Course No. 146 By Seth / SETI Institute Shostak (Author)
Our Place in the Cosmos Aliens in the Neighborhood - Fiction and Fact Prospects for Life in the Solar System - Mars, Europa, Titan Other Worlds - The Search for Habitable Planets Interstellar Travel and Colonization Why aren't the Aliens Everywhere Why UFOs are Bunk What is E.T. Made Of Alien Appearance and Motivation - Can Science Tell us Anything Searching for E.T - Modern Techniques Estimating the Number of Civilizations - The Drake Equation
Helps to understand the role and importance of CVs and learn how to analyze and present your transferable skills. This title also helps you to plan and target your career search and develop a CV that offers you the best opportunity of obtaining...
Post-Pop Cinema - The Search for Meaning in New American Film
Starting in the early 1990s, artists such as Quentin Tarantino, David Foster Wallace, and Kurt Cobain contributed to a swelling cultural tide of pop postmodernism that swept through music, film, literature, and fashion. In cinema in particular, some of the art's most fundamental aspects--stories, characters, and genres, for instance--assumed such a trite and trivialized appearance that only rarely could they take their places on the screen without provoking an inward smirk or a wink from the audience.
Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.37 | Fiction literature | 27 December 2010
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The Little Sister
The Little Sister is a 1949 novel by Raymond Chandler, the fifth in his popular Philip Marlowe series. The story opens when mousy Orfamay Quest first phones and then visits Philip Marlowe's office in search of a detective. Orfamay is a "small, neat, rather prissy-looking girl with primly smooth brown hair and rimless glasses" from Manhattan, Kansas who has come to Los Angeles to search for her older brother Orrin.
Join Jasper, the leprechaun and his friend Liam, and visit magic Rainbow Land. With them the angry villagers search for gold, but in the end they find something much more valuable.