User talk:Stilltim
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[edit] Welcome
Hello Stilltim, and welcome to Wikipedia. Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few good links for newcomers:
- The Five Pillars of Wikipedia
- How to edit a page
- Editing tutorial
- Picture tutorial
- How to write a great article
- Naming conventions
- Manual of Style
I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! By the way, you can sign your name on Talk and vote pages using three tildes, like this: ~~~. Four tildes (~~~~) produces your name and the current date. If you have any questions, see the help pages, add a question to the village pump or ask me on my Talk page. Again, welcome! Tobycat 17:21, 6 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Philip Phillips
Great question. I wondered the same thing when I started editing. There are two special notices on that article:
- This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality.
- This article needs to be wikified.
Before explaining how to remove them, let me explain how they are added. If an article looks like a valid topic but the writing is in rather poor shape (or in the wrong tone), the "cleanup" notice is posted. To make that notice appear, people place the following text, including the curly brackets, at the top of the page in the edit window: {{cleanup}}
It is a similar deal when the article needs formatting (section breaks, proper format for the introductory sentence, links, etc.). Making those style changes is called "wikifying" a page. To put a notice requesting that a page get wikified editors put the following text at the top of the edit box: {{wikify}}
Note that you can have as many notices as you want at the top of an article so you may see multiple tags.
Now, how to remove them is pretty easy...just remove the {{cleanup}} or {{wikify}} tag from the top of the article while in edit mode and save the page.
These are all types of templates, by the way, which are pretty cool tools. There's more info on the commonly used templates at Wp:templates. Thanks for asking. Have fun!
[edit] Delware governor project
Wow! I'm flattered that you should ask for my advice. Welcome to (editing) Wikipedia! I hope your project goes perfectly; judging from your contributions, you've already made huge progress. There's no full template for governor articles, but here are a few tips for the intro, which is somewhat standardized:
Start with the full name in bold. Try to get middle names if known. Don't include "Governor" or any other title at the beginning. Immediately following the full name, out in the date of birth and death in parentheses, separated by an ndash. After that, state their nationality, profession, and state. Soon afterwards mention the political party, and after this a brief summary of the person's career. Be sure to make the words flow, and not to use either the pronouns or the name too much.
Try looking at John Holmes (U.S. politician), Albion K. Parris, and John Chandler. And for research, I recommend the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress [1] (public-domain, searchable) and the Political Graveyard [2] (gigantic, searchable, and extremely comprehensive).
Good luck! If you have any other questions or concerns, don't hesitate to contact me. I hope you'll have a long and enjoyable time here. Warmest regards --Neutralitytalk 06:20, August 9, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Welcome
Hi Stilltim - it's always good to see another First-Stater here. Just wanted to say hello. If you have any questions, drop me a message on my talk page →Raul654 01:52, August 17, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Re: Governors & other politicians
Welcome to Wikipedia. Always good to see people who want to help.
If you want a basic set of categories for politicians, you'll find that there are a lot of them to use.
When writing an article for a politician, read their history. If they were a physician, search for a category on medicine (a good place to start would be to go to the Medicine article on Wikipedia, and to search in the category for a "people" subcategory, such as Category:Physicians). Politicians are also frequently ex-military, so Category:U.S. Army soldiers or Category:U.S. Navy sailors, for example, are very often used by me.
There are also a bunch of categories that most politicians fit into; in the case of Delaware people, they would probably fit into Category:U.S. Senators from Delaware or Category:U.S. Representatives from Delaware (the latter will be created soon by me). Also, Category:Governors of Delaware.
In terms of a standard format for articles, be sure to include the succession boxes, birth/death categories, stubs if necessary (Template:US-politician-stub), and a picture if possible.
Also, I noticed that in Elbert N. Carvel, the article had two spaces in between paragraphs, which isn't necessary. Only one space is necessary. Also, the succession box goes at the very bottom of the page (just above the categories).
If you want a template to wrap around a picture of a politician in a longer article, try Template:Infobox Politician that I created. See Phillips Goldsborough for an example of how to use the template.
Enjoy your time here and keep up the good work. Feel free to put any questions or comments on my talk page. --tomf688<TALK> 18:45, August 22, 2005 (UTC)
- You seem to be using the categories correctly. There is no "standard" to category naming, but when placing categories in articles, it is not necessary to place both Category:Governors of Delaware and Category:Delaware politicians into the article. This is because the governors category is a subcategory of the politicians category. Category:People from Delaware is different than Delaware politicians, since someone can be from Delaware but isn't necessarily a Delaware politician, and vice versa.
- As for single spacing and putting succession boxes at the bottom, that is the unwritten standard on Wikipedia (you will find that on just about every article, the succession box goes at the bottom and paragraphs are single-spaced). --tomf688<TALK> 19:25, August 22, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Chicken?
So what's the deal with the blue hen graphic? I gather it's something to do with Delaware, but I can't find an actual explanation, and without any explanation it's a little weird to see it on all these pages. /blahedo (t) 09:50, 8 September 2005 (UTC)
That's right, it's a well-known state symbol for Delaware- in Delaware, but perhaps not so well-known outside. I'm trying to make these articles look a little more appealing, hence the graphics, but now recognize the need for some explanation. I'll work on it, just don't want to disrupt the focus on the subject of the article...somewhere I saw how to get a description when moving the cursor over top, that may be the answer once I figure out how to do it. Thanks for the heads up.
stilltim 12:27, 8 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Template:Pennsylvania
Nice work on the switch over to the new version, you beat me to it, and nice work on the addational information that you have contributed to Delaware, it's about thime the first state got some respect. As for the template i am cool with everything but that yellow color, i think i you might have caught it off the flag or something, it's just thats it's a bit bright, i ave been looking into some other types to tone it down, any thoughts? --Boothy443 | comhrá 03:58, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
- Yeah i was thinking of going in the buff or old gold direction, the results were ehhhh, iffy to say the least. I was also considering a blue, but it would have to be lite as not to mask the links. In the end it might have to be warshed out in the end. --Boothy443 | comhrá 03:15, 23 September 2005 (UTC)
- oh thats nice, i didnt come acorss that color, yeah i think thats a winner. --Boothy443 | comhrá 03:26, 23 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Delegation
I like some of what you've done to the Delaware delegation article, but the senate table seems very crowded. Do we really need the president there? --Golbez 16:43, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
I'm putting the President there because the terms seem kind of lost in time without some sort of more familiar reference point. It's intended to help the reader understand where these folks fit in relative to the larger world. I thought about adding major events as well, but agree that would jam it up a bit too much. It's an experiment.
stilltim 16:56, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
- An experiment.. okay. Let's see how it works compared to the other articles; I have a few footnote styles I need to experiment on as well. Personally, though, I think it crowds it too much and is pretty much irrelevant information (For example, most of the individual articles won't say what president they served under). --Golbez 17:22, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
Interesting elaboration on Comegys, though personally that may be too much (or too specific) information. Is who was the head of the Catholic Church or France relevant, but not, say, who was head of Mexico or Canada? We have "world leaders of this year" articles.
I made many state delegation articles based on what info I had at the time; I got through most of the simple ones, like Delaware. I stopped until I could get a better reference work; obviously, it's been a long while. I still plan to, of course. I kind of like the idea of mentioning the senate terms separately, but it still clutters up the table, with way too many years. Makes it a little difficult to read. I have an idea to try on that, though.
And yes, these are specifically the DELEGATIONS. An alphabetical list of all the senators/reps would go separately, possibly as a category.
As for the colors, I'm unsure. Perhaps we need to check for a specific wiki convention on Rep/Dem party colors. :) The problem with making them brighter is they tend to make the text harder to read, especially colored wikilinks; I much prefer a "washed out" look. These are only supposed to be subtle indicators, not glaring signals.
You seem concerned that our goals don't mix; based on what I've said, do you still feel that? I say this because I'm still not entirely sure what you mean. You want to turn the delegations page into a timeline, I would say no, it should specifically be about the delegations, not a general timeline of Delaware federal political history. Have I misinterpreted you? And thanks for the response. PS - I did make most of the articles, but my original inspiration was the North Carolina page, if you want to see how this started. --Golbez 19:14, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
- Yes, that was my idea exactly - have thin, shaded textless boxes alongside the years, alternating grey and white for each senate term. I can try it later. As for an example of what I was speaking of, see List of state leaders in 1990 and List of religious leaders in 1990.
- Yes, Wiki is very fun when it's new. Then you get old and bitter like me. ;) Just kidding. Working on those tables was great fun, and I look forward to being able to work on them again and fleshing them out. But sometimes it's hard seeing someone work on your baby, but I have to learn to let go - or at least offer constructive criticism. :) --Golbez 19:48, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Name disambiguation
Re: links on Deleware delegation. I named one of the articles after the one that already existed (even if it is very bad). The Wiki norm seems to be Name (occupation). I felt as you when I first started, see William Bradford for one such effort that I got away with. I also found that every time I used dates I got into discussions with people wanting to correct me, so I gave up and now I go along.
Re: what to use as (occupation). I feel worst chioce is (politician), although (American politician) is still worse. I've used state a number of times, especiaaly when there are multiples with a name (e.g governors). A fairly extensive check can be made using eith political graveyard or the growing nndb. I guess we keep trying... Thanks for the comment,,, Lou I 17:59, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Image Tagging Image:TCDuPont.jpg
Thanks for uploading Image:TCDuPont.jpg. I notice the image page currently doesn't specify who created the image, so the copyright status is therefore unclear. If you have not created the image yourself then you need to argue that we have the right to use the image on Wikipedia (see copyright tagging below). If you have not created the image yourself then you should also specify where you found it, ie in most cases link to the website where you got it, and the terms of use for content from that page.
If the image also doesn't have a copyright tag then you must also add one. If you created/took the picture then you can use {{gfdl}} to release it under the GFDL. If you can claim fair use use {{fairuse}}.) See Wikipedia:Image copyright tags for the full list of copyright tags that you can use.
If you have uploaded other images, please check that you have specified their source and copyright tagged them, too. Note that any unsourced and untagged images will be deleted one week after they have been uploaded, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. Thanks so much. --Michael 11:18, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Category note
Just a brief note to explain: I removed your category from Van Dyke since it is circular. Governor of Delaware category has as a parent the category 'Delaware Politicians' which has as a parent 'People from Delaware'. In general, if we point to a more specific category, then we don't need a pointer to the more general category. Thanks, 09:40, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Delaware Images / Template
No problem, man. I think your are great for contributing, and none of us, least of all me, are perfect. --Mm35173 14:47, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Image permission
I see that you have uploaded a number of images with the description:
- "Per Jeff Hague, Registrar of Regulations, Legislative Council, State of Delaware, image is not copyright and is used with permission."
What exactly does this permission entail? Evil Monkey∴Hello 01:35, 8 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Image:Blue-crab-5in.jpg has been listed for deletion
An image or media file that you uploaded, Image:Blue-crab-5in.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Images and media for deletion. Please look there to see why this is (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry), if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. |
[edit] Image:BLUE CRAB.jpg has been listed for deletion
An image or media file that you uploaded, Image:BLUE CRAB.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Images and media for deletion. Please look there to see why this is (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry), if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. |
[edit] Dates as Dab'g qualifiers in titles
_ _ I noticed your edit abt 2 days ago on List of people by name: prefixed Van, where you used a date range to disambiguate article titles, and perhaps the other similar ones i saw were among the places where i've noticed your name.
_ _ I think your thoroughness in bypassing even single rdr's that result is admirable, and it's good to see editors attending to missing bios. But i am surprised at your choice of vital stats to distingush people. Sometimes its longer and sometimes shorter than a word or two, but IMO even a four-digit number involves more effort to read and compare than even two or three words that have a natural relationship. Are you choosing that approach based on some recommendation, or is it you own idea? If no one recommended it, what is your reason for using it? Thanks,
--Jerzy•t 05:27, 13 October 2005 (UTC)
- At my talk, you answered (reformated by J, as with my own, above):
- I've given this a good deal of thought and realize that everything else being equal, ultimately what is needed in the name field is for it to be unique. For people, as the inventory gets larger, location or occupation will eventually be the same, especially for common names. I am even running into it my small efforts, see Nicholas Van Dyke, father and son. B/D date will almost never be. This is really a database management issue, not a lookup convenience or data entry issue, although it may not be readily apparent as such to to an individual writer working on just a few people. This approach is not original to me, but was suggested by another writer who acknowledged it was not the Wikipedia norm and had given up trying to explain, see William Bradford. Not surprisingly he is an IT professional as well, used to working with large databases. I hope this helps explain. I have put some other nutty ideas I have about bios on my talk page. I love writing these articles and am learning things everyday. All of my ideas can be exchanged for your better ones, so your comments are appreciated.
stilltim 02:44, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
_ _ Thanks for this very clear response; yes, the Van Dykes are the ones i referred to; it doesn't look like Bradford was another of yours that i noted, since that's not yet within the LoPbN BRs that i'm watching closely. I'll certainly make a point to look soon at your detailed arguements there. (I gather you mean at Talk:William Bradford.)
_ _ (BTW, i dunno which of us edits more bios, but i'd be willing to bet i'm in the top 0.1% of editors by amount of attention paid to bio titles. FWIW [grin].)
_ _ It certainly is a DBM issue. But (based perhaps only on ignorance of what you've already said beyond the above) i'm inclined to argue that it is wasted energy trying to outthink all the cases in advance: titles are easy to change; due to our redirects, references don't need to be changed (desirable as that is) until they become part of a dbl rdr; and in any case What links here make them easy to trace and to automate the "repair".
_ _ Further, IMO it's not just a DBM issue, nor therefore is uniqueness in the name field all that is needed. My impression is that most users, after clicking a lk, next turn their attention to the biggest text at the top of the next page, viz., the title. When following a piped lk, that is arguably wasted effort, but with piped lks (which these will always be, except when followed from MoS-compliant Dab pages) there is a human-factors issue: the Principle of least astonishment.
- [ARRGH! How sweetly bizarre! I just thot i put "Principle of minimum surprise" in the search box, and to watch my reaction, you'd have thot i'd been slapped unexpectedly: the page delivered was Acrophobia (and i'm not going to bother figuring out why). Please take that image as a timely natural metaphor.]
This and some of these are WP-namespace examples of it, but the one i was looking for is Wikipedia:Redirect#What needs to be done on pages that are targets of redirects?, which discusses a close analog of pipe-lk'd titles. When the title is not the same as what the user clicked on, IMO it should reassure them as much as possible that it isn't an unchecked lk to something that no one has yet dab'd, and that reassurance should be realizable with as little user thot as possible. (Here's a negative example of the principle: within the last couple weeks, i was suspicious to see only one blue lk among an author's many rd-lks to his works, so i clicked on the lk for his novel, which read Zack at that time; it was the title of a rdr to Zack (Final Fantasy VII)! -- a video game fictional character, not a book.
_ _ To come back to specifics, a date range amounts to encoded information that is meaningless until decoded, and may not even be helpful when you've converted
- (1787-1859)
into, say,
- between the Constitution and secession
(Especially not, if the reader and the subject of the bio are from different countries.) If time periods really are the best choice, a case like my Davey Moore (1960s) and Davey Moore (1980s) (but note that those titles were temporary expedients and deserve reconsideration by someone who knows more about boxing than is contained in "Who Killed Davey Moore?") uses the reader's attention much more efficiently than any pair of four digit numbers can. Or to return to the Van Dyke example we've both mentioned, IIRC "(son)" and "(father)" would probably be more useful (and certainly less demanding), and if and when they are not sufficiently detailed, there's nothing wrong with either "New Hampshire; son", etc., or "politician; son", etc. -- or with "New Hampshire politician; son", etc. when that much distinction becomes necessary.
_ _ Finally (for the moment!), as a DBM issue, it is also a human factors issue: picture a user who wants to come back to the same page, from memory, by the shortest feasible path, i.e., without sorting thru the entries on a Dab page again. They may well succeed in remembering whether it said "... New Hampshire; son" or "... politician; son" at the top of the page, but they don't have any chance of remembering the 8-digits-and-hyphen version. And if they come up with the wrong one of those two non-numeric ones, they may well immediately try the other; whether they succeed on the second try, or give up and go thru a Dab page, they may create a redir from the non-existent one to the article one (as i just did from Principle of minimum surprise and from Principle of minimum astonishment, even before it occurred to me that mentioning them would offer a case in point for this discussion.) And BTW, note that even if "politician; son" becomes ambiguous, it will remain useful to those who have remembered it, by automatically turning into a rdr to the old one, when the article is renamed (or maybe into a very-special purpose Dab -- most likely if people misremember the former title of the other bio that is eligible for that title).
_ _ Now, i'd be rude to expect you to reply before i've read & responded to the talk you referenced, so i'm not soliciting your reply to this, by writing it before doing my homework. But my getting some response to you written down might be immediately useful to you, and it will actually increase the likely speed of my better informed and probably more complete reply.
_ _ (I should remember to keep an eye on yr talk page, if you like continuing to consolidate our discussion in one place here.)
--Jerzy•t 05:37, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Redundant categories
My thinking regarding categories is that they are not strictly hierarchical (sp?). But if they were for bios there would at least need to be ones reflecting 1) when they lived, 2) where they lived, and 3) what they did. The last category gets so big it gets qualified by all sorts of things, often location. Such a qualification of the "what" should not require the deletion of the "where," because the articles in the "where" category will be incomplete as a result. While I admit there is some redundancy, with "People of Pennsylvania" when they are also "Pennsylvania politicians" that redundacy is OK because it prevents a serious omission. I believe this follows Wikipedia standards. I would like to restore a couple you have removed.
stilltim 03:04, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
- Where people are from is important to who they are, and is important for categorization. I like strictly hierarchical categorization, but I realize that you and others on Wikipedia don't. Someone who is a Senator is clearly a politician. Furthermore, anyone who has read the U.S. Constitution or studied it in school at any level knows that a U.S. Senator from Delaware must, by law, reside in Delaware, and therefore be a person from Delaware. I realize, though, that not everyone who reads the Wikipedia article about a U.S. Senator from Delaware has ever read or studied the U.S. Constitution. I think that having the same person in the "People from x", "Politicians from x", and "U.S. Senators from x" categories is just too many, but I'm not sure which of the first two to give up.
- Also, it had been (and still is) my intent to go through the rest of the Senate cleaning up categories. Could you tell me what sorts of things you plan to restore, to save both of us extra work?
NatusRoma 03:15, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Great work on Delaware
...related topics. Keep up the good work.
Take care, Molotov (talk) 21:25, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Re: Your important queries
You wrote:
- 1. Do you have an automated tool that gives you the ability to add or delete things from many articles at the same time? If so, would you be interested in sharing it?
I use the Firefox browser from Mozilla. It's open-source and copyleft, completely free, and the best browser in existance. More to the point, it has a feature called tabbed browsing, allowing a user to have many different pages open in a single window. I use that function alot, especially on Recent Changes and New Pages patrol.
- 2. What information do I need to supply you with to make you comfortable with the content of the articles I write, so that I may avoid future instances of your deleting significant portions of my work? Please see articles on the Governors of Delaware.
You belittle your own truly amazing work here by saying a single image constitutes a "significant portion." I wish I had the knowledge and writing ability for my home state that you possess in reference to your home state and those who have guided its development.
- 3. I would be grateful if you could take the time to read my user page, as I have yours, to try and understand my intentions. As I state on it, feedback is appreciated. I recognize my work is not perfect, and am simply experimenting to find ways to produce a better product.
And please continue to expirement, by all means.
But now, the reasoning behind my edits. First, to clarify things for anyone else wondering, I removed the image at left from thirty-five (35) pages mainly dealing with notable Delaware politicians and statesman. In each of those pages, the image at left was located at the beginning of the main section after the table of contents, without fail.
When I first saw this image on one of the pages, I was entirely perplexed by its presence. Initially, I assumed it was a vandal trying to make some sort of statement or to just plain vandalize the page. Digging into the history, however, I saw that the page had not been vandalized, and in fact had largely been written by two individuals, yourself and one other editor. Clicking on the image revealed that it was the state bird of Delaware, and that it was on many similar pages. I immidiately understood that someone was trying to bring all Delaware articles together by introducing the theme of the state bird. However, there are specific and significant problems with including it on the pages:
- As is (just the bird), to the uninitiated (or in other words, most of the readers of the page) it is frankly confusing. One shouldn't have to click on multiple things to gather the significance of an edit.
- So lets say you thumbnail the image and explain what it is. Even then, it is still confusing. One would be wondering, for instance, why the state bird is on Joe Biden's page: did he choose it? Did he cast a pivotol vote in its selection? etc. The answer is, naturally, no, so to rectify the situation you'd need to explain even further: "This is the state bird of Delaware and it's on Delaware related pages." Then it just gets in the way and distracts from the article.
- Including an image on any article that does not somehow have something directly to do with the image is not encyclopedic in the traditional or wiki sense. Indeed, your strategic inclusion of the flag, seal, shield etc. of Delaware (and occasionally other states) through all of your Delaware bios are also thoroughly confusing - what purpose do they serve?
I understand what you are trying to do, and it is logical for a website, but not an encyclopedia. What you can do is create a Wikiproject with Delaware as the focus, and use the bird as the symbol. Then the bird will be on all project related talk pages, which is perfectly acceptable.
However, upon further inspection of the issue as I was removing the images, I noticed that the copyright info wasn't in line with what is acceptable for Wikipedia. The image page specifically states the website from which the image came - this is good. The problem is, the image is copyrighted to somebody - if its not the webpage's owner, than to whomever took the picture, and inclusion of the whole image does not constitute fair use under any circumstances. As a result, it is not allowed on wikipedia at all (until such time that the original owner releases it to the public domain/the GDFL/Creative Commons, or current copyleft status can be definitively confirmed). And even then, it would only be appropriate on articles about the animal, the state, and state birds in general.
I hope you see what I was trying to do here, both in terms of cutting down on potential confusion, staying in line with encyclopedic standards, and following the new stricter rules of image use laid down by Jimbo, and by no means did I intend harm to "your work" (though you should already know by now that the nature of the Project means that someone, somewhere, will eventually edit the pages you have created).
A suggestion I have for you that will greatly improve your articles is removing all those little, unexplained images (the flags and shields and seals) - they will make your articles easier to read, and bring them in line with the rest of Wikipedia.
I cannot stress enough the importance of your presence on the Project, and I hope this does not discourage you in any way. I hope you have a good night, --Jeffrey O. Gustafson - Shazaam! - <*> 23:15, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Succession box use
I'd like to make a comment about your use of the succession box template on the Caesar Rodney article for his service in the Continental Congress. I considered and discarded the idea of doing this when the boxes first began to appear. My reasoning was: Delegates were generally appointed by a resolution in the state assembly, with a single resolution naming a slate of delegates. There usually isn't a tracable "A replaced B" kind of logic to it. We do have boxes for the presiding officers that I can live with, but I'd ilke to discourage them for delegates. What do you think? Reply here or my talk page, thanks,, Lou I 16:35, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
- Thanks for your reply. You can answer here since I've added your talk page to my watch list. Most of the times I've done this with a user's page, I drop it when any discussion goes quiet for two or three weeks. You just click the 'watch' tab when viewibng a talk page. LouI
- Re. Personality descriptions: I agree that we'd be better if we had these, but I've had some trouble with these, and even physical descripions. There is a tendency for some editors to disagree with anything you might say. We are woefully missing almost any humanizng material in biographies. In fourteeen screens worth of Thomas Jefferson article we never mention that he was moderately taall, thui, or red-haired. The only way I've found that stands up to objections is to look for a quote thst contains a description. Adams diaries, Jefferson, Jay, and Adams letters are a good source for these. <personal rant> I can't see that it is better the report that 'John Adams, in a letter to his wife, described Jefferson as a man of "impressive height and bearing with bright red hair".' I can just write that he had red hair. But someone will strike it as an opinion.</personal rant> LouI
- I have no good way to keep Succession boxes from wrapping. I have a bad (brute force) way, simplty code the underlying html table directly and you can set width yourself. I've only used it on a bx that seriouly annoyed me. Good luck, and if you find a better method, let me know. Thanks... Lou I 16:25, 10 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Committee of 100 (Delaware)
Thought you might be interested in contributing to this new article. --Briangotts | (Talk) 16:27, 30 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Delaware image category
Hi. Just curious if you had plans for the Category:Delaware Government images category you created? If not, I'll probably list for deletion since it's empty. wknight94 19:17, 18 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] The Movement
What does this one think of the movement? --Kin Khan 02:04, 22 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Anglican userbox
Hi, it may interest you to know there is now an Anglican userbox. It's {{user religion|anglican}}. --Angr (t·c) 09:50, 28 December 2005 (UTC)
- The userboxes are mostly for fun. Sort of like bumper stickers for your user page. You're certainly under no obligation to use them, but some people like them. Of course Episcopalians are Anglicans, and certainly feel it's redundant to have both Category:Anglican Wikipedians and Category:Anglican and Episcopalian Wikipedians. I created A&E WPians in September, and User:Celestianpower created Anglican WPians in October, presumably without being aware the A&E WPians already existed. I guess I used the more inclusive name not because Episcopalians aren't Anglicans, but because many aren't aware that they are (thanks to U.S. parochialism). There are a lot of teenagers on Wikipedia, and I think a lot of teenaged Episcopalians in the U.S. don't realize their church is part of something bigger that uses the name "Anglican". I certainly didn't when I was a teenager. If we do ultimately have just one Anglican Wikipedian category, I don't think it's necessary to subcategorize it further. There aren't that many Anglican Wikipedians in the first place, and even Category:Baptist Wikipedians and Category:Wikipedians in the Baptist church (another redundancy that ought to be resolved) isn't divided up into Southern Baptists, American Baptists, National Baptists, etc., etc. --Angr (t·c) 13:04, 28 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Delaware Userbox
- It's not a problem that you changed the userbox. I was actually waiting to see how long it could be up like that before someone decided to standardize it with the other State userboxes. I think you are looking for something like this.
This user lives in Delaware. |
- Try messing around with the parameters to change the colors, font, etc as needed. I'm going to change the Delaware flag so that it takes up less width. After I make that change, you may need to change the 80px to something like 60px. Enjoy! --R6MaY89 20:03, 28 December 2005 (UTC)
This user lives in Delaware. |
- I saw that you implemented the code on Template:User_Delaware so I changed it there to make the flag less fat. I moved my version to Template:User_Delaware2 so that I could still use it. --R6MaY89 01:10, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Web-screenshot tag
Thank you for contributing to Wikipedia. I've noticed you've uploaded some images tagged with {{web-screenshot}}. This tag is not meant to be used for images that came from Web pages; it's meant to be used for images of Web pages (such as Image:Google screenshot.png, for example). I've retagged the images below as having no license information. Please make sure that Wikipedia has permission to use these images. Then edit the image description pages to include information about the licenses these images are under. You may find an appropriate tag at Wikipedia:Image copyright tags or Wikipedia:Template messages, or if none of these fit you may write a description of the license yourself. You may want to refer to the image use policy. If the use of this image on Wikipedia is a copyright violation, please follow the steps at Wikipedia:Images and media for deletion to nominate this image to be deleted. If you have any questions, please feel free to post a message on my talk page. —Bkell 20:00, 2 January 2006 (UTC)
- Image:Mattdenn.jpg – There's a good chance this is provided under some free license, if it was created by the State of Delaware.
[edit] Willard Saulsbury, Jr.
Why did you revert my edit to sort this stub into a more specific stub category? FYI, it is the policy of WP:WSS to sort stubs into the most specific stub category possible and Category:Delaware politician stubs is a daughter cat of Category:Delaware stubs.--Carabinieri 23:01, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] {{Questions-DE}}
Hi Stilltim, just a question. I saw this tag on the new article John Hunn (1818–1894). I've never seen it before and was wondering if it is part of a project? My first thought is that it belongs on the talk page, not in the article, but I was just wondering. Cheers.--Bookandcoffee 21:50, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah I think you're right about the potential of this place, but I know there's been quite a bit of talk about Wikipedia self-reference. Wikipedia:Avoid self-references and Wikipedia talk:Template messages#Moving templates to talk pages, so I think you might find some resistance to the idea. That said, it's worth exploring ways to engage people, and I like the thought about advising vandals. (BTW, I stole the "leave mssg." idea from someone else, but now I can't even remember who! It's handy, and it keeps newbies from leaving messages on my user page. :) --Bookandcoffee 22:28, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Ruth
Referencing you recent edits.
- I reverted your change to the infobox. It seems to me the generic politician infobox is to be prefered to one that is organized around one particular office. Most politicians, including Minner, have served in several offices, and I think their infobox should reflect that. Furthermore, I think the infoboxes ought to be consistent for all politicians. The Governor box or the Senator box just doesn't do justice to such office holders if they have done something else- and most have. Additionally, I do not think it very useful to repeat information that is very clearly stated in the succession box nearby, nor is it sometimes possible to reliably state that a person is the "25th Governor." At least in Delaware there are several equally legitimate ways to count. The one thing I don't like about the infobox I use is the size of the picture. Not being a programmer, I do not know how to make the picture bigger, and would like to. Your assistance in that way would be much appreciated. I hope you don't mind my doing this, but I have given this infobox matter a great deal of thought before reaching these conclusions.
Your thoughts and opinions on these things are of great interest to me, as I am truly seeking to produce the best article possible. In fact, this article is getting lots of attention from me and if you have some ideas we can agree on, I will make the changes. stilltim 12:07, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
- I have left the needs attention notice in place because I would appreciate more specific information. It seems to me that what is lacking in this article is considerably more detail about her positions. Frankly I had hoped that people with more knowledge of them than I would flesh that out, at least until I found a reliable source to do it myself. Eventually I will add it. But that sort of information would be in the top 1/3 of the article. In the bottom 2/3 I have added all kinds of things I don't see anywhere else. Is that what you think needs attention? Do you believe that information should not be included, needs to be expanded in some way, or just needs to be presented in another way? I acknowledge I have done some things no one else is doing, but think I am being consistent with Wiki policy while exercising some "boldness" that might result in a general improvement of all articles.
- The ordinal number was a human error. I believe it should have read 72nd.
- Some of your comments suggest a disregard for the policy against Wikipedia:Ownership of articles.
- The lower part of the article appears rather disorderly and could use a some work, which wasn't what I came to do.
- I don't think the information is bad, but yes, it would benefit from a cleaner, more uniform presentation.
- Although I'm sure you mean well, the "Add your organization if you have information on this subject available to the public" message, at best, is unencyclopedic, and at worst is an invitation for link-spammers.
- The template you reverted to unnecessarily contains other nested templates. Please read Wikipedia:Avoid using meta-templates.
- When Ms. Minner leaves office, changing to a generic Template:Infobox Politician might be appropriate.
- Spouse (as used in the other 30+ articles I've added this template to thusfar) is understood to mean "current spouse" as it replaces the "first lady/gentleman" parameter used previously.
- Naming two spouses, then, implies that she's a bigamist, when she's actually a double widow.
- Most current governors of U.S. states have, in fact, held other offices previously. This template is intended for active governors. See the pre-emptive text for Jon Corzine, who will become New Jersey Governor in four days.
— FREAK OF NURxTURE (TALK) 12:50, Jan. 14, 2006
[edit] templates
Do not create template forks. If you have a concern or a function you'd like to see, discuss it on the talk page of the template in question. Do not go on your own and create a too-specific template. This leads to drift over time. For example, there are no less than 42 templates for universities, which can and should be able to fit into one common template. Going back and cleaning up this is rarely the job of the creator of those extra templates, so you just make more work for other people. -- Netoholic @ 06:39, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
- I do have a concern with the office-specific Governor and Senator templates. At last check they did not adequately handle the problem of persons holding multiple offices, particularly historical figures such as Thomas McKean. You are obviously aware that I have slightly modified the Governor infobox and made it generic and somewhat flexible. It is intended to be a demonstration that the presentation you seek in the G/S templates is possible in a template equally useful for historical people. Nothing would please me more than to join the community in developing and adopting such a template, and I have so stated.
- Because I much prefer to concentrate my limited free time on research and building content, it seems I have not learned all the proper ways to illustrate and advocate improvements. Your friendly assistance and guidance would be much appreciated. I will try and find the proper places to note these points. stilltim 11:21, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
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- And, as I said, if you think a template does not meet your needs, post on the talk page of the template that you are thinking about forking. Infoboxs, to a large extent, are not meant to be flexible. The templates are designed and intended to prominently display the person's highest level of office. The infobox is not a replacement for information that should appear elsewhere in the article. It is a summary. Pretend it isn't even there when writing the article, then you or someone else can take the relevant information and summarize it into an infobox. To document all of their offices, use separate section at the end of the article, where you can devote a full, appropriate amount of space it. Use succession boxes. -- Netoholic @ 12:09, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
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- Thanks for the response. Please see the Template talk:Infobox_Governor for my early morning thinking. I appreciate your serious consideration of my points. stilltim 12:23, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Delaware House template
Tim, (FYI) I am deleting the template DelawareUSHouse. All the articles use Template:DelawareUSH. Since no other state (perhaps Vermont or RI? )is likely to use a house member template, I dont forsee any general objections to the USH template name. If you have a concern, let me know on my talk page or e-mail. Thanks for your good work, Lou I 18:11, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Re: Biography stuff
To be honest, I had forgotten about our previous conversation about the succession boxes and assumed they were simply placed up where they were accidentally, thus I moved them down by reflex. I also like how the generic politician infobox has evolved, although I don't like that changes were made to the template and then not implemented in articles that already contained the template by the person who changed the template. --tomf688{talk} 23:20, 4 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Du Pont family
Hi Stilltim,
My concern about the genealogical information was that it contained many people who were not notable. I don't think simply being a member of the DuPont family is notable in itself. My view was that it was an indiscriminate collection of information. But, I could be wrong. We can discuss it on the talk page, and you could put in a RfC to get other user's opinions. --JW1805 (Talk) 00:22, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wikimeetup Delaware
I've "officially" announced the meetup, as we had discussed. See Wikipedia:Meetup/Newark Raul654 06:04, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Biden and dealing with bad edits
One way of dealing with persistent vandalism could be semi-protection of Biden article (like George_W._Bush). I still think that enough people have Biden on their watchlist and are able quickly revert vandalism, and it doesn't become such a problem. feydey 13:55, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] succession box at Thomas McKean
I'm not sure why you keep moving the succession box to the middle of the article. Wikipedia convention is to put this at the bottom. --JW1805 (Talk) 01:27, 16 February 2006 (UTC)
- There needs to be a consistent look to all the articles. Every other article with a secession box has it at the bottom. It doesn't make any sense to put in the middle. --JW1805 (Talk) 03:31, 16 February 2006 (UTC)
- I've put a post on Wikipedia:Village pump (policy) to see if we can get some other comments on where seccession boxes should be. Your comments are welcome there as well. --JW1805 (Talk) 03:59, 16 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Deleware templates
We seem to have two Delaware templates Template:DEHistory and Template:Delaware. They are being used inconsistently. The main Delaware template should be the one on the Delaware page, since that is the one that has the division into cities and counties. The History template (which doesn't really have anything to do with history) seems to be showing up on articles about people from Delaware. This really isn't the function of a template like this. If the template doesn't contain a link to the article, in shouldn't be in that article. We shouldn't have every article about an American include the state template of whatever state they were from. It would be better, I think, I merge some of the links into the main Delaware template.--JW1805 (Talk) 03:45, 16 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Meetup reminder
Just a reminder that there will be a meetup in Newark, DE, this saturday at 3:00 PM. (Since people have complained after previous meetups that they had forgotten about it, this message is going to everyone listed on Wikipedia:Meetup/Newark) Raul654 15:37, 23 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Follow-up to the meetup
See Wikipedia:Copyright FAQ (which I wrote). In particular:
- Taking a work in the public domain and modifying it in a significant way creates a new copyright on the work. For instance, the Homecoming Saga by Orson Scott Card is a re-telling of the Book of Mormon. Therefore, the books in the Homecoming series can be copyrighted.
- However, the new work must be different from the original in order for a new copyright to apply, as the court ruled in Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corporation.
- The Bridgeman Art Library had made photographic reproductions of famous works of art from museums around the world (works already in the public domain.) The Corel Corporation used those reproductions for an educational CD-ROM without paying Bridgeman. Bridgeman claimed copyright infringement. The Court ruled that reproductions of images in the public domain are not protected by copyright if the reproductions are slavish or lacking in originality. In their opinion, the Court noted: "There is little doubt that many photographs, probably the overwhelming majority, reflect at least the modest amount of originality required for copyright protection.... But 'slavish copying', although doubtless requiring technical skill and effort, does not qualify." Raul654 10:44, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
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- Thanks, I think I had seen this note, but in view of the importance of getting it right wanted to see or hear explicitly that this applied to photographs of 2 dimensional PD pictures included in a recently published work with a recent copyright.
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- The meetup was a wonderful afternoon for me and I very much appreciate being included. You are to be highly commended for your work and, for what it's worth, I am very impressed with the knowledge and wisdom of all the members of the group. Please call on me if there is anything I can do to assist you...as I will certainly be seeking your advice. (Is this the right way to respond? please confirm.) stilltim 21:50, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Help with templates
I've gotten myself, inadvertantly, into a Revert War with User:Jack Cox over the format of governors' templates. See the histories of, for example, {{MAGovernors}}, {{NYGovernors}}, and {{DEGovernors}}. I believe that font-size 90% is sufficient, but he is adding <small> as well. He reverts me with ALL CAPS in the edit summaries that my way is ugly. I've replied that his way is too small, and inconsistent with other templates, such as {{USPresidents}}, etc. (See, for example, the bottom of article on Franklin Roosevelt. He has modified the templates for the governors of all the states. Can you help me with a message on his talk page? You'll find mine there already (User talk:Jack Cox#Governor Templates). If you disagree with me, of course, please reply here or on my talk page. Thank you. —Markles 19:05, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] John Dickinson (1732–1808)
I noticed this article, and thought that it would be good to move it to John Dickinson (lawyer). Then a look at he history showed that you had moved John Dickinson (lawyer) to John Dickinson (1732-1808). Wikipedia:Naming conventions (people)#Qualifier between brackets or parentheses recommends avoiding numbers in article names for people. Think of an editor adding a link to another article. Would it be easier to type "(lawyer)" or "(1732–1808)" with an endash? I think the second case would be more prone to mistakes. Of course, (delegate) or (governor) might be better than (lawyer), since John is not remembered for his work in the courtroom as much as in Congress. I had planned to rename the other guy to John Dickinson (inventor). Would it make you hopping mad if I renamed (moved) these articles? If not, what qualifier do you think would be best? Chris the speller 16:00, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I wouldn't be hopping mad, especially since you were kind enough to discuss it first. Using dates as a qualifier is intentional, as I think they are the most specific, least arbitrary, and follow the practice used in most published encycolpedias. They are particularly useful when you get the same name, same profession, same residence, etc.- a frequent occurrence with uncles/nephews/cousins. The larger WP gets the more likely it is that these situations will appear. So in order to be consistent, I have tried to use this approach if there was not some middle name or suffix distinguisher. There is considerable debate in the WP community about this, and there are obviously good points to be made all around, but I think more and more the thinking is moving in the date direction. I think that most people use the copy/paste to create links- rather than typing it out. I also have a concern that if one person creates a John Dickinson (lawyer) article, another may go and create a John Dickinson (delegate) article without knowing they were the same. I have seen several instances of this. The dates are unlikely to be as easily confused. So, I would ask you to leave it, and others you see as is, and recognize the naming convention recommendation reflects the thinking of a much less comprehensive database than exists now.
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- If you know where the considerable debate is, please point it out (I'll watch this section), and I will get involved in it. For now, I will leave John alone, as you ask. Just don't get angry at the next editor who follows the guideline and leaps before he looks (or asks). The (lawyer)/(delegate) split can be avoided by adding a redirect at (delegate). I could get behind the dates better if there were more than two people, or if they were born and died in different centuries, but until the guidelines change, I don't think disambiguating using the dates should be the first resort. Chris the speller 17:36, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
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- Your concern about my getting angry makes me wonder if I might have a reputation. The courtesy and knowledge shown by your comments are the best antidote to any potential anger- and I thank you for indulging me. The conversation I refer to connects above on this page and there are examples. My intent is to produce a quality product, as I know yours is, and I don't pretend to have any exclusive intelligence on these issues. Like my friend who worked on William Bradford, I am willing to let it go. In any case, I can assure you, I will not be angry. stilltim 19:00, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
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Nothing about reputation, just recognizing the tendency towards a feeling of ownership that some editors have after they put a lot of work into an article (even though we should not). I often check with major contributors to an article before renaming, for that reason and for the reason that they might have good judgment about what would make a better article name. I have renamed quite a few articles from date qualifiers to professions, and haven't had any fights yet. Jerzy (above) makes some good points against using dates, I think. It would take a consensus (more than you and LouI) to overturn the present guidelines, but your user page is not the best place to build such a consensus, and I am confident that the opposition would be considerable, if not formidable. And this is coming from a DBA, data modeler and database designer. John Dickinson makes a pretty good poster child for the avoidance of numbers, but I am leaving it alone for now as promised, but I still plan to bulldoze others where it seems the editors just wanted a mechanism that allowed them not to think very hard about good article names. All the best, and happy editing! Chris the speller 21:03, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] THANK YOU
I would like to commend you for all of the work that you have done with the Wikipedia articles involving the State of Delaware. I would love to do the same thing with the people of West Virginia, but I don't have the time. Byrdin2006 23:32, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Fiftieth United States Congress & Fifty-first United States Congress
I LOVE what you're doing with the 50th and 51st Congresses!—Markles 15:08, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks, It's nice to hear something positive. I thought I had 10 Congresses all ready to go, but the detail at the end is much harder than I thought, particularly meeting some of the particulars of the 109 template- like the seniority/district sort.
Here's some ideas, per 109th Congress standard: —Markles 20:20, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Delegates at large
- Don't need "A/L" for delegates at-large.
- I wondered about the A/L note too- and will take it out
[edit] Birth/death dates
- Avoid the birth-death dates. They're just unnecessary to this article.
- I like the birth/death dates. There are an awful lot of people here with like names- and that's the best way to quickly tell them apart. The are not in the way, and I believe are very necessary when trying to figure which John Brown might be referenced.
- I don't think they're necessary unless, perhaps, they're for a redlinked name.—Markles 10:29, 4 April 2006 (UTC)
- Can we remove the birth-death dates for blue-lined names as they become blue-linked? (Such as 7 of the 12 Reps from Massachusetts in Forty-second United States Congress#House of Representatives) —Markles 22:16, 22 April 2006 (UTC) Well? What do you think? I think the dates are excessive, especially when they're unnecessary. —Markles 21:47, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
- I respectfully disagree. They are neither excessive nor unnecessary. They are often very useful in making identifications, as discussed above, there is plenty of room, and cosmetically they look fine. The point of an index- which this really is- (or nav box) is to make it easy for the reader to find the subject they are looking for without taking extra steps, like reading three or four articles, or doing another search in a browser (re alpha argument on nav box). Regarding the idea to do it partially, it would be very difficult to delete dates for linked names only and would look strange at that. It's really one way or the other. I've taken them out on some articles, temporarily, to see the result, and frankly saw no improvement. I don't understand your reasoning for making such an issue of this. I am giving you substantive reasons why they should be there, please show me some equally substantive reasons why they should not be there...or let it rest. stilltim 01:01, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
- I like the birth/death dates. There are an awful lot of people here with like names- and that's the best way to quickly tell them apart. The are not in the way, and I believe are very necessary when trying to figure which John Brown might be referenced.
[edit] States as section headers
- States/Territories ought to be section headings
- I don't mind the States/Territories being section headings, so much as I like the readability of them being indented and in the font they show in as I have them. Is there a way to do this without making the states look just like the chamber? If so, tell me and I'll make it so.
- They don't look too bad on my OS/browser/skin combination, although they are similar. I think we should keep them as section headers and suggest to some of the wiki programers that they make "==" and "===" section headers look more different. Can you change them back in the 50th Congress? —Markles 15:08, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- It's the "====" (four equals) that are not different from the "===" (three equals). The two and three are fine. If you can get whoever to make the four equals do another indent, that would be a perfect solution. I agree the font is not as important, and I'm OK with them being section headers. I think the readability of the article is more important than the TOC, though, because this section of the article is itself really just an index, and most will use it rather than the TOC. But we ought to be able to do both the way we want.
- I'm sure you understand that I am building all this off-line and just pasting it into the article. Hence when updating anything, I have to repaste everything. So when I find redirects, correct mistakes, or learn more info, the changes go back into my off-line template or database. This updates all the lists automatically. It would never get done otherwise. So, see what you can do with the programming, let me know the result, and I will build it into my off-line template. I haven't learned the nocks and crannies well enough to know how to ask the question.
- Also, I'm not happy with the way the special date notes look and will be experimenting a bit. Your feedback would be appreciated, plus I really want your specific guideline for what dates or portion should be wikified. Also, do you think there should be fourth list, strictly alpha, regardless of chamber or party. I have thought not, but could build and maintain it or any other combination easily if you or others would like.stilltim 16:59, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- They don't look too bad on my OS/browser/skin combination, although they are similar. I think we should keep them as section headers and suggest to some of the wiki programers that they make "==" and "===" section headers look more different. Can you change them back in the 50th Congress? —Markles 15:08, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- I don't mind the States/Territories being section headings, so much as I like the readability of them being indented and in the font they show in as I have them. Is there a way to do this without making the states look just like the chamber? If so, tell me and I'll make it so.
[edit] Lame ducks
- That whole lame-duck discussion seems excessive as it will be in most other ordinal congress articles. Can we just say "lame duck" but leave it in quotes? Those sessions are widely considered to be lame duck sessions, and they were the impetus behind the Twentieth Amendment.
- I am familiar with the Twentieth Amendment. The "lame duck" phrase has a negative POV implication that implies a problem to modern ears, but was not so much of an issue in another time. Hence the desire to explain the facts. I agree the explanation is long and would be OK with a simple "lame duck" following rather in the too prominent middle position, like "Second session: December 1, 1890 to March 2, 1891 — a lame duck session."
[edit] Date linking
- Can you wikilink the dates when individual Reps/Senators left/took office?
- I can build the links for any dates very easily in my DB, but frankly am thoroughly confused with your criteria for what dates to link and not to link. (ref your changes to the Joe Biden article). I could care less what the answer is, but would like a clear spec that addresses months/days & years.
[edit] TOC vertical space
- no vertical space before {{TOCright}}
- OK, with the TOC, that was just me being sloppy- or learning
[edit] Linking to censuses
- link to the Census article as such: [[United States Census, 1880|Tenth Census in 1880]] (omit "United States" from piped link).
- I will link the Census as you want, but there is no article for the Tenth Census, so it leaves this horrible red mark at the head of the article. Why don't you create a stub for all the missing censuses, and I'll do as you ask.
- Done! I created stubs for all the remaining census articles. what's more, Tenth United States Census redirects to United States Census, 1880. I haven't yet made redirects for the others, though.—Markles 22:23, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- I will link the Census as you want, but there is no article for the Tenth Census, so it leaves this horrible red mark at the head of the article. Why don't you create a stub for all the missing censuses, and I'll do as you ask.
[edit] Also
Markles, you sure are watching me closely...I'm not sure how to take it!? I'm happy to team up with you on getting this stuff done- we obviously have lots of interests in common. I appreciate you taking my concerns seriously and can assure that when you do I will be very flexible and easy to work with- and we will get a lot of good content built. I have to keep reminding myself that's the point of the exercise, not some of the silliness we get tangled up in. stilltim 20:57, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not watching you (don't worry). I'm just keeping up with the Congress stuff. —Markles 22:23, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] {{USCongresses}}
Why are you creating a manual table at the bottom of the Congresses, when there's a template at {{USCongresses}}? And, for that matter, have you decided not to make these Congresses the same format as the 109th?—Markles 21:18, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
- Why do you write with that tone? I have waited for your response to my numerous questions, and hearing none, have assumed you had no preference, and proceeded. I am following the 109 to the extent that it is consistent with itself, where not I stayed consistent as previously noted. Don't you think the table is an improvement over the template? Trying to be courteous, I didn't want to change the template until receiving feedback.stilltim 21:30, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
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- SORRY-- REALLY SORRY! I'm really not good at leaving these messages. I really didn't mean to express myself like that. I thought I had replied to you already, I'm sorry if I left some out. Feel free to change the template if you'd like to. That's the Wiki way, right? I really do love the work you're doing here!!!—Markles 23:18, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Shading colors
Hey Stilltim! Hi there. Look what I've done with List of United States Representatives from Delaware. I've just added shading templates. Is this OK? This should make your work easier with similar articles. You can find most of the templates here: Category:Party colours templates. —Markles 10:40, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
- Good morning Markles. Yes, this is a very nice addition and will reduce the labor and help with standardization. The only downside is that when the data is coming from a template, some yahoo will inevitably decide to change the template and effectively vandalize all the articles. But maybe this is sufficiently esoteric that it will escape their attention. BTW are you a Brit? I figured you were from Boston. stilltim 11:04, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Sessions of Congress
Your template, US Congress Sessions, needs to be changed. A "session" of the US Congress is a specific term meaning a time between commencement and adjournment. You would have to say "Congresses." —Markles 21:53, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed, the term is imprecise, but it seems to be used in this context as well, see Category:United States Congress by session, as well as in some US Gov publications. I will change it. stilltim 22:34, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Your edits of "sessions of congress"
It disturbs me that you remove kilobytes of text at a time without leaving a reason. please stop.--Frenchman113 on wheels! 22:52, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, just replacing text with a template, no change in presentation or content. I'll add a note. stilltim 22:56, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] List of Governors of Delaware
While bumping my way around Wikipedia, I found the List of Governors of Delaware. I notice that you have done much work on that page. This is just my opinion, but I think that if the political parties (if aappropriate) of the Governors in the Presidents under the Constitution of 1776 is filled out, this would make an excellent candidate to become a Featured lists.
PS: Your talk page is quite lengthy. You may want to consider archiving part of it. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 22:46, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
- I concur with the Featured lists suggestion! —Markles 23:07, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks. I'd be glad to add whatever would be appropriate, but these folks did not belong to a party. Would you like to see the column dropped? Or "none" perhaps in the column? I'll read up on how to archive. stilltim 02:04, 5 May 2006 (UTC)
- I think your changes are good. Do you want to nominate it? Or should I? If you nominate it I'll be sure to support it. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 20:13, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
- You may if you wish. I very much appreciate your positive feedback, but am not really into the competitive aspects of this. And I fear the greater exposure to those out there who will nit-pic it to death. stilltim 22:56, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
- I nominated it as you suggested. BTW, there is no need to fear the exposure of getting it featured. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 23:18, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
- You're welcome. I'm always willing to help. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 23:29, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
- I'd also like to thank you for your assistance in resolving objections in the nomination. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 19:15, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] List of counties in Delaware
I have put back the FIPS codes in the list of counties of Delaware because I am attempting to include them in every state's list of counties. (Some states have not yet been completed, but I'm working on it as I go along.) I think you should have looked at the FIPS state list before simply changing Delaware's county list page to only a link to the state list because the county list does not appear in the state list. This would (eventually) cause Delaware to be the only state that does not have its own county FIPS code list if this was not fixed. I am changing every state's county list to include this information as I think it is relevant to county lists. Paul Robinson (Rfc1394) 21:30, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
- I did look and I do see what you are doing. I know your intentions are good and you are putting hard work into this effort, but the point I was trying to make is that if you think this information is important enough to include in WP, and I would not argue that point, it would be better to build a FIPS county list in addition to or as part of the state list. There are undoubtedly hundreds of codes that apply to each county for various purposes and they all may be important, but obviously can't all be displayed on every list of the counties. There is no problem with having a note directing the reader to an article with some or all of these codes, but, meaning no disrespect, to give this particular code the prominence your design has done makes this seem to be primarily an article about FIPS codes rather than the larger objective of the article which is simply to provide basic high level information about the counties, how they came to be, and a link to more detailed information. Please consider enlarging the FIPS state code article or creating a FIPS county article instead of piggybacking onto the county list articles. I think the end product will be much superior. I am also concerned about the massive proliferation of navigation boxes on all articles. The US counties navigation box you added is completely redundant to a perfectly functional Category:Lists of U.S. counties that can be accessed from the line below. There is, therefore, no need for this nav box. stilltim 21:57, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Joe Biden article
I just wanted to thank you for keeping the Joe Biden article under control. It looks like it's a bit hairy in the discussions. -- ×××jijin+machina | Chat Me!××× -- 14:02, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Anglicanism and the Anglican Communion
Hello! I noticed that you have identified yourself as an Anglican, and so I thought that you may be interested in checking out a new WikiProject - WikiProject Anglicanism. Please consider signing up and participating in this collaborative effort to improve and expand articles related to Anglicanism and the Anglican Communion! Cheers! Fishhead64 23:53, 11 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Source for political party information in Congress entries
Thanks so much for adding so much material to the entries for the particular Congresses. This is really impressive.
I'm curious about what source for poltical parties you're using. Is it Martis's Historical Atlas of Parties in Congress or something else?
- Thanks for your comment. It means a lot to get positive feedback. I'm trying to make sure I like the exact format before adding other Congresses, which I can easily do. The party counts come from the US Congress [3]. Perhaps I should footnote that. BTW, I would appreciate it if you would sign your notes in the future so I get to know who you are. Its nice to know who your friends are! stilltim 21:04, 16 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal congresses
I'm going to stop messing up your very good contributions to the early congresses. However, here's a boilerplate template I've created: Wikipedia:WikiProject U.S. Congress/Ordinal congresses. Hope it helps! Keep up the great work! —Markles 19:33, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
- I appreciate your desire not to be "messing up...[my] contibutions." It is hard to work on something as complex as this with no base line to work from. It is my expressed desire to establish that, and I have no illusions that my preferences are more valid than yours or the community in general. Therefore, while I hope to convince you (and others) that my ideas are the good, I hope I am flexible enough to incorporate the good points of others. In such an attempt, at one time or other, I have incorporated nearly every suggestion you have made, and honestly want your input- but do ask that you equally strongly consider my points, and once agreed to, support the agreement. Frankly, no one else in the wikiworld seems to be watching this work, or care enough to comment.
- Regarding your template, I'm not sure how it can be useful to me. Obviously, I have a template I am using off-line to pull in the data and manipulate it. I'm certainly not typing all these names. Hence all those awful spaces which while invisible to the reader, are messy- and I will clean up at some point. I do have a few formatting concerns from looking at the template, some major, some minor. Here they are.
- 1. Major- there is no standard lead paragraph. Every good article should have one, and if they are similar articles, the same information should be presented in an identical manner.
- 2. Major- the nav boxes at the end are horrific. Too, big too many, and largely redundant. The nav box we previously agreed upon may not be perfect, but it is small enough, and looks much less amateurish. I'm sure it can be improved, but I think the nav box situation in all WP articles has become a major problem. Most need to go, and the remainders need to be cleaned up- big time. Much of their purpose can be achieved through work on categories. I need your help with this particularly.
- 3. Major- The party summary in a table is way out of place in an otherwise line article. For cosmetic reasons we have to go one way or the other. That's why I'm putting the membership changes on another article, maybe the party summary table should be handled the same way. Now if we could find a way to create a pie chart and incorporate it as an image- that would be real nice, as would some good maps, but no boxes. Those things are on my to do list. Any suggestions? The "busy look" you observed on one version of the 1st Congress was exactly right, and resulted from mixing tables and line data.
- 4. Major- (slightly out of scope) The major events and major legislation sections are sadly lacking. A bullet list of random items is not nearly good enough. In fact, these sections should be the meat of the article, written as narrative, and the list simply an attachment.
- 5. Major- (but out of scope) The articles on the Congressmen are mostly awful. It's all I can do not to get off on a tangent and try and clean them up to a consistent standard.
- 6. Less critical- We have to use the same terminology as the Congress. They call the non-elected officers, officials, not employees. They call the Vice President the "Vice President," not the President of the Senate. I thought we had reached a good middle ground on that, although I would prefer the later be gone.
- 7. Least critical- The names of leadership and officials have to go on their own line if there are more than one. Therefore, since it happens often, we should always place them that way, otherwise it is confusing and IMO, ugly.
- 8. Minutiae- A) The MOS recommends not using links in section headers. B) the Major Legislation "main article" title can be cleaned-up.
- I'm sure you've noticed I've dropped the dates at your specific request, although I think it is a major loss. It seems, for now, you and I are the ones that are going to get this project done, so I am doing my best to work with you and look forward to a real cooperative effort as we go forward. Are you going to Wikimania? I might...and it would be good to meet you. stilltim 20:43, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Joe Biden: Indian Controversy
Would you please tell me why you removed the part I inserted into Joseph Biden's article about the Indian-American comments he made? I am not sure what rule that paragraph broke. If your reasoning is that the paragraph contained information widely available on the Internet, I will put it back. We don't simply reference people to outside sources. Instead, we do our own versions of a story while crediting sources. I'd appreciate if you could follow up on this. Stiles 23:34, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
- Your prompt response to my question is appreciated, and while your reasoning is certainly understandable, it is not in accordance with accepted practice on Wikipedia. Many other articles feature information, whether seeminly minute or not, and present them to the reader. As editors, we don't evaluate the weight of a given story, but rather its notability. That notability is determined by its presence in the news, amongst other factors. The Biden remarks have been reported by many news agencies, and they have also attracted the attention of several Indian-American organizations. Not only that, the remarks have been on the minds of many Indian-Americans. We can't omit information, simply because a politician has been in hot water many times over, and that this may result in an article containing many similar stories. The fact that Biden has is criticised often times does not change the fact what happened is of interest to many, and is of notable nature. If you disagree with this, please raise awareness of what I wrote, and as Wikipedians, we'll be able to consider the matter on the talk page of the article. If it turns out the majority sees what I wrote as being entirely unnecessary, although certainly not in the eyes of those news agencies which have already featured the story, the piece will be removed. In the mean time, I will add the piece once again. Thank you. Stiles 01:14, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 9th United States Congress
- Honorifics- I took them out because keeping them in would mean we should also put "Hon." before Congressmen's names or "Sen." before Senator's, etc.. I figure we just need names here.
- Abbreviated party designations- In the current congress (109th), we just use "D" and "R". It seems excessive to the eyes to have "Federalist" and "Democratic-Republican" repeated all over the screen when a simple "F" and "D-R" will suffice. If, and when, a party is rare, it could be spelled out fully in those few cases.
- Extra spaces - Why did you revert the entire article? I had deleted a lot of extra spaces.
- Running out of disk space - There's no point in putting in excessive information. It takes a while for slow computers to read long files (see Wikipedia:Article size) and it's hard for a reader to find the information they want if there's too much extraneous repetitions.
- Delegates - linking to Orleans Territory brings the reader to United States Congressional Delegations from Orleans Territory. I have just changed it.
—Markles 04:31, 13 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] WikiProject Biography July Newsletter
The July 2006 issue of the Biography WikiProject newsletter has been published. You may read the newsletter, change the format in which future issues will be delivered to you, or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Thank you. plange 08:37, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] License tagging for Image:BustGeorgeClinton.jpg
Thanks for uploading Image:BustGeorgeClinton.jpg. Wikipedia gets thousands of images uploaded every day, and in order to verify that the images can be legally used on Wikipedia, the source and copyright status must be indicated. Images need to have an image tag applied to the image description page indicating the copyright status of the image. This uniform and easy-to-understand method of indicating the license status allows potential re-users of the images to know what they are allowed to do with the images.
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- oops, now added...stilltim 01:11, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Biography Newsletter August 2006
The August 2006 issue of the Biography WikiProject newsletter has been published. You may read the newsletter, change the format in which future issues will be delivered to you, or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Thank you. plange 01:49, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
Hi,
I increased the size of the Trumbull picture in the McKean article because I wanted to add the location of McKean in the picture and wanted people to see it. (I just added that info, although I don't think it was there when you shrunk back the picture size. I suppose a reader could just as well increase the size of the thumbnail if they wanted. Is there a particular reason you shrunk the size back to that picture? Would it be all right to leave it larger? Best, Noroton 23:37, 8 August 2006 (UTC) (Noroton)
[edit] Question about photo source
Hello, I am trying to locate the archival copy of this photo you uploaded of the Old Brick Capitol for reproduction in a book. http://www.pddoc.com/photohistory/v7/images/2004-077b.jpg Can you tell me where you found the image? Yours is the only one I've been able to locate.
Thanks very much, Laura McGuire
- It is in the "The Photographic History of the Civil War" on-line. Just drop the "images/2004-077b.jpg" from the url you have. stilltim 21:18, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Help with Delaware template
Hi Stilltim,
It looks like you disapproved of my edits to the Delaware template yesterday. In the spirit of being bold, I went through all 55 states/insular areas on Wikipedia:WikiProject U.S. states/state templates and standardized the templates. (94% page width, 75px flag in the upper left corner, section headers down the left side.) I admit that I know very little about Delaware, since I'm a Michigander living in American Samoa. That's why I need your help. I'd like the Delaware template to have the same layout as other U.S. possesions, but since I'm not an expert on the state, I could use your input on how best to lay it out. Anyway, I hope you're willing to work with me on this. Thanks for your help. Lovelac7 20:24, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
P.S. I like your "places I've visited" layout on your user page. It's better than mine. Lovelac7 20:24, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
- Hello Lovelac...what's a Michigander in Samoa doing behind a computer instead of enjoying paradise? We all dream of being in such places. Seriously, I appreciate your note and will try and share my thinking with you. I have found the "standard" nav box to be very limited, and frankly not very pleasing to the eye. It uses up tons of space delivering minimal information- and much too heavily geographical. It is really not appropriate for use on a biography or historical article. So, being bold as well, I have tried to design a simpler, smaller and more attractive nav box, that is relevant for all articles that can be associated with a state. Template:Delaware is the result. I have also made a Template:PAGeneral box for that state, although I have hardly used it at all. I have also created Template:USCongressTerms for articles relating to Congress, although I strip off the lower portion for individuals and customize it to indicate the years terms they served. see J. Caleb Boggs for instance. From these boxes the reader can move anywhere, not just geographically. I think there is a general tendency to have way too many big nav boxes on these articles, and this is my attempt to suggest and experiment with an alternative. I once created a DEHistory template that looked like the PAGeneral, and used it, leaving the Delaware template a standard. This created a big fuss with certain individuals who did not object to the change, so much as two templates.
- I would enjoy working with you on this, but I warn you the merciless editing I have experienced over the past year has forced my thinking way "out of the box" in trying to find solutions. I would love to see the same layout nationwide, and I'm sure my design could stand much improvement, but the overall goal is to dramatically reduce the size and number of nav boxes on these articles by routing readers into appropriate categories...and to make the boxes a little more professional looking. I could go back to two nav box designs, but the Delaware template as you modified it would never be used, because the new design works better for all articles. And it would in other states as well. Please give it some thought...and enjoy paradise! stilltim 21:13, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
-
- Take a look at the changes I made this morning (or evening in Delaware). I tried to get this edit to have the same footprint as your edit, as well as the same information. The only link I added was a general link to Category:Delaware. Other than that, I kept your colors, links, and layout.
-
- By the way, Samoa is fun, but I still like editing Wikiepdia as much as I did back in Lansing, Michigan. Believe it or not, it can get pretty boring on a tropical island, just like anywhere else. Still, I'm thankful to be here. Lovelac7 22:49, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Template:Delaware
Stilltim: I appreciate your attachment to Template:Delaware and your desire to keep it the way that it is now (it looked great before, and it still does!). I was the same way with Template:Colorado before I realized that some state templates are so inconsistent with each other that something had to be done. I personally don't mind if the Delaware template remains as it is; it merely presents the links in a much more concise way than what Lovelac7 and I have been trying out on the other state templates.
Regarding the location of the flag images, that's something that several templates had previously, an image of the flag on the left and an image of the state seal on the right. I love the work that you've done on Template:Delaware; it's a fantastic template that will be easy to maintain and the colors juxtapose each other well. I'm all for keeping it the way it is. Feel free to tell us how to standardize the rest of the state templates (and how they can complement Delaware's) over at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. states/state templates. Thanks for your concern! ;) — Webdinger BLAH | SZ 01:35, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
- Stilltim, I got it fixed as much as I could without compromising the look of the template. Here's what I've achieved:
- The content is now centered to the title and not the entire area of space; I added in a 75px margin to the right of the content.
- I removed the bold-facing on "Topics." Is that what you wanted or is it the title that you wanted me to remove the bold-facing?
- I removed the margins as much as I could, but there is still a 2px margin that refuses to disappear. I'll try again tomorrow.
- Let me know if there's anything else I can do for you! ;) — Webdinger BLAH | SZ 03:33, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
-
- Hey, Stilltim, I'm finished with the requests that you placed on my talk page; what a difficult template to work with! It looks almost exactly like the United States Congress template you have on the J. Caleb Boggs page as for spacing and borders. And thankfully, it looks passable in Internet Explorer. Please, if there is anything more you would like me to do, feel absolutely free to contact me again on my talk page. Thanks! — Webdinger BLAH | SZ 00:55, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Biden intro
Hi, I restored information you removed from the introduction, but I wanted to leave you a note in case you want to discuss it. To me it seems significant that he was elected to the Senate at such a young age, and his original national fame was a result of his presidential bid in '88, thus the links. Regards, Kaisershatner 16:02, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
- Your removal of this information with no other comment than "remove repetitive info and POV" is not very nice. The information wasn't actually repetitive, and I'm not seeing the POV problem. This time, would you care to discuss it at the Talk page? Kaisershatner 15:24, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
- I apologize for not sounding nicer, it wasn't meant to sound that way. I liked much of your addition to the introduction and actually am using it as a model for other articles as well. The age comment and the previous election seemed less important, and therefore not as critical to repeat in an intro. Both are covered prominently in the body of the article. The previous election actually has a TOC entry and whole paragraph. I have tried to keep intros very concise, and you were correct to expand it in this case. The removal of the POV word was an edit someone else made and was not in the intro. stilltim 15:57, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks for your comments. I get a little prickly about being reverted without comment, so I'm sorry if I was a bit clipped in my response. My guide for the intros is to follow the basic ideas at WP:LEAD and Wikipedia:Summary_style, and thus the introduction actually should duplicate the major subheadings of the article that follows. Further, I think Biden's age at initial election is significant- wasn't he pretty young for a Senator? To me, that's notable about him. Kaisershatner 21:36, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
- I apologize for not sounding nicer, it wasn't meant to sound that way. I liked much of your addition to the introduction and actually am using it as a model for other articles as well. The age comment and the previous election seemed less important, and therefore not as critical to repeat in an intro. Both are covered prominently in the body of the article. The previous election actually has a TOC entry and whole paragraph. I have tried to keep intros very concise, and you were correct to expand it in this case. The removal of the POV word was an edit someone else made and was not in the intro. stilltim 15:57, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] The messy stub...
um... I stuck it there. Thanks for the compliment. Navboxes are on all 50 other AG's +DC, PR, Guam, USVI, and the NAAG article. Do you really want Danberg to stand out? Middle initials in title where necessary (George W. Bush) but otherwise completely optional: I am keeping it simple, stupid. - CrazyRussian talk/email 04:04, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
- As to the navbox, please put it back in. If you want to use cats instead, get it deleted through WP:TFD. Until and unless, I think you should opt for uniformity. - CrazyRussian talk/email 04:08, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Borrowing a bit from Barry Goldwater, "uniformity in the pursuit of excellence is no virtue." How do we improve articles if we always opt for uniformity? I do not want to delete the nav box. It is quite useful on any article about the office of Attorney General or on the NAAG article, and probably many others. I also don't mind the Danberg article standing out. I suppose I could remove the nav box from the other 50 articles, but I think that would be too bold. I'm just trying to gradually introduce the idea that a nav box listing everyone that has done anything the subject of an article is famous for...may be too much (like this sentence). Perhaps you can suggest some forums to do so. I also recognize that middle initials are optional, but since that's the way he always signs his name, see [4], seems like we should do it his way when there is a choice. That actually would be the simple way...
Regarding my "compliment"...that was thoughtless, and I regret saying it. My apologies. I need to stop doing this in the middle of the night. I should have read your page and realized you were working a project. Regardless, I hope what I did improved the article, and that we can work together going forward. stilltim 03:23, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
- Hehe... no problem. Say what you will, I think the box should stay on. As for the middle initial, move it if you wish, just update incoming links. Oh, and downtown Wilmington is a seriously scary place. We got out of there quick. We enjoyed the nice state park in Northern Wilmington on the old Dupont estate. - CrazyRussian talk/email 03:29, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Biography Newsletter September 2006
The September 2006 issue of the Biography WikiProject newsletter has been published. You may read the newsletter, change the format in which future issues will be delivered to you, or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Thank you. plange 00:02, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] License tagging for Image:Delawarearms.gif
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[edit] Featured list candidate
I thought you'd like to know that List of United States federal legislation has been nominated to be a Featured List. It needs 4 votes by October 2, 2006.
As I have labored hard on the article, I would appreciate your looking it over. You can find a discussion here: Wikipedia:Featured list candidates/List of United States federal legislation.
Thank you!
—Markles 23:09, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Moving Sykes and Van Dyke
A while ago you asked me to help move "James Sykes (physician)" to "James Sykes (governor)", and "Nicholas Van Dyke (1769-1826)" to "Nicholas Van Dyke (senator)", reversing the current redirects. I agree that this needs to be done, and you could do so yourself if the redirect pages didn't have edit histories. Just list them in WP:RM under "Noncontroversial proposals". If you have any trouble, please let me know. Chris the speller 02:54, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Question on historical senators biographies
I'm currently working on John W. Johnston, a senator from Virginia in the 1800s, and wanted to find out what you thought a good TOC structure should be? I found this that you guys worked on User:PaulHanson/Style_guide but wanted to see what you guys felt was proper for content, etc? Namely, is it encyclopedic to mention any bill introduced by the said senator? Should details be divided up by which session of Congress it occurred in? Greatly appreciate any guidance you can give. --plange 03:06, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Image:Delawarearms.gif
Thanks for uploading Image:Delawarearms.gif. I notice the 'image' page specifies that the image is being used under fair use, but its use in Wikipedia articles fails our first fair use criterion in that it illustrates a subject for which a free image could reasonably be found or created. If you believe this image is not replaceable, please:
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[edit] Congressional delegation discrepancy
for Virginia-- I posted a notice -- do you know which is correct? Besides wanting to fix whichever is incorrect, I'm using the List as a to-do list with all the red links. Also I wanted to populate the congressional pages (Virginia's 9th congressional district) with their historical data... Thanks! --plange 05:00, 31 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Delaware senate election
Sorry that it took a while to respond. The source that I used was this CNN page, U.S. SENATE / DELAWARE. – Zntrip 17:41, 12 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Early Congresses
You have done a lot of work on these articles and I don't wish to be critical. But I am finding a lot of errors in the numbering of House members. Look at Pennsylvania in the 4th Congress for example. The numbers make no sense at all, even allowing for the fact that the 4th District elected two members. And why assign district numbers to the members from Connecticut (for example), when they were elected at large? Adam 01:03, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
- Please feel free to be critical. The district assignments in the early congresses for certain states are very questionable. Pennsylvania and Virginia are particular problems. On-line congressional records that I have found are reliable only from the 24th Congress. I can find no good source prior to that, specifically for district assignments. To the best of my knowledge, the answer is not in the [5] as you suggest. So I actually just left the districts assignments from contributors prior to me. I tried to note on the discussion page that there was work to be done there, as well as for some of the party designations. On some congresses I just left them alpha with a footnote claiming ignorance, but what is there in the 4th in PA seems like it has some basis in fact. I just don't understand it or know where it came from. It seems there were multiple instances of multi member districts, possibly with non consecutive numbering, but I have nothing that says this...only guesswork. I am resigned to having to do some real on-site research to find a good source for this information, but do not have the time just now. If you know of a good source, please advise, even if in Philadelphia, I can probably track it down. Your interest and help is appreciated. stilltim 01:46, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for your reply. One of my strange enthusiasms is electoral cartography (see my website). About ten years ago I found and photocopied an atlas of congressional districts from 1789 to the 1980s, which I still have. I am currently making a complete set of US District maps. Here is the citation for the atlas. It gives the name and district number of every member elected to House from 1789 to 1983, although unfortunately not their party (for this you have to cross-reference with the bioguide. The atlas shows clearly (for example) that in the 1790s PA had 12 districts, of which only the 4th was a "double." It also shows that CT and NH elected their members "at large" (CT continued to do so until 1837). I am reluctant to take on the task of redoing all these articles, and it seems strange that an Australian should have to do so. You or another US editor should be able to find that atlas in a library somewhere. Adam 02:07, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
Here is a sample. It has taken me a week to get up to 1797, so I expect this will take approximately the rest of my life to finish.
- Wonderful information, thank-you. I feel like I've died and gone to heaven! I'm sure I can find it. Regrettably this effort of mine is an avocation and competes with a full time job and family/household responsibilities... Once I locate the atlas I will make the corrections. The last time I looked, the bioguide was not complete with regard to party. They seemed to have stopped towards the end of the alphabet. Stay tuned, and thanks again. stilltim 02:23, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
I am not posting my maps of current elections to WP, because I want to maintain my website as a separate entity until such time as WP can protect its contents against vandalism, which won't be any time soon under its current administrative arrangements. (see The Problem with Wikipedia at the bottom of my User page). But these historical maps are another matter. I was going to wait until I had finished the whole sequence before I uploaded them, but that might be a long time. So perhaps I should upload them year by year as I do them. But I don't want to incorporate them into the existing articles, which are, with all due respect, too cluttered already. I might create a sample article, United States Congressional Districts, 1797, and see what you and others think. Adam 02:57, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
Sounds like a very sensible approach for the maps. Links would be good. The 1797 PA map actually refers to the 5th Congress, and if posted might be more understandable if labeled that way. I would be interested in your thoughts about presentation of information on the Congress articles, although the current layout is the result of very difficult negotiation with another editor. I generally agree with your comments about WP. Basically it needs an editorial board to keep the crazies at bay. What bothers me the most are the too zealous "editors" who contribute nothing themselves, but spend vast amounts of time disrupting serious contributers. Fortunately I've noticed that they generally go away after a few weeks. What I need the most is the ability to produce maps like yours to illustrate the articles I write. Someday I'll learn how to do it. stilltim 03:30, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
So you think United States Congressional Districts, 5th Congress would better reflect American usage? Or perhaps United States Congressional Districts: 5th Congress (1797-1799). Adam 03:34, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
Yes, I think the first would be fine. I have borrowed the material you pointed out and am about to post corrections for the first 9 congresses. You have been a great help!!! stilltim 01:54, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
I will create a sample page tonight and see what you think. When you are corrcting the lists in the existing articles, you will notice that the lists of members given in the atlas make no distinction between members elected on election day and members elected to fill vacancies during the term. So you will still need to use the bioguide to disambiguate when you find two members listed for the same district. Adam 03:33, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
Here is a possible layout for the maps. I have deleted the names of the Congressmen elected. There seems no point in duplicating what is already in the articles you are working on. Tell me what you think. Adam 11:13, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
As I said, the maps are beautiful. I do notice a couple of errors (?) when comparing to the atlas I have...South Carolina & Virginia. Also the atlas shows at large districts as diagonal lines with party coloration. Can you do that or some equivalent? I do understand, and have good data for transitional members. I am working from the Historical Atlas of Political parties in the United States Congress, a later companion to the Atlas of Congressional Districts. It has maps that look very much like yours, except the color is reversed. stilltim 01:58, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wikiproject Biography
Hey. Just wondering, i was lookign through the full list of the articles in Wikiproject Biography, and the list keeps breaking up. Every time I try to fix it, another section of notes for someone messes up the table. I them noticed each time that the notes you're putting in when you're discussing your rating choice are apparently messign up the table. Basically, it you look here: Wikipedia:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Biography_articles_by_quality/5 and get to the point where the table stops, you'll see what I'm talking about. My main questions are if you were aware of this, and if not, how could the format be fixed without removing your stuff completely? You seem to put a lot of time in each one so I don't want to remove them, but they're also messing up the numbers of each kind of bio on the main page. --Wizardman 05:37, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
- I was not aware of this, thanks for pointing it out. Not being much of a programmer, I do not know what in my syntax causes the problem. I was trying to respond to the request to document "present staus" and progress. There is nothing sacred to me about how the information is presented, and if you or others could suggest a better way, I will use it and modify what is out there. stilltim 11:50, 6 December 2006 (UTC)
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- No problem. I actualy love the way you're reating them, it's very well done. Really the only problem is the addition of the table. Basically I'm just takign the table itself out (see here), as the info is more than good enough to hang around. I actually have no idea why the frames messed up the table. It's really not a big deal anyway as I'm sure very few people actually view the complete table.--Wizardman 17:20, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] 20th United States Congress
I was looking for the 20th Congress of the CPSU, but when I typed in 20th Congress it redirected to 20th United States Congress. The edit I made to the lattermost wasn't WP:NONSENSE. Would it be better to edit 20th Congress? Шизомби 15:06, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- That works, thanks! Шизомби 16:45, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Expiration of congressional terms
Thanks for your post at Talk:List of Presidents of the United States and your thoughts on the "March 3rd vs. March 4th" issue. I've left a reply on the page and would welcome your further comments. Regards, Newyorkbrad 02:20, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Image:Handyirving.jpg
FYI, the Library of Congress has a more complete copy of this image that you found at findagrave, at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.03086. According to that copy, it's actually Levin Corbin Handy, not L. Irving Handy. Unless you have a source that contradicts the LoC's identification, you might want to request it to be deleted as {{badname}} (I'll be uploading the larger copy to commons shortly, for the Levin C. Handy article). --Davepape 06:00, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] License tagging for Image:BustGarrettHobart.jpg
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[edit] Unspecified source for Image:Reprmncastle.jpg
Thanks for uploading Image:Reprmncastle.jpg. I notice the file's description page currently doesn't specify who created the content, so the copyright status is unclear. If you have not created this file yourself, then there needs to be a justification explaining why we have the right to use it on Wikipedia (see copyright tagging below). If you did not create the file yourself, then you need to specify where it was found, i.e., in most cases link to the website where it was taken from, and the terms of use for content from that page.
If the file also doesn't have a copyright tag, then one should be added. If you created/took the picture, audio, or video then the {{GFDL-self}} tag can be used to release it under the GFDL. If you believe the media meets the criteria at Wikipedia:Fair use, use a tag such as {{Non-free fair use in|article name}} or one of the other tags listed at Wikipedia:Image copyright tags#Fair use. See Wikipedia:Image copyright tags for the full list of copyright tags that you can use.
If you have uploaded other files, consider checking that you have specified their source and tagged them, too. You can find a list of files you have uploaded by following this link. Unsourced and untagged images may be deleted one week after they have been tagged, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If the image is copyrighted under a non-free license (per Wikipedia:Fair use) then the image will be deleted 48 hours after 21:25, 7 January 2007 (UTC). If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. Thank you. MECU≈talk 21:25, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Re: Current office templates
Personally, I was against such templates initially, but I have gone the other way and now I support them as they are useful navigation aides and bring traffic to otherwise unvisited articles. These templates have become widely accepted and their use has been established by consensus in the community. For example, the U.S. Senators template was nominated for deletion a while ago, and received a lot of votes; the result was a resounding "keep". While you are clearly very protective of Delaware articles, consensus and general practice says these templates should be on all the state's pages, including Delaware. If you have a problem with them as a whole, you should nominate them for deletion instead of removing them from the pages. --tomf688 (talk - email) 04:13, 17 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Your Edits to Joe Biden
I'm confused why you insist on moving the succession box to the middle of this article --- I thought it was standard to put it at the bottom of senator's article and so, I made the edit that you just reverted. And, in the process, you've removed two succession boxes that are fairly commonly used for other US Senators. I'm declining to revert your edits, but I find it strange that you insist on non-standard practices for this particular article. Rickterp 18:14, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
- I appreciate you asking the question. I hope I can answer it satisfactorily, although without you having an account I can't reply on your page. The succession box information regarding the senator office is nicely included in the infobox and therefore is unnecessarily redundant to include in another template on a remote portion of the page. The County Council office is not appropriate for a succession box at all, as it has no specific predessesor/successor. However, the committee chairs are appropriate and are not shown elsewhere, hence I left them. Rather than bury them at the bottom of the article where they would be unlikely to be seen, I placed them with the paragraph on the committee assignments, illustrating the narrative, much like a picture or table. It is my belief that the use of "standard" practices are always subject to thoughtful consideration, that too many templates detract from articles, and that their use, design and placement should be particularly reviewed for logic and usefulness, regardless of what an informal standard may be. stilltim 21:54, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Thank you for your reply. I've been editing in wikipedia for less than a year and it's tough to understand how to achieve balance between what might look right in one situation and a practice that seems standard for other comparable situations. This is particularly true when what is "standard" is an evolving concept and subject to constant review and (re)consideration. I've added a user page for my account --- I think you could have left me a message on my talk page, but it probably helps to not be completely anonymous on here. Rickterp 15:52, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Hi, it may not have been your intention but you removed the reference to Senator Biden's contribution to domestic violence / violence against woman during the following lengthy edit:
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15:46, 10 February 2007 Stilltim (Talk | contribs) (incorporating new material into flow of article, other maintenance)
Assuming it was not your intention to remove this material i have re-included it and also made some NPOV edits. i live in Australia and know next to nothing about U.S. politics so please let me know your thoughts on the Joe Biden talk page. 202.0.106.130 04:21, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal Congresses
Thanks for putting lots of time into the ordinal congresses. I've lately been spending lots of time on them too. I'm running into some disagreements wih other contributers, however, and the process is more frustrating than what I've run across in other articles and other broad article areas. One of the issues is whether to use Template:USCongresses or Template:USCongressTerms at the bottom of each article. The latter is used in about 80 of 110. It looks nicer on my screen and provides more information. I wondered whether perhaps it looks bad on smaller screens, but User:Markles just said that some people prefer the other one, with no reasoning given. User:Markles has reverted my changes when trying to make these consistent, and I was wondering if you know of any reason to keep the inconsistancy. --Appraiser 23:43, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
- Its nice to know of another working on the ordinal congresses. They are quite a chore, but I think worth the effort. I much prefer the Template:USCongressTerms for the reasons you stated and would hope that template is used consistantly throughout the series. I would encourage you to be persistent. User:Markles often has good suggestions for improvements, and he and I had actually reached agreement some time ago on the use of Template:USCongressTerms and its design. However, I noticed he made some edits to it just the other day...so I'm not sure what gives. Let's continue to collaborate on this. stilltim 00:51, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Helping out with the Unassessed Wikipedia Biographies
Seeing that you are an active member of the WikiBiography Project, I was wondering if you would help lend a hand in helping us clear out the amount of [unassessed articles] tagged with {{WPBiography}}. Many of them are of stub and start class, but a few are of B or A caliber. Getting a simple assessment rating can help us start moving many of these biographies to a higher quality article. Thank you! --Ozgod 22:49, 23 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Meetup
Since you're local, I wanted to let you know about Wikipedia:Meetup/Philadelphia 3 Raul654 22:02, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Wikiproject Biography March 2007 Newsletter
The March 2007 issue of the Biography WikiProject newsletter has been published. You may read the newsletter, change the format in which future issues will be delivered to you, or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. Thank you. Mocko13 22:07, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Format for External Links
Nice job on the David Lloyd (judge) article, but you might want to take a look at the Style Guide on how to format External Links: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:External_links --BillFlis 19:53, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal Congresses
Hi. Thanks for working on the ordinal congresses. I am still entering members; I'm up to the 85th. Looking at your edits from yesterday, the headers, such as
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- Actually I'm just playing around with cosmetics and made very few changes, almost all to the presentation of the links (making them blue rather than black). I saw a guideline that said they should be that way, but frankly may change them back because I prefer the black with the arrow following...what do you think? I have no idea why the rest of the stuff shows up, because it did not change. I also watch for edits that change data incorrectly, but think I only saw two in 1-18. There were also a couple of typos I fixed, but don't remember Illinois. It could have been a mistake of mine. I'll check later.
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- On the cosmetic subject, I've been wondering about the appearance of the linking of the state names. When there is so much crowded information in blue the page is a little harder to read than if the state names are in black, contrasted with the person's names in blue. I like the link, but wonder if a "Seealso" linking to the category might make the page a bit more legible. I might experiment with the 19th Congress so you can see what I mean. I build these pages off line in Word and Excel and then upload them. That way I can just copy and paste info from various sources rather than re-key all the names, dates, etc. It also assures some greater consistency. I have 1-55 all built off line, so it makes maintenance very easy, as well as changing from one format to another.
I hadn't looked at your work, and will this weekend to see where we might be out of sync. stilltim 20:43, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
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- Concerning blue vs. black - are you talking about not linking the state names at all and adding a seealso for each one? That might be an improvement. It has a couple of other advantages too: 1) we could seealso both the delegations article and the representatives (or senator) articles. 2) we could make each state a minor heading, which would provide section editing capability.
- I had thought about only one per chamber. Let me play with 19 this weekend and see what might work. I'm always concerned about legibility, and too many notations or edit markers may be a problem. I will also add to your good work in 84 to match the format I've been using. You'll notice I've started leaving off the notes from the main article and adding them to a supplemental State Delegation article.
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- There wasn't anything special about Illinois; I just used it as an example.
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- I've worked mostly in the range of 57th thru 85th congresses so far. My plan is to continue up to about 100, adding member names and making the format consistent. I consider 70-84 more or less done. 57 & 60-70 are not in the format that shows districts. I'll probably re-do those after the others if someone else hasn't fixed them yet. I know there are a lot of deaths, resignations, appointments, and special elections that are missing throughout. When I started, I was writing "died in office"; now I'm putting in a death date.
- I have painfully worked through all those choices and would offer the presentation you will see on 19 and 84.
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- There are some inconsistencies in the way the Territories are handled which I plan to look at someday. I'm also going through each article for my own state's representatives and senators and linking each ordinal congress that he/she was in. (That task isn't quite as tedious as adding members to the ordinals.)
- Clearing these up were some of the edits I did in 1-18 last night.
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- Since you're keeping a database of these lists offline, do you update yours' whenever someone fixes a name or link? I would think you'd have to avoid re-introducing errors.
- That's exactly what I do, you'd be suprised but the edits others make to the content are far far fewer than the edits I make from my own research. I have some great reference materials right here with virtually all the answers and just need the time and patience to add them. stilltim 03:04, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
--Appraiser 21:22, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Next and Previous Congresses
Why put Previous and Next Congress in the session dates section? It's obvious that the 109th comes after the 108th and before the 110th. If it's for the sake of navigation, then it's already in your template, {{USCongressTerms}}. Therefore it looks unnecessary and redundant. My 2¢. —Markles 14:47, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
- I understand your point, we've discussed it before. It is for navigation. It is redundant, but I think most folks skim over these articles, looking at just the header, therefore need an easy way to move from where they are. When the articles are fully fleshed out the template at the bottom then becomes really inconvenient to get to. I liked the succession box, but agree that this note should be very unobstrusive, which is what this presentation attempts to be. stilltim 14:54, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
- OK, you make a good point. You're right that there is some value in keeping a short-hand navigation available at the top. So how can we make it seem less redundant/excessive?—Markles 16:46, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] License tagging for Image:BustLyndonJohnson.jpg
Thanks for uploading Image:BustLyndonJohnson.jpg. Wikipedia gets thousands of images uploaded every day, and in order to verify that the images can be legally used on Wikipedia, the source and copyright status must be indicated. Images need to have an image tag applied to the image description page indicating the copyright status of the image. This uniform and easy-to-understand method of indicating the license status allows potential re-users of the images to know what they are allowed to do with the images.
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This is an automated notice by OrphanBot. If you need help on selecting a tag to use, or in adding the tag to the image description, feel free to post a message at Wikipedia:Media copyright questions. 11:06, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] succession boxes
I really wish you wouldn't remove succession boxes, which I notice you've done for various Delaware politicians. They are highly useful for navigating, and, I think, are certainly no more space consuming than the large tables you've been creating. (They also contain more information, in that they give predecessors and successors, where the tables you've created do not). john k 03:49, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
- I'm simply following what appears to be the new standard for infoboxes that do include all the succession box information at the top/right of the page where it is more readily available. I have no preference as to whether the summary "succession" information and dates of service are in either place, but there is certainly no need to be in both. I tried taking it out of the infoboxes and had the same problem. The advantage I see to using the infobox is that there is more of a consensus on how it looks, whereas some editors are making the succession boxes completely unwieldly with additions of all kinds of peripheral information. The "large" tables I am creating are intended to provde much greater detail about service and election results, information never in the succession boxes. Hope this helps, and am interested in your thoughts with this in mind. stilltim 14:54, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] The WikiProject Biography Newsletter: Issue II - April 2007
The April 2007 issue of the WikiProject Biography newsletter has been published.You may read the newsletter, change the format in which future issues will be delivered to you, or unsubscribe from this notification by following the link. BetacommandBot 20:23, 24 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Image:Carvel.gif
Could you provide some information about the copyright status of Image:Carvel.gif. It is currently tagged with {{PD-art}} but as the painting is less than 100 years old this tag cannot be used. The image summary indicates that it is used with permission but by following the source link I cannot see where this is stated. If there is a page where permission is given please provide this link and add the appropriate copyright status tag (see Wikipedia:Template messages/Image namespace for a list). Without a proper copyright attribution the image may be deleted. Thanks. Madmedea 10:36, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
- Just spotted Image:CharlesRMiller.gif and Image:BenjaminBiggs.gif, Image:Boggs.gif, same goes for this chappie! Madmedea 10:42, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
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- This is an instance where the owner of the original image has clearly stated that the work is in the public domain and the present use is acceptable. His name and agency are stated, allowing verification if thought necessary. If some other statement to this effect in some other place is needed, I would appreciate clear guidance as to where/what that might be, and I will place it there. Because my reading of the tag suggests that the 100 year point is only an example and not a prerequisite, I believe it matches this situation. However, in the likely event that I misunderstand something, someone with a better understanding may certainly put the appropriate one on it. stilltim 11:21, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
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- If the images are used with permission from the copyright holder, as seems to the case here, than that permission needs to be given in the form of an appropriate free license ie. GFDL or Public domain. Permission for use just for wikipedia or non-commercial purposes isn't accepted unless the image is used under fair use terms. If this permission is available on the website where the pictures are hosted you can just provide the link to that page, if not the correspondence you had with the copyright holder needs to be sent to permissions-en@wikimedia.org. See Wikipedia:Copyrights#Using copyrighted work from others for the issues and for how to ask permission Wikipedia:Requesting copyright permission. Feel free to ask more questions if you're still not clear, I'm happy to try and answer them. You can also ask questions at Wikipedia talk:Copyright FAQ. Madmedea 14:03, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
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[edit] John Dickinson (delegate)
Any particular reason you removed the link to Liberty Song? I will gladly admit there could be more on it in the article, but it is a memorable contribution of his, and I think it should be mentioned somewhere at least. --AnonEMouse (squeak) 03:05, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
- You're right, it should be included, just not in the lead paragraph. I'll add it back. stilltim 03:07, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Your changes to Tom Carper's infobox
I noticed you recently made some edits to Tom Carper's and Mike Castle's infoboxes, which reverted some edits I had previously made. I am wondering why you made the edits you made. My understanding was that Template:Infobox Officeholder was recently updated to merge all other politician infoboxes into one, so that it would be easier for those officeholders who held mulitple offices. Moreover, the change were such so that you no longer need to use generic "office1", "office2", etc. for those individuals, and can use the more descriptive fields of "governor", "state", and "district" in the infoboxes.
If your changes are because of a general perference for Delaware officeholders, I will yield to your judgement. I'm just curious as to why you've chosen to format the infobox in this manner when a more descriptive option is available.Dcmacnut 16:41, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for asking the question. I am just getting familiar with the new infobox arrangements, so could easily be missing something, but I have always sought a clean and consistent presentation for all politicians/office holders, and it looks like the merged Template:Infobox Officeholder provides exactly that. Please consider the possibility that the more descriptive information you refer to might belong elsewhere in the article to allow a consistent infobox across offices, and to keep it clean and "to the point" in this critical portion of the page. Sometimes I think we try to cram too much information in every space and detract from the appearance and readability of the article in doing so. stilltim 01:45, 24 May 2007 (UTC)
- Point taken, however, the descriptive fields I was referring to don't necessarily clutter the infobox. The same basic information is displayed in the infobox either way, but by using specific office names for the fields ("governor", "senator". etc.) make the infobox code easier to follow than is possible with "office1", "office2". If someone holds just one office, other infoboxes don't simply say "Governor from <state>." It reads "Nth Governor from <state>."
- For example, Delaware has just one house district, so your edits work fine by saying he was the Representative from Delaware - there's only one. But what if you had more than one district in the state. Shouldn't the field identify the district the person held rather than just a generic "U.S. Representative from <blank>"? The "state" and "district" fields use the power of the template to generate the information, rather than having to resort to filling the infobox fields with long wikilinks to portray the same information. In my opinion, that is the beauty of the merger - the template does all the work with just the basic information provided by the user in the infobox. In my mind {{Infobox Officeholder}} should be reserved for those individuals whose political office doesn't fall into a specific catetorgy already in the template. My understanding of the the main reason for the merger was the various infoboxes weren't robust enough to handle people with multiple public offices, so everyone had to resort to the generic {{Infobox Officeholder}} and write out all of the offic information long hand. Now, with the merger you no longer need to do that. You can use the most appropriate infobox and office-specific fields. If we are going to continue pre-merger method of using {{Infobox Officeholder}}, than I wonder why the merger was conducted in the first place.
- Having said that, I will yield to your judgement on Delaware articles, but I think I'll continue updating other infoboxes to avoid using {{Template:Infobox Officeholder}} where appropriate.Dcmacnut 14:19, 24 May 2007 (UTC)
- Well, like I said I'm still learning, but it appears to me you actually are using the Template:Infobox Officeholder because they were all merged into it and all work the same, even if called otherwise. If I exchange "Infobox" with "Governor" nothing changes. The only differences happen when additional fields are added, and they can be added regardless of the name of the box. These generally include information I truly believe belongs elsewhere, like "junior/senior," "served alongside," "order," "lieutenant" and "district," or cause the way too wordy "Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from...," so I would avoid them. "Order" is a relic from boxes designed to handle British nobility, like the 6th Duke of York, and are not likewise commonly used to identify US officeholders, and shouldn't be here. "Served alongside," and "lieutenant" are interesting information, but are not critical to the subject of the article. "Junior/senior" and "district" present their own set of problems. Individual people are quite often both junior senator then senior senator, so which do you use for someone no longer in office? I chose neither. Same for district. Individuals are often from various districts over the course of their career. Do we create several entries in the infobox, allow the information to be partially incorrect, or leave it off and put it elsewhere where we can get it right. I chose the later. I have built all the ordinal Congress articles up to the 56th Congress and have read each of the congressmen's articles and have studied these issues closely for months. As you say, this is not a Delaware issue, especially with district, so I really hope you and others will think through these points, using complicated historical situations as examples, and I think like me, you will see no other way out. stilltim 20:38, 24 May 2007 (UTC)
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- I agree that we should pursue cleaner infoboxes. I misspoke in my point about not using {{Infobox Officeholder}} - I realize they are all one and the same now. My point was more about not using generic "office" fields for each public office, but rather fields tailored specifically to that office. Why have separate fields if they aren't going to be used? And why amend the Template to allow 7 or 8 variants on past public offices in an infobox if you aren't going to portray that information. I've gone and looked at some offices to see how it would be implemented practically, and frankly some infoboxes would become so overwhelmed with data to make it unusable. You can see what I mean on my Sandbox where I'm testing out various ideas to see if they are worth implementing.
I'm not saying this is how those articles should be rewritten, but perhaps we can use Lamar Alexander's article as a model. It has an infobox for him as a senator, and then further down the article it has an infobox right next to the section on his time as governor. That is much better than having one long infobox at the top of the article. If you run into a case where (like Charlie Norwood) served two different districts during his career or where you get into "office overload" in the infobox, then an editor should use his or her best judgement. You have to balance providing complete information as well with how the infobox plays visually with the rest of the article, which ultimately is my goal.
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- As far as the debate over how much personal data to include has taken on a life of its own in other forums - some believe the info should be included, others not. My sense is that it is useful in stub articles that haven't been completely fleshed out. One point I heard made on the debate over mentioning one's religion in an infobox was "why should religion be the only 'fact' we include in an infobox, why not profession, education, or residence." My opinion has been you either include all of that "personal data" or don't include any. All major official congressinal directories include key personal facts, and I believe so should infoboxes. Yes, the information can be included in the prose of the text, but sometimes it is left out because the article is incomplete or adding it would result in some awkward phrasing. Adding it to the infobox ensure it is there and standard across articles.
- Thanks for your insights and suggestions.Dcmacnut 22:07, 24 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] TfD nomination of Template:S-ptd
Template:S-ptd has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for Deletion page. Thank you. — Waltham, The Duke of 14:06, 30 May 2007 (UTC)
You can see more about this here. The vote is not expected to be a thriller or anything; the Project only wishes to get rid of a redundant template.
Basically, I am afraid you should visit the Project's talk page more often; there are several issues that need to be dealt with. Right now it seems to be forgotten by almost all members of the Project.
Also, there is a working version of the /Guidelines subpage at User:The Duke of Waltham/SBS and any input, either a good idea or a simple comment, would be greatly appreciated.
Have a nice day.
[edit] Format of external links in John Dickinson
Stilltim: I see you undid all of my formatting of the External links. I was following this page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:External_links#How_to_link which is what I've been following for over a year now and I've never been reverted. Are you following some other standard I don't know about?--BillFlis 11:47, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
- This is clearly not a matter terrific importance and I have seen it done both ways. I have no strong preference, but do seek consistency. In fact I have been edited in both directions several times, so I picked the one that had the most visual consistency with the section on references, i.e. black text instead of blue text. The guideline you cite does give an example with the blue text, but it seems to me to be an illustration only and not intended to say categorically it must be done that way. BTW I appreciate your other edits and am contemplating switching to the default sort for categories myself. Seems like an improvement. stilltim 19:25, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
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- If you are truly interested in seeking consistency, you might want to follow an established guideline. If you don't like a particular guideline, it's best to argue about that on the guideline's Discussion page.--BillFlis 01:18, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal Congresses
Some states have an article such as Delaware's At-large congressional district, but many do not, such as Minnesota's At-large congressional district, so if we put A/L in the template, we really ought to create articles for all the states that use it. That's really the best comprehensive solution.
Over the 110 congresses, some have "A/L." some have "A/L:" some have "A/L -" I personally like the : which I've been changing as I make other changes. The period would be my third choice. These things really are pretty easy to fix; the time consuming (and boring) part is adding congressional districts on each name (Woohoo about 11 to go!) and senatorial classes. This WikiProject seems to be a pretty obstinate crowd - makes it frustrating to get anything done.--Appraiser 00:45, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
- Hmm. I wasn't replacing the period with colon on the numbered districts - just the A/L ones. Was that your intention, or was it an accidental change?--Appraiser 12:34, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
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- I've also noticed some of the delegations (i.e. NH, CT and VT-there may be others ) have A/L representation listed at the ordinal congresses, but listed as district representation when you look at the congressional rosters from each state. The ordinal congresses are cited, so I'm fixing NH right now. Not sure if it's a big deal, but thought I'd try to correct those delegatons. Does take a bit of time.......Pmeleski 11:31, 29 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] USCongressTerms
Please see my question for you at Template talk:USCongressTerms#111th & 112th. Thanks!—Markles 20:30, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal congresses project
I invite you to a discussion at User talk:Appraiser#Ordinal congresses project. Please comment there. Cheers!—Markles 18:45, 13 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Please stop changing Joe Biden's and Tom Carper's Infoboxes
Please look at the other 98 Senator's pages. They all look the same in their infoboxes. Joe Biden's and Tom Carper's shouldn't be any different. Please stop changing them.1.21 jigwatts 19:57, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Please stop changing the infobox. If you want to add stuff to the article, go ahead, but please stop changing the infobox. I will be changing it back to normal, and please keep it that way.1.21 jigwatts 22:50, 2 July 2007 (UTC)
I'm going to keep changing the infoboxes back to normal every time you change it, so there's no point in you changing it again.1.21 jigwatts 02:16, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Orphaned non-free image (Image:Protackmichael.jpg)
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[edit] Image:John Carney.jpg
This fair use image has been orphaned since it has been replaced by a free alternative. --Tom (talk - email) 11:17, 3 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] DC Meetup notice
Greetings. There is going to be a Washington DC Wikipedia meetup on next Saturday, July 21st at 5pm in DC. Since you are listed in Category:Wikipedians_in_Delaware, I thought I'd invite you to come. I'm sorry about the short notice for the meeting. Hopefully we'll do somewhat better in that regard next time. If you can't come but want to make sure that you are informed of future meetings be sure to list yourself under "but let me know about future events", and if you don't want to get any future direct notices \(like this one\), you can list yourself under "I'm not interested in attending any others either" on the DC meetup page.--Gmaxwell 22:11, 14 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] general tix for early congresses
Welcome back!
In many of the early U.S. Congresses, some Reps are listed as being elected At-large on a general ticket. This looks right to me. However, I'm not confident in the sources. I'll see this in both the "United States congressional delegations from FOO" tables and in "FOOth United States Congress." In the tables, an asterisk is used.
Can you give me a reliable source for those early Reps? Preferably one easy-to-access source for all states? I'd like to be sure exactly when each delegation went to and from at-large representation.
What I'd like to do is modify the tables in the "… delegations…" articles to reflect that those reps were elected at-large by a general ticket. See, for example, the work I've done with early New Hampshire Reps at United States Congressional Delegations from New Hampshire#1789-1793: Three members At-large.
(I'll read your reply here.)
—Markles 14:49, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- Sure. The references I give on all the congress articles- Prof Martis. These are completely reliable and used by the Congress itself for its accounting. The books even map the data. I found one in the University of Delaware library, I'm sure there are several copies in the Boston area. (If that's where you are). Alas, I've never seen it on-line and it costs $700 to buy. Too much for me today.
- Your project is an ambitious one. Figuring out how to display at-large congressmen in the same format as district ones is not easy because there is no real first/second/third seat. Nor can one be said to suceed another. I commend you for trying to fgure it out, and the NH example you gave is sure a good shot. In any case you can absolutely rely on the accuracy of the rendering in the ordinal congress articles as I have rechecked it many times from the source noted below. (but watch for less careful subsequent editing) Good luck.
- Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
- Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
stilltim 12:33, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- You know I was hoping you wouldn't cite Martis. That book weighs a ton and my library hates when I take it out.
- I know this is ambitious, but so are most projects on WP. My goal is to correct the idea (perhaps originally perpetrated by me) that there were X number of districts when, in fact, there were fewer districts which doubled up. See, e.g., Maryland.
- I've recenly done new work on general tickets with United States Congressional Delegations from New York over the weekend. Frankly, I think I need to pull back a little. I might have gone overboard with calling some seats "At-large" (see, e.g., Category:Obsolete United States Congressional districts).
- —Markles 12:45, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- Right, it does, but it has all the answers. I've tried to use Martis' terminology as best I understand it. "At-large" referring only to statewide districts, and "plural" districts refering to multi member districts that are not state wide. I suppose "general ticket" can refer to either, but it seems to be applied mostly to "at-large" situations. Naturally Martis gives a long and excellent description of these and other terms, that we really need to understand to do this right.
stilltim 16:15, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- Plural means 2+ members elected at large from a district? And General ticket means 2+ elected at large from the entire state? I'll try to get Martis, but it takes a while for interlibrary loan.—Markles
Just inserting my thoughts as I've been following this discussion and am also working on congressional districts, mainly historical boundaries through the Official Congressional Directory. I've checked out Martis Political Parties through interlibrary loan here in North Dakota, and am waiting for delivery (if at all). No local copies are available. My general understanding of districts was that a state could have more than one at-large district, but the district wasn't necessarily elected on a "general ticket." For example, South Dakota had two at-large districts from statehood until the 1910 Census, when it got three. Each at-large seat was elected separately (individual elections), so I would argue they are separate districts, albeit with the same geographic boundaries. However, this does raise questions of succession, but that could be fairly simple to work out.
General tickets, on the other hand, I understand to be where the representatives are elected as a group in one election, i.e. a slate of candidates wherein a vote for one means a vote for all. Kind of like the way most states choose presidential electors. But a plural ticket would be two or more members representing a district, but each being elected individually instead of a group. A modern example of a plural district would be the state legislatures in the Dakotas, where there are two Representatives elected from each district. Each compete in separate elections even though both represent the same geographic area. Figuring out whom succeeded whom in the South Dakota case, was surprisingly simple in most cases, particularly if one member from a district served multiple years, while his district-mate changed every session.
Again, just my thoughts. This is a worthy project, and I'd be willing to lend a hand in any way I can.24.220.191.2 01:10, 14 August 2007 (UTC) Clarification. The preceeding was added by me, Dcmacnut, For some reason, Wikipedia logged me out in the midst of typing a response.Dcmacnut 02:13, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Discussion transferred to Talk:General ticket#General ticket vs. Plural district vs. At-large for a broader audience.—Markles 16:28, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] US Senate Party affiliations from State Congressional Delegations
Tim: Here is one for you. I was looking at the Senatorial Rosters from most of the state US senate delegations,and it seems only the first party a particular senator was elected to is indicated. (i.e, X Senator was colored and sent to Federalist designation,even if the sen changed to anther party later(ie Democrat-Republican). It seems to ccur only in the early parties, and for those Senators who changed parties during consecutive terms. There are a few of them It seems to ccur only in the early parties. I'm not sure how big a deal it is for now, but I thought I'd share the info. I tried fixing but I can't get the columns to line up right,particularly if a Senator was replaced mid term. Pmeleski 23:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- I am following Martis' information closely, and you are corrrect, it reflects the stituation when the person first came into the Congress. However, on the main article, I don't know why another one letter party designation could not be added (with a footnote), with a brief description on the "state delegation" and "political parties" articles, and a full description on the "membership changes" article. Give me an example (with source) and I will try to do it. stilltim 10:21, 27 August 2007 (UTC).
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- Take a look at United States Congressional Delegations from Massachusetts for one. For example, according to the Congressional Biography, Samuel Livermore was a Pro-Admin candidate, until 1795, when he joined the Federalists. John Davis was an Anti-Jackson 1835-37, then a Whig thereafter. Daniel Webster was an Adams 1827-29, an Anti-Jackson 1829-33, then a Whig from 12833 on. Isaac Hall was a Jacksonian 1831-35, then a Democrat from then on. Samuel Bell was a Adams-Clay D-R 1823-1825, an Adams 1825-1829, and a Anti-Jackson 1829-35. Thats just a few.Pmeleski 11:24, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Template:Leaders
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[edit] List of Governors of Delaware
I would appreciate further discussion on the talk page. --Golbez 11:19, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Your name brought up
Aloha! Your name was brought up in a current RfA for User:Markles: Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/markles. As someone that Markles has apparantly been in disagreement with, I would appreciate a bit of insight as to whether Markles' telling of the story is correct. I am not here asking you to express your opinion on the RfA (although you may do so if you choose), I just like hearing from "all sides". You can even just respond here if you would like, and I will keep an eye out. Mahalo, Tim. --Ali'i 18:08, 10 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] SBS membership renewal request—Project in great need of contributors
The summer has passed (unless you live in the Southern Hemisphere), and for most people holidays are over. Therefore, it is time for work again. Not that work ever stops in Wikipedia, but I believe we can at last get over the stage when slow progress can be taken for granted. Like yourself, most members of WikiProject Succession Box Standardization have been away during most of the summer (and some of you have been away for much longer); this lack of contributors has almost led SBS activity to a standstill.
A couple of members have stayed, however, and things have greatly improved in the project. There is a renovated and functional main page; the talk page has organised archives and a dedicated page for archived proposals; the Guidelines page is in a very good shape and I am preparing a further set of guidelines to be proposed for adoption by the project and incorporation into the page; the Documentation page has been again updated and a potential restructuring is being planned; the Templates list is the operations centre for the ongoing removal of antiquated and redundant templates. The Offices page is the only one that has yet to be improved, but there is a proposal for that one as well. Even a new SBS navbox has been created and added to the project's pages, easing navigation between the different parts of the WikiProject, while shortcuts have been created for the three most basic pages.
And the project itself is not the only thing that has been improved; the headers system has been cleared up and rationalised during the last six months, and a new parameter system is being inserted into templates like s-new and s-vac in order to successfully adapt succession boxes to more tricky cases of succession without large, clumsy cells or redundant reasoning. S-hou has also been improved and /doc pages have been added to most of the headers' pages, as well as to many proper succession templates' ones.
Despite all these breakthroughs that have made SBS a better, more functional and more user-friendly WikiProject, things move excruciatingly slowly as far as the adoption of proposals and correction/improvement of succession boxes in the mainspace are concerned. As has been mentioned, this is due to the utter absence of all but two of its members. I completely understand that a few of them might be unwilling to resume work in SBS, and some of them might even have left Wikipedia altogether. However, we are certain that there are people intent to continue improving Wikipedia's succession boxes and helping others to do so as well. If you are one of them, please return. And even if you cannot help at the moment, but want to contribute at a later time, please let us know by renewing your membership. You can do that very easily by removing the asterisk next to your name in the member list in SBS's main page. The deadline is 31 October; members that do not renew their memberships until 23:59 of that day will be removed from the list, as these members will be assumed to have left the project for good.
SBS is a project highly capable of doing some serious work in Wikipedia. These potentials are seriously undermined by the unavailability of helpful hands. I hope you shall consider this message seriously before taking any decisions.
Thank you for your time. Waltham, The Duke of 14:13, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ordinal Congresses - Parties during the 19th Congress and later
I've been looking over the ordinal congress articles, particularly the 19th Congress. The overview lists Democratic Party and National Republican Party, while the individual members are listed as Democratic-Republicans in favor of Adams or Jackson. The official Clerk of the House site identifies them as Adams and Jacksons. National Republican is never really used. National Republicans didn't "officially" form until 1832, when they fielded Henry Clay as their presidential candidate. Jacksons didn't start calling themselves Democratic until after 1832 (information from Congressional Quarterly's Guide to Elections).
While I think the articles should be changed to list the parties as Adams and Jacksons (there were Adams Democrats and Jackson Republicans), I have no strong opposition to using the Democratic and National Republican monikers, as that makes it easier for a broader audidence to understand the difference and points out a key turning point in the schism within the Democratic-Republican Party. However, would you object to me adding Adams and Jacksons as a parenthetical to the headings in the 19th Congress and 20th Congress articles for sake of completness and to match the Clerk of the House description? For the 21st Congress and until the Whigs appeared in the 25th Congress, I would change add Anti-Jacksonian to the National Republican line to be more accurate. Thoughts?Dcmacnut 16:26, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
- I checked the bioguide for a couple: Henry H. Chambers is listed as a "Jacksonian"[6] and Calvin Willey is list as "Adams; Anti-Jackson"[7]. I think it makes sense to clearly distinguish between the factions within the Democratic-Republican party.--Appraiser 17:11, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
-
- Of course, you are both right. I tried to make the changes you suggested. stilltim 22:00, 23 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Adams-Clay Republicans
Tim:
As you are probably aware, one of my efforts has been to add historical US rep rosters to various Rep districts (now focusing in New England right now). One thing I haven't worked out in my mind (and in the spirit of trying to be accurate) is if Adams-Clay Republicans should be grouped with Democratic-Republicans or National Republicans........Most of the rosters here show Adams-Clay as National Republicans, but outside sources show the election of 1824 shows the Democratic-Republican group (of which Adams-Clay was around then)as the only viable party at this time. I was reading the threads on Democratic/Republican vs. Republican vs. Jeffersonian Republican and certainly don't want to start an edit war. But if I go forward with creating the rosters, I don't want to create additional work by grouping this in the wrong body and having myself or someone else change them later. I suppose I could leave it alone for now, but someone else may come along and do it anyway without concensus. Any thoughts?........
And do you know who has access to the political party key?????? I wanted to discuss some stuff there too......Pmeleski 23:12, 18 September 2007 (UTC)
- I would suggest calling congressmen "Democratic-Republicans" or "Federalists" through the 20th Congress and adding an indicator as to which faction they belonged: "Adams," "Jackson," "Crawford." Of course, in the 19th and 20th there were no Federalists or Crawford. From the 21st through 24th, I would use the terms "Jacksonian or Democratic" and "Anti-Jacksonian or National Republican." I have used "D" or "NR" for an abbreviation for them. It's a bit of a call, but I think doing it this way is clear and covers all bases that I know of.
- I do not know the answer to your second question. Can you find it in the edit history? stilltim 22:09, 23 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Fair use rationale for Image:NS-Flag.png
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[edit] Featured List nomination
109th United States Congress has been nominated for Featured List status. Please comment here. —Markles —Preceding signed but undated comment was added at 12:41, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
- Obviously I missed the deadline for commenting, but clearly it doesn't match the standard we established in many ways. stilltim 22:03, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] WikiProject Biography Newsletter 5
The Biography WikiProject Newsletter Volume IV, no. 4 - September 2007 |
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Congratulations to the editors who worked on the newest featured biographies: Augustus; William Shakespeare; Adriaen van der Donck; Alfred Russel Wallace; Alison Krauss; Anne Frank; Anne of Denmark; Asser; Bart King; Bill O'Reilly; Bobby Robson; Bradley Joseph; CM Punk; Ceawlin of Wessex; Colley Cibber; Cædwalla of Wessex; Dominik Hašek; Elizabeth Needham; Frank Macfarlane Burnet; Georg Cantor; Gregory of Nazianzus; Gunnhild Mother of Kings; Gwen Stefani; Hannah Primrose, Countess of Rosebery; Harriet Arbuthnot; Harry S. Truman; Henry, Bishop of Uppsala; Héctor Lavoe; Ine of Wessex; Ion Heliade Rădulescu; Jack Sheppard; Jackie Chan; Jay Chou; John Martin Scripps; John Mayer; Joseph Francis Shea; Joshua A. Norton; Kate Bush; Kazi Nazrul Islam; Kevin Pietersen; Martin Brodeur; Mary Martha Sherwood; Mary of Teck; Maximus the Confessor; Miranda Otto; Muhammad Ali Jinnah; P. K. van der Byl; Penda of Mercia; Pham Ngoc Thao; Rabindranath Tagore; Ramón Emeterio Betances; Red Barn Murder; Richard Hakluyt; Richard Hawes; Robert Garran; Roman Vishniac; Ronald Niel Stuart; Ronald Reagan; Roy Welensky; Rudolph Cartier; Samuel Adams; Samuel Beckett; Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough; Sarah Trimmer; Sargon of Akkad; Shen Kuo; Sophie Blanchard; Stereolab; Sydney Newman; Sylvanus Morley; Tim Duncan; Timeline of Mary Wollstonecraft; Uncle Tupelo; Waisale Serevi; Wallis, Duchess of Windsor; Walter Model; William Bruce; William Goebel; Yagan; Zhou Tong; Æthelbald of Mercia; Æthelbald of Mercia
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The newsletter is back! Many things have gone on during the past few months, but many things have not. While the assessment drive helped revitalize the assessment department of the project, many other departments have received no attention. Most notably: peer review and our "workgroups". A day long IRC meeting has been planned for October 13th, with the major focus being which areas of the project are "dead", what should our goals be as a project, and how to "revive" the dead areas of our project. Contribute to the discussion on the the new channel (see below) We decided to deliver this newsletter to all project members this month but only those with their names down here will get it delivered in the future. This is your newsletter and you can be involved in the creation of the next issue. Any and all contributions are welcome. Simply let yourself be known to any of the undersigned or post news on the next issue's talk page
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[edit] Massachusetts and South Carolina delgations for the 19th Congress
Since you have a copy of Martis available, could you review the district representatives for these two states during the 19th Congress? They order currently displayed does not match that in CQ's Guide to U.S. Elections. CQ pulls directly from the Inter-university consortium on political research, which got its information directly from state election returns. CQ's returns match up for all other years except for 1823-1833 for Massachusetts. South Carolina is showing a discrepancy from 1825-1843. I want to check with you on what Martis says before correcting the articles.Dcmacnut 18:56, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
District | Wikipedia | CQ |
---|---|---|
1 | Daniel Webster | Daniel Webster |
2 | Benjamin W. Crowninshield | Benjamin W. Crowninshield |
3 | John Varnum | John Varnum |
4 | Edward Everett | Edward Everett |
5 | John Davis | John Locke |
6 | John Locke | Samuel C. Allen |
7 | Samuel C. Allen | Henry W. Dwight |
8 | Samuel Lathrop | Samuel Lathrop |
9 | Henry W. Dwight | John Bailey |
10 | John Bailey | Francis Baylies |
11 | Aaron Hobart | John Reed, Jr. |
12 | Francis Baylies | Aaron Hobart |
13 | John Reed, Jr. | John Davis |
District | Wikipedia | CQ |
---|---|---|
1 | Joel R. Poinsett/William Drayton | Joel R. Poinsett/William Drayton |
2 | James Hamilton, Jr. | James Hamilton, Jr. |
3 | Thomas R. Mitchell | Thomas R. Mitchell |
4 | Andrew R. Govan | Andrew R. Govan |
5 | George McDuffie | Starling Tucker |
6 | John Wilson | George McDuffie |
7 | Joseph Gist | Joseph Gist |
8 | John Carter | John Wilson |
9 | Starling Tucker | John Carter |
I have rechecked Martis, and the district assignments I have shown are exactly what he has. In his first atlas, The Historical Atlas of Congressional Districts, published in 1982, on page 39, he describes his source for the relevant years as follows: "the ICPSR 1 data file, "Historic Election Returns, 1788-1976 (as amended and published in Congressional Quarterly's Guide to United States Elections); and the ICPSR 4 data file, "United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records," taken from the WPA records. He states that this is the first time the two have been cross referenced, and that "researching, codifying, and keypunching errors were found in both." He says that discrepancies were resolved by "checking state histories, individual biographies, election returns, contested election documentation and newspaper reports of the day." He points out that Massachusetts was particularly "eclectic" before 1823. Given that he cites your source and notes the resolution of errors there, I believe we should accept the results of his research as definitive. Some sort of footnote might be appropriate though, noting the issue and the resolution. I will try and place it for the periods you point out. stilltim 21:59, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for checking. I figured he may have been more thorough. CQ only pulls from the ICPSR data files. I recently found another discrepancy with Pennsylvania's 16th District. CQ says it's the 17th, but Martis and a journal regarding multi-member districts says its the 16th. I'll follow Martis, and make notations when I come across them.
- As as an aside, did you know that the American Antiquarian Society is undertaking an early elections database [8]? It says the interface will be up sometime this month. I've found bits an pieces of their old interface, and was able to get full names for a few non-winning candidates, where CQ only listed last names. Could prove to be a useful resource.Dcmacnut 01:57, 13 October 2007 (UTC)
- You're welcome, what a massive tangle it must have been to straighten this out. I look forward to seeing the AAS database, thanks for pointing it out. stilltim 10:31, 13 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Possibly unfree Image:Boggs.gif
An image that you uploaded or altered, Image:Boggs.gif, has been listed at Wikipedia:Possibly unfree images because its copyright status is disputed. If the image's copyright status cannot be verified, it may be deleted. You may find more information on the image description page. You are welcome to add comments to its entry at the discussion if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. Calliopejen1 01:32, 15 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Early Virginia Congressional delegations
Do you have any information about who represented the various Virginia districts for the first eight Congresses (from 1789-1807)? They are missing from United States Congressional Delegations from Virginia. —Markles 15:01, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
- Sure, but I think its all on the various ordinal congress articles. What additional information would you like? stilltim 20:24, 23 October 2007 (UTC)
- Whoops. I should have looked there. What was I thinking? Thanks.—Markles 20:42, 23 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Minner Photo
With regard to your message on my user talk page, I feel constrained to point out that copyright concerns are not a "technicality" and that enforcement of Wikipedia's policies is not vandalism, "benign" or otherwise. You've been around long enough to know how serious Wikipedia is about copyrights and how important that concern is.
Ironically, although I removed it from the article, I neglected to delete the image, which works out because it gives you a chance to explain how the permission was documented. All I see on the image page now is an image tag that was added by another editor that has no basis. You apparently had tagged the image fair use, but current Wikipedia policy prohibits most non-free images of living people. Maybe I'm missing something, but I don't see anything about permission there.
If you have permission, by all means forward it to OTRS so they can clear it and the image can remain. (See this page for more guidance on that.) Otherwise, it will have to be deleted. -- But|seriously|folks 07:05, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
- OK, I see what happened. When I used the search box, it took me right to the similarly-named image. I had to paste into the URL to get the right image page. Anyhow, the problem with Image:MinnerRuthAnn.jpg was that the permission only encompassed use in her Wikipedia entry. In order to be used at Wikipedia, images have to be licensed in a way that permits reuse (including commercial reuse), derivatives, etc. See WP:CSD#I3. So the image couldn't stay. If you can get them to license it under the GFDL or one of the appropriate Creative Commons licenses, I'll be happy to restore it. Just let me know. Cheers! -- But|seriously|folks 18:58, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
-
- You're looking for WP:COPYREQ. The Minner image is still going to be a problem though. This is the statement from her office that you included on the image page: "Please consider this message a confirmation of our approval for your request for permission of use for Governor Minner’s Wikipedia entry. Please credit “State of Delaware – Office of the Governor” with the work, state that it is used with our permission and provide a link back to our website." There's no way to fix that unless you have other correspondence from her office that grants a broader license. -- But|seriously|folks 20:59, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
- The permission is qualified. It is permission of use "for Governor Minner's Wikipedia entry". Ironically, that permission is not good enough for use at Wikipedia. See this page. -- But|seriously|folks 21:29, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
- OK, tell you what: I'll restore it but list it at WP:PUI. That will get you two weeks and probably more, as PUI is usually backlogged by an additional couple of weeks or more. You can take that time to do what you can to clarify the permission. Cool? -- But|seriously|folks 02:54, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
- The permission is qualified. It is permission of use "for Governor Minner's Wikipedia entry". Ironically, that permission is not good enough for use at Wikipedia. See this page. -- But|seriously|folks 21:29, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
- You're looking for WP:COPYREQ. The Minner image is still going to be a problem though. This is the statement from her office that you included on the image page: "Please consider this message a confirmation of our approval for your request for permission of use for Governor Minner’s Wikipedia entry. Please credit “State of Delaware – Office of the Governor” with the work, state that it is used with our permission and provide a link back to our website." There's no way to fix that unless you have other correspondence from her office that grants a broader license. -- But|seriously|folks 20:59, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Possibly unfree Image:MinnerRuthAnn.jpg
An image that you uploaded or altered, Image:MinnerRuthAnn.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Possibly unfree images because its copyright status is disputed. If the image's copyright status cannot be verified, it may be deleted. You may find more information on the image description page. You are welcome to add comments to its entry at the discussion if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. But|seriously|folks 02:56, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] standardizing navigational boxes
Stilltim - please see my comment on the {{DEGeneral}} talk page. Let's work together toward converging on a standard for Delaware pages and their navigational boxes. Elpiseos 14:56, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] collapsible
When there are 2 or more nav boxes with "autocollapse" on a page, they will all collapse except for the primary one, which I believe is defined to be the top one. Elpiseos 04:39, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] License tagging for Image:MarkellJackA.jpg
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[edit] Image tagging for Image:BustCalvinCoolidge.jpg
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[edit] Ordinal congresses style formatting
Please see my proposed formatting discussed at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Congress/Ordinal congresses. I have applied these styles to the 60th, 77th, and 84th-110th Congresses, so far.—Markles 18:00, 25 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] 68th Congress
It's not really a "cleaner" format, is it? I'm willing to concede your need for italicized party names/initials and for piping chaplains as "The Rev…" but why do you have to revert to {{USCongressTerms}}, indented/bolded headings instead of standardized === wiki-style headings, etc.? There were a lot of other changes which you reverted, but what was wrong with them?—Markles 04:15, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Possibly unfree Image:Coonschristopher.jpg
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[edit] No content in Category:Delaware State Legislators
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[edit] Undoing my work
I have pain-stakingly been checking U.S. Representative's names and links in the Ordinal Congress articles, and have found a lot of errors. I don't care too much that you have been changing the format in all of those articles-although I still very much believe the transition information should be left intact, as many of the Rep's articles do not have resignation dates. I will probably eventually go back and put in the ones you have deleted. BUT, I am very upset that you are not checking the names that you are changing. That activity makes me want to revert all of your recent changes. Before changing formats, PLEASE update your database with the corrections that have been incorporated in the lists of names. For example, look at my change today in the 69th United States Congress. I fixed that name on September 19, and you UNFIXED it yesterday! Your sloppiness is anti-productive to getting these articles right. Merry Christmas.--Appraiser (talk) 17:46, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
- Thank you for your quick response and for double-checking the names. There's an awful lot of information here, and it's tough to get it all right. As for the transition information - if you're willing to add it to all the biography articles, I'm OK with that. I use fairly big screens, and don't see the crowding issues that you have described.
- I'm looking now at Matthew Vincent O'Malley, who was elected to the 72nd United States Congress after the death of John Francis Quayle [9]. His obit here [10] calls him a congressman, but John J. Delaney's bioguide entry says that O'Malley was a representative-elect [11], and he doesn't have his own bioguide entry. I think he should be added to the List of members-elect of the United States House of Representatives who never took their seats instead of on the 72nd United States Congress article. Also, his own article, Matthew Vincent O'Malley, appears to be wrong. What do you think?--Appraiser (talk) 18:21, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] US Congress dates
Please see discussion at Wikipedia: WikiProject US Congress, before thinking of reverting my March 4th edits. GoodDay (talk) 23:13, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
Would a compromise be possible? Have the March 3 dates on the 'session sections', but keep the March 4 dates at top of articles & in infoboxes. GoodDay (talk) 19:19, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Replaceable fair use Image:Russ_peterson.jpg
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[edit] Speedy deletion of Template:Elections1792-DE
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[edit] Speedy deletion of Template:Elections1897-DE
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[edit] Speedy deletion of Template:ElectionsUSDE
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[edit] List of counties in Delaware
Way back in April 2006, you added the following to List of counties in Delaware: "The boundaries between the districts were not well defined, and there is some indication that the Upland District served the Swedish and Finnish population in the central Delaware Valley, and New Castle served the Dutch and few English." (diff). Do you have a reference for this statement? I ask because thearticle is being nomainetd for FA status. Tompw (talk) (review) 22:00, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] your test subpage
Hi, Stilltim. fyi, I dropped colons into the front of a couple of categories in templates on that page, to keep the page from being displayed in the categories themselves. Gwguffey (talk) 21:55, 28 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Input requested - Georgia's House members from the 1st Congress
When you have a chance, please take a look at my post at Talk:1st_United_States_Congress#Question_on_order_of_Georgia_Representatives on some apparent discrepencies in the members/districts for the 1st Congress. You've done the lionshare of the work on the early congresses, so you're probably better equipped to answer the questions.Dcmacnut (talk) 22:30, 3 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Subquestion on John Sevier from North Carolina
John Sevier is listed in the 1st Congress as being from North Carolina's 5th district. The aforementioned "U.S. Congressional Districts 1788-1841" by Stanley Parsons has him listed in a footnote as being elected as "representative from Tennessee in the First Congress" because North Carolina's districts "included the present state of Tennessee." That all of Tennessee was once a part of North Carolina is not in dispute. The Annals of Tennessee (1853), page 433, found on Google Books, indicates that John Sevier was elected to Congress in 1789 as a representative of North Carolina from the Tennessee lands, and took his seat in June 1790. He is referred to in The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography (1893), page 430, as the "first representative in Congress from the Mississippi Valley." However, North Carolina ceded its Tennessee lands to the U.S. on April 2, 1790 and Congress formed the Southwest_Territory on May 26. So while it is possible that the area was part of North Carolina when he was elected, it wasn't part of North Carolina when he took his seat. I'm just trying to get my head wrapped around the boundaries and locations of the early districts to help expand the historical aspect of the district articles. I know this borders on violating WP:NOR, but most of the sources on the early congresses are just educated guesses as it is. What does Martis say about John Sevier and the 5th district's boundaries for the 1st Congress?Dcmacnut (talk) 04:35, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
-
- Nevermind. I was (finally) able to get a copy of Martis through Inter Library Loan locally and answered my own question (i.e. Sevier's district was in Tennessee for the 1st Congress). Even if that district disappeared after he was elected, that shouldn't have changed his status, since district changes do not take affect while the member is still in office.Dcmacnut (talk) 23:08, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
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[edit] Representatives from California in the 79th Congress
Can you please confirm & correct the list of Representatives from California in the 79th United States Congress? I'm trying to correct United States congressional delegations from California. See Talk:79th United States Congress.—Markles 14:25, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Possibly unfree Image:AdamsWilburL.jpg
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