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  2. Ray-Ban Stories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray-Ban_Stories

    Ray-Ban Stories are the latest in a line of smartglasses released by major companies including Snap Inc and Google and are designed as one component of Facebook’s plans for a metaverse. [2] Unlike other smart glasses, the Ray-Ban Stories do not include any HUD or AR head-mounted display. On September 27, 2023, Meta removed the "Stories" name ...

  3. Ray-Ban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray-Ban

    Ray-Ban is a brand of luxury sunglasses and eyeglasses created in 1936 by Bausch & Lomb. The brand is best known for its Wayfarer and Aviator lines of sunglasses. In 1999, Bausch & Lomb sold the brand to Italian eyewear conglomerate Luxottica Group for a reported $640 million.

  4. Speed (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_(novel)

    Speed is an autobiographical novel about the ins and outs of the life of a methamphetamine addict. [1] It starts out with Burroughs in his grandmother's house in Florida and moves to the streets of New York. It is written in the straight narrative style. Throughout the book the life of the speed addict is explored and the stories of how ...

  5. The Lovin' Spoonful's drug bust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lovin'_Spoonful's_drug...

    The Berkeley Barb was the first to cover the bust, placing a story on its front page in February 1967. Loughborough led efforts to boycott the band. [35] In July, he took out a one-page ad in the Los Angeles Free Press which related the story, called for readers to destroy their Lovin' Spoonful records and avoid their concerts and urged female ...

  6. Dopesick (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dopesick_(book)

    Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America is a 2018 non-fiction book by American author Beth Macy.The book covers the origin and evolution of the opioid epidemic in the United States beginning primarily with the 1996 release of the drug OxyContin, and examines its effects on small town America and the Appalachian region in particular.

  7. Physicians' Desk Reference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physicians'_Desk_Reference

    The Physicians' Desk Reference was first published in 1947 by Medical Economics Inc., a magazine publisher founded by Lansing Chapman. [2] Medical Economics Inc. merged with Reinhold Publishing in 1966 to form Chapman-Reinhold. [3] Litton Industries, which owned the American Book Company, acquired Chapman-Reinhold in 1968. [4]

  8. Lists of banned books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_banned_books

    Book burning. List of book-burning incidents. Nazi book burnings. Burning of books and burying of scholars. Areopagitica; A speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc'd Printing, to the Parlament of England. Index Librorum Prohibitorum. List of most commonly challenged books in the United States.

  9. Glasses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasses

    Reading glasses are available without prescription from drugstores, and offer a cheap, practical solution, though these have a pair of simple lenses of equal power, and so will not correct refraction problems like astigmatism or refractive or prismatic variations between the left and right eye. For the total correction of the individual's sight ...