User talk:Kalimac
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Welcome!
Additional tips:
- Here are some extra tips to help you get around Wikipedia:
- If you made any edits before you got an account, you might be interested in assigning those to your username.
- If you want to play around with your new Wiki skills, try the Sandbox.
- Click on the Edit button on a page, and look at how other editors did what they did.
- You can sign your name using three tildes, like this: ~~~. If you use four, you can add a datestamp too. Always sign comments on Talk pages, never sign Articles.
- You might want to add yourself to the New User Log
- If your first language isn't English, try Wikipedia:Contributing to articles outside your native language
Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 19:48, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Steeleye Span
Please see my question at Talk:Folk-rock#Steeleye_Span. -- Jmabel | Talk June 29, 2005 02:12 (UTC)
Sorry but since you seem to be the user who wrote this could you please tell me where you got this and who the commentators are? And Again I'm sorry but could you answer me as fast as possible, I need the info very soon. from the "Angry Young Men" article: "Some commentators, following publisher Tom Maschler, who edited a collection of political-literary essays by the "Angries" (Declaration, 1957), divided them into three groups:
The New University Wits (a term applied by William Van O'Connor in his 1963 study The New University Wits and the End of Modernism), Oxbridge malcontents who explored the contrast between their upper-class university privilege and their middle-class upbringings. They included Kingsley Amis, Philip Larkin, and John Wain, all of whom were also part of the poetic circle known as The Movement. Writers mostly of lower-class origin concerned with their political and economic aspirations. Some of these were left-wing and some were right-wing. They included John Osborne (whose play Look Back in Anger is a basic "Angries" text), Harold Pinter, John Braine, and Alan Sillitoe. William Cooper, the early model AYM, though Cambridge-educated was a "provincial" writer in his frankness and material and is included in this group. A small group of young existentialist philosophers led by Colin Wilson and also including Stuart Holroyd and Bill Hopkins. " Answer me on my user page Roman Taycher --rtaycher1987 10:18, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Norton Lectures
Hello, I wanted to thank you for the overhaul on the Norton Lectures page. I spent quite a bit of time bringing it to where it was, and I believe it took you a while as well. Congrats on finding all that information. I thought it was very inaccessible... Happy surfing/editing, Rareş
PS: Are you also affiliated with Harvard? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Raresel (talk • contribs) 00:52, 25 April 2007 (UTC).