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By topic (prior to June 1, 2009):
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Dated (beginning June 1, 2009):
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031-032-033-034-035-036-037-038-039-040-041-042-043-044-045
046-047-048-049-050-051-052-053-054-055-056-057-058-059

Temp

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Note to administrators (not visible to others): I have just learned that it is possible to leave a note that is supposed to be only visible to administrators.

L. V.

Miscellany

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Casper (1995) Casper: A Spirited Beginning (1997) Casper Meets Wendy (1998) || Matty's Funday Funnies (1959–1961)
The New Casper Cartoon Show (1963–1970)
several others The Spooktacular New Adventures of Casper (1996) Casper's Scare School (2009) || several made-for-TV movies || various || toys

File:St. Mary's Academy,Meerut Cantt..jpg

Tables with citation before text.
Draft:Elmer J. Rathbun
Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/United States judges and justices#Rhode Island[1]
User:BD2412/Square brackets without correct beginning
Category:Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress; Category:American state court judge stubs; Category:United States federal judge stubs‎
Talk:List of political and geographic subdivisions by total area/Progress

Possible

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CoCo (band), Uptown (band), State Property (band), TRU (band), Sharp (South Korean band)

HSBC announced Monday that Robert Werner, a former head of the Treasury Department agencies responsible for sanctions against terrorist financing and money laundering, will begin a new role at HSBC as head of financial crime compliance and become the bank's money-laundering reporting officer. Werner has been head of global standards assurance since August.[2]


South Dakota source.[9]

User:BD2412/TLA, User:BD2412/TLA-R
User:BD2412/sandbox/Potential surname pages
File:The District of Columbia in United States.svg (filespace page can not be moved to non-filespace)

Template:Ds/topics.json

Too old

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an insource search for "birth date and age\|18" to search for people born in the 19th century that are allegedly still alive. This will more likely show that the wrong template is being used, or some other error, or commented-out templates. You can do the same thing for birth years starting with 190. There are lots of commented-out templates in the results.

Here's how to do a cross-category search with PetScan. Change the year in the Categories box to modify the search.

Our search box can also do this simple case: incategory:"Living people" incategory:"1920 births".

d:Q23074256 offers 1909 or 1917. both allegedly imported from enwiki.

Notability for cases

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Proposed notability guideline for legal cases.

A legal case is an occurrence wherein two or more persons (called parties) have a dispute which at least one seeks to resolve by filing a claim with a court of law or other dispute resolution body. Legal cases are ubiquitous, with thousands of cases being filed around the world every day. Legal cases are generally not notable, but in rare instances a case may be notable either because it involves notable people or arises out of notable events, or because the decision in the case establishes an important precedent that is followed by other courts and commented on by legal scholars. In even rarer instances, a case may become notable because it encompasses a strange or quirky set circumstances that draw popular attention, even though the prosecution and resolution of the case are otherwise unremarkable.

Wish list

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  • Academy Award-winning Wikimedia theatrically released feature-length documentaries on scientific and historic subjects.
  • A 24-hour Wikimedia broadcast station.
  • Brick-and-mortar Wikimedia centers in ever major city where people can come together for events, classes, or just to edit.
  • 3D printing files from Commons.
  • 3D rendering from Commons, which can be embedded in Wikipedia articles (e.g. see a Geneva mechanism or Michelangelo's David from all angles; see a tiger from all angles and see internal layer views).
  • Live cameras with 24 hour broadcasts of zoo animals, monuments, works of art. When I go to the article, Tiger, I want to see a 3D rendering, a short film, and a live camera feed of a tiger habitat in a zoo.
    Suppose we were to do a documentary on the Giant panda. What would we want to include?
    Original footage of giant pandas.
    Interviews with experts on various aspects of the lives of giant pandas.
    Computer animations of giant panda anatomy.
    Public domain stock footage of historic events involving giant pandas.

Draft/userspace pages

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Disambig resolvers

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Done but need improvement: Ancestral home, Master builder

Potential future targets: Fish and Game, Labour, Specialist, Qualification, Typology, Familiarity, Unknown

Redirects to revisit: big, tiny, gigantic, tall, short, long

People

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Top travel influencers
  1. Draft:Kate McCulley - Kate McCulley
  2. Draft:Kiersten Rich - Kiersten Rich

  1. Draft:The Planet D (The Planet D, Dave Bouskill and Debra Corbeil)

Refunded from deletion

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Murder by State

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  1. Draft:Murder in Washington, D.C., law

Climate change

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S. George Philander, Encyclopedia of Global Warming and Climate Change, Second Edition
Stephanie Parker, How climate change has affected each state
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The Evolution of Fantasy Role-Playing Games
The Monsters Know What They're Doing: Combat Tactics for Dungeon Masters
Dungeons and Dragons and Philosophy: Raiding the Temple of Wisdom

Case law

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Supreme Court cases

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Campaigns

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Other draft pages

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Subpages

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U.S. State Supreme Court justices

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Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/United States judges and justices
The Green Bag
Finished

Other

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Presidential initials

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Legacy drafts

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User:DGG drafts

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Visit/revisit

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most bonus links
dab-to-dab bonus

Check again: (bonus list)

NOTE: Dabsolver is now at http://dispenser.homenet.org/~dispenser/view/Dab_solver.

LNF-JLNF-D1LNF-D2LNF-D3LNF-D4LNF-D5LNF-L
B /30Blue/Green•/37Two-name•/80/85Cabinet
Qwerfjkl/sandbox/55‎toolforge:missingredirectsprojectUser:Certes/Reports/R from sort name
/01Utilities•/02Various•/03Draft Check 2024•/04Draft Check 2023•/05
/06Mo/Md•/07Tax Ct.•/08Ark•/09/10Judge deaths
/11x/12sort check•/13BH•/14/15MS.1
/16MS.2•/17MS.3•/18Del sort•/19DC arch•/20Title dabs
/21Canal Zone•/22The dabs•/23Nev. Terr.•/24/25Utah
/26Palindromes•/27Polb•/28Casenames•/29/30EB COI?
/31/32MT•/33RI•/34Mid check•/35M.I. dabs
/36½Del sort•/372-name•/38/39/40FlaA
/41TN/LA/TX•/42MCU/DC•/43/44/45Toons
/46/47/48/490918•/50Multimedia
/51AK Terr•/52Dennis•/53Pa. Sup.•/54FA drafts•/55
/56/57/58/59/60Unambig check
/61JD•/62/63/64/65
/6667/68/69/70
/71/72/73/74/75
/76/77/78/79/80
/81/82/83/84/85
/86/87/88/89/902LC•/PDSFDT
Archive

Last-name-first redirects

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For hundreds of years, reference works tended to list human names by last name, comma, first name (as in Washington, George). Common sense supports creating redirects following this formula, as some readers may expect to be able to find names this way.

Wikithings To Do

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Wearing the t-shirt that I won for my work in the September 2014 disambiguation contest.
Wearing the t-shirt that I won for my work in the March 2015 disambiguation contest.

WikiProjects

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  1. List of United States federal judges by longevity of service
  2. Wikipedia:WikiProject United States courts and judges/Court evaluations
  3. Special:PrefixIndex/User:Polbot/scrap/
  4. John J. Gore
  5. Complete List of courts of the United States (including info from User:Postdlf/courts).
  6. List of United States federal courthouses‎
  7. Wikipedia:WikiProject United States courts and judges/courthouses
    1. Wikipedia:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places/GSA federal building links
  8. Wikify biographies from List of Judges of the United States Tax Court.
  9. Pages that link to "Template:Cleanup FJC Bio"
  10. Tidy List of impeachment investigations of United States federal judges‎

The work just keeps right on rolling along.

Under the banner of Wikipedia:WikiProject Law, we will make Wikipedia the world's most comprehensive internet source of free legal information.

  1. List of U.S. state constitutional provisions allowing self-representation in state courts.
  2. /Tax protesters - the role of courts.
  3. Make sure that all court cases have citations.
  4. Fill in Postdlf's court case infoboxes for all of my court cases (and then for everyone elses).
  5. Add Category:United States courts of appeals cases to all U.S. Court of Appeals cases.
  6. Fix errant links to Supreme court.
  7. Case articles to do:
  8. Fix up United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp.

Ongoing labors

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Templates
Portals
Categories

Pumping out the disambig fixes.
  1. Regular reports
    1. Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Candidates for disambiguation by extending link
    2. User:RussBot/Invalid redirect hatnotes
    3. Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Possible hatnote disambiguation links
    4. Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Potentially intentional dablinks
  1. Projects
    1. Recently added disambiguation pages with links
    2. Questionable redirects to disambiguation pages
    3. Incomplete dabs, Compound dab titles, Categories with dabs
    4. User:RussBot/Disambiguation not needed/001 and User:RussBot/Disambiguation not needed/002
    5. User:RussBot/Foo of Bar dab pages/001
    6. User:RussBot/Plural dab pages/001
    7. Wikipedia:Database reports/Broken section anchors
  2. Populate List of political and geographic subdivisions by total area
  3. Category:Copy to Wikiquote
  4. Chip away at Wikipedia:Disambiguation pages with links:
    1. Pages to de-disambiguate: CCTV International
    2. Long term disambig projects (need articles written): Capacity, Ward
    3. Disambig maintenance: Oscar, Phoenix, Ainu, Battery, Crest, Dean, Hart, Mohawk, Pantheon, Rancid, Sam, Vulcan, NASL.
      1. Non-disambig pages with frequent erroneous links: judgment, Supreme Court.
  5. Keep an eye on new anonymous edits
  6. Condemn spamvertisers to Wiki-Hell.
  7. Keep an eye on this and various things from the list and the guide.
  8. Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)/Archive 100#Offering a prize for an editing contest.

Other specific tasks

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  1. Provide articles for red links on the following pages:
    1. Most wanted law articles
    2. Notable terms at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Applied arts and sciences/Law (merge or redirect the rest to more appropriate places); I hammered through much of it while studying for the Bar exam.
    3. Lists of United States Supreme Court cases
    4. List of United States federal legislation
    5. List of law schools in the United States

Statement on COI

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My personal identity is on file with the WMF, and known to certain administrators whom I have met in person at Wikimania events and other in-person gatherings. Those who know of my identity can confirm my absence of conflict with respect to the topics that I edit.

Nonetheless, I am occasionally asked whether I have a conflict with respect to some article or other. I do not hesitate to edit articles that have a history of COI editing, because it would be absurd if the existence of past COI edits made clearly notable topics so toxic to address that attempts to improve them would automatically lead to suspicion, resulting in a perverse permanent stasis in a poorly-written state.

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Recently I have noticed that there were a small number of pages titled "Foo discography", tagged as disambiguation pages, and containing links to lists of different kinds of discographies by the same artist. I have changed all of these to media index pages, since they are obviously not unrelated for disambiguation purposes (see WP:DABCONCEPT), but I doubt that they need to exist at all. Of the 3,451 pages in Category:Discographies by genre, 3,379 are titled "Foo discography", while only 26 are titled "Foo albums discography". An additional 34 are titled "Foo singles discography", and some of these have long existed where the main article is titled "Foo albums discography".

An example of a page currently presented as an index of only a few links is Mariah Carey discography, which states that the title may refer to Mariah Carey albums discography, Mariah Carey singles discography, and Mariah Carey videography. Putting aside the question of whether "discography" refers to a videography at all, it is incorrect to suggest that the term "discography" refers to one or the other kind of recording, as opposed to referring to both kinds of recording combined. By contrast, see Annie discography for a proper disambiguation page containing links to multiple unrelated artists or collections that happen to share the name "Annie". For this reason, and because many of these pages only have links to two or three articles collecting different kinds of recordings by the same artist, I do not think they need to exist at all. In each case, I would presume that the discography most likely to be sought was the album discography (since most tracks released as singles are also released on albums), and would move all articles currently titled "Foo albums discography" to "Foo discography", with a hatnote to indicate the existence of a separate "Foo singles discography" as needed.

WP:ATA proposal for disambiguation pages

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Claiming that the search function can substitute for a human name disambiguation page.

A frequent argument made with respect to disambiguation pages for human names (or HNDIS pages) is that if the page is deleted, searchers could just use the Wikipedia search function to find people sharing that name. This sounds good in theory, if the search function operated to isolate people with a given combination of given name and surname, but it does not actually work that way.

Notes

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Non-dab pages with dab-tagged links:

  • Soul
  • Abdul Kadir
  • Sam Sloan
  • Insignificance
  • Abdul Majid

Need a study done on the utility of disambiguation pages versus hatnotes.

It is important to distinguish between CEOs and the companies they are affiliated with. Bad acts attributed to companies or their other employees should not be included in articles on the CEO unless reliable sources equate these specific actions of the company with the actions of the CEO. Government letters and notices sent to CEOs in their capacity as CEO of a company should not be used as sources on the pages of the individual.

Admin awards?

A heavy metal proposition

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From time to time we have discussed the possibility of asking editors to fix disambiguation links being added to articles before the changes including the link are saved. However, we have never actually tested out such a scheme with an actual disambiguation term. I propose that we initiate such a test with the disambiguation page, Heavy metal. This is one of the most frequently linked disambiguation pages due to Wikipedia's extensive catalog of articles in the heavy metal music genre, and thorough coverage of the heavy metals in chemistry articles. Although there are several other meanings, these are the two that are by far the most likely intended when a link is made.

Comment on cases

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The question has come up of whether an article on a legal case can rely on the statement of facts given by the court. The discussion that followed resulted in the articulation of some useful principles to guide this inquiry.

In articles about judicial opinions, it often does not matter whether the facts stated in the opinion are "true" or not; they are the facts on which the court based its opinion, whether the court got them right or not. A practicing lawyer, or judge deciding a subsequent case, would ordinarily rely on the facts that a court set forth in its decision for purposes of understanding that decision. Similarly, a Wikipedia article on a court decision would ordinarily summarize relevant facts as found by the court. If the facts of the case are non-controversial, we can ordinarily go a step further and accept that the facts as described by the court are probably what actually happened. Where the facts were disputed between the parties, then it is better to report that the court accepted the version the facts asserted by a particular party.

There are two notable exceptions to this principle. First, there are cases that arise from important historical events or in connection with notable historical figures, such as Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803), United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683 (1974), and , Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46 (1988). The judicial machinations of the early 1800s Congress, and the facts of the 1970s Watergate investigation, obviously are of historical significance in many other contexts besides just the court's analysis in that one case. The facts of the 1980s dispute between a leading televangelist and a widely circulated pornographic magazine are significant to articles on the respective subjects.

Second, certain cases about mundane events nevertheless become unusually celebrated, perhaps due to their importance in establishing principles of law. Examples include Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co., 248 N.Y. 339, 162 N.E. 99 (1928), in which a woman was injured by events that occurred while she was attempting to board a train at the Long Island Rail Road's Jamaica station East New York station one day in 1924, Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963), in which a man was accused of breaking into a pool hall and stealing a small amount of cash and cigarettes. What happened to Mrs. Palsgraf, and what Mr. Gideon was accused of, are things that are not of any historical significance whatsoever except to the extent it affected the outcomes of their court cases, and the facts that affected the outcomes are those that the respective courts believed to be true, regardless of what later historical research may reveal. However, because this cases are well-known among lawyers, there are additional sources for the underlying facts, which may be helpful to fill our or supplement the facts as found by the court. Such additional sources are not essential to every case-related article, but may be helpful for some of them. Palsgraf, in particular, is an unusual example of a case that involved a small, local, non-fatal accident, but which has attracted an enormous secondary literature of a type that most other cases will be unable to match. Much of that secondary literature revolves around the specific question of whether the facts as reported in the opinions corresponded with what actually happened that morning.

Templating of IP talk pages

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Templating of IP talk pages has been discussed and approved. Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals)/Archive 110#Bot blank and template really.2C really.2C really old IP talk pages. Common ancient IP talk page link indicators:

Examples: User talk:24.59.23.158 User talk:198.188.11.148

User:VoABot II

Disambiguation nightmares

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A disambiguation nightmare is a disambiguation page for which it is very difficult to fix the incoming links because topics on the page are excessive, poorly described, poorly delineated, overlapping, or generally incomplete. A disambiguation nightmare can occur for a common human name like John Smith because there are so many people by that name that it is very difficult for a reader coming to that page to quickly find the John Smith mentioned in an article linking to the page.

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I have decided to put on a mini-contest within the November 2013 monthly disambiguation contest, on Saturday, November 23 (UTC). I will personally give a $20 Amazon.com gift card to the disambiguator who fixes the most links on that server-day (see the project page for details on scoring points). Since we are not geared up to do an automated count for that day, at 00:00, 23 November 2013 (UTC) (which is 7:00 PM on November 22, EST), I'll take a screenshot of the project page leaderboard. I will presume that anyone who is not already listed on the leaderboard has precisely nine edits. At 01:00, 24 November 2013 (UTC) (8:00 PM on November 23, EST), I'll take a screenshot of the leaderboard at that time (the extra hour is to give the board time to update), and I will determine from that who our winner is. I will credit links fixed by turning a WP:DABCONCEPT page into an article, but you'll have to let me know me that you did so. Here's to a fun contest. Note that according to the Daily Disambig, we currently have under 256,000 disambiguation links to be fixed. If everyone in the disambiguation link fixers category were to fix 500 links, we would have them all done - so aim high! Cheers!

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I propose to amend Wikipedia:Redirect#Do not "fix" links to redirects that are not broken to permit "fixing" links from potentially ambiguous redirects, where doing so makes it easier to find and fix mistaken links to that redirect.

For example, CIA redirects to Central Intelligence Agency, and it is not disputed that the primary topic of "CIA" is "Central Intelligence Agency"; nevertheless, there are many other lesser-known meanings of "CIA" to which editors sometimes intend to link, such as The Culinary Institute of America, Chartered Institute of Arbitrators, and Calgary International Airport. In order to find and fix accidental links to CIA that are intended for one of these other meanings, I would like to change all existing links intended to point to Central Intelligence Agency to piped, direct links to that target (i.e., [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] links).

I would further like to do something similar for primary topic titles for which other prominent uses exist. For example, links are often made to Apple and Mouse that are intended for Apple Inc. and Mouse (computing). I would like to change all of the links that are intended to point to Apple and Mouse into redirects that are piped through Apple (fruit) and Mouse (animal), so that it will be easier to find and fix accidental links to these pages that are intended for the other pages at issue.

DAB AWB wish list

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I would like:

  • AWB disambiguation to recognize disambiguation redirect titles.
  • AWB disambiguation to fix titles in {{disambiguation needed|Foo}} templates.
  • The ability to get all the "what links here" lists for a list of articles at once.
  • The ability to generate lists of solutions for multiple disambiguation links at once, and see those in the disambiguation window.
  • Recognize and fix dab links in {{sortname}} templates.

DAB points

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With close to a million incorrect links to fix, the most effective way to do it is with a program like AWB that loads up all links to a particular page. By excluding the tens of thousands of intentional links from this process, we save enough time that we are actually finally getting ahead of the curve. As long as there are disambiguation pages, there will be errant links to them, and we will need some means to avoid the distraction of those intentional links.

A redirect that does not contain the phrase "(disambiguation)" would not show up on the "what links here" page as redirecting through a "foo (disambiguation)" page. For a page like John Smith, if the dozens of intentional incoming links did not redirect through John Smith (disambiguation), people trying to fix incorrect links would waste hours checking pages containing intentional links that could not be fixed.

In Darmok, Data was not very helpful just reeling off a list of topics with no sense of relative usefulness to the situation at hand.

Discounting IP votes

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See [7]

Lists of state supreme court justices

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[8]

State Supreme court redirects

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Possible new judge categories

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berries

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Tidbits

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Gordon Grundy was the president of Studebaker Canada Ltd. in 1966, but the company failed to earn profits sufficient to justify continued investment, and was closed.

Todd Wood, commanding officer of the 184th Infantry Regiment, was the highest ranking United States military officer to be killed in the War in Iraq.

http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Committee_Grills_Nominee.htm

On January 24, 1925, five days after the Senate Judiciary Committee had recommended Stone's confirmation, Senator Thomas J. Walsh—Wheeler's Montana colleague and legal counsel—convinced the Senate to return the nomination to committee for further review. Although President Coolidge refused to withdraw the nomination, he agreed to an unprecedented compromise. He would allow Stone to become the first Supreme Court nominee in history to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee. On January 28, 1925, Stone's masterful performance during five hours of public session testimony cleared the way for his quick confirmation. Not until 1955, however, did the Senate Judiciary Committee routinely adopt the practice, based on the precedent established by the Stone nomination, of requiring all Supreme Court nominees to appear in person.

a Maryland Transit Administration bus route from North Avenue by Calvert Street|North Calvert Street in the north end (behind the old 1912 Baltimore Polytechnic Institute high school building - now the Alice G. Pinderhughes administrative headquarters of the Baltimore City Public Schools) in the mid-town area (near the newly developed and designated "Station North" district) through the downtown central business district, past the "Inner Harbor" and old South Baltimore/Federal Hill peninsula, across the Hanover Street Bridge and the Middle Branch of the Patapsco River, to East Patapsco Avenue, the main northwest-southeast commercial strip of the adjacent community to the west of "The Bay", known as Brooklyn, where the line runs a circuitous route after turning right (to the south) through the Brooklyn residential streets up 10th Street to Church Street then to the intersection of the Curtis Bay neighborhood's main commercial drive - Pennington Avenue and Spruce Street in the northeastern corner of the Curtis Bay residential area in Baltimore, Maryland. Evolved 130 years from the former Baltimore and Curtis Bay Railroad line of electrified streetcars first began running in 1893 after the mid-century became the old Number 6 line from the days of the streetcars of the old United Railways and Electric Company which merged out of several competing lines in 1899 to the later successor merged Baltimore Transit Company after 1935. The modern state MTA was formed after the state takeover of the BTC in 1968. By the mid-1980's, the old Number 6 line was split into several routes, #61, #62 and #64 serving different southern ends and terminuses of the old combined line in various sectors of the surrounding southern Baltimore neighborhoods of Brooklyn-Curtis Bay-Fairfield-Wagner's Point and the U.S. Coast Guard Yard at Arundel Cove.

/P

1) Top half of a brassiere. 2) It is for horses (not oats).
The usual value.
Bond-Trek cap, Saul new cap.

WP:DAA -> WP:DFD

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I propose merging Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Article alerts into Wikipedia:Disambiguations for discussion, and setting up a bot to transclude ongoing AFD discussions into the page.

http://www.uscfc.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/court_info/20130813_rules/13.08.30%20Final%20Version%20of%20Vaccine%20Rules.pdf

http://www.uscfc.uscourts.gov/guidelines-fast-track-settlement

http://www.nvic.org/injury-compensation.aspx

User:SharedIPArchiveBot IP talk page archives

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 Done

References

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Comment on perennial proposals

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If every person who has had anything to do with any of these proposals were to throw their hands up and decide not to bother with it again, there would be some new editor (or some old editor who was new to this particular issue) who would see this title, find it disconcerting that appears to be the less common usage, the less concise usage, the less recognizable usage, and will file a move request. I can guarantee you that, because that is how most of these move requests have started. Of course, if someone does file such a move, you can't expect editors who agree with that proposal to silence themselves just because the issue has been considered at a different time, under different circumstances. Furthermore, it is well-established practice that editors who have previously been involved in such discussions - on either side of the issue - have a right to be notified when a new discussion on the same topic is initiated. It's not a matter of any "cohort"; in a community of tens of thousands of editors, including some who have only ever heard the shorter version of this name, these nominations will happen organically.

PD judge stuff

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Alan David Lourie, circuit judge; born January 13, 1935, in Boston, MA; son of Joseph Lourie and Rose; educated in public schools in Brookline, MA; A.B., Harvard University, (1956); M.S., University of Wisconsin, (1958); Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, (1965); and J.D., Temple University, (1970); married to the former L. Elizabeth D. Schwartz; children, Deborah L. Rapoport and Linda S. Lourie; employed at Monsanto Company (chemist, 1957–59); Wyeth Laboratories (chemist, literature scientist, patent liaison specialist, 1959–64); SmithKline Beecham Corporation, (Patent Agent, 1964–70; assistant director, Corporate Patents, 1970–76; director, Corporate Patents, 1976–77; vice president, Corporate Patents and Trademarks and Associate General Counsel, 1977–90); vice chairman of the Industry Functional Advisory Committee on Intellectual Property Rights for Trade Policy Matters (IFAC 3) for the Department of Commerce and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (1987–90); Treasurer of the Association of Corporate Patent Counsel (1987–89); President of the Philadelphia Patent Law Association (1984–85); member of the board of directors of the American Intellectual Property Law Association (formerly American Patent Law Association) (1982–85); member of the U.S. delegation to the Diplomatic Conference on the Revision of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, October–November 1982, March 1984; chairman of the Patent Committee of the Law Section of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (1980–85); member of Judicial Conference Committee on Financial Disclosure, 1990–98; member of the American Bar Association, the American Chemical Society, the Cosmos Club, and the Harvard Club of Washington; recipient of Jefferson Medal of the New Jersey Intellectual Property Law Association for outstanding contributions to intellectual property law, 1998; nominated January 25, 1990, by President George Bush to be circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, confirmed by Senate on April 5, 1990, and assumed duties of the office on April 11, 1990. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 849.

Randall Ray Rader, circuit judge; born April 21, 1949 in Hastings, NE, son of Raymond A. and Gloria R. Rader; higher education: B.A., Brigham Young University, 1971–74, (magna cum laude), Phi Beta Kappa; J.D., George Washington University Law Center, 1974–78; married the former Victoria Semenyuk: legislative assistant to Representative Virginia Smith; 1978-81: legislative director, counsel, House Committee on Ways and Means to Representative [Page 840] Philip M. Crane; 1981-86: General Counsel, Chief Counsel, Subcommittee on the Constitution; 1987–88, Minority Chief Counsel, Staff Director, Subcommittee on Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights, Senate Committee on Judiciary; 1988-90: Judge, U.S. Claims Court; 1990–present, Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, nominated by President George Bush on June 12, 1990; confirmed by Senate August 3, 1990, sworn in August 14, 1990, recipient: Outstanding Young Federal Lawyer Award by Federal Bar Association, 1983; recipient: Jefferson Medal Award 2003; bar member: District of Columbia, 1978, Supreme Court of the United States, 1984, U.S. Claims Court, 1988, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, 1990. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 849-50.

William Curtis Bryson, circuit judge; born August 19, 1945, in Houston, TX; A.B., Harvard University, 1969; J.D., University of Texas School of Law, 1973; married with two children; law clerk to Hon. Henry J. Friendly, circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1973–74), and Hon. Thurgood Marshall, associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court (1974–75); associate, Miller, Cassidy, Larroca and Lewin, Washington, DC (1975–78); Department of Justice, Criminal Division (1979–86), Office of Solicitor General (1978–79, 1986–94), and Office of the Associate Attorney General (1994); nominated in June 1994 by President Clinton to be circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and assumed duties of the office on October 7, 1994. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 850.

Richard Linn, circuit judge; born in Brooklyn, NY, April 13, 1944; son of Marvin and Enid Linn; graduated in 1961 from Polytechnic Preparatory County Day School, Brooklyn, NY; received Bachelor of Electrical Engineering degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1965, and J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center in 1969; served as patent examiner at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, 1965–68; member of the founding Board of Governors of the Virginia State Bar Section on Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law, chairman, 1975; member of the American Bar Association Intellectual Property Law Section; the American Intellectual Property Law Association; the District of Columbia Bar Association Intellectual Property Section; the Virginia Bar Intellectual Property Law Section; and the Federal Circuit Bar Association; partner, Marks and Murase, L.L.P., 1977–97, and member of the Executive Committee, 1987–97; partner, Foley and Lardner, 1997–99, Practice Group Leader, Electronics Practice Group, and Intellectual Property Department, 1997–99; recipient, Rensselaer Alumni Association Fellows Award for 2000; adjunct professor of law, George Washington University Law School, 2001–present; member, Advisory Board of the George Washington University Law School, 2001–present; Master, Giles S. Rich American Inn of Court, 2000–present; nominated to be Circuit Judge by President William J. Clinton on September 28, 1999, and confirmed by the Senate on November 19, 1999; assumed duties of the office on January 1, 2000. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 851.

Timothy B. Dyk, circuit judge; nominated for appointment on April 1, 1998 by President Clinton; confirmed by the Senate on May 24, 2000; entered on duty June 9, 2000; education: Harvard College, A.B. (cum laude), 1958; Harvard Law School, LL.B. (magna cum laude), 1961; prior employment: law clerk to Justices Reed and Burton (retired), 1961–62; law clerk to Chief Justice Warren, 1962–63; special assistant to Assistant Attorney General, Louis F. Oberdorfer, 1963–64; associate and partner, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, 1964–90; partner, and chair, of Issues & Appeals Practice area (until nomination) with Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue, 1990-2000; and Adjunct Professor at Yale, University of Virginia and Georgetown Law Schools. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 851.

Sharon Prost, circuit judge; born Newburyport, MA; daughter of Zyskind and Ester Prost; educated in Hartford, CT; B.S., Cornell University, 1973; M.B.A., George Washington University, 1975; J.D., Washington College of Law, American University, 1979; admitted to practice in Washington, DC, 1979; LL.M., George Washington University School of Law, 1984; Labor Relations Specialist, U.S. Civil Service Commission, 1973–76; Labor Relations Specialist / Auditor, U.S. General Accounting Office, 1976–79; Trial Attorney, Federal Labor Relations Authority, 1979–82; Chief Counsel's Office, Department of Treasury, 1982–84; Assistant Solicitor, Associate Solicitor, and then Acting Solicitor, National Labor Relations Board, 1984–89; Adjunct Professor of Labor Law, George Mason University School of Law, 1986–87; Chief Labor Counsel, Senate Labor Committee--minority, 1989–93; Chief Counsel, Senate Judiciary Committee--minority, 1993–95; Deputy Chief Counsel, Senate Judiciary Committee--majority, 1995-2001; Chief Counsel, Senate Judiciary Committee--majority, 2001; appointed by President George W. Bush to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, September 21, 2001; assumed duties of the office, October 3, 2001; two sons, Matthew and Jeffrey. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 851.

Kimberly A. Moore, circuit judge; born in Baltimore, MD; married to Matthew J. Moore; four children; B.S.E.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1990; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1991; J.D. (cum laude), Georgetown University Law Center, 1994; Electrical Engineer, Naval Surface Warfare Center, 1988–92; Associate, Kirkland & Ellis, 1994–95; Judicial Clerk, Hon. Glenn L. Archer, Jr., Chief Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, 1995–97; Assistant Professor of Law, Chicago-Kent College of Law, 1997–99; Associate Director of the Intellectual Property Law Program, Chicago-Kent College of Law, 1998–99; Assistant Professor of Law, University of Maryland School of Law, 1999-2000; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law, 2000–04; Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law, 2004–06; nominated to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President George W. Bush. Joint Committee on Printing, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CDIR-2014-02-18/html/CDIR-2014-02-18-JUDICIARY.htm Official Congressional Directory], 2013-2014 (February 2014), p. 862-63.

Kathleen M. O'Malley, prior to her elevation to the Federal Circuit, Judge O'Malley was appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio by President William J. Clinton on October 12, 1994. Judge O'Malley served as First Assistant Attorney General and Chief of Staff for Ohio Attorney General Lee Fisher from 1992–94, and Chief Counsel to Attorney General Fisher from 1991-92. From 1985-91, she worked for Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur, where she became a partner. From 1983-84, she was an associate at Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue. During her sixteen years on the district court bench, Judge O'Malley presided over in excess of 100 patent and trademark cases and sat by designation on the United States Circuit Court for the Federal Circuit. As an educator, Judge O'Malley has regularly taught a course on Patent Litigation at Case Western Reserve University Law School; she is a member of the faculty of the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology's program designed to educate Federal Judges regarding the handling of intellectual property cases. Judge O'Malley serves as a board member of the Sedona Conference; as the judicial liaison to the Local Patent Rules Committee for the Northern District of Ohio; and as an advisor to national organizations publishing treatises on patent litigation (Anatomy of a Patent Case, Complex Litigation Committee of the American College of Trial Lawyers; Patent Case Management Judicial Guide, Berkeley Center for Law & Technology). Judge O'Malley began her legal career as a law clerk to the Honorable Nathaniel R. Jones, Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1982-83. She received her J.D. degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Law, Order of the Coif, in 1982, where she served on Law Review and was a member of the National Mock Trial Team. Judge O'Malley attended Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio where she graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1979; was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President Barack Obama in 2010. Joint Committee on Printing, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CDIR-2014-02-18/html/CDIR-2014-02-18-JUDICIARY.htm Official Congressional Directory], 2013-2014 (February 2014), p. 863.

Richard G. Taranto, practiced law with the firm of Farr & Taranto from 1989 to 2013, where he specialized in appellate litigation. From 1986 to 1989, he served as an Assistant to the Solicitor General, representing the United States in the Supreme Court. He was in private practice from 1984 to 1986 with the law firm of Onek, Klein & Farr. Judge Taranto served as a law clerk at all three levels of the federal court system. He clerked for Justice Sandra Day O'Connor of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1983 to 1984; for Judge Robert Bork of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit from 1982 to 1983; and for Judge Abraham Sofaer of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York from 1981 to 1982. Judge Taranto received a J.D. from Yale Law School in 1981 and a B.A. from Pomona College in 1977; was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President Barack H. Obama, in 2013, confirmed by the Senate on March 11, 2013 and assumed the duties of his office on March 15, 2013. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2013-2014 (February 2014), p. 864.

Raymond T. Chen, served as Deputy General Counsel for Intellectual Property Law and Solicitor at the United States Patent and Trademark Office from 2008 to 2013. He was an Associate Solicitor in that office from 1998 to 2008. From 1996 to 1998, Judge Chen served as a Technical Assistant at the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Before joining the court staff, Judge Chen was an associate with Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear from 1994 to 1996. Before entering law school, Judge Chen worked as a scientist at the law firm of Hecker & Harriman from 1989 to 1991. Judge Chen received his J.D. from the New York University School of Law in 1994 and his B.S. in electrical engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1990; was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President Barack H. Obama in 2013, confirmed by the Senate on August 1, 2013 and assumed his office on August 5, 2013. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2013-2014 (February 2014), p. 864.

Todd M. Hughes, served as Deputy Director of the Commercial Litigation Branch of the Civil Division of the United States Department of Justice from 2007 to 2013. He was the Assistant Director in that office from 1999 to 2007 and a Trial Attorney from 1994 to 1999. From 1992 to 1994, Judge Hughes served as a Law Clerk to Circuit Judge Robert Krupansky of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. He was an Adjunct Lecturer in Law at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law during the Spring, 1994 semester. Judge Hughes received a J.D. from Duke Law School in 1992, an M.A. from Duke University in 1992, and an A.B. from Harvard College in 1989; was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President Barack H. Obama in 2013, confirmed by the Senate on September 24, 2013 and assumed the duties of his office on September 30, 2013. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2013-2014 (February 2014), p. 864.

Raymond C. Clevenger, circuit judge; born August 27, 1937, in Topeka, KS; son of R. Charles and Mary Margaret Clevenger; educated in the public schools in Topeka, Kansas, and at Phillips Academy, Andover, MA; B.A., Yale University, 1959; LL.B., Yale University, 1966; law clerk to Justice White, October term, 1966; practice of law at Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering, Washington, DC, 1967-90. Nominated by President George Bush on January 24, 1990, confirmed on April 27, 1990 and assumed duties on May 3, 1990. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 852.

Daniel Mortimer Friedman, senior judge; born New York, NY, February 8, 1916; son of Henry M. and Julia (Freedman) Friedman; attended the Ethical Culture Schools in New York City; A.B., Columbia College, 1937; LL.B., Columbia Law School, 1940; married to Leah L. Lipson (deceased), January 16, 1955; married to Elizabeth M. Ellis (deceased), October 18, 1975; admitted to New York bar, 1941; private practice, New York, NY, 1940–42; legal staff, Securities and Exchange Commission, 1942, 1946–51; served in the U.S. Army, 1942–46; Appellate Section, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1951–59; assistant to the Solicitor General, 1959–62; second assistant to the Solicitor General, 1962–68; First Deputy Solicitor General, 1968–78; Acting Solicitor General, January- March 1977; nominated by President Carter as chief judge of the U.S. Court of Claims, March 22, 1978; confirmed by the Senate, May 17, 1978, and assumed duties of the office [Page 842] on May 24, 1978; as of October 1, 1982, continued in office as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97-164, 96 Stat. 50. Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 2009-2010 (2010), p. 852.

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O'Melveny

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H. K. S. O'Melveny (died November 27, 18__)

Public domain material: JUDGE O'MELVENY. A CHICAGO PAPER'S ACCOUNT OP HIS EVENTFUL CAREER.

He Was An Active Politician In War Times—A Circuit Court Judge and Member of a Constitutional Convention.

Los Angeles (Cal.) papers of November 28 contain long obituaries of exJudge H. K. S. O'Melveny, who died in that city on the previous day of apoplexy, says the Chicago Herald; also reports of interviews with judges and lawyers concerning the dead jurist, all of which showed that be was held in high esteem. O'Melveny was formerly of Illinois, but he had been for 25 years a resident of California. The lawyers of this state and the politicians of the older class will not have forgotten the man who succeeded Judge Breese on the bench of the circuit court under the constitution of 1848, and who took a prominent part in Democratic politics in the stormy times just before and after the outbreak of the civil war. O'Melveny was born in Kentucky and was partly educated in that state, but his parents moving to Illinois when he was still young, he entered the Jacksonville college and graduated with honors at that institution. He read law both under Governor Bissell and General Shields, and was admitted to the bar of St. Clair county and began practice of the profession at Bellville. The discovery of gold in the Sacramento valley of California in 1848 induced him to migrate to that country, but, instead of going into the mines, he connected himself with a law firm in Sacramento city, and, in a short time, was appointed to a minor judicial office in a department of one of the state courts. After two years spent there be returned to Illinois and resumed at Bellville the practice of the law. He had a fondness for politics, was an ardent Democrat, and soon made himself prominent and influential in the party's councils, and in election campaigns he was much in request as a powerful speaker from the stump. Mr. O'Melveny was chosen to All out the vacancy in the circuit court bench occasioned by the resignation of Sidney Breese, and he received his commission March 1, 1858. In this capacity he served acceptably until 1861, when he was elected a member of the constitutional convention, which assembled in January, 1862. The Democrats were in a majority of more than two to one iv the convention, and the leading men of the majority shared the views of John' C. Crittenden of Kentucky, that the war had been diverted to lines not originally contemplated, and was become a war merely to free the negroes; and that it could not be fought to a successful termination. O'Melveny was one of the leaders. He was placed on several of the more important committees and was chairman of the committee*on resolutions. The Democrats also had the legislature in 1862, and the first business upon its assembling in January. 1863, was the election of a United States senator in place of Stephen A. Douglas, deceased. O'Melveny was a candidate. He went to Springfield and contested the prize with 8. G. Marshall, R. T. Merrick, William C. Goudy and W. A. Richardson. Early, however, in the struggle he drew out and gave his influence to Richardson. He was opposed to what he thought to be the new objects of the war, but he was in agreement with Richardson that to take ground against the war absolutely would be a mistake. He did not, however, lose standing with his party. Indeed, he favored the so-called peace resolutions that passed the assembly, and only failed of passing the senate by an accident; and he was named in the Sixth resolution that provided commissioners "to confer with congress and to otherwise aid in securing the results" aimed at —namely, the immediate cessation of the war and the preservation of the union. In the June following he was a member of the Peoria convention. In this convention the anti-war feeling was intense, and the declarations made were extreme. Of course the party was beaten overwhelmingly in the next elections, and O'Melveny, with many other Democrats, southern born and educated, or northern born and educated in southern principles, who had found immense difficulty in approving of a war which, it was foreseen, must result in the abolition oi slavery, finally became reconciled to the inevitable and ceased their opposition. In 1808 O'Melveny removed to California and settled at Los Angeles. He in a short time obtained a remunerative law practice and earned a reputation for ability and integrity. Ho did not again take part in general politics, but allowed himself to be known as a Democrat. He was for several terms in succession elected a judge of the Superior court and Served with distinction to the bar and the people. Upon his final retirement from the bench he organized a strong law firm, and for years, and up to the time of his death, his practice was extensive and lucrative. He was concedly one of the most valued citizens of Los Angeles, and his excellent reputation extended throughout California.

Comebacks

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Man Utd - European Cup Final 1999
Liverpool - European Cup Final 2005
Man City - Premier League 2012
[9][10][11][12][13][14].
Sweden fightback against huge favourites Germany in 2014 World Cup qualifier (a time when Germany was great team) as the "perfect winning record" was broken? 4–0 with 30 minutes left became 4–4, which was huge comeback for a underdog. The equaliser coming in 93rd minute, did not make it less interesting. bbc article, the guardian.
In 1998, Day 3 of 1998–99 French Division 1, Marseille was losing at home against Montpellier, the score being 0-4 at halftime. In the second half, Marseille scored 5 times in the last half-hour of the game, with an extra-time victory goal scored by Laurent Blanc from the penalty spot. Probably the biggest come-back in French football history. official report
The 1954 FIFA World Cup Final is the only World Cup final to date in which a team came back from 2 goals behind, but that was after 8 minutes and it was 2-2 at 18 minutes: it doesn't quite have the same 'comeback' feeling to it.

Wikimania userboxes

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Historical Review of Arkansas (1911)

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Judge Lacy was succeeded by Judge Edward Cross, who had been upon the territorial bench. He was a sound lawyer, a man of the highest character, who filled many positions with honor, and who died at a patriarchal age, universally lamented; but his influence upon our jurisprudence was not sufficient to justify a sketch of his long and useful life. ... In 1845 Williamson S. Oldham succeeded Judge Lacy.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Doorn, Philip van (June 13, 2017). "This money manager aims to hold on to stocks for decades". MarketWatch.
  2. ^ Fay Hempstead, Historical Review of Arkansas (1911), p. 452.