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Guardian 20117008299087

new wpw

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  • BCB4891

How to send an email attachment

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ISBN converter

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Infoboxes

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Westminster archive

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Terracotta sealant

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Images

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Note thread on WP:FAC (talk) 16-18 September 2009 re left-aligned images under headers. Brianboulton (talk) 07:46, 8 October 2009 (UTC)


Wikibreak

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JSTOR

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  1. You will be directed to the MyJSTOR Login Page.
  2. Click the 'Register' link to register for a MyJSTOR Account.
  3. Complete the required fields to register a username and password.
  4. Click 'Submit' to complete your registration
  • You will be directed to the JSTOR homepage, where you may begin to use JSTOR immediately. If the above activation link does not work, copy and paste the link directly into your web browser. In the future, you may go directly to www.jstor.org and select 'Login' on the top right of the page and enter your username and password to access JSTOR.

Your access to JSTOR is now confirmed. Whenever you log into your MyJSTOR account in the future, you will have access to the full set of content available to you.

  • Username= Brianboulton
  • Password 1984again

Concise WP

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Reg form
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Westminster
  • Westminster pass no: 20117008299087

Christmas 2018

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  Seasonal Greetings and Good Wishes
Seasonal greetings for 2018, and best wishes for 2019 to all who continue to fight for good practice and higher standards in building this great encyclopedia. Brianboulton (talk) 11:07, 16 December 2018 (UTC)

Accessdate and archive date

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Wilkinson magazine articles

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   WILKINSON, LOUIS (Umfreville) (1881-1966); see pseudonym Louis Marlow (chron.)
       * The Black Windmill, (ss) The International Sep 1917
       * Chrissy’s Way (with Frances Gregg), (nv) The Smart Set Nov 1918
       * The Connoisseur of Emotion, or the Tester of Thrills, (nv) The Smart Set May 1915
       * Else, (ss) The Smart Set Oct 1916
       * Her Kindness to Him, (ss) Pearson’s Magazine (US) Dec 1918
       * Kangeroodledoo, (ss) The Smart Set Oct 1915
       * The Night-Boat: a Modern Grimace of the Tragic Muse, (ss) Pearson’s Magazine (US) Jul 1918
       * The Phantom Baby, (ss) The Smart Set Dec 1915
       * A Question of Nerve, (ss) The Smart Set Oct 1916
       * Shakespeare: Rebel, Aristocrat and Pessimist, (nf) The International Nov 1917
       * The Strange Case of Zedekiah, (ss) The Smart Set Aug 1919

Burgess house

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Monteverdi

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Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi (1567–1643) was an Italian composer and choirmaster, considered a crucial transitional figure between the Renaissance and the Baroque periods of music history. Born in Cremona, he developed his career first at the court of Mantua and then until his death in the Republic of Venice where he was maestro di capella at the basilica of San Marco. Much of Monteverdi's output has been lost; his surviving music includes nine books of madrigals, large-scale sacred works such as his Vespro della Beata Vergine (Vespers) of 1610, and three complete operas. His opera L'Orfeo (1607) is the earliest of the genre still widely performed. While he worked extensively in the tradition of earlier Renaissance polyphony, he undertook great developments in form and melody, and began to employ the basso continuo technique, distinctive of the Baroque. He defended his sometimes novel techniques as elements of a seconda pratica, contrasting with the more orthodox earlier style which he termed the prima pratica. Largely forgotten during the eighteenth and much of the nineteenth centuries, Monteverdi's works enjoyed a rediscovery around the beginning of the 20th century, and he is now established as a significant influence in European musical history.

  • Wordcount after trims 7 March: 8134
  • Wordcount 28 April: 8121
  • Wordcount after 29 April: 8111

Leslie Hylton blurb

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Leslie Hylton was a West Indian Test cricketer of the inter-war years who in the 1950s was hanged for murder after shooting his wife in a jealous rage. Hylton, from a background in the lowest stratum of Jamaican society, overcame many obstacles to reach the Test side, and his international career was belated and brief. Although the circumstances of his crime created a certain degree of public sympathy for Hylton at the time, the cricket world turned its back on him and largely ignored his contribution to the game, so that he is scarcely acknowledged in cricket histories. Hylton's actions can't be excused, but one can't help feeling that his crime passionnel might have been viewed differently had he come from a higher social background. A sad story indeed. Thanks to the talk-page reviewers who helped me to put the article together.

Source reviews outstanding

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  1. Leonardo DiCaprio 13 October 2019
  2. Felicity Smoak (Arrowverse) 3 November 2019
  3. Ghostbusters II 5 November 2019
  4. 1927 FA Cup Final 10 November 2019
  5. Sathi Leelavathi (1936 film) 11 November 20
  6. 1958 US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement 18 November 2019
  7. The Life and Death of 9413: a Hollywood Extra 24 November 2019
  8. Elizabeth College, Guernsey 24 November 2019
  9. Washington State Route 504 25 November 2019
  10. Ultralight Beam 30 November 2019
  11. Parachute Jump 1 December 2019
  12. 55th (West Lancashire) Infantry Division 3 December 209

Sankey

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  • Sankey, Ira D. (1993). Sacred Songs & Solos: Twelve Hundred Pieces. London: Marshall Pickering. ISBN 0-551-05093-4.
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Sullivan hymns discography

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  • [7] CricketWeb - Big Jim Smith (Chandler)
  • [8] Fate of SY Morning (Australian National Maritime Museum)
  • [9]SPRI re Morning
  • [10] Fate of Francais (Charcot's ship) per Coolantarctica
  • [11] p. 423: Return of kainan Maru yo Yokohama, 19 June 1912
  • [12] Deutschland sold to Austria ?
  • [13] - but this says it was placed at the disposal of the Argentine Govt
  • [14] Interesting but perhaps not RS? (Summary of fate of all Antarctic exploration vessels)
  • [15] Discovery post-expedition history
  • [16] Riffenburgh re Gauss
  • [17] E Brit re fate of Pourquoi-pas?
  • [18] re Amundsen search 1928
  • [19] Charcot details post-1918
  • [20] re Shirase
  • [21] Fram
  • [22] BBC Terra Nova
  • [23] Royal Museums Greenwich re Terra Nova
  • [24] Southpole.com re deutschland (sold to Austria)
  • [25] re loss of Aurora - Museum (Australia's National Maritime Museum)
  • [26] re loss of Aurora. "W.R. Grace". Aus govt Dept of E and E
  • [27] re Shackleton's sea-cabin on Quest (Irish Times)
  • [28] re Quest (warsailors.com)
  • [29] Atlas Obscura re crow's nest
  • [30] re Yelcho (Scottish Built Ships)
  • [31] re Yelcho (James Caird Society)
  • [32] Schmidt O I re Terra Nova
  • [33] Telegraph re Terra Nova sinking
  • [34] re Uruguay (p.145)
  • [35] Donaghy re Uruguay (13 Antarctic voyages)
  • [36] Buenos Aires Ciudad
  • [37] Schaufflen p.3
  • [38] SouthPole.com re Uruguay
  • [39] Re Koonya wreck 1919
  • [40] Koonya - first steel vessel to cross the Antarctic Circle (Shackleton, Heart... p. 48)
  •   Chile
  •   Argentina
  •   New Zealand

Sources reviews

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I'm glad to say that my most recent bleat asking for more participation in FAC sources (18 August) has had some effect. In the April–August 2019 period, I carried out 71% of the 143 source reviews on completed nominations. In September/October my "share" fell to just half that. Many thanks for this – it enables me to spend more of my WP time on more interesting things. Long may the trend continue.

About 18 months ago I posted an essay offering guidance to editors on conducting FAC source reviews. This was added to and improved by User:SlimVirgin – it's still here, although its recent page viewing history (average 1 per day) is not encouraging. In the hope that it might help further, I'm leaving a simplified version of the Guide on my sandbox, here. Note, too, that there's always help available if you need it – just post your query on my talkpage.

I name the guilty ones

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(Not to be published beyond this page)

  • The dozen prolific FAC nominators still reasonably active, and the number of source reviews they did in the period Jan-Sept 2019:
  • Wehwalt: Total successful noms 188 [11 in 2019 to date] Source reviews 0; content reviews 32
  • Casliber: Total 182 [10] SR 2; CR 52
  • Brianboulton: Total 106 [0 – last 31.5.18] SR 128; CR 9
  • Sturmvogel 66: Total 83 [15] SR 2; CR 15
  • Ian Rose: Total 81 [7] SR 0; CR 19
  • Hurricanehink: Total 77 [1] SR 1; CR 7
  • Parsecboy: Total 77 [12] SR 3; CR 8
  • Jimfbleak: 74 [2] SR 2; CR 27
  • Hawkeye7: 73 [7] SR 2; CR 7
  • Mike Christie: 65 [2] SR 4; CR 16
  • SchroCat: 55 [12] SR 5; CR 67
  • Ceoil: 54 [2] SR 3, CR 22

(and a few more)

  • Funkmonk: 49 [4] SR 0; CR 43
  • Peacemaker67: 47 [4] SR 5; CR 50
  • Tim riley: 46 [4] SR 1; CR 64
  • Nick-D: 42 [3] SR 0; CR 16
  • Midnightblueowl: 30 [3] SR 0; CR 3
  • The ed 17: 27 [0: last 4.4.18] SR 0; CR 4
  • Aoba47: 26 [5] SR 1; CR 34

All the rest SR 114; CR 825

"Top group" responsible for 58% of source reviews (BB 47%, others 11%) and 37.5% of content reviews
"All the rest" responsible for 42% of source reviews and 62.5% of content reviews.

Most "rest" reviewers:

Australasian Antarctic Expedition

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Related subarticles:

Statistics

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Subject category Total nominations
Aug/Sept/Oct 2019
Promoted Archived "Success" percentage
Popular culture (Film, TV, Video, Pop music, Sport) 27 11 16 41%
General history (Ancient, Medieval, Modern) 21 15 6 71%
Military history 20 20 0 100%
Sciences (Biology & related, Physics, Meteorology) 14 12 2 86%
All others 16 12 4 75%
All nominations 98 70 28 71%

Far Western base

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Required for expansion of Western base party article expansion

  • Fitzsimons:
  • 431-432: 1,500 mi W of Cape Denison, in desperation Davis & Wild agree to establish the Far Western base on a glacier.
  • 436–439: Hut erected, etc. Wild gives Davis letter of indemnity
  • 470: serious brekaway of ice endangers pos. of base.
  • 500: Midwinter's Day celebrations. Wild names the territory Queen Mary Land.
  • 553–554: Summer sledging, E and W. Gaussberg.
  • 617–620: relief.
  • Turney
  • 229-231: Landing on ice
  • 248: relief
  • Mills
  • 140-142: Landing, indemnity
  • 142: Summary of achievements: 6 sledging journeys, 350 mi. coastline mapped, naming plateau QM Land, reaches Gaussberg, sci. observations
  • 143: Wireless equipt useless, unused.
  • 145–153: March-April sledging jny. Depot laid, 29 March
  • 155–160: August-Sept: depot-laying jny for eastern party. Dept laid, 4 September, 70 mi. frm base.
  • 160: Sept 26, Jones leads depot-laying jny for western party.
  • 160–161: Oct 1–8: jny to recover depot laid in Mar-april, early return, weather
  • 163: Jones party returns, 26 October. depot laid 28 miles from base. Jny much affected by weather.
  • 163: 30 Oct: Wild leads eastern party
  • 163, 175-177: Jones leads western party, reaches Gaussberg
  • 164-166, 167-175, 177-187: 30 Oct - 6 January 1913 : Wild's account of eastern jny. 230 mi., 150 miles of new land charted.
  • 191: 23 February: relief.