Search Results Heading

MBRLSearchResults

mbrl.module.common.modules.added.book.to.shelf
Title added to your shelf!
View what I already have on My Shelf.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to add the title to your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
    Done
    Filters
    Reset
  • Discipline
      Discipline
      Clear All
      Discipline
  • Is Peer Reviewed
      Is Peer Reviewed
      Clear All
      Is Peer Reviewed
  • Item Type
      Item Type
      Clear All
      Item Type
  • Subject
      Subject
      Clear All
      Subject
  • Year
      Year
      Clear All
      From:
      -
      To:
  • More Filters
20 result(s) for "Rob Way"
Sort by:
Rogers Communications Inc
Founded in 1960, Rogers Communications is Canada's leading wireless, cable, and media company that provides connectivity services and entertainment to consumers and businesses across the country. From cable and wireless services to news, sports, entertainment, and its award-winning credit card, the company reaches Canadians from coast to coast. It connects about 11.7 million mobile subscribers in over 2,200 communities on the country's largest and most reliable 5G network, and its cable service territory covers approximately 10 million homes. In addition, it also operates a transcontinental fiber-optic network that provides voice and data communications and advanced services, including data centers and cloud computing, to the enterprise, public sector, and carrier wholesale markets.
Rage get rolling on another season
K-W Rage coach and general manager Rob Way said their biggest competition for talent is lacrosse, which has enjoyed a resurgence in the last few years with the Toronto Rock serving as poster boys. That mean players like the Waterloo Siskins' Ryan Benesch, who would be a natural for the in-line hockey game, instead turns his skates in every summer to play for the K-W Junior A Braves lacrosse team. Kevin Brennamen, however, is healthy and remains one of the best defencemen in the Great Lakes Inline hockey league, which began play last week, with the Rage dropping a 4-1 decision to Hamilton at Albert McCormick Arena. He plays senior hockey with the Cambridge Hornets when the temperature is below zero, and the Rage when the temperature heats up. While it's an all-star calibre team on the ice, on the concrete of the in-line floor the Rage will be a solid club that will need a few breaks to knock of league powers like back-to-back Gli champs Sarnia and Chatham, who both play in the Rage's division.
Rage looking for a few good players
The junior league itself draws much of its support from programs like the K-W Inline minor hockey, that develops players from seven to 20, who then make the jump up to the big team. The Rage are looking to strengthen those ties this year by re-investing all surplus funds into the K-W Inline program, while hosting skills development clinics for the minor players and inviting some minor teams to their home games. Rob Way, who is taking over the General Manager duties of the club, said the Rage will have a strong nucleus of returning players to take a run at the league title-holder, the Sarnia Bulldogs. But the club will also be holding open tryouts this week to see if they find can players to replace departing veterans like Gary Kotsopoulos.
Softball's Bantam Warriors live to fight another day
Rob Way still remembers the incredible experience his Waterloo Peewee boys softball team had two years ago, becoming the first local team to qualify for the Eastern Canadian championships in Nova Scotia. That strong nucleus helped the Warriors win the Ontario Softball eliminations last week in Cobourg, qualifying them for a return to the nationals. Anyone interested in helping the Warriors bring home a championship can call Way at home at 725-2743 or at his work number at 745-2101, ext. 221.
Swiftspace work stations cater to changing offices
One day, [Dean McIntyre]'s operations manager in Calgary, Jerry O'Brien, began to wonder: \"Why does this have to be so hard?\" He imagined one-piece, foldable, work stations. In the retail sector, the company is making products for \"pop up stores\" or for additional checkout stations during the Christmas rush. \"They just unfold it, put a cash register and debit machine on it, and move people through their stores more quickly,\" [Rob Way] said. Rob Way (left), chief executive officer of Swiftspace, and Dean McIntyre, one of the partners in the business, stand with one of Swiftspace's foldable modular work stations installed in their Ayr office. David Bebee, Record staff
Minor hockey merger proposal creates 'brouhaha' in Waterloo
\"Waterloo is committed to creating a hockey program for youth that is fun, where participants can develop and learn the technique and skills of the game, life skills, and good sportsmanship,\" the website says. \"Waterloo Minor Hockey Association was founded in 1949 to provide an organized program for the children of Waterloo.\" Rangers chief operating officer Steve Bienkowski said the Rangers were not out to \"control\" and \"groom\" elite players in Kitchener and Waterloo for OHL duty with the Rangers. He said the chances of that happening are \"remote.\" \"Waterloo minor hockey should not be run by a private club,\" said [Doug Snyder], who grew up in Waterloo. \"I have pride in this city.\"
Slain soldier from Watauga called 'a quiet professional'
Chief Warrant Officer Rob Way, Davis' immediate supervisor in the 5th Special Forces Group of the Army's 3rd Battalion stationed at Fort Campbell, Ky., gave that assessment of Davis as he talked about the three soldiers who died in a \"friendly fire\" accident on Wednesday. Way was chosen as the \"rear detachment commander\" to handle unit matters stateside. He and several other 5th Special Forces soldiers held a press conference Thursday at a hotel near the base, which straddles the Tennessee-Kentucky border. It was Way and Lt. Col. Frank Hudson, deputy commander of the 5th Special Forces Group, who went to the Davis home to deliver the grim news to Davis' wife, Mi Kyong Davis.
Cars like no others on the road
\"The trend (of customizing cars) is so popular that there are companies - all they do is make fibreglass bodies, or all they do is make replacement parts,\" [Larry Way] said. \"There's a company that's just making steering wheels. It's a hot industry. We're going through a bit of a recession now, and the market's a little soft, but most of these companies are still surviving.\" \"Once the builder started to show me all of this stuff, I thought, 'Holy cow, this is unbelievable,'\" Way recalled. \"I just couldn't believe the engineering and all the things they did to it. And you wouldn't know it unless someone showed it to you because everything is hidden.\" Way and I proceeded to Hall Four, the zone of the young, the realm of \"Lambo doors,\" named after the doors of the Lamborghini, set on hinges that make them open like beetle wings. \"They do things differently,\" Way said of these younger customizers. \"The cars today have more electronics so they do a lot of that, modifying electronics. It's different from baby boomers, who are more involved in mechanical things. These guys here are more electronic and cosmetic.\"
THE RAMSEY EXPLOSION ; Blast victims are mourned as search for clues continues; Some signs point to gas leak, but no answers yet
Jim Holt, who owns Dependable Indoor Air Quality of Coon Rapids, said the building owners had called him Nov. 26 to say they had no heat in the building. A technician looked at the furnace, which had turned off. If a gas furnace gets too hot, the blow motor quits, Holt said. That probably indicates a slightly higher pressure of gas to the furnace than should exist, which trips a sensor and shuts off the furnace. There is no chance that a furnace malfunction would cause this explosion, Holt said. The safety equipment built into the furnace would have shut down the furnace before it would explode, he said. Capt. Rob Bredsten of the Anoka County Sheriff's Office said the law enforcement part of the investigation is just about wrapped up, although crime lab investigators still plan to do some work at the scene. But the brunt of the work now moves to fire and pipeline officials. In addition, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency are participating in the investigation, Bredsten said.