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User:Rfl

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Penrose Tribar
Penrose Tribar

Rafał Pocztarski

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Administrator of the English Wikipedia since 2004 (original nomination)

My Contributions: All · Articles · Talk · User talk · Wiki · Wiki talk · Page Deletions · Current rights




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Shortcuts

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Rules

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Simplified ruleset: WP:SIMPLE · Policies and guidelines: WP:PG WP:POLICY WP:GUIDELINE · Five pillars: WP:FIVE WP:5P WP:FIVEPILLARS

Neutral point of view: WP:NPOV WP:NPV · Verifiability: WP:V WP:VERIFY WP:SOURCE · No original research: WP:OR WP:NOR WP:ORIGINAL

What Wikipedia is not: WP:! WP:NOT WP:WWIN

Sources

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Primary, secondary and tertiary sources: WP:PSTS WP:PRIMARY WP:SECONDARY Third-party sources: WP:THIRDPARTY WP:3PARTY WP:INDEPENDENT

Identifying reliable sources: WP:IRS WP:RS WP:RELY WP:RELIABLE WP:RELIABLESOURCES · Wikipedia:Notability: WP:N WP:NN WP:NOTE

Abuse

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Vandalism: WP:VAN WP:VAND WP:VNDL WP:VANDAL · Warning templates · Administrator intervention against vandalism: WP:AIV WP:AIAV WP:RVAN

Abuse response: WP:ABUSE WP:AbRep · Cleaning up vandalism: WP:CUV · WikiProject Vandalism studies: WP:WPVS

Requests for page protection: WP:RFPP WP:RFP WP:RPP WP:PADLOCK · Protection policy: WP:PP WP:PROTECT

Misc

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Special:WhatLinksHere

Picture of the day

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Featured pictures · visible · candidates

Indian Head gold pieces
The Indian Head gold pieces were two coin series struck by the United States Mint: a two-and-a-half dollar piece, or quarter eagle (1908–1915, 1925–1929), and a five-dollar coin, or half eagle (1908–1916, 1929). The only US coins with recessed (engraved) designs ever to enter circulation, they were the last of a long series of coins in those denominations. President Theodore Roosevelt advocated for new coin designs, and had the Mint engage his friend, the sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, to design coins that could be changed without congressional authorization. The sculptor completed an eagle ($10 piece) and double eagle before his death in 1907. Roosevelt convinced Mint Director Frank A. Leach to reproduce the eagle's design on both of the smaller coins, but recessed below the background. The job fell to Boston sculptor Bela Pratt, and after some difficulty, the Mint was able to strike the coins, though Pratt was unhappy with modifications made by the Mint's engravers. The quarter eagle enjoyed popularity as a Christmas present, but neither coin circulated much. This photograph shows the obverse (left) and reverse (right) of a quarter eagle coin struck in 1908, which is in the National Numismatic Collection at the National Museum of American History.Coin design credit: United States Mint; photographed by Jaclyn Nash

Selected anniversaries

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April 25: Liberation Day in Italy (1945); Anzac Day in Australia and New Zealand

USS Triton (SSRN-586)
USS Triton
More anniversaries:

In the news

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Current events:

Pope Francis in 2014
Pope Francis

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