User:DutchTreat/Projects

People
Various biography pages I have touched or wish to improve:

A - B

 * Aamund, Malou left politics for job at Microsoft
 * Amin, Samir Egyptian Marxian economist. See interview
 * Aquin, Stéphane chief curator at Hirshhorn Museum, see WD
 * Armand, Pascale
 * Azarenka, Victoria tennis player
 * Bär, Simone (born 1965) casting director (Does she meet notability standard?) IMDB profile Inglourious Basterds
 * Baudrillard, Jean French philosopher
 * Barash, David P. - Professor from University of Washington
 * Berlin, Leslie historian at Stanford University with a speciality on Silicon Valley
 * Barnes, Clive dance and theater critic for New York Post
 * Bengescu, Gheorghe (1848–1922) - Romanian diplomat and man of letters, biographer of Voltaire
 * Bogatsky, Nikolay Russian portrait artist, see Commons:Category:Nikolay Bogatsky
 * Booth, Ezra (1792 – 1873) from wikisource EB1911 (2014)
 * Bourdonnaye, Louis François de La (1700 — 1777) French diplomat
 * Brandt, Bill - German-British photographer featured at MoMA
 * Bréal, Michel French philologist, work from 1906 Pour mieux connaître Homère
 * Browning, Christopher historian from UNC specializing in the Holocaust. author of Ordinary Men (1992)
 * Burden, Amanda director of the New York City Department of City Planning
 * Butler, E. M. scholar

C - D

 * Campbell, Douglas (1839-1893) American lawyer and history writer
 * Cardiff, Janet Canadian artist
 * Capell, Arthur 1st Early of Essex (1631 – 13 July 1683), an English statesman. "In June 1648, then a sickly boy of sixteen, he was taken by Lord Fairfax's soldiers from Hadham to Colchester in Essex, which town his father was defending, and was carried every day around the works with the hope of inducing Lord Capel to surrender the town." Earl of Essex
 * Carroll, John M., The Nurnberg Funnel: Designing Minimalist Instruction for Practical Computer Skill (1990)
 * Cates, Arthur wikisource EB1991 (2014)
 * Chai, May-lee author
 * Chang, Morris IEEE Medal of Honor winner in 2011
 * Chin, Staceyann poet, spoken word artist
 * Chow, Agnes (b. 1996) Hong Kong activist
 * Chow, Tina sister to Adelle Lutz, mother to China Chow
 * Chow, China daughter of Chow, Tina
 * Chung, Alexa TV host, model and fashion muse, found via WP Wikify drive for Feb 2013
 * Couture, Guillaume - 17th century scout in New France
 * Cunningham, Bill NY Times On the Street photography
 * Curzan, Anne linguist, contributor to Lingua Francia at The Chronicle of Higher Education
 * de Mille, Agnes from The Musical 21 Oct 2011
 * Davis, D. Dwight (1908–1965), American zoologist
 * Davis, Linsey - ABC News, from 2020 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums 3rd debate on 12 Sept 2019 in Houston, TX.
 * Deitch, Gene - cartoonist and creator of Nudnik (cartoon)
 * Carole Delga French politican
 * Depardieu, Julie won Cesar Award
 * Deutsch, L Peter - software developer Ghostscript, Gzip and now musical composer
 * Devlin, Keith - NPR Weekend Edition Saturday 'Math Guy' and Standford Professor, Executive Director of Center for the Study of Language and Information
 * Dexter, Henry Martyn father, American clergyman and author
 * Dexter, Henry Morton son, co-author with father The England and Holland of the Pilgrims
 * Dihrberg, Anja casting director (notable?)
 * Dixon, Joseph inventor and producer of Dixon Ticonderoga pencils, see Dixon Crucible Company, 1827 factory in Jersey City, NJ
 * Domergue, Jean-Gabriel French artist, expand using French translation and TheFrenchSampler on blogspot.com
 * Dorschug, Harold - radio engineer that taught classes at Boston University
 * Ducruet, Pauline - royal daughter of Princess Stephanie of Monaco. Ducreut involved in Monte-Carlo International Circus Festival and was a diver at Singapore 2010 Olympic Games
 * Dulaine, Pierre started Dancing Classrooms program, featured in Dancing in Jaffa doc film
 * Dutens, Louis "published an edition of the works of Leibniz (Gothofridi Guillemi Leibnitii Opera Omnia, Geneva, 6 vols., 1768)"

E - G

 * Ehrenburg, Ilya the author Fernando Gessari used quotes from him and criticism of his memior by Vsevolod Kochetov
 * Elgey, Georgette (1929 - 2019) French historian, author of Histoire de la IVe République
 * Elgort, Arthur fashion photographer
 * Elliott, Andrea journalist
 * Ellison, Henry (1811–1880) wrote "Siberian Exile's Tale" (1833) quoted in Ground truth. See another poem at Bartleny.com
 * Evans, Victor J. (draft) from Wikipedia:Meetup/Philadelphia/WikiSalon 2024-01-13|Philly WikiSalon 2024 Jan]]
 * Fairouz, Mohammed composer
 * Feldman, Robert "Bob" (1937-2022) Robert Alan "Bob" Feldman, born on May 13, 1937, died May 22, 2022. "in 1970, founded Parasol Press, a publisher of fine-art limited edition prints and photographs.".
 * Franck, Adolphe (1809–1893) French-Jewish philosopher, specialized in Jewish mysticism
 * Fortini, Franco Italian poet
 * Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark with twins born Jan 2011
 * Freire-Marreco, Barbara (1879–1967) British anthropologist, wrote articles for Folk-Lore
 * Frere-Jones, Tobias font designer, in 2014 legal dispute with Hoefler & Co.
 * French, Pierre Mendès add Mendès France tie worn by supporters
 * Freed, Kayce producer of documentaries, widow of Peter Jennings, co-founder of the DocGroup production company for documentary TV. American Program Bureau profile of Kayce Freed Jennings
 * Fumaroli, Marc French historian
 * Gaensler, Bryan astronomer, former Young Australian of the Year in 1999.
 * Garanča, Elīna Latvian opera singer, see also Anna Krauja
 * Garcia, Nancy TV producer for fashion, found WP Wikify drive for Feb 2013
 * Gardner, Sue, co-founder The Markup former Executive Directory Wikimedia Foundation
 * Gerassi, Fernando (father) was split from John Gerassi (son)
 * Giacometti, Alberto has links to Art in Society and Yale University Press
 * Grand, Katie founder of LOVE magazine
 * Gray, Christopher architectural historian, contributor to New York Times, see articles on how to research a building in NYC
 * Green, Hetty NPOV disputed 2023-Nov
 * Greenberg, Clement art critic and wrote essay Collage using This is not a Story (part 3), Originally published as “The Pasted Paper Revolution” in Art News (September 1958), significantly revised and expanded for reprinting in Art and Culture.
 * Greiner, Stefan-Peter (born 1966) German violin maker

H - K

 * Haïm, Laurence journalist
 * Hardison, Bethann model agent and activist
 * Hart, Horace contributor at Cambridge University Press
 * Heim, Michael Henry translator from UCLA of Eastern European fiction
 * Herzog, Amy playwrite/director
 * Hirschman, Albert Otto author Worldly Philosopher by Princeton University Press
 * Hoadley, Walter E. (draft) from Philly WikiSalon 2024 Jan
 * Holland, John Henry mathematician at Santa Fe Institute
 * Homans, Jennifer author of Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet (2010)
 * Horvilleur, Delphine Franch rabbi studied in NYC
 * Ishioka, Eiko, Japanese fashion and Oscar award winning costume designer
 * Irish Traveller
 * Jackson Chris - publisher at One World imprint and editor
 * Jackson, Matthew Day artist
 * Jeram, Anita illustratoe of chilren's books
 * Johnson, A. B. (1786–1867) American philosopher of language
 * Dutch author, married to Robbert Dijkgraaf, directory of Institute of Advanced Study
 * Jullien, François French author and professor
 * Klein, Naomi Professor and climate change activist
 * Klop, Cody child actor
 * Krauja, Anna Latvian opera singer, see also Elīna Garanča
 * Kentridge, William artist
 * Kraus, Kitty (b. 1979) artist, part of collection at Kunsthalle Hamburg and Guggenheim
 * Kritzman, Lawrence wrote Columbia History of Twentieth Century French Thought, won 2006 Modern Language Association Scalgione prize for best book in French.

L - N

 * de Laborde, Alexandre French writer and official
 * LePage, Wilbur R. - SU professor, wrote a book on APL programming for engineering
 * LaRue, Jan (draft) musicologist
 * Le, Tan co-Founder of Emotiv, former Young Australian of the Year in 1998.
 * Lebowitz, Fran author
 * Leroy-Beaulieu, Philippine actor in Emily in Paris (2020)
 * Levrant de Bretteville, Sheila American graphic designer and educator, signers First Things First 2000 manifesto
 * Lim, Susan surgeon, entrepreneur and cancer researcher
 * Linn, Bambi from The Musical 21 Oct 2011
 * Lotz, Károly (1833 – 1904) artist
 * Lombardi, Mark conceptual artist used sociograms, some works part of Whitney Museum collection.
 * Loomis, Robert editor retires from Random House after 54 years
 * Lutz, Adelle former wife of David Bryne, sister Tina Chow
 * Magnussen, Jan, Danish auto racing driver and his wife Christina who designs his helmets.
 * check this change, after or vacant related to [[Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria-Este (1817–1886) (2022-10-06)
 * Marot, Clément (1496 – 1544) French poet, needs more sources.
 * Martin, Charles poet, won Harold Morton Landon Translation Award (2004) for Ovid's Metamorphoses
 * Marton, Kati author of Paris: a love story former wife of Mr. Jennings and widow of Richard Holbrooke. NPR Weekend Edition Saturday interview with Kati Marton
 * Zavarzadehf, Mas'ud art critic, teaches at Syrcause University, coined term metamodernism in 1975; Fanny and Alexander; edited Post-Ality: Marxism and Postmodernism; Verisimilitude (fiction) ""The Semiotics of the Foreseen: Modes of Narrative in (Contemporary) Fiction" in Poetics Today(1985)
 * McLean, Anne translator of Spanish literature including Javier Cercas
 * Meurisse, Martin (1584–1644), Franciscan professor of philosophy at the Grand Couvent des Cordeliers in Paris
 * Molloy, Sylvia author, died 2002, event at NYU 2022-12-02
 * Morgan, Anne philanthropist, created American Committee for Devastated France (C.A.R.D.) for relief in France post-WW I
 * Mori, Masako - Minister of Justice, Japan in 2019.
 * Joseph Moxon's Mechanick Exercises precursor to user guide?
 * McMillan, Grace Roosevelt (draft)- née Grace Green Roosevelt, died 1994, NYT, granddaughter of Theodore Roosevelt
 * Morgan, Edmund Yale historian
 * Mullins, Aimee actor, model, athlete. Mullins starred in cycle 3 of Matthew Barney's art film "The Cremaster Cycle."
 * Munde, Alan Bluegrass banjo player
 * Nagel, David former CEO of PalmSource, former executive from Apple
 * Naldini, Nico (born 1929) Italian poet and translator, found via WP Wikify drive for Feb 2013
 * Nash, Ogden American poet, (needs help with citations)
 * Nicolai, Christoph Friedrich (1733 – 1811) German writer and bookseller. See Thomas Carlyle footnote of essay about "Goethe" related to definition for philostine
 * Nizan, Paul his 1960 edition of "Arabie Aden" (1960) Columbia University Press, preface by Jean-Paul Sartre
 * Nora, Pierre - French historian lives with French journalist Anne Sinclair. Lawrence Kritzman quoted Nora in 2012 for his Legion d'Honneur award, Nora's three-volume English-language edition Realms of Memory: Rethinking the French Past (Columbia University Press: 1996–1998) abridged translation of Les Lieux de mémoire (Gallimard: 1984–1992)

O - P

 * O'Donnell, James J. scholar, provost at Georgetown, uses computers in humanities
 * Olaf, Erwin Dutch photographer
 * O'Riordan, Dolores (1971 – 2018) lead singer from The Cranberries, died from accidental drowning
 * Ōe, Kenzaburō (born 1935) Japanese writer, Nobel Laureate
 * O'Neil, Felix & O'Neill, Constantine historical Irish clan leaders from Portugal
 * Philip M. Parker generates books using template and database
 * de Pascoaes, Texeira poet
 * Pasternak, Anne director of Brooklyn Museum, former directory of Creative Time
 * Pellerin, Fleur French government Minister of Culture and Communications 2014 - 2016
 * Adrian John Pieters Translate from es:Adrian John Pieters. Use
 * Price, Huw co-founder Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at Cambridge University
 * Putman, Andrée - French interior designer for Karl Lagerfeld and Yves Saint Laurent

R - S

 * Raico, Ralph on Lord Acton in The Place of Religion in the Liberal Philosophy of Constant, Tocqueville, and Lord Acton (2010); and related to publishing Constant's Principes de Politique (1815)
 * Rambova, Natacha improve references with Rambo Va-va-voom by Gimcrack Hospital blog, bio from The Fashion Spot blog, Roaring Twenties pic on Tumbler, DeMille exhibit at USC and The FrenchSampler on blogspot; and from book
 * Raymond, Thomas Newark's mayor in the 1920s, supported Newark airport, "August 3, 1927, Raymond ordered plans for a new airport"
 * Renn, Crystal (born 1986) model who was a former plus size model
 * Rhee, Michelle (born 1969) former Chancellor District of Columbia, "Opponents of Rhee, arguing that she had not genuinely improved education in D.C. schools"
 * Riefenstahl, Leni (died 2003) propaganda film maker promoted Nazi cause in films like Olympia, wrote books on Nuba people
 * Rist, Pipilotti (born 1962) Swiss performance artist
 * Ritschl, Friedrich Wilhelm improve references to Nietzsche sources
 * Roche, Charlotte (born 1978) German author
 * Alexander-Roosevelt, Eleanor Butler - mother of Grace Green Roosevelt McMillan
 * Rosefeldt, Julian German artist, created Manifesto (2015 film)
 * Roth, Kenneth, executive director for Human Rights Watch since 1993 (as of 2020)
 * Roversi, Paolo fashion photographer
 * Ruiz, Raúl (1941–2011) Chilean film director
 * Safranski, Rüdiger (born 1944) German philosopher
 * Sasha Sagan born 1982 according to article on Ann Druyan
 * Sanches, Francisco (1550-1623) reported as Franz Sanchez (1562-1632), Spanish professor of medicine and philosophy at Montpelier and Toulouse, felt the need of substituting a new method for the scholastic logic. in A Brief History of Modern Philosophy Book 1 p. 16.
 * Sato, Kashiwa - Japanese artist, see exhibit on "Flow" using lines at "The Kashiwa Sato exhibition", National Art Center, Tokyo from February to April 2021, designed the Uniqlo logo, from 2021-07-15-Design Talk Plus on NHK World
 * Scott, William Robert (1868-1940) was Adam Smith Professor of Political Economy 1915 to 1940 at the University of Glasgow. Works at wikisource:Author:William Robert Scott.
 * Shaomin, Shen (b. 1956) artist, missing article on 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, Sydney
 * Shearer, Norma (1902 – 1983) actor, played title role in Marie Antoinette (1938), based on book by S. Zweig
 * Snell, Charles draft for new page. See Round hand in Types of handwritten European scripts and MyFonts Adobe Snell Roundhand. Samples of Snell's work in The Pen-man's Treasury Open'd a New Essay ... (1694)
 * Solmi, Federico (born 1973) Italian comtemplorary artist, working in Brooklyn, NY
 * Song, Dorris architect, winner NDA in 2021, page needs major rework as of 2021-09-13
 * André de Staercke Belgian representative to NATO
 * Steers, Jr., Edward Lincoln historian
 * Stradivari, Antonio and Stradivari Family, wikisource EB1991 (2014)
 * Stratton, Helen British illustrator
 * Straubel, Boryana (1983–2021) former Tesla executive, philanthropist and sustainability advocate, killed while bicycling
 * Strong, Tara (born 1973) actor known mostly for voice-over work
 * Suggs, Robert Carl suggested by Wikify project, randomly assigned.
 * Sugiyama, Harry (born 1985) Japanese TV personality on shows like Japan Sportscope on NHK World, his father Henry Scott-Stokes (born 1938) British journalist
 * Suter, Martin Swiss author and columnist
 * Švankmajer, Jan Czech filmmaker
 * Szegedy, Mario - Computer Science professor Rutgers University involved with computationally provable algorithms

T - Z

 * Tyler, John great portrait from 1860 of 10th US President, son Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853-1935); grandson Lyon Gardiner Tyler Jr. (1925-2020)
 * Tomura, Keiko reporter for NHK World
 * Trockel, Rosemarie German artist on de:Kunstkompass for 2012
 * Tsing Loh, Sandra - public radio personality and author
 * Tsujii, Nobuyuki piano
 * Tyutchev, Fyodor Russian poet
 * Vélez, Lupe in Stand and Deliver (1928)
 * Venturi, Robert - architect
 * Versace, Allegra Italian heiress, aspiring actress, and major shareholder in the Versace company
 * Walton, Henry (1746–1813) English painter
 * Ward, Thomas (1845 – 1926) an English author and journalist
 * Weisstein, Eric Wolfgang an encyclopedist, maintains MathWorld, created Eric's Treasure Trove of Sciences (1995) while at CalTech
 * Weitz, Morris philosopher wrote Hamlet and and the philosophy of literary criticism (1964)
 * Weston, David - British railway artist
 * Wtewael, Joachim - artist
 * Wintergate - singer, author, wife of Bouncing Souls member
 * Woods, Ngaire spoke at World Economic Forum
 * Work, Monroe - sociologist
 * Wurm, Erwin - artist
 * Yaeger, Lynn - fashion columnist in NYC
 * Yanaka, Marie - reporter NHK World, former Miss Nippon
 * Ying Cheng - fictional character from Return of the Condors
 * Zan, Ni Chinese painter known for dan (blandness)
 * Zawinski, Jamie American hacker and nightclub owner
 * Zetlin, Julie elite rhythmic gymnast see Profile Julie Zetlin and Interview of Zetlin by Ali Fedotowsky from 1st Look on LXTV
 * Žižek, Slavoj author The Sublime Object of Ideology where he "argued for ideology as an unconscious fantasy that structures reality."

New Pages
Created pages with other work-in-progress as drafts at ../sandbox:


 * Heller - Otto Heller (author) (1863 - 1941) author and academic, wrote Prophets of Dissent, original draft


 * Herzog - Amy Herzog granddaughter of Arthur Herzog Jr., unclear linkage to Arthur Herzog see Profile TimeOut NY and


 * Galard - de Galard de Brassac de Béarn, Pauline (draft) (1825-1860) - married to Albert, 4th duc de Broglie, featured by Ingres in portrait.


 * Lalor - John Joseph Lalor (d. 1899) - political scientist, translator of work by Roscher, original draft


 * Oelrichs - Oelrichs, Theresa Fair (draft) or Theresa Alice Fair as original owner of Rosecliff using biography at Newport Biographies by Kay Davis, University of Virginia and New York Social Diary


 * Parshall - Parshall, Ralph L. (draft) Parshall, Ralph L. (Ralph Leroy), 1881-1959 Dr. at the U.S. Soil Conservation Service, inventor of Parshall flume Collection of papers at Colorodo State University

Awards

 * Friedrich Ulfers Prize (article missing as of 2021-05-14) won by Carol Brown Janeway (2013)
 * Independent Foreign Fiction Prize
 * List of winners of the Raiziss/de Palchi Translation Awards won by Thomas E. Peterson (2017)
 * Ottaway Award for the Promotion of International Literature won by Carol Brown Janeway (2014)

Professionals

 * Open letter for "Translators on Covers"
 * Collins, Charlotte Olga, heads Translation Assocation
 * Croft, Jennifer with Olga Tokarczuk, won 2018 Man Booker International Prize
 * Jhumpa Lahiri book 'Translating Myself and Others' from NPR All Things Considered on 2022-05-18

Change View

 * /Dashboard draft from SignPost

User Page Design

 * User:Selfworm/ArticlesEdited - lots of user templates to manage journal of activity and User:Selfworm/Quotes; and User:Michael J (18 August 2019)
 * Talk pages project/Usability/Prototype - August 2022

Organizing Principals

 * Mind map - Freemind and VYM (View Your Mind)
 * Zettelkasten - note cards
 * /CmdrDanProjects
 * ../tag

Video Explainers

 * WikiProject Wiki Makes Video expand topics using video illustrations or "explainers"

Maintenance Tasks

 * Replace Harvard references. Help with tools and process at User:Peaceray/Converting Havard citations to shortened footnotes (sfn). Use Peaceray's list with strikeout instead of directly using Category:Use Harvard referencing. From WikiConference NA 2020.


 * /list-maintenance


 * Graphics Lab/Maintenance/Images for cleanup - most of my active will be from Commons


 * Unref Backlog drive Feb 2024: Use NYC list, then Articles lacking sources from September 2013 (first 10)
 * Niagara Falls conference article and book
 * Yamamoto District, Akita

Art
Subpage: /art/
 * Art manifesto
 * Big Apple Circus
 * Compagnons du Tour de France, a rite of passage as a crafts-person following a Medieval tradition present until today.
 * Dandy uses a quote by Camus from L'Homme révolté (1951)
 * Glaucus_(owl) known as owl of Minerva with Hegel quote see page 304 from Minerva's Owl: The Tradition of Western Political Thought By Jeffrey B Abramson
 * Gregg shorthand improving ref by merging duplicates
 * Infinite canvas named by Scott McCloud for web comics
 * Sefer Torah with Finials called rimonim on Torah scrools, see Judaica Rimonim.
 * Vanity gallery, a claim made against the Florence Biennale

Architecture

 * Anchor Stone Blocks from Germany also see as Ankor Stone Building Kits
 * Balconet aka Jullet balcony
 * Enfilade (architecture) - aligned doorways between suite of rooms
 * Japanese architecture "Japanese House-Building" from PSM 28 (March 1886); more on wood joints and building methods?  linked from
 * Museum of Modern Art - 2008 Pre-fab buildings: missing page on Jeremy Edmiston & Douglas Gauthier won The Architectural League Prize; and Leo Kaufmann Architects
 * Piano nobile feature where floor of house is used for greeting guest of same social class. Even homes in Dublin of Georgian architecture have this element. (Ed-Add to English designed homes to the page.)
 * Plyscraper buildings from cross laminated timber (CLT)
 * Schmear - add painting technique of German Schmear to thinly apply paint to brick exterior. BobVila.com

Artworks

 * Alexander I of Russia's funeral by Stepan Galaktionov (1779-1854) aka С. Ф. Галактионов,, used on Alexander I of Russia
 * Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film - film aired on PBS
 * "Ark" in Newark, NJ by Kea Tawana, she worked as assistant to Willie Cole (b. 1955)
 * Bande dessinée French-Belgian comics
 * Vlaho Bukovac at Klovićevi Dvori Gallery, Spring 2022 exhibit "Roots and wings, Bukovac in Zagreb, Cavtat and Vienna, 1893–1903"
 * CADUCEUS (expert system) - software is art
 * Charity nude calendar as invited by Yorkshire Women's Institute (WI) in 1999, turned into film Calendar Girls
 * Il Disinganno (Release from Deception) by Francesco Queirolo (1704–1762), see marble fishing net
 * Sheila Hicks, artist created texture walls at Ford Foundation Building using handmade discs
 * Nicolas de Largillière (1656-1746) painter:
 * Portrait of Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil (1729) in Timken Museum of Art, subject Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil de Myons no page, in Wikidata as
 * Manifesto (2015) by Julian Rosefeldt including in episode #5 Barnett Newman, The Sublime is Now (1948), was on display at Hirshorn
 * Mark Miremont and his art manifesto "Resurrection of Beauty for 21st Century" (2010)
 * "Munro" - short film winner of Academy Award, directed by Gene Deitch
 * Oslo:
 * Ekebergparken Sculpture Park: Walking Woman, 2010 by Sean Henry | Anatomy of an Angel, 2008 by Damien Hirst  | Cliff Sappho, 2013 by Jenny Holzer  | Levitating woman, 2013 by Matt Johnson
 * Gustav Vigeland at Frogner_Park
 * Pontificia Fonderia Marinelli bell foundary in Italy makes the official bells for the Holy See
 * The Slav Epic by Alphonse Mucha in National Gallery Prague's Veletržní Palace between 2012 and 2016
 * Semyonov-Menes,Semyon (1895-1972) graphic designer of Soviet film posters; "Semyonov-Menes, Semyon Abramovich" from Bridgeman Education; not to be confused with Semyon Semyonov KGB agent
 * Studio Ghibli film "My Neighbor Totoro"
 * Triadisches Ballett ballet
 * Portia Munson Gardens of Fort Hamilton Parkway Station glass murals on the platform at Fort Hamilton Parkway (BMT West End Line).
 * Comic strips:
 * Funky Winkerbean - cartoon strip by Tom Batiuk
 * Tillie the Toiler by Russ Westover

Awards

 * AIGA medal winners: Pablo Ferro | Clement Mok | Maira Kalman | Tibor Kalman | Doyald Young ; improve the listing of winners, the AIGA.org site no longer keeps bio of previous winners, medal page only has a link to IA pages archived from their site (Sept 2022)
 * Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Medal for chamber music
 * European Design Award - missing 2007 winners on ED-Award site
 * German Design Award - missing 2007 winners on ED-Award site
 * Molière Award winners (2011) Michel Fau, not sourced on award page, only on bio
 * National Translation Award from American Literary Translators Association
 * Type Directors Club major redesign of awards and medal winners
 * Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes established in 2010, Yale University and Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
 * Young America Grand Prix annual ballet competition in New York City

Books

 * Goethe : Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship
 * Sartre : The Myth of Sisyphus and Situation
 * Thesaurus Linguae Latinae (1894 — ~2050) Latin dictionary aka TLL, genius of Eduard Wölfflin
 * Voltaire : Complete Works of Voltaire (1968 — ~ 2020)


 * Murty Classical Library of India

Crafts

 * Mary Maxim
 * Newark Dress Maker

Design

 * Drafting tools: Keuffel and Esser including "Leroy Lettering Set";

Poets
Quote from "Voltaire" in EB1911 Volume 28:3, page 199: "The abbé de Châteauneuf died before his godson left school, but he had already introduced him to the famous and dissipated coterie of the Temple, of which the grand prior Vendome was the head, and the poets Chaulieu and La Fare the chief literary stars."


 * Charles Auguste, Marquis de La Fare (1644 – 1712) 17th century French poet
 * Guillaume Amfrye de Chaulieu (1639 – 1720) 17th century French poet


 * "Abbé de Châteauneuf" refers to François de Châteauneuf (1650 – 1703), not Pierre-Antoine de Châteauneuf (1644 – 1728).


 * Sylvia Plath effect - poets suffering from mental illness


 * Sara Teasdale - wrote letters to Robert Sterling Yard (1861-1945) for The Century Magazine Teasdale, Sara, 1884-1933 (Correspondent) Collection - Century Company records, Series I. General Correspondence, Date Created: 1909 - 1914 in Manuscripts and Archives Division, Shelf locator: MssCol 504.
 * Index in Dictionary catalog of the Henry W. and Albert A. ... v. 4 (Son-Z. Appendix I:Correspondents A-G). link see 1916-17 postcards to Mr. Braithwaite


 * Derek Walcott Love After Love (poem)
 * Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records six volume set on Old English poetry


 * The Poets' Encyclopedia is an English-language poetical anthology, covering the literary, art and music worlds of New York City in the 1970s. Published in 1979 and edited by Michael Andre. 225 poets, artists, musicians and novelists transform the world's basic knowledge. (2024 January-missing sources) 1

19th Philosophers

 * Victor Cousin see reference on work by Harald Høffding who wrote A Brief History of Modern Philosophy (1912) and gave Modern philosophers, lectures delivered at the University of Copenhagen during the autum of 1902
 * Jean Philibert Damiron (1794–1862)
 * In 1824. he took part with P. F. Dubois and Th. S. Jouffroy in the establishment of the Le Globe;
 * See Adolphe Franck, Moralistes et philosophes (1872) from EB1911]


 * Hugo von Hofmannsthal (1874 – 1929) poet and essayist
 * Guillaume-François Le Trosne (missing as of Oct 2019, translate from French WP)
 * Gustav von Schönberg (1839 – 1908) German economist

Part of a series on Continental philosophy, based on work by Adrian Johnston (philosopher) in German idealism and Dialectical materialism.

Fashion Designers

 * Roberto Capucci
 * Francisco Costa
 * Caroline Herrera
 * Alexander McQueen
 * Ralph Rucci
 * Emilio Schuberth

Festivals

 * Bregenzer Festspiele opera on water in Austria: set for "Madama Butterfly" in summer 2022 is large folded Japanese paper
 * Festival N°6 in Portmeirion, North Wales. Suspended after 2018.
 * Figment (arts event) - annual on Governor's Island, NYC
 * /outlaw-music-festival 2016, tour from 2017 to present (2024)
 * Maltese Carnival add inline reference using stories from Time of Malta and schedule of events

Film
quote: "Varda and JR travel to Switzerland so that she may introduce him to Godard. When they arrive at Godard's house, however, he rudely refuses to see them—bringing Varda to tears." Another article said that Godard didn't respect JR.
 * (Ano Ko wa Kizoku) 2020 film by Yukiko Sode
 * The Breadwinner 2017 film by Nora Twomey
 * Brooks, Louise (1906 – 1985) film actor starting in the silent era, featured in The Chaperone (2018 film)
 * Daniels, Bebe (1901 – 1971) film actor, dancer, writer and proceducer.
 * The Leopard (1963)
 * Faces Places (2017) by Agnès Varda and JR
 * Living Is Easy with Eyes Closed (2013) Spanish comedy, filmed in Province of Almería, Spain and related to John Lennon film How I Won the War (1967)
 * "See Yourself in Others" short for 2017 Tribeca Film Festival directed by Jared Knecht, Vimeo, Rogo, copywriter from WorkingNotWorking production company.

Opera

 * Manon (1884) by Massenet at the Met Opera in Sept/Oct 2019 with soprano Lisette Oropesa as Manon, production directed by Laurent Pelly
 * Orfeo ed Euridice by Gluck, at Met Opera with production by Mark Morris
 * Queen of the Night aria from The Magic Flute K. 620
 * prompter role in opera house, find sources and image at de:Souffleur (German)
 * Scalia/Ginsburg (2015) by Derrick Wang
 * Wagner's Dream see NYT review

Stage

 * Lorraine Hansberry last play Toussaint about Toussaint Louverture, {{small|seen on All*Arts Archive from 2022-Nov, Playwright at works interview where she spoke on naturalism v. [[Literary realism|realism {{cite web |url=https://www.allarts.org/programs/all-arts-vault-selects/lorraine-hansberry-playwright-at-work-eo82cz/# |title=Lorraine Hansberry - Playwright at Work}}
 * Playwright at Work series hosted by Frank Perry, see interview from 1961 of Hansberry

Pop Bands
J-Pop and K-Pop:
 * Dream Note
 * Elkie Chong from CLC (group)
 * Hash Tag
 * Ho1iday
 * NeonPunch
 * S.I.S (group)

Street art

 * Eduardo Kobra – Brazilian, works in NYC
 * JR – French, exhibit at Brooklyn Museum
 * Sainer – from ETAM Cru, works in Lodz, Poland; Instagram profile

Companies

 * Corinthia Group Of Companies - hotel chain
 * Convera Corporation - Internet search software
 * Google - "AtGoogleTalks" talks by invited guests talksat.withgoogle.com and podcast
 * Hoefler & Co. - font design company
 * Progress Software & DataDirect - software
 * Titan Aerospace article created from de:Titan Aerospace (de) translation
 * Zebra companies with female founders: with an update by same authors

Markets/Trading

 * Cayman Islands Stock Exchange
 * Malta Stock Exchange - stock exchange
 * Paris Bourse crash of 1882
 * Payment for order flow (PFOF)
 * /zagreb-stock-exchange (ZSE)

Trade Associations

 * Securities Industry Association - David Gottesman a director? See claim on First Manhattan Co.

Transportation

 * AMT Terminals in Port of Elizabeth, available "reefer plugs" for Refrigerated containers

Culture

 * Bob's your uncle

Various

 * Cultural appropriation
 * Civility and manners across cultures
 * The Civilizing Process (1939) book by Norbert Elias; criticism from Hans Peter Duerr in Der and Mythos and vom and Zivilisationsprozeß (5 volumes, 1998-2002) DNB catalog search...
 * Debate: Harvard International Debate Competition. See NPR Morning Edition for 2021 winners
 * Levee (ceremony) used differently in British American from British England. See French origin and changes. The lead paragraph could be improved-2022-11-01
 * The Interpretation of Cultures (1973) by Clifford Geertz, "Thick Description" page 22, quoted by Richard Rorty in essay "Pragmatism, Literature, and Democracy."

Africa

 * Nanda people - in South Sudan, studied by E. E. Evans-Pritchard in "The social organization of the Azande of the Bahr-el-Ghazal province of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan" (1928) dissertation
 * Nuba people - photographs by Leni Riefenstahl, briefly mentioned by Fran Lebowitz and Martin Scorsese in "Pretend It's a City"

Australia
, 100K records stored in a modern CMS, called Keeping Culture KMS, as of 2021-12-05
 * Themes
 * Contemporary Indigenous Australian art
 * Dreaming (Australian Aboriginal art)
 * Tjala Arts from APY lands ""Ara Irititja" is a project of the APY, commenced in 1994 to identify, copy and electronically record historical materials about the Anangu"


 * Exhibits
 * "Ara Winki: Life on the Pitjantjatjara Lands", From the 2007 site, exhibit on display in the South Australian Museum and the Alice Springs Public Library. Access requests to Project Manager, Ara Irititja, PO Box 1234, Marleston, SA, 5033, Australia.


 * Books
 * . available for purchase from outofprint.com.au for $350 AUD, id 33141 or out of stock from [https://www.wakefieldpress.com.au/product.php?productid=1239&cat=1&page=2 Wakefield Press




 * Outofprint.com.au id 16264


 * "Carroll began painting at Ernabella Arts in 2009, and in 2011 he was introduced to ceramics."

Cambodia

 * Norodom Sihamoni "His Merciful Excellent Majesty Protector, King Norodom Sihamoni, who unites the nation, religion, realms, and people of Khmer state..."

Croatia

 * Anti-Serbian_sentiment
 * Bad Blue Boys supporters of football club in Zagreb
 * History Museum in Zagreb
 * Economic view: List of companies of Croatia
 * Festival of Lights, see stained glass windows from Marija Bistrica projected onto St. Catherine's Church, Zagreb
 * Kockica building in Zagreb in brutalism style, tours available
 * Liburnians mystery phrase "Florus (II,5) noted the Liburnians as the Romans' enemies in this expedition" See "L231 (1929) Florus: Epitome of Roman History. Translation by Forster." source: Loeb Classical Library and Loeb_Classical_Library from Epitome of Roman History "The most accessible modern text and translation are in the Loeb Classical Library (no. 231, published 1984, ISBN 0-674-99254-7)." source: Works attributed to Florus
 * Pisanica (Croatian) egg for Easter
 * Ustashe - Ustaša – Croatian Revolutionary Movement, active between 1929 and 1945.
 * Uskoks - solders from Hapsburg Croatia, related to Nehaj Fortress
 * Croatian Wikipedia related to Ideological bias on Wikipedia

English

 * After Norman Conquest in 1066, legal influences from Law French which today is still used in U. S. Courts like terms for Voir dire and Petit jury

Finnish

 * Kalevala - The Kalevala: Epic of the Finnish People (1988); What edition is included in the rooms at Klaus K Hotel in Helsinki?

French
"The expectation of obtaining these sinecures drew young men towards the church in considerable numbers, and the class of abbés so formed - abbés de cour they were sometimes called, and sometimes (ironically) abbés de sainte espérance ("abbés of holy hope; or in a jeu de mots, "of St. Hope") - came to hold a recognized position. The connection many of them had with the church was of the slenderest kind, consisting mainly in adopting the title of abbé..."
 * Abbot


 * Détente - Jules Cambon, French diplomat, ambassador to Germany (1907–1914), expand his role in 1912 by adding section using source
 * Battle of Handschuhsheim, add portrait General der Kavallerie from French WP
 * Salonnière Mme Geoffrin, Mlle de Lespinasse, and Madame Necker from Salon (gathering)

German

 * Reichsbürgerbewegung ("Reich Citizens' Movement") more complete information from de:Reichsbürgerbewegung (in German); Kommissarische Reichsregierung founded in 1985 by Wolfgang Gerhard Günter Ebel.


 * Lustige Blätter satrical German newspaper, used at Triple Alliance (1882)


 * Austria-Hungary in late 1890s and the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867


 * ""Count Eduard von Taaffe, the Austrian prime minister from 1879 to 1893. Taaffe used a coalition of clergy, conservatives and Slavic parties to weaken the liberals. In Bohemia, for example, he authorized Czech as an official language of the bureaucracy and school system, thus breaking the German speakers' monopoly on holding office.""


 * ""the elections of 1891, in which the Young Czechs who were opposed to the feudal party gained a decisive victory, made his position a very difficult one.""


 * ""In September 1874, seven newly elected Young Czech deputies defied the Old Czech boycott and took their seats in the Diet.""


 * ""The next election reform was enacted in 1896 by Kasimir Felix Graf Badeni, who succeeded in bringing about more radical reforms than Taaffe had achieved. ""


 * ""The minorities sought the widest opportunities for education in their own languages, as well as in the "dominant" languages—Hungarian and German. By the "Ordinance of 5 April 1897", the Austrian Prime Minister Count Kasimir Felix Badeni gave Czech equal standing with German in the internal government of Bohemia; this led to a crisis because of nationalist German agitation throughout the empire. The Crown dismissed Badeni.""


 * ""Late-19th-century Germans in Austria-Hungary, as a general rule, wanted the Empire to maintain its German character established during the period of Germanization under Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor in the late 18th century, so they resisted the demands of the other ethnic groups for linguistic recognition. Badeni's ordinance was seen by Germans as the "last straw" in a series of concessions.""


 * ""Badeni courted controversy when, in an attempt to gain the support of the Young Czech faction in the Reichsrat""

Greek

 * Miasma (Greek mythology) improve with translation from Hungarian version
 * Atreus - improve family tree. Chart template added to discussion for Talk:Atreus:

Iceland

 * Icelandic National Day - reading of poem by "Lady of the Mountain"
 * Lady of the Mountain
 * Willard Fiske American scholar who was an authority on Icelandic language and culture

India

 * Hindu festivals: Makar Sankranti festival of the Sun Jan 14-15
 * Hindu temples: Ayodhya and Babri mosque in India; Bochasanwasi Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha in Woodbridge and Robbinsville, New Jersey
 * Food: Dhaba and Punjabi Americans truck drivers

Islam

 * Zamzam Well, Saudi Arabian place with story from Islam faith

Japan

 * Ban'ei draft horses pulling heavy loads at Obihiro racecourse
 * Karuta and Uta-garuta play card game
 * Netsuke miniature sculptures central part of the story in The Hare with Amber Eyes (2010) by Edmund de Waal
 * Ōmiya Bonsai Village district north of Tokyo
 * Seven & I Holdings related to the USA company 7-11

Jewish / Hebrew

 * France–Israel relations
 * Maggid - storytellers: Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1741–1804) and Malbim also known as Meir Leibush ben Yehiel Michel Wisser (1809 – 1879)
 * Yiddish - List of English words of Yiddish origin Yiddish words used in English
 * Meshugaas crazy or senseless activity or behavior

Kazakhs

 * Golden Eagle Festival

Language / Linguistic

 * Tree model / Wave model, comparative method see diagram on romance languages

Mexico

 * Carnival in Mexico

Military History

 * WP:MILHIST -- Military History Scope. More on the Template:WPMILHIST to deter the task-force names, used during Tag & Assess 2007 drive.
 * War of the Spanish Succession add missing battles like Bombardment of Fort Isabella and Battle of Middelburg

New York City

 * /chess-nyc Chess history
 * Manhattan purchase for $24, see Peter Minuit
 * /nyc-migrant-assistance NYC and NYS assistance programs for migrants
 * /nyc-400-anniversary : NYC 400th anniversary task force: Harlem Renaissance, List of New York placenames of Native American origin and List of New Jersey placenames of Native American origin; 1940s newspaper PM (newspaper)

Norse

 * Skáldskaparmál from Hagbard

Russia
"Zo droeg nl:Aleksej Bestoezjev-Rjoemin in de vroege 18e eeuw het portret van nl:Peter de Grote en Alexander Mikhailovich Gorchakov droeg een dergelijk in diamanten gevat portret aan het hemelsblauwe lint van de nl:Orde van Sint-Andreas van tsaar nl:Alexander II van Rusland"
 * Order of St. Andrew, more details on user talk page: nl:Overleg gebruiker:Robert Prummel/Bewerkingsruimte Robert Prummel1. See example on portrait Alexander Gorchakov. Related topic Royal family order. Detail of insignia File:Detail van portret van Alexander Mikhailovich Gorchakov.jpg

- Robert Prummel

Source: Zie het portret van Bestoezjev op Wikimedia Commons. Gezien op 1 juli 2016.
 * Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens - see "Smolny Institute" (1823) image by

Sami
Northern Norway
 * /sami-folklore

United Kingdom
Acts of Parliment
 * Category:Acts_of_the_Parliament_of_England -- England
 * Category:Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain -- Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain (1707-1801).
 * Category:Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom -- UK
 * Wills Act 1837 - used as foundation for USA law related to Wills

United States of America
Government and Judical rulings
 * California Resale Royalty Act based on constitutional argument of Common Code and U. S. Supreme Court decision
 * Mount Laurel doctrine zoning and development in New Jersey
 * /us-court-cases

Churches

 * St. Catharine Church, Spring Lake explain coverage of building using : There are two publications available at the rectory: “Guide to St. Catharine Church” (FREE) and “A Centennial History of Saint Catharine Church” by the St. Catharine Centennial Research Committee. An in depth history of the church, its art and architecture as well as Martin Maloney. Published by Providence House

Industry

 * Glove making in Johnstown, New York and Gloversville, New York, see "Fulton County" by Lewis Decker and Glovers and Tanners with pictures.

Native American

 * Pocomtuc near current Deerfield, Mass
 * NYC troupe Thunderbird American Indian Dancers hold 44th Annual Thunderbird American Indian Powwow at Queens County Farm Museum on July 28 – July 30, 2023, see more at thunderbirdamericanindiandancers
 * "Indian Relay" - Native American bareback horse racing, see CBS 60 Minutes Season 56, March 31 story, add to Types of Horse racing.

University

 * Ivy League Presidents - mainly modern female Presidents
 * Brown Ruth Simmons (2001-2012), Christina Paxson (2012 to present) - List of Presidents of Brown University
 * Columbia (no women as of 2021) - List of Presidents of Columbia University
 * Cornell Elizabeth Garrett (2015–2016), Martha E. Pollack (2017 to present) - List of presidents of Cornell University
 * Dartmouth Philip J. Hanlon - List of Dartmouth College faculty
 * Harvard Drew Gilpin Faust (2007–2018) - President of Harvard University
 * Penn List of presidents of the University of Pennsylvania
 * Princeton Shirley M. Tilghman, Christopher L. Eisgruber - President of Princeton University
 * Yale Hanna Holborn Gray - List of presidents of Yale University


 * Female Leaders of Top International Universities
 * Oxford Louise Richardson, Vice-Chancellor University of Oxford


 * Named chairs: List of professorial positions at Harvard Law School lacking sources (added 2023-09-25)

Education

 * /nyc-schools

Media

 * /media
 * Dispatches (TV series) documentary
 * Pacifica Radio produce Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman

Concepts

 * Bechdel test way to measure female leading roles in film
 * Echo chamber (media)
 * impact factor: Ecology Letters and Journal Citation Reports

Libraries

 * User:Emijrp/All Human Knowledge - attempt to quantify all knowledge contained in encyclodies and journals.

Magazines

 * Capital (German magazine) with de:Kunstkompass
 * Numéro fashion magazine
 * Tvář, Czech magaine with debat in February 1969 by Milan Kundera and Václav Havel. See
 * V fashion magazine
 * Visionaire
 * Zimbio

Newspapers

 * Die Welt newspaper
 * Göttingische Gelehrte Anzeigen Göttingische gelehrte Anzeigen : unter Aufsicht d. Akademie der Wissenschaften Verlagsort (Göttingen,1840). See fountain pen annotations on page 2

Publishers

 * L. W. Singer, a textbook division of publisher Random House in Syracuse, New York. Not mentioned on RH page. Found at Toni Morrison.

Radio

 * The Thistle & Shamrock NPR show available from SomaFM
 * On the Media restore deleted quote on 2023-06-08 with:
 * Radio Maria (original from Italy) with KJMJ first USA station in Alexandria, Louisiana. When was New York - studio on 14th Street added to the network?

"Segments cover topics related to freedom of the speech, privacy and the impact of media on the public." reference The former co-host Bob Garfield claimed, On the Media covers "...anything that reaches a large audience—either electronically or otherwise.... Plus, throw into that anything that covers First Amendment issues; anything that has to do with freedom of speech, privacy, is also in our portfolio"..

Studios

 * Newark, NJ: Lionsgate at Seth Boyden Terrace in South Ward -

TV

 * lookup Mhz at Pan-American television frequencies
 * iSpot TV ratings as of 2024


 * Markets


 * New York City Category:Television stations in New York City
 * WCBS-TV 02 / UHF 36 → Mhz
 * WNBC   04 / UHF 35 → 599 Mhz
 * WNYW 05 / UHF 27  →  Mhz
 * WABC-TV 07 / VHF 07 → Mhz
 * WWOR-TV 09 / UHK 25 → 536 – 542 Mhz
 * WPIX   11 / VHF 11 →  Mhz
 * WNET   13 / VHF 12 →  Mhz
 * WLIW   21 / VHF 32 →  581? Mhz
 * WNYE-TV 25 / UHF 24 → 533 Mhz
 * WXTV-DT 41 / UHF 30 → 569 Mhz Univision affiliates
 * WRNN-TV 45 / UHF 25
 * WNJU   47 / UHF 35 → 605 Mhz Telemundo affiliates
 * WFUT-DT 68 / UHF 26 → 545 Mhz UniMás


 * WCBS On-air staff Morning News: Rob Morrison, Mary Calvi , Alex Denis (traffic) , Ashley Morrison (business), Lisa Kerney (sports) , John Elliott (weather) , Weijia Jiang (reporter) , Kathryn Brown (reporter)


 * New Jersey Category:Television stations in New Jersey
 * NJTV WNJN 50 / VHF 08


 * Timeline
 * History in USA
 * List of local children's television series (United States) documented about 1,400 local children's shows in Hi There, Boys and Girls! (2002) Tim Hollis; does Museum of the Moving Image have archives?


 * Stations/Series
 * 60 Minutes
 * /media/60-minutes-episodes to improve an episode list


 * HBO
 * The Newsroom (2012-2014)


 * NBC
 * Scrubs, cast Zach Braff and Donald Faison on podcast "Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald" distributed by iHeartRadio


 * PBS List of Masterpiece Classic episodes
 * Firing Line, host Margaret Hoover started in 2018
 * The McLaughlin Group, host John McLaughlin


 * Playground Entertainment "September 24, 2019: Channel 5, BAFTA and Golden Globe-winning production company Playground (Howards End, Wolf Hall) and MASTERPIECE on PBS"


 * POV List of POV (TV series) episodes


 * Travel Man presented by Richard Ayoade

Websites

 * Lookbook.nu fashion blog
 * Otto GmbH online catalog store from Germany

Philosophy

 * Monism
 * Praxis (process)
 * on Victor Farías

Places
See subpage /Places for expanded coverage.
 * California Institute of Technology
 * Croatian Maritime Museum established in 1997 as successor to the Military-Maritime Museum established by the Yugoslav Navy in 1960. Inheriting the collection of the Maritime Museum of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts which existed between 1956 and 1985. Seeking references. See hvm.mdc.hr/croatian-maritime-museum-in-split which says a museum from created in 1925.
 * Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Association
 * List of Garbage landslides - to be created
 * Hartmannswillerkopf needs more pictures
 * Ichishi District, Mie, Japan - needs better format, district merged into Tsu, Mie
 * Kiryas Joel, New York
 * Hackensack Meadowlands Conservation and Wildlife Area
 * Radcliffe Science Library
 * Spanish Riding School Vienna, Austria, home for training Lipizzan horses
 * St. John - List of buildings in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador (my sandbox) with redesigned list.
 * Yoro Park (Yōrō, Gifu, 1995) "the Site of Reversible Destiny" by Shusaku Arakawa (1936-2010) and Madeline Gins (1941-2014)

Cartography/Mapping
See subpage /Maps for hints.
 * Angola: Battle of Quifangondo map in Pourtgeuise, needs to be redesigned. File:Battle of quifangondo.JPG map in Pourtgeuise, needs to be redesigned. From [[Wikipedia:Graphics Lab/Map workshop/Archive/Mar
 * Mark Antony improve maps like Battle of Pharsalus and Battle of Philippi
 * Alexander the Great: improve diagrams on Siege of Pelium (featured on Depths of Wikipedia 2022-09-28) original diagrams from
 * Comuneros: article Military history of the Revolt of the Comuneros with improve diagram File:BattleofTordesillas.PNG by User:SnowFire from 2008
 * Croatia: Map for Cadastral community for Croatia from [Wikipedia:Graphics_Lab/Map_workshop/Archive/Jan_2021#Cadastral_municipalities_of_Croatia|request]] at Graphics Lab/Map workshop (2020-11-29)
 * Grand Union Canal (old) in England for narrow boats, see Bothworth's Tunnel
 * Russia: Exhibition of Achievements of National Economy in Moscow, map request in Feb 2021
 * Villas - see street map at fr:Villa Valmer Maps are uncommon at English place pages. Ask mapping community about suggested style to add to Villa Valmer
 * Abbey and Monastery examples:
 * England: Kirkstall Abbey, Reading Abbey (map of Reading)
 * France: Abbey of Saint-Martin-du-Canigou in Module:Location map/data/France Occitanie, Clairvaux Abbey (map of France), Fontevraud Abbey in Module:Location map/data/France Grand Est; Hautecombe Abbey
 * Germany: Altmünster Abbey (no infobox)
 * Italy: Florance Villa Medici at Cafaggiolo, Villa del Trebbio in Module:Location map/data/Italy North; Turin Basilica of Superga
 * Switzerland: Abbey of Saint Gall in Module:Location map/data/Canton of St. Gallen
 * More at Special:WhatLinksHere/Template:Infobox_monastery and List of Carolingian monasteries
 * Mapping hints:
 * WikiProject Geographical coordinates for using coord and linkage to the WikiMiniAtlas
 * For Location Map see options at Category:Location map modules by country
 * Note, no map support in Template:Infobox religious building and Template:Infobox church
 * Graphics Lab/Resources/Tutorials - getting started guides

Ships
A floating place: List of motor yachts by length maintained with help from user wolf
 * The Maltese Falcon (yacht)
 * Seven Seas Explorer launched in 2016
 * White Rabbit (yacht) - 84m yacht by Echo Yachts. See stats at ,

Ship builder:
 * Meyer Werft (German)

Canals:
 * Morris Canal see history of included planes. Later, used in Poland for Elbląg Canal

Sports

 * Netherlands women's national field hockey team change tables using guide from nl:Nederlandse_hockeyploeg (vrouwen) (in Dutch)
 * List of mountaineering equipment brands :
 * Arc'teryx (Canadian)
 * Fjällräven (Swedish)
 * Montbell (Japanese, 1975) ja
 * Red Fox Outdoor Equipment (Russian, 1989) by Vladislav Moroz and Alexander Glushkovsky ; in Europe shop in Via Maistra 138, Pontresina, Switzerland 7504.
 * GRIMP Day, rope rescue competition sponsored by CMC Rescue, Inc. rules; NFPA, ASTM, SPRAT, and the Cordage Institute organizations working to develop (USA) national standards.
 * Sumo:
 * Terunofuji Haruo - married to Tsegmed Dorjihand in 2018, announced Feb 11, 2021
 * Strakka Racing racing team in FIA Endurance, missing 2011 and 2012 history

Aerospace

 * ADM-Aeolus Atmospheric Dynamics Mission Aeolus, is an Earth observation satellite built, part of Living Planet Programme from List of European Space Agency programs and missions
 * Chasing the Moon (2019 film) by Robert Stone (director)
 * Joint Polar Satellite System expand history with old news, since 2017 NOAA-20 launched.
 * "Mission to Mir" documentary film on IMAX about mission to Mir space station
 * Spire Global - nano-satellite startup, building constellations of space sensors

Astronomy
Talk:List of astronomical observatories
 * Gaia (spacecraft) used for measure distances between all visible stars in the cosmos
 * Goode Solar Telescope and Big Bear Solar Observatory, both operated by NJIT

Awards

 * Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers - many award winners missing pages

Biology

 * List of animal names, Should collective noun fluffle of rabbits be added given definition in Collins Dictionary?
 * Antimicrobial peptides
 * Apical dominance
 * Evolutionary biology biographies: Category:Women evolutionary biologists is Non-diffusing subcategories which allows duplicates of Category:Evolutionary biologists. To fix, find any in subcategory that do not exist in the parent. Use PetScan.
 * Nanofiber seeding
 * Nectocaris

Chemistry

 * Pitch drop experiment


 * Sabatier reactor used in Trash-to-Gas (TtG) project at NASA Report

Devices

 * electric motors: A. O. Smith founder Charles Jeremiah Smith history, "In 2011, the Company sold its electric motor business and embarked on a strategy to become a leading global water technology company."
 * English wheel - needs more inline cites, as of 2024-July ; see and
 * Valve needs more inline cite as of 2024 July
 * Vernier scale used on calipers and many scientific instruments

Ecology

 * Forest Stewardship Council, Croatia not a member? See Croatian Forestry Society and Sustainable Forestry Initiative (US and Canada) and Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification, see FSC-CNRA-HR FSC Centralized National Risk Assessment for Croatia, Controlled Wood Risk Assessment (CW) V(1-0)

Agriculture

 * Landscape rake as called a "York Rake" made by York Modern company in NYS is a landscape rake. Add to Rake (tool), not a Hay rake. Originally a York Power Stone Rake founded in 1921 to finish off a road surface. See

Mechnical

 * Tennis racket theorem - Prof. Terry Tao's Math Overflow Explanation; "The Twisting Tennis Racket" Ashbaugh,at el (1991) 3: 67. ; "Janibekov’s effect and the laws of mechanics" Petrov, Dokl. Phys. (2013) 58: 349. ; "Tumbling Asteroids" Prave et al. ; "The Exact Computation of the Free Rigid Body Motion and Its Use in Splitting Methods" SIAM J. Sci. Comput., 30(4), 2084–2112, E. Celledoni, et al all from The Bizarre Behavior of Rotating Bodies on  Veritasium channel on YouTube

Electrical - Power

 * ABB Swiss-Swedish company makes things for power industry like circuit breakers. "n December 2018, ABB and Hitachi Ltd. announced that Hitachi would take over ABB’s power grid business for about $6.4 billion."
 * Perovskite solar cell flexible panels available by 2025, research by Toshiba and Panasonic (2021-09-21)
 * PJM Interconnection in N. E. USA, "world's largest competitive wholesale electricity market until the development of the European Integrated Energy Market in the 2000s"

Electrical - Radio

 * Antenna (radio) remove the animated GIF for a media film. A static frame to a film the user can choose to play; see equations on Hertzian dipole; more background info at
 * F region related to HF communication
 * Hallicrafters manufactuer of tube radios
 * Ionosphere - D, E and F layers influence radio communication transmissions
 * Spurious emission Spurious E

Transportation

 * Gliding
 * National Soaring Museum, Elmira, NY


 * Hazardous markings Template:Hazardous Material Placards unsourced, Where should "hot" elevated temperature go? See Elevated Temperature Materials including "UN 3256 Elevated temperature liquid,flammable n.o.s., Class 3, PG III", "UN 3257 Elevated temperature liquid, n.o.s. Class 9, PG III" and "UN3258 Elevated temperature solid"


 * Road construction - Asphaltic concrete laying machine expanded in Asphalt concrete or as article about construction equipment


 * Snowcat
 * Aktiv trademark of Swedish Aktiv Maskin Östersund ltd. Company
 * Overland train TC-264 Sno-Buggy
 * Snow Trac small personal Snowcat
 * Tucker Sno-Cat tracked vehicles for snow conditions, manufactured in Medford, Oregon


 * Transport in Mauritania and Mauritania Railway - one of longest and heaviest trains in world
 * Train Suite Shikishima - luxury train operated by Japan East

Materials

 * Alternative approaches to redefining the kilogram refer guests Katie Green, Dr. David Farrant, the CSIRO, and the National Measurement Institute, Australia on "World's roudest object" from Veritasium channel on YouTube; compared to rotors on Gravity Probe-B
 * Compliant mechanism - Compliant Mechanisms Research group at Brigham Young University, Professor Larry Howell
 * Multiaxis machining compare 5-axis to 3-axis CNC machines

Mathematics

 * Chudnovsky, Maria (b. 1977) math professor at Princeton University. ;
 * Chudnovsky brothers and Chudnovsky algorithm a fast method for calculating the digits of π.
 * Degeneracy missing references
 * Göttingen
 * SageMath uses MPIR (mathematics software) forked from GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library
 * Super Crunchers book on using data analysis

Medicine

 * Ankylosing spondylitis (AS)
 * oldest hospital in the Americas Hospital San Nicolás de Bari opened in 1522, oldest public hospital in NYC: Bellevue Hospital from 1736

Meteorology

 * Anomaly (natural sciences) - add ACC definition and examples
 * Bora (wind)
 * dBZ (meteorology) in radar
 * Taylor diagram evaluate model variations to a standard
 * Global Forecast System v16 released in March 2021. Make updates showing past tense. What is next for v17? operations plan 2020-2022
 * Katabatic wind
 * Wind rose diagram used to tracking changes to wind

Networking

 * Parallel Wireless - no artcle as of July 2020
 * Privacy - 2017 Broadband Consumer Privacy Proposal repeal
 * Redback Networks

Photography

 * Steadicam celebrates 30 years in 2005.

Software

 * Anna Karenina principle
 * APL (programming language) - Wilbur R. LePage prof at SU
 * Brave (web browser) based on Chromium
 * Formal verification
 * Bedrock, a Coq library like classical verification systems (e.g., Extended static checking (ESC), Boogie) from MIT Bedrock project.
 * CompCert The C compiler specified, programmed and proved in Coq
 * Godot open source game engine
 * High-availability cluster
 * Infoworld Bossie Awards page was removed on 19:31, 3 October 2014 due to lack of notability. However, it is referenced by many pages. Previously article was missing 2011 and 2012 winners.
 * Innovative Interfaces library software created by Stephen M. Silberstein
 * Network Time Foundation deleted in 2014 - 501(c)(3) organization, develops open-source precision time software
 * Leslie Lamport - his 2012 paper related to Buridan's ass published as from Lamport's pubs. He is famous in part for LaTex.
 * Multics early mainframe OS used in USAF RADC
 * Nginx
 * OpenFlow SDN
 * OpenNebula cloud computing infrastructure management
 * Operations Support System : COSMOS (telecommunications), Loop maintenance operations system,  Trunks Integrated Record Keeping System (TIRKS); Sources
 * OSv cloud operating system, unikernel
 * Rose tree used in Haskell
 * Simulation of Urban MObility - translation from German in Simulation of Urban MObility (draft)
 * SHINE Expert System
 * Zstandard file compression, released in 2016

Tools

 * ProveIt = gadget for managing references (from User:CmdrDan, 2021-12)

There are a few links that I used during the beginning of my Wikipedia journey between 2007-2010:


 * Assessment
 * User talk:OhanaUnited/assessment.js -- an assessment tool (replaced one from User_talk:Outriggr)
 * Metadata gadget add gadget to article titles


 * Category
 * Guideline of Wikipedia Categorization
 * Categorization of people
 * Templates like |  |
 * WikiSense no longer available for Category Tree Category Tree


 * Cleanup
 * Template_messages/Cleanup


 * Geospacial
 * Lat/Long conversion


 * Pageviews
 * By category glamorous.php; glamorous good at usages, but not good at pageviews and glamorgan requires a categorybest at finding pageviews.


 * Purpose
 * Wikipedia is not a dictionary (not a tool, move somewhere else)

My User Pages
Selected (not complete):
 * ../Nav Header Subpages
 * ../Identity