>Very low pending changes backlog

Existent refs
  •  Y "Resumption. – Department Of Industries And Trade And Commerce". Oireachtas. 6 August 1920. Archived from the original on 15 December 2020.
  •  Y "Dail Eireann Loans And Funds Bill, 1923 – The Courts Of Justice Bill, 1923 (Committee Stage Resumed)". Oireachtas. 8 February 1924. Archived from the original on 26 December 2020.
  •  Y "Gaeilge badge gets students talking" (PDF). ASTIR. Vol. 25, no. 2. 2007. p. 9. ISSN 0790-6560. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 November 2007.
  •  Y "Béal na nGael". BBC Northern Ireland (in Irish). Archived from the original on 10 February 2007.
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Bibliography

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Lake Zamkaft
Fictitious religious tradition of a sea that Mohammed crossed while on the Isra and Miraj journey
11.04 years May 16, 2012 May 31, 2023 1,077 Deletion discussion
Archived version of the hoax

(Polish: Zupa ogórkowa, [zupa ɔɡurkɔva] )

Cucumber soup is a LaTeX traditional Polish and Lithuanian soup (Polish: Zupa ogórkowa, [zupa ɔɡurkɔva] ).

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Nominations


Reviews

For future "Jordanian Writers Society" draft

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Pages that link here

  • Tayseer Sboul (investigate link between Sboul's death and Society foundation)

TCC plans

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improving adjacent articles

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Searches

Sources

Related articles

Check Abolitionist newspapers in Bleeding Kansas:

Proslavery newspapers in Bleeding Kansas:

Other


Notes

  1. ^ pg. 260: For more than two years the winds of controversy had swirled around Samuel Lecompte (1814-1888), a founder of the proslavery stronghold of Lecompton and first chief justice of Kansas Territory. As the slavery agitation reached a high pitch in 1856, he added fuel to the fire by charging a grand jury to indict the members of the “free-state” government at Topeka; sub¬ sequently he was also blamed for the so-called “sack of Lawrence. Char¬ acterized by Allan Nevins as “bibulous, hot-tempered, partisan,” Lecompte became an object of political attack in Congress as he became identified with the extreme southern faction in troubled Kansas. Kfforts to remove him were ultimately successful when, despite the southern political backing shown by this and other petitions, he was replaced by John Pettit of Indiana in March, 1859. Yet when war came, Lecompte chose the Union, remaining in Kansas and becoming a Democratic member of the legislature (1867—68) before embracing Republicanism during the 1868 campaign. James C. Malin, “Judge Lecompte and the ‘Sack of Lawrence,’ May 21, 1856,” Kansas Historical Quarterly, XX (1953), 465-94 passim, 553; George A. Root, “Ferries in Kansas: Part II—Kansas River,” ibid., II (1933), 344; Allan Nevins, Ordeal of the Union (2 vols., New York, 1947), II, 212-13, 434.
  2. ^ pg. 48: Judge Lecompte, the founder of the proslavery town of Lecompton, which he developed as a real estate speculation and got the legislature to des- ignate the capital, also invested in railroad companies with his partner, John Calhoun, the federal land agent. “To the charge of a pro-slavery bias,” Le- compte declared, “I am proud, too, of this. I am the steady friend of Southern rights under the constitution of the United States. I have been reared where slavery was recognized by the constitution of my state. I love the institution as entwining itself around all my early and late associations.”
  3. ^ pg. 79: Lecompton's name comes from Samuel LeCompte, the chief justice of the Territory and president of the town association.
  4. ^ pg. 36: The oath administered to new lawyers by Judge Samuel Lecompte swore allegiance to the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Fugitive Slave Law rather than the Constitution of the United States and the “divinity of the Christian religion.”
  5. ^ Investigate this: “Lecompte in 1875 published a lengthy and highly rhetorical article in the Troy Chief, defending in great detail his official conduct.”

    Possible citation: Lecompte, Samuel D. “A Defense By Samuel D. Lecompte.” Kansas Historical Collection, 1903-1904 8 (1904): 389-405. First published in Sol Miller's Troy Chief, February 4, 1875; concerning Lecompte’s controversial tenure as chief justice of Kansas territorial court, 1854-1859.
  6. ^ Per To Govern the Devil in Hell, LeCompte "participated". Investigate this.
  7. ^ LeCompte appears to have authorized the raid. Verify exact involvement.
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The cornetto motif as it appears in the films:
Top: Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Centre: Hot Fuzz (2007)
Bottom: The World's End (2013)