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Utah Education Network The Utah Education Network (UEN) is a not-for-profit consortium of higher and public education, libraries, state government and business. UEN’s high speed computer network connects Utah colleges and universities as well as the state’s school districts and libraries.
Utah Festival Opera The Utah Festival Opera (also known as the UFOC) is an opera company based in Logan, Utah. The company performs four works in repertory every July and August at the Ellen Eccles Theatre on Logan's Main Street.
Utah GLX Utah GLX was a project aimed at creating a fully open source basic hardware-accelerated 3D rendering for XFree86 and OpenGL before the introduction of the Direct Rendering Infrastructure in XFree86 version 4.0, which is what is used today.
Utah House of Representatives The Utah House of Representatives is the lower body of the Utah State Legislature. There are 75 Representatives, each of whom is elected from districts having approximately 22,064 to 23,888 residents, these districts are based on population figures from the U.
Utah Museum of Natural History The Utah Museum of Natural History in Salt Lake City shows exhibits of the Earth's natural wonders. The mission of the museum is to educate the public of science and the Earth, to preserve biological diversity, honor Utah's native cultures, and more.
Utah native plant society The Utah Native Plant Society is dedicated to the appreciation, preservation, conservation and responsible use of the native plant and plant communities found in the state of Utah and the Intermountain West. Our goal is to foster public recognition of the spectacularly diverse flora of the state--a natural treasure to be valued, respected and protected.
Utah Parks Company Utah Parks Company was a company located in Utah. A subsidiary of Union Pacific Railroad, this tourism company owned and operated restaurants, lodging, and bus tours in Bryce Canyon, Zion, and Grand Canyon National Parks and Cedar Breaks National Monument.
Utah Pride Festival The Utah Pride Celebration is a five-day festival held in downtown Salt Lake City in June, celebrating Utah's diversity and gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered populations. It includes the state’s second-largest parade In 2004] an estimated 50,000 people attended, the largest since the festival began in [[1977 when the "Salt Lake Coalition for Human Rights" sponsored a three day conference.
Utah Public Relations The Utah Valley PRSA, as well as theSLC PRSA are the only chapters of the Public Relations Society of America in Utah. The most prominent figures and issues that Public Relations pros deal with in the state are generally Christian and technology related.
Utah Railway The Utah Railway is a class 3 regional railroad serving the state of Utah. The Utah Railway Company was incorporated on January 24 1912, with the name of Utah Coal Railway Company, shortened to Utah Railway Company in May of the same year.
Utah Road 400 Road 400 (Cottonwood Canyon byway) connects the Page, Arizona area near Glen Canyon Dam via Utah Highway 89 with the hamlet of Tropic, Utah (from 89 via Utah Highway 12) near the entrance to Bryce Canyon National Park and traverses portions of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. (An alternate paved route via Highway 89 passes some distance to the west.
Utah Salt Ratz Utah Salt Ratz were an American soccer team, founded in 2003. The team was a member of the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, until 2004, when the then-new Real Salt Lake franchise joined Major League Soccer.
Utah Shakespearean Festival The Utah Shakespearean Festival is a festival of repertory productions of the works of William Shakespeare and other dramatists. The Festival is held during the summer and fall on the campus of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, Utah, within a day's drive of seven national parks and other attractions.
Utah Snowbears The Utah Snowbears were a basketball team in the revived American Basketball Association based in Taylorsville, Utah for the 2004-2005 season. The team played its home games in the Lifetime Activities Center on the Redwood Campus of Salt Lake Community College.
Utah State Route 111 Utah State Route 111 is a highway running from SR-201, in Magna (8400 South in Magna), to the New Bingham Highway (SR-48), east of Copperton. It is a main street through Magna, and mainly serves the westside population.
Utah State Route 128 Utah State Route 128 begins near Moab, Utah and follows the Colorado River almost to the Colorado state line before turning North and terminating at Interstate 70 near Cisco, Utah. SR 128 features famous scenery having served as backdrops for numerous western movies and commercials.
Utah State Route 171 Utah State Route 171 (or 3300 South and 3500 South) is a four lane (five counting center lane) city street running from SR-111 (8400 West) to the east Interstate 215 belt route. It is 3300 South from the east end to somewhere between 1000 West and Redwood Road.
Utah State Route 186 Utah State Route 186 is a six-lane road (seven including center lane) in Salt Lake County that goes from the east end of Interstate 80 to the Salt Lake City International Airport. Going northwestbound, it is known as Foothill Drive from Interstate 80 to Research Road, near the University of Utah.
Utah State Route 201 State Route 201 is a freeway/expressway located in Salt Lake County, Utah, United States. It begins at the intersection of 2100 South Street and State Street (US-89) in Salt Lake City and continues westward along 2100 South Street to 300 West Street as a four lane city street.
Utah State Route 275 Utah SR-275 is a state highway located entirely within central San Juan County, Utah. It runs 8-miles northwest, from the junction of Utah SR-95 (which is two-miles west of the Utah SR-95 and Utah SR-261 junction), to the east entrance of Natural Bridges National Monument.
Utah State Route 68 Utah State Route 68 starts in Davis County, westbound as 500 South in Bountiful, then turns southbound and turns into Redwood Road through Salt Lake County, and keeps southbound and enters Utah County as Camp Williams Road. Then it heads along the west coast of Utah Lake.
Utah State Route 71 Utah State Route 71 starts out on SR-186 (400 South) in Salt Lake City, heads southbound as 700 East until 4500 South (SR-266), where it dips southeasterly and turns southbound onto 900 East. It continues as 900 East until once again, it heads southwest to make 700 East again.
Utah System of Higher Education The Utah State Board of Regents was formed in 1969 as a governing body for the Utah System of Higher Education, made up of the College of Eastern Utah, Dixie State College of Utah, Salt Lake Community College, Snow College, Southern Utah University, the University of Utah, Utah College of Applied Technology, Utah State University, Utah Valley State College , and Weber State University.
Utah teapot The Utah teapot or Newell teapot is a 3D model which has become a standard reference object (and something of an in-joke) in the computer graphics community. It is a simple, round, solid, partially concave mathematical model of an ordinary teapot.
Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency The Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency (UTOPIA) is a consortium of 14 Utah cities engaged in deploying and operating a fiber to the premises network to every business and household (about 140,000) within its footprint. Using an active Ethernet infrastructure and operating at the wholesale level, it supports open access and promotes competition in all telecommunications services.
Utah Troubles Utah Troubles refers to a series of rebellions, reprisals, and occupations of the state of Utah by the US Army in the Timeline-191 alternate universe of Harry Turtledove's fiction novel. Starting with the Second Mexican War, detailed in How Few Remain, Mormon nationalist-theocrats attempt several times to secede Utah from the Union and form the Nation of Deseret.
Utah Valley State College Utah Valley State College or UVSC, is a publicly-funded college located in Orem, Utah. Although the college has many courses of study, including an increasing number of bachelor's degree programs, it still retains many of its trade/technical school roots.
Utah Valley Symphony The Utah Valley Symphony was organized in 1959 with about 30 members and an initial audience of eleven people (mostly relatives). Today the orchestra has grown to between 75 to 80 members and gives multiple performances to accommodate demand.
Utah War The Utah War was a 19th century armed conflict between Mormon settlers in Utah Territory and the United States federal government. From 1857 to 1858, the settlers and the government battled for hegemony over the culture and government of the territory.
Utah Warriors The Utah Warriors were a National Indoor Football League team that entered the league at the beginning of the 2003 season, but disbanded at the end of the 2004 season, so the franchise owners could prepare to launch an Arena Football League team in Salt Lake City for the 2006 season. The team played its home games at The E-Center in West Valley City.
Utah's 1st congressional district Utah District 1 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves the northwest area of Utah, including Ogden, Logan, Tooele, the northwest portion of Salt Lake City, and the entirety of the Great Salt Lake. The current Representative from District 1 is Republican Rob Bishop.
Utah's 2nd congressional district Utah District 2 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that currently serves the largely rural southern and eastern portions of Utah (including Saint George and Moab), as well as the east side of urban Salt Lake County and Wasatch County. The current Representative from District 2 is Democrat Jim Matheson.
Utah's 3rd congressional district Utah District 3 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that currently serves central and west central Utah, including nearly all of Utah County and the west side of Salt Lake County. The current Representative from District 3 is Republican Chris Cannon.
Utah-BYU rivalry Few rivalries in collegiate athletics can match the passion and intensity of the rivalry between the University of Utah and Brigham Young University ("BYU"). Through the years, the enmity between these two schools has become so deep that fans of either side are rarely willing to concede even the slightest point, as doing so would be a detriment to their own cause.
Utah/US Film Festival The Utah/US Film Festival was started in 1978 and eventually developed into the Sundance Film Festival. Started by Robert Redford and co-chair Charles Gary Allison, the goal of the festival was to showcase what the potential of independent film could be.
Utahraptor Utahraptor (meaning "Utah thief") is the largest known member of the theropod dinosaur family Dromaeosauridae, and dates from the upper Barremian stage of the Lower Cretaceous period (126 million years ago).
Utatsusaurus Utatsusaurus is the earliest-known form of an ichthyopterygian (the group of marine reptiles that includes the ichthyosaurs), inhabiting the Scythian stage of the middle Triassic period. Unlike the more advanced icthyosaurs, Utatsusaurus has no dorsal fin and has a broad skull that tapers slowly toward the snout.
Ute Geweniger Ute Geweniger (born February 24 1964 in Karl-Marx-Stadt, East Germany) was a breaststroke and medley swimmer of the 1980s who was a leading member of the East German swimming team. She won two Olympic gold medals, in the 100 m Breaststroke and 4x100 m medley relay at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and set seven individual and two relay world records.
Ute muster A Ute Muster is an Australian activity that embraces its large Ute culture in remote, flat, rural councils. The event is a type of festival whose premise is to bring as many utes (named after 'utility vehicles') to the one location as possible, and includes competitions and other side events.
Ute Mountain Ute Indian Reservation The Ute Mountain Ute Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation in southwestern Colorado, northwestern New Mexico, and southeastern Utah, USA. It is the smallest of three reservations that are the homeland to the Ute Tribe of Native Americans.
Ute Noack Ute Noack is a former East German cross country skier who competed during the 1980's. She won a bronze medal in the 4 x 5 km at the 1985 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Seefeld and also finished 11th in the 20 km event at those same championships.
Ute tribe The Utes (/juËts/; "yoots") are an ethnical related group of American Indians now living primarily in Utah and Colorado. There are three Ute tribal reservations: (1) Uintah-Ouray in northeastern Utah (3,500 members), (2) Southern Ute (1,500 members) and (3) Ute Mountain (2,000 members) — both in southwestern Colorado.
Uteck Bowl The Uteck Bowl is one of the two semifinals in Canadian Interuniversity Sport men's football, held in the easternmost of the two semifinal venues. The Uteck Bowl champion moves on to face the Mitchell Bowl champion for the Vanier Cup.
Utelle Utelle, roughly 40 miles northeast of Nice, in the Alpes-Maritimes département of southeastern France, is a village and commune of roughly 140 permanent residents, perched on a hill along the Vesubie Gorge, not far from the Mercantour National Park.
Utenzi Utenzi or utendĚ i is a form of narrative poetry in Swahili. Its name derives from the fact that it usually describes heroic deeds (utendi, meaning 'act' or 'deed', is derived from the Swahili verb ku-tenda 'to do').
Uterine Didelphys Uterine Didelphys is a rare type of deformity (1 in 1000 women) in the female reproductive organs in which some organs may be either split or duplicated. Typically, some of these "extra" organs are non-functional or semi-functional appendages, although on occasion they will be completely function in all normal respects, and often independently.
Uterine fibroids Uterine fibroids (leiomyomata, singular leiomyoma) are the most common neoplasm in females, and may affect about 25 % of white and 50% of black women during the reproductive years. Uterine Fibroids may be removed by NSAIDs, a hysterectomy, hormonal therapy, a myomectomy, or uterine artery embolization.
Uterine malformation A uterine malformation is the result of an abnormal development of the Mullerian duct(s) during embryogenesis. The range of impact reaches from amenorrhea, infertility, pain, to normal functioning depending on the nature of the defect.
Uterine sarcoma A uterine sarcoma is a malignant tumor that arises from the smooth muscle or connective tissue of the uterus. If the lesion originates from the stroma of the uterine lining it is an endometrial stromal sarcoma, and if the uterine muscle cell is the originator the tumor is a uterine leiomyosarcoma.
Uther Pendragon (band) Uther Pendragon was a San Francisco rock band from the late sixties and seventies. The band was made up four members: Bruce Marelich, lead guitar and singer and songwriter: Mark Lightcap, guitar, keyboards, singer and songwriter; Martin Espinosa, Bass Guitar, singer and songwriter; Michael Beers, Drummer, singer and songwriter.
Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas of the Banu Thaqif tribe was in the beginning one of chieftains of the city of Ta'if, a city hostile to Islam. However in 631 or 632, he was included in a delegation that resulted in his tribe accepting Islam.
Uthman Qur'an The Uthman Qur'an (also referred to as "Osman's Koran") is a manuscripted copy of the Qur'an considered to be the oldest in the world and said to still have a stain of blood from the assassination of the third Caliph, Uthman ibn Affan. Of the original Qur'an, only about one third now remains.
Uthyr of Gwynedd In the fictional universe of the Deryni novels of Katherine Kurtz, Uthyr Haldane was the seventeenth King of Gwynedd, reigning from 948 to 980. He was the twelfth member of the House of Haldane to sit upon the throne of Gwynedd, and the sixth consecutive Haldane king since the end of the Festillic Interregnum.
Uti possidetis Uti possidetis (Latin for "as you possess") is a principle in international law that territory and other property remains with its possessor at the end of a conflict, unless provided for by treaty. Originating in Roman law, this principle enables a belligerent party to claim territory that it has acquired by war.
Utian languages Utian (also Miwok-Costanoan, Mutsun) is a family of indigenous languages spoken in the central and north portion of California, United States. The Miwok and Ohlone peoples both spoke a language in the Utian linguistic group:
Utica Blue Sox The Utica Blue Sox were a minor league baseball team based in Utica, New York. In their most recent incarnation, the Blue Sox played in the Short-Season Class A New York - Penn League from 1977-2001, with their home games at Murnane Field.
Utica Psychiatric Center The Utica Psychiatric Center, which opened in Utica in 1843, was New York's first state-run facility designed to care for the mentally ill and was one of the first such institutions in the United States. Originally called the New York State Lunatic Asylum at Utica.
Utica, Illinois Tornado Outbreak The Utica Tornado of 2004 was a tornado that hit the town of Utica, Illinois in spring of 2004. It was part of an outbreak of thirty tornadoes that formed in eastern Iowa, northern Illinois and northern Indiana, but the Utica tornado was the only tornado in that outbreak that caused fatalities.
Utigurs The Utigur Bulgars or Hunno-Bulgars were a Bulgar tribe which in the 5th and 6th centuries are known to have inhabited the steppe north-east of the Black Sea and east the river Don. Earlier they represented the eastern half of Hun Empire and inhabited roughly the same area north of the Caucasus.
Utik Utik ( also known as Uti, Utiq, or Outi) was a historic province of Armenia located in part of present-day Azerbaijan immediately west of the Kura River. According to Anania Shirakatsi's Ashkharatsuyts ("Geography" 7th c.
Util The util (u; pronounced as it is spelled or alternatively with a hard I) is a theoretical unit of economic utility. The util is most often used for quantitative microeconomic reasoning, for example, an individual weighing distinct choices based on the expected utility of each choice.
Utilidors (Arctic towns) Utilidors are above-ground enclosed utility conduits that are used in larger communities in the northern polar region where permafrost does not allow the normal practice of burying water and sewer pipes underground. They can in particular be found in Inuvik, Northwest Territories and Iqaluit, Nunavut.
Utilisation In relation to access to health care services and in the terminology of Aday and Andersen, utilisation reflects the extent to which "potential access" is converted into "realised access" (Aday & Andersen, 1981).
Utilitarian bioethics Utilitarian Bioethics is a very controversial branch of Utilitarian ethics and bioethics that espouses directing medical resources where they will contribute most to the sum of the number of happy people in the world. It is implicitly used in some healthcare planning decisions, such as the use of Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs).
Utilitarianism (book) John Stuart Mill's book Utilitarianism is one of the most influential and widely-read philosophical defenses of utilitarianism in ethics. The essay first appeared as a series of three articles published in Fraser's Magazine in 1861; the articles were collected and reprinted as a single book in 1863.
Utilities of Seattle This is the main article on Utilities of Seattle. In Seattle, Washington, USA, water is furnished by Seattle Public Utilities (SPU), an agency of the city, which owns two water collection facilities--one in the Cedar River watershed, which primarily serves the city south of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, and the other in the Tolt River watershed, which primarily serves the city north of the canal.
Utility In economics, utility is a measure of the relative happiness or satisfaction (gratification) gained by consuming different bundles of goods and services. Given this measure, one may speak meaningfully of increasing or decreasing utility, and thereby explain economic behavior in terms of attempts to increase one's utility.
Utility bicycle A utility bicycle (aka city bicycle or a beater) is one which is designed for a practical purpose, as opposed to "sport bicycles" which are designed for recreation and competition, such as touring bicycles, racing bicycles and mountain bicycles.
Utility class In computer programming, a utility class is a class that defines a set of methods that perform common, often re-used functions. Most utility classes define these common methods under static (see Static variable) scope.
Utility cooperative A utility cooperative is a type of cooperative that is tasked with the delivery of a public utility such as electricity, water or telecommunications to its members. Profits are either reinvested for infrastructure or distributed to members in the form of "capital credits", essentially dividends paid on a member's investment into the cooperative.
Utility cycling Utility cycling encompasses any cycling not done primarily for fitness, recreation such as cycle touring, or sport such as cycle racing, but simply as a means of transport. It is the most common type of cycling in the world.
Utility Data Center The Utility Data Center, or UDC, is a product of Hewlett Packard. It was intended to be a combination of hardware and software to enable rapid deployment of virtualized resources, Virtual Networking, Virtual Storage, and Virtual servers.
Utility furniture Utility furniture refers to furniture produced in the United Kingdom during and just after during World War II, under a Government scheme which was designed to cope with shortages of raw materials and rationing of consumption. Introduced in 1942, the Utility Furniture Scheme continued into post-war austerity and lasted until 1952.
Utility infielder A utility infielder is a baseball player, usually someone who does not have a regular starting role on the team, who is capable of playing more than one of the four defensive infield positions: first base, second base, third base, and shortstop.
Utility model A utility model is an intellectual property right to protect inventions. This right is available in a number of national legislations, such as Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Chile, China, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Morocco, Poland, Portugal, South Korea, Spain and Taiwan.
Utility pole A utility pole, telegraph pole, telephone pole, power pole, or telegraph post is a post or pole upon which telephone network equipment is situated. Similar poles are often used for electricity cables (with pylons being used for only the higher voltage applications) and frequently a pole will share both power and communications lines.
Utility room A utility room is a room in a house, which is the descendant of the scullery. The utility room typically contains washing machine, tumble dryer, and other appliances which, in houses without such a room, would be in the kitchen or laundry.
Utility software Utility software (also known as service program, service routine, tool, or utility routine) is a type of computer software. It is specifically designed to help manage and tune the computer hardware, operating system or application software, and perform a single task or a small range of tasks; as opposed to application software which tend to be software suites.
Utility sound technician A utility sound technician, or simply utility or cableperson is an assistant to both the production sound mixer and the boom operator on a film set. Although sometimes the utility pulls cable, he or she is more than just a cableperson.
Utility station The term utility station is used to describe fixed radio broadcasters disseminating signals that are not intended for reception by the general public (but such members are not actively prohibited from receiving). Utility stations, as the name suggests, do broadcast signals that have an immediate practical use, by means of analog or usually digital modes; most often utility transmissions are of a "point-to-point" nature, intended for a specific receiving station.
Utility submeter Utility Submetering is the process in which a landlord, property management firm, condominium association, homeowner's association, and many other multi-tenant properties allow the tenant to pay for the utility usage. Usually, utility submetering is placed in situations were the local utility cannot or will not individually meter the utility in question.
Utility tunnel A utility tunnel is a subterranean space for wires, conduits, pipes, and other conveyances used in the delivery of utilities with enough room for a human to enter. Modern pipes and cables need less attention than older varieties, so the construction of utility tunnels has declined of late.
Utilization behavior Utilization behavior is a frontal lobe disorder in which the patient has difficulty resisting their impulse to "utilize" objects which are in their visual field and within reach. Unlike other impulse-control disorders, patients with this disorder confabulate reasons for their actions.
Utilization management Utilization management is the evaluation of the appropriateness, medical need and efficiency of health care services procedures and facilities according to established criteria or guidelines and under the provisions of an applicable health benefits plan. Typically it includes new activities or decisions based upon the analysis of a case.
Utilization review Utilization Review is the review of how certain medical services are requested and performed. The review typically involved pre-review, or pre-authorization; concurrent review, or inpatient evaluation of care and needs; and retrospective review, or the larger historical picture of how physicians, labs, or hospitals handle their patient populations.
Utisz Utisz (the Hungarian spelling of the Greek name "ουτις," or "OYTIΣ", pronounced: "outis") often used pseudonym of István Orosz Hungarian visual artist. The ancient Greek name means "Nobody".
Utkal University Utkal University, Bhubaneswar is the oldest university in Orissa and the seventeenth oldest university in India. It is a teaching-cum-affiliating University, that has produced some of the best brains in Orissa.
Utkirbek Haydarov Utkirbek Haydarov (born January 25, 1974) is an Uzbek boxer who competed in the Light Heavyweight (81kg) at the 2004 Summer Olympics and won the bronze medal. He also won the bronze medal at the 2005 World Amateur Boxing Championships in Mianyang, People's Republic of China after having won the world title six years earlier in Houston.
Utm theorem In computability theory the utm theorem or universal turing machine theorem is a basic result about Gödel numberings of the set of computable functions. It proves the existence of a computable universal function which is capable of calculating any other computable function.
Utman Khel The Utman Khel are a Pathan tribe who occupy the hills to the north of Peshawar in the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan. Their land lies between the Mohmands and the Ranizais of Swat, to the west and south-west of the junction of the Swat and Panjkora rivers.
Utmost Christian Poetry Contest The Utmost Christian Poetry Contest is an annual poetry contest sponsored by Utmost Christian Writers Foundation, a non-profit association registered in Edmonton, Alberta in 2003. The contest pays one of the largest cash prizes for poetry in Canada (about US$3200 in 2006).
Uto-Aztecan languages Uto-Aztecan (also Uto-Aztekan) is a Native American language family. It is one of the largest (both in geographical extension and number of languages) and most well-established linguistic families of the Americas.
Utopia (anarchist community) Utopia (sometimes known as Trialville) was an individualist anarchist colony begun in 1847, by Josiah Warren and associates, in the United States on a tract of land approximately 30 miles from Cincinnati, Ohio. Personal invitation from the first settlers was required for admission to the community, with Warren reasoning that the most valuable individual liberty was “the liberty to choose our associates at all times.
Utopia (Bioinformatics tools) UTOPIA (User Friendly Tools for OPerating Informatics Applications) is a suite of free tools for visualising and analysing bioinformatics data. Based on an ontology-driven data model, it contains applications for viewing and aligning protein sequences, rendering complex molecular structures in 3D, and for finding and using resources such as web services and data objects.
Utopia (Genetically Enriched) "Utopia (Genetically Enriched)" is a electronic song written by British group Goldfrapp for their debut studio album Felt Mountain (2000). The song was produced by Goldfrapp and received a positive reception from music critics.
Utopia (rock band) Utopia was a progressive rock band led by Todd Rundgren that was together roughly from 1973 to 1987. After two recorded live albums in 1974 and 1975, Utopia became a four-man-band that, like The Beatles, had members who all rotated lead vocals and writing credits, though Rundgren was the undisputed leader.
Utopia (song) "Utopia" is a electronic song written by British group Goldfrapp for their debut studio album Felt Mountain (2000). The song was produced by Goldfrapp and received a positive reception from music critics.
Utopia fm Utopia FM is the radio station based at the University of Sunderland in North East England. It began life in November 1997 as Radio Utopia a 2 week short term broadcast under the (then) Radio Authority's Restricted Service Licence (RSL) scheme.
Utopia Group Utopia Group SA is a Luxembourgian cinema chain that owns and operates cinemas located predominantly in Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. The company operates most of its cinemas under the brand name of Utopolis.
Utopia Pictures & Television Utopia Pictures & Television is a production company and film distributor whose credits include the three movies based off of the novel, Shiloh. In February 1, 2004, Variety announced that they had acquired the rights to produce three of Philip K.
Utah Festival Opera The Utah Festival Opera (also known as the UFOC) is an opera company based in Logan, Utah. The company performs four works in repertory every July and August at the Ellen Eccles Theatre on Logan's Main Street.
Utah GLX Utah GLX was a project aimed at creating a fully open source basic hardware-accelerated 3D rendering for XFree86 and OpenGL before the introduction of the Direct Rendering Infrastructure in XFree86 version 4.0, which is what is used today.
Utah House of Representatives The Utah House of Representatives is the lower body of the Utah State Legislature. There are 75 Representatives, each of whom is elected from districts having approximately 22,064 to 23,888 residents, these districts are based on population figures from the U.
Utah Museum of Natural History The Utah Museum of Natural History in Salt Lake City shows exhibits of the Earth's natural wonders. The mission of the museum is to educate the public of science and the Earth, to preserve biological diversity, honor Utah's native cultures, and more.
Utah native plant society The Utah Native Plant Society is dedicated to the appreciation, preservation, conservation and responsible use of the native plant and plant communities found in the state of Utah and the Intermountain West. Our goal is to foster public recognition of the spectacularly diverse flora of the state--a natural treasure to be valued, respected and protected.
Utah Parks Company Utah Parks Company was a company located in Utah. A subsidiary of Union Pacific Railroad, this tourism company owned and operated restaurants, lodging, and bus tours in Bryce Canyon, Zion, and Grand Canyon National Parks and Cedar Breaks National Monument.
Utah Pride Festival The Utah Pride Celebration is a five-day festival held in downtown Salt Lake City in June, celebrating Utah's diversity and gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered populations. It includes the state’s second-largest parade In 2004] an estimated 50,000 people attended, the largest since the festival began in [[1977 when the "Salt Lake Coalition for Human Rights" sponsored a three day conference.
Utah Public Relations The Utah Valley PRSA, as well as theSLC PRSA are the only chapters of the Public Relations Society of America in Utah. The most prominent figures and issues that Public Relations pros deal with in the state are generally Christian and technology related.
Utah Railway The Utah Railway is a class 3 regional railroad serving the state of Utah. The Utah Railway Company was incorporated on January 24 1912, with the name of Utah Coal Railway Company, shortened to Utah Railway Company in May of the same year.
Utah Road 400 Road 400 (Cottonwood Canyon byway) connects the Page, Arizona area near Glen Canyon Dam via Utah Highway 89 with the hamlet of Tropic, Utah (from 89 via Utah Highway 12) near the entrance to Bryce Canyon National Park and traverses portions of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. (An alternate paved route via Highway 89 passes some distance to the west.
Utah Salt Ratz Utah Salt Ratz were an American soccer team, founded in 2003. The team was a member of the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, until 2004, when the then-new Real Salt Lake franchise joined Major League Soccer.
Utah Shakespearean Festival The Utah Shakespearean Festival is a festival of repertory productions of the works of William Shakespeare and other dramatists. The Festival is held during the summer and fall on the campus of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, Utah, within a day's drive of seven national parks and other attractions.
Utah Snowbears The Utah Snowbears were a basketball team in the revived American Basketball Association based in Taylorsville, Utah for the 2004-2005 season. The team played its home games in the Lifetime Activities Center on the Redwood Campus of Salt Lake Community College.
Utah State Route 111 Utah State Route 111 is a highway running from SR-201, in Magna (8400 South in Magna), to the New Bingham Highway (SR-48), east of Copperton. It is a main street through Magna, and mainly serves the westside population.
Utah State Route 128 Utah State Route 128 begins near Moab, Utah and follows the Colorado River almost to the Colorado state line before turning North and terminating at Interstate 70 near Cisco, Utah. SR 128 features famous scenery having served as backdrops for numerous western movies and commercials.
Utah State Route 171 Utah State Route 171 (or 3300 South and 3500 South) is a four lane (five counting center lane) city street running from SR-111 (8400 West) to the east Interstate 215 belt route. It is 3300 South from the east end to somewhere between 1000 West and Redwood Road.
Utah State Route 186 Utah State Route 186 is a six-lane road (seven including center lane) in Salt Lake County that goes from the east end of Interstate 80 to the Salt Lake City International Airport. Going northwestbound, it is known as Foothill Drive from Interstate 80 to Research Road, near the University of Utah.
Utah State Route 201 State Route 201 is a freeway/expressway located in Salt Lake County, Utah, United States. It begins at the intersection of 2100 South Street and State Street (US-89) in Salt Lake City and continues westward along 2100 South Street to 300 West Street as a four lane city street.
Utah State Route 275 Utah SR-275 is a state highway located entirely within central San Juan County, Utah. It runs 8-miles northwest, from the junction of Utah SR-95 (which is two-miles west of the Utah SR-95 and Utah SR-261 junction), to the east entrance of Natural Bridges National Monument.
Utah State Route 68 Utah State Route 68 starts in Davis County, westbound as 500 South in Bountiful, then turns southbound and turns into Redwood Road through Salt Lake County, and keeps southbound and enters Utah County as Camp Williams Road. Then it heads along the west coast of Utah Lake.
Utah State Route 71 Utah State Route 71 starts out on SR-186 (400 South) in Salt Lake City, heads southbound as 700 East until 4500 South (SR-266), where it dips southeasterly and turns southbound onto 900 East. It continues as 900 East until once again, it heads southwest to make 700 East again.
Utah System of Higher Education The Utah State Board of Regents was formed in 1969 as a governing body for the Utah System of Higher Education, made up of the College of Eastern Utah, Dixie State College of Utah, Salt Lake Community College, Snow College, Southern Utah University, the University of Utah, Utah College of Applied Technology, Utah State University, Utah Valley State College , and Weber State University.
Utah teapot The Utah teapot or Newell teapot is a 3D model which has become a standard reference object (and something of an in-joke) in the computer graphics community. It is a simple, round, solid, partially concave mathematical model of an ordinary teapot.
Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency The Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency (UTOPIA) is a consortium of 14 Utah cities engaged in deploying and operating a fiber to the premises network to every business and household (about 140,000) within its footprint. Using an active Ethernet infrastructure and operating at the wholesale level, it supports open access and promotes competition in all telecommunications services.
Utah Troubles Utah Troubles refers to a series of rebellions, reprisals, and occupations of the state of Utah by the US Army in the Timeline-191 alternate universe of Harry Turtledove's fiction novel. Starting with the Second Mexican War, detailed in How Few Remain, Mormon nationalist-theocrats attempt several times to secede Utah from the Union and form the Nation of Deseret.
Utah Valley State College Utah Valley State College or UVSC, is a publicly-funded college located in Orem, Utah. Although the college has many courses of study, including an increasing number of bachelor's degree programs, it still retains many of its trade/technical school roots.
Utah Valley Symphony The Utah Valley Symphony was organized in 1959 with about 30 members and an initial audience of eleven people (mostly relatives). Today the orchestra has grown to between 75 to 80 members and gives multiple performances to accommodate demand.
Utah War The Utah War was a 19th century armed conflict between Mormon settlers in Utah Territory and the United States federal government. From 1857 to 1858, the settlers and the government battled for hegemony over the culture and government of the territory.
Utah Warriors The Utah Warriors were a National Indoor Football League team that entered the league at the beginning of the 2003 season, but disbanded at the end of the 2004 season, so the franchise owners could prepare to launch an Arena Football League team in Salt Lake City for the 2006 season. The team played its home games at The E-Center in West Valley City.
Utah's 1st congressional district Utah District 1 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves the northwest area of Utah, including Ogden, Logan, Tooele, the northwest portion of Salt Lake City, and the entirety of the Great Salt Lake. The current Representative from District 1 is Republican Rob Bishop.
Utah's 2nd congressional district Utah District 2 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that currently serves the largely rural southern and eastern portions of Utah (including Saint George and Moab), as well as the east side of urban Salt Lake County and Wasatch County. The current Representative from District 2 is Democrat Jim Matheson.
Utah's 3rd congressional district Utah District 3 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that currently serves central and west central Utah, including nearly all of Utah County and the west side of Salt Lake County. The current Representative from District 3 is Republican Chris Cannon.
Utah-BYU rivalry Few rivalries in collegiate athletics can match the passion and intensity of the rivalry between the University of Utah and Brigham Young University ("BYU"). Through the years, the enmity between these two schools has become so deep that fans of either side are rarely willing to concede even the slightest point, as doing so would be a detriment to their own cause.
Utah/US Film Festival The Utah/US Film Festival was started in 1978 and eventually developed into the Sundance Film Festival. Started by Robert Redford and co-chair Charles Gary Allison, the goal of the festival was to showcase what the potential of independent film could be.
Utahraptor Utahraptor (meaning "Utah thief") is the largest known member of the theropod dinosaur family Dromaeosauridae, and dates from the upper Barremian stage of the Lower Cretaceous period (126 million years ago).
Utatsusaurus Utatsusaurus is the earliest-known form of an ichthyopterygian (the group of marine reptiles that includes the ichthyosaurs), inhabiting the Scythian stage of the middle Triassic period. Unlike the more advanced icthyosaurs, Utatsusaurus has no dorsal fin and has a broad skull that tapers slowly toward the snout.
Ute Geweniger Ute Geweniger (born February 24 1964 in Karl-Marx-Stadt, East Germany) was a breaststroke and medley swimmer of the 1980s who was a leading member of the East German swimming team. She won two Olympic gold medals, in the 100 m Breaststroke and 4x100 m medley relay at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and set seven individual and two relay world records.
Ute muster A Ute Muster is an Australian activity that embraces its large Ute culture in remote, flat, rural councils. The event is a type of festival whose premise is to bring as many utes (named after 'utility vehicles') to the one location as possible, and includes competitions and other side events.
Ute Mountain Ute Indian Reservation The Ute Mountain Ute Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation in southwestern Colorado, northwestern New Mexico, and southeastern Utah, USA. It is the smallest of three reservations that are the homeland to the Ute Tribe of Native Americans.
Ute Noack Ute Noack is a former East German cross country skier who competed during the 1980's. She won a bronze medal in the 4 x 5 km at the 1985 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Seefeld and also finished 11th in the 20 km event at those same championships.
Ute tribe The Utes (/juËts/; "yoots") are an ethnical related group of American Indians now living primarily in Utah and Colorado. There are three Ute tribal reservations: (1) Uintah-Ouray in northeastern Utah (3,500 members), (2) Southern Ute (1,500 members) and (3) Ute Mountain (2,000 members) — both in southwestern Colorado.
Uteck Bowl The Uteck Bowl is one of the two semifinals in Canadian Interuniversity Sport men's football, held in the easternmost of the two semifinal venues. The Uteck Bowl champion moves on to face the Mitchell Bowl champion for the Vanier Cup.
Utelle Utelle, roughly 40 miles northeast of Nice, in the Alpes-Maritimes département of southeastern France, is a village and commune of roughly 140 permanent residents, perched on a hill along the Vesubie Gorge, not far from the Mercantour National Park.
Utenzi Utenzi or utendĚ i is a form of narrative poetry in Swahili. Its name derives from the fact that it usually describes heroic deeds (utendi, meaning 'act' or 'deed', is derived from the Swahili verb ku-tenda 'to do').
Uterine Didelphys Uterine Didelphys is a rare type of deformity (1 in 1000 women) in the female reproductive organs in which some organs may be either split or duplicated. Typically, some of these "extra" organs are non-functional or semi-functional appendages, although on occasion they will be completely function in all normal respects, and often independently.
Uterine fibroids Uterine fibroids (leiomyomata, singular leiomyoma) are the most common neoplasm in females, and may affect about 25 % of white and 50% of black women during the reproductive years. Uterine Fibroids may be removed by NSAIDs, a hysterectomy, hormonal therapy, a myomectomy, or uterine artery embolization.
Uterine malformation A uterine malformation is the result of an abnormal development of the Mullerian duct(s) during embryogenesis. The range of impact reaches from amenorrhea, infertility, pain, to normal functioning depending on the nature of the defect.
Uterine sarcoma A uterine sarcoma is a malignant tumor that arises from the smooth muscle or connective tissue of the uterus. If the lesion originates from the stroma of the uterine lining it is an endometrial stromal sarcoma, and if the uterine muscle cell is the originator the tumor is a uterine leiomyosarcoma.
Uther Pendragon (band) Uther Pendragon was a San Francisco rock band from the late sixties and seventies. The band was made up four members: Bruce Marelich, lead guitar and singer and songwriter: Mark Lightcap, guitar, keyboards, singer and songwriter; Martin Espinosa, Bass Guitar, singer and songwriter; Michael Beers, Drummer, singer and songwriter.
Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas of the Banu Thaqif tribe was in the beginning one of chieftains of the city of Ta'if, a city hostile to Islam. However in 631 or 632, he was included in a delegation that resulted in his tribe accepting Islam.
Uthman Qur'an The Uthman Qur'an (also referred to as "Osman's Koran") is a manuscripted copy of the Qur'an considered to be the oldest in the world and said to still have a stain of blood from the assassination of the third Caliph, Uthman ibn Affan. Of the original Qur'an, only about one third now remains.
Uthyr of Gwynedd In the fictional universe of the Deryni novels of Katherine Kurtz, Uthyr Haldane was the seventeenth King of Gwynedd, reigning from 948 to 980. He was the twelfth member of the House of Haldane to sit upon the throne of Gwynedd, and the sixth consecutive Haldane king since the end of the Festillic Interregnum.
Uti possidetis Uti possidetis (Latin for "as you possess") is a principle in international law that territory and other property remains with its possessor at the end of a conflict, unless provided for by treaty. Originating in Roman law, this principle enables a belligerent party to claim territory that it has acquired by war.
Utian languages Utian (also Miwok-Costanoan, Mutsun) is a family of indigenous languages spoken in the central and north portion of California, United States. The Miwok and Ohlone peoples both spoke a language in the Utian linguistic group:
Utica Blue Sox The Utica Blue Sox were a minor league baseball team based in Utica, New York. In their most recent incarnation, the Blue Sox played in the Short-Season Class A New York - Penn League from 1977-2001, with their home games at Murnane Field.
Utica Psychiatric Center The Utica Psychiatric Center, which opened in Utica in 1843, was New York's first state-run facility designed to care for the mentally ill and was one of the first such institutions in the United States. Originally called the New York State Lunatic Asylum at Utica.
Utica, Illinois Tornado Outbreak The Utica Tornado of 2004 was a tornado that hit the town of Utica, Illinois in spring of 2004. It was part of an outbreak of thirty tornadoes that formed in eastern Iowa, northern Illinois and northern Indiana, but the Utica tornado was the only tornado in that outbreak that caused fatalities.
Utigurs The Utigur Bulgars or Hunno-Bulgars were a Bulgar tribe which in the 5th and 6th centuries are known to have inhabited the steppe north-east of the Black Sea and east the river Don. Earlier they represented the eastern half of Hun Empire and inhabited roughly the same area north of the Caucasus.
Utik Utik ( also known as Uti, Utiq, or Outi) was a historic province of Armenia located in part of present-day Azerbaijan immediately west of the Kura River. According to Anania Shirakatsi's Ashkharatsuyts ("Geography" 7th c.
Util The util (u; pronounced as it is spelled or alternatively with a hard I) is a theoretical unit of economic utility. The util is most often used for quantitative microeconomic reasoning, for example, an individual weighing distinct choices based on the expected utility of each choice.
Utilidors (Arctic towns) Utilidors are above-ground enclosed utility conduits that are used in larger communities in the northern polar region where permafrost does not allow the normal practice of burying water and sewer pipes underground. They can in particular be found in Inuvik, Northwest Territories and Iqaluit, Nunavut.
Utilisation In relation to access to health care services and in the terminology of Aday and Andersen, utilisation reflects the extent to which "potential access" is converted into "realised access" (Aday & Andersen, 1981).
Utilitarian bioethics Utilitarian Bioethics is a very controversial branch of Utilitarian ethics and bioethics that espouses directing medical resources where they will contribute most to the sum of the number of happy people in the world. It is implicitly used in some healthcare planning decisions, such as the use of Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs).
Utilitarianism (book) John Stuart Mill's book Utilitarianism is one of the most influential and widely-read philosophical defenses of utilitarianism in ethics. The essay first appeared as a series of three articles published in Fraser's Magazine in 1861; the articles were collected and reprinted as a single book in 1863.
Utilities of Seattle This is the main article on Utilities of Seattle. In Seattle, Washington, USA, water is furnished by Seattle Public Utilities (SPU), an agency of the city, which owns two water collection facilities--one in the Cedar River watershed, which primarily serves the city south of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, and the other in the Tolt River watershed, which primarily serves the city north of the canal.
Utility In economics, utility is a measure of the relative happiness or satisfaction (gratification) gained by consuming different bundles of goods and services. Given this measure, one may speak meaningfully of increasing or decreasing utility, and thereby explain economic behavior in terms of attempts to increase one's utility.
Utility bicycle A utility bicycle (aka city bicycle or a beater) is one which is designed for a practical purpose, as opposed to "sport bicycles" which are designed for recreation and competition, such as touring bicycles, racing bicycles and mountain bicycles.
Utility class In computer programming, a utility class is a class that defines a set of methods that perform common, often re-used functions. Most utility classes define these common methods under static (see Static variable) scope.
Utility cooperative A utility cooperative is a type of cooperative that is tasked with the delivery of a public utility such as electricity, water or telecommunications to its members. Profits are either reinvested for infrastructure or distributed to members in the form of "capital credits", essentially dividends paid on a member's investment into the cooperative.
Utility cycling Utility cycling encompasses any cycling not done primarily for fitness, recreation such as cycle touring, or sport such as cycle racing, but simply as a means of transport. It is the most common type of cycling in the world.
Utility Data Center The Utility Data Center, or UDC, is a product of Hewlett Packard. It was intended to be a combination of hardware and software to enable rapid deployment of virtualized resources, Virtual Networking, Virtual Storage, and Virtual servers.
Utility furniture Utility furniture refers to furniture produced in the United Kingdom during and just after during World War II, under a Government scheme which was designed to cope with shortages of raw materials and rationing of consumption. Introduced in 1942, the Utility Furniture Scheme continued into post-war austerity and lasted until 1952.
Utility infielder A utility infielder is a baseball player, usually someone who does not have a regular starting role on the team, who is capable of playing more than one of the four defensive infield positions: first base, second base, third base, and shortstop.
Utility model A utility model is an intellectual property right to protect inventions. This right is available in a number of national legislations, such as Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Chile, China, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Morocco, Poland, Portugal, South Korea, Spain and Taiwan.
Utility pole A utility pole, telegraph pole, telephone pole, power pole, or telegraph post is a post or pole upon which telephone network equipment is situated. Similar poles are often used for electricity cables (with pylons being used for only the higher voltage applications) and frequently a pole will share both power and communications lines.
Utility room A utility room is a room in a house, which is the descendant of the scullery. The utility room typically contains washing machine, tumble dryer, and other appliances which, in houses without such a room, would be in the kitchen or laundry.
Utility software Utility software (also known as service program, service routine, tool, or utility routine) is a type of computer software. It is specifically designed to help manage and tune the computer hardware, operating system or application software, and perform a single task or a small range of tasks; as opposed to application software which tend to be software suites.
Utility sound technician A utility sound technician, or simply utility or cableperson is an assistant to both the production sound mixer and the boom operator on a film set. Although sometimes the utility pulls cable, he or she is more than just a cableperson.
Utility station The term utility station is used to describe fixed radio broadcasters disseminating signals that are not intended for reception by the general public (but such members are not actively prohibited from receiving). Utility stations, as the name suggests, do broadcast signals that have an immediate practical use, by means of analog or usually digital modes; most often utility transmissions are of a "point-to-point" nature, intended for a specific receiving station.
Utility submeter Utility Submetering is the process in which a landlord, property management firm, condominium association, homeowner's association, and many other multi-tenant properties allow the tenant to pay for the utility usage. Usually, utility submetering is placed in situations were the local utility cannot or will not individually meter the utility in question.
Utility tunnel A utility tunnel is a subterranean space for wires, conduits, pipes, and other conveyances used in the delivery of utilities with enough room for a human to enter. Modern pipes and cables need less attention than older varieties, so the construction of utility tunnels has declined of late.
Utilization behavior Utilization behavior is a frontal lobe disorder in which the patient has difficulty resisting their impulse to "utilize" objects which are in their visual field and within reach. Unlike other impulse-control disorders, patients with this disorder confabulate reasons for their actions.
Utilization management Utilization management is the evaluation of the appropriateness, medical need and efficiency of health care services procedures and facilities according to established criteria or guidelines and under the provisions of an applicable health benefits plan. Typically it includes new activities or decisions based upon the analysis of a case.
Utilization review Utilization Review is the review of how certain medical services are requested and performed. The review typically involved pre-review, or pre-authorization; concurrent review, or inpatient evaluation of care and needs; and retrospective review, or the larger historical picture of how physicians, labs, or hospitals handle their patient populations.
Utisz Utisz (the Hungarian spelling of the Greek name "ουτις," or "OYTIΣ", pronounced: "outis") often used pseudonym of István Orosz Hungarian visual artist. The ancient Greek name means "Nobody".
Utkal University Utkal University, Bhubaneswar is the oldest university in Orissa and the seventeenth oldest university in India. It is a teaching-cum-affiliating University, that has produced some of the best brains in Orissa.
Utkirbek Haydarov Utkirbek Haydarov (born January 25, 1974) is an Uzbek boxer who competed in the Light Heavyweight (81kg) at the 2004 Summer Olympics and won the bronze medal. He also won the bronze medal at the 2005 World Amateur Boxing Championships in Mianyang, People's Republic of China after having won the world title six years earlier in Houston.
Utm theorem In computability theory the utm theorem or universal turing machine theorem is a basic result about Gödel numberings of the set of computable functions. It proves the existence of a computable universal function which is capable of calculating any other computable function.
Utman Khel The Utman Khel are a Pathan tribe who occupy the hills to the north of Peshawar in the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan. Their land lies between the Mohmands and the Ranizais of Swat, to the west and south-west of the junction of the Swat and Panjkora rivers.
Utmost Christian Poetry Contest The Utmost Christian Poetry Contest is an annual poetry contest sponsored by Utmost Christian Writers Foundation, a non-profit association registered in Edmonton, Alberta in 2003. The contest pays one of the largest cash prizes for poetry in Canada (about US$3200 in 2006).
Uto-Aztecan languages Uto-Aztecan (also Uto-Aztekan) is a Native American language family. It is one of the largest (both in geographical extension and number of languages) and most well-established linguistic families of the Americas.
Utopia (anarchist community) Utopia (sometimes known as Trialville) was an individualist anarchist colony begun in 1847, by Josiah Warren and associates, in the United States on a tract of land approximately 30 miles from Cincinnati, Ohio. Personal invitation from the first settlers was required for admission to the community, with Warren reasoning that the most valuable individual liberty was “the liberty to choose our associates at all times.
Utopia (Bioinformatics tools) UTOPIA (User Friendly Tools for OPerating Informatics Applications) is a suite of free tools for visualising and analysing bioinformatics data. Based on an ontology-driven data model, it contains applications for viewing and aligning protein sequences, rendering complex molecular structures in 3D, and for finding and using resources such as web services and data objects.
Utopia (Genetically Enriched) "Utopia (Genetically Enriched)" is a electronic song written by British group Goldfrapp for their debut studio album Felt Mountain (2000). The song was produced by Goldfrapp and received a positive reception from music critics.
Utopia (rock band) Utopia was a progressive rock band led by Todd Rundgren that was together roughly from 1973 to 1987. After two recorded live albums in 1974 and 1975, Utopia became a four-man-band that, like The Beatles, had members who all rotated lead vocals and writing credits, though Rundgren was the undisputed leader.
Utopia (song) "Utopia" is a electronic song written by British group Goldfrapp for their debut studio album Felt Mountain (2000). The song was produced by Goldfrapp and received a positive reception from music critics.
Utopia fm Utopia FM is the radio station based at the University of Sunderland in North East England. It began life in November 1997 as Radio Utopia a 2 week short term broadcast under the (then) Radio Authority's Restricted Service Licence (RSL) scheme.
Utopia Group Utopia Group SA is a Luxembourgian cinema chain that owns and operates cinemas located predominantly in Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. The company operates most of its cinemas under the brand name of Utopolis.
Utopia Pictures & Television Utopia Pictures & Television is a production company and film distributor whose credits include the three movies based off of the novel, Shiloh. In February 1, 2004, Variety announced that they had acquired the rights to produce three of Philip K.
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