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The Evening Star is a 1996 American comedy drama film directed by Robert Harling, adapted from the 1992 novel by Larry McMurtry. It is a sequel to the Academy Award -winning 1983 film Terms of Endearment starring Shirley MacLaine , who reprises the role of Aurora Greenway, for which she won an Oscar in the original film.
By 1900, Del Ray contained approximately 130 people, and St. Elmo's 55. In 1908, the tracts of Del Ray, St. Elmo's, Mt. Ida, and Hume Springs were incorporated into the town of Potomac, which by 1910 had a population of 599; by 1920 it contained 1,000; by 1928 it had 2,355 residents. Now more than 20,000 people live in Del Ray. [84]
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The Evening Star is a 1992 American novel by Larry McMurtry. It follows on from Terms of Endearment. The novel was filmed in 1996. McMurtry called the book "my none too good sequel to Terms of Endearment and had a heart attack while writing it. However he was able to finish the novel before having heart surgery. [1]
The Evening Star, a 1996 sequel to the film Terms of Endearment; Evening Star (Fripp & Eno album), 1975; Evening Star (Joshua Breakstone album), 1988 "Evening Star" (Kenny Rogers song), 1984 "Evening Star" (Judas Priest song), from their 1978 album Killing Machine "Evening Star", a song from the 1967 album For All the Seasons of Your Mind by ...
So on November 13, 1959, [7] WVEC-TV moved to its current location on VHF channel 13. Two years later, the channel 15 position would be occupied by current PBS member station WHRO-TV. In 1980, Chisman sold the station to Corinthian Broadcasting, [8] a unit of Dun & Bradstreet. At the time of the sale, it was the last locally owned and operated ...
WSLS-TV (channel 10) is a television station licensed to Roanoke, Virginia, United States, serving the Roanoke–Lynchburg market as an affiliate of NBC.Owned by Graham Media Group, the station maintains studios on Fifth Street in Roanoke, and its transmitter is located on Poor Mountain in Roanoke County.
The Washington Star, previously known as the Washington Star-News and the Washington Evening Star, was a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C., between 1852 and 1981. The Sunday edition was known as the Sunday Star. [1] The paper was renamed several times before becoming Washington Star by the late 1970s.