Aparna Nancherla, "Bridgetown Comedy Festival 3: The Return of the Zing," The Apiary (as a review, this qualifies as a secondary source for notability purposes)(last viewed 7/6/2010).[permanent dead link]
oregonlive.com
Kristi Turnquist, Laugh riot ! Big names, local favorites kick off the Bridgetown Comedy Festival, The Oregonian (Apr. 16, 2009) ("The eclectic list of performers in this year's Bridgetown Comedy Festival may share some of those traits. One thing is for certain -- they're not showing up at the April 23–26 event looking for a big paycheck. If anything unites Bridgetown's roster of out-of-town stars like Janeane Garofalo and up-and-coming local hopefuls, it's comedy for comedy's sake . . . . Wood, the Bridgetown fest co-founder, has a theory about why some Portlanders aren't willing to take a chance on seeing nonfamous comics: 'Maybe it's because it's so earnest here,' he says.") Douglas Perry, Coming Up: Bridgetown Comedy Festival, The Oregonian (Feb. 28, 2008) ("Time will tell if next week's first Bridgetown Comedy Festival will take its place in the pantheon of Portland performance buffets. But founders Wood and Matt Braunger have something in common with Waterfront Blues Festival booker Peter Dammann: They're working performers . . . . The fest features comedians from the Northwest and nationwide, working to raise funds for the Oregon Red Cross.")[1]
phikappapsi-cornell.org
Cornell University Residence Plan of 1966, Schedule I, Appendix A (May 3, 1966)(see sixth page of document noting the relationship between Phi Kappa Psi and the Irving Literary Society)); see also, List of Phi Kappa Psi/Irving Literary Society Members (Aug. 18, 2011).
John Chandler, "A Comic Invasion," Portland Monthly (Apr. 20, 2010)(last viewed 7/6/2010)(a primary source with respect to the comic performances, but as a review, a secondary source with respect to organization).
Randy Gragg, Laughs on Hawthorne: Bridgetown Comedy Festival returns, Portland Monthly (Apr. 2009) ("Give it time. The Bridgetown Comedy Festival, which is in only its second year, has grown from a field of forty comedians to an invasion of 115 rib-ticklers from the Northwest and around the country. And while the festival might not yet have bred a one-off catch-phrase ("Take my compost pile—please!?"), it has already bred success.").
Ben Bateman, "By Comics, For Comics: How the fastest-growing comedy festival in the country snuck into Portland," Willamette Week (Apr. 21, 2010)(as a review, this constitutes secondary source material, even though it was published in a newspaper)(last viewed 7/1/2010)[2]Archived 2010-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
wweek.com
wweek.com
"No Joke," by Ethan Smith, Willamette Week (newspaper), March 5, 2008Archived 2008-10-21 at the Wayback Machine)(last viewed on July 23, 2010).
Ethan Smith, "No Joke," Willamette Weekly Online (March 5, 2008Archived 2008-10-21 at the Wayback Machine)(last viewed June 29, 2010).
Ben Bateman, "By Comics, For Comics: How the fastest-growing comedy festival in the country snuck into Portland," Willamette Week (Apr. 21, 2010)(as a review, this constitutes secondary source material, even though it was published in a newspaper)(last viewed 7/1/2010)[2]Archived 2010-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
blogs.wweek.com
Ben Bateman, "News and Culture: Bridgetown Comedy Diaries: Night 1," Willamette Week (Apr. 23, 2010)(a primary source reporting on the 2010 Festival)(last viewed 7/6/2010).