Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2008-04-14
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Sources[edit]http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfatprocessen 217.213.69.190 (talk) 00:44, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]http://www.xxlmag.com/online/?p=20680
72.65.88.122 (talk) 03:35, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]http://www.oas.org/documents/eng/biography_Levens.asp
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Sources[edit]72.67.104.27 (talk) 04:17, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]http://www.last.fm/music/River+Jones+Music+-+RJM
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Sources[edit]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Weird_America http://www.newweirdamerican.com/
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Sources[edit]1.http://kirkuty.xip.pl/jalowka.htm
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There should be a redirect to Ayurveda (traditional Indian medicine,) as well as possible disambiguation re: various styles of Native American Indian medicine. 58.37.118.189 (talk) 05:59, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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The messiah, or in some cultures, god of ootz. http://www.visitstafford.org/
68.4.112.53 (talk) 06:58, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]The Detroit News (newspaper) Wednesday, February 9, 2005 Detroiter's Super Bowl starring role melts away By Neal Rubin http://www.detnews.com/2005/metro/0502/09/A02-84579.htm IMDB.com http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0842191/ Obamaniacs flood debate http://video1.washingtontimes.com/bellantoni/2008/01/scenes_from_the_debate.html Interview : Michael Anton director Dead in Texas http://www.moviesonline.ca/movienews_4845.html also from the Detroit News an article about actress Pauley Perrette of NCIS Actress's help could bring killer to justice a posting of it here http://ncisspecialops.proboards29.com/v45index.cgi?board=media&action=display&thread=110&page=9 69.226.184.7 (talk) 07:27, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Francis creates a crisis in the small town of Radnor, PA, when goats on Steve's farm are found sacrificed. His wife Martha is terrorized after this troumatic event. Source:
http://imdb.com/title/tt0230250/
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Sources[edit]125.18.172.171 (talk) 09:43, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Patrick Moylett (1878-1932) was a 20th century Irish nationalist who, during the initial armistice negotiations to end the Irish War of Independence, briefly served as president of the Irish Republican Brotherhood during late-1920. A successful businessman in Mayo and Galway, he was a close associate of Arthur Griffith and frequently traveled to London acting as a middleman between Sinn Féin and officials in the British government. Biography[edit]Born in Mayo to a farming family, Moylett emigrated to London as a young man working in various departments in Harrods for five years before returning to Ireland in 1902. He opened a grocery and provisions business in Ballina and, as it proved successful, he later establishing branches in Galway and London between 1910 and 1914; the London-branch would be sold at the outbreak of the First World War. Relocating his business to Dublin, he became involved in the Irish nationalist movement and was active in the Mayo and Galway areas during the Irish War of Independence. [1] With Harry Boland in the United States with Éamon de Valera, Moylett succeeded him as president of the Irish Republican Brotherhood [2] and, in October 1920, he was selected to go to London as the personal envoy of Arthur Griffith. During the next several months, Moylett was involved in secret discussions with British government officials on the recognition of Dáil Éireann, a general amnesty for members of the Irish Republican Army and the organization of a peace conference to end hostilities between both parties. [1] He was assisted by John Steele, the London editor of the Chicago Tribune, who helped him contact high level members of the British Foreign Office. One of these officials in particular, C.J. Phillps, had frequent meetings with him. These meetings were later attended by H.A.L. Fisher, the Minister of Education and one of the most outspoken opponents of unauthorized reprisals against the Irish civilian population by the British government. One of the main points Fisher expressed to Moylett was the necessity of Sinn Fein to compromise on its demands for a free and united republic. His efforts were hindered however, both to the slow and confused pace of the peace negotiations as well as the regularly occurring violence in Ireland, most especially the Bloody Sunday incident on November 21, 1920. [3] During the Irish Civil War, although a supporter of the Anglo-Irish Treaty, he chose not to participate in the Free State government party which he viewed as an amalgam of Unionists and the old Irish Party. He was later a founding member of the Clann Éireann Party and became an early advocate of the withholding of land annuities. He remained in politics until his death in 1932. [1] References[edit]
72.74.226.117 (talk) 11:11, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Biography[edit]An active member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, McGarry was a close friend of Bulmer Hobson and was frequently arrested or imprisoned by British authorities for his activities with the IRB during the early 1900s. McGarry participated in the Easter Rising of 1916 as an aide-de-camp to Thomas Clarke [4] and sentenced to eight years penal servitude for his role in the failed rebellion. [5] He was sent to Frongoch internment camp in Wales, but was eventually released. McGarry assisted Michael Collins in his efforts to reorganize the Irish Republican Brotherhood and, at the Volunteer Executive Meeting held in late 1917, he was elected General Secretary of the Irish Volunteers. [6] [7] On the night of May 17, 1918, McGarry was arrested along with seventy-three other Irish nationalist leaders and deported to England and held in custody without charge. The day following their arrest, he and the others were charged with conspiring "to enter into, and have entered into, treasonable communication with the German enemy". [8] In his absence, Harry Boland was selected for the Supreme Council and became his successor as president of the IRB. [9] He was only imprisoned a short time when he took part in the famous escape from Lincoln Jail with Seán Milroy and Eamon de Valera on February 3, 1918. He and Milroy had managed to smuggle out a postcard, a comical sketch of McGarry to his wife, allowing a copy of the key to their cell to be made. They were later assisted by Harry Boland and Michael Collins who awaited them outside the prison. [10] A month later, McGarry gave a dramatic speech at a Sinn Fein concert held at Dublin's Mansion House before going into hiding. [11] Throughout the Irish War of Independence, McGarry served as a commander and was eventually elected to Dáil Éireann in the 1921 General Election as a Sinn Féin TD representing Dublin Mid. He, like the majority of those in the Irish Republican Brotherhood, supported the Anglo-Irish Treaty and was involved in debates against de Valera during the controversy, most especially discussing the status of Sinn Fein as a political entity. [12] He was re-elected as a Pro-Treaty Sinn Féin TD in the 1922 General Election, siding with the Free State government during the Irish Civil War. According to Frank Henderson, as told to Ernie O'Malley, Liam Lynch and other members of the Eamon de Valera's Anti-Treaty faction began planning the assassination of McGarry among other TDs supporting the Public Safety Bill.
On December 10, 1922, shortly before the first meeting of the Free State, a fire was deliberately set by the Irregulars at his family home resulting in the death of his son. He was one of four others targeted by the anti-Treatyites during the December Free State executions. De Valera publicly denounced the attack. [14] [15] McGarry was re-elected as a Cumann na nGaedheal TD in the 1923 General Election for Dublin North. Dissatisfied and disillusioned with the Free Staters, he resigned from the Cumann na nGaedheal after the Irish Army Mutiny and defected to Joseph McGrath's National Group. [16] He resigned his seat in 1925 and tried to retain his seat as a National Group candidate in the by-election but was defeated by Oscar Traynor. [17] Further reading[edit]
References[edit]
72.74.226.117 (talk) 11:11, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Biography[edit]A resident of Dublin, Deakin worked as a chemist in Hoyt's pharmacy in O'Connell Street and later owned his own shop in Phibsborough. Deakin became involved in the Irish nationalist movement during the early 1900s and, within a short time, became a high ranking member in the Drumcondra-branch of the Irish Republican Brotherhood. A political ally of George Irvine, Ernest Blythe and Sean O'Casey, in 1913, he succeeded John Mulholland as president of the IRB before acceding to Denis McCullough the following year. His whereabouts are unrecorded during the Easter Rising in 1916, apparently escaping arrest during the rebellion, and later immigrating to the United States where he died in 1953. [18] Further reading[edit]
References[edit]
72.74.226.117 (talk) 11:11, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Dundee Schools Music Theatre is a Dundee-based theatrical organisation. The organisation uniquely draws members from all of Dundee's ten secondary schools and an brings them together to perform stage musicals to an exceptionally high standard. Notable performances include the North East premier of Les Miserables, an international tour of Side by Side by Sondheim and a performance for HRH The Princess Royal. The organisation is run by Dundee City Council.
History[edit]Dundee Schools Music Theatre (commonly known as DSMT) was formed in 1998 by Lina Waghorn. The original idea was to bring young people together from all of Dundee's secondary schools to perform - a unique project in Scotland. After discussions with Dundee's Director of Education Anne Wilson, it was decided that the project would be set up on a trial basis for a year. Success in the trial year would secure further funding from the council. The first show performed by DSMT was Guys and Dolls. The show played to capacity crowds at Dundee's Whitehall Theatre in August 1998. The success of this initial performance secured financial commitment from the city council and DSMT has grown from strength to strength ever since. The next year, DSMT were amongst the few acts specially chosen to perform in the Millennium Dome, London. Sponsored by McDonalds, a cast of 80 flew to London to be part of the national millennium celebrations. In 2001, DSMT made its debut performance at the Edinburgh International Fringe. The production of Stephen Schwartz's Godspell received rave revues from the press and Fringe Magazine. 2003 presented DSMT with it's biggest and most exciting challenge yet. The group were awarded the rights to perform the epic Les Miserables. The performance was the North East premier of the show and attracted much media attention as well as a visit from the Education Minister. The show opened at the Whitehall Theatre on August 23rd 2003 and the run had completely sold out within a week. 2003 also saw the formation of DSMT's sister group, Back to Back. The success of the original project was such, that it was decided expansion was necessary. Back to Back allowed pupils to remain with the organisation for a year after they left school. This "post development" project furthered the learning achieved by members as part of the original group. Back to Back's first project was Side by Side by Sondheim - a musical review of Sondheim's work. Back to Back began with only four cast members and success such as that enjoyed by the main group was far from assured. However, the original performances in Dundee and Arbroath were received with critical acclaim and the show transferred to the Edinburgh Fringe in 2004. Soon after it's Edinburgh run, the production went international with further performances in Wurzburg, Germany and Washington D.C, USA. Songs from the production were also played on BBC radio Scotland. The runaway success of Side by Side by Sondheim secured Back to Back's future and it's important place within the Structure of Dundee Schools Music Theatre. By 2004, Back to Back had expanded to 40 cast members. While Back to Back flourished, DSMT continued to impress audiences both locally and nationally. 2004 saw a production of Cy Coleman's circus musical Barnum and in 2005, an entirely new production of Joseph And The Amazing Technicoloured dreamcoat was staged. Soon After, DSMT expanded even further. A junior section was added which allowed first and second year pupils to be part of the project. This group perform their own annual shows in May. Dundee Schools Music Theatre has also been supported by The Scottish Arts Council and National Lottery.
Sources[edit]www.edinburghguide.com/festival/ 2001/fringe/review_musicalsopera.shtml www.dundeecity.gov.uk/news/index/ article?article_ref=140&year=2001&month=9 www.josef-weinberger.com/weinberger/lesmizframes.htm www.edinburghguide.com/festival/ 2001/fringe/review_musicalsopera.shtml
92.233.171.242 (talk) 13:01, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Plot[edit]The special starts off with an introduction sequence zooming in on the area the Gogs live. It then shows the dinosaurs and prehistoric creatures living in the area, and finally the Gogs cave and the Gogs themselves. The first few minutes show the Gogs in their cave, doing things such as entertaining the baby, Girj, and eating an apple. Suddenly, the ground starts to shake and rocks fall. Outside the cave, rocks are rising up from the ground in fire. The Gogs start to climb up a hill when suddenly, Tyrannosaurus Rex appears, and sees Girj, who had been accidentaly left on the ground. The T.Rex is just about to eat Girj when he is lifted up by a rock, and is then reunited with his mother.A large falling boulder kills the T.Rex. The Gogs reach the top of the hill and see the ruins of the land around the cave. They start crying when suddenly, Oglas sees what appears to be a shooting star. The Gogs then head where the star is going. In the desert, many of the Gogs are tired,and Gogas is in much pain because he has no shoes. He then sees two dead, dog-like creatures, and uses them as his shoes. The group continue on until they see a large, real-life monitor lizard, at which point they burst into laughter.Igi sees the carcass of a mammoth, with the skin still on. Everybody heads inside, but the carcass is still full of flies. Next morning, Igi climbs a tree and sees an egg, which soon hatches into a vulture chick. Near the carcass, Oglas massages Ogla's back, and Gogas goes to sleep and has a flashback. In the flashback, he is still living with his wife. They have a child (Oglas), but one day, Gogas and his wife are seperated by an army of pygmy soldiers. At the end of the nightmare, Gogas sees their leader- a person in a Pteranodon skull and mask.Gogas wakes up suddenly sweating. Ogla finds out that Oglas is making bacon,eggs and a sausage on her back. They start to fight until the sun goes down, at which point they sleep. Next morning, Ogla awakes to see the baby vulture's parents have eaten the skin of the carcass. He cracks the skeleton, destroying it. The Gogs head into a forest. In the forest, the Gogs see a dead dinosaur carcass and some hot springs before finally heading into a cave. They fail to notice the cave is in the shape of a human skull. Igi's vulture goes back to the hot springs, causing her to leave the group. The other Gogs light a fire in the cave, but hear childish laughter twice. Gogas sees the pygmies, which then capture the Gogs.Igi heads back into the cave, where she discovers the Gogs in a cauldron (presumably as food for the pygmies). Gogas finds out that his wife is a cook in the pygmy caves. She gives the Gogs reeds to breathe through (although she is not seen giving them). Meanwhile, Igi uses the dead dinosaur carcass to create a hot air baloon. At feeding time for the pygmies, their leader appears again, and opens the cauldron. Gogas jumps out, followed by the rest of the family. With the help of Gogas' wife, they manage to escape onto an open cliff. With nowhere to go, they are cornered by the pygmies and their leader when Igi's dinosaur baloon rises up. The gogs manage to get on and escape. The pygmies then use Pterosaurs to attack the baloon. Igi turns the basket part of the baloon into an aeroplane, but she looses the baby vulture in the process. The baloon part explodes with the leader on it. Igi's vulture flaps its wings when it falls, making it fly.The leader smashes into the plane, knocking Gogas and his wife off. They hang on to the baloon until the leader is eaten by a T.Rex. The Gogs see the shooting star but then suddenly crash into a lush, green valley. The Gogs make this their home. Gogas and his wife find a tree full of clubs for them. Igi is sad because she lost her baby vulture. Suddenly, she sees the 3 vultures-parents and child-and the baby flies to her, carrying a flower. Gogas threads the flower in her hair. Girj jumps into a puddle of poo, and Ogla picks him up. All the gogs see the shooting star, heading towards them. It gets larger and redder as ominious music plays. It finally zooms out from the valley, and eventually showing the world, where it is revealed that the star was an asteroid all along. The Gogs scream as the asteroid hits the earth. Awards[edit]Gogwana won 2 awards at 2 animation festivals and was nominated for a BAFTA Film award. Sources[edit]http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0205972/ 86.133.49.34 (talk) 15:02, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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TKM institute of Technology is an Engineering college located near Kundara, Kollam in Kerala Sources[edit]http://76.162.89.240
219.99.143.14 (talk) 15:05, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]Kyle Eyean (talk) 15:13, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sources[edit]http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30979 131.204.96.86 (talk) 15:37, 14 April 2008 (UTC) Crankshaw, Edward (1909–1984), writer and commentator on Soviet affairs, was born on 3 January 1909 in London, the elder son (there were no daughters) of Arthur Crankshaw, later chief clerk to Old Street magistrates' court, and of his wife, Amy Bishop. He was small in stature and suffered from a weak chest, and the family soon moved out to Letchworth in Hertfordshire for the sake of his health. He was educated at Bishop's Stortford College. His parents wished him to go to university, but in a first display of his romantic and headstrong side he went alone to Vienna, aged eighteen, and taught English in the Berlitz School. Here began the deepest intellectual attachment of Crankshaw's life. He learned excellent German, and immersed himself in German and Austrian history and culture, developing not only his talent as a writer but his particular sense of politics as an expression of inherited ‘national character’. On his return, he worked in the advertising department of The Times and began to write reviews—mostly musical—for The Spectator, The Bookman, and other periodicals.[reply] In 1931 Crankshaw married Clare, daughter of Ernest Carr, a civil servant; the marriage was childless. After 1933, at their home in Hampstead, London, the Crankshaws gathered around them many of the German and Austrian intellectual refugees from Hitlerism. Crankshaw began to translate German plays and his versions were staged; when the revolutionary Ernst Toller arrived in England, he ‘adopted’ Crankshaw and his wife, and Crankshaw put five of Toller's plays into English in the next few years. He was by now writing his own books: Joseph Conrad: some Aspects of the Art of the Novel appeared in 1936, and in 1938 he published Vienna: a Culture in Decline and Nina Lessing, the first of his three novels. In spite of these successes, the Crankshaws were existing on erratic scraps of income, and in the mid-1930s they left London for a cottage in Kent. Most of the rest of Crankshaw's life was spent in the village of Sandhurst, in west Kent; he worked alone and found the research and contacts which he needed on regular forays to London. A man who was a friend both of Toller and of the novelist Ford Madox Ford was hard to catalogue politically. Crankshaw has been called a ‘romantic conservative’, but his gesture of joining the territorials in 1936, which dismayed some left-wing friends, turned out to be only too practical. ‘If there is going to be a war’, he observed, ‘I might as well learn how to do it.’ When war came, his knowledge of German brought him into military intelligence. Then, to his surprise, he was posted to the British military mission in Moscow. He had to learn Russian, and was in the country for less than three years. But, while deploring the regime, he came to love the Russian people as they fought for their survival, and to understand the historic roots of their political system in the tsarist autocratic tradition. When Crankshaw joined The Observer in 1947 he was at first reluctant to write about Soviet affairs. He felt his strength lay not in political analysis but in literary and especially musical criticism (Artur Schnabel was a close friend). However, he let himself be tempted, and within a few years had become Britain's most authoritative and persuasive commentator on the USSR and its ‘sphere of influence’. He wrote almost weekly until his retirement in 1968, and not much less frequently after that. Crankshaw was not a true ‘Kremlinologist’, remarking once that ‘the difference between Brezhnev and his colleagues seemed of no more interest than the difference between a number of stale buns’. Instead, he treated Soviet affairs much in the manner of the theatre reviewer he had once been. Nor was he an ideological ‘cold warrior’, but—for all his loathing of the Soviet system and his pessimism about its capacity for reform—a firm advocate of peaceful coexistence. His real testament is the preface, written when he was a dying man, to Putting up with the Russians (1984), his aptly named collection of shorter writings. In this preface, he furiously attacked the contemporary American ambition to evict the Soviet Union from all influence outside its own borders. Crankshaw published numerous books on the changing Soviet scene, and his book on Nazi terror, Gestapo (1956), was widely read. But in 1963 he began to produce the ambitious, deeply researched books which are his main literary work. The Fall of the House of Habsburg appeared in that year; Maria Theresa in 1969; and his masterly The Shadow of the Winter Palace, a study of nineteenth-century Russia, in 1976. Slight and gentlemanly in appearance, Crankshaw controlled a wild and independent nature. But even at the height of his fame, his modesty was phenomenal. He justified his own retirement by saying that he hated the Brezhnev leadership too much to be able to be fair to it. The Austrian government awarded him the Ehrenkreuz für Wissenschaft und Kunst in 1964, and the British followed with a series of prizes for his books including the Heinemann award in 1977 and the Whitbread prize in 1982 (for his Bismarck, 1981). He died at his home, Church House, Sandhurst, Hawkhurst, Kent, after a long illness, on 30 November 1984, continuing to write even when he was too sick to leave his bed.
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Sukhamo Devi was a 1986 Malayalam movie directed by Venu Nagavalli. It had a on-campus story line depicting a city based college setting of the 1980's in Kerala Sources[edit]www.imdb.com/title/tt0292260/ at the Internet Movie Database 12.40.148.19 (talk) 15:57, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]72.67.104.27 (talk) 16:16, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Peter Day is an award winning business journalist and broadcaster on BBC Radio four. He has presented In Business since 1988, and also presents its sister programme Global Business on the BBC World Service. Peter Day went to Lincoln School and read English at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. He worked on the Daily Record in Glasgow for four years before he joined the BBC radio newsroom in London in 1974. He has won the Harold Wincott Award for broadcast business journalism twice, in 1989 and 2000. He also received the Industrial Society Award for business broadcasting and a Lifetime Achievement award by the Work Foundation, London. In 2007 it was revealed that In Business had become a suprise podcast hit, beating 'The best of Moyles', 'Today' and 'In Our Time' as the BBC's most downloaded podcast.
Sources[edit]http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/presenters/peter_day.shtml http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=492863 http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/presenters/peter_day.shtml 129.67.63.222 (talk) 16:26, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sources[edit]209.250.171.245 (talk) 17:58, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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History and Philosophy[edit]Rethink is one of Canada’s most creative and respected advertising, design and online agencies. It was founded on November 1, 1999 by Chris Staples, Tom Shepansky and Ian Grais. The three founding partners had worked together for many years at Palmer Jarvis Vancouver (now DDB Canada), helping turn that agency into the country’s leading creative shop. Palmer Jarvis was named Canada’s Agency of the Year three times under their leadership. Having worked at a large multi-national agency, it was clear that clients were looking for a new kind of ad agency. Thus Rethink was born, with several key differences over traditional agencies. Rethink’s décor is decidedly economical, with furnishings by IKEA, and Astroturf on the floors. This makes the shop’s overhead is significantly lower than large agencies. The money saved is used to invest in smart thinkers. In fact, Rethink has three times the number of writers and art directors than most agencies their size. The company is structured to have fewer layers and less bureaucracy than most large agencies. In most cases, one account manager handles a project from top-to-bottom—rather than a three or four. This means greater efficiency and accountability. The shop has also eliminated the “silos” that plague many large agencies. There are no separate divisions for design or online. Rethink specialists in these areas sit with the rest of the shop’s creative department. Account managers are also able to manage projects across disciplines—from ads, to design, to interactive. Rethink also believes agencies should be far more accountable for achieving results for clients— by putting their profit at risk. That’s the idea behind the Rethink Rebate. Once a fee is agreed upon with a client, part of the money is set aside (up to 5 percent). The clients then creates a set of criteria, based on hard sales numbers and other measures. Based on performance, the agency is paid all, some or none of the Rebate. Every year, Rethink has more money tied up in Rebates than they pay in rent. The agency specializes in strategy, creative and production for all communications mediums, including design, online, outdoor, point of sale, print, radio, television and innovative media. For areas like media planning and buying and PR, outside partners are hand-picked for each project. Since its founding, the agency has been consistently among the most awarded in Canada. These honours include:
The agency was also the subject of a profile in the June, 2007 issue of the prestigious Communication Arts magazine. Clients[edit]Rethink has a range of retainer and project accounts. Many are national in scope, including work in Quebec. Some major retainer accounts include:
External links[edit]Rethink website [10] Sources[edit]Strategy Magazine Agency of the Year, 2007 [11] Marketing Magazine Agency of the Year, 2003 [12] Communication Arts magazine. [13]
Rethinkadmin (talk) 18:23, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Redirect to The Crepes of Wrath Sources[edit]Alternative spelling 80.223.35.113 (talk) 18:37, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Doug grew up in South Dakota, Kansas, and Illinois. He attended Canyon Lake Elementary school in South Dakota before transfering to Lee Elementary School in Kansas. Doug finished elementary school with a general education degree. He then attended middle school in Edwardsville, IL. While in middle school Doug specialized in picking up ladies and being a huge pimp. While Doug attended high school at Edwardsville High school, he began experimenting with drugs. By the age of 16, he was addicted to coke, LSD, marijuana, and he also had become an alcoholic. Doug barely graduated from high school. After high school, he applied to many colleges, but was turned down. As a last resort, Doug applied to Southern Illionis University Edwardsville. His transcripted was confused with another students transcript and some how he got in. In his English 102 class, Doug met a young boy, Michael. Michael continually called him an idiot and other derogatory names. Eventually after all of these negative comments, Doug had an epiphany. He realized everything the little boy was saying was true. Doug was now on the right track. Sources[edit]146.163.99.237 (talk) 19:22, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. Studied Drums and Percussion at the Rotterdam Conservatorium (The Netherlands). Has a Degree in Performance and Composition (Summa Cum Laude) from the Berklee College of Music (USA), and a PhD in Music Theory from the University of Southampton (UK). Through out his academic and artistic career, he was recipient of many grants and scholarships, such as: Berklee International Grant, Berklee Achievement Scholarship, scholarships from the Portuguese Ministry of Culture, and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology. Performs on a regular basis with many prestigious national and international ensembles. Besides doing a fair amount of work as a studio musician, he is frequently asked to do Master-Classes through out Portugal. As a music researcher, he has as main interests of research: Performance Studies, 20th Century Music, Music Theory, and Rhythm and Metre. Sources[edit]http://www.yamaha-europe.com/yamaha_europe/portugal/service/010_artist/portugal_artists_BandOrchestra/Eduardo_Lopes/index.html http://www.rollsrock.com/portugues/pt_agenciamento_03_eduardo_lopes_body.htm http://home.uevora.pt/~el/ 85.242.248.66 (talk) 20:38, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply] Declined. The proposed article is not suitable for Wikipedia. Sorry, Thisisborin9talk/contribs 01:51, 15 April 2008 (UTC) P.S. If you want to resubmit this article, please reword it.[reply] |
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. Gwaunfarren is a small primary school located in the village of Penydarren in the County Borough of Merthyr Tydfil. Sources[edit]www.gwaunfarren.merthyr.sch.uk/ 86.128.78.56 (talk) 20:43, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply] Declined. This suggestion doesn't sufficiently explain the importance or significance of the subject. See the speedy deletion criteria A7 and/or guidelines on biographies. Please provide more information on why the person or group is worthy of inclusion in an encyclopedia, and cite reliable, published third-party sources, so that the information in the article is verifiable. Sorry, Thisisborin9talk/contribs 01:49, 15 April 2008 (UTC)[reply] |
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. Sources[edit]198.60.182.138 (talk) 21:01, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply] Declined. We cannot accept unsourced suggestions or sources that are not reliable per the verifiability policy. Please provide reputable, third-party sources with your suggestions. Third party sources are needed both to establish the verifiability of the submission as well as its notability. Sorry, Thisisborin9talk/contribs 01:46, 15 April 2008 (UTC)[reply] |
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- ^ a b c
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- ^ Hopkinson, Michael, ed. Frank Henderson's Easter Rising: Recollections of a Dublin Volunteer. Cork: Cork University Press, 1998. (pg. 7-8) ISBN 1-85918-143-0
- ^ Valiulis, Maryann Gialanella. Portrait of a Revolutionary: General Richard Mulcahy and the Founding of the Irish Free State. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1992. (pg. 183-184) ISBN 0-8131-1684-8
- ^ Cathal, Liam. Blood on the Shamrock: A Novel of Ireland's Civil War, 1916-1921. Cincinnati: St. Padriac Press, 2006. (pg. xlvi)
- ^ Manning, Maurice and Moore McDowell. Electricity Supply in Ireland: The History of the ESB. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1984. (pg. 70)
- ^ Coogan, Tim Pat. De Valera: Long Fellow Long Shadow. London: Hutchinson, 1995.
- ^ Murray, Christopher. Sean O'Casey: Writer at Work, A Biography. Montreal: McGill-Queen's Press, 2005. (pg. 71-72) ISBN 0-7735-2889-X