— Wikipedian ♀ — | |
Name |
Lorri Brown
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Country | USA & Canada |
Current location | Canada |
Time zone | PDT |
Family and friends | |
Marital status | Married |
Education and employment | |
Occupation | Retired |
Contact info | |
lorri.brown.2019![]() |
Greetings,
My disclosure is as follows:
My participation in Wikipedia is as a volunteer editor. I am NOT a paid editor and I DO NOT solicit being paid for creating articles. I have a COI with the article Kent Tate, the Canadian Visual Artist/Filmmaker, as a family member. I've been indirectly involved in the arts for many years. I am currently active with this interest. I am retired. My primary interest in Wikipedia has been to create Living Person Biographies for Canadian Visual Artists and Filmmakers. I've created the following new articles that I've either submitted to AfC (Articles for Creations) for review or have posted directly to the Wikipedia main space directly. I am a member of the Women in Red project and have found many subjects listed there. My goal is to create or contribute to well researched, accurate and respectful articles for Canadian artists:
Additionally, I've created and/or contributed to the following film festival and film awards pages:
Thank you, LorriBrown (talk) 14:20, 27 May 2020 (UTC)
Today's motto...
→ Non numerantur, sed ponderantur
("They are not counted, but weighed")
Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Grading scheme
Justice was a pre-dreadnought battleship built for the French Navy in the early 1900s. She was the second member of the Liberté class, which included three other vessels and was a derivative of the preceding République class. Justice carried a main battery of four 305 mm (12 in) guns, with ten 194 mm (7.6 in) guns for her secondary armament. On entering service, Justice became the flagship of the 2nd Division of the Mediterranean Squadron, participating in the training routine of squadron and fleet maneuvers and cruises, as well as several naval reviews. During World War I, Justice was used to escort troopship convoys carrying elements of the French Army from North Africa to face the Germans invading northern France and also steamed to contain the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the Adriatic Sea, taking part in the minor Battle of Antivari. She was sent to the Black Sea after the war to oversee the surrender of German-occupied Russian warships, and then briefly became a training ship, before being decommissioned in the early 1920s. This photograph shows Justice in 1909 near New York City.Photograph credit: Detroit Publishing Company; restored by Adam Cuerden
Wikipedia editor
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