harry blake civil rights - Google Search
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/users/my_library/
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/16551/beata-beatrix?is_public_domain=1&page=2
It's core area was along the Mississippi River, streaches from Cahokia in modern Illinois to, Mound Bottom in Tennessee to the Winterville site in the state of Mississippi. Temple mounds further extend from Aztalan in Wisconsin to Crystal River in Florida, and to Fort Ancient in Ohio and Sprio in Oklahoma, and cultural influences, as far as modern North Dakota
The Chicago is an "aircruiser" that became the lead aircraft in the first flight circumnavigation of the globe. In 1924, the Chicago and three other Douglas Aircraft Company World Cruisers set out to circumavigate the earth, under a sponsorship commissioned by the United States Army Aircorp. In 1923, the United States announced plans to become the fisrt to complete circumanvigation of the earth by airplane. The British had made one unsucessful around-the-world air flight attempt in 1922. The following year a French team had tried. The Italians, Portuguese, and British also announced additional plans.
The Army commissioned five newly designed airplanes from the
Douglas Aircraft Company to prepare for the flight. The company gave them the class name of World Cruisers. One of the planes became the test vehicle and the other four, including the Chicago, were slated to make the flight. The planes included 400-horsepower Liberty Engines and had 15 meter (49 feet) wing span, in two-place biplane design. The flight planners also had to find and make elaborate and careful international stopping points for refueling and reprovisioning of the aircraft. Becasue the United States, at the time, had not had diplomatic relations with the
Soviet Union since its revolution a few years earlier, an extra 11,000 km (6,875 mi) detour route through southern Asia was devised.
One of the Army's best flyers Luitenant Lowell H. Smith, was named to pilot the Chicago. He was permitted to choose his own co-pilot, who would double as the flight mechanic. The pilots trained in metrrology and navigation at Langley Feild in Virginia, where they also practised in the test plane. The crews then practised on the flight planes in Los Angeles and San Diego.
On April 6, 1924, the Chicago and the other three planes took off from Seattle,the official start of the circunavigation route. Soon, however the lead plane named, Seattle, developed engine problems. It was forced to land to replace its engine. When it took off in poor weather to catch up with the other planes it crashed into an Alaska mountain. The crew survived. Luitenenat Smith, in the Chicago, became flight commander of the remaining planes. Taking off from the Alleutian Islands the planes traveled across the north pacific archeplego to Japan, and then China, Indo-China, Siam (Thailand), Burma, India, Persia (Iran), Turkey, the Balkans, and France. In France, they were escorted by the French Airforce to a celebration of Bastille Day on July 14th in Paris. The planes and crews had survived multiple forced landings, repairs, bad weather and technical problems during the difficult and hazardous trip.. From Paris the planes flew to London and then out over the Atlantic. Here, the mission lost its second plane, when the Boston was forced to ditch into the sea, short of the American mainland. The crew, however, was rescued. In Newfoundland, the test plane, renamed the Boston II, joined the mission. After a triumphal east-west tour of the United States, the Chicago, the New Orleans. and the Boston II returned to Seattle.
At the request of the
Smithsonian Institution, the Army transferred ownership of the Chicago to the museum. It made its last flight from '
Dayton, Ohio to Washington, DC on September 25, 1925. It was almost immediately put on display in the
Smithsonian's Arts and Industries building. In 1974, the plane was restored and transferred to the new National Air and Space Museum building for display in their Pioneers of Flight exhibition.
How does a financial conflict of interest policy prevent scientists writing about science or lawyers writing about law?
Physics does not pay people to write about itself.
Estoppel does not pay people to write about itself. Financial conflict of interest cannot apply to concepts -- the concept itself does not pay to be written about. It is limited to existing entities (including living people), when they write about themselves or pay others to do so, and to things like products and organizations from which those entities currently benefit financially. See eg.
Protecting our Neutrality. Moreover, the idea that we are not perfect, so we cannot adopt a well-known, standard financial conflict of interest rule really means we should all just give up on the project. If we cannot address a simple financial conflict of interest, we cannot address anything. Advocacy maybe advocacy, but if you cannot address a simple well known in the real world ethics issue, then there is no hope for addressing any other such issue. --
Alanscottwalker (
talk) 21:50, 14 October 2013 (UTC)
On their User page, on subject article talk pages, and on any conflict of interest related policy/guideline discussion page:
- Users must disclose the fact that they have recieved or will receive anything that could be construed as a payment to the User for favorable coverage or for avoiding unfavorable coverage of article subjects the User is working on. This includes money, gifts, tickets, discounts, reimbursements or other benefits from individuals or organizations covered (or likely to be covered) by the User in a Wikipedia article.
- Users must disclose the fact of payment or compensation (not the amount) of any sort from individuals or organizations who are the subject of coverage the User is to provide, edit, prepare or supervise on Wikipedia.
1) WP:Administrators are granted advanced permission only according to the policy and process of Wikipedia. WP:Bureaucrats are bound by Wikipedia's policy and process when granting and revoking permissions.
[====Procedure for revocation of adminship (borrowed from Uninvited Company==== 2) The established procedure for revocation of adminship is contained in Wikipedia:Bureaucrats#Removal of permissions and Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee/Procedures#Removal of permissions. By design, these procedures require the involvement of multiple Wikipedians, and incorporate time for deliberation.
3) The established procedure for revocation of adminship is contained in Wikipedia:Bureaucrats#Removal of permissions and Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee/Procedures#Removal of permissions. By design, these procedures require the involvement of multiple Wikipedians, and incorporate time for deliberation.
4) Both WP:Administrators in self-unblocking and WP:Bureaucrats in removing permissions, are bound by policy and procedure in the use of those permissions. For a single Bureaucrat to take out-of-process action to remove advanced permissions, when a single Administrator performed out-of-process administrative actions in self-unblocking is contradictory.
Established | 2004 [1] |
---|---|
Location | 2831 W. Lawrence Ave. Chicago, IL 60625 P: (773) 878-7090 |
Type | Private nonprofit cultural organization |
Owner | Cambodian Association of Illinois |
Website |
www |
The National Cambodian Heritage Museum & Killing Fields Memorial seeks to commemorate and interpret the experiences of the Cambodian people and immigrants to the United States. [2] Located in the Albany Park neighborhood of Chicago, it is overseen by the Cambodian Association of Illinois, an immigrant social services and heritage agency. [3] [4] The museum opened in 2004 in the agency headquarters. [5] Its exhibits have included: ". [6] [7] The museum is a private, non-profit organization, open to the public. It is a member organization of the Chicago Cultural Alliance.
http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/chicagoans-preserve-their-cambodian-heritage/
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(
help)
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(
help)
Historymakers: [15] Black Histories find their voice aided by group, Rhodes Sec 1:4 April 8, 2016 [16]
[desplains river] [17]
Man’s Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race, authored by Ashley Montague. [1]
[18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28]
[30]1896 "inspired notion to use x-rays to treat cancer" 21 years old "flamboyant, adventurous, and fiercely inventive" 75 electron tube Rose Lee factory electron tube Halsted tinfoil cover body (18 days) it shrank relapse metastasized March 29, 1896 - "first documented local response to x-rays" 76, died at 85 operations in by mid 40s to remove fingers face growths (limits cause injury/cancer and only local) 9781439107599 scribner 2010
NANM [31]
Watercolors by Winslow Homer: The Color of Light - Martha Tedeschi, Kristi Dahm - Google Books [32]
Zapata [33] [34] [35] [36] [37]
The senior King was inspired by a trip to Germany for that years' Baptist World Alliance (BWA) meeting. While visiting sites associated with reformation leader, Martin Luther, attendees also witnessed the rise of Nazism. The BWA conference issued a resolution condemning anti-Semitism, and the senior King gained a new appreciation for the power of the Luthur's protest. [2]
References
{{
cite news}}
: Missing pipe in: |title=
(
help)
During the American Revolutionary era (1765-1783), thirteen colonies of the first British empire developed a number of disputes against British colonial government. [1] To address these issues, colonial representatives cooperated in the Continental Congress. [2] On July 2, 1776, the second congress resolved that each of these colonies is a free and independent state, [3] and soon after adopted the Declaration of Independence of the "united States of America". [4] In 1777, the congress proposed to the states ratification of a weak compact in the Articles of Confederation; after an extended process in the states, this confederation eventually came into effect. [2] Also during this period, the newly independent states developed their individual written constitutions. [5] Later, from 1787 to 1790, each of the states ratified a new federal frame of government in the Constitution of the United States. [6]
References
As a research institution, UChicago has attracted an internationally recognized faculty from its beginning, and is one of the most highly regarded universities. [1] [2]
References
{{
cite encyclopedia}}
: |author=
has generic name (
help)
Jackie Taylor (actress) Carlos Tortolero Cyrus Colter [40] Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)/Archive 153
" 'The picture of Dorian Gray' (the film that featured the first painting ever on-screen in color, and still the most horrifying. Dorian in the last stages of decay painted by Chicago artist Ivan Albright, who, it almost seemed to me, had existed for that very purpose." (Between Lives: An Artist and Her World Dorothea Tanning - 2011)
[43]
Haefeli, Evan (2006). "Du Sable, Jean Baptiste Pointe". Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass. Vol. 1. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 431–432.
ISBN
0195167775. {{
cite encyclopedia}}
: Unknown parameter |editors=
ignored (|editor=
suggested) (
help)
"seems . . . applied for social relief"
Salgado [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] [52] [53]
Lincoln [54]
ORES INFO: [55]
[ Ishikawa]
[56] Mildred carter
{{Namespace detect| |main=
|other={{#ifeq:|yes||
![]() | This is a
draft article. It is a work in progress
open to editing by
anyone. Please ensure that the draft meets
our core content policies before publishing it as a
live Wikipedia article. Editor ressources Lua error in Module:Find_sources at line 50: invalid link code 'highbeam'; no link config found at
Module:Find sources/links.
Last edited by
Alanscottwalker (
talk |
contribs) 18 months ago. (
Update) |
harry blake civil rights - Google Search
https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/users/my_library/
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/16551/beata-beatrix?is_public_domain=1&page=2
It's core area was along the Mississippi River, streaches from Cahokia in modern Illinois to, Mound Bottom in Tennessee to the Winterville site in the state of Mississippi. Temple mounds further extend from Aztalan in Wisconsin to Crystal River in Florida, and to Fort Ancient in Ohio and Sprio in Oklahoma, and cultural influences, as far as modern North Dakota
The Chicago is an "aircruiser" that became the lead aircraft in the first flight circumnavigation of the globe. In 1924, the Chicago and three other Douglas Aircraft Company World Cruisers set out to circumavigate the earth, under a sponsorship commissioned by the United States Army Aircorp. In 1923, the United States announced plans to become the fisrt to complete circumanvigation of the earth by airplane. The British had made one unsucessful around-the-world air flight attempt in 1922. The following year a French team had tried. The Italians, Portuguese, and British also announced additional plans.
The Army commissioned five newly designed airplanes from the
Douglas Aircraft Company to prepare for the flight. The company gave them the class name of World Cruisers. One of the planes became the test vehicle and the other four, including the Chicago, were slated to make the flight. The planes included 400-horsepower Liberty Engines and had 15 meter (49 feet) wing span, in two-place biplane design. The flight planners also had to find and make elaborate and careful international stopping points for refueling and reprovisioning of the aircraft. Becasue the United States, at the time, had not had diplomatic relations with the
Soviet Union since its revolution a few years earlier, an extra 11,000 km (6,875 mi) detour route through southern Asia was devised.
One of the Army's best flyers Luitenant Lowell H. Smith, was named to pilot the Chicago. He was permitted to choose his own co-pilot, who would double as the flight mechanic. The pilots trained in metrrology and navigation at Langley Feild in Virginia, where they also practised in the test plane. The crews then practised on the flight planes in Los Angeles and San Diego.
On April 6, 1924, the Chicago and the other three planes took off from Seattle,the official start of the circunavigation route. Soon, however the lead plane named, Seattle, developed engine problems. It was forced to land to replace its engine. When it took off in poor weather to catch up with the other planes it crashed into an Alaska mountain. The crew survived. Luitenenat Smith, in the Chicago, became flight commander of the remaining planes. Taking off from the Alleutian Islands the planes traveled across the north pacific archeplego to Japan, and then China, Indo-China, Siam (Thailand), Burma, India, Persia (Iran), Turkey, the Balkans, and France. In France, they were escorted by the French Airforce to a celebration of Bastille Day on July 14th in Paris. The planes and crews had survived multiple forced landings, repairs, bad weather and technical problems during the difficult and hazardous trip.. From Paris the planes flew to London and then out over the Atlantic. Here, the mission lost its second plane, when the Boston was forced to ditch into the sea, short of the American mainland. The crew, however, was rescued. In Newfoundland, the test plane, renamed the Boston II, joined the mission. After a triumphal east-west tour of the United States, the Chicago, the New Orleans. and the Boston II returned to Seattle.
At the request of the
Smithsonian Institution, the Army transferred ownership of the Chicago to the museum. It made its last flight from '
Dayton, Ohio to Washington, DC on September 25, 1925. It was almost immediately put on display in the
Smithsonian's Arts and Industries building. In 1974, the plane was restored and transferred to the new National Air and Space Museum building for display in their Pioneers of Flight exhibition.
How does a financial conflict of interest policy prevent scientists writing about science or lawyers writing about law?
Physics does not pay people to write about itself.
Estoppel does not pay people to write about itself. Financial conflict of interest cannot apply to concepts -- the concept itself does not pay to be written about. It is limited to existing entities (including living people), when they write about themselves or pay others to do so, and to things like products and organizations from which those entities currently benefit financially. See eg.
Protecting our Neutrality. Moreover, the idea that we are not perfect, so we cannot adopt a well-known, standard financial conflict of interest rule really means we should all just give up on the project. If we cannot address a simple financial conflict of interest, we cannot address anything. Advocacy maybe advocacy, but if you cannot address a simple well known in the real world ethics issue, then there is no hope for addressing any other such issue. --
Alanscottwalker (
talk) 21:50, 14 October 2013 (UTC)
On their User page, on subject article talk pages, and on any conflict of interest related policy/guideline discussion page:
- Users must disclose the fact that they have recieved or will receive anything that could be construed as a payment to the User for favorable coverage or for avoiding unfavorable coverage of article subjects the User is working on. This includes money, gifts, tickets, discounts, reimbursements or other benefits from individuals or organizations covered (or likely to be covered) by the User in a Wikipedia article.
- Users must disclose the fact of payment or compensation (not the amount) of any sort from individuals or organizations who are the subject of coverage the User is to provide, edit, prepare or supervise on Wikipedia.
1) WP:Administrators are granted advanced permission only according to the policy and process of Wikipedia. WP:Bureaucrats are bound by Wikipedia's policy and process when granting and revoking permissions.
[====Procedure for revocation of adminship (borrowed from Uninvited Company==== 2) The established procedure for revocation of adminship is contained in Wikipedia:Bureaucrats#Removal of permissions and Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee/Procedures#Removal of permissions. By design, these procedures require the involvement of multiple Wikipedians, and incorporate time for deliberation.
3) The established procedure for revocation of adminship is contained in Wikipedia:Bureaucrats#Removal of permissions and Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee/Procedures#Removal of permissions. By design, these procedures require the involvement of multiple Wikipedians, and incorporate time for deliberation.
4) Both WP:Administrators in self-unblocking and WP:Bureaucrats in removing permissions, are bound by policy and procedure in the use of those permissions. For a single Bureaucrat to take out-of-process action to remove advanced permissions, when a single Administrator performed out-of-process administrative actions in self-unblocking is contradictory.
Established | 2004 [1] |
---|---|
Location | 2831 W. Lawrence Ave. Chicago, IL 60625 P: (773) 878-7090 |
Type | Private nonprofit cultural organization |
Owner | Cambodian Association of Illinois |
Website |
www |
The National Cambodian Heritage Museum & Killing Fields Memorial seeks to commemorate and interpret the experiences of the Cambodian people and immigrants to the United States. [2] Located in the Albany Park neighborhood of Chicago, it is overseen by the Cambodian Association of Illinois, an immigrant social services and heritage agency. [3] [4] The museum opened in 2004 in the agency headquarters. [5] Its exhibits have included: ". [6] [7] The museum is a private, non-profit organization, open to the public. It is a member organization of the Chicago Cultural Alliance.
http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/chicagoans-preserve-their-cambodian-heritage/
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(
help)
{{
cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(
help)
Historymakers: [15] Black Histories find their voice aided by group, Rhodes Sec 1:4 April 8, 2016 [16]
[desplains river] [17]
Man’s Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race, authored by Ashley Montague. [1]
[18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28]
[30]1896 "inspired notion to use x-rays to treat cancer" 21 years old "flamboyant, adventurous, and fiercely inventive" 75 electron tube Rose Lee factory electron tube Halsted tinfoil cover body (18 days) it shrank relapse metastasized March 29, 1896 - "first documented local response to x-rays" 76, died at 85 operations in by mid 40s to remove fingers face growths (limits cause injury/cancer and only local) 9781439107599 scribner 2010
NANM [31]
Watercolors by Winslow Homer: The Color of Light - Martha Tedeschi, Kristi Dahm - Google Books [32]
Zapata [33] [34] [35] [36] [37]
The senior King was inspired by a trip to Germany for that years' Baptist World Alliance (BWA) meeting. While visiting sites associated with reformation leader, Martin Luther, attendees also witnessed the rise of Nazism. The BWA conference issued a resolution condemning anti-Semitism, and the senior King gained a new appreciation for the power of the Luthur's protest. [2]
References
{{
cite news}}
: Missing pipe in: |title=
(
help)
During the American Revolutionary era (1765-1783), thirteen colonies of the first British empire developed a number of disputes against British colonial government. [1] To address these issues, colonial representatives cooperated in the Continental Congress. [2] On July 2, 1776, the second congress resolved that each of these colonies is a free and independent state, [3] and soon after adopted the Declaration of Independence of the "united States of America". [4] In 1777, the congress proposed to the states ratification of a weak compact in the Articles of Confederation; after an extended process in the states, this confederation eventually came into effect. [2] Also during this period, the newly independent states developed their individual written constitutions. [5] Later, from 1787 to 1790, each of the states ratified a new federal frame of government in the Constitution of the United States. [6]
References
As a research institution, UChicago has attracted an internationally recognized faculty from its beginning, and is one of the most highly regarded universities. [1] [2]
References
{{
cite encyclopedia}}
: |author=
has generic name (
help)
Jackie Taylor (actress) Carlos Tortolero Cyrus Colter [40] Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)/Archive 153
" 'The picture of Dorian Gray' (the film that featured the first painting ever on-screen in color, and still the most horrifying. Dorian in the last stages of decay painted by Chicago artist Ivan Albright, who, it almost seemed to me, had existed for that very purpose." (Between Lives: An Artist and Her World Dorothea Tanning - 2011)
[43]
Haefeli, Evan (2006). "Du Sable, Jean Baptiste Pointe". Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass. Vol. 1. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 431–432.
ISBN
0195167775. {{
cite encyclopedia}}
: Unknown parameter |editors=
ignored (|editor=
suggested) (
help)
"seems . . . applied for social relief"
Salgado [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] [52] [53]
Lincoln [54]
ORES INFO: [55]
[ Ishikawa]
[56] Mildred carter
{{Namespace detect| |main=
|other={{#ifeq:|yes||
![]() | This is a
draft article. It is a work in progress
open to editing by
anyone. Please ensure that the draft meets
our core content policies before publishing it as a
live Wikipedia article. Editor ressources Lua error in Module:Find_sources at line 50: invalid link code 'highbeam'; no link config found at
Module:Find sources/links.
Last edited by
Alanscottwalker (
talk |
contribs) 18 months ago. (
Update) |