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The Ern Westmore Hollywood Glamour Show The Ern Westmore Hollywood Glamour Show was a short-lived television show. Produced by Kroger Babb, the show was hosted by Hollywood make-up artist Ern Westmore, who would explain various beauty tips to viewers as well as give makeovers to a member of the studio audience, who would then be serenaded by a vocal singer, similar to the end of the Miss America Pageant.
The Ernie Kovacs Show The Ernie Kovacs Show was a comedy show first hosted by comedian Ernie Kovacs in Philadelphia during the early 50s, then shown on national television, still hosted by Kovacs, during the rest of that decade. The original studio location was on the 4th floor of the WRCV-TV studio location at 1619 Walnut Street in Philadelphia.
The Ernies The Ernies were an American ska band of the late 1990s. The band's music was a blend of ska-rock, hip hop, and humorous lyrics, often dealing with the subjects of philosophy and science Although never establishing a mainstream following, the band did receive a small cult following after the release of their third album, Meson Ray].
The Escal Institute of Advanced Technologies The Escal Institute of Advanced Technologies is a Delaware corporation whose principal office is located in Bethesda, Maryland. It operates under the trademarked name SANS Institute and operates the Global Information Assurance Certification and Internet Storm Center.
The Escorts / The Do's & The Don'ts (album) ""The Escorts / The Do's & The Don'ts (album)"" is a 24 track album featuring "the best of" or greatest hits by The Escorts / Do's & Don'ts from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA. These are original recordings of all 12 singles released by The Escorts later known as The Do's & The Don'ts.
The Essential Alison Moyet The Essential Alison Moyet was essentially a re-release of Singles, the greatest hits album of singer Alison Moyet. The album was released in 2001 by Sony-BMG in response to renewed interest in the singer, after she signed a new record contract at Sanctuary Records and moved back into the public eye.
The Essential Collection 1995-2005 The Essential Collection 1995-2005 is the eighth studio album released by the hard rock band Ten. The double compact disc is a re-recording of songs from the Ten catalog, the original versions being available on previous releases.
The Essential Elvis Presley The Essential Elvis Presley is a two-disc compilation of Elvis Presley songs, set to be released on January 2, 2007. The set will make Presley the best-selling artist of all time to have an album released by The Essential series of compilation albums (this title had been previously held by Michael Jackson).
The Essential Guide to Planets and Moons Star Wars: The Essential Guide to Planets and Moons is the fourth book in Del Rey's Essential Guide series; it consists of an in-depth look at one hundred planets, moons, and asteroids from the Original trilogy and the Expanded Universe, each with its own two-page spread. This guide is frequently used on Wookieepedia and by Star Wars fans.
The Essential Heart The Essential Heart is a greatest hits compilation album released by the American rock band Heart in 2002. The collection spans the band's history from 1975 through 1995 and the package includes two compact discs.
The Essential Herbie Hancock (album) The Essential Herbie Hancock is the forty-sixth album by American jazz musician and pianist Herbie Hancock. Unlike the box set The Herbie Hancock Box, this is the first 2-disc compilation of all of Hancock's music on the various recording labels that Hancock was on.
The Essential Jacksons The Essential Jacksons is the first compilation to cover The Jacksons' fourteen-year long tenure at CBS/Epic Records. Released in 2004 by Epic, this compilation includes stand-out hits such as "Enjoy Yourself", "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)", "Can You Feel It", and "State of Shock".
The Essential Willie Nelson The Essential Willie Nelson is a two-disc compilation of Willie Nelson songs. Released in April 2003 in honor of Nelson's 70th birthday, this digitally-remastered compilation covers five decades of Nelson's recording career, and is part of Sony's Essential series of compilation albums.
The Essentials, Patrice Rushen The Essentials, Patrice Rushen is the fourtenth album released by keyboardist/singer/songwriter/arranger/musical director, Patrice Rushen. This compilation, released in 2002 is special because it contains: 12 digitally remastered tracks including some of her greatest hits songs such as: "Forget Me Nots", "Haven't You Heard" & "Feels So Real (Won't Let Go).
The Essex and Kent Scottish The Essex and Kent Scottish is a reserve infantry regiment of the Canadian Forces formed in 1954 by the amalgamation of The Essex Scottish Regiment and The Kent Regiment. Its Colonel-in-Chief is HRH Prince Michael of Kent.
The Essex Green The Essex Green are an indie rock band from Brooklyn, NY. The band is primarily composed of songwriters Jeff Baron, Sasha Bell and Chris Ziter, and specialize in a classic sound inspired by 1960s–1970s pop and folk in the tradition of bands like The Left Banke and Fairport Convention.
The Essex Scottish Regiment The Essex Scottish Regiment was an infantry regiment of the Canadian Armed Forces. During World War II the regiment was among the first Canadian units to see combat in the European theatre during the invasion of Dieppe, By the end of the Dieppe Raid, the Essex Scottish Regiment had suffered 121 fatal casualties, with many others wounded and captured.
The Establishment (club) The Establishment was a short-lived London nightclub which opened in October 1961, at 18 Greek Street, Soho and was famous in retrospect for satire although actually more notable at the time for jazz and other events. It was founded by Peter Cook and Nicholas Luard, both of whom were also important in the history of the magazine Private Eye.
The ESP Affair The ESP Affair is an independent feature motion picture from Point Reyes Pictures, Pulse Films, JLP, and executive producer Scott Rosenfelt (Mystic Pizza, Smoke Signals). A paranormal / sci-fi thriller, The ESP Affair is about Connie, an ordinary woman who's dreams are invaded, causing her to stumble onto a top-secret government conspiracy involving psychics and mind control.
The Ethiopians The Ethiopians are a reggae, rocksteady, and ska vocalgroup, founded by Leonard Dillon, Stephen Taylor and Aston Morris, that started recording for Clement 'Coxsone' Dodd in 1966. Leonard Dillon had previously released some mento songs under the name Jack Sparrow.
The Eton Rifles "The Eton Rifles" was the only single to be released from the album Setting Sons by The Jam. Released on 3 November 1979, it became the band's first top ten hit when it entered the United Kingdom singles chart at #3.
The Etude (magazine) The Etude was a magazine dedicated to music, which was founded by Theodore Presser (1848-1925) at Lynchburg, Virginia, and first published in October 1883. In 1884, Presser moved his publishing headquarters to Philadelphia, and his Theodore Presser & Co.
The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh "The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh" is a two volume set of novels written by Greg Cox about the life of the fictional Star Trek character: Khan Noonien Singh. He is often refered to as simply "Khan" in the Star Trek episode "Space Seed" and in the Star Trek movie "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan"
The Eurasia Center The Eurasia Center is an association of specialists working on European and Asian (Eurasian) affairs who have joined together to provide a forum for debate through public education in order to promote better relations between the nations of East and West.
The Europe Winter 2006 Church Tour DVD The Europe Winter 2006 Church Tour DVD features on stage performances and behind the scenes footage of Neal Morse's February and March church tour. The DVD also includes footage of Bonita High School Drumline perform a Spock's Beard medley.
The European Cultivated Potato Database The European Cultivated Potato Database (ECPD) is an online collaborative database of potato variety descriptions. The information that it contains can be searched by variety name, or by selecting one or more required characteristics.
The European Dream The European Dream: How Europe's Vision of the Future Is Quietly Eclipsing the American Dream is a book, by Jeremy Rifkin, published in September 2004. Rifkin describes the emergence and evolution of the European Union over the past five decades, as well as key differences between European and American values.
The European Law Moot Court Competition The European Law Moot Court Competition is an annual moot court competition which is held between rival teams consisting of university students who have an interest in European Law. The first official competition was held in 1989.
The European miracle The term European miracle was coined by Eric Jones to describe his position that Europe was more advanced and progressive than all other civilizations prior to the year 1492, allowing it to develop capitalism, reach the New World first, and dominate world trade and politics.
The European Radio Astronomy Club The European Radio Astronomy club {ERAC) is Europe's only group coordinating the work of radio astronomers to jointly use Radio Science to study the universe at radio wavelengths. It was founded in 1995 by Peter Wright and his wife, Angelika, both having the same idea of writing a small newsletter to the then only 15-strong radio astronomy community in Europe, which were up to this date linked only by letters.
The European Researcher's Mobility Portal European Researcher's Mobility Portal is a one-stop shop for researchers seeking to advance their careers and personal development by moving to other countries. In addition to the information on training and jobs it provides, this electronic gateway is the entry point to a wealth of practical information on living, working and relaxing in the 32 European countries involved, through the widening network of (currently 31) national mobility portals complementing it.
The Europeans The Europeans: A sketch is a short novel by Henry James, published in 1878. It is essentially a comedy contrasting the behaviour and attitudes of two visitors from Europe with those of their relatives living in the 'new' world of New England.
The Evangelists The Evangelists (EvangheliĹźtii in Romanian) is a controversial play by Romanian academic and writer Alina Mungiu-Pippidi. The play received the UNITER Prize, one of Romania's most prestigious literary awards, in 1992.
The Event Center Arena The Event Center Arena is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena on the main campus of San José State University in downtown San Jose, California; it was built in 1989. It is home to the SJSU Spartans basketball teams.
The Eveready Hour The Eveready Hour was a radio program that was first broadcast on December 4, 1923 (or, according to other sources, on February 12, 1924) on WEAF Radio in New York. The first commercially-sponsored variety program in the history of broadcasting, it was paid for by the National Carbon Company, which at the time owned Eveready Battery.
The Evergreen Annex - Remix Addendum The Evergreen Annex - Remix Addendum is the name of an EP by The Echoing Green. As the name suggests, it was released as an addition to the second disc of the A Different Drum release of The Evergreen Collection, which featured only remixes of the band's work.
The Evergreen School The Evergreen School (formerly known as The Evergreen School for Gifted Children) is an elementary through middle school located in Shoreline, Washington that educates highly capable students from preschool to eighth grade. The school was founded in 1963 by Edith Christensen, with an initial enrollment of six children.
The Evergreen State College The Evergreen State College is an accredited public baccalaureate arts and sciences college, founded in 1967 in the state capital, Olympia, Washington. Begun as an experimental and non-traditional college, its academic offerings have become generally more traditional over time, but faculty still issue narrative evaluations of students' work rather than grades, and Evergreen still organizes most studies into largely interdisciplinary classes titled "Coordinated Studies Programs," which generally constitute a full-time course load.
The Everlasting (role-playing game) The Everlasting is a role-playing game created by Steve Brown of Visionary Entertainment Studios Inc in the 1990s. The system has four core books: The Book of the Unliving (1997); The Book of the Light (1998); The Book of the Spirit (1998); and The Book of the Fantastical (2004).
The Everlasting (song) "The Everlasting" was released by Manic Street Preachers on November 30, 1998 and is the second single to be released from the This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours. All three members of the band - James Dean Bradfield, Sean Moore and Nicky Wire - share the writing credits.
The Everlasting Hatred: The Roots of Jihad The Everlasting Hatred: The Roots of Jihad, is a book by Hal Lindsey which attempts to explain the conflict between Islam and the Western world by tracing its roots to a biblical conflict between the descendants of Jacob (biblical forefather of the Jews) and Esau/Ishmael (biblical forefathers of Arabs/Muslims).
The Everly Brothers The Everly Brothers are a pair of brothers who were top-selling country-influenced rock and roll performers, best known for their acoustic guitar playing and close harmony singing, who had their greatest success in the 1950s.
The Everton Collection The "David France Collection", compiled by Dr David France, consists of some 10,000 items, each representing a special piece of the club’s past, but as a collection it captures and illustrates the club’s unparalleled heritage. There are programmes, season-tickets, ticket stubs, medals, photographs, contracts, cash books, handbooks, financial statements and other ephemera dating back to the pioneering days at Stanley Park, Priory Road and Walton Breck Road as well as letters, gate books, itineraries, cigarette cards, postcards and international caps from the turn-of-the- century.
The Every Thing The Great Northwest (previously Thee Every Thing or Thee Very Thing) is a neo-psychedelic project created by studio engineer and producer Brian James "Coatsie" Coates (The Dandy Warhols, Dead Meadow). The group is based around a collective philosophy in which "every one is welcome to participate".
The Evian Child (Passions) The Evian Child refers to the fan coined name of the unknown son of Eve Johnson & Julian Crane on the NBC soap opera Passions. The identity of their son has been an ongoing plot thread throughout the show's history.
The Evidence of the Film The Evidence of the Film was a 1913 American silent short crime film directed by Lawrence Marston and Edwin Thanhouser starring William Garwood. Only 15 minutes long it is a film about a messenger boy at a film studio is wrongfully accused of stealing bonds worth $20,000.
The Evidence of Things Not Seen The Evidence of Things Not Seen is a 1985 book by James Baldwin about the Wayne Williams Atlanta child murders of the early 1980s. The title is a reference to the definition of faith from the Epistle to the Hebrews 11:1.
The Evil Experiment The Evil Experiment by Jude Watson is the twelfth 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 Evil of the Daleks The Evil Of the Daleks is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which originally aired in seven weekly parts from May 20 to July 1, 1967. This serial marked the debut of Deborah Watling as the Doctor's new companion, Victoria Waterfield.
The Evil of the Day The Evil of the Day is a novel by Thomas Sterling, published in 1955. The book is patterned after Ben Jonson's Elizabethan comedy Volpone, and was later adapted for the stage by playwright Frederick Knott under the title of Mr.
The Evil Touch The Evil Touch was an Australian-produced television series, originally broadcast in Australia in 1973. It was an anthology series and each episode had a self-contained story and a new set of characters, although several guest stars appeared in more than one episode, playing different characters.
The Evolution Control Committee An experimental music band from Columbus, Ohio founded by Mark Gunderson in 1986, The Evolution Control Committee (ECC) typically uses uncleared and illegal samples from various sources as a form of protest against copyright law. They are one of the pioneers of the Mash-Up, where two or more songs are mixed together into a new track.
The Evolution of Cooperation The Evolution of Cooperation is a 1984 book and a 1981 article of the same title by political science professor Robert Axelrod. The nine-page article is currently one of the most cited articles ever to be published in the journal Science (it, Axelrod explores the conditions under which fundamentally selfish agents will spontaneously cooperate.
The Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920 The Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920 documents the historical formation and cultural foundations of the movement to conserve and protect America's natural heritage, through books, pamphlets, government documents, manuscripts, prints, photographs, and motion picture footage drawn from the collections of the Library of Congress.
The Ex (2006 film) The Ex is a 2006/2007 comedy film directed by Jesse Peretz and starring Zach Braff and Jason Bateman. The film had a limited release on December 29, 2006 under the original name Fast Track and a wide release is currently planned for March 9, 2007.
The Ex (song) The Ex was the second single released from the Canadian emocore music group Billy Talent's debut self-titled album. The Ex was the most popular single from the album in Great Britain, but is usually regarded as the least popular in North America.
The Excellent Dizzy Collection The Excellent Dizzy Collection is a video game compilation published by Codemasters in November 1993. The title includes three stand alone games, based on the video game character Dizzy created by the Oliver Twins.
The Excellent Prismatic Spray The Excellent Prismatic Spray is a magazine devoted to the Dying Earth role-playing game and Jack Vance. It is published intermittently by Pelgrane Press and is named for one of the spells used by various wizards in the Dying Earth stories.
The Excelsior (Hong Kong) The Excelsior (怡東酒店) is a hotel located at Lot No.1(which is at 281 Gloucester Road in Causeway Bay on Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong), which is the first plot of land sold at auction after Hong Kong became a British Colony in 1841Official website.
The Exception and the Rule The Exception and the Rule is a short play by famous German playwright Bertolt Brecht and is one of the many LehrstĂĽcke (Teaching plays) he wrote in his later life. The objective of Brecht's LehrstĂĽcke was that they be taken on tour and performed in schools or in factories to educate the masses about socialist politics.
The Exceptions The Exceptions is the team name chosen by a group of home computer loving european teenagers who started writing their own demonstration computer programs for the Atari ST computer in the 1980's. Their German demo group was usually known by the shortened form TEX.
The Executioner (book series) The Executioner is a paperback series of books (332 as of July, 2006) created and written by American author Don Pendleton in 1969 who would go on to write 37 more Bolan novels before he licensed the rights to Gold Eagle. The series involves the on-goings of twelve-year career Army Sergeant and Green Beret named Mack Bolan .
The Exercise Circus The Exercise Circus is the 11th episode in season 2 in the Barney and Friends television show which airs on PBS. The episode features Bob West as the voice of Barney, West was featured on the show from 1992 - 2001.
The Exodus The Exodus, (Hebrew: יצי×ת מצרים) more fully the Exodus of Israel out of Egypt, was the departure of the Hebrew slaves from Egypt under the leadership of Moses and Aaron as described in the biblical Book of Exodus. It forms the basis of the Jewish holiday of Passover.
The Exonerated The Exonerated is a film that dramatizes the stories of six people who had been wrongfully convicted of murder, but were later exonerated and freed after varying years of imprisonment, where many were subjected to further brutality and degradation. It was based on a play of the same name written by Eric Jensen and Jessica Blank and first aired on the CourtTV cable television network on January 27, 2005.
The Exorcism of Emily Rose The Exorcism of Emily Rose is a 2005 horror/thriller film directed by Scott Derrickson. The film is based on the true story of Anneliese Michel, a young Catholic woman from Germany who died in 1976 after unsuccessful attempts to cure her from the alleged state of demonic possession with the means of psychotropic drugs.
The Exorcist The Exorcist is a horror novel written by William Peter Blatty first published in 1971. It is based on a supposedly genuine 1949 exorcism Blatty heard about while he was a student in the class of 1950 at Georgetown University, a Jesuit and Catholic school.
The Exotic Enchanter The Enchanter Reborn is an anthology of four fantasy short stories edited by science fiction and fantasy authors L. Sprague de Camp and Christopher Stasheff, the second volume in their continuation of the classic Harold Shea series by de Camp and Fletcher Pratt.
The Expedition The Expedition is a live album released in 2000 by the power metal band Kamelot. The last three tracks are not live - "We Three Kings" and "One Day" are additional material from the Siege Perilous sessions, and "We Are Not Separate" is a re-recorded version of a song from the Dominion album.
The Experience Machine The Experience Machine is a short section of Anarchy, State, and Utopia published by Harvard University philosopher Robert Nozick. The text is one of the best known attempts at a refutation of ethical hedonism.
The Exploded View The Exploded View is a quartet of stories by Ivan Vladislavic. The stories revolve around four men in Johannesburg: a statistician employed on the national census, an engineer out on the town with his council connections, an artist with an interest in genocide, and a contractor who erects billboards on building sites; each tries to make sense of a changed world after the demise of apartheid.
The Exploits of Elaine The Exploits of Elaine is a 1914 film serial in the genre of The Perils of Pauline, and even outgrossed that serial in ticket sales. It tells the story of a young woman named Elaine who, with the help of a detective, tries to find the man, known only as "The Clutching Hand", who murdered her father.
The Express Line "The Express Line" is a comedic one act play by Tom Fitzpatrick III. It is set in a supermarket in "the present", and it concerns a battle of wills between a man (Fred), who wants to go through a nine item express line with eleven items in his cart, and a checker (Mabel) who refuses to bend the rules.
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals is a book by the British naturalist Charles Darwin published in 1872, on how animals and humans express and signal to others their emotions. It, along with his 1871 book The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex, was part of Darwin's attempt to address questions of human origins and human psychology using his theory of evolution by natural selection.
The Expulsion from the Garden of Eden (Masaccio) The Expulsion from the Garden of Eden (Italian: Cacciata dei progenitori dall'Eden) is a fresco by renowned early-Renaissance artist Masaccio. The fresco itself was painted on the wall of Brancacci Chapel, in the Santa Maria del Carmine church in Florence, Italy.
The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple is a painting by the Italian renaissance artist Raphael. It was painted between 1511 and 1512 as part of Raphael's commission to decorate with frescoes the rooms that are now known as the Stanze di Raffaello, in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican.
The Extended Phenotype The Extended Phenotype (subtitled "The Gene as the Unit of Selection" later "The Long Reach of the Gene") is a 1982 book by Richard Dawkins. A revised edition was published in 1999 with an afterword by the philosopher Daniel Dennett.
The Exterminator The Exterminator is a 1980 action movie directed by James Glickenhaus and starring Robert Ginty as John Eastman, aka 'The Exterminator', who takes out the street punks and those involved in organized crime when the law fails to do justice.
The Exterminators (comics) The Exterminators is a monthly comic book, published under the Vertigo imprint by DC Comics. The comic was created by writer Simon Oliver and artist Tony Moore and follows the employees of the Bug-Bee-Gone extermination company.
The Extinction Event The Extinction Event 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 Extra Girl The Extra Girl (1923) is a story of a small-town girl, Sue Graham (played by Mabel Normand) who comes to Hollywood to be in the pictures. This Mabel Normand vehicle, produced by Mack Sennett, followed earlier films about the film industry and also paved the way for later films about Hollywood, such as King Vidor’s Show People (1928).
The Extra Glenns The Extra Glenns are a band made up of Franklin Bruno of Nothing Painted Blue and John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats. They were something of an underground legend in the 90's, recording tracks for singles and some compilations.
The Extreme Right in Europe and the USA The Extreme Right in Europe and the USA is a book edited by Paul Hainsworth. It is a political science study of the extreme right politics in Western Europe with a chapter on the United States, and one on Eastern European developments.
The Extreme Scene The Extreme Scene is the first radio talk show dedicated specifically to extreme sports and action sports. The program, hosted by longtime KNBR producer Cyrus Saatsaz, former pro snowboarder Steve Blankenship, and pro surfer Omar Etcheverry (recent addition), airs Saturday evenings from 6-7 pm PT on KNBR 1050 AM (KTCT).
The Eye (2002 film) The Eye also known as Seeing Ghosts (Traditional Chinese: 見鬼; Simplified Chinese: č§é¬Ľ; pinyin: JiĂ n GuÇ; yale: Gin3 Gwai2) is an Asian horror film directed by The Pang Brothers, Danny Pang and Oxide Pang. It is currently being remade into a 2007 film starring Jessica Alba and Thomas Jane.
The Eye (Nabokov novel) The Eye (Sogliadatai), written in 1930, and translated into English by Dmitri Nabokov in 1965, is Vladimir Nabokov's fourth novel. At just over 100 pages it also his shortest novel and perhaps his least often read.
The Eye Creatures The Eye Creatures (also known as Attack of the Eye Creatures, or Attack of the the Eye Creatures from a production error) is a 1965 science-fiction film about an invasion of an unnamed American countryside by a flying saucer and its silent, shambling alien occupants. While the military ineptly attempts to stop the invasion, a group of young people, whose reports to the local police are dismissed as pranks or wild imagination, struggle to defend themselves against the menacing monsters.
The Eye of Argon The Eye of Argon (TEoA) is an infamously bad heroic fantasy novella, written in 1970 by Jim Theis and circulated anonymously in science fiction fandom since then. The story subsequently came into use as part of a common SF convention party game and is popularly known as "the worst science fiction story ever written".
The Eye of the World The Eye of the World (abbreviated as tEotW by fans) is the first book of The Wheel of Time fantasy series written by American author Robert Jordan. It was published by Tor Books and released on January 15, 1990.
The Eye of Texas The Eye of Texas is a television news music package composed by Dallas-based music production studio Loomis Productions. The name originates from the former nickname of Dallas television station KTVT, which since 1995 has been affiliated with CBS (before 1995, KTVT was an independent station and a superstation).
The Eyes of Darkness The Eyes of Darkness is a best-selling novel written by Dean Koontz, released in 1981. The book focuses on a mother who sets out on a quest to find out if her son truly did die one year ago, or if he was still alive - somewhere.
The Eyes of Nye The Eyes of Nye is a science program airing on public television in the United States and featuring Bill Nye. The show is more sophisticated than its predecessor Bill Nye the Science Guy as it is aimed more toward adults and teenagers than children.
The Eyes of the Overworld The Eyes of the Overworld is a fantasy fixup by Jack Vance published in 1966, the second in the Dying Earth series. It features a series of linked stories detailing the travails of the self-proclaimed Cugel the Clever.
The Eyre Affair The Eyre Affair, published in 2001, is the first novel published by Jasper Fforde. It is the story of literary detective Thursday Next's pursuit of a master criminal through an alternative 1985 and through the pages of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre.
The first big brother The first big brother (Imam Ali Community), (Persian: جمعیت امام علی , Jameeat-e-Imam Ali) is the first nonpartisan, studental NGO in Iran founded in 1999 and has its first official office in Sharif University in 2000.
The first four Sunni Caliphs and the Sunnah The Sunnah, the customs and practices of Muhammad, is a key source of Islamic law and morality. After Muhammad's death, controversies arose as to what constituted the Sunnah, and whether his successors were truly implementing the Sunnah.
The first game: December 18, 1921. Hungary - Poland 1-0 In the fall of 1918, when World War I came to an end, several Eastern European nations, including Poland, regained independence. Poland had been an ancient kingdom, which in the years 1772-1795 was partitioned by its three powerful neighbors - Russia, Habsburg Austria and Prussia (see: Partitions of Poland).
The first pilgrimage The first pilgrimage or Umrah Dhu'l-Qada was the first pilgrimage that the Muslim made after the Migration to Medina. It happened in on the morning of the fourth day of Dhu al-Qi'dah 7 AH, after the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah 6 AH.
The F***ing Fulfords The F***ing Fulfords is a documentary-style programme about Francis Fulford and his family. Fulford is the 24th in the line of his family to have inherited Great Fulford, an 800-year old crumbling manor in Dunsford, near Cheriton Bishop, Devon.
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