Word: wilmot
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...prolific incubator of money-minting ideas, playing a key role in creating everything from the computer mouse to the HDTV standard, which Carlson helped develop. Over the past 20 years, Carlson has searched SRI and countless corporations for the best practices of innovation. Now he has, with William Wilmot, director of the Collaboration Institute, laid all that learning down in a book, Innovation: The Five Disciplines for Creating What Customers Want...
...syphilis, but it got significantly worse when I had to cower and yell at my embattled and traumatized friend, “Tell me when its over!” every time Depp came on screen. “The Libertine,” details the life of John Wilmot, the second Duke of Rochester, whose unparalleled bisexual licentiousness made him both a legend and a man reviled. He was extremely witty and intelligent, but his cynicism ultimately impelled his self-destruction. Depp’s Wilmot is completely and utterly unlikable. He scorns the overtures of his long-suffering...
...Australian border and back, ministering to roadhouses and sheep stations. "They're nearly all Catholic," he says of the people he visits, "but that's all right, because I'm the church presence out there at the moment." Malarrpa and Murray are but two of the foot soldiers in Wilmot's vast territory. But the tale of these two ministries shows the extent to which churches must cross borders - both geographical and cultural - to conquer distance and despondency...
...volunteer army of pastoral care and social justice coordinators. His church might be in Coomalbidgup or Condingup one week, a farmer's lounge room the next. "What we are talking about is a revolution that involves identifying and energizing the gifts that are there within any community," says Bishop Wilmot. "This is what St. Paul and St. Barnabas discovered as they wandered around the Mediterranean basin." Murray's mission is to take the church to the people - even if those people are sheep farmers with 150-km-long road frontages. "We either go down that path," he says...
...work is involved with the comforting constancy of "hatch, match and despatch," as Bishop Wilmot likes to call it. Out on the Eyre Highway, isolation has taken its toll on the young station and roadhouse workers to whom Murray also ministers. "A lot of people think they're going out there to get away, but they take their problems with them," he says, "and a lot of them don't last terribly long. There's not much to do in places like Cocklebiddy, and a lot of people turn to alcohol." As with the stranded motorists he regularly finds...