Greenpeace
Greenpeace
Greenpeace is the largest environmental organization in the world with 2.8 million supporters worldwide and national as well as regional offices in forty-one countries across Europe, the Americas, Asia, and the Pacific. It is a nonprofit organization founded in 1971 and based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Greenpeace is one of the nongovernmental organizations that have consultative status to the United Nations, and is an active participant in international conferences on the environment such as the 1992 Rio Earth Summit and the 2002 Johannesburg Earth Summit and their treaty processes. As a global organization, Greenpeace focuses on what it feels are the most crucial worldwide threats to the planet's biodiversity and environment. Using nonviolent means, it campaigns to stop climate change, protect the oceans, stop whaling, stop genetic engineering, stop nuclear threats, eliminate toxic chemicals, and encourage sustainable development. Greenpeace does not accept donations from governments or corporations but relies on contributions from individual supporters and foundation grants.
Greenpeace was founded by a small group of activists in an old fishing boat, the Phyllis Cormack. They wanted to stop and "bear witness" to U.S. underground nuclear testing at Amchitka, a tiny island off the west coast of Alaska. Although their boat was intercepted and the bomb was detonated, nuclear testing there ended a year later. Greenpeace's creative communication and media-savvy tactics of bringing vivid images to the public, of individuals confronting huge corporations and governments, and of using specific cases to highlight broader issues sparked worldwide interest and changed the way advocacy groups conduct campaigns. In one of its best-known campaigns, activists placed small inflatable boats called zodiacs between whaling ships and the whales to protest the hunting practice and highlight toxic threats facing oceans. In 1987, Greenpeace's flagship the Rainbow Warrior was preparing to lead a peace flotilla of ships from New Zealand to the island of Moruroa to peacefully protest against French nuclear testing. Three days after arrival in Auckland, French agents bombed and sank the Rainbow Warrior in the harbor, killing Greenpeace photographer Fernando Pereira. After two years of international arbitration, a panel of three arbitrators awarded a U.S. $8.159 million damage claim settlement in favor of Greenpeace. The money, paid by the French government, was used in part by Greenpeace to support a worldwide fleet of ships and its campaigns for a nuclear- and pollution-free Pacific.
see also
Activism;
Antinuclear Movement;
Arbitration;
Earth Summit;
Environmental Movement;
Ethics;
Global Warming;
Hazardous Waste;
Mass Media;
Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOS);
Ocean Dumping;
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPS);
Petroleum;
Public Participation;
Technology, Pollution Prevention;
Treaties and Conferences;
War;
Water Pollution: Marine.
Bibliography
internet resources
envirolink network web site. available from http://www.envirolink.org.
greenpeace web site. available from http://www.greenpeace.org.
Susan L. Senecah
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L'Heure Exquise: Melodies by Enesco, Hahn, Chausson and Debussy.
Magazine article from: Opera Canada; 11/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; L'HEURE EXQUISE Melodies by Enesco, Hahn, Chausson and Debussy Marie...Reynaldo Hahn was born in Venezuela and Georges Enesco in Romania, but both lived and...as only French melodies can be. Enesco's Sept chansons de Clement Marot...
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THE DARNDEST THINGS YOU DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT ENESCO
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 3/31/1987; ; 700+ words
; ...instead of more usual fare, pieces by Georges Enesco, Eugene Ysaye, Charles Ives...the Violin Sonata No. 3 by George Enesco (1881-1955), the eminent composer...the ongoing varying tensions in Enesco's work between artistic cosmopolitanism...
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Chamber group playing at WSU
Newspaper article from: Deseret News (Salt Lake City); 2/8/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...48, the program also includes Georges Enesco's Octet, op. 7, an early work...both the composer and audiences, Enesco is today remembered mainly for his...composer's lifetime. Much to Enesco's chagrin, in the eyes of the...
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Sonorous strings soar
Newspaper article from: The Topeka Capital-Journal; 3/16/2004; ; 565 words
; ...in C Major by Romanian composer Georges Enesco. A masterfully crafted work reflecting...shifting musical tides of 1907, Enesco's swirling Romanticism echoed...Strings in E-flat Major. As with Enesco's opus, the players traded chairs...
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Toda, Ahead of Her Time
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 2/11/1997; ; 552 words
; ...Toda was equally impressive in Georges Enesco's Sonata No. 3 in A Minor, Op...modal jazz or classical klezmer). Enesco gives his performer lots of sounds...ethereal, passionate and spent. Both Enesco and Ysaye were celebrated concert...
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ST. CECILIA TUNES UP TO DOUBLE YOUR FUN.(SHOWTIME)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 10/10/1993; 700+ words
; ...heard composers -- Josef Suk, Georges Enesco, William Turner Walton -- and...unusual "Prelude in Unison," by Enesco, a contemporary of Stravinsky...as the better-known Russian. Enesco mixed in the folk music of his native...
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Hilary Hahn, Channeling Violinists of Yore
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/15/2005; ; 671 words
; ...20th century - - Eugene Ysaye, Georges Enesco and Nathan Milstein -- and played...standing ovations were fervent. Enesco's Sonata No. 3 in A Minor...virtuosic partner in the exploration of Enesco's three- movement sonata, which...
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replay
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/19/1996; ; 688 words
; ...recalls that of his great teacher Georges Enesco and, although Yehudi and Hephzibah...blooded Lalo Symphonie espagnole under Enesco (one of the first recordings to...Intermezzo" movement) and an account of Enesco's own gypsy-style Third Violin...
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In memoriam: Lord Menuhin of Stoke d'Abernon
Magazine article from: Musical Times; 7/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...sought further instruction from the Romanian violinist Georges Enesco, who exerted a profound and lasting influence on his...gramophone recordings (1928) and further guidance from both Enesco and Adolf Busch. One of the most historic events of...
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CD set recalls the genius of cult artist Dinu Lipatti
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 9/29/1991; ; 700+ words
; ...frail, he was privately educated at home. The composer Georges Enesco, his godfather, supervised his musical studies. In...the little-known but extraordinary Sonata No. 3 by Enesco. There are four concertos, and these are probably...
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Georges Enesco
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Georges Enesco , Rom. George Enescu, 1881-1955, Romanian violinist, composer...Conservatory and in Paris with Massenet , Fauré , and others. Enesco made many worldwide concert tours as both violinist and conductor, including...
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Menuhin, Yehudi
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
...Europe, where Yehudi studied with the violinist Georges Enesco; the family followed Enesco back to the U.S. in 1927. It was that year...Sigmund Anker and Louis Persinger in California; Georges Enesco in Paris and Romania; and Adolf Busch in Basel...
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Haendel, Ida
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
...recognized by Carl Flesch, with whom she began formal studies, and composer Georges Enesco, who taught her to consider the deeper meaning of a musical work. Describing Enesco’s teaching to Arthur Kaptainis in the Montreal’...
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Negulesco, Jean
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...teens he was a precocious painter. When composer Georges Enesco visited the military hospital where Negulesco worked...the youthful Negulesco drew a portrait of him, and Enesco bought it. Encouraged by this, Negulesco decided he...
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Yehudi Menuhin
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...He made his debut with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra at seven, then studied in Europe with Adolf Busch and Georges Enesco . After a world tour (1934-35) of unprecedented success, he retired to study for two years. During World War...
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