Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There were two teams comprising two contestants each; two celebrity guests formed the "Brain" portion (hosted by Davis) and two other contestants formed the "Brawn" portion (hosted by Lescoulie). The complex structure of the show puzzled audiences and sponsors (it ran as a sustaining program) and was cancelled after just three or four months.
[1] [2] The series started by the book, the "Brain & Brawn Ship series", is sometimes called the "Ship Who Sang series". [3] [4] [5] The protagonist of the 1969 novel and all the early stories is a cyborg, Helva, a human being and a spaceship, or "brainship". The five older stories are revised under their original titles as the first five ...
In the first verse, the two of them converse, which leads to the old man saying, "God is great, beer is good / And people are crazy." They continue to converse throughout the second verse as well, with the old man hinting that he is terminally ill with a smoking-related illness, before parting ways in the bridge. In the third verse, the old man ...
Harvard transfer and defensive lineman Jacob Sykes came to UCLA looking for a new system at a higher level and has bolstered the Bruins' interior defense.
The Takbir, the Arabic phrase "Allāhu Akbar", often translated as "God is Great" God Is Great and I'm Not ( Dieu est grand, je suis toute petite ), a 2001 French film God is Great (no. 2) , a 1991 sculpture by John Latham
The Great God Brown is a play by Eugene O'Neill, first staged in 1926. O'Neill began writing notes for the play in 1922 – "Play of masks – removable – the man who really is and the mask he wears before the world" [ 1 ] – and wrote the play between January and March 1925. [ 2 ]
Oxford University Press’s word of 2024 was “brain rot.”The year also gave us a flurry of TikToks documenting “bed rotting.” What's with all this rotting — and is it a trend we should ...
Leibniz claims that God's choice is caused not only by its being the most reasonable, but also by God's perfect goodness, a traditional claim about God which Leibniz accepted. [2] [b] As Leibniz says in §55, God's goodness causes him to produce the best world. Hence, the best possible world, or "greatest good" as Leibniz called it in this work ...