User talk:RickAguirre

Welcome to Wikipedia! Thanks for your contributions to the coolest online encyclopedia I know of =). I sure hope you stick around; we're always in need of more people to create new articles and improve the ones we already have.  You'll probably find it easiest to start with a tutorial of how the wikipedia works, and you can test stuff for yourself in the sandbox.  When you're contributing, you'll probably find the manual of style to be helpful, and you'll also want to remember a couple important guidelines.  First, write from a neutral point of view, second, be bold in editing pages, and third, use wikiquette.  Those are probably the most important ones, and you can take a look at some others at the policies and guidelines page. You might also be interested in how to write a great article and possibly adding some images to your articles.

Be sure to get involved in the community – you can contact me at my talk page if you have any questions, and you can check out the village pump, where lots of wikipedians hang out and discuss things. If you're looking for something to do, check out the community portal. And whenever you ask a question or post something on a talk page, be sure to sign your name by typing &#126;&#126;&#126;&#126;.

Again, welcome! It's great to have you. Happy editing! --Spangineer (háblame)  14:54, Jun 9, 2005 (UTC)

Copyright

 * Basically, everything is copyright unless it says it isn't and you can't use copyright material without explicit permission from the owner. The text Ailsa Mellon-Bruce should be removed but I don't have time to do it right now (as I have to get to a meeting) and you might well have rewritten it by the time I get back. It's quite simple to do by rephrasing but it must be "substantially" different (i.e. different in substance, not just one word changed.) These sites are good sources of info but you must rewrite and not simply cut and paste. Thanks for your contribution and please continue to learn more and contribute.Cutler 17:07, Jun 9, 2005 (UTC)
 * I'd say that User:Wetman has done just enough to the article! Cutler 17:19, Jun 9, 2005 (UTC)

Republican Congressman Stephen G. Porter, a long-time congressional expert on narcotics and member of the American delegation to the Geneva opium conferences, persuaded a large number of his fellow congressmen to support his move to set up a new Bureau of Narcotics within the US Treasury Department. On 12 August 1930 his plan was adopted and the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN) came into existence. Porter, who was a Congressman for Pennsylvania, did not live to see his achievement for he died of cancer on 27 June in Pittsburgh.

Anslinger was appointed the first commissioner of the FBN, his appointment ratified by President Herbert Hoover the following month and confirmed by the US Senate in December. It seems likely that Porter had put Anslinger's name forward for the latter's wife, Martha Denniston, was politically connected through her uncle, Andrew Mellon, who was Secretary of the Treasury, and moreover her family were exceedingly wealthy steel mill owners and major contributors to the Republican Party. A staunch Republican himself, Anslinger received a salary of nine thousand dollars per annum and the brief to supervise, regulate and enforce the law concerning both licit and illicit habit-forming drugs within the USA.

Cannabis: a history by Martin Booth St Martin's Press, 2004 0-312-42494-9