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1979 in television - 1960s

A Wisdom Archive on 1979 in television - 1960s

1979 in television - 1960s

A selection of articles related to 1979 in television - 1960s

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1979 in television - 1960...
1979 in television, 1979 in television - 1940s, 1979 in television - 1950s, 1979 in television - 1960s, 1979 in television - 1970s, 1979 in television - Births, 1979 in television - Deaths, 1979 in television - Debuts, 1979 in television - Ending this year, 1979 in television - Events, 1979 in television - Miniseries, 1979 in television - Television shows

ARTICLES RELATED TO 1979 in television - 1960s

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Doctor Who spin-offs - Comics

Comic strip adventures of the Doctor appeared almost from the beginning of the television series, first in the 1960s publication TV Comic, and during the 1970s in the mainly Gerry Anderson related comic Countdown. The two comics later merged to become TV Action plus Countdown, where the strip continued to be featured. A comic strip also regularly appeared in the pages of Doctor Who Magazine. This began in its first issue in 1979, and the magazine continued to be published despite the programme ceasing produ ...

See also:

Doctor Who spin-offs, Doctor Who spin-offs - Overview, Doctor Who spin-offs - Novelisations, Doctor Who spin-offs - Original fiction, Doctor Who spin-offs - Novellas, Doctor Who spin-offs - Comics, Doctor Who spin-offs - Television, Doctor Who spin-offs - Video, Doctor Who spin-offs - Audio, Doctor Who spin-offs - Webcasts, Doctor Who spin-offs - Merchandise

Read more here: » Doctor Who spin-offs: Encyclopedia II - Doctor Who spin-offs - Comics

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - High-definition television - Early systems

High-definition television - SECAM 755i. When Europe resumed TV transmissions after WWII, i.e. in the late 1940s and early 1950s, different countries used different resolutions. The UK used 405 lines, most other countries 625 lines (both numbers include the vertical gap, the actual resolution were lower), but France decided in 1948 to go for 819 lines. The French TV system thus became the world's first HDTV system, and by today's standards, the French system could be called 755i (not all lines could be used for t ...

See also:

High-definition television, High-definition television - Notation, High-definition television - Standard resolutions, High-definition television - Standard frame or field rates, High-definition television - Comparison to SDTV, High-definition television - Close-up view, High-definition television - Format considerations, High-definition television - Technical details, High-definition television - Advantages of HD TV technology expressed in non-engineering terms, High-definition television - Stereoscopic 3D television is far more practical with HD technology, High-definition television - Early systems, High-definition television - SECAM 755i, High-definition television - MUSE, High-definition television - HD-MAC, High-definition television - Contemporary systems, High-definition television - Australia, High-definition television - Brazil, High-definition television - Canada, High-definition television - Europe, High-definition television - Japan, High-definition television - Republic of Korea, High-definition television - Mexico, High-definition television - United States, High-definition television - Recording compression and prerecorded media, High-definition television - Future media, High-definition television - Table of terrestrial HDTV transmission systems

Read more here: » High-definition television: Encyclopedia II - High-definition television - Early systems

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Bruce Forsyth - Life history

He was born Bruce Joseph Forsyth-Johnson in Edmonton, North London, into a Salvation Army family who owned a local garage. He attended The Latymer School in Edmonton and started in showbusiness aged 14, with a song, dance, and ukulele act called "Boy Bruce, the mighty atom". Bruce made his television debut in 1939 when a child, singing and dancing on a talent show introduced by Jasmine Bligh (This was probably an episode of "Come and be Televised" (BBC, 1939), broadcast from Radiolympia). He spent many years performing on stage, with little success; he travelled the UK working seven days a we ...

See also:

Bruce Forsyth, Bruce Forsyth - Life history, Bruce Forsyth - Catch phrases, Bruce Forsyth - Film

Read more here: » Bruce Forsyth: Encyclopedia II - Bruce Forsyth - Life history

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Bee Gees - 1960s in England

Very soon after their arrival in January 1967, the Bee Gees were signed by Robert Stigwood, and added Australian musicians Vince Melouney (guitar) and former child actor Colin Petersen (drums). Their first single recorded in England was "New York Mining Disaster 1941" (1967), a surreal, haunting and macabre song that made the Top 20 on both sides of the Atlantic. Their album "Bee Gees' First" scored well with critics and the public, offering an innovative blend of rock and orchestral ballads such as the classics ...

See also:

Bee Gees, Bee Gees - Early history, Bee Gees - 1960s in England, Bee Gees - 1970s: Saturday Night Fever, Bee Gees - 1980s and 1990s, Bee Gees - Later years, Bee Gees - Current news, Bee Gees - Awards and success, Bee Gees - Original Albums, Bee Gees - Compilations, Bee Gees - International Hit Singles, Bee Gees - Band, Bee Gees - Parodies of the Bee Gees

Read more here: » Bee Gees: Encyclopedia II - Bee Gees - 1960s in England

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Stop motion - History

Stop motion animation is almost as old as film-making itself. The first instance of the technique can be credited to Albert E. Smith and J. Stuart Blackman for The Humpty Dumpty Circus (1898), in which a toy circus of acrobats and animals comes to life. The Haunted Hotel (1907) is another stop motion film by James Stuart Blackton, and was a resounding success when released. Segundo de Chomons (1871-1929), from Spain, released Hotel Electrico later that same year, and used similar techniques as the Blackton film. The earliest clay animation film was ...

See also:

Stop motion, Stop motion - History, Stop motion - Current Work, Stop motion - Software, Stop motion - Compare with, Stop motion - Stop Motion Movies

Read more here: » Stop motion: Encyclopedia II - Stop motion - History

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - TV-FM DX - Meteor scatter propagation

Meteor scatter occurs when a signal bounces off a meteor's ionised trail. When a meteor strikes the Earth's atmosphere, a cylindrical region of free electrons is formed at the height of the E layer. This slender, ionised column is relatively long, and when first formed is sufficiently dense to reflect and scatter television and radio signals, generally from 25 MHz upwards through UHF TV, back to Earth. Consequently an incident television or radio signal is capable of being reflected up to distances approaching that of conventiona ...

See also:

TV-FM DX, TV-FM DX - History, TV-FM DX - Tropospheric propagation, TV-FM DX - Tropospheric ducting, TV-FM DX - Notable tropospheric DX receptions, TV-FM DX - Sporadic E propagation E-skip, TV-FM DX - Equatorial E-skip, TV-FM DX - Notable Sporadic E DX receptions, TV-FM DX - F2 propagation F2-skip, TV-FM DX - Notable F2 DX receptions, TV-FM DX - Transequatorial propagation TEP, TV-FM DX - Afternoon TEP, TV-FM DX - Evening TEP, TV-FM DX - Earth–Moon–Earth EME propagation Moonbounce, TV-FM DX - Notable Earth-Moon-Earth EME DX receptions, TV-FM DX - Auroral propagation, TV-FM DX - Meteor scatter propagation, TV-FM DX - Satellite TVRO UHF TV DX, TV-FM DX - Notable Satellite TVRO UHF TV DX receptions

Read more here: » TV-FM DX: Encyclopedia II - TV-FM DX - Meteor scatter propagation

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia - Michelle Phillips

Michelle Phillips (born June 4, 1944) is an American singer and actress. She was born Holly Michelle Gilliam in Long Beach, California. She gained fame as a member of the popular 1960s singing group The Mamas & the Papas. Michelle Phillips - Beginnings. Michelle Gilliam married John Phillips on December 31, 1962, when she was 18 years of age. She helped him co-write some of the band's most popular hits, including Creeque Alley and California Dreamin'. They later had one child togeth ...

Including:

Read more here: » Michelle Phillips: Encyclopedia - Michelle Phillips

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Tangerine Dream - History

Edgar Froese arrived in West Berlin in the mid-1960s to study art. He worked as a sculptor and studied under Salvador Dalí, among others. His first band, the R&B-styled The Ones, was gradually dismantled after releasing only one single, and Froese turned to experimentation, playing minor gigs with a variety of musicians. Most of these gigs were in the famous Zodiac nightclub, although Froese's band was also invited to play for his former teacher Dalí. Music was mixed with literature, painting, early forms of multimedia, and more ...

See also:

Tangerine Dream, Tangerine Dream - History, Tangerine Dream - Discography, Tangerine Dream - Studio albums, Tangerine Dream - Soundtrack albums, Tangerine Dream - Live recordings, Tangerine Dream - The Bootmoon Series, Tangerine Dream - Compilations remixes

Read more here: » Tangerine Dream: Encyclopedia II - Tangerine Dream - History

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - London in film - 20th Century

Edwardian London has been depicted in several films, notably the Ealing comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets in 1949, the Merchant Ivory E.M. Forster adaptation Howards End (1992) and the biopic Young Winston (1972). Wartime London has featured in many films, with The Man Who Loved Redheads and Zeppelin (1971) among those set during the First World War. The 1943 film The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp covered 40 years in the city, including the Edwardian era, the First World War and the Second Wor ...

See also:

London in film, London in film - Historical London, London in film - Pre-Victorian London, London in film - Victorian London, London in film - 20th Century, London in film - Ealing Comedies, London in film - Swinging London, London in film - Romantic London, London in film - Thrillers, London in film - London Underground, London in film - Science fiction, London in film - Criminals, London in film - The other side of London, London in film - Kids London, London in film - Musical London

Read more here: » London in film: Encyclopedia II - London in film - 20th Century

1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Guiding Light - Cast

Guiding Light - Current cast members. Scott Bailey (Sandy Foster) (2003-present) Neal Bledsoe (Quinn Matthews) (2005-present) Rob Bogue (A.C. Mallet #2) (2005-present) Mandy Bruno (Marina Cooper #6) (2003-present) Crystal Chappell (Olivia Spencer Lewis Spaulding Spaulding Lewis) (1999-present) Bradley Cole (Jeffrey O'Neill) (2003-present) Justin Deas (Buzz Cooper) (1993-present) Michael Dempsey (Alan-Michael Spaulding #4) (2005-present)

  • See also:

    Guiding Light, Guiding Light - Radio, Guiding Light - Major characters, Guiding Light - Plot development, Guiding Light - 1950s, Guiding Light - Major characters, Guiding Light - Plot development, Guiding Light - 1960s, Guiding Light - Major characters, Guiding Light - Plot development, Guiding Light - 1970s, Guiding Light - Major characters, Guiding Light - Plot development, Guiding Light - 1980s, Guiding Light - Major characters, Guiding Light - Plot development, Guiding Light - 1990s, Guiding Light - 2000s, Guiding Light - Trivia, Guiding Light - Day-Behind airings, Guiding Light - Cast, Guiding Light - Current cast members, Guiding Light - Recurring cast members, Guiding Light - Coming and going cast members, Guiding Light - Head writers and executive producers

    Read more here: » Guiding Light: Encyclopedia II - Guiding Light - Cast

  • 1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - 1970s - Social movements

    1970s - Environmentalism. The seventies touched off a mainstream affirmation of the environmental issues early activists from the '60s, such as Rachel Carson, warned about. The moon landing that had occurred at the end of the previous decade transmitted back concrete images of the earth as an integrated, life-supporting system and shaped a public willingness to preserve nature. On April 22, 1970, the United States celebrated its first Earth Day in which over two thousand colleges and universities and roughly ten thousand p ...

    See also:

    1970s, 1970s - Worldwide trends in the Seventies, 1970s - Economy of the Seventies, 1970s - Oil crisis, 1970s - Social movements, 1970s - Environmentalism, 1970s - Feminism, 1970s - Gay rights, 1970s - Culture during the Seventies, 1970s - Emerging social perspectives in the Seventies, 1970s - The Seventies in music, 1970s - The Seventies in cinema, 1970s - The Seventies in television, 1970s - The Seventies in literature, 1970s - The Seventies in architecture, 1970s - The Seventies in science and philosophy, 1970s - The Seventies in sports, 1970s - The Seventies in technology, 1970s - National issues, 1970s - In the Middle East, 1970s - In Africa, 1970s - In India and Pakistan, 1970s - In Southeast Asia, 1970s - In Japan, 1970s - In the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, 1970s - In the United States, 1970s - In the United Kingdom

    Read more here: » 1970s: Encyclopedia II - 1970s - Social movements

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Animation

    Animation is the technique in which each frame of a film is produced individually, whether generated as a computer graphic, or by photographing a drawn image, or by repeatedly making small changes to a model unit (see claymation and stop motion), and then photographing the result with a special animation camera. When the frames are strung together and the resulting film is viewed at a speed of 16 or more frames per second, there is an illusion of continuous movement (due to the persistence of vision). Generating such a film is very labour intens ...

    See also:

    Film industry, Film industry - History of film, Film industry - Origins of motion picture arts and sciences, Film industry - Protean developments, Film industry - The silent era, Film industry - The Sound Era & The Golden Age of Hollywood, Film industry - The 1940s: the war and post-war years, Film industry - The 1950s: Widescreen 70mm Stereo and even 3D, Film industry - The 1960s, Film industry - The 1970s, Film industry - The '80s: sequels blockbusters and videotape, Film industry - The Digital Age, Film industry - The '90s and new Millenium: technical advances, Film industry - Film theory, Film industry - History, Film industry - Specific theories styles and movements in film, Film industry - Film criticism, Film industry - The motion picture industry, Film industry - Stages of filmmaking, Film industry - Development, Film industry - Preproduction, Film industry - Production, Film industry - Post-production, Film industry - Distribution, Film industry - Film crew, Film industry - Production Team, Film industry - Primary Production Artists, Film industry - Camera and lighting, Film industry - Production sound, Film industry - Postproduction picture, Film industry - Postproduction sound, Film industry - Independent filmmaking, Film industry - Animation, Film industry - Film venues, Film industry - Development of film technology, Film industry - Endurance of films, Film industry - Wikibooks, Film industry - Basic types of film, Film industry - Lists, Film industry - Other

    Read more here: » Film industry: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Animation

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Guiding Light - History

    The series was created by Irna Phillips, who based it on personal experiences. After giving birth to a still-born baby at age 19, she found spiritual comfort listening to sermons by a preacher of a church centered on the brotherhood of man. It was these sermons that formed the nucleus of the creation of The Guiding Light. Guiding Light - The radio years. The radio show's original storyline centered around a preacher named Rev. John Ruthledge (Arthur Peterson, Jr.) and all the people of a fictional s ...

    See also:

    Guiding Light, Guiding Light - History, Guiding Light - The radio years, Guiding Light - Early years on television, Guiding Light - 1960s, Guiding Light - 1970s, Guiding Light - 1980s, Guiding Light - 1990s, Guiding Light - 2000s, Guiding Light - Trivia, Guiding Light - Day-Behind airings, Guiding Light - Cast, Guiding Light - Current cast members, Guiding Light - Recurring cast members, Guiding Light - Coming and going cast members, Guiding Light - Head writers and executive producers

    Read more here: » Guiding Light: Encyclopedia II - Guiding Light - History

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - London in film - Criminals

    Historic periods in the city's underworld have been portrayed in a small number of films. Examples include Where's Jack? (17th century), The First Great Train Robbery (Victorian era), Chicago Joe and the Showgirl (World War II) and The Krays (the 1960s), while 10 Rillington Place (1971) recreated 1940s London, filming in the actual street where John Christie carried out his infamous murders. Other films have evoked London's underworld in the modern era, including Robbery (1967), Villain ...

    See also:

    London in film, London in film - Historical London, London in film - Pre-Victorian London, London in film - Victorian London, London in film - 20th Century, London in film - Ealing Comedies, London in film - Swinging London, London in film - Romantic London, London in film - Thrillers, London in film - London Underground, London in film - Science fiction, London in film - Criminals, London in film - The other side of London, London in film - Kids London, London in film - Musical London

    Read more here: » London in film: Encyclopedia II - London in film - Criminals

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Film theory

    Film theory seeks to develop concise, systematic concepts that apply to the study of film/cinema as art. Classical film theory provides a structural framework to address classical issues of techniques, narrativity, diegesis, cinematic codes, "the image", genre, subjectivity, and authorship. More recent analysis has given rise to psychoanalytical film theory, structuralist film theory, feminist film theory and others. Film industry - History. The Italian futurist Ricciotto Canudo (1879-1923) is considered t ...

    See also:

    Film industry, Film industry - History of film, Film industry - Origins of motion picture arts and sciences, Film industry - Protean developments, Film industry - The silent era, Film industry - The Sound Era & The Golden Age of Hollywood, Film industry - The 1940s: the war and post-war years, Film industry - The 1950s: Widescreen 70mm Stereo and even 3D, Film industry - The 1960s, Film industry - The 1970s, Film industry - The '80s: sequels blockbusters and videotape, Film industry - The Digital Age, Film industry - The '90s and new Millenium: technical advances, Film industry - Film theory, Film industry - History, Film industry - Specific theories styles and movements in film, Film industry - Film criticism, Film industry - The motion picture industry, Film industry - Stages of filmmaking, Film industry - Development, Film industry - Preproduction, Film industry - Production, Film industry - Post-production, Film industry - Distribution, Film industry - Film crew, Film industry - Production Team, Film industry - Primary Production Artists, Film industry - Camera and lighting, Film industry - Production sound, Film industry - Postproduction picture, Film industry - Postproduction sound, Film industry - Independent filmmaking, Film industry - Animation, Film industry - Film venues, Film industry - Development of film technology, Film industry - Endurance of films, Film industry - Wikibooks, Film industry - Basic types of film, Film industry - Lists, Film industry - Other

    Read more here: » Film industry: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Film theory

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Development of film technology

    Filmstock consists of a transparent celluloid, polyester, or other plastic base coated with an emulsion containing light-sensitive chemicals. Cellulose nitrate was the first type of film base used to record motion pictures, but due to its flammability was eventually replaced by safer materials. Stock widths and the film format for images on the reel have had a rich history, though most large commercial films ...

    See also:

    Film industry, Film industry - History of film, Film industry - Origins of motion picture arts and sciences, Film industry - Protean developments, Film industry - The silent era, Film industry - The Sound Era & The Golden Age of Hollywood, Film industry - The 1940s: the war and post-war years, Film industry - The 1950s: Widescreen 70mm Stereo and even 3D, Film industry - The 1960s, Film industry - The 1970s, Film industry - The '80s: sequels blockbusters and videotape, Film industry - The Digital Age, Film industry - The '90s and new Millenium: technical advances, Film industry - Film theory, Film industry - History, Film industry - Specific theories styles and movements in film, Film industry - Film criticism, Film industry - The motion picture industry, Film industry - Stages of filmmaking, Film industry - Development, Film industry - Preproduction, Film industry - Production, Film industry - Post-production, Film industry - Distribution, Film industry - Film crew, Film industry - Production Team, Film industry - Primary Production Artists, Film industry - Camera and lighting, Film industry - Production sound, Film industry - Postproduction picture, Film industry - Postproduction sound, Film industry - Independent filmmaking, Film industry - Animation, Film industry - Film venues, Film industry - Development of film technology, Film industry - Endurance of films, Film industry - Wikibooks, Film industry - Basic types of film, Film industry - Lists, Film industry - Other

    Read more here: » Film industry: Encyclopedia II - Film industry - Development of film technology

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Immanuel Velikovsky - Biography

    Immanuel Velikovsky was born in Vitebsk in what is today Belarus. He learned several languages as a child, performed exceptionally well in Russian and mathematics at the Medvednikov Gymnasium after moving to Moscow, and graduated with a gold medal in 1913. He then travelled to Europe, visiting Palestine, briefly studying medicine at Montpellier, France, and taking premedical courses at the University of Edinburgh. Having returned to Russia before the outbreak of World War I, Velikovsky enrolled in the University of Moscow and received ...

    See also:

    Immanuel Velikovsky, Immanuel Velikovsky - Biography, Immanuel Velikovsky - Velikovsky's Theories, Immanuel Velikovsky - The Revised Chronology, Immanuel Velikovsky - Criticism, Immanuel Velikovsky - Books by Velikovsky, Immanuel Velikovsky - Organisations sympathetic to Velikovsky's work:

    Read more here: » Immanuel Velikovsky: Encyclopedia II - Immanuel Velikovsky - Biography

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Winnipeg Manitoba - Famous Winnipegers

    Winnipeg Manitoba - Born in Winnipeg. Randy Bachman, musician, (The Guess Who) & Bachman-Turner Overdrive (BTO) Ashleigh Banfield, TV actress, TV host Cordell Barker, Oscar nominated animator The Cat Came Back Brenda Barrie, novelist and poet Burton Cummings, musician, (The Guess Who) Len Cariou, actor Bill Cody, actor Richard Condie, Oscar nominated animator The Big Snit Dionisio, Ma-Anne, lead role of Kim in Miss Saigon in Toronto ...

    See also:

    Winnipeg Manitoba, Winnipeg Manitoba - History, Winnipeg Manitoba - Geography and Climate, Winnipeg Manitoba - Government, Winnipeg Manitoba - Unicity, Winnipeg Manitoba - Demographics, Winnipeg Manitoba - Visible minorities, Winnipeg Manitoba - Religious affiliation, Winnipeg Manitoba - Languages Spoken, Winnipeg Manitoba - External links, Winnipeg Manitoba - Education, Winnipeg Manitoba - Higher Education, Winnipeg Manitoba - Workforce and industry, Winnipeg Manitoba - Large corporations based in Winnipeg, Winnipeg Manitoba - Transportation, Winnipeg Manitoba - Winnipeg International Airport, Winnipeg Manitoba - Railways, Winnipeg Manitoba - Bus Terminal, Winnipeg Manitoba - Winnipeg Transit, Winnipeg Manitoba - External links, Winnipeg Manitoba - Crime, Winnipeg Manitoba - Politics, Winnipeg Manitoba - Sports, Winnipeg Manitoba - Current professional franchises, Winnipeg Manitoba - Arts and culture, Winnipeg Manitoba - Festivals, Winnipeg Manitoba - Museums, Winnipeg Manitoba - Theatre Companies, Winnipeg Manitoba - Architecture, Winnipeg Manitoba - Local media, Winnipeg Manitoba - Daily newspapers, Winnipeg Manitoba - Ethnic media, Winnipeg Manitoba - Weekly newspapers, Winnipeg Manitoba - Magazines, Winnipeg Manitoba - Websites, Winnipeg Manitoba - Television stations, Winnipeg Manitoba - Locally based national cable television channels, Winnipeg Manitoba - Radio stations, Winnipeg Manitoba - Famous Winnipegers, Winnipeg Manitoba - Born in Winnipeg, Winnipeg Manitoba - Winnie-the-Pooh, Winnipeg Manitoba - Raised but not born in Winnipeg, Winnipeg Manitoba - Achieved fame while living in Winnipeg, Winnipeg Manitoba - Twinnings, Winnipeg Manitoba - Neighbouring communities

    Read more here: » Winnipeg Manitoba: Encyclopedia II - Winnipeg Manitoba - Famous Winnipegers

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - Sex Pistols - Influences and Legacy

    The Sex Pistols remain influential, however, both for their musical style and in terms of their influence on the British cultural landscape. Whereas previous challenges to the class system, and to the post-war British ethos of uncomplaining sacrifice, had come mainly from within, such as from the public school and Oxbridge dominated satire boom of the late 1960s and early '70s (including the Monty Python troupe), or from the social-realist novels and theatre of the 1950s and early '60s, the Pistols communicated directly with a much wider, more vernacular audience and, to some ...

    See also:

    Sex Pistols, Sex Pistols - Origins and Early Days, Sex Pistols - EMI and the Grundy Incident, Sex Pistols - Sid Vicious and God Save the Queen, Sex Pistols - Never Mind the Bollocks, Sex Pistols - Last UK gig and 1978 US Tour, Sex Pistols - Post Sex Pistols, Sex Pistols - Influences and Legacy, Sex Pistols - Members, Sex Pistols - Discography, Sex Pistols - Albums, Sex Pistols - Vicious Solo album, Sex Pistols - Hit singles, Sex Pistols - References and further reading, Sex Pistols - Films

    Read more here: » Sex Pistols: Encyclopedia II - Sex Pistols - Influences and Legacy

    1979 in television - 1960s: Encyclopedia II - University of Southern California - Overview

    Founded in 1880 as a Methodist University, on land donated by three wealthy Los Angeles residents, it has grown to international prominence. The university opened with an enrollment of 53 students and a faculty of 10. Its first graduating class in 1884 was a class of three - two males and a female valedictorian. The University is no longer a Methodist institution, having ended formal ties with the church se ...

    See also:

    University of Southern California, University of Southern California - Overview, University of Southern California - The University Park Campus, University of Southern California - Demographics, University of Southern California - Academics, University of Southern California - Academic Subdivisions, University of Southern California - Athletics, University of Southern California - Men's NCAA National Title, University of Southern California - Women's NCAA National Title, University of Southern California - Club sports, University of Southern California - The Marching Band, University of Southern California - Tradition, University of Southern California - Trophies, University of Southern California - Administration, University of Southern California - Student Government, University of Southern California - Campus Renovations, University of Southern California - Notable alumni faculty and students, University of Southern California - Trivia

    Read more here: » University of Southern California: Encyclopedia II - University of Southern California - Overview

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