Yes, someone did remove this SandBox, previously.

I want to have a record of a transaction on WikiMedia..... hence:


DRAFT ARTICLE: International Project Management Association edit

File:Sir_Richard_Williams_portrait.JPG edit

Jim, please explain how the deletion of the image I posted of the painting by Vernon Jones can be of assistance to the Wiki-commons/Wikipedia world. I note that User:Tryphon said that link lists the image; it does not, so far as I see. I know that someone trimmed the image that I originally posted; that was silly, frankly, as it removed the context that I had left for all to see. The painting hangs in the Officer's Mess at RAAF Laverton. How many Wikipedians/Wiki-commons people have access there, as I did (and may again, but who knows when...) So, the image was lost to the Wiki world, and did not make it on the page for Williams as it appeared as the featured page on Wikipedia. I absolutely DID NOT know that was a possibility when I posted the image, but I 'fought' the deletion of the image because I knew that it was probably unique; who else can or WILL get a photo of it? Please reply, understanding that I am on a 'flaky' connection and may not reply for some days. (It is why I have not 'fought' further the removal of the image, from now months ago... my computer has been giving me grief.) Peter Ellis (talk) 14:34, 12 April 2011 (UTC)

Peter, the correct link would have been Commons:Deletion_requests/File:Sir_Richard_Williams_portrait.JPG. --Túrelio (talk) 14:40, 12 April 2011 (UTC)
Peter -- I'll work with you -- and I'm sure my colleague Túrelio will also, as best we can within the rules. None of us like deleting images, but to keep Commons "a database of 9,979,929 freely usable media files to which anyone can contribute", we must pay attention to copyright where it is called for.
I assume you understand and don't dispute the fact that the painting has a copyright which belongs to the artist and his heirs until 70 years after his death. Ownership of the copyright is completely independent of ownership of the physical painting. Since there is a copyright, the painting is a derivative work. Although there are exceptions to the copyright rules for certain kinds of works permanently hung in public places, which we call Freedom of Panorama, those exceptions cannot apply here both because the Australian rule does not include paintings and because I don't think that an Officer's Mess is "open to the public" within the meaning of the applicable law.
That leaves us with two possibilities. The first is for you to get permission from the artist or his heirs, following the procedure at Commons:OTRS. That may or may not be possible. The other is for you to construct a ... ask me on my talk page, .... already has a portrait of him.
If you chose to construct a fair use argument, you can then upload the file to WP:EN without Commons worrying about it. If you no longer have access to the file, I can temporarily undelete it here for you.
If you have further questions, feel free to ask -- as I said at the top, we're here to help.      Jim . . . . Jameslwoodward (talk to me) 15:06, 12 April 2011 (UTC)
Thanks, Jim. I thought that I had made it completely clear on the picture's description page and the deletion page that I thought that the removal of the context (frame) of the image by... well, I can't find out, now, can I... was wrong. I had quite obviously left the context -- the frame and surround. Chronologically, though, when someone asked about the author, I went out of my way on a subsequent visit to RAAF Laverton to visit the image, determine the author, and add the detail to the image's description page. I think that it was later that someone trimmed the image of its context.
You said, "Since there is a copyright, the painting is a derivative work." I assume that you mean that the picture of the painting is a derivative work. A hypothetical: Someone was taking a picture of en:Laurent Gbagbo as he is arrested, and Gbagbo happens to be holding a magazine up to his eyes -- it's obviously him, though. The owner of the magazine claims 70 years on the magazine, the owner of the image used on the front presumably has an issue, too; so, is the picture of Gbagbo rejected? What if he was wearing a suit by Zegna, the design of which is presumably covered by similar legislation? Zegna objects to the besmurching of its reputation by the showing of the image, and wants the image removed, too. Two or three grounds for removal; but, a public interest. This is murky, frankly. What if my friend had stood in front of the Williams image, and I had used the picture of her with her permission to show even more 'context'? Is there a 'reality' here that I am not understanding? Is Commons:OTRS being invoked (I've not heard of it before) because the image was cropped to lose the context?
I thought I was doing a good and right thing to put up the image, in context; and, despite what you have said, I just want to understand why my image was ditched. And, it would have made me happy, when Williams page was the featured page, to see my image there... even though I had no idea that it was a candidate. I guess the issue of the provenence of the image became the issue when someone determined that that was a possibility. Peter Ellis (talk) 12:20, 13 April 2011 (UTC)
You would probably be surprised how many people get into the Officer's Mess at RAAF Laverton, and elsewhere. Guests of the Mess officials? The Public Servants who are members of the mess? The casual visitors to the base, as I was? The civilian, contracted staff including guards? There are undoubtedly more.Peter Ellis (talk) 13:32, 13 April 2011 (UTC) And, these people were the folk I observed around the picture during the two visits sub-hour in question. Undoubtedly, there were others in the weeks/months/years when I was not present.- Peter Ellis - Talk 14:46, 13 April 2011 (UTC)

Arch McKirdy edit

References edit

External links edit

first broadcast: November 30, 1972; rebroadcast 30/31 August 2013


Alan Payne (naval architect) edit

Phoenix Collective edit

Hello, I was given details of a contact between Radio1RPH's staff member and Pip. An offer was made to conduct an interview and add some music, to make a segment for broadcast on www.Radio1RPH.org.au. I have been given such details as there are, and offer to make a "15 minute" (typically 14m30s) segment. This could also be offered to RPH stations around Australia, through the RPH Network (https://www.rph.org.au/). My thoughts for subject matter: What is "classical music"? (Yes, but... Significant new classical is played by PC); Why do we assume that music must be SEEN as well as HEARD? (Music for blind and visually disabled); Music for children (brain development) and "troubled minds" (Wayside Chapel, etc); instruments and bows, and rosins, and luthiers; etc. The interview could be on Zoom, or at the radio station on the Barton Highway, Crace, by negotiation. [BTW, I am a violinist, with Canberra's www.MarukiCommunityOrchestra.org.au ... and its Vice President/Manager.]

Golden Globe Race 2022 edit

2022 Golden Globe Race
 
Event title
Edition3nd
Event details
VenueLes Sables-d'Olonne
DatesSept 2022
Yachts'Retro' fibreglass 32-36ft
Competitors
Competitors20
← 2018

The 2022 edition of the Golden Globe Race will have 20 entrants in the Suhaili class and 10 entries in the Joshua Class. The events start in a UK port on 26 July 2022 when GGR entrants assemble ahead of a SITraN Challenge Race bound for Les Sables-d'Olonne, France, starting on Sunday 31 July 2022. The GGR Race Village will open in France on 6 August 2022. The Golden Globe Race will start from Les Sables-d'Olonne on Sunday 21 August 2022. This date commemorates the anniversary of Bernard Moitessier setting off in the original Sunday Times Golden Globe on 22 August 1968.[1]

The 2022 race has attracted 22 entrants from 12 countries. There are 7 British, 3 Australian, 2 French, 2 American, 2 South African, 1 Austria, 1 Canada, 1 Irish, 1 Italia , 1 Maltese, 1 New Zealander and 1 Norwegian.

Sailor Yacht Type
1  Aleix Selles Vidal Onsoro the Bodhisattva Rustler 36
2  Arnaud Gaist prénom Feï of Shanghaï Barbican 33 MKII (Long Keel Version)
3  Damien Guillou PRB Rustler 36
4  Daniel Gatt Zazuela Biscay 36
5  David Scott Cowper Tradewind 35
6  Edward Walentynowicz Noah’s Jest Rustler 36
7  Elliott Smith GaleForce 34
8  Ertan Beskardes Lazy Otter Rustler 36
9   Gaurav Shinde Good Hope Flying Dutchman/Baba 35
10  Graham Dalton Matmut Rustler 36
11  Guido Cantini Hannah of Cowes Vancouver 34
12  Guy deBoer Keys Spirit Tashiba 36
13  Guy Waites Sagarmatha Tradewind 35
14  Ian Herbert-Jones Puffin Tradewind 35
15  Jeremy Bagshaw Olleanna OE32
16  Kirsten Neuschäfer Minnehaha Cape George Cutter, CG36
17  Marc Cambounet Bahdlu Rustler 36
18  Mark Sinclair Coconut Lello 34
19  Matthew Wright Rustler 36
20  Michael Guggenberger Nina Biscay 36
21  Mike Smith Pingo Suhaili Replica
22  Pat Lawless Saltram Saga 36
23  Robin Davie C’est La Vie Rustler 36
24  Robin Davie C’est La Vie Rustler 36
25  Simon Curwen Clara Biscay 36
26   Confidential Confidential Confidential
27   Tapio Lehtinen Asteria Gaia 36

*As at 2021-12-27[2]

  1. ^ "GGR 2022". Golden Globe Race. Retrieved 2019-06-22.
  2. ^ "Skippers 2022". GGR2022. Retrieved 2021-12-27.