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Zoey 101
Zoey 101 is an American live-action situation comedy television show that debuted on January 9, 2005. It stars Jamie Lynn Spears as the title character, who is one of the first girls to attend Pacific Coast Academy (PCA) a previously an all boy boarding school, her younger brother Dustin (Paul Butcher) also attends the school. In the first season, Zoey Brooks (Jamie Lynn Spears) has two roommates that have complete opposite personalities there is: Dana Cruz (Kristin Herrera) she is unafraid of defending herself and somewhat conceited and Nicole Bristow (Alexa Nikolas). Zoey is left to play peacemaker between them. One of her best friends is Chase Matthews (Sean Flynn-Amir), who secretly loves Zoey but lacks confidence to express his feelings. His roommate and good friend is Michael Barrett (Christopher Massey) who likes to play basketball and is very energetic and outgoing. Another character, roommate to Chase and Michael, is Logan Reese (Matthew Underwood): overconfident, rich and self-absorbed. Quinn Pensky (Erin Sanders) is highly skilled in Science.

July 13th 2007
Harry Potter and the Order of the Pheonix

Dumbledore's Army Members
Harry Potter (D.A. leader/teacher)-- served in battle Ron Weasley (co-founder/adjutant) -- served in battle Hermione Granger (co-founder/adjutant) -- served in battle Hannah Abbott Lavender Brown Katie Bell Susan Bones Terry Boot Cho Chang (came up with abbreviation "D.A."; wanted it to stand for "Defence Association") Michael Corner Colin Creevey Dennis Creevey Marietta Edgecombe (betrayed the D.A., triggering Hermione's hex) Justin Finch-Fletchley Seamus Finnigan (attended the last meeting, but didn't sign the parchment) Anthony Goldstein Angelina Johnson (her suggestion for the group name was "The Anti-Umbridge League") Lee Jordan Neville Longbottom -- served in battle Luna Lovegood -- served in battle Ernie Macmillan Padma Patil Parvati Patil Zacharias Smith Alicia Spinnet Dean Thomas Fred Weasley (suggested name "Ministry of Magic are Morons Group") George Weasley (suggested name "Ministry of Magic are Morons Group") Ginny Weasley (conceived the idea of having "D.A." stand for "Dumbledore's Army") -- served in battle

Life With Derek
The MacDonalds

Casey,Nora & Lizzie

Joy Tanner as Nora MacDonald Ashley Leggat as Casey MacDonald Jordan Todosey as Lizzie MacDonald The Venturis

Derek,Edwin,George & Marti

John Ralston as George Venturi Michael Seater as Derek Venturi Daniel Magder as Edwin Venturi Ariel Waller as Marti Venturi Friends Shadia Simmons as Emily Davis, Casey's best friend, has a crush on Derek and kissed Derek once. Arnold Pinnock as Paul Creepy, Casey's guidance counsellor Kit Weyman as Sam, Derek's best friend, also Casey's ex-boyfriend Recurring Characters William Greenblatt as Sheldon Schlepper Lauren Collins as Kendra (Derek's girlfriend) Relatives of Casey Sarah Gadon as Vicki (Cousin) Tara Manuel Rigal as Fiona (Aunt) Rick Roberts as Dennis (former husband of Nora/Father) [Relatives of Derek Abby (former wife of George/Mom) [edit]Guest Stars Ryan Cooley as Frank Shane Kippel as Ralph Alex House as Trevor Robbie Amell as Max Keir Gilchrist as Jamie Hannah Lochner as Michelle Kate Todd as Jennifer

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Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about the book. For the character, see Half-Blood Prince (character). For the film, see Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (film). Harry Potter Books

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Author	J.K. Rowling Illustrator	Jason Cockcroft (UK), Mary GrandPré (US) Genre	Fiction Publisher	Bloomsbury (UK), Scholastic (US) Release date	16 July 2005 Number in series	Six Sales	15.6 Million (US) as of December 2006 [1] Dedicated to	"Mackenzie, my beautiful daughter, I dedicate her ink-and-paper twin" Story timeline	1996-1997 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, released on July 16, 2005, is the sixth novel in J. K. Rowling's popular Harry Potter series. There are seven novels planned. Set during Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts, the novel explores Lord Voldemort's past, and Harry's preparations for the final battle amidst emerging romantic relationships. In 24 hours, the book sold 6.9 million copies in the United States alone, or 287,564 books per hour, making it the fastest selling book in recent history. It generated over $100 million in sales on its opening weekend, outpacing even the combined take of the top movies at the box office that same weekend. Bookseller Barnes and Noble reported sales averaging 105 copies per second in the first hour of sales. It is dedicated to Rowling's daughter Mackenzie. Contents [hide] 1 Plot Synopsis 2 Controversies 2.1 Right to read 2.2 Environmental concerns 3 Other 3.1 Fan reaction 3.2 Dedication 3.3 Movie release date 3.4 Spoilers 3.5 Text changes 3.6 Translations 3.7 Editions 4 References 5 External Links [edit]Plot Synopsis

Wikibooks Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter has a page on the topic of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince opens in the summer of 1996 and with a darker mood than the previous books. Voldemort and his "Death Eaters" are openly wreaking chaos and paranoia throughout Britain and recruit the Dementors, who abandon Azkaban Prison. Following public outcry over Cornelius Fudge's mishandling of the Voldemort situation, Rufus Scrimgeour becomes the new Minister for Magic. This is a positive move for the Weasley family, as Arthur receives a promotion that improves the family's financial situation. One evening at his home, Severus Snape receives a visit from Draco Malfoy's mother Narcissa and her sister, Bellatrix Lestrange. Narcissa swears Snape to an Unbreakable Vow ensuring he will protect Draco and, should Draco fail, complete the mission which he has been assigned. Due to the increased Death Eater activity, security measures are increased at Hogwarts. Snape is given his coveted Defence Against the Dark Arts post while Albus Dumbledore, with help from Harry Potter, persuades Horace Slughorn to return from retirement to replace Snape as Potions teacher. Because Slughorn only requires a minimum of an "E" grade ("Exceeds Expectations") in O.W.L. exams in order to take his advanced N.E.W.T. Potion classes, Harry and Ron Weasley are able to sign up. Slughorn lends Harry an old textbook marked as the property of "The Half-Blood Prince." The talented former owner's handwritten notes help Harry outperform even Hermione Granger. As a reward, Slughorn gives Harry a vial of Felix Felicis, a good luck potion. When Harry hears a suspicious conversation between Snape and Draco, he suspects that Draco may be a Death Eater. Harry then confides his suspicions to Dumbledore, who appears unconcerned. It is unknown if Dumbledore told Snape to hold this conversation to investigate Draco, or if Snape is betraying Dumbledore. Just when Ron and Hermione seem on the verge of a relationship, Ron begins dating Lavender Brown — unabashedly kissing her in public — although it is mostly to spite Hermione, who, Ron learned, kissed Viktor Krum. Hermione retaliates by inviting Cormac McLaggen, an egomaniacal Quidditch player, to be her date to Slughorn's Christmas Party, but the plan backfires. Ron and Hermione continually bicker until Ron is accidentally poisoned. Hermione is so distraught that she and Ron end their feud. Ron later breaks up with Lavender when she proves to be a nuisance. Meanwhile, Harry finds himself the unwelcome object of many girls' attention, while he only cares for one—Ginny Weasley. He worries that a relationship with her might harm his friendship with Ron, but Ron ultimately gives his approval. Dumbledore and Harry begin a series of private lessons using Dumbledore's Pensieve. They view memories about Voldemort's past. A memory belonging to Slughorn is partially missing. Aided by the Felix Felicis potion, Harry retrieves the missing portion from him. From the memories, Dumbledore speculates that Voldemort split his soul into seven parts, storing six pieces in Horcruxes to grant himself immortality (if the pieces are not destroyed), while leaving the seventh piece in his body. Two of Voldemort's Horcruxes have already been destroyed (Tom Riddle's diary by Harry[HP2] and Marvolo Gaunt's ring by Dumbledore). He and Harry set off to find another, (Salazar Slytherin's locket) hidden in a secret cave. They successfully retrieve the locket, but Dumbledore is heavily weakened from the effort. Returning, they find the Dark Mark hovering over Hogwarts. They are ambushed by Draco Malfoy on the Astronomy Tower. Dumbledore quickly paralyses Harry, who is hidden under his Invisibility Cloak, leaving him to witness events but unable to act. Draco disarms Dumbledore and reveals that the Death Eaters have entered Hogwarts with his help through a Vanishing Cabinet in the Room of Requirement. Dumbledore discerns that the obviously frightened boy was coerced into aiding Voldemort's followers. Other Death Eaters arrive and urge Draco to fulfil his mission—killing Dumbledore—but Draco hesitates. Snape also arrives; Dumbledore uncharacteristically pleads with Snape, but he assassinates Dumbledore with the Avada Kedavra killing curse, although the effects of this particular curse seem unlike those Avada Kedavra seen before. Dumbledore is hurled over the edge of the tower. Upon Dumbledore's death, Harry is freed from the spell. The Death Eaters flee, and Harry pursues Snape, who identifies himself as the Half-Blood Prince in a short-lived duel before escaping with Malfoy. Harry recovers the locket from Dumbledore's body only to discover it is a fake. Inside is a note to the Dark Lord from someone with the initials "R.A.B.". It says the real Horcrux has been stolen and will be destroyed with the hope that when Voldemort meets his match he, "will be mortal once more." The school year ends abruptly with Dumbledore's funeral. Prominent members of the Wizarding world, including Rufus Scrimgeour, attend. Professor McGonagall is appointed Hogwarts' interim headmistress, but she and the other teachers fear the school may be closed. McGonagall and Scrimgeour attempt to find out what Harry learned from Dumbledore, but Harry keeps it secret. Harry decides not to return to Hogwarts next year and will instead search for the remaining Horcruxes. When he tells Hermione and Ron, they insist on accompanying him. He ends his relationship with Ginny to protect her from Voldemort. Harry enjoys one last golden day with his friends, although there will be one additional happy occasion before the trio sets off on their mission—Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour's wedding. [edit]Controversies

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. The record-breaking publication of Half-Blood Prince was accompanied by controversy both inevitable and unpredictable. In May 2005 bookmakers in the UK suspended bets on which main character would die in the book amid fears of insider knowledge. A number of high value bets were made on the death of Albus Dumbledore, many coming from the town of Bungay where, it was believed, the books were being printed at the time. Betting was later reopened.[2] Other controversies included the "right to read" Potter books inadvertently sold before the release date, environmental concerns over the source of the paper used in the printing of millions of books, and fan reactions to the plot developments and revelations of the novel. Spoilers end here. [edit]Right to read In early July 2005, the Real Canadian Superstore, a big-box grocery chain in Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada, accidentally sold fifteen copies of The Half-Blood Prince before the authorised release date. The Canadian publisher, Raincoast Books, obtained an injunction from the Supreme Court of British Columbia prohibiting the purchasers from reading the books before the official release date or from discussing the contents. Purchasers were offered a Harry Potter T-shirt and an autographed copy of the book if they returned their copies before July 16. On July 15, less than twelve hours before the book went on sale in the Eastern time zone, Raincoast warned The Globe and Mail newspaper that publishing a review from a Canada-based writer at midnight, as the paper had promised, would be seen as a violation of the trade secret injunction. The injunction sparked a number of news articles alleging that the injunction had restricted fundamental rights. Canadian law professor Michael Geist posted commentary on his weblog;[3] Richard Stallman called for a boycott, requesting that the publisher issue an apology for attempting to maintain suspense for a worldwide phenomenon.[4] The Globe and Mail published a review from two UK-based writers in its July 16 edition and posted the Canadian writer's review on its website at 9 AM that morning.[5] Commentary was also provided on the Raincoast website.[6] In the same week, a Chicago Walgreens mistakenly sold a copy of the book. When the purchaser read about the Canadian incident on the Internet she said she would not return the book, but that she would not read the novel until the US release date.[citation needed] [edit]Environmental concerns Before and after the release of the book, the environmental organisations Greenpeace and the National Wildlife Federation urged consumers in the United States who planned to buy Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince to do so from the book's Canadian publisher, Raincoast Books [7], which published on 100% recycled, chlorine-free, ancient forest–free paper. The U.S. edition of the book, published by Scholastic Press, was printed with a percentage of recycled paper that Scholastic declined to make public. The Scholastic Hardcover edition of the book claims, on the last page, to be free of fibres from ancient forests. [edit]Other

Crowds wait outside a Borders store in Delaware for the midnight release of the book [edit]Fan reaction This article or section does not cite its references or sources. Please help improve this article by introducing appropriate citations. (help, get involved!) This article has been tagged since January 2007. More so than any of the previous books, fans of the series were polarised by the revelations of the sixth book. Rowling herself expected this when she stated on her website: Book six does what I wanted it to do and even if nobody else likes it (and some won’t), I know it will remain one of my favorites of the series. Ultimately you have to please yourself before you please anyone else! [8] Fans on one end claimed Harry's supposed "lack of reaction" was out-of-character[citation needed] while others criticised his "immediate" acceptance of the death at the end of the book.[citation needed] Supporters argue that the events of Book 5 changed Harry considerably and his reactions are in accordance to the events which transpired.[citation needed] A vocal segment of fans also expressed their displeasure at the lack of romance between Harry and Hermione Granger. Although the latest book was the most obvious evidence of their purely platonic relationship, Rowling claims to have made such insinuations as early as the third book pointing toward putting Hermione with Ron Weasley, even going so far as to say that there were "anvil-sized hints" in the fourth installment. Rowling had also said in earlier interviews that Harry and Hermione had a "very platonic relationship," though this didn't dissuade certain fans from believing that Rowling intended for them to be together in the end. The identity of the Half-Blood Prince character has no apparent bearing on the main plot of the series, some critics charge, and since Harry's main concern throughout this book is to solve the mystery of this character's true identity, the driving plot of the book is not truly resolved. Also, vast tracts of the book deal with Harry passively receiving instruction from Dumbledore regarding Lord Voldemort's past, and this slows down the pace considerably. This view is in part countered in statements made by J.K. Rowling, in which she has stated that book six is very much to be regarded as the first half of a two-volume work, with book seven rounding up the story. It remains to be seen to what extent book seven will explain the relevance of these side stories. [edit]Dedication

Wikinews has news related to: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince released Rowling became pregnant with her third child during the writing of this book, and often joked about them racing each other into the world. For this reason, the book has this dedication: To Mackenzie, My beautiful daughter, I dedicate Her ink-and-paper twin [edit]Movie release date Box Office Mojo reported, and Warner Brothers has confirmed, that the movie based on the sixth book is scheduled to be released on November 21, 2008. Steve Kloves is expected to write the screenplay, but a director has yet to be chosen. [9] [edit]Spoilers The plot detail "Snape kills Dumbledore" along with a list of chapter titles were leaked on the Usenet group alt.fan.harrypotter as early as July 14, 2005—two days before the official release date. Weeks earlier, betting patterns on the website "Blue Square" recorded an unusual surge in bets originating in a town where the book was being published (as pointed out in the Guardian newspaper May 24) [10]. A number of direct scans from the book were also leaked, with the spoiler highlighted to attract viewers' attention. It noted that the spoilers had already appeared on Ain't it Cool News before a cease and desist letter from the book's publishers led to its removal. [citation needed] This leakage, however, enabled some people to run around release parties shouting the spoilers and was made into an Internet meme. [edit]Text changes As with Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, the United States version of the novel has slightly changed text from the British version. In this case, however, the reason for the edit has not been explained on the author's webpage, but it clearly makes the nature of an offer from Dumbledore to Draco explicit, whereas the British edition is more ambiguous. The text can be found in chapter 27, "The Lightning-Struck Tower". The parts added in the United States version have been highlighted in bold, below: "[…] He told me to do it or he'll kill me. I've got no choice." "He cannot kill you if you are already dead. Come over to the right side Draco, and we can hide you more completely than you can possibly imagine. What is more, I can send members of the Order to your mother tonight to hide her likewise. Nobody would be surprised that you had died in your attempt to kill me — forgive me, but Lord Voldemort probably expects it. Nor would the Death Eaters be surprised that we had captured and killed your mother — it is what they would do themselves, after all. Your father is safe at the moment in Azkaban […]" (US Edition p. 591)(CND Edition p. 552) [HP6] [edit]Translations Various publishers have announced release dates for local translations of the book. See: Harry Potter in translation [edit]Editions Bloomsbury (United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, etc.) ISBN 0-7475-8108-8 Hardcover ISBN 0-7475-8110-X Hardcover (adult edition) (Different cover and binding, same text) Raincoast (Canada, etc.) ISBN 1-55192-756-X Hardcover ISBN 1-55192-760-8 Hardcover (adult edition) (Different cover and binding, same text) ISBN 0-7475-8152-5 Hardcover (large print edition) Scholastic (United States, etc.) ISBN 0-439-78454-9 US Hardcover ISBN 0-439-79132-4 Deluxe Edition ISBN 0-439-78596-0 US Paperback

US Children's Edition Scholastic

US Deluxe Edition Scholastic

UK Adult Edition Bloomsbury Raincoast

UK Children's Edition Bloomsbury Raincoast

Danish Edition Gyldendal

Dutch Edition De Harmonie

French Edition Gallimard

German Edition Carlsen

Japanese Edition

Spanish Edition Salamandra

Swedish Edition Tiden

Hebrew Edition Books in the Attic Ltd. [edit]References

↑ "Potter's 'Prince' Conjures Record" by E!Online ↑ "Bets reopen on Dumbledore death" from the BBC ↑ ↑ "The Harry Potter Injunction" by Michael Geist ↑ "Don't Buy Harry Potter Books" by Richard Stallman ↑ "Much Ado As Harry Potter Hits the Shelves" by The Globe and Mail ↑ "Greenpeace to U.S. Potter fans: Buy Canadian" from the CBC ↑ "Do You Like 'Half-Blood Prince" from J.K. Rowling's Official Site [HP2] Rowling, J.K. (1998). Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. UK ISBN 0747538492/US ISBN 0439064864. [HP6] Rowling, J.K. (2005). Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. UK ISBN 0747581088/US ISBN 0439784549.

Half-Blood Prince
Plot Synopsis

Wikibooks Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter has a page on the topic of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince opens in the summer of 1996 and with a darker mood than the previous books. Voldemort and his "Death Eaters" are openly wreaking chaos and paranoia throughout Britain and recruit the Dementors, who abandon Azkaban Prison. Following public outcry over Cornelius Fudge's mishandling of the Voldemort situation, Rufus Scrimgeour becomes the new Minister for Magic. This is a positive move for the Weasley family, as Arthur receives a promotion that improves the family's financial situation. One evening at his home, Severus Snape receives a visit from Draco Malfoy's mother Narcissa and her sister, Bellatrix Lestrange. Narcissa swears Snape to an Unbreakable Vow ensuring he will protect Draco and, should Draco fail, complete the mission which he has been assigned. Due to the increased Death Eater activity, security measures are increased at Hogwarts. Snape is given his coveted Defence Against the Dark Arts post while Albus Dumbledore, with help from Harry Potter, persuades Horace Slughorn to return from retirement to replace Snape as Potions teacher. Because Slughorn only requires a minimum of an "E" grade ("Exceeds Expectations") in O.W.L. exams in order to take his advanced N.E.W.T. Potion classes, Harry and Ron Weasley are able to sign up. Slughorn lends Harry an old textbook marked as the property of "The Half-Blood Prince." The talented former owner's handwritten notes help Harry outperform even Hermione Granger. As a reward, Slughorn gives Harry a vial of Felix Felicis, a good luck potion. When Harry hears a suspicious conversation between Snape and Draco, he suspects that Draco may be a Death Eater. Harry then confides his suspicions to Dumbledore, who appears unconcerned. It is unknown if Dumbledore told Snape to hold this conversation to investigate Draco, or if Snape is betraying Dumbledore. Just when Ron and Hermione seem on the verge of a relationship, Ron begins dating Lavender Brown — unabashedly kissing her in public — although it is mostly to spite Hermione, who, Ron learned, kissed Viktor Krum. Hermione retaliates by inviting Cormac McLaggen, an egomaniacal Quidditch player, to be her date to Slughorn's Christmas Party, but the plan backfires. Ron and Hermione continually bicker until Ron is accidentally poisoned. Hermione is so distraught that she and Ron end their feud. Ron later breaks up with Lavender when she proves to be a nuisance. Meanwhile, Harry finds himself the unwelcome object of many girls' attention, while he only cares for one—Ginny Weasley. He worries that a relationship with her might harm his friendship with Ron, but Ron ultimately gives his approval. Dumbledore and Harry begin a series of private lessons using Dumbledore's Pensieve. They view memories about Voldemort's past. A memory belonging to Slughorn is partially missing. Aided by the Felix Felicis potion, Harry retrieves the missing portion from him. From the memories, Dumbledore speculates that Voldemort split his soul into seven parts, storing six pieces in Horcruxes to grant himself immortality (if the pieces are not destroyed), while leaving the seventh piece in his body. Two of Voldemort's Horcruxes have already been destroyed (Tom Riddle's diary by Harry[HP2] and Marvolo Gaunt's ring by Dumbledore). He and Harry set off to find another, (Salazar Slytherin's locket) hidden in a secret cave. They successfully retrieve the locket, but Dumbledore is heavily weakened from the effort. Returning, they find the Dark Mark hovering over Hogwarts. They are ambushed by Draco Malfoy on the Astronomy Tower. Dumbledore quickly paralyses Harry, who is hidden under his Invisibility Cloak, leaving him to witness events but unable to act. Draco disarms Dumbledore and reveals that the Death Eaters have entered Hogwarts with his help through a Vanishing Cabinet in the Room of Requirement. Dumbledore discerns that the obviously frightened boy was coerced into aiding Voldemort's followers. Other Death Eaters arrive and urge Draco to fulfil his mission—killing Dumbledore—but Draco hesitates. Snape also arrives; Dumbledore uncharacteristically pleads with Snape, but he assassinates Dumbledore with the Avada Kedavra killing curse, although the effects of this particular curse seem unlike those Avada Kedavra seen before. Dumbledore is hurled over the edge of the tower. Upon Dumbledore's death, Harry is freed from the spell. The Death Eaters flee, and Harry pursues Snape, who identifies himself as the Half-Blood Prince in a short-lived duel before escaping with Malfoy. Harry recovers the locket from Dumbledore's body only to discover it is a fake. Inside is a note to the Dark Lord from someone with the initials "R.A.B.". It says the real Horcrux has been stolen and will be destroyed with the hope that when Voldemort meets his match he, "will be mortal once more." The school year ends abruptly with Dumbledore's funeral. Prominent members of the Wizarding world, including Rufus Scrimgeour, attend. Professor McGonagall is appointed Hogwarts' interim headmistress, but she and the other teachers fear the school may be closed. McGonagall and Scrimgeour attempt to find out what Harry learned from Dumbledore, but Harry keeps it secret. Harry decides not to return to Hogwarts next year and will instead search for the remaining Horcruxes. When he tells Hermione and Ron, they insist on accompanying him. He ends his relationship with Ginny to protect her from Voldemort. Harry enjoys one last golden day with his friends, although there will be one additional happy occasion before the trio sets off on their mission—Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour's wedding. [edit]Controversies Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. The record-breaking publication of Half-Blood Prince was accompanied by controversy both inevitable and unpredictable. In May 2005 bookmakers in the UK suspended bets on which main character would die in the book amid fears of insider knowledge. A number of high value bets were made on the death of Albus Dumbledore, many coming from the town of Bungay where, it was believed, the books were being printed at the time. Betting was later reopened.[2] Other controversies included the "right to read" Potter books inadvertently sold before the release date, environmental concerns over the source of the paper used in the printing of millions of books, and fan reactions to the plot developments and revelations of the novel. Spoilers end here. [edit]Right to read In early July 2005, the Real Canadian Superstore, a big-box grocery chain in Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada, accidentally sold fifteen copies of The Half-Blood Prince before the authorised release date. The Canadian publisher, Raincoast Books, obtained an injunction from the Supreme Court of British Columbia prohibiting the purchasers from reading the books before the official release date or from discussing the contents. Purchasers were offered a Harry Potter T-shirt and an autographed copy of the book if they returned their copies before July 16. On July 15, less than twelve hours before the book went on sale in the Eastern time zone, Raincoast warned The Globe and Mail newspaper that publishing a review from a Canada-based writer at midnight, as the paper had promised, would be seen as a violation of the trade secret injunction. The injunction sparked a number of news articles alleging that the injunction had restricted fundamental rights. Canadian law professor Michael Geist posted commentary on his weblog;[3] Richard Stallman called for a boycott, requesting that the publisher issue an apology for attempting to maintain suspense for a worldwide phenomenon.[4] The Globe and Mail published a review from two UK-based writers in its July 16 edition and posted the Canadian writer's review on its website at 9 AM that morning.[5] Commentary was also provided on the Raincoast website.[6] In the same week, a Chicago Walgreens mistakenly sold a copy of the book. When the purchaser read about the Canadian incident on the Internet she said she would not return the book, but that she would not read the novel until the US release date.[citation needed] [edit]Environmental concerns Before and after the release of the book, the environmental organisations Greenpeace and the National Wildlife Federation urged consumers in the United States who planned to buy Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince to do so from the book's Canadian publisher, Raincoast Books [7], which published on 100% recycled, chlorine-free, ancient forest–free paper. The U.S. edition of the book, published by Scholastic Press, was printed with a percentage of recycled paper that Scholastic declined to make public. The Scholastic Hardcover edition of the book claims, on the last page, to be free of fibres from ancient forests.

J.K Rowling

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Author	J.K. Rowling Illustrator	Jason Cockcroft (UK), Mary GrandPré (US) Genre	Fiction Publisher	Bloomsbury (UK), Scholastic (US) Release date	16 July 2005 Number in series	Six Sales	15.6 Million (US) as of December 2006

Dedicated to	"Mackenzie, my beautiful daughter, I dedicate her ink-and-paper twin" Story timeline	1996-1997

Ecuador
Main article: Provinces of Ecuador Ecuador is divided into twenty-two provinces, each with its own administrative capital: Province	Capital Azuay	Cuenca Bolívar	Guaranda Cañar	Azogues Carchi	Tulcán Chimborazo	Riobamba Cotopaxi	Latacunga El Oro	Machala Esmeraldas	Esmeraldas Galápagos	Puerto Baquerizo Moreno Guayas	Guayaquil Imbabura	Ibarra Province	Capital Loja	Loja Los Ríos	Babahoyo Manabí	Portoviejo Morona-Santiago	Macas Napo	Tena Orellana	Puerto Francisco de Orellana Pastaza Province	Puyo Pichincha	Quito Sucumbíos	Nueva Loja Tungurahua	Ambato Zamora-Chinchipe	Zamora

Harry Potter 1234567
Harry James Potter Hermione Jane Granger Ronald Bilius Weasley Ginervia Molly Weasley Frederic Weasley Precy In Weasley

That's so Suite life of Hannah Montana
From That's So Raven: Raven-Symone as Raven Baxter Anne-Marie Johnson as Donna Cabonna Orlando Brown as Eddie Thomas Anneliese van der Pol as Chelsea Daniels Kyle Massey as Cory Baxter Rondell Sheridan as Victor Baxter Bobbe' J. Thompson as Stanley Jasmine Guy as Pistache Annie Wood as Kandra Blair Tiffany Thornton as Tylar Spelick Malik Yoba as Judge [edit]From The Suite Life of Zack & Cody: Dylan Sprouse as Zack Martin Cole Sprouse as Cody Martin Ashley Tisdale as Madeline Fitzpatrick Brenda Song as London Tipton Phill Lewis as Marion Moseby Kim Rhodes as Carey Martin Adrian R'Mante as Esteban Julio Ricardo Montoyo Delaroso Ramírez Brian Stepanek as Arwin Quentin Hawkhauser Arturo Gil as Robot Sharon Jordan as Irene the Concierge Adam Tait as Reporter Brian Peck as London Tipton's Mirror Anthony Acker as Norman the Doorman [edit]From Hannah Montana: Miley Cyrus as Miley Stewart/Hannah Montana Billy Ray Cyrus as Robby Stewart Emily Osment as Lilly Truscott Mitchel Musso as Oliver Oken Jason Earles as Jackson Stewart Frances Callier as Roxy Richard Portnow as Marty Kleine Aleksandra Okapiec as Inga Izabella Okapiec as Helga Monika Okapiec as Uma Rafael Rojas III as Jay Billy Lloyd as Boy #2

Daniel Radclffle/Harry Potter
Medium	Project	Year	Character	Notes TV	David Copperfield	1999	Young David Copperfield Film	The Tailor of Panama	2001	 Mark Pendel Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone-Harry Potter - US title: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets	2002-Harry Potter Stage	The Play What I Wrote	Guest	West End theatre, Wyndham Theatre Film	Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban	2004	-Harry Potter Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire	2005 TV	Foley and McColl: This Way Up	Traffic Warden Extras	2006	 Boy Scout/Himself Film	December Boys	2007	Maps Stage	Equus	Alan Strang	West End theatre, Gielgud Theater TV	My Boy Jack	Jack Kipling Film	Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix	Harry Potter Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince	2008- Harry Potter Awards

Nominations 2006 Best Young Actor (Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards) Actor of the Year (AOL Moviefone Moviegoer Awards) Best Performance by a Young Actor (Saturn Awards) Best Hero (MTV Movie Awards) Best On-Screen Team (with Emma Watson and Rupert Grint; MTV Movie Awards)

2005 Best Performance by a Young Actor (Saturn Awards) Best Young Actor (Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards)

2003 Best Performance by a Young Actor (Saturn Awards) Best Acting Ensemble (Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards) Most Unforgettable Scene (for the scene "Harry Battles The Basilisk" in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets) (American Moviegoer Awards)

2002 Best Performance by a Young Actor (Saturn Awards) Best Young Performer (Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards) Breakthrough Male Performance (MTV Movie Awards) Best Newcomer (Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards) Best Debut (with Emma Watson and Rupert Grint) (Sony Ericsson Empire Awards) Outstanding Actor (American Moviegoer Awards) Best Performance in a Feature Film: Leading Young Actor (Young Artist Awards) Best Ensemble in a Feature Film (with Emma Watson and Rupert Grint Young Artist Awards)

Wins 2006 Best Actor (Cine Awards, Belgium) Best Male Film Star (Gold): Otto Awards, 2006 Best Actor/Movie (SyFy Portal's SyFy Genre Awards)

2005 Best Young Actor (SyFy Portal's SyFy Genre Awards)

2004 Top 10 Child Stars (RTL Television, Germany) Best Breakthrough Male Actor (Star Channel Star Awards, Japan) Best Junior Achiever (for viewers' favorite under-16 guest on the show Relly Awards) Young Talent of the Year (ITV Celebrity Awards) Best Movie Actor (K-Zone Kids Awards, Philippines) Best Film Star/Actor (Dutch Kids Choice Awards)

2003 Best Young Actor (SyFy Portal's SyFy Genre Awards) Best Actor (Roadshow Cinema Grand Prix Awards, Japan)

2002 Person of the Year (Time For Kids) Targa d'Oro ("Gold Plate", David di Donatello Awards) Outstanding New Talent (Sir James Carreras Award for the Variety Club Showbusiness Awards)

2001 Male Youth Discovery of the Year (Hollywood Women's Press Club)

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