User:Innotata/sandbox
To-do list
[edit]Immediate agenda:
- → chestnut sparrow, Iago sparrow
- →
- → Indian Legion, Mariana mallard
- African Passer species, ornithologists, EDGE species, German generals, articles on militaries in crisis (Ukraine, Afghanistan, etc), Richard Crossley, Epinephelus adscensionis
Areas to focus on: sparrows, waterfowl, animals from my part of the world.
Start
- New Ulm Battery
- articles from WP:WikiProject Birds/Article requests, WP:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/Skysmith's list of missing articles/Animals, User:Gobonobo/Gender Gap red list
- List of amphibians of the Seychelles
- Fauna of Socotra
Make maps
- Afghan snowfinch, based on individual breeding, winter, vagrancy (a la Sibley) records
- All the Passer!
India in WWII sources
[edit]- Hauner, Milan (1981). India in Axis Strategy: Germany, Japan, and Indian Nationalists in the Second World War. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta. ISBN 3-12-915340-3.
- Mookerjee, Girija K. (1968). Europe at War (1938–1946): Impressions of War, Netaji, and Europe. Meerut: Meenakshi Prakashan.
Enwiki images
[edit]New Ulm
[edit]- http://www.newulmtel.net/~municipal/battery/history.htm
- http://pastcasts.com/?p=143
- http://www.nujournal.com/page/content.detail/id/528630/New-Ulm-Battery-heads-to-Battle-of-Shiloh-reenactment.html?nav=5009
- http://newulmonline.com/Attractions.html
Carol Shaw-Sutton
[edit]Carol Shaw-Sutton (born 1948) is an American textile artist who works in fiber art using a variety of techniques and materials. She is a professor emeritus at California State University, Long Beach.
Early life and education
[edit]Carol Shaw-Sutton was born in Los Angeles in 1948. Both of her parents were educators, her mother in psychology and her father in history. As she has recounted, an accident when she was three years old led to her fiber arts career: she was severely burned by an exploding grill, and protected by a wool sweater she was wearing.[1]
Career
[edit]https://cdm15785.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15785coll2/id/12503/rec/217
After retiring from CSU Long Beach, she moved to Ojai, California.[1]
References
[edit]External links
[edit]