User:Susanzwitter/sandbox

This is Susan Witter's sandbox.

1-- DRAFT Chosroid Dynasty source 2-- Yarshater (1983), p. 520

is it Cambridge History of Iran?

Simon Fraser University Library, WAC Bennett Library

Combine Sources and References? No need for both?? I know this is originator's choice..

2-- Guy East

3-- Working on Washington State Route 99 wikipedia entry. https://www.cob.org/services/planning/historic/Pages/historic-tours.aspx

Hwy 99 Interactive Story Map Jackson Edson, Lelah. The Fourth Corner Highlights from the Early Northwest. Whatcom Museum of History and Art: Bellingham, 1968. Washington Polk's Bellingham City Directory. R.L. Polk and Company Publishers: Kansas City. Prosch, Thomas W. The Military Roads of Washington Territory. WHQ II, 1907: 119- 126. Winther, Oscar O. Inland Transportation and Communication in Washington, 1844-1859. Pacific Northwest Quarterly, 1939: 371-386. The Good Roads Association Collection. Washington State Archives, Bellingham. Gray, Jerry. Old "99" Replaced...Not Retired. Highway News, Washington State Department of Transportation, 1963: 8-9. The State of Washington Department of Highways in co-operation with the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Public Roads and the City of Bellingham Department of Public Works. Origin and Destination Traffic Survey of Bellingham Washington. 1950. Vouri, Mike. "Freeway paved new way for travel." Bellingham Herald: June 29, 1986. "New Samish road opening on December 1." Bellingham Herald. November 18, 1936. Vouri, Mike. "Interstate passes 30th milestone: Lives changed with I-5 course." Bellingham Herald: June 29, 1986. Flood, Chuck. Images of America, Washington's Highway 99. Charelston: Arcadia Publishing, 2013. Print. Vouri, Mike."I-5's impact still being felt." Bellingham Herald: July 21, 1986. Amber Strawn, Chris Sullivan, Elisha Joseph, Stewart Grossman. Highway 99, Shaping Bellingham's History by Larissa King. Jeff Jewell, Whatcom Museum of History and Art.

mention and link to "Washington State Route 11" wp entry

From Interactive Story Map The route of Highway 99 from Burlington ran across the Skagit County flatland, sharply curving up at the state fish hatchery and continuing on through Alger. From Alger Highway 99 passed Lake Samish and entered Bellingham along the broad curves of Samish Way next to Lake Padden. Highway 99 continued along Samish Way, crossing where I-5 is today and curving along onto Maple St. and then Ellis St.

veered left onto Northwest Ave. and exited Bellingham along West Maplewood, continuing to Canada.

There was also a scenic Alternate 99 that diverted from the main branch of Highway 99 at Burlington going onto Chuckanut Drive and winding along Puget Sound. This road was frequently closed due to weather and rockslides. The Alternate 99 left Bellingham from Meridian St., heading north to another border crossing into Canada. Chuckanut Drive is still a pleasant way to reach Bellingham, enjoying picturesque views of Puget Sound and Bellingham Bay.

4-- Joni Mitchell

missing--4-octave range. early experience as a model. falling in and out of love as her muse. vocal style that included a continuum from emphatically spoken lyrics to singing them. unusual singing rhythms. tribute albums--River, Herbie Hancock, and A Tribute to Joni Mitchell.

other sources say her father was a grocer.

[is this source in wp article?--from her website] Barney Hoskyns Joni: The Anthology edited by Barney Hoskyns [Picador - 2017 ]

ISBN-13: 9781250148629ASIN: 1250148626

hung out downtown with a rowdy set until deciding that she was getting too close to the criminal world. [Rolling Stone http://www.theuncool.com/journalism/rs296-joni-mitchell/

the polio had affected her fingers, and she had to devise dozens of alternative tunings of her own. This improvised approach later helped her break free of standard approaches to harmony and structure in her songwriting. https://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5937559/the_100_greatest_guitarists_of_all_time [her weak left hand]

At 18, she widened her repertoire to include her own favorite performers like Édith Piaf and Miles Davis. [how was she performing Miles Davis??]

Here she felt disillusioned about the high priority given to technical skill over free-class creativity, and also felt out of step with the trend towards pure abstraction, and the tendency to move into commercial art. [wide-ranging, unsubstantiated]

"singing long tragic songs in a minor key" [needs attribution]

s "in church basements and YMCA meeting halls". [needs attribution]

needs quite a few citations in through here, I think.

[up to 1994-2001]

just missed the Hot 100 on Billboard. [needs citation]

5--

Dordogne. Removed most encyclopedic language. Needs citations. May need more info (caves of Lascaux, etc.)