User:Jnestorius/Todo
Misc 1
- Olympic medal and Medal (sports) from gold medal, silver medal, bronze medal
- Hiberno-English phonology; standard v dialect;
- Clay Sanskrit Library ←→ John P. Clay : Murty Classical Library of India
- Sheldon Pollock quoted in Kuruvilla, Elizabeth (24 January 2015). "The modern revivalists". Live Mint corresponded with [HUP] on 5 January 2009, saying that the Clay Sanskrit Library ... was coming to an end and I wanted to find a way to build on that visionary project ... John Clay ... had decided to move on to other philanthropic activities. So the library was closed and many translators were left hanging. They had done one part of a series, Book 1 of Kadambari, Books 2 and 3 were just “sorry, bye". I want to praise John Clay for his extraordinary vision, but many people were blindsided by the sudden termination of the library and I felt that was unfair. ... John said no, I don’t want you to go raise money for me, I don’t want to continue the series, it is what it is, thank you, bye-bye—that was in October 2008"
- Wookie adds from other spellings
- David Copperfield -- little Emily was never a prostitute, whereas Martha was.
- do you remember Martha?” / “Of our town?” / I needed no other answer than his face. / “Do you know that she is in London?” / “I have seen her in the streets,” he answered, with a shiver.
- When my child,” he said aloud, and with an energy of gratitude that shook him from head to foot, “stood upon the brink of more than I can say or think on—Martha, trew to her promise, saved her!”
- List of Irish Academy Award winners and nominees
- John Huston 1964 [1], Anjelica Huston 1964 p. 127
- List of British Academy Award nominees and winners
- Peter O'Toole had Irish passport
- site:dib.ie "academy award"
- Maureen O'Hara born in Ireland, honorary Oscar
- {{Ireland newspapers}} and other two "Newspapers of Ireland founded in the period before the establishment of Northern Ireland in 1921 and the Republic of Ireland in 1937" — (1) 1937 was Constitution, 1949 was Republic (2) why the different end dates? Why not just 1921 for both? (3) why plaster two overlapping templates onto most articles? what value to readers? (4) just vague yuck
- Court of Chancery#Origins cited 1828 source says 8 Ed. 1 quote (Law French original in 1662 cited by 1828) is a "Statute", but a 1970 source says "Chancery memorandum".
Misc 2
- The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show merge some SeeAlso into Legacy
- Governorate of Paraguay -- how to split rows where governor spans two kings? rownum on cells is not working. List of prime ministers of the United Kingdom is a FL with same problem in Monarch column!
- Cashio add redirect and in- links and dab or hatnote
- Names of the Holocaust intro redo from The Holocaust#Terminology and scope
- Lord Mayor of Dublin 1959 Council motion to request Oireachtas act removing Lord from title was amended to Irish Ard Mhaor IT 6 Sep 1959 p1
- Bowl of Light at An Tóstal 1953. Sources differ. Photos exist. plastic flames, copper bowl, steel tubes, concrete base; compared to a coal-effect electric fire. Brawl started when hoarding removed to reveal monument. https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-philadelphia-inquirer-george-m-neil/27326732/ Anthony Babington Wilson soon threw flames into river, fined. Bowl thrown in later by students. Flowers planted in bowl later. DCC debated removal 1958.[1] Removed 1964 as too heavy. Called "The Thing" after flowers added or "The Tomb of the Unknown Gurrier" before then by Jimmy O'Dea. https://ifiarchiveplayer.ie/the-thing-is-removed-from-oconnell-bridge/ https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/heritage/the-times-we-lived-in-the-odd-bowl-of-light-on-o-connell-bridge-1.3411617 https://www.dublincity.ie/library/blog/rathmines-literary-heritage-transcript https://www.google.com/search?q=%22Bowl+of+Light%22+tostal+-wikipedia&tbm=bks
- county corporate and Unreformed House of Commons and Irish House of Commons — I think only in Irish counties corporate did the extra-municipal liberties form part of the parliamentary borough as opposed to voting for the county-at-large; but complications elsewhere. Separate questions of forty shilling freeholders inside vs outside municipal boundary.
- Corbett, Uvedale (1826). An Inquiry Into the Elective Franchise of the Freeholders of, and the Rights of Election for, the Corporate Counties in England and Wales. London: J. & W. T. Clarke.
- includes brief discussion of Irish CCs on pp. 47–48
- Municipal Corporation (Boundaries) Act 1836 suggests 1835 act mistakenly added corporate county's Liberties to municipal area, whereas 1836 act reversed that and seemingly also took Liberties from corporate to at-large county. Presumably this experience influenced Irish act of 1840.
- Corbett, Uvedale (1826). An Inquiry Into the Elective Franchise of the Freeholders of, and the Rights of Election for, the Corporate Counties in England and Wales. London: J. & W. T. Clarke.
- Krivichs Radimichs and Dregovichs — bare -s plural is incorrect; Krivich[i] or Krivichian[s] etc per languagehat and Google Books University Press
- eg 2024 Cork City Council election results use "new" in the delta columns --- misleading and unnecessary
- Penalty shoot-out (association football) talks about winning the match rather than winning the fixture; in the case of a single match, the shootout is not part of the match [check World/euro ranking points]; also, two legged ties and group ranking tiebreakers.
Misc 3
- Not Angles but angels
- Hugh O'Neill, 1st Baron Rathcavan his three Privy Councils
- Trinity College, Dublin and University of Dublin: merge most of latter into former, and refactor separate University of Dublin–Trinity College distinction --- User:Jnestorius/TCD vs Dublin U
- Steven van de Velde - child rape vs statutory rape, English criminal law vs Dutch law s.5 of Sexual Offences Act 2003, summary vs detail of acts NYT, lenient sentence because career over
- Joel Embiid more on France letter to macron about aunts Cameroon first, bad CAM-FRA relations NYT interview athletic story French unhappy
- Category:Football clubs in Fiji -- as per Ba FA others need Foo F.C. renamed to Foo FA see rsssf names
- Ireland at the Olympics — Why are Ireland winning more Olympic medals? Post-Sydney reforms are helping Independent report after 2000 Games not implemented until after 2004 Games. "As soon as it [2000] was over, the infant Irish Sports Council, the age-old Olympic Council of Ireland, the Minister for Sport and the National Coaching and Training Centre were at each other’s throats." "Ireland didn’t have its first 50 metre pool until 2002." [Competitors dubbed] “Olympic tourists”. "Accountability was weak. Clientelism was rife." Radio shows criticised poor showing. [2024 good results] "This is what the high performance network was designed to produce"
- Coxswain (rowing)#Sex - heartheboatsing FINA 2017 gender neutral but ARA and HRR 1976 and Sue Brown 1981 -- was that both ways or female Cox only? Also mixed vs open vs female in US/UK. Also pararowing non-disabled cox
- Puissance separate high jump and remove hatnote
- Add Poulton Lancelyn redirect to Bebbington and update latter, Lancelyn Green, and Poulton (disambiguation) accordingly
- homonymous dab visual field issues, see also Homology
- List of UK parliamentary election petitions → /List of UK parliamentary election petitions — for "void election" add link to ensuing by-election; also change glossary "Reason" seems outofdate and "Result" repeats 'One of four possible outcomes of a petition trial'
- 2018 Athletics World Cup merge from Athletics World Cup into date name and make no-date name a dab with IAAF World Cup and see also World Athletics and World Athletics Championships
- List of world records in athletics relays
- name the teams; some are College or club rather than national
- move splits now anchor from notes column and/or change label to make obvious
- similar changes to progression and all-time lists
- List of best-selling albums in the United States merge sections into one table, trim repeated text like Platinum, maybe add studio/live/compilation/soundtrack column, more meaningful notes than asterisk/obelisk, standardise refs (do any disagree?), simpler lede-- criterion is 10x platinum = diamond certification.
- Nobility Law (Norway) -- add wl, integrate see-alsos Norwegian nobility, Norwegian noble titles
- Campbell's Soup Cans -- list the 32 varieties; better to include "soup" in names, so can distinguish links including or excluding the word "soup":
Manhattan clam chowder | Chicken noodle | Cream of vegetable | Onion | Green pea | Scotch broth | Vegetable | Split pea with ham |
Vegetable beef | Bean with rice | Cheddar cheese | Tomato rice | Beef with vegetables and barley | Cream of asparagus | Cream of celery | Black bean |
Turkey noodle | Beef broth | Chicken gumbo | Turkey vegetable | Chili beef | Vegetable bean | Cream of chicken | Cream of mushroom |
Pepper pot | Chicken with rice | Consommé | Tomato | Minestrone | Chicken vegetable | Beef noodle | Vegetarian vegetable |
Misc 4
- Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo lede order
- Commonwealth Games Association distinguish Commonwealth Games Federation; clearer on which double up as National Olympic Committee or National Olympic Committee#Unrecognized National Olympic Committees; which are separate (Canada and Australia), which are for non-Olympic areas (Home Nations, most dependencies); separate "Foo CGA" from "Foo at the Commonwealth Games" (maybe combined table?); More on history; how were early games organised? 1970 PhD Appendix C pp 210-211 has then list, more non Olympic
- Ray Armstead - college website [2] [3] [4], archive.org, alltime-athletix, 1984 US Trials PDF
- List of close election results % margin not "obviously"
- Junior (chess) and talkpage
- Synaxis#Feast Days maybe separate article: definitely replace outlinks with links to Near Caves, etc.
- Category:Chronology by event redundant, fold into Category:Timelines by topic; more generally separate Category:Chronology from Category:Timelines
- fr:marc (eau-de-vie) and fr:marc de raisin should wikidata with pomace brandy and pomace.
- Pomace brandy#France links should not WP:EGG. cf the French fr:Catégorie:Eau-de-vie de marc de raisin. Do the marc AOC areas match those of the namesake wines and/or fines?
- Category:Monuments and memorials and memorial are sorta predicated on "memorial" as a physical mini-monument as opposed to a non-physical commemoration or honor; but the category tree does not reflect that, and the boilerplate hack
{{Category explanation|actual monuments and memorials to [[CategoryName]], rather than articles [[WP:SHAREDNAME|just named after]] them/it.}}
is not working. The reason is that that sense is not sufficently WP:MAINTOPIC for memorial ; see merriam-webster and ahdictionary. - Cross Tipperary more on 1621 forfeit - by quo warranto James leveraged succession dispute between male Catholic and female Protestant
- Barry Lyndon IRA threat -- communicated via who: Dublin or London police, production assistant, direct IRA contact; rumour of chatter or specific threat; how likely to be hoax; was target Kubrick personally, family, or production; was cause redcoats in Ireland, clockwork orange, something else; did it influence withdrawal of clockwork orange from cinemas
- Elfdalian integrate ref from notes doi:10.14324/111.9781787355392
- Cooperative principle section redirects
- WP:OCEPON "Individual works by a person should not be included in an eponymous category but should instead be in a subcategory" -- what if there is no eponymous for it to be a subcategory of? I guess {{seealsocat}} or similar.
- Point (ice hockey) split in two and make name redirect to general dab. In fact only individual stat is article worthy, team stat is just group tournament ranking system#Ice hockey. Still, rename both this and The point (ice hockey)
Misc 5
- Assist (association football), [1] g+a is contribution or involvement, cf point (ice hockey). Also [2] edit lede to avoid "contribution", also [3] to specify not final touch. [4] Does player fouled off the ball leading to penalty get assist? [5] any "own assist"? Likely some record "mistake leading to goal" as separate stat.
- Great Seal of the Irish Free State
- 1919 Dáil patrix matrix "Séala Saorstát Éireann / Sigllum Republicae Hibernicae" "H Frederick St"
- 1922 Prov Govt [5] "Seala Rialtas Séaladaid na hÉireann" "Rooney, 8 College St., Dublin"
- 1925 seal steel matrix, copper patrix.[2] Seal of Ex Council[3] and Pres Ex Co HH:1939.165b derived from this.
- UKGovt promised new UK seal consequent on Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927.[4]
- Satow & Ritchie A guide to diplomatic practice (1932) p. 20 "The mode of appointment of His Majesty's Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs is by the delivery to him by the sovereign of the seals of office. There are three seals, the signet, a lesser seal, and a small seal called the cachet; all these are engraved with the Royal arms, but the signet alone has the supporters. In the Foreign Office, diplomatic and consular commissions signed by the sovereign pass under the signet; the lesser seal is used for royal warrants (such as instruments authorising the affixing of the Great Seal to full powers and to ratifications of treaties); the cachet is used to seal the envelopes of letters containing communications of a personal character made by the King to foreign sovereigns." — I guess the UK signet has 2 sides, obs throned majesty and rev arms with supporters, whereas IFS signet has obs throned majesty and rev harp. Then maybe IFS fob seal corresponds to UK lesser seal, and cachet would be unused in IFS. But Satow uses don't really correspond to DIFP 1937 No. 97. The 4th ed. (1957, by Bland) slightly different: Nope, fob seal design corresponds to cachet per 1937 RMint rpt, so use difference is more greater vs lesser signet.
- p. 22 s. 27 The mode of appointment of Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs is by the delivery to him by the sovereign of the seals of office. There are three seals, viz. a greater and a lesser signet and a small seal called the cachet; all these are engraved with the Royal Arms. The two former now differ only in point of size. In the Foreign Office, diplomatic and consular commissions signed by the sovereign pass under the greater signet; the lesser is used in the case of royal exequaturs granted to foreign consular officers, and for royal warrants (such as instruments authorising the affixing of the Great Seal to full powers and to ratifications of treaties); the cachet is used to seal the envelopes of letters containing communications of a personal character made by the Queen to foreign sovereigns.
- p. 396 s. 706 Most formal documents signed by the Sovereign, whether countersigned by a Minister or not, bear a Seal, which may be either the Great Seal of the Realm, which is in the custody of the Lord Chancellor, or the Signet, which is the Seal entrusted to United Kingdom Secretaries of State. In 1931 King George V approved a proposal by the Irish Free State Government that a new Great Seal of the Irish Free State and a new Signet should be instituted for sealing Royal documents relating solely to the Free State. In 1934 legislation was passed by the Parliament of the Union of South Africa instituting a Royal Great Seal of the Union and a Royal Signet. In 1939 Canada passed legislation providing that documents which would normally be sealed with the Great Seal of the Realm or the Signet might be sealed with the Great Seal of Canada, i.e., the Seal in the custody of the GovernorGeneral which is used for sealing documents signed by him
- I am beginning to doubt whether greater signet is two-sided; RMint 1902 p.60 talks of "Greater Seal" and "lesser seal" for secretaries of state, made with new king's style, but not till 1904 was Great Seal of the UK made. So the UK Foreign Secretary did not have a seal[=signet] with the king's likeness, just the title and the arms guess. OTOH Exchequer seal of 1939 replaced 1904 model (1939 Rpt p. 12); was that double-sided? yes; was figure used? yes, obverse reproduced that of Great Seal (though reverse was just arms).
- NAI TSCH/3/S3255 Oireachtas: dissolution and proclamation of General Election, 1923 under GG private seal per Dáil proceedings
- Edward Gibson, 1st Baron Ashbourne left old (1890) Irish seal in will.[5]
- doi:10.1080/03086534.2020.1783116 pp. 15-17: 1929 attempt to sneak internal seal onto Kellogg–Briand Pact ratification fouled by slip from diplomat to CO official
- Cecil Thomas Autobiography pp. 53-54 "I engraved the Great Seal of the Irish Free State, designed by a Dublin Museum official who put together a couple of photographs – one – that of the ancient harp – the other the detail decoration on the Ardagh Chalice, forming a border to surround the harp; and the Irish inscriptions outside that. It wasn’t much of a design, but as it relied on sharp definition for its interest, I decided to engrave it by hand which meant hammer and chisel work for it was very bold. I think it must be the last Great Seal in these Islands to be cut by hand. It makes a good impression but is artistically dull, as most rehashes in design"
- Royal Mint 1931-11-16 "Great Seal of the Irish Free State. The Chairman reported that a new double-sided Great Seal for wax impressions was required for the use of the Government of the Irish Free State. The Seal itself was to bear the design of the Great Seal of the Realm (with one minor modification), but the Counterseal was to be of new design. A model for the Counterseal had been prepared by Mr. Metcalfe. Gutta percha impressions (unfinished) were examined by the Committee. The general feeling was that the treatment was coarse, especially when compared with the wafer seal executed some time ago by Mr. Cecil Thomas, impressions of which were also before the Committee. The Chairman stated that Mr. Cecil Thomas' seal would continue to be used for certain purposes."
- Royal Mint Annual Report 1937 Volume No.68 p7 "A new series of seals was put in hand for the Government of Éire" [p/ 41] "Following the new Constitution for Éire, that Government decided to change the titles on the Ministerial and other official seals from SAORSTÁT ÉIREANN to ÉIRE and to discontinue the use of bi-lingual names on the seals. The general designs remained unchanged and seals for the President, Prime Minister, the Government (formerly Executive Council) and Minister for External Affairs were engraved and despatched to Éire. In the case of the seal for the President, which is five inches in diameter and requires a special press, the fitting up of the seal in the press was done in the Mint, but all the other seals were fitted to their presses by the staff of the Stamping Department, Dublin Castle." 1938 Volume No.69 p. 46 "A large order of over 80 Court of Justice and other seals with Gaelic inscription, to replace the existing seals with bi-lingual inscriptions, was placed by the Government of Éire, but only five of these were completed by the end of the year." p. 49 'A number of cheque dies were returned from Éire, and the existing Irish Free State monogram "SE" in the design was replaced by "E."' 1939 p. 32 "A further 26 seals with Gaelic inscription for the Government of Éire were despatched during the year." [1940 p. 51] "15 Circuit Court Seals, 10 Land Registry Seals and 3 Probate Registry Seals were supplied to the Government of Éire during the year." [1941 p. 125] "Three Seals were made for the High Commissioners of Éire in London, Ottawa and Lisbon, respectively, and twelve for Land Registries of Éire." [1942 p. 138] "Three new seals were made for the Department of External Affairs, Éire. The first, for the High Commissioner's Office in London was fitted to a hand lever press and issued ready for use. The second and third for use in Lisbon and Ottawa were sent to Éire with counterparts to be fitted to existing presses. A further twelve seals for Éire local Land Registries were completed and issued with counterparts and No. 4 hand lever presses for final fitting in Éire. The seals were struck from the standard punch prepared for this series and the County inscriptions were added by hand engraving." [1943 p. 145] "Six Seals for Land Registries and Probate Registries of Éire completed the series of non-ministerial Seals required by that change of name." [1944 p. 175] "A double sided seal was made for the Éire Genealogical Office."
- Pictured 1930 UK seal is one 1931 IFS modelled on.
- "The Commission appointing the said Donal Buckley, Esquire, is attached hereto for His Majesty's signature. The Signet Seal to be used will be that approved by His Majesty for use in the Irish Free State."[6] commission was "passed under the Royal Sign Manual and Signet"[7] — is this the same as the "IFS signet seal" used on exequaturs and diplomatic commissions? In which case, I guess the IFS signet seal was in the custody of the King in Britain, and used on documents authorising GG to use the Great Seal. Where was the fob seal kept?
- NLI MS 49,709/1-9 Headed paper and seal of the Governor General (Seanascal) of the Irish Free State, "The wax seal has 'Saorstát Éireann' above a harp and 'Irish Free State' below, 'Seanascal' at one side and 'Governor General' at the other" — my guess is that this is the "GG's private seal"
- I suggest saying ...
- change of both sides of external seal was discussed in 1937,[ref DIFP] due to new king and change of name of state. While other SÉ seals were replaced,[ref RMint reports 1937+] the RMint reports have no record of a new version of either side of the external Great Seal.[ref RMint reports 1937-49, though not necessarily the same page numbers as previous ref], though it does record making the new Presidential Seal.[ref RMint report 1937/8?]
- refs as follows: N=mentions SÉ to Éire change; L=lists Éire seals; C=only count of Éire seals
- 1937 p. 41 LN 4 "Pres, PM, Govt, Min Ext Aff" (large size of Pres mentioned; not so Ext Aff, described as fitted into a press, hence not the 2-sided Great Seal)
- 1938 p. 22 L 5
- 1939 p. 13 L 18+ & p. 32 C 26 — p. 13 L incl (a) "Dept Ext Affairs" (whereas 1937 incl "Min Ext Affairs"; may be for an embassy) cf. 1942 (b) "Circuit Court A–L" no count, but p. 32 total 26 → 9 CC
- 1940 p. 51 L 28
- 1941 p. 84 0 ditto p. 99
- 1942 p. 138 L 15
- 1943 p. 164 LN 6 "completed 80 non-ministerial Seals req by chg of name
- 1944 p. 175 L 1 Genealog Off double-sided
- 1945 p. 17 1 Ballina replaced
- 1946 p. 10 1 DIAS
- 1947 p. 9 4 Mins Health, Soc Welf, Loc Govt [dept names had changed]; and handseal Geneal Off
- 1948 pp. 24–5 0
- 1949 p. 16 1 Legation Stockholm
- Well when were the other ministerial seals done? Taoisaech and Ext Aff in 1937, but next 80 (1938–44)were "non-ministerial". 1956 min gael "usual" pattern
- Great Seal of Ireland
- JSTOR 42751273 discusses different seals on medieval Chancery docs
- JSTOR 25511957 more medieval
- doi:10.1017/S0021121400015224 Regency crisis 1788 involved which Great Seal?
- Birch, W. de G. (1895). "Ireland; Seals of Sovereigns". Catalogue of Seals in the Department of Manuscripts in the British Museum. Vol. 4. British Museum. pp. 695–700.
- HC Deb 27 June 1906 vol 159 cc940-1 prior to the Union between Great Britain and Ireland the Great Seal of Ireland was similar in general character and design to that of Great Britain, but differed from the latter by bearing the distinguishing mark of a harp crowned; and it would appear that, neither on the passing of the Act of Union nor since, has any change been made in the Great Seal of Ireland, so that this distinguishing mark still remains,
- RMint 1949 Rpt pp. 13-14 not until Ed.7 that principle of GSUK and GSI having same size and design on seal; not counter seal
- NMI HH:1976.27 Will 4 pouch
- rcsiheritage Sealed With A Waxy Disc! — back of 1784 seal, front and back of 1844 and 1885 seals
- Yes
- 1398 Ric II both sides "Irish letters patent:"
- 1401 Hen IV both sides "Irish letters patent:"
- 1425 Hen VI one side v fragmentary "Irish letters patent:"
- 1422-1471 Henry VI PRO 23/5285 both sides
- 1419 Henry V throne
- 1509-1547 Henry VIII PRO 23/4746 both sides
- 1544 Henry VIII throne side
- 1615 James I equestrian side harp detail
- Charles II equestrian side
- 1649-1685 Charles II PRO 23/5869 both sides
- Charles II 1679 both sides (not 1689)
- Charles II 1684 both sides
- George II 1756 equestrian pdf has both sides
- George III 1767 both sides
- George III 1793 equestrian side
- George IV both sides
- Victoria 1881 both sides
- Victoria both sides
- Victoria equestrian side
- 1902-4 Edw VII eq side other side same as GB
- Maybe
- 1337 Edw III one side, full-faded, letters patent
- 1370 Edw III both sides "EXEMPLIFICATION of English patent ... Attested: William Windsor, Lt"
- 1375 Edw III both sides "INSPEXIMUS and CONFIRMATION of the K.'s letters patent under the g.s. of Eng ... Attested: William Windsor, governor and keeper"
- 1380 Richard II both sides "English letters patent ... later exemplified by Irish letters patent"
- 1392 Richard II throne side [inside pouch "sealed with the p.s. of the Jcr."]
- 1396 Ric II fragment one side
- 1401 Hen IV both sides part-faded
- 1408 Hen IV both sides, one full-faded, other strange feathers "Thomas of Lancaster, Duke of Clarence"
- 1467 Edw IV both sides, looks good, "endorsed by the deputy [Thomas e. Desmond] and sealed with his seal"
- 1476 Edw IV both sides, odd arms, "INSPEXIMUS of a record enrolled in rolls of the common bench of Ireland"
- 1487 1487 "edw VI" Lambert Simnel booth sides looks good
- 1502 Hen VII, both sides
- 1527 Hen VIII, both sides looks good "Irish letters patent attested by the chief justice of the common bench"
- 1911 Geo V, Mint Rpt plates D and E of GSU and text "The Counter Seal of Ireland is distinguished from that of the United Kingdom by the representation of a Harp in substitution for the Trident above the lanterns"
- {{STV Election box begin2}} e.g. Dublin Bay South (Dáil constituency)#2024 general election counts 9–12 not obvious which surplus transferred; no row with non-transferables; no cols with transfers.
Misc 6
- User:Jnestorius/A Box of Ten Photographs
- Category:Peerage is not UK-specific but Category:Peers is; Category:Life peers not a subcat; other messy cat nesting and UK-defaultism include:
- Category:Ordained peers vague, includes rabbi but subcat of Christian; excludes Category:Lords Spiritual which also is England not Ireland and very underpopulated
- Category:Hereditary peers elected to the House of Commons vs Category:UK MPs who inherited peerages, does latter include those who left Commons before acceding to Lords?
- Irish honours system
- "No, Sir: Government refused Oliver J Flanagan's request to use title after papal honour". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 December 2024.
"I was under the impression that papal decorations and honours were not regarded as coming under the scope of Article 40-2:2 of the Constitution," one civil servant noted on December 13th, 1978. They advised that the matter be checked with the Department of Foreign Affairs and, if it came under that section of the Constitution, the issue should then be taken up with Mr Flanagan.
- "No, Sir: Government refused Oliver J Flanagan's request to use title after papal honour". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 December 2024.
- Irish neutrality rte.ie/news/2024/1229 "Proposals to manufacture or repair weapons of war in Ireland were rejected by successive governments [1980-1993], concerned about neutrality and the political implications of involvement in the arms industry."
- Ixtle move to Istle
- Calendar (New Style) Act 1750#Ireland -- Calendar Act 1781 is only RoI name; see User:Jnestorius/Constitution of 1782#Table for more background
- Talk:Hungarian nobility#Heredity
- Dublin City Marshal
- Popular Protest and Policing in Ascendancy Ireland, 1691-1761 discusses marshal
- REPORT of the COMMISSIONER appointed to inquire into the LAWS of PAWNBROKING in IRELAND HC 1867-8 xxxii [3985] 345
- 1687 charter appoints
- 1849 presentation of keys funny
- 1851 Ireland Sixty Years Ago By John Edward Walsh "The last miserable remnant of our corporate dignity is the Lord Mayor's annual procession, in his old glass coach, accompanied by a sorry troop of horse police; and the only merry-making that accompanies it is an occasional upset of that terror of pawnbrokers, the city marshal, from his military charger."
- anecdote Henry Vizetelly
- possible pictures of ceremonial:
All-American; Dave Williams "Phil Shinnick could play any sport and was the finest athlete I'd ever seen, ever! Only injuries kept him from setting even more world records."; 1965 Universiad, Olympic Project for Human Rights, USAF captain, 1968 trials complaint, 1969 military games, United Amateur Athletes c. 1972; athletic director Livingston College, Rutgers; Jack Scott tried to recruit to Oberlin, 1974 Hearst contempt, 1970s doping testimony; 1983-4 executive director of "Athletes United for Peace" to promote détente and disarmament via friendly US-SU competition, still heading it 1995 capaigning to free Mamo Wolde; 2000s cared for Rustum Roy; acupuncture, BDORT, qigong
References
- site:trackfield.brinkster.net Shinnick
- https://trackandfieldnews.com/mens-u-s-long-jump-rankings-by-athlete/, us-nationals-results-long-jump reg-reqd
- gohuskies summary of dead link article also copied in full at onceuponatimeinthevest
- historylink
- Williams, Dave (23 October 2017). My Best for HIM: My Memoir. Christian Faith Publishing. ISBN 978-1-64079-313-2.
- Daves, Jim; Porter, Tom; Porter, W. Thomas (November 2000). The Glory of Washington: The People and Events that Shaped the Husky Athletic Tradition. Sports Publishing LLC. pp. 188–189. ISBN 978-1-58261-221-8.
- Pathé YouTube @ 1m58s
- Alamy 1964 Olympics photo in rain
- Burns, Bob (2 October 2018). The Track in the Forest: The Creation of a Legendary 1968 US Olympic Team. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1-64160-080-4.
- Henderson, Simon (28 March 2013). Sidelined: How American Sports Challenged the Black Freedom Struggle. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 8, 35, 43. ISBN 978-0-8131-4154-1.
- Johnson, Mark (1 July 2016). Spitting in the Soup: Inside the Dirty Game of Doping in Sports. VeloPress. ISBN 978-1-937716-82-0.
- United States Congress Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency (1973). Proper and Improper Use of Drugs by Athletes: Hearings, Ninety-third Congress, First Session, Pursuant to S. Res. 56, Section 12. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 134–151, 160, 170, [testimony], 146 [bio sketch], 521 [allusion].
- Hoffer, Richard (17 September 2009). Something in the Air: American Passion and Defiance in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. Simon and Schuster. pp. 87–89. ISBN 978-1-4165-9389-8.
- Hartmann, Douglas (2003). Race, Culture, and the Revolt of the Black Athlete: The 1968 Olympic Protests and Their Aftermath. University of Chicago Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-226-31855-4.
- Dyreson, Mark; Mangan, J. A. (13 September 2013). Sport and American Society: Exceptionalism, Insularity, ‘Imperialism’. Routledge. p. 122. ISBN 978-1-317-99777-1.
- 1969 Pacific Conference Games in high jump!
- worldathletics.org/athletes/united-states/phil-shinnick 1972 mark
- nytimes.com/1973/05/08
- nytimes.com/1975/09/21/archives/radical-jocks-how-jack-scott-once-known-as-chief-who-would-go
- nytimes.com/1976/12/31/archives/a-modern-inquisition
- United States Congress House Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and International Law (1977). Grand Jury Reform: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on H.R. 94. Ninety-fifth Congress, First Session. Vol. Part 2 Serial No. 22. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 1192–1216, 1394–1395, 1459.
- Intondi, Vincent J. (7 January 2015). African Americans Against the Bomb: Nuclear Weapons, Colonialism, and the Black Freedom Movement. Stanford University Press. p. 94, 158 n. 31. ISBN 978-0-8047-9348-3.
- Sack, Allen L.; Parseghian, Ara (6 April 2012). Counterfeit Amateurs: An Athlete's Journey Through the Sixties to the Age of Academic Capitalism. Penn State Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-271-05409-4.
- Willey, David, ed. (30 March 2010). Going Long: Legends, Oddballs, Comebacks & Adventures. Rodale. p. 419. ISBN 978-978-160-539-0.
- Laber-Warren, Emily (January 2006). "Sticking Points". Women's Health. Rodale: 106–108.
- News: US long jumper Shinnick retroactively recognised as world record-breaker (28 Jun 2021) World Athletics
Publications
- Shinnick, Phil (1966). An investigation into the personnel functions of the city of Seattle. OCLC 29834058.
- Shinnick, Philip Kent (August 1978). China and the Olympics : historical perspective. Far East Reporter. New York: Maud Russell. OCLC 22924059.
- Ruiz, Rafael; Shinnick, Phil (1979). The Recognition of the German Democratic Republic: Slander & Reality in Sport. Highland Park, NJ: Olympic Publ. OCLC 37232660.
- Shinnick, Phil (September 1980). "Commentary: Comments on Kanin "The Olympic Boycott in Diplomatic Context" JSSI (Vol. 4, No.1)". Journal of Sport and Social Issues. 4 (2): 33–34. doi:10.1177/019372358000400204.
- Shinnick, Phil; Omura, Yoshiaki (1985). "Difference in the location of finger placement on the radial artery for pulse diagnosis in the Orient; and, 15th to 18th century Occidental rare books on pulse diagnosis". Acupuncture & electro-therapeutics research. 10: 309–324. doi:10.3727/036012985816714342. ISSN 0360-1293.
- Shinnick, Phillip; Freed, Simon (2002). "A Case Study of the Synchronization of Human Energy in an Acute Condition of Chronic Heart Disease Through Complementary Treatment". Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine. 13 (3): 209–232. ISSN 1099-6591.
- Shinnick, Phil (December 2003). "Reearch Summary on Qigong and the Differentiation of Qi into Body Pathways, the Physiology and Properties of Mind/Body Wholeness and its Clinical Application to Disease and Athletics". In Roy, Rustum (ed.). Science of Whole Person Healing: Proceedings of the First Interdisciplinary International Conference. iUniverse. pp. 87–126. ISBN 978-0-595-30153-9. — WP:SELFPUB
- Shinnick, P. (2006). "Qigong: Where Did It Come From? Where Does It Fit in Science? What Are the Advances?". Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. 12 (4): 351–353. doi:10.1089/acm.2006.12.351. ISSN 1075-5535.
- Haddad, Jack B.; Obolensky, Alexis Guy; Shinnick, Phillip (June 2007). "The Biologic Effects and the Therapeutic Mechanism of Action of Electric and Electromagnetic Field Stimulation on Bone and Cartilage: New Findings and a Review of Earlier Work". The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. 13 (5): 485–490. doi:10.1089/acm.2007.5270.
- Shinnick, Phillip (2009). Whole Person Healing: The O-Ring Imaging Technique Influences to Oriental and Occidental Medicine. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4389-6566-6. — WP:SELFPUB
- Chen, Kevin W; Comerford, Anthony; Shinnick, Phillip; Ziedonis, Douglas M. (August 2010). "Introducing Qigong Meditation into Residential Addiction Treatment: A Pilot Study Where Gender Makes a Difference". The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. 16 (8): 875–882. doi:10.1089/acm.2009.0443.
- Shinnick, Phillip (October 2012). "On Contradictions Between Chinese and Tibetan Pulse Diagnosis". Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. 18 (10): 889–891. doi:10.1089/acm.2012.1501.
- Shinnick, Phillip; Porter, Laurence (25 March 2017). "Science to Improve the Human Condition". Cosmos and History. 13 (2: Foundations of Mind IV: Quantum Mechanics Meets Neurodynamics): 256–260.
- Shinnick, Phillip; Porter, Laurence (19 April 2017). Whole Person Self-Healing: A Science and Art. Bentham Science Publishers. ISBN 978-1-68108-259-2. — low-rep publisher, albeit not actually WP:Predatory
- Shinnick, Phillip; Porter, Laurence (12 January 2018). "Difficulties in Inorganic and Organic Measurement of Energy: Influences of Mind (intention or Yi) and Nature in Outcome". Cosmos and History. 14 (1: Foundations of Mind V: The New AI Scare): 187–202.
- Shinnick, Phillip; Porter, Laurence; Maize, J. (26 August 2018). "Intention and Attention within Sheldrake's Morphic Resonance Fields in Nature and Humans: Network Interaction in Weather. Eyes Closed Images during Research and non Research: Similar Artistic and Scientific Images". Cosmos and History. 14 (2: Foundations of Mind VII: On Fields): 256–277.
- Shinnick, Phillip (6 March 2019). "Dual Properties of Electromagnetic Light: The curvilinear (Octagonal) and rectilinear in the cosmos, earth and applications for medicine and disease". Cosmos and History. 15 (2: Mind and Cosmos): 111–132.
numbered elite
- The Four Hundred (Gilded Age)
- 200 families fr:Deux cents familles (French Third Republic)[8]
- Edouard Daladier 1934 that '"200 families run the French economy and, in fact, French politics.” He was referring to the 200 principal shareholders of the Banque de France'.[9]
- Upper ten thousand
- New York "According to Bristed, an upper ten thousand was a great exaggeration, ‘for the people so designated are hardly as many hundreds’ ([Charles Astor Bristed, The Upper Ten Thousand: Sketches of American Society (New York, 1852)] p. 27 1)."
- Britain
- The 1%
- 1911 Mammy's lullaby with music by Logan Douglass Howell of Goldsboro, North Carolina
- 1969 Mammy loves world's simplest songs
- Odetta liner notes:
- 1957 At the Gate of Horn — PRETTY HORSES — A woman crooning a lullaby to a baby while she leaves her own unattended in order to earn money for bread. In the song she refers to her own child as the lambie in the meadow. This lullaby comes from the South, post Civil War.
- 1960 Odetta at Carnegie Hall — All the Pretty Little Horses. It is a lullaby from the slave period, of a Negro woman who must go to the “big house” to take care of the master’s child while her own “little lamby” remains unattended.
- JSTOR 1495941 doi:10.2307/1495941 review of song book
- [proquest] The Language of Lullabies; Alice Sterling Honig. YC Young Children; Washington Vol. 60, Iss. 5, (Sep 2005): 30-36
- [proquest or ebscohost] "Hush-a-bye baby": Death and violence in the lullaby; Marina Warner. Raritan; New Brunswick Vol. 18, Iss. 1, (Summer 1998): 93-114
- the savage turn taken in the second verse ... frequently softened by singers ... Peter, Paul and Mary's recording, for instance. American commentators traditionally interpret these lyrics as those of a black mother who sings of her own baby, left behind in the fields while she looks after the white folks' offspring. ... its unexpected morbidity [is] a most characteristic lullaby
- ebscohost jrnl=17569575 found but AN=110087355 not
- alias "Cornbread Crumbled in Gravy" in Bullfrog Jumped: Children's Folksongs from the Byron Arnold Collection doi:10.1353/ala.2009.0042
- Mary Chapman Grove Hill, Alabama recorded 5 July; recording online
- ebscohost Black Feminist Theories of Motherhood and Generation: Histories of Black Infant and Child Loss in the United States. By: Simmons, LaKisha Michelle, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society, 00979740, Winter2021, Vol. 46, Issue 2
- Fannie Lou Hamer version passed down from enslaved grandmother/ cited Hamer, Fannie Lou. (1963) 2015. Songs My Mother Taught Me. Mp3. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. first 10s preview
- ebscohost Patricia Hill Collins' Black Feminine Identity in Toni Morrison's Beloved. By: Ghasemi, Parvin, Heidari, Samira, Journal of African American Studies, 15591646, Dec2020, Vol. 24, Issue 4 "The great degree of apprehension and worry manifestly expressed in the second stanza of the poem contains rage and resentment; this great anger is voiced and conveyed by means of descriptions and imageries related to conjure"
- mudcat has several refs, but...
- ...LOC ref is Baa Baa Black Sheep
- Ballad Index LxU002: All the Pretty Little Horses 2024 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle — index lists many books and a few recordings
- Roud number 6705 — index lists many recordings and a few books, manuscripts, etc.
- 1855 "The Judge’s Big Shirt"
- OED (Dec. 2015 update per linguistlist) s.v. "nine, adj." subsense 3.e. [sense 3 groups "allusive and proverbial uses"; others include "nine days' wonder", "nine ways at once", "nine lives"] "Apparently originating in the frequently repeated comic story cited in quot. 1855." — says who? OED internal lexicographers? What of others? (1855 quote is in brackets; 1907 quote is first unqualified)
- nytimes 2012 (article has potted history of antedatings since 1982 Safire NYT article; also enchilada, shebang, ball of wax)
- Barry Popik barrypopik.com — originally 2005 but check archive.org for dates of later edits — 'it appears that a popular 1855 story, "The Judge's Big Shirt," spread the idea that the "whole nine yards" of cloth meant "everything."'
- Fred Shapiro
- nytimes.com 2013/01/02 sceptical of 1855 relevance (also Brooklyn Eagle 1873 “a brief and pithy letter nine yards long.”)
- yalealumnimagazine The inflation of “cloud seven” and “the whole six yards.” 2013 finds 1921 “the whole six yards”
- Patricia T. O'Conner and Stewart Kellerman grammarphobia 2016/12 Dubious of 1855–1907 attestation gap: "Perhaps researchers will eventually fill in the gap with more examples." / Other researchers have found that cloth was often sold in multiples of three yards during the 19th century, and “nine yards” was a common measurement. / “nine yards to the dollar” / Richard Bucci 1850 will not attempt to follow you through your ‘nine yards’ in all its serpentine windings
- Stephen Goranson [6] "1855 joke link is iffy, at best"
- David Wilton wordorigins "the long gap, over fifty years, between this citation and the next militates against this story"
(Help talk:Citation Style 1/Archive subpages unless stated otherwise):
- User talk:Cyberpower678/Archive 34#|dead-url=unfit "In all cases, the |url= values that Cyberbot II declared to be unfit, are not in fact, unfit and are working correctly. ... I will modify Module:Citation/CS1 to add articles with |dead-url=unfit and |dead-url=usurped to a maintenance category so these templates are marked and can be inspected and repaired." added to sandbox 2016-06-20T11:56:25
- 19—|dead-url=unfit maintenance category "I misspoke. Cyberbot II sets |dead-url=unfit when it moves an archival url from |url= to |archive-url= leaving behind the original url in |url= ... As a result of the conversation at the bot operator's talk page, I have modified the sandbox to include a new |dead-url= keyword bot: unknown." added to sandbox 2016-06-21T15:57:56
- Module:Citation/CS1
utilities.set_message ('maint_unfit');
(lines 3851 et seq) sandbox to main 2016-07-30T10:55:17 - Category talk:CS1 maint: unfit URL#How to remove "Is there a method to remove this category from articles when the parameter has been correctly applied?" 26 January 2019 "The maintenance message helps to answer editor questions about why the reference has the 'Archived from the original' static text where 'the original' isn't linked" 6 January 2024
- 57—Unfit URLs "Seems a bit silly to have a maintenance category that can't be emptied." "A lot of the articles in that category come from a time when Cyberbot II was adding |dead-url=unfit to many cs1|2 templates that it touched. ... We could create additional keywords unfit-verified, usurped-verified. What then? ... Someone may find it useful – it isn't as though there is a cost to having such categories." 22 May 2019
- 72—unfit url: maint or property? "The tracking category for pages using |url-status=unfit or |url-status=usurped, Category:CS1 maint: unfit url, seems like it would make more sense as a property category, much like Category:CS1: long volume value, given that there are legitimate uses for those values" "We've had one or two (not recent?) discussions about whether it should be maintained. For example, someone might feasibly misuse the parameter to remove a URL that doesn't need removing, where maybe it should be the case that someone should check that each instance of unfit is a good use." 27 October 2020
- 83—unfit url maintenance message "I think that you are the first to complain about lingering maintenance messaging." 6 March 2022
- 84—url-status parameter invalid "There is no required action for most maintenance messages." 3 August 2022
- 88—Template:Citation Style documentation/url leaves a Script warning "explain why there should be a Script warning – of any type – when using url-status=unfit in the way explicitly defined by the documentation" 17 April 2023
- reasoned amendment - procedureofhouse03redl said flat no to main motion never used
- "not the county town" books [7], [8], [9], [10]
Teju Cole birth name
- refs from 2011,[10] 2016,[11] and 2022[12] all call Teju Cole a "pen name" for Obayemi "Yemi" [Babajide Adetokunbo] Onafuwa
- I note that 2016 ref is a bit snarky about the change
- but Cole (as User:Simultanagnosia)
- removed in 2020 from lede (left in infobox)
- User:Lopifalko re-added (as "born" rather than "real name"), Cole reverted, Lopifalko de-reverted then self-reverted "WP:BLP states that such things can be removed if the subject of the article is trying to communicate that they would like them removed"
- The edit summary may be alluding to WP:BLPEDIT "When a logged-out editor blanks all or part of a BLP, this might be the subject attempting to remove problematic material"; not WP:BLPNAME which relates to "individuals who are discussed primarily in terms of a single event"
- User:Lopifalko re-added (as "born" rather than "real name"), Cole reverted, Lopifalko de-reverted then self-reverted "WP:BLP states that such things can be removed if the subject of the article is trying to communicate that they would like them removed"
- said in 2015 Talk that "Teju Cole" was by then his legal name and name for all other purposes:
- v1 - "strongly preferred name" - "it becomes a topic of discussion, and this is precisely what one wishes to avoid"
- v2 - "This information is handled differently for Toni Morrison, Marguerite Yourcenar, Tea Obreht, Jhumpa Lahiri, Xeni Jardin, and a number of contemporary writers who use a name other than the ones they're born with, but whom I do not wish to out." --- instances he cites are [no longer] of the format he would prefer
- Section deleted in 2015 by User:Nickknack00 without explanation
- removed in 2020 from lede (left in infobox)
- I suggest:
- restoring birthname to body with info on when used and when changed
- but do any citable sources give full name without asserting Teju Cole is only a pen name? I suspect they all rely (perhaps tacitly) on the Wikipedia article, which is invalid per WP:CIRCULAR
- add comment-note to lede saying not to add there
- restore section to Talk, ping Simultanagnosia Lopifalko and Nickknack00 and re-open discussion
- remove email address etc
- add {{Connected contributor}} Simultanagnosia
- restoring birthname to body with info on when used and when changed
References
- ^ "O'Connell Bridge structure not to be removed". The Irish Times. 11 March 1958. p. 1. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ NMI cat HH:1939.163a HH:1939.163b HH:1939.163c
- ^ NMI HH:1939.164a 164b 164c
- ^ Hansard HC Deb 09 March 1927 vol 203 c1264
- ^ Saunders, Frances Stonor (2010). The woman who shot Mussolini. London: Faber and Faber. p. 64. ISBN 9780571239771.
- ^ Sexton, Brendan (1989). Ireland and the crown, 1922-1936 : the Governor-Generalship of the Irish Free State. Blackrock, Dublin: Irish Academic Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-7165-2448-9.
- ^ ibid. p. 188, citing NAI (SPO) S.8540/A = NAI TSCH/3/S8540 A
- ^ doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198221043.003.0005
- ^ https://books.google.ie/books?id=inCvU-XVxjsC&pg=PA10
- ^ permalink-version-ref1
- ^ Gehrmann, Susanne (2 January 2016). "Cosmopolitanism with African roots. Afropolitanism's ambivalent mobilities". Journal of African Cultural Studies. 28 (1): 72 note 15. doi:10.1080/13696815.2015.1112770#EN0015. JSTOR 24758431.
- ^ Sykes, Rachel (1 March 2022). "Cole, Teju". In O'Donnell, Patrick; Burn, Stephen J.; Larkin, Lesley (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Contemporary American Fiction, 1980–2020. Vol. I. John Wiley & Sons. p. 275. doi:10.1002/9781119431732.ecaf0035. ISBN 978-1-119-43171-8.
Check edit history in case someone has made a bad tweak that should first be reverted.
- Contradiction
Currently there is a disconnect between the first and second lines:
- Use "Ireland" for the state except where the island of Ireland or Northern Ireland is being discussed in the same context. In such circumstances use "Republic of Ireland" (e.g. "Strabane is at the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland").
- An exception is where the state forms a major component of the topic (e.g. on articles relating to states, politics or governance) where "Ireland" should be preferred and the island should be referred to as the "island of Ireland" or similar (e.g. "Ireland is a state in Europe occupying most of the island of Ireland").
Line #1 says use "Ireland" for the state by default; line #2 says use "Ireland" for the state only in exceptional cases.
- Minor tweak
I would like to change
- "Ireland" should not normally be linked. If it is thought necessary to link, in order to establish context or for any other reason, the name of the state must be pipelinked as
[[Republic of Ireland|Ireland]]
.
- "Ireland" should not normally be linked. If it is thought necessary to link, in order to establish context or for any other reason, the name of the state must be pipelinked as
- to
- "Ireland" (state or island) should not normally be linked. If it is thought necessary to link, in order to establish context or for any other reason, "Ireland" (the state) must be pipelinked as
[[Republic of Ireland|Ireland]]
- "Ireland" (state or island) should not normally be linked. If it is thought necessary to link, in order to establish context or for any other reason, "Ireland" (the state) must be pipelinked as
It seems clear to me that there are two orthogonal minority cases: (1) where "Republic of Ireland" is to used instead of "Ireland" and (2) where the label is to be linked instead of left unlinked. If a case is at the intersection and meets BOTH (1) AND (2) then it should be linked as [[Republic of Ireland]]
.
- Lacuna
There is the separate question regarding "island of Ireland"
- is this the preferred formulation
- in the minority of cases with link, is it
island of [[Ireland]]
or[[Ireland|island of Ireland]]