LAND'S END, England (AP) - At 11:10 a.m. Wednesday, the small island of Bryher in the Scilly Isles off southwestern England will go dark as the moon slides across the sun. It will be the first landfall of the millennium's last total solar eclipse, an event that is stirring eclipse fever from Europe to South Asia. From Bryher, the moon's shadow will race at 1,522 mph across the southwestern tip of England, where it will be pursued by two supersonic Concorde jetliners carrying eclipse revellers. Then it will speed across northern France and swathes of Germany, Austria and Yugoslavia, turning day to night in a corridor 69 miles wide. It will rush across Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, the Black Sea, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and India, before dying at evening in the Bay of Bengal.