Think Global (formal name Development Education Association, also known as DEA) is a British charity which "works to educate and engage people about global issues". It was founded in 1993 by a group of major charities including CAFOD, Oxfam, ActionAid, Save the Children and Christian Aid, and evolved from NADEC, the National Association for Development Education Centres; in January 2011 it adopted the "working name" Think Global to reflect a broadening of its interests.
DEA is the commonly used acronym for the Drug Enforcement Administration, a United States law enforcement agency.
DEA or Dea may also refer to:
D.E.A. is a television program which was aired by Fox Broadcasting Company as part of its 1990-91 lineup.
D.E.A. was based on true stories of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Shot in cinéma vérité style, the program combined recreated scenes using actors with actual surveillance footage and film of actual newscasts covering the stories depicted.
Fox apparently had considerable confidence in this concept. When the initial version garnered low ratings and was put on hiatus, before its return the program was retooled into DEA—Special Task Force, which placed more emphasis on the agents' personal lives and showed less graphic violence. The revamped show premiered in April 1991, but also failed to achieve significant ratings and the program was canceled for good in June 1991.
DEA was produced by David Peckinpah (supervising producer) with cast being Maurice Benard (Curro), John Vargas as drug lord (Ricky Prado) Terri Treas and Christopher Stanley (Nick Biaggi).
Summertime may refer to:
"Summertime" is the third single released by The Maybes? from their debut album, Promise. It was released on 25 August 2008 on Xtra Mile Recordings as a download and 7" Record.
Download Single
7" Single
Charles L. Mee (born September 15, 1938) is an American playwright, historian and author known for his collage-like style of playwriting, which makes use of radical reconstructions of found texts. He is also a professor of theater at Columbia University.
Mee was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1938. He contracted polio at the age of fourteen. His memoir A Nearly Normal Life (1999) tells how that event informed the rest of his life.
After graduating from Harvard University in 1960, Mee moved to Greenwich Village and became a part of the Off-Off-Broadway scene. Between 1962 and 1964, his plays were presented at venues that included La MaMa E.T.C., Caffe Cino, Theatre Genesis, and the Ontological-Hysteric Theater.
In 1961 Mee began work at American Heritage publishing company and eventually became the editor of the hardback bi-monthly Horizon: A Magazine of the Arts. He was also the Advising Editor and then Contributing Editor of Tulane Drama Review – now called TDR and published from New York University – until 1964 and its Associate Editor from 1964 to 1965.
[Verse 1: Sadat X]
The Art Of War, war like you never seen before
Or, you can pick behind door three
See me with my dozers, and Desue
I guess you
I bless you
More or less
Fuckin' with me, it's more of this
Similar to great battles and war time tales
Hit me with my man Diamond and when all else fails
We can take it to the streets and not my sales
My game plan save the land
And that's the role part to be a general
I got to keep a cold heart right from the start
From the beginning I'm winnin'
Desue keeps it spinnin'
Hard wax,
hard facts,
hot jacks
My mother raised a soldier and my father was there
And if it's fair
Then I shouldn't have bring them things
Blow off your angels wings
I'm a warrior
Used to have a broad in Astoria but she caught feelings
I ?cut? off the dealings
That's a wrap for me
My niggas in the street ya bust a cap for me
Put my face on the wall
plus I'm being a whore
Read a verse from St. Peter and that's all (and that's all, and that's all)
[Chorus: Sadat X]
It's the art of war
War like you never seen my niggas
Runnin' in the street
Face summertime heat
Can you compete with the straight rap hop
and make sure your world don't stop
It's war
War like you never seen before
Summertime street
Niggas tryin' to eat
Can you compete with the straight rap hop
And make sure your world don't stop
[Verse 2: KC Da Rookee]
I declaire W-A-R
Attacking with the form are
Casualties and conflicts over the years we grow hard
Resistance torture mental scar move forward
Take grimest into the army it's enormous
Speech chain steady my aim
I'm blowin' up the target even when I be shooting from long range
Resistance, niggas hide behind enemy lines
Plot strategy and locations they can't find
Whose is the world if it ain't mine
Up against the enemy that's taken from us trapped up in petty crime
I stay ahead of time
With death threats aimed at my kind
But what's a better nigga still shine
Full power landin' in your mind
Rookee, Diamond D, Sadat X
Desue with the bomb on the decks
With the thoughts were comin' like air support
Fire missles they hit the core
?CY?
[Chrous]
[Diamond D]
Smack me I'ma smack you back
You won't hear D-Squeezy if the track is wack
Me and `X-Man´ once again back to back
I'm a fly ass nigga with a knack to rap
Ladies call me full Nelson, I'll crack your back
In the south BX where I pack the mack
Where the fiends get mad If the smack is wack
and all people stop and ask "where the cracks is at"
Honey's wear it one night and take it back to saks
Pickin' pockets
quick to hop it
One felony beat still quick to cock it
Bottles in yellow plastic quick to pop it
And I'm still quick with mines, sick with mines
Only cup OZ's no nicks and dimes
In the club on the low new kicks and shines
And still get cards from ex chicks of mine
[Chorus]
[talking: (Sadat X /) Diamond D]
(Yeah, yeah, y'all like that right)
Yeah, uh, goin' out to my man Desue
(Great 'dat X)
KC's and 'dat X
(and my man Desue)
Diamond D right here, uh