I like these! I'd be a little wary though about assuming our audience is American (for example, I didn't know what the Alamo actually was until I read Ed's post ;) )
These look good though, since the target for this I imagine is indeed Americans. Joe On 2 October 2015 at 22:55, Jeff Elder <[email protected]> wrote: > > Posted in comments on banned books: Some men are born mediocre, some men > achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With > Major Major it had been all three. https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Catch-22 > > Going up at 4: > > Students in Taiwan are making the Chinese Wikipedia more ethnologically > diverse. http://buff.ly/1P9MO5N > > For Facebook on Saturday: > Wikipedians of the world, in what city are you seeing this post? > > For Ed's Texas Revolution blog post on Facebook (today): > Everyone remembers the Alamo, but there's much more than that to the Texas > Revolution, started this day in 1835. That's why one Wikipedia editor > invested hundreds of hours on this article. > > For Ed's Texas Revolution blog post on Twitter (today): > Everyone remembers the Alamo, but there's much more than that to the Texas > Revolution, started this day in 1835. > > > > > > Jeff Elder > Digital communications manager > Wikimedia Foundation > 704-650-4130 > @jeffelder <https://twitter.com/JeffElder> > @wikipedia <https://twitter.com/wikipedia> > The Wikimedia blog <https://blog.wikimedia.org/> > > _______________________________________________ > Social-media mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/social-media > > -- *Joe Sutherland* Communications Intern [remote] m: +44 (0) 7722 916 433 | t: @jrbsu <http://twitter.com/jrbsu> | w: JSutherland <https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:JSutherland_(WMF)>
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