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The Daily Review The Daily Review (sometimes referred to as The Review) is a daily broadsheet newspaper, serving Bradford and Sullivan Counties of Pennsylvania. Its main office is in Towanda, Pennsylvania with branch offices in Troy and Sayre.
The Daily Show: Indecision 2000 The Daily Show: Indecision 2000 was a series of special episodes featured on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart spoofing the 2000 Presidential Election. This series covered the primaries leading up to the general election between George W.
The Daily Show: Indecision 2004 The Daily Show: Indecision 2004 is a DVD boxed set of several episodes of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart relating to the 2004 presidential election. The episodes were all filmed during 2004, and feature interviews with political candidates and parodies of the events during the general election campaign.
The Daily Show: Indecision 2006 Midwest Midterm Midtacular: Battlefield Ohio was a special of The Daily Show that aired on Comedy Central from October 30, 2006 through November 2, 2006. It was filmed in Columbus, Ohio at Roy Bowen Theater on the campus of Ohio State University.
The Daily Sport The Daily Sport is a tabloid newspaper published in the United Kingdom by Sport Newspapers, owned by the pornographer David Sullivan. The daily paper was launched in 1988, following on from its Sunday sister title, The Sunday Sport (first published in 1986).
The Daily Talk As of 2006, The Daily Talk is an English-language news medium published daily on a blackboard on Tubman Boulevard in the center of the Liberian capital Monrovia. According to a New York Times report, it is "the most widely read report" in Monrovia, as many Monrovians lack the money or the electricity necessary for access to the conventional mass media.
The Daily Tar Heel The Daily Tar Heel (commonly referred to as the DTH) is the independent student newspaper of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It was founded on February 23, 1893, and became a daily newspaper in 1929.
The Daily Targum The Daily Targum is the official student newspaper of Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey. In its current form, it exists as a bi-fold tabloid-style paper featuring international, national, local, and university news, as well as editorials, columns, comics, classifieds, sports, and other amusements.
The Daily Telegraph The Daily Telegraph was founded in 1855, and is one of only two remaining daily British newspapers that still uses the traditional broadsheet layout, along with the Financial Times, as rival broadsheet publications have converted to the smaller compact or Berliner formats. Its sister paper, The Sunday Telegraph, was founded in 1961.
The Daily Universe The Daily Universe is the student newspaper for Brigham Young University (BYU) and was started shortly after the school was founded. It was first titled Y News, which was then changed to The Blue and White and finally to The Daily Universe.
The Daily World The Daily World is the leading daily newspaper in Aberdeen, Washington, United States. Serving Grays Harbor County and northern Pacific County counties since 1889, The Daily World is the only daily newspaper on the coast of Washington state.
The Dairyman's Daughter The Dairyman's Daughter is an early 19th century Christian religious booklet of 52 pages, which had a remarkably wide distribution and influence. It was a narrative of the religious experience of Elizabeth Wallbridge, who was the person after whom the book was named.
The Dakota The Dakota, constructed from October 25 1880 to October 27 1884,Historic American Buildings Survey, The Dakota (Apartments), 1 West 72nd Street, Central Park West, New York, New York County, NY, page 2. URL last accessed 2006-10-24.
The Dakotas (TV series) The Dakotas was a television western series first seen on ABC television (UK) on January 7th 1963. Produced in Hollywood by Warner Bros, the short-lived show recalls the Dakota Territory in the years between the Civil War and the turn of the century.
The Daleks The Daleks (also known as The Mutants, among other titles, see below) is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast weekly from 21 December 1963 to 1 February 1964. The story also marks the first appearance of the popular Daleks.
The Daleks' Master Plan The Daleks' Master Plan is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which originally aired in twelve weekly parts from November 13, 1965 to January 29, 1966. This serial marks the final appearance of Adrienne Hill as companion Katarina.
The Dalhousie Gazette The Dalhousie Gazette (more commonly referred to as "The Gazette") is the main student publication at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The paper first began publishing in 1868, making it the oldest student newspaper in Canada (The Brunswickan, printed out of the University of New Brunswick, actually predates The Gazette by a year, but began printing in magazine format).
The Dallas Contemporary The Dallas Contemporary is a non-profit, nationally awarded contemporary art space located at 2801 Swiss Avenue in the Wilson Historic District of east Dallas, Texas (USA). The director Joan Davidow is truly dedicated to nurturing, following, and supporting emerging Texas artists.
The Dallas Morning News The Dallas Morning News is the major daily newspaper serving the Dallas, Texas (USA) area. The Dallas Morning News first began publishing on 1 October 1885Texas State Historical Association - Texas Day by Day - December 3, 1885.
The Dalles Carnegie Library The Dalles Carnegie Library is a historic building located at the corner of Fourth and Washington Streets in The Dalles, Oregon, United States. It is one of the 2,509 libraries whose construction was funded by Andrew Carnegie.
The Dalles Civic Auditorium The Dalles Civic Auditorium, is a registered historic building located at the corner of Fourth and Federal Streets in The Dalles, Oregon. It is currently owned by the Civic Auditorium Historic Preservation Committee, a non-profit corporation formed specifically for the purpose of purchasing it from the City of The Dalles to save it from scheduled demolition, restore it, and operate it as a local and regional cultural center.
The Dalles Dam The Dalles Dam is a hydroelectric dam spanning the Columbia River, two-miles east of the city of The Dalles, Oregon, USA. It joins Wasco County, Oregon with Klickitat County, Washington, 192 miles (309 km) upriver from the mouth of the Columbia near Astoria, Oregon.
The Dalles, Oregon The Dalles is a city in Wasco County, Oregon, United States, and the county seat of Wasco County. The name of the city comes from the French word dalle ("flag stone"), what the French-Canadian employees of the Hudson's Bay Company called the now-inundated Long Narrows of the Columbia River above the present-day city.
The Dam Busters (book) The Dam Busters is a 1951 book by Paul Brickhill about British Royal Air Force Squadron 617 during World War II. The squadron became known as the "Dam Busters" because of Operation Chastise, a mission using highly specialized bombs to destroy Ruhr dams in Germany.
The Damage The Damage is a collection of Ludus songs culled from the Manchester post-punk group's albums, singles, b-sides, and live recordings. It includes the band's most famous song, Breaking the Rules, as well as a cover of Brigitte Bardot's 1970 single Nue au Soleil.
The Damagers The Damagers, published in 1993, is a spy novel by Donald Hamilton, and the twenty-seventh volume of the adventures of government assassin Matt Helm. Hamilton had launched the series in 1960 with Death of a Citizen.
The Dame Edna Experience The Dame Edna Experience was a British television comedy talk-show hosted by Dame Edna Everage (a character played by Australian satirist Barry Humphries). It ran for twelve regular episodes, plus two Christmas specials.
The Damnation of Theron Ware The Damnation of Theron Ware (published in England as Illumination) is an 1896 novel by American author Harold Frederic. It is widely considered a classic of American literature by scholars and writers although not as widely known or read popularly.
The Damned Don't Cry (Visage compilation) The Damned Don't Cry is a 2001 compilation album by the New Romantic ensemble Visage. Of all Visage compilation is the most-complete, including every important single from the ensemble and several rarities never-before released on CD.
The Damning Well The Damning Well is a rock supergroup comprised of Wes Borland (of Limp Bizkit) on guitar, Danny Lohner (formerly of Nine Inch Nails) on bass, Richard Patrick (of Filter) on vocals, and Josh Freese (of A Perfect Circle and The Vandals) on drums. The group has only released one song, "Awakening", on the Underworld movie soundtrack in 2003, even though an album's worth of material has apparently been recorded with producer Terry Date.
The Dan Band The Dan Band is a band from Los Angeles, California, created by actor/comedian Dan Finnerty specializing in covers of originally female-performed pop songs, with added obscenities and swearing. They are signed to SideOneDummy Records.
The Dan Patrick Show The Dan Patrick Show is a syndicated sports talk show that is hosted by SportsCenter personality Dan Patrick and broadcast on ESPN Radio in Bristol, Connecticut during most of the year and New York, New York during the NBA season. The show debuted on September 13, 1999 and is heard weekdays from 1 p.
The Dance of the Dead The Dance of the Dead is a Big Finish Productions audio drama featuring Lisa Bowerman as Bernice Summerfield, a character from the spin-off media based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.
The Dancers at the End of Time The Dancers at the End of Time is a series of science fiction novels and short stories written by Michael Moorcock, the setting of which is the End of Time, an era "where entropy is king and the universe has begun collapsing upon itself". The inhabitants of this era are immortal, decadent and amoral, creating flights of fancy using power rings which draw on energy devised and stored by their ancestors millions of years prior.
The Dancing Girl The Dancing Girl (舞姫 Maihime) was the first major novel by the Japanese novelist Mori Ogai. The novel first appeared in Kokumin no Tomo (国民之友) in 1890, and is based on Mori's own experiences as a medical student in Germany.
The Dancing Girl of Izu "The Dancing Girl of Izu", (Japanese: 伊豆の踊り子, izu no odoriko) published in 1926, was the first work of literature by Japanese author Yasunari Kawabata to achieve great popular and critical acclaim. The short story was first translated into English by Edward Seidensticker and published in an abridged form in The Atlantic Monthly in 1952.
The Dancing Master The Dancing Master (first edition: The English Dancing Master) is a dancing manual containing the music and instructions for English Country Dances. It was published in several editions by John Playford and his successors from 1651 until c1728.
The Dancing Princesses (Faerie Tale Theatre episode) The Dancing Princesses is the 27th and final episode of the television anthology Faerie Tale Theatre. The story is adapted from the Brothers Grimm collection story of The Twelve Dancing Princesses and stars Lesley Ann Warren as the eldest princess.
The Dancing Wu Li Masters The Dancing Wu Li Masters by Gary Zukav is a popular new age book from 1979 about quantum physics interpretations. The subject is described in non-mathematical terms to enable the widest possible readership to grasp the trends in physics research and theory current as of the mid-1970s.
The Dandy Annual The Dandy Annual is the current name of the book that has been published every year since 1938, to tie in with the children's comic The Dandy. As of 2006 there have been 69 editions, with another (The Dandy Annual 2008) to follow in 2007.
The Dandy Warhols The Dandy Warhols are an alternative rock band formed in Portland, Oregon by Courtney Taylor-Taylor (formerly Courtney Taylor) (vocals, guitar), Zia McCabe (keyboard), Peter Holmström (guitar), and Eric Hedford (drums). When Hedford left in 1998, Taylor-Taylor's cousin Brent De Boer replaced him as drummer.
The Dangerous Book for Boys The Dangerous Book for Boys is a self-help guidebook published by Harper Collins, aimed at boys "from eight to eighty." It covers around eighty topics, from building a treehouse to catching rabbits and how to understand girls.
The Dangerous Brothers The Dangerous Brothers was an early stage and TV act by anarchic comedy duo Rik Mayall and Ade Edmondson, performing respectively as "Richard Dangerous" and "Sir (or occasionally Lady) Adrian Dangerous". They appeared in a number of brief sketches in the 1980s TV programme Saturday Live.
The Dangerous Liaisons The Dangerous Liaisons is an opera in two acts by Conrad Susa to an English libretto by Philip Littell, based on the novel Les Liaisons dangereuses by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos. First performance: War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, 1994.
The Dangerous Rescue The Dangerous Rescue by Jude Watson is the thirteenth in a series of young reader novels called Jedi Apprentice. The series explores the adventures of Qui-Gon Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi prior to Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace.
The Dangerous Summer The Dangerous Summer is a 1960 book written by Ernest Hemingway. In it, Hemingway describes, with his own words, the real-life bullfighting rivalry that took place the year before between legendary bullfighters Luis Miguel Dominguín the second and his brother in law Antonio Ordóñez.
The Danny Joe Brown Band The Danny Joe Brown Band (DJBB) was centered around it's lead singer, Danny Joe Brown. The rest of the act consisted of Bobby Ingram (Guitar/Slide/Vocals), Steve Wheeler (Guitar/Slide), Kenny McVay (Guitar), John Glavin(Keyboards/Vocals),Buzzy Meekin(Bass/Vocals) and Jimmy Glenn (Drums).
The Dante Club The Dante Club is the first novel by Matthew Pearl. The book reached #1 on several best seller lists (Including Border's, The Washington Post, and the Boston Globe) and appeared on the New York Times Best Seller List.
The Dapper Dans The Dapper Dans are a barbershop quartet that performs at Disneyland in Anaheim, California (since 1959), at the Magic Kingdom in Lake Buena Vista, Florida (since 1971), and at Hong Kong Disneyland in Lantau Island, Hong Kong (since 2005).
The Darcy School The Darcy School is a private coeducational day school located in Chatham Township, New Jersey, United States, serving students in preschool through eighth grade. The school has a total enrollment of 115 students.
The Dares Since arriving in California from Burlington, Vermont, pop-punk band The Dares have already generated buzz in the local music scene and performed over 200 times, including shows at such venues famous as Viper Room, The Roxy, The Whisky, House of Blues, The Key Club, The University of Arizona and at this year's X-Games in LA.
The Darfur Wall The Darfur Wall is a non-profit web site that raises awareness of the Darfur conflict and supports Darfur-relief organizations. It displays a list of numbers from 1 to 400,000, each representing one person killed in Darfur.
The Darien Gap Expedition Darien Gap are a high school Rock/Indie band originally called Epicentre (the name was found in a GCSE Geography text book)Robert Carroll, Kial Jackson and Tim Jessop played a gig in June 2006 and decided to make a band. Then Jordan Lilford left a message on the bands MySpace saying he was a drummer and was interested in (at that stage) Epicentre's Music.
The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze "The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze", also known as "The Man on the Flying Trapeze", is a very well-known 19th century popular song about a flying trapeze circus performer. The melody and words of its central refrain are instantly recognisable:
The Darjeeling Initiative The Darjeeling Initiative is a group of like-minded locals, mostly in their youth, from diverse backgrounds, coming together with the aim to make a positive impact on the socio-economy of the Darjeeling Hills. The group includes development workers, businessmen, hotel and restaurant owners, tour operators, lawyers, doctors, professionals, college students and unemployed youth.
The Dark Aeons The Dark Aeons are optional bosses in the popular computer game Final Fantasy X but, only in the international version. The Dark Aeons also appear in Final Fantasy X-2 but required bosses that you must fight to beat the game.
The Dark Angel (1935 film) The Dark Angel is a 1935 film which tells the story of three childhood friends, two male, one female. When the woman chooses one of the men to marry, the other, jealous, sends his rival off into a dangerous situation during wartime.
The Dark Crystal The Dark Crystal is a 1982 fantasy film by Jim Henson and Frank Oz. Like most of Henson's other work, its characters are Muppets, but The Muppet Show characters for which he is famous do not appear (though some of the same performers are used).
The Dark Eye The Dark Eye (TDE, German: Das Schwarze Auge (DSA), literally "the black eye", but without its idiomatic sense, as the German version of black eye is "blaues Auge" literally "blue eye"), is a German role-playing game created by Ulrich Kiesow and launched by the Schmidt Spiel & Freizeit GmbH and the Droemer Knaur Verlag in 1983.
The Dark Eye (video game) The Dark Eye is a computer game of the horror genre, released in 1995 for the PC by now-defunct software company inSCAPE. Upon its release, the game attracted little attention from either critics or consumers, though it has received some attention since.
The Dark Frontier The Dark Frontier (1936) is Eric Ambler's first novel, about whose genesis he writes: "[…] Became press agent for film star, but soon after joined big London advertising agency as copywriter and "ideas man". During next few years wrote incessantly on variety of subjects ranging from baby food to non-ferrous alloys.
The Dark Glow of the Mountains The Dark Glow of the Mountains is a TV documentary made in 1984 by German filmmaker Werner Herzog. It is about an expedition made by freestyle mountain climber Reinhold Messner and his partner to climb Gasherbrum I and Gasherbrum II all at once without returning to basecamp.
The Dark Hours The Dark Hours is a 2005 Canadian made psychological thriller movie directed by Paul Fox and written by Wil Zmak. In his book The Long Tail, Wired editor Chris Anderson cited it as the poorest box-office performance for 2005 in the U.
The Dark is Rising Sequence The Dark is Rising is the name of a five-book series by Susan Cooper originally published in the 1960s and 1970s. The series is written as high fantasy, and depicts the struggle between the forces of good, called The Light, and the forces of evil, known as The Dark.
The Dark Island (song) The Dark Island is the name of a song which was written as the theme tune of the BBC television show of the same name. While the show is no longer seen, the song is a favourite with Scottish musicians, mostly accordionists and pipers.
The Dark of the Matinée "The Dark of the Matinée", also known simply as "Matinée", is a song by Scottish indie rock band Franz Ferdinand. It was released as the fourth track on the self-titled album Franz Ferdinand on February 9, 2004.
The Dark Prison The dark prison is the informal name used by some Guantanamo Bay detainees for a secret prison they claim they were detained in near Kabul, Afghanistan. According to an article distributed by Reuters eight Guantanamo detainees have described the conditions they were under held in "the dark prison" or the prison of darkness.
The Dark Rival The Dark Rival by Jude Watson is the second in a series of young reader novels called Jedi Apprentice. The series explores the adventures of Qui-Gon Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi prior to Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace.
The Dark Side of the Moon Live After expressing an interest in reviving The Dark Side of the Moon following his performance with Pink Floyd at Live 8, Roger Waters announced that he would be staging "The Dark Side of the Moon Live", a worldwide concert tour. Waters and his band performed the title piece in its entirety at each show, beginning at the Rock In Rio festival on 2 June 2006.
The Dark Tower (series) The Dark Tower is a series of seven books by American writer Stephen King that tells the tale of lead character Roland Deschain's quest for the "Dark Tower." The Dark Tower is often described in the novels as a real structure, and also as a metaphor.
The Darkangel Trilogy The Darkangel Trilogy is a series of fantasy novels by American author Meredith Ann Pierce. It is set in the far distant future, when the Moon has long since been terraformed into a lush paradise complete with its own animals, plants, and races.
The Darkbeat EP The Darkbeat EP is a vinyl EP record released by the industrial band Bile in 1997 on the now defunct record label, Energy Records. This EP is out of print and is highly sought after by fans of the band as it is a collector's item.
The Darkest Hour The Darkest Hour is a phrase coined by British prime minister Winston Churchill to describe the period of World War II between the fall of France in 1940 and the Nazi invasion of Russia in 1941, when the British Commonwealth stood alone. It is particularly used for the time when the UK was under threat of invasion after Dunkirk, before victory in the Battle of Britain.
The Darkside The Darkside was one of several bands to emerge following the break-up of Spacemen 3 and adhered to a dark psychedelic yet more overtly pop-orientated template than their progenitor. The band formed in the Spacemen's hometown of Rugby and was led by Pete Bain (AKA Bassman), who had left Spacemen 3 just before their 1989 LP Playing With Fire.
The Darling Buds The Darling Buds was an indie band from Caerleon near Newport, Wales. The band were formed in 1986 and took their name from a British novel called The Darling Buds of May, a title taken from the Shakespeare sonnet that begins, "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
The Darling Buds of May The Darling Buds of May was a British television series which was first broadcast between 1991 and 1993 produced by Yorkshire Television for the ITV Network. It is set in an idyllic rural 1950s Kent, among a large, boisterous family.
The Dartmoor Worker The Dartmoor Worker is a collection, first assembled in 1966, of newspaper articles originally written for The Western Morning News by the principal authority on Dartmoor and its history, William Crossing, in the early 1900s. The book is illustrated with many photographs from the collection of Lady Sayer, a highly influential member of the Dartmoor Preservation Society during the mid 20th century.
The Dartmouth The Dartmouth (informally known as The D) is America's oldest college newspaper, published independently at Dartmouth College (although its offices are located on campus). According to its web site the paper began publication in 1799], although the Hanover newspapers existing then are unconnected to a monthly literary magazine that students established around 1843, which is the publication that evolved into the current paper.
The Dartz The Dartz is a pop-folk (as they name themselves) band from Saint Petersburg, Russia. The band called their genre "pop-folk", meaning "popular, merry, modern, understandable, appealing, positive". The musicians are inspired by songs and dances of Europe: Irish, Scottish, Breton, Balkan, Spanish, Jewish, Scandinavian, Russian melodies. The band is extraordinary free with folk music, and almost always composes its own Russian texts, putting them onto traditional melodies, or sometimes translates the songs into Russian. That's why The Dartz consider themselves a folk band as well as authors. This principal line still exists since their first album. These days the folk lore is understood in a deeper sense, it went deeper, and diffused in arrangements, and even in blues compositions something celtic appears sometimes, and rock'n'roll motiffs can be met in jigs, for instance — a guitar solo. In authentic celtic music guitar never plays solo and isn't even recognized as an instrument.
The Dating Game The Dating Game was an ABC television show that first aired on December 20, 1965 and was created by Chuck Barris. ABC dropped the show on July 6, 1973, but it resurfaced in several syndicated versions (1973-1974 as The New Dating Game, 1978-1980, 1986-1989 and 1996-1999).
The Daughter of the Snows The Daughter of the Snows (AKA Snegurochka) is a "fantastic ballet" in 3 acts/5 scenes, with choreography by Marius Petipa and music by Léon Minkus. Libretto by Marius Petipa, derived from the Russian fairy-tale Snegurochka by Alexander Ostrovsky, which the writer based on a Norwegian legend.
The Daughter of Time The Daughter of Time is a 1951 novel by Josephine Tey, often referenced by "supporters" of King Richard III of England, despite the fact that it never claims to be fact. It was the last book Tey published, shortly before her death.
The Dave Brubeck Quartet The Dave Brubeck Quartet was a jazz quartet, founded in 1951 by Dave Brubeck; featuring Paul Desmond on saxophone, and Brubeck on pianoTake Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond. They took up a long residency at San Francisco's Blackhawk nightclub and gained great popularity touring college campuses, releasing a series of albums with such titles as Jazz at Oberlin, Jazz Goes to College, and Jazz Goes to Junior College.
The Dave Clark Five The Dave Clark Five (DC5) were an English rock and roll group in the 1960s, and one of the few that were able to present something of a commercial threat to The Beatles, the dominant group of the period. They were, in fact, the second group of the "British Invasion" after The Beatles to have a chart hit in America ("Glad All Over" #6 January 1964).
The Dave Thomas Comedy Show The Dave Thomas Comedy Show (later simply Dave Thomas) was a sketch-based, half-hour, five-week summer replacement series, which aired on CBS in the summer of 1990. The show starred Canadian comedian Dave Thomas.
The David Lawrence Show The David Lawrence Show or Online Tonight with David Lawrence is a radio show that airs nightly on various different radio stations, including XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio. The show deals with computer problems, but also deals with politics, pop culture and music.
The David Letterman Show The David Letterman Show was a short-lived live morning NBC talk show hosted by David Letterman every weekday from June 23-October 24, 1980. A precursor to 1982's Late Night with David Letterman, the show was a critical success but the edgy comedy did not go over well with morning television watchers, more used to talk shows, soap operas, and game shows.
The David Project Center for Jewish Leadership The David Project Center for Jewish Leadership is a non-profit corporation located in Boston, Massachusetts, whose stated aim is "to promote a fair and honest understanding of the Arab-Israeli conflict.""Our Mission", The David Project, accessed July 29, 2006.
The Davis Sisters The Davis Sisters was a gospel group founded by Ruth ("Baby Sis") Davis and featuring her sisters Thelma, Audrey and Alfreda. Imogene Greene joined the group in 1950, and was later replaced by Jackie Verdell when Greene left to join the Caravans.
The Davis Sisters (country) The Davis Sisters were a country music duo group consisting of two singers, Skeeter Davis and Betty Jack Davis. They are best known for their 1953 #1 country hit "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know".
The Dawn (band) The Dawn is a Filipino rock band (see Pinoy rock) which gained popularity during the late 1980s in the Philippines. The band broke up in 1995 and eventually, lead vocalist Jett Pangan formed another band bearing his name.
The Dawn (magazine) The Dawn is a religious magazine printed and published by Associated Bible Students via their Dawn Bible Students Association, East Rutherford, New Jersey and branch offices around the world. In 1931, the Dawn Bible Students Association was founded to publish The Dawn and Herald of Christ’s Presence, a monthly journal.
The Dawning Light The Dawning Light is a 1959 science fiction novel published under the name Robert Randall, but actually the collaborative work of two writers, Robert Silverberg and Randall Garrett. It depicts the changes in the society of the fictional planet Nidor, a world perpetually covered in dense cloud, inhabited by humanoids resembling humans but differing in several respects, notably in being covered from head to foot in short downy fur.
The Day After The Day After is an American television movie which aired on November 20, 1983 on the ABC network. The film portrays a fictional nuclear war between the United States/NATO and the Soviet Union/Warsaw Pact and its effects on the residents of Lawrence, Kansas; Kansas City, Missouri, and several family farms situated next to nearby nuclear-missile silos.
The Day After Tomorrow The Day After Tomorrow is a 2004 apocalyptic science-fiction film that depicts catastrophic effects of global warming and boasts high-end special effects, bending the lines between science, reality and science fiction. Worldwide, it is the 38th top grossing film of all time, with total revenue of USD$542,771,772.
The Day Before You Came "The Day Before You Came" is a song recorded and released by the Swedish pop group ABBA. It was originally released as the first "new" song off the November 1982 double complilation album The Singles: The First Ten Years.
The Day Britain Stopped The Day Britain Stopped is a drama documentary produced by Wall to Wall for the BBC. It is based around a fictional disaster - in which a train crash is the first in a chain of events that lead to a meltdown of the country's transport system.
The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away is a novella by the Japanese author Oe Kenzaburo, first published in Japanese in 1972. It has been translated into English by John Nathan and was published in 1977 together with Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness, Prize Stock and Aghwee the Sky Monster.
The Day is Done "The Day is Done" is a short story by science fiction author Lester del Rey, originally published in the May 1939 issue of Astounding Science-Fiction . The short story documents the waning days of the last of the Neanderthals.
The Day I Snapped The Day I Snapped is an alternative/punk rock band from Glasgow, Scotland. Formed in late 2000, the members include Alan Easton on lead vocals and guitar, guitarist Richie Bradford, drummer Craig Brennan and bassist Andy McFarlane.
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