Wikipedia:Help desk/Archives/2017 April 7

= April 7 =

add pictures
I cannot figure out how to add pictures to Milo Lemert's site. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Columbob (talk • contribs) 02:42, 7 April 2017 (UTC)
 * Are you trying to upload a new picture or add an existing one? -AnonWikiEditor (talk) 02:43, 7 April 2017 (UTC)


 * In general, one can just input into the source " x|thumb ", where "x" is the name of the file you want to add, and where "caption" is the caption that you want to go along with the picture. If you are having trouble finding pictures, then you can search it on Wikimedia Commons (a quick google should do). Hope that helps! RileyBugz Yell at me  &#124; Edits  02:59, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

Franchise Policies
Are there any policy pages, etc. regarding dealing new entries in a franchise? Like if a new movie or show is named a certain way it can be implicitly known to be a part of that franchise without needing some exec explicitly saying "this new entry branded the exact same way as all our other entries is also part of the same franchise." — Preceding unsigned comment added by AnonWikiEditor (talk • contribs)
 * WP:CRYSTALBALL, WP:No original research, and WP:GNG are usually relevant. It's not so much whether the entry is named a particular way or whether an exec says something, it's whether professionally published mainstream sources describe the entry as part of a series or that an exec has said something. Ian.thomson (talk) 03:56, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

Murray Polner
Murray Polner, born May 15, 1928, is an American teacher, professor, editor, and writer. He has served as the editor of Present Tense, a monthly magazine published by the American Jewish Committee for 17 years, Fellowship magazine, “Shalom: The Jewish Peace Letter,” and numerous magazine articles, book reviews, and on-line essays, and authored many books on foreign policy, sports, and Jewish life and culture. His works reflect both his liberal beliefs and his strong opposition to war and belief in non-violence as a preferred way of life. He also became, while a young man, a lifelong vegetarian, as his growing appreciation for pacifism extended his concern over the problem of cruelty against animals in labs, factory farms, and beyond.

LIFE AND CAREER

Murray Polner was born and raised in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, on May 15, 1928, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants Alex Polner, a salesman, and Rebecka Meyerson Polner, a homemaker. He had one sister, Mildred Polner Berkowitz.

As a student at Tilden High School, he was sports editor of the school newspaper and senior yearbook, and played center and linebacker on the football team. He earned a BSS degree from the City College of New York in 1950, majoring in history and economics, and an MA degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1951, majoring in Central and East European history. He married Louise Greenwald of Forest Hills, N.Y. Polner’s parents were working class, while Greenwald’s middle class family roots extended back to Germany in the 19th century. Their marriage produced three children, Beth Abrahams, Alex Polner, and Robert Polner.

He enrolled in Columbia University's Russian Institute (later renamed the Harriman Institute) and earned a Certificate in a two-year program requiring a dissertation as well as competence in the French and Russian languages. He served five years in the U.S. Naval Reserve and nearly two years in the US Army, and was a Military Intelligence Analyst and Chief, USSR Desk, Far East Psychological Warfare Detachment. In 1967, he finally completed all the requirements of the Certificate – albeit gradually, over several years – when a Columbia dean asked why it had taken so long. “The military draft, marriage, and three kids,” Polner remembered saying. The dissertation dealt with the Bolsheviks and the Czech Legion in the years after World War I and the Bolshevik Revolution.

He also became a lifelong vegetarian; his anti-war feelings and gathering pacifism extending his scope of concern to the problem of cruelty against animals in labs, factory farms, and beyond. He taught social studies at Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn, a school whose working class/lower middle class student body and faculty reflected his own. He went on to teach history classes at Brooklyn College, Queens College, St. Dunstan University in Canada, the University of Maine, and Suffolk Community College. In 1972, he earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from the Union Institute and University.

He left teaching in the early 1970s and began working as an editor of books and magazines. He wrote extensively for academic quarterlies such as Phylon, Russian Review, The Journal of American History, Political Science Quarterly, American Political Science Review, South Atlantic Quarterly and Annals, and contributed opinion pieces and letters to The New York Times, the Washington Post, and other publications, urging the end of compulsory draft registration. He also wrote New York Times book reviews as well as Times articles about Vietnam veterans, anti-Asian discrimination, and the whites-only Levittown mass-produced housing community, and columns for New York Jewish Week, Congress Weekly, Chicago Jewish Forum, Antiwar.com, The Nation, New Republic, Village Voice, Labor's Daily, Commonweal, Catholic Worker, Newsday and Washington Monthly, The American Conservative, and LewRockwell.com

It was the Vietnam War, which he viewed as an immoral imperial misadventure, that drove Polner to speak publicly and also write three books related to the war: No Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran (1971); ''When Can I Come Home? A Debate on Amnesty for Exiles, Anti-War Prisoners, and Others (June 1972); and, with O'Grady, Disarmed and Dangerous: The Radical Lives & Times of Daniel and Philip Berrigan'', a dual biography of the antiwar Catholic priests (January, 1997).

No Victory Parades came out in 1971, before broad public awareness of wanton killing of South Vietnamese citizens and the mounting unpopularity of the war at home. It was one of the first books about the war to describe the grim and daunting prospects faced by what its author termed “the new veteran,” a soldier sent to fight an unpopular war, and for which he was unlikely to be acclaimed upon his return from battle. As he wrote in the book, “Never before in American history have as many brave and loyal young men been as shabbily treated by the government that sent them to war; never before have so many of them questioned so much, as these veterans have, the essential rightness of what they were forced to do.”

“The range of interviews in the book,” said a reviewer in The 1st Casualty (published by Vietnam Veterans Against the War), “span ‘hawks’, ‘doves’, and what Polner calls the ‘haunted’. As the interviews show, all felt betrayed. Polner’s particular contribution is to try to put all this into perspective: … ‘Many of the (vets) had come from nothing to nothing, in a war they later discovered had not one single idea they could grasp... and be ready to die for. Vietnam was their fantasy world, but the reality was their return to America.’ ”

While a few reviewers struggled with Polner’s anti-Vietnam War opinions, more typical was a review by William Beauchamp. Writing in the July 31, 1971, issue of Saturday Review, Beauchamp stated that No Victory Parades “may well be the most persuasive, comprehensive, poignant indictment of the Indochina disaster published to date... It serves as an anthropological course book of catastrophic attitudes, fostered by our institutions, and swallowed by our people, toward war and the war-waging state....Murray Polner’s cool shattering reportage should be serialized on the front page of every American newspaper.”

In 2008, Polner edited, with conservative Thomas Woods Jr., a collection of American antiwar writing from 1812 to the present, We Who Dared Say No To War.

He is also the author of a biography of [|Branch Rickey], the Brooklyn Dodger executive who brought [|Jackie Robinson] into baseball and thus desegregated the game even before [|President Truman] signed an Executive Order of July 26, 1948, establishing equal opportunity in the U.S. armed forces. Polner’s book was recalled in a 2011 book by the New York newspaper columnist [|Jimmy Breslin], who credited Polner’s work as noteworthy. “Polner,” Breslin wrote, “is a friend, but I would. . . reread his work even if I hated him.”

For many years, Polner has also been the senior book review editor and a blogger for the History News Network, and contributed articles and reviews as well to LA Progressive, Hollywood Progressive, Uncommon Thoughts, The Cutting Edge, and other online publications.

Moreover, he has written several books about Jewish life, such as Rabbi: the American Experience (RW Holt), in which his portrayal of Mississippi Jewish life before and during the Civil Rights era drew considerable praise and discussion. In addition, he edited, with Stefan Merken, Peace, Justice and Jews: Reclaiming Our Tradition, a July, 2007, collection and, with Naomi Goodman, The Challenge of Shalom (May, 1994).

He was perhaps most well-known as founder and sole senior editor of Present Tense magazine, published by the [|American Jewish Committee] from 1973-1990, an editorially independent, liberal publication about Jewish life that politically was the opposite of the AJC’s neoconservative Commentary magazine. Present Tense opposed the Reagan administration's proxy war in Central America in the 1980s. And while supportive of Israel, Present Tense’s reportage questioned some of Israeli government’s policies and that of its U.S.-based Israel Lobby, especially the growth of the settlements, favoring a two-state solution with the Palestinians instead.

Present Tense was, then, a departure from the usual run of Jewish-oriented magazines, which generally followed a narrow, party line, even though to dissent from unquestioning support of the policies of the Israeli government, as a few small American Jewish groups did, could mean the possible loss of positions and of donor support, and denunciation for supposed disloyalty.

Reflecting the magazine’s independent spirit was, for example, [|Anne Roiphe's] “Blacklisting,” which included the following passage: “Not since Holland's Jews read Spinoza out of the people have Jews so quickly drawn lines of who is acceptable and who is outside, and used those lines and political weapons, one against the other.” Another piece that appeared in the magazine was Robert Spero’s “Speaking for the Jews.” Spero wrote: “A growing number of American Jews, including many inside the Jewish establishment, are fed up with the hard line views of Jewish leaders whom they did not elect and who, in any case, do not speak for them.”

[|Helen Fein’s] article, “The Holocaust—What It means, What It Doesn't,” stated: “Selling the Holocaust for political ends risks diminishing the perception of its reality and demeaning the memories of its victims. Its sellers also risk self-deception.” And, the Conservative rabbi and scholar [|Arthur Hertzberg's] piece spoke to the influence of an ideology he viewed as pernicious: “Neocon Job: The Neoconning of America.”

When the American Jewish Committee dropped its financial underwriting of the magazine, its leaders cited financial causes, but others believed that the organization had become uncomfortable with Present Tense’s leftish-liberal articles critical of the American Jewish establishment’s views. Out of work, Polner was soon hired as editor of Fellowship magazine, published by the [|Fellowship of Reconciliation]. His opposition to American Exceptionalism and what he viewed as its historic addiction to war and imperial domination led him to a close affiliation in 1968 with the Jewish Peace Fellowship, a group formed in 1941 to assist [|Conscientious Objectors]. In addition, with a colleague, Adam Simms, he started "PS: The Intelligent Guide to Jewish Affairs," a bi-monthly, liberal-left newsletter, opinionated and even satirical, lasting for more than five years.

PEOPLE AND POLITICS

Polner repeatedly urged President Obama to pardon [|Edward Snowden] and [|Chelsea Manning] (in the end Obama’s magnanimity only extended to Manning). Polner wrote, in the website LA Progressive and the History News Network, a critical piece about Irving Kristol, the founder of the neoconservative movement. At another point, Los Angeles Dodger General Manager Al Campanis asked him to write his biography because of his book on Branch Rickey, after Campanis was banished from baseball for foolishly saying on TV that blacks did not have the experience to run teams, an absurd notion. Polner saw the ban, effectively a permanent one, as an effort by professional baseball’s all-white cast of senior executives to find a scapegoat for their own history of exclusionary practices. Polner has also focused on FDR’s policies toward Jews during WWII, and the growing contemporary gap between liberal American Jews and the hard-line right wing Israelis now governing Israel. America’s military veterans are one of his frequent concerns, as are the victims of blacklist, and the murder of four Kent State students and wounding of nine others in May 1970, for which no one has ever been held accountable.

BOOK PASSAGES:

“It was in this strange world that I wandered about until reaching Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where I learned about its onetime rabbi, Charles Mantinband. ‘Jewish life is pleasant and easy in Mississippi,’ he wrote. But then came Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Freedom Riders, black and white. Rabbi: The American Experience (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1977)

“When Jackie Robinson died of diabetes and hypertension in 1972 some wrote that his coming was no big thing and wouldn't have happened sooner or later. Others, more cynical, described Rickey's driving force as greed. But the fact is that before Branch Rickey no one had done it or even seriously proposed doing it. And that is his legacy.” Branch Rickey: A Biography (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1982; updated by McFarland Publishers, 2007)

“Seven men and two women [the Catonsville draft board raiders], all but forgotten by a new generation, had raised the ante and posed thorny questions that are far from resolved. When is military intervention, governmental deceit, a nuclear first strike, of the overwhelming power of the state over individual rights justified, if at all?....To the extent that some of these are reasonable questions, then the Nine could rightly see themselves as absolved from blame. They had, after all, broken the law and served their times. Those who had dreamed up the war and filled up the earth with the dead had not.” Disarmed and Dangerous by Murray Polner and Jim O'Grady (Basic Books, 1997; Westview Press 1998)

“Never before in American history have as many brave and loyal young men been as shabbily treated by the government that sent them to war; never before have so many of them questioned so much, as these veterans have, the essential rightness of what they were forced to do.” No Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1971)

"Sadly on this Mother's Day, peace seems further away than ever. How many more war widows and grieving parents do we need?? Do we need yet another war memorial to the dead in Washington? Do we really need to continue disseminating the myth than an idealistic America always fights for freedom and democracy? On Mother's Day 2007 thousands of American soldiers have already been killed, and many more have been wounded in body and mind, not to mention tens of thousands of Iraqis. They all had mothers," We Who Dared Say No To War edited with commentary by Murray Polner and Thomas Woods, Jr., (Basic Books, 2008)

EXTERNAL LINKS

Present Tense, Archived at Yivo Intitute http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1944483

Publishers Weekly book review of Disarmed and Dangerous http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-465-03084-2

Book review of Rabbi: The American Experience (American Jewish History, 1979).

Murray Polner. "Will Ozzie Guillen Go the Same Way as Al Campanis?" History News Network, April 16, 2012

Review of Jimmy Breslin’s book on Branch Rickey (Washington Post, April 1, 2011). https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/review-branch-rickey-by-jimmy-breslin/2011/03/14/AFFmLJHC_story.html

Murray Polner papers at Swarthmore College Peace Collection:http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/DG100-150/dg113m%20polner.html

Fellowship Magazine http://archives.forusa.org/fellowship — Preceding unsigned comment added by RobertPolner (talk • contribs) 16:17, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

Hello,, I'm not sure what your question regarding editing Wikipedia may be, but if you would like to see an article on Murray Polner please see WP:AFC, or go via the article wizard. You should develop a page in draftspace before submitting it for review. Please also see your first article and ensure that the subject is notable in the Wikipedia sense. Your username might suggest a connection with the subject and you may need to follow the guidelines at WP:COI. Please return here if you need further help. Good luck. Eagleash (talk) 16:33, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

Also WP:BIO and WP:REFB. Eagleash (talk) 16:36, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

citation template
P p p er y 23:27, 7 April 2017 (UTC) I submitted a template to cite a foreign law source that I need for a page I am creating. This template wasn't available and it follows a very specific citation format (Bluebook for Israel's HCJ) - its name Template:Cite IsrSC ... I did my best to follow similar templates, but I am not sure if I got everything right. I also need a little help with the documentation - since I closely followed other cite law templates as a guide, I am not certain if these are mandatory parameters or not. It is still in AFC review and I would appreciate if someone could help me go over it. Thanks, Seraphimsystem (talk) 19:48, 7 April 2017 (UTC)


 * The template I used for reference is Template:Cite court but there are certain significant differences that make a dedicated template a better option - especially the fact that the Court name and date are formatted together in parentheses where HCJ citations should start with the Court name. Seraphimsystem (talk) 19:19, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

Nm, I got it to work Seraphimsystem (talk) 22:46, 7 April 2017 (UTC)

2017–18 NBA season by team template
Can you move the 2017–18 NBA season by team template from the talk page to the draft page for me please. 2600:8803:7A00:976A:28A8:5D6E:9558:57F6 (talk) 23:27, 7 April 2017 (UTC)


 * None of the team pages listed on the draft template exist yet, so this looks like WP:TOOSOON. I see from the log that Template talk:2017–18 NBA season by team has been deleted twice within recent weeks. See also section  above, and previous similar requests from the same IP range such as at Help desk/Archives/2017 April 3 and numerous others as listed here --David Biddulph (talk) 02:46, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
 * It's been 2 days since you last posted about this. Not til the season starts or is close to starting. Joseph2302 (talk) 07:14, 8 April 2017 (UTC)