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Pierre Marteau
Pierre Marteau (French for Peter Hammer), was the imprint of a supposed publishing house. Allegedly located in Cologne from the 17th century onward, contemporaries were well aware that such a publishing house never actually existed -
List of banned films
Template:Articleissues Society General Erotican Child Nude Leverkusen in Germany nearly the entire history of film for pornography production, certain films have been either boychildernscotted by political and religious groups or literally banned by a -
First Amendment to the United States Constitution
Template:US Constitution article series Template:Redirect The First Amendment to the United States Constitution is a part of the United States Bill of Rights that expressly prohibits the United States Congress from making laws -
South African Broadcasting Corporation
Template:Infobox Network The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) is the state-owned broadcaster in South Africa and provides 18 radio stations (AM/FM) as well as 4 television broadcasts to the general public. Radio -
Freedom of speech in the United States
Freedom of speech in the United States is protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and by many state constitutions and state and federal laws. Criticism of the government and advocation of -
History of the World Wide Web
Template:Unreferenced The World Wide Web ("WWW" or simply the "Web") is a global information medium which users can read and write via computers connected to the Internet. The term is often mistakenly used as -
Eyes Wide Shut
Template:Infobox Film Eyes Wide Shut is a 1999 drama-mystery-thriller film directed, produced, and co-written by Stanley Kubrick, based on the novella Traumnovelle (in English Dream Story) by Arthur Schnitzler. It was -
United States Motion Picture Production Code of 1930
The Production Code (also known as the Hays Code) was the set of industry censorship guidelines governing the production of United States motion pictures. The Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors Association (MPPDA), which later became -
Samizdat
Template:Alternateuses Template:Russianterm Samizdat (Template:Lang-ru) was the clandestine copying and distribution of government-suppressed literature or other media in Soviet-bloc countries. Copies were made a few at a time, and those -
Man with a Movie Camera
Template:Infobox Film Man with a Movie Camera, sometimes The Man with the Movie Camera, The Man with a Camera, The Man With the Kinocamera, or Living Russia (Template:Lang-ru, Chelovek s kino-apparatom -
M (1931 film)
Template:About Template:Infobox Film M is a 1931 German drama-thriller directed by Fritz Lang and written by Lang and his wife Thea von Harbou. It was Lang's first sound film, although he -
Shannon–Hartley theorem
In information theory, the Shannon–Hartley theorem is an application of the noisy channel coding theorem to the archetypal case of a continuous-time analog communications channel subject to Gaussian noise. The theorem establishes Shannon -
Cultural schema theory
Template:Orphan Cultural Schema Theory (Nishida, 1999) explains the familiar and pre-acquainted knowledge one uses when entering a familiar situation in his/her own culture. Cultural schemas for social interaction are cognitive structures that -
Spectral efficiency
Spectral efficiency, spectrum efficiency or bandwidth efficiency refers to the amount of information that can be transmitted over a given bandwidth in a specific communication system. It is a measure of how efficiently a limited -
Frank Harris
Frank Harris (February 14, 1856 – August 27, 1931) was a naturalised American author of British origin, editor, journalist and publisher who was friendly with many well-known figures of his day. Though he attracted much -
Child Bride
Template:Seealso Template:Infobox Film Child Bride, also known as Child Bride of the Ozarks, Child Brides (USA reissue title) and Dust to Dust (USA reissue title), is a 1938 film directed by Harry Revier -
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923 film)
Template:Infobox Film The 1923 film version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, starring Lon Chaney as Quasimodo and Patsy Ruth Miller as Esmeralda, and directed by Wallace Worsley, is one of the more famous -
Licensing Order of 1643
The Licensing Order of 1643 instituted prepublication censorship upon Parliamentary England. Milton's Areopagitica was written specifically against this Act. Parliament abolished the Star Chamber in July 1641, which led to the de facto cessation -
Charles Molloy
and The Coquet, or, The English Chevalier (1718) had three-night runs, but The Half Pay Officer (1720) was a success. It ran for seven nights on its initial run and was revived several times -
The Offenders
The Offenders is a melodrama filmed in the town of Randolph, Vermont, in 1921 directed by Fenwick L. Holmes. The plot is that a woman has been accused of murder, and the (singular) witness is -
The Seventh Bullet
and The Bodyguard, The Seventh Bullet is set after the Russian Civil War which ended in the 1920s when Soviet power established itself in Central Asia in the wake of the Basmachi rebellion. Despite this -
Transceiver
between transmit and receive functions, the device is a transmitter-receiver. The term originated in the early 1920s. Technically, transceivers must combine a significant amount of the transmitter and receiver handling circuitry. Similar devices include
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Downton Abbey is a British period drama set in the fictional Downton Abbey, Yorkshire, country house of the Earl and Countess of Grantham, and follows the lives of the aristocratic Crawley family and their servants. It begins in pre World War…