User talk:Stepnwolf

Where should I put an article on Greek tragedy, as a genre of Greek Theater?

1) Tragedy; topic exists

2) Greek Theater; link mentioned

3) Greek Tragedy; would be new link

4) ???

How about Greek tragedy (capitalization is not needed for the T and is in fact counter to a Wikipedia naming convention.

Here are some answers to the the questions you posed on my talk page: You can get help by either visiting Help and looking for answers there (most questions new users have have already been asked and answered). Or you can just ask someone else you have already chatted with on a talk page (like me). If you have a specific question about an article you can post it on the talk page of that article or you can even post a quick question in the edit summary of an article you are working on (if the question relates to the article, of course). Your next question has to do with trouble connecting: this is a known issue, wikipedia has great server resources but the current software is a bit inefficient and gets bogged down often. Sometimes wikipedia goes totally down for a few hours or is so darn slow that it effectively goes down. These issues are being worked on, but nobody knows when, or if, these slowdowns can be completely fixed (the wikiware is based on PHP, which is well-known for causing these types of issues). There really set time periods you can visit and be confident you will avoid a slowdown. However, if you have a dial-up telephone modem account then there also may be times when your entire connection to the internet is slow. BTW, you can find out other cool ways to edit articles by going to How does one edit a page. Have a good day. :) --maveric149

A rather bizarre article on Irish Public House. Where did you learn all those facts? From the same place Tom Cruise got his 'oirish' accent in Far and Away? I've never heard an Irish saint mentioned in a pub, ever. I don't know anyone who has ever taken poteen. (I've only ever seen it twice, both times used to feed to calves who had a severe life-threatening chill; it warmed them up sufficiently to keep them alive for a critical few hours. Though seeing a pissed calf, drunkenly lying with its tongue out, snoring madly is one of the funniest things ever. Almost as funny as seeing it with a hangover the next morning. But at least it is alive, which it wouldn't have been otherwise! The only funnier moment was finding a cat which had knocked over a creamy drink called Baileys and drank some, walking over a floor, pissed completely, followed by four kittens drank a few drops themselves. All five swaying from side to side, colliding, their tongues hanging out before collapsing in a heap on top of each other and snoring their heads off!)

As your the clichéd Irish catholic nonsense, Ireland has some of the most liberal gay laws in Europe (decades ahead of America), a prime minister who left his wife and is living with his girlfriend, religious attendances plummeting and two feminist presidents in a row (with a senior gay senator tipped to get the job next). Oh and today we are the only part of the continent of Europe buried in snow, which suggests our climate is not all that bad. Sorry, don't mean to bitch. Its just that your description of Irish bars was about as realistic as Dick Van Dyke's accent in Mary Poppins. 'Holy Catholic' drink-laiden Ireland is about as realistic a Britain full of cockneys and men wearing bowler hats, French men who wear strings of garlic around their neck, or Germans who all have Kaiser Wilhelm moustaches. Fun cliché, but not real. (Don't worry. I'm not mad or anything, just amused. :))) JTD 04:36 Feb 1, 2003 (UTC)