User:IvoShandor/sandbox/sandbox5

Work pages
These are work pages I developed for articles or reviews I conducted, the type of page is noted next to the link. Some are active some aren't. They often represent compilations from myriad review sources, comment


 * User:IvoShandor/Oscar Taylor House
 * User:IvoShandor/Soldiers' Monument (Freeport, Illinois)
 * User:IvoShandor/William Ritzman House
 * User:IvoShandor/Rockford Elks Lodge
 * User:IvoShandor/Kendall County Courthouse
 * User:IvoShandor/Byron Nuclear Plant
 * User:IvoShandor/National Register of Historic Places work page: expansion work page
 * User:IvoShandor/SIM PlanetQuest work page: expansion work page
 * User:IvoShandor/Notes on Gobulac: GA review
 * User:IvoShandor/Rock Springs Massacre work page
 * User:IvoShandor/Sycamore Historic District work page
 * User:IvoShandor/Lee County, Illinois
 * User:IvoShandor/DeKalb County, Illinois
 * User:IvoShandor/Christmas tree farm
 * User:IvoShandor/Christmas tree farm/Christmas tree farming/Christmas tree pests
 * User:IvoShandor/Christmas tree farm/Christmas tree production
 * User:IvoShandor/Christmas tree farm/History of Christmas tree farms


 * User:IvoShandor/Garrison School

Project work
Project related work still hanging out in the sandbox.


 * User:IvoShandor/Wikipedia:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places/peer review
 * User:IvoShandor/Wikipedia:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places/A class review
 * User:IvoShandor/Wikipedia:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places/A-class criteria

Templates
Templates doin' nothing right now, perhaps later.
 * User:IvoShandor/Pages template
 * User:IvoShandor/Template:Aicon1
 * User:IvoShandor/Template:Aicon2
 * User:IvoShandor/Template:NRHP PR instructions
 * User:IvoShandor/DYK template
 * User:IvoShandor/Ogle County
 * User:IvoShandor/Chemical Corps: not a template
 * User:IvoShandor/Chemical corps template

Articles
Articles hanging out in user space for now, vastly incomplete.

Note: Items struck through redirect to the main space.

Work space
The Egbert Codex is one of the greatest Ottonian illustrated manuscripts ever created.



List of bio weapons topics (some of these heading may not be needed, I am just copying from the chem topics list:

Other
=New article=

==Personal life==

Shooting
Alabama Governor George Wallace was campaigning for the U.S. presidency in 1972 when a would-be assassin opened fire on him at a campaign stop in Laurel, Maryland. Wallace was speaking from behind a bulletproof shield but stepped out to shake hands with the gathered crowd. Arthur Bremer appeared from the crowd with a .38 caliber pistol and fired at the governor, severely wounding him.

Three other people were shot including Secret Service Agent Nick Zarvos. Zarvos was shot in the throat as he and other Secret Service Agents dove for the governor as Bremer fired. In addition a campaign worker and state trooper were wounded. In the confusion following the shooting medical care for Zarvos and Wallace was delayed; the ambulance had trouble getting through the crowd. Zarvos eventually recovered from his wounds. Zarvos remains one of the few Secret Service agents wounded or killed in the line of duty.

Zarvos never held any ill feelings toward Bremer, though the shooting paralyzed his right vocal cord and left him with a permanently raspy voice. In 2007, as Zarvos said of Wallace's interaction with the crowd, "It's the democratic way. The candidates have to go to the people and shake hands. Nowadays you just screen the people better."

=New article=
 * Jerkin roof, Half hip roof, Dutch hip roof etc.:

Bestowed for unrelenting good humor, of the ectoplasmic variety upon Jerem43 by Ivo Shandor, or IvoShandor, or. . . yeah, that guy. IvoShandor (talk) 19:29, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

=New Article= The White House Christmas tree, also known as the Blue Room Christmas tree, is the official indoor Christmas tree at the residence of the U.S. President, the White House. The first indoor Christmas tree was installed in the White House in 1889 and since 1961 the tree has had a themed motif at the discretion of the First Lady of the United States.

History
The first indoor Christmas tree at the White House was installed in 1889, during the administration of President Benjamin Harrison. First Lady Caroline Harrison helped decorate the tree, which was installed in the Oval Room. After the Harrison administration indoor trees were not always set-up. Later, First Lady Lou Henry Hoover started the tradition of First Ladies decorating the White House tree in 1929. In 1961 First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy began the tradition of selecting a theme for the White House Christmas tree. That first themed tree had a Nutcracker motif.

Description
The White House Christmas tree is selected from various growers nationwide. Growers in the state of North Carolina have provided 11 trees, more than any other state. The state of Wisconsin has the second highest total of trees provided for the White House with six. The White House Christmas tree has been displayed in the Blue Room many times since 1961. It has also occasionally been displayed in the Entrance Hall.