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I have many and extremely varied interests, ranging from Judaism to Ultimate to Genealogy, and, as I live in the DC area, politics, particularly US politics (both current events and history). And more! |
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Greetings
[edit]Today is Wednesday, December 31, 2025. It's 15:27 (UT).
Wikipedia currently has 7,114,610 articles.
Today's Pic of the Day
[edit]Useful Links
[edit]
General Editing[edit]
Images, Copyright, Etc.[edit]
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Tools[edit]
Policy[edit]
Misc[edit]Redirect - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Redirect #REDIRECT [[NAME OF PAGE 2]] |
Vandalism, Protection, Afd, Etc.
[edit]- WP:RFPP
- WP:AIV
- WP:RFI (watchlist section)
- Report here {{vandal|username_or_ip}} optional brief reason for listing (keep it short) -- ~~~~
- but after giving a warning {{blatantvandal|[name of article]}}
- List of vandalism warnings
- Dealing with Vandalism - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Dealing_with_vandalism
- Spam project - Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam
- Spam message - {{subst:spam1}}
- WP:Spam
- WP:Articles for deletion
Congressional Templates
[edit]See [[Category:Succession templates]], particularly
| wikitext | renders |
|---|---|
{{start box}}
{{US House succession box |
state=Texas |
district=22 |
before=[[Ron Paul]] |
start=1984
}}
{{U.S. Senator box |
state=Washington| class=1 |
before=[[Slade Gorton]] |
start=2001 |
alongside=[[Patty Murray]] |
}}
{{end box}}
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Also:
- {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|}} gives you "Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district"
- {{CongBio|R000243|(default=name of page)}} gives you "
- United States Congress. "name of page (id: R000243)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress."
External Links: 2006 Election
[edit]These are some of the links that I frequently use in following the 2006 election. If you're reading this, and you find other useful ones, please add them!
- For all results in one place, http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2006//pages/results/states/VA/index.html, simply replace "VA" with whatever state you need
- The king - CQPolitics.com
- The Green Papers -- excellent reference resource
- TPMCafe Election Central - polls and stories
- TPMMuckraker - scandals
- Electoral Vote.com
- Nat Journal's ranked list of most likely seats to flip
- Real Clear Politics, ranked list of seats most likly to flip
- Larry Sabato's Crystal Ball
- Cook Political Report
- meta-survey of projections
- Pollster.com
Reference Templates
[edit]<ref>
{{cite news |first = |last = |author = |coauthors = |url = |title = |work = |publisher = |pages = |page = |date = |accessdate =
}}
</ref>
if you need to cite a source twice, give it a name as such:
<ref name="Source1">{{cite news | etc. }}}</ref>then to link it again use
<ref name="Source1"/>
Also
{{cite web | title=Title | work=Title of Complete Work | url=http://www.example.com | accessdate=2006-06-28}}Two columns for references?
{{reflist|2}}
See also Sources of Articles.
Other Useful Templates
[edit]- {{subst:lifetime|1904|1991|Greene, Graham}}
- {{birth date and age |1953|12|22}} yields December 22, 1953
- {{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, John}}
To Do List
[edit]- Bradley Schlozman -- good summary here
- Johnnie Burton -- part of Abramoff? See here
- Abramoff update, see here
- 2005 Georgia Voter ID Law -- or something entitled something like that
- Veco scandal -- see here
- Joey Fay, corrupt union official, involved with a number of pols in the 1940's and 1950's
- 495/Beltway: resources to update: lots of links from here
- update Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act to include information about Administration's withholding of accurate cost estimates, see, e.g., here and here
- Thomas M. Davis - article way too negative
- Ohio Investment Scandal -- apparently Coingate is only one part
- reorg Jeanine Pirro
- J. Joseph Curran, Jr. with info from here.
- Mayors of Newark, start with Leo P. Carlin and work backwards. [2]
- District of Columbia voting rights
- Frank Rudolph Wolf - stub
- Jim Moran -
- Congressional Districts, might United States House of Representatives, Massachusetts District 1 be a template? (If anybody knows of a better generic one, please let me know!)
- converting generic succession boxes to {{USRepSuccession}} for US Reps?
- Sprauges, Sprague family; Lodge family (look in political graveyard); Freulinhuysen family page...
- It'd be a big project: MZM
- Is it true that JFK had no tax cuts passed?
- He proposed tax cuts in 1962; they were passed in 1964. [3] On a larger subject: the "Domestic Policies" section of the JFK article seems pretty dismissive. Certainly it's wrong to imply, as strongly as it does, that the tax cuts passed in 1964 owed little to his efforts. John Broughton 15:02, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
- A quick scan of my old Ency. Britannica noted as accomplishments: Cuban missle crisis, which may have helped lead Kruschev to sign, 10 mos later, the nuclear test ban treaty. It notes that Congress was indeed wary of his domestic plans (one that passed was the Peace Corps) in part because of the closeness of the election -- but that Kennedy was convinced he would win a 1964 landslide against Goldwater, and get the mandate for the massive tax cut, and civil rights leglislation that he wanted. -- Sholom 21:13, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
- He proposed tax cuts in 1962; they were passed in 1964. [3] On a larger subject: the "Domestic Policies" section of the JFK article seems pretty dismissive. Certainly it's wrong to imply, as strongly as it does, that the tax cuts passed in 1964 owed little to his efforts. John Broughton 15:02, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
- RFK campaign missing some good details
- Great Society is kinda short . . .
- Interesting article at [4], which, if its information were incorporated here, would effect articles on Everglades and Fla Gov John W. Martin (where all this is missing), and adding to the following articles where it is mentioned to some degree: Lake Okeechobee, 1926 Miami Hurricane, and Herbert Hoover Dike.
- check out Template:COTWs
- Ed Buckham, Jack Abramoff, U.S. Family Network (and perhaps Tom DeLay), need some major updating b/c of the info in this article [5], does the Abramoff template need to include U.S. Family Network?
- The Chandler Family and the LA Times? [6]
- Frank Doyle Scholarships
Trivia
[edit]various 'landmarks'
[edit]- 1st edit: Roy Orbison
- 100th edit Talk:Bob Ney
- 500th edit Newark Evening News (initial version)
- 1000th edit Porter J. Goss
- 1500th edit Ed Schrock (+ pic)
- 2000th edit United States House elections, 2006
- 2500th edit Cynthia Matthews
- 3000th edit Dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy
some articles I created
[edit]- Sharon Mosher, American geologist
- Patricia Herzog, lawyer in the landmark marital property law
- Justin Maxwell, Jonathan Albaladejo, Ross Detwiler, Brandon Larson - more baseball players for, at the time, the Washington Nationals
- Judah Nadich, Rabbi, chair of Rabbinical Assembly, helped Holocaust victims.
- Paul L. Troast, 1st chair of NJ Turnpike, filed gov candidate
- Template:Dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy and some of the players: Monica Goodling & J. Scott Jennings
- Leonard Ruben, long time Montg. County, Md., judge
- Margaret Chiara, Daniel Bogden, two US Attorneys fired
- Michael A. Battle Director of EOUSA in DOJ (some involvement with Dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy).
- 1977 Hanafi Muslim Siege
- Jeralyn Merritt - defense attorney, creator of TalkLeft blog
- Cathy L. Lanier - first female to head (and current) DC Police cheif
- Anita Alpern - in 1970's, the highest ranking woman in the federal career service
- Thomas N. Downing Virginia Congressman
- Ohio 13th congressional district election, 2006
- Nevada 2nd congressional district election, 2006
- California 11th congressional district election, 2006
- Colorado 5th congressional district election, 2006
- Joel T. Broyhill (congressman)
- Arizona 8th congressional district election, 2006
- Georgia 4th congressional district election, 2006 (Cynthia McKinney loses in runoff)
- Pennsylvania 7th congressional district election, 2006 (Curt Weldon v Joe Sestak)
- Virginia 2nd congressional district election, 2006 (Phillip Kellam v incumbent Thelma Drake)
- John E. Fogarty congressman
- Phil Hare running for Congress
- Roger Stillwell another character in the Abramoff scandal
- Jack Abramoff/CNMI
- Christine Jennings running for congress in Katherine Harris's old seat
- Sam Sparks federal judge, ruled on one fo Tom DeLay's cases
- Phillip Kellam member of local prominent family, running for congress
- Donna Edwards local activist, came within a whisker of beating Albert Wynn in Dem primary in 2006, then beat him, and won the general to become a Congresswoman in 2008.
- Balor Moore baseball player (first player drafted by the expansion Montreal Expos)
- William Pickering (governor) of Washington Territory
- Lew Anderson final actor to portray Clarabell the Clown on Howdy Doody
- Leo P. Carlin mayor of Newark
- Dave McCurdy Congressman from Oklahoma
- Andrew Jacobs, Jr. and Andrew Jacobs Congressmen from Indiana
- Jonathan H. Wallace Congressman
- William A. Newell Congressman, and governor of two states (NJ and Wash Terr)
- Benjamin Franklin Howey, John Runk, Samuel G. Wright Congessmen from NJ
- George F. Fort, Charles C. Stratton Governors of NJ
- Newark Evening News
- Template:Essex County, New Jersey
- Camelback Ski Area, in the Poconos (Pa.)
- Richard Warren passenger on the Mayflower (and ancestor of my wife) -- my first article
Parsha of the Week
[edit]Jacob lived in Egypt 17 years, and lived to be 147 years old. When Jacob’s death drew near, he called his son Joseph and asked him to put his hand under Jacob’s thigh and swear not to bury him in Egypt, but to bury him with his father and grandfather. Joseph agreed, but Jacob insisted that he swear to, and so he did, and Jacob bowed.

Later, when one told Joseph that his father was sick, Joseph took his sons Manasseh and Ephraim to see him. Jacob sat up and told Joseph that God appeared to him at Luz, blessed him, and told him that God would multiply his descendants and give them that land forever. Jacob adopted Joseph’s sons as his own and granted them inheritance with his own sons. Jacob recalled how when he came from Paddan, Rachel died on the way, and he buried her on the way to Ephrath, near Bethlehem. Jacob saw Joseph's sons and asked who they were, and Joseph told him that they were the sons whom God had given him in Egypt, so Jacob asked Joseph to bring them near so that he might bless them.

Jacob's sight had dimmed with age, so Joseph brought his sons near, and Jacob kissed them and embraced them. Jacob told Joseph that he had not thought to see his face, and now God had let him see his children, as well. Joseph took them from between his knees, bowed deeply, and brought them to Jacob, with Ephraim in his right hand toward Jacob's left hand, and Manasseh in his left hand toward Jacob's right hand. But Jacob laid his right hand on Ephraim, the younger, and his left hand on Manasseh, the firstborn, and prayed that God bless the lads, let Jacob’s name be named in them, and let them grow into a multitude. It displeased Joseph that Jacob laid his right hand on Ephraim, and he lifted Jacob's right hand to move it to Manasseh the firstborn, but Jacob refused, saying that Manasseh would also become a great people, but his younger brother would be greater. Jacob blessed them, saying Israel would bless by invoking God to make one like Ephraim and as Manasseh. Jacob told Joseph that he was dying, but God would be with him and bring him back to the land of his fathers, and Jacob had given him a portion (shechem) above his brothers, which he took from the Amorites with his sword and bow.
Jacob gathered his sons and asked them to listen to what would befall them in time. Jacob called Reuben his firstborn, his might, and the first-fruits of his strength; unstable as water, he would not have the best because he defiled his father’s bed. Jacob called Simeon and Levi brothers in violence, prayed that his soul not come into their council — for in their anger they slew men and beasts — and cursed their descendants to be scattered throughout Israel. Jacob called Judah a lion's whelp and told him that he would dominate his enemies, his brothers would bow before him, and his descendants would rule as long as men came to Shiloh. Zebulun’s descendants would dwell at the shore near Sidon, and would work the ships. Jacob called Issachar a large-boned donkey couching between the sheep-folds, he bowed his shoulder to work, and his descendants would dwell in a pleasant land. Jacob called Dan a serpent in the road that bites the horse's heels, and he would judge his people. Raiders would raid Gad[clarification needed], but he would raid on their heels. Asher's bread would be the richest, and he would yield royal dainties. Jacob called Naphtali a hind let loose, and he would give good words. Jacob called Joseph a fruitful vine by a fountain whose branches ran over the wall, archers shot at him, but his bow remained firm; Jacob blessed him with blessings of heaven above and the deep below, blessings of the breasts and womb, and mighty blessings on the head of the prince among his brethren. Jacob called Benjamin a ravenous wolf that devours its prey.
And Jacob charged his sons to bury him with his fathers in the cave of Machpelah that Abraham bought and where they buried Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, and where he buried Leah. And then Jacob gathered his feet into his bed and died.
Joseph kissed his father's face and wept. Joseph commanded the physicians to embalm Jacob, and they did so over the next 40 days, and the Egyptians wept for Jacob 70 days. Thereafter, Joseph asked Pharaoh’s courtiers to tell Pharaoh that Jacob had made Joseph swear to bury him in the land of Canaan and ask that he might go up, bury his father, and return. Pharaoh consented, and Joseph went up with all Pharaoh’s court, Egypt's elders, chariots, horsemen, and all Joseph’s relatives, leaving only the little ones and the flocks and herds behind in the land of Goshen. At the threshing-floor of Atad, beyond the Jordan River, they mourned for his father seven days, and the Canaanites remarked at how grievous the mourning was for the Egyptians, and thus the place was named Abel-mizraim. Jacob’s sons carried out his command and buried him in the cave of Machpelah, and the funeral party returned to Egypt.
With Jacob’s death, Joseph's brothers grew concerned that Joseph would repay them for the evil that they had done, and they sent Joseph a message that Jacob had commanded him to forgive them. When the brothers spoke to Joseph, he wept, and his brothers fell down before him and declared that they were his bondmen. Joseph told them not to fear, for he was not God, and even though they had intended him evil, God meant it for good, to save many people. Joseph spoke kindly to them, comforted them, and committed to sustain them and their little ones.
Joseph lived 110 years, saw Ephraim's children of the third generation, and grandchildren of Manasseh were born on Joseph's knees. Joseph told his brothers that he was dying, but God would surely remember them and bring them out of Egypt to the land that God had sworn to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Joseph made the children of Israel swear to carry his bones to that land. So Joseph died, and they embalmed him, and put him in a coffin in Egypt.
Hebrew-English Text
Hear the parshah chanted
Commentary from the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the American Jewish University (Conservative)
Commentary from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (Conservative)
Commentary by the Union for Reform Judaism (Reform)
Commentaries from Project Genesis (Orthodox)
Commentaries from Chabad.org (Orthodox)
Commentaries from Aish HaTorah (Orthodox)
Commentaries from the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation (Reconstructionist)
Commentaries from My Jewish Learning (trans-denominational)
Commentaries from Aleph Beta Academy