Wikipedia:Wikipedia as a press source 2005 and Donovan McNabb: Difference between pages

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Wikipedia is increasingly being used as a source in the world press—articles citing Wikipedia have been published in [[Australia]], [[Austria]], [[Canada]], [[Ethiopia]], [[Germany]], [[Indonesia]], [[Iran]], [[Ireland]], [[Israel]], [[New Zealand]], [[Norway]], [[Pakistan]], [[Russia]], [[Serbia and Montenegro]], [[Singapore]], [[Switzerland]], [[Sweden]], the [[United Kingdom]], and the [[United States]].
{{Infobox NFL player
|Color=#123543
|fontcolor=White
|Name=Donovan McNabb — No. 5
|Image=Donovan McNabb.jpg
|Caption=Donovan McNabb signing a football jersey for a fan.
|Nickname=McChoke and McPuke
|DateOfBirth={{birth date and age|1976|11|25}}
|Birthplace={{flagicon|USA}} [[Chicago, Illinois]]
|DateOfDeath=
|Deathplace=
|Height_ft=6
|Height_in=2
|Weight_lbs=240
|Position=[[Quarterback|QB]]
|College=[[Syracuse University|Syracuse]]
|DraftedYear=1999
|DraftedRound=1 / Pick 2
|Career Highlights=Y
|CFLAllStar=
|ProBowls=[[2001 Pro Bowl|2000]], [[2002 Pro Bowl|2001]], [[2003 Pro Bowl|2002]], [[2004 Pro Bowl|2003]],<br /> [[2005 Pro Bowl|2004]]
|Awards=2004 NFC Offensive<br /> Player of the Year
|Honors=
|Retired #s=
|Records=
|Stats=Y
|PFR=McNaDo00
|DatabaseFootball=MCNABDON01
|NFL=133361
|CBS=
|ESPN=
|SportsIllustrated=
|years=1999–''present''
|teams=[[Philadelphia Eagles]]
|CollegeHOF=
|HOF=
}}
'''Donovan Jamal McNabb''' (born [[November 25]], [[1976]] in [[Chicago|Chicago, Illinois]]) is an [[American football]] [[quarterback]] for the [[Philadelphia Eagles]] of the [[National Football League]]. He attended [[Syracuse University]]. McNabb's best season came in [[2004 NFL season|2004]], when he helped the Eagles win the [[NFC Championship|National Football Conference Championship]].
 
==Early life==
''See also: [[Wikipedia:Press coverage 2003#Wikipedia as a source|Wikipedia as a press source 2003]], [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia as a press source 2004]]
McNabb grew up in Chicago and was a standout at Mt. Carmel High School on the town's south side, then he transferd to gandhi high shcool there he helped Mount Carmel win the 1991 State Championship as a sophomore. He led the team to win the Prep Bowl as a Senior.
 
==NewsCollege searchesyears==
McNabb was heavily recruited out of high school, however, only two schools offered him a scholarship to play quarterback. These were the [[University of Nebraska]] and Syracuse University. McNabb at first was strongly considering going to the University of Nebraska. He enjoyed the idea of being coached by the legendary [[Tom Osborne]]. However, McNabb decided not to attend Nebraska mainly because he wanted to prove himself a competent pocket passer. Due to this, and academic factors, McNabb chose to attend Syracuse University.<ref> [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/columnist/oconnor/2004-01-14-oconnor_x.htm] Retrieved April 9th, 2007.</ref>
Note that mentions of common mirror sites ''may not'' refer to actual mirrored Wikipedia articles.
* '''Wikipedia''' news search: [http://news.google.com/news?q=wikipedia&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&scoring=d Google News] | [http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news/?c=&p=wikipedia Yahoo! News] | [http://altavista.com/news/search?q=wikipedia&nc=0&nr=0&ns=0&nd=0&avkw=aapt&sort=date AltaVista News] | [http://search.msn.com/news/results.aspx?q=wikipedia MSN News]
 
One of the most decorated athletes in Syracuse University history, he was a four-year starter at quarterback and a reserve on the school's nationally ranked [[basketball]] team. On the [[gridiron]] he was named the [[Big East Conference]]'s offensive player of the decade (1990s) and of the year an unprecedented three times from 1996-98, as well as the first-team all-conference vote earner in each of his four seasons. Later, he was named to the Syracuse All-Century Football team.
==Page guidelines==
*If the article is ''about'' [[Main Page|Wikipedia]] itself, please add it to [[Wikipedia:Press coverage]], rather than here.
*If the citation is in a book, rather than a periodical, please add it to [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia as a book source]].
*If the citation is in an academic publication, such as a peer-reviewed journals, please add it to [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia in academic studies]].
*Also, please check to make sure this is the first publication of the article&mdash;newspapers often reprint things other papers published days and even weeks before.
* If you have the time (and it is really appreciated), place a notice on the article's talk page about the press reference. See below for instructions.
*''Note:'' <nowiki>{{source}}</nowiki> is deprecated. Use [[Template:authoronlinesource2005]] or alternatively [[Template:onlinesource2005]] which leaves out the author field if author is unknown. See the [[Template talk:authoronlinesource2005|talk page]] for instructions on how to use these templates.
 
McNabb started every game during his career, compiling a 33-12 record. As a senior, he led Syracuse to an Orange Bowl berth vs. Florida as he completed 157 of 251 passes (62.5%) for 2,134 yards. His 22 TD passes tied the school's single season record set by former Eagle [[Don McPherson]] (1987). McNabb also rushed 135 times for 438 yards and 8 touchdowns. He ranked sixth in the nation with a 158.9 passing efficiency rating and 22nd in total offense (233.8 yards per game). As well, he tied a school record with 4 TD tosses vs. Cincinnati and accounted for 5 TDs vs. Miami (3 rushing and 2 passing). McNabb amassed 2,892 yards in total offense in his junior season to set a school record. As a freshman, he was the Big East rookie of the year and tossed a 96-yard TD pass vs. [[West Virginia|West Virginia University]], the longest in SU history. He [[Redshirt freshman|redshirted]] in 1994. Against [[West Virginia|West Virginia Mountaineers]] in [[1995]], McNabb accounted for 354 total yards of offense, and in [[1997]] and [[1998]] he threw six TD passes.
==Formatting==
*Lastname, Firstname. "Name of article." ''Name of Source''. [Month] [Day], 2005. <small>[http://en.wikipedia.org link]</small>
===Big East records===
*:"Relevant/representative quote here." (Please wikify the articles that were referenced)
* 1st - touchdown passes (77)
* 1st - touchdowns responsible for (96)
* 1st - passing yards (8,389)
* 1st - total offensive yards (9,950)
* 1st - total offensive plays (1,403)
 
===Syracuse University records===
==Articles==
* 1st - total yards per game (221.1)
===January===
* 1st - passing efficiency (155.1)
====January 1&ndash;10====
* 1st - yards per attempt (9.1)
*Murphy, Stephanie R. "I’ll Give You My Heart..." ''Lew Rockwell'' (CA). January 1, 2005. <small>[http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/murphy-s1.html]</small>
::"Wikipedia puts the price of a fresh [[kidney]] at about $125,000 US dollars."
*Dooley, Jim. "For the Record." ''Fallbrook-Bonsall Village News'' (CA). January 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.thevillagenews.com/story.asp?story_ID=3558]</small>
::"[[Eric Shinseki|Shinseki]]'s own statement is that he was forced into retirement "(ref: www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Shinseki)."
*Jones, Tricia. "Anti-resolutions." ''The Columbian'' (WA). January 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.columbian.com/01022005/life/228422.html]</small>
::"Wikipedia, an online reference source, reports that [[rose]] perfumes are made from attar of roses or rose oil, which is a mixture of volatile essential oils obtained by steam-distilling the crushed petals of roses. Nowadays some 70 to 80 percent of production is in the so-called Valley of Roses near Kazanluk in Bulgaria. About 2,000 flowers are required to produce one gram of oil."
*"Donors wary after bitter experience in Latur, Bhuj." ''The Times of India''. January 2, 2005. <small>[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/978523.cms]</small>
::"[[Donations for victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake|A list of 106 links in more than a dozen nations]] is available at Wikipedia, the free encylopaedia site."
*Storobin, David. "Nazi Influence on the Middle East During WWII." ''Global Politician''. January 3, 2005. <small>[http://globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=274&t=Nazi-Islamist+Alliance+During+WWII]</small>
::Cites Wikipedia articles ([[Haj Amin Al-Husseini]], [[Sherif Hussein bin Ali]], [[Rashid Ali al-Kaylani]]) several times.
*Twist, Jo. "Looming pitfalls of work blogs." BBC. January 3, 2005. <small>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4115073.stm]</small>
::Uses Wikipedia as a "related link" on a sidebar to accompany an article about job-related [[blog]]s.
*Newton, Jon. "Go After the Real Pirates." ''TechNewsWorld''. January 5, 2005. <small>[http://www.technewsworld.com/story/39393.html]</small>
::Quotes article on [[warez]].
*Hoffenberg, Noah. "Kraut: Ain't it cool?" ''North Adams Transcript'' (MA). January 5, 2005. <small>[http://www.thetranscript.com/Stories/0,1413,103~9049~2635941,00.html]</small>
::"[[Sauerkraut]], according to Wikipedia.com, the free encyclopedia, literally translates from the German to sour cabbage. It is finely sliced white cabbage fermented with lactobacillus bacteria. The sugars in the cabbage are then converted into lactic acid and act as a preservative."
*Boisvert, Pierre. "Les tsunamis très présents dans internet." Journal de Montréal, January 5, 2005.
*:"Le site de l'encyclopédie en ligne Wikipédia fait également une description assez complète du phénomène, qui n'est pas aussi rare qu'on pourrait le penser." (Links to http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsunami, also apparently has a photo)
*Noguchi, Yuki. "Notes on Gates." ''The Washington Post''. January 6, 2005. <small>[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52460-2005Jan6.html]</small>
::"Without warning, the screen went deep blue. (Echos of Windows's classic [[Blue screen of death|Blue Screen of Death]].)"&mdash;article has external link to the Blue Screen of Death article
*Neuwirth, Rachel. "Noam Chomsky and Anti-Semitism" ''ChronWatch'', January 7, 2005. <small>[http://www.chronwatch.com/content/contentDisplay.asp?aid=12204&catcode=13]</small>
::Cites [[Faurisson affair]].
*Aba, Adam Wild. "Arab Americans Alarmed at Gonzales' Nomination." ''Islam Online'' (UK). January 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.islam-online.net/English/News/2005-01/08/article03.shtml]</small>
::"Both parents [of [[Alberto Gonzales]]] were children of migrants from Mexico with less than a high-school education themselves, according to the Wikipedia encyclopedia."
*Goldstein, Fred. "Deaths not just act of nature: Socialist organization & planning can save lives." ''Workers World''. January 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.workers.org/ww/2005/tsunami0113.php]</small>
::"With such regimes, early warning is not enough. Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia, carried a [[2004 Indian Ocean earthquake|comprehensive report on the tsunami]]. It described how "on the Maikhao beach in Thailand, a 10-year-old British girl, Tilly Smith, recognized the signs when the tide rushed out and boats on the horizon began bobbing violently. She told her mother she had just been studying tsunami in geography at school and that they should leave the beach. Her parents warned others on the beach and so this was one of the few areas where no one was reported killed."
*"Tech Tuesday: Stop Spam & Spyware." Yahoo News. January 10, 2005. <small>[http://news.yahoo.com/techtuesday]</small>
::Beginner's Guide:
::Wikipedia: [[Spamming]]: "This article provides a general overview of the spamming phenomenon including the techniques of spammers and ways to stop e-mail abuse."
::Wikipedia: [[Spyware]]: "Get basic definitions of adware, spyware, and malware, their consequences, and how to fight them."
 
==NFL career==
====January 11&ndash;20====
===1999===
*Aba, Adam Wild. "Fox Features 'Muslim Terrorists' in ''24'' Drama." ''IslamOnline.net''. January 10, 2005. <small>[http://www.islamonline.org/English/News/2005-01/10/article02.shtml]</small>
Donovan was drafted 2nd overall by the Eagles in the [[1999 NFL Draft]], a choice which was famously [[Booing|booed]] by [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]] fans present at the draft. McNabb saw his first NFL regular season action in the second half against the [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] in a 19-5 home loss on [[September 19]]. He made his first career start at home against Washington on [[November 14]], completing eight of 21 passes for 60 yards in a 35-28 win. He also had nine carries for 49 rushing yards and led the team to a pair of successful two-point conversions (1 rush and 1 pass). With the win, he became the first Eagles rookie QB to win his first NFL start since [[Mike Boryla]] ([[December 1]], [[1974]] vs. Green Bay) and the first Eagle QB to win his first start since [[Ty Detmer]] ([[October 13]], [[1996]] at NYG).
*:[[Rupert Murdoch|Murdoch]] is generally regarded as the most politically influential media proprietor in the world, and is regularly courted by politicians in the United States, Britain and Australia, according to the Wikipedia encyclopedia.
*Pireupireum, Michel. "Waiting for a Syzygy." ''Business Day'' (South Africa). January 10, 2005. <small>[http://www.bday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1785628-6078-0,00.html]</small>.
*:For those who didn't know, a [[syzygy]] is described by Wikipedia as "a situation where three bodies are situated along a straight line. Usually used in context with the sun, earth and the moon or a planet, where the latter is in conjunction or opposition. For example, solar and lunar eclipses."
*Storobin, David. "Slovakia: Best Investment Environment in EU After Recent Economic Reforms." ''Global Policitian''. January 11, 2005. <small>[http://globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=285&t=Slovakia%3A+Best+Investment+Environment+in+EU+After+Recent+Economic+Reforms ]</small>
*:References [[Economy of Slovakia]] in their endnotes.
*"No hockey? No problem." '' Pittsburgh Tribune-Review''. January 11, 2005. <small>[http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/trib/newssummary/s_291762.html]</small>
*:" The Wikipedia free encyclopedia site has a complete short history of the [[National Hockey League|NHL]], including more information on the strikes."
*Davis, Ariel." A modern look into the past." ''The Vanguard'' (AL). January 12, 2005. <small>[http://www.usavanguard.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/01/12/41e73c9255d41]</small>
*:"[[Video art]], as defined on the Wikipedia website, as artistic works that rely on moving pictures of video or audio data. Video art is different from the more mainstream theatrical cinema because it may not have sound, plot or characters."
*Rinearson, Bob. "We need not welcome an apologist for terror." ''Fort Wayne News Sentinel'' (IN). January 13, 2005. <small>[http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/editorial/10636301.htm]</small>
*:"According to Wikipedia, 'The [[Muslim Brotherhood]] is working to spread its concepts and gain more followers. They work on the levels of school students, university students, inside mosques and at work.'"
*"A short history of anime." sidebar to Slafkosky, Jenny. "Anime: Popular Japanese animation easy to find." ''The Oakland Tribune'' (CA). January 13, 2005. <small>[http://insidebayarea.com/searchresults/ci_2523506] and [http://insidebayarea.com/searchresults/ci_2523519]</small>
*:"Other cool [[anime]]-related sites: - Wikipedia's discussion of anime &#8212; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anime
*Singer, Michael. "Apple's iPod Shuffle Stifles Podcasting." ''InternetNews.com''. January 14, 2005. <small>[http://www.internetnews.com/storage/article.php/3459051]</small>
*:"According to online encyclopedia Wikipedia, [[podcaster]]s make their audio programs available for download to portable digital audio devices (iPod, MP3 player, PDA)."
*Rousos, Rick, and Allen, Dianne Lacey. "Two Die in Plane Crash." ''The Ledger''. January 15, 2005. <small>[http://www.theledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050115/NEWS/501150404/1039]</small>
*:According to an online encyclopedia, Wikipedia.org, with a special aviation section, the [[Cessna Skymaster]] is a twin-engine utility aircraft built first in 1961 in what is known as a "push-pull" configuration.
*:It has one engine mounted on the nose and the other at the rear of the pod-style fuselage just behind the wing. It was also adapted in a military version as spotter aircraft, used in Vietnam.
*:In 1965, Cessna introduced the model 337. This aircraft was larger, had more powerful engines, retractable landing gear and a dorsal air scoop for the rear engine.
*:Cessna ceased manufacturing the Skymaster in 1980, but a French company, Reims, continued to produce the aircraft as the FTB337 STOL and the military FTMA Milirole. The company produced a total of 94 Skymasters.
*:Generally, Skymasters can carry a pilot and five passengers. They can have a maximum cruising speed of 200 mph and a range of 764 miles with a service ceiling of 19,500 feet. The aircraft is 30 feet in length and has a wingspan of 38 feet.
* Rubel, Steve. "Get Folksy With Folksonomies." ''WebProNews''. January 16, 2005. <small>[http://www.webpronews.com/news/ebusinessnews/wpn-45-20050116GetFolksywithFolksonomies.html]</small>
*:According to Wikipedia, [[folksonomy]] is the collaborative categorization of user-generated content using simple tags. Folksonomies are wildly popular on Flickr, a photo sharing site, and on del.icio.us, a social bookmark site. However, it doesn't end there.
*Green, David M. "Tsunami info: A world of links." ''Chicago Times''. January 16, 2005. <small>[http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0501150300jan16,1,4028488.story?coll=chi-technology-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true]</small>
*:"A true creature of the Web, the Wikipedia site is more or less a constantly evolving online encyclopedia written collaboratively by contributors from across the globe. The address above will take you to the [[2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake]] "chapter" of this virtual resource, which provides a remarkable background on the earthquake and resulting tsunamis as well as information regarding the situation on the ground in affected areas. Photographs and videos are also available at the Web site."
*Indian Ocean Tsunami. Wikipedia quotedby New Zealand Listener, Jan 22-28, in an article reviewing media coverage of the disaster
*:"Meanwhile, the Internet's ability to respond to such events was amply demonstrated. In amazingly rapid order, the free encyclopedia, Wikipedia, had a comprehensive page on the diasaster."
*Ojeda-Zapata, Julio. "Tuning in to regional 'podcasts.'" ''St. Paul Pioneer Press''. January 18, 2005. <small>[http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/news/local/10668799.htm]</small>
*:"To bone up on [[podcasting]], start at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasting http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasting]."
*Mitchell, Bill. "Hunting Where the Ducks are Flying." ''Poynter Online''. January 19, 2005. <small>[http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=77156]</small>
*:"The approach extends a growing trend toward transparency in the news business, maybe not all the way to what Wikipedia describes as [[radical transparency]], but certainly headed in that direction."
*Berlind, David. "ZDNet's podcasts: How to tune in." ''ZDNet''. January 18, 2005. <small>[http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-5539171.html]</small>
*:"As defined by the Wikipedia, [[podcasting]] "plays upon the terms [[broadcasting]] and [[webcasting]] and is derived from the name of the [[iPod]] portable music player, the playback device of choice of many early podcast listeners. Podcasting is not directly associated with [[Apple Computer|Apple's]] iPod device or [[iTunes]] jukebox software. Podcasting is similar to time-shifted video software and devices like [[TiVo]], which let you watch what you want when you want by recording and storing video, except that podcasting is used for audio and is currently free of charge. Note, however, that this technology can be used to pull any kind of file, including software updates, pictures, and videos." (has external link to each article)
* Hamric, Roy. "Bezos to build space venture on ranch near Van Horn." ''Desert Mountain Times''. January 20, 2005. <small>[http://www.dmtimes.net/blog/News/_archives/2005/1/20/267069.html]</small>
*:"A biography of [Jeff] [[Jeff Bezos|Bezos]] on wikipedia.org says: "Bezos’ mother’s ancestors were early settlers in Texas, and over the generations had acquired a 25,000-acre ranch in Cotulla, Texas. His maternal grandfather was a regional director of the Atomic Energy Commission in Albuquerque. His grandfather retired early to the ranch, where Bezos spent summers as a child.
*:'His mother's marriage to his father lasted little more than a year. She married Bezos’ stepfather, Mike Bezos, who was born in Cuba. The family moved to Houston, where Mike Bezos worked as an engineer for Exxon.
*:'Bezos attended River Oaks Elementary in Houston from the 4th to 6th grades before the family moved to Miami.'"
* Bergstrom, Allyson. "Hard rock Christian Christian singer spreads gospel by rocking." ''The Daily O'Collegian''. January 20, 2005. <small>[http://www.ocolly.com/new_ocollycom/show_story.php?a_id=24802]</small>
*:"Rock music is increasingly used as an evangelical tool. Yet, despite its popularity, [[Contemporary Christian music|Christian contemporary music]] continues to be a hot issue with conservative Christians, according to Wikipedia Encyclopedia."
* Patel, Amit. "Corporations & securities brief&mdash;Enron trial of Skilling, Lay to stay in Houston." January 20, 2005. ''Jurist''. <small>[http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/01/corporations-securities-brief-enron.php]</small>
*:"Leading Thursday's corporations and securities brief, US District Court Judge Sim Lake has decided against former top Enron [corporate website; JURIST Hot Topic] executives [[Ken Lay]] [wikipedia profile], [[Jeff Skilling]] [wikipedia profile], and Rick Causey in their attempt to move their trial outside of Houston."
 
McNabb threw the first TD pass of his career (6 yards to TE [[Chad Lewis]]) vs. Indianapolis in a 44-17 home loss on [[November 21]]. McNabb went on to start six of the Eagles' final seven contests (missing the [[December 19]] home game against New England, a 24-9 victory, due to injury) as he became the first [[Philadelphia Eagles]] rookie to start in the quarterback position since [[Brad Goebel]] on [[October 13]], [[1991]], and the first Eagles rookie draft pick to start since [[John Reaves]] in 1972.
====January 21&ndash;31====
* Hodge, Bob (January 22, 2005). "Exotic fish have made life hard on native species." ''Knoxsville News Sentinel''. <small>[http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/outdoors/article/0,1406,KNS_326_3485476,00.html]</small>
*:"[[Carp]] were introduced in North America in 1877 as "the world's finest fish" according to Wikipedia. They were released around the country, usually with great fanfare, and people sat back and waited for them to become popular as both a pan and sport fish."
*Toronto Sun (January 22, 2005). Article about [[Bill Cosby]], citing Associated Press, about.com, and wikipedia.org as sources.
* Woolsey, Garth (January 23, 2005). "Life in a fishbowl suits this new star just fine." ''Toronto Star''. <small>[http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1106435409247&call_pageid=970599119419]</small>
*:"The critters can weigh in at well over a kilogram, live more than 150 years, are considered a delicacy in Asia, and, according to online encyclopedia Wikipedia: 'The appearance of a [[geoduck]]'s large, protruding siphon has led to the mistaken belief that the geoduck has properties as an aphrodisiac.'"
* "Cultural event unites Irish Lord, Native American tribes." ''The Jackson Sun.'' January 25, 2005. <small>[http://miva.jacksonsun.com/miva/cgi-bin/miva?NEWS/news_storyV2.mv+link=200501256884379]</small>
*:"The [[House of Lords]] is an unelected body, and its members are known as ''Lords of Parliament,'' according to the Wikipedia Web site."
* Smith, Roger (January 26, 2005). "The business&mdash;and technology&mdash;of finding a friend in cyberspace." ''NewsForge''. <small>[http://trends.newsforge.com/trends/05/01/26/0111240.shtml?tid=29&tid=13]</small>.
*:Wikipedia, the free, collaboratively-edited Web encyclopedia (itself a type of social network application), describes [[social networking]] as the process of connecting individuals via friends, relatives, and acquaintances, allowing a person to build a "personal network." These networks can then branch out and allow friends to connect with people inside their accepted social circle.
* Stoneham, Cherre (January 26, 2005). "Ex-weatherman slips the tongue." <small>[http://www.orion-online.net/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/01/26/41f708a775519]</small>
*:"'[[Coon]]' has been around as long as the "n-word." Slave owners began calling black people coons after using hunting dogs trained to hunt down raccoons to capture runaway slaves, according to the Wikipedia online encyclopedia."
* Roberts, Andrew (January 27, 2005). "A Week in the Life of an Arch Linux Newbie". ''OS News''. <small>[http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=9540]</small>
*:"At this point, I expect many readers are thinking 'Debian' or 'Slackware'. Both are well-established distros and I was tempted by both. I had heard anecdotally that Slackware's package management is rather simplistic, e.g., no dependency resolution. (I love how the [[Slackware#Package_management|Slackware]] entry in Wikipedia describes this as a “unique” feature!)"
* Pawluk, Hal (January 28, 2005). "Encounter With The Pod People...". ''Blogcritics.org''. <small>[http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/01/28/135851.php]</small>
*:(Refers to [[Podcasting]]).
*Fisher, Bart (January 29, 2005). "How sweet the city is". ''New Britain Herald''. <small>[http://www.newbritainherald.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=13849233&BRD=1641&PAG=461&dept_id=10110&rfi=6]</small>
*:"Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia, notes that the words [of [[Amazing Grace]]] are those of the Rev. John Newton, who was once involved in the slave trade, but vehemently de-nounced the practice after being saved and becoming a minister and hymnist.Wikipedia also says, "the now familiar and traditional melody of the hymn was not composed by Newton, and the words were sung to a number of tunes before the now inseparable melody was chanced upon.They first appeared in a shape note hymnal from 1831 called Virginia Harmony, where the tune is called New Britain. "
[[Category:Wikipedia as a media source]]
*Green, David (January 28, 2005). "Keep tabs on travel conditions with the Web". ''Dallas Morning News''. <small>[http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/fea/travel/thisweek/stories/011605dntraasiaweb.6de13.html]</small>
*:"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Indian_Ocean_earthquake The Wikipedia site is more or less a constantly evolving online encyclopedia written by contributors from across the globe. The address above will take potential travelers to the [[2004 Indian Ocean earthquake]] 'chapter' of this virtual resource, which provides a remarkable background on the earthquake and resulting tsunamis as well as information on the situation in affected areas. Photographs and videos are available at the site for those interested in a particular area."
 
===February2000===
In his first full season as a NFL starter in 2000, McNabb finished second in the Associated Press MVP voting (24-11) to St. Louis RB [[Marshall Faulk]], who set the NFL record for most TDs scored in a season. McNabb made his prime time debut (ESPN) vs. Atlanta at home ([[October 1]]) with his first 300-yard passing game in a 38-10 victory and the Eagles' first since Bobby Hoying vs. Cincinnati at home on [[November 30]], [[1997]]. His 55 pass attempts at Pittsburgh, a come-from-behind 26-23 overtime victory ([[November 12]]) were a career-high and the fourth-highest total in team history. Named NFC Offensive Player of the Week after accounting for 90.7% of the offense in a 23-20 overtime victory at Washington ([[November 26]]). His 125 rushing yards were the most by an NFL QB since the Bears Bobby Douglass (127 on [[December 17]], [[1972]]) and was the sixth-best rushing effort by a QB since 1940 when the "T" formation was introduced. Threw for a career-high 390 passing yards and 4 TDs in a 35-24 victory at Cleveland ([[December 10]]) en route to NFC Offensive Player of the Week honors. McNabb led the Eagles to their first playoff appearance since 1996, where they defeated the favored [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] 21-3 before losing to the [[New York Giants]] 20-10.
====February 1&ndash;10====
*"In Our Time - MP3 Downloads and Podcasting." BBC Radio 4. [February] 2005. link <small>http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/mp3_podcast.shtml</small>
*:"[[Podcasting]] enables anyone to have In Our Time delivered automatically to their PC or Mac whenever a new mp3 file is placed on the website each week (assuming, of course, that their computer is logged onto the internet). You have to download a little application, such as iPodder [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasting#Software follow this link for a useful list of such applications])."
 
He was selected as a first alternate to the [[National Football Conference|NFC]] [[Pro Bowl]] squad in 2000 (behind the [[Minnesota Vikings]] [[Daunte Culpepper]], [[San Francisco 49ers]] [[Jeff Garcia]], and [[St. Louis Rams]] [[Kurt Warner]]). When Warner was unable to participate due to injury, McNabb led the NFC on a touchdown scoring drive in his first series. Accounted for 74.6% of the team's total net yards in 2000. Only Carolina's Steve Beuerlein (75.3%) and San Francisco's Jeff Garcia (75.1%) had a higher percentage. His 629 rushing yards in 2000 were tops among NFL QBs and, at the time, the fourth-highest total ever (968 by Bobby Douglass in 1972; 942 by [[Randall Cunningham]] in 1990; and 674 by [[Steve McNair]] in 1997. [[Michael Vick]] has since eclipsed that total three times). His six rushing TDs in 2000 were the most by an Eagles QB since Randall Cunningham also had six in 1988. Broke the club's single season record for most attempts (569) and completions (330) in 2000, marks previously set by Cunningham (560 and 301 respectively) in 1988. Named 2000 NFL Player of the Year by CBS Radio and the Terry (Bradshaw) Awards on Fox Sports and was named to the All-Madden team.
*MON (Pseudonym). "Kim Jong-Nam, the heir candidate." ''Kompas'' (Indonesia). February 1, 2005. <small>[http://www.kompas.com/kompas-cetak/0502/01/ln/1536371.htm]</small>
*:"Wikipedia, an encyclopedia, mentions that [[Kim Jong-nam]] was born in Pyongyang on 10 May 1971 to Sung Hae-Rim."
* Mary Martin "Blog sites connect students", ''Northern Star Online'' <small>[http://www.star.niu.edu/articles/?id=4579&override=standard/printerfriendly]</small> February 2, 2005.
*:"Free online encyclopedia service www.wikipedia.org defines a [[weblog]], Web log or blog as a Web application that contains periodic posts on a common Web page."
* Jean-François William, "Un DS c'est bien, deux c'est mieux" (February 6, 2005), Journal de Québec.
*:"D'un côté les petits jeux simples et faciles d'accès, tels les jeux de cartes (exemple: http://games.yahoo.com), et de l'autre les jeux de rôles, en ligne où il faut s'abonner après l'achat (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MMORPG)."
*"All about the Grammys" (February 8, 2005). ''The Star Online''. <small>[http://www.star-ecentral.com/news/story.asp?file=/2005/2/8/music/10085226&sec=music]</small>
*:According to wikipedia.com (sic) (a free-content encyclopaedia), the [[Grammys]], which currently has 105 categories within 30 genres of music (such as pop, gospel, and rap), are voted upon by peers – voting members of the Recording Academy – rather than being based upon popularity (as with the BMAs and the AMAs).
*"Veritas Lux Mea" (February 9, 2005). ''The Feature''. <small>[http://www.thefeature.com/user/fadereu/journalentry?id=1335&ref=-1]</small>
*:"[[Mass media]] is a communication method that began with the Gutenberg printing press in the 16th century, but only started gaining importance in the 20th century when electronic duplication kicked in. I quote the Wikipedia:
*::''Physical duplication technologies such as printing, record pressing and film duplication allowed the duplication of books, newspapers and movies at low prices to huge audiences. Television and radio allowed the electronic duplication of content for the first time.''"
*Wan, Tiffany (February 10, 2005 ). "STAFF eyes and EARS". ''The Daily of the University of Washington Online''. <small>[http://thedaily.washington.edu/ae.lasso?-database=DailyWebSQL&-table=Articles&-response=wnpage.lasso&-keyField=__Record_ID__&-keyValue=11901&-search]</small>
*:"Free encyclopedias are hard to come by these days, but Wikipedia has yet to fail me. Found at www.wikipedia.org, this public knowledge-based encyclopedia features entries written by average people who may have a vast (and possibly unhealthy) amount of knowledge on topics varying from Bohemianism to Keynesian economics. Entries can be edited by readers, which may seem vulnerable to misinformation, but you'd be surprised how much one person knows about Elvis that Encyclopedia Britannica can't even touch."
 
====February 11&ndash;28=2001===
McNabb led the Eagles in fourth-quarter comebacks in two wins vs. the Giants in 2001. At the Meadowlands ([[October 22]]), his 18-yard pass to James Thrash with 1:52 remaining gave the Eagles a 10-9 victory. At Philadelphia ([[December 30]]), wiped out a 21-14 deficit, engineering two fourth-quarter scores as the Eagles clinched the NFC East title with a 24-21 over archrival [[New York Giants]]. Tied Ron Jaworski and Tommy Thompson for the most postseason wins in franchise history by a QB (3). His 8 career playoff TDs trails only Jaworski (9). Named NFL Offensive Player of the Week after the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Chicago ([[January 19]], [[2002]]). Completed 26 of 40 for 262 yards with 2 touchdowns passing and added 37 yards and a TD on the ground. That rushing TD was the final touchdown at the old [[Soldier Field]]. Became only the fourth QB in Eagles history to pass for 3,000 yards in consecutive seasons - Sonny Jurgensen (1961-62), Ron Jaworski (1980-81), and Randall Cunningham (1988-90) were the others. McNabb's Eagles advanced to the NFC championship game for the first time since 1980, losing to the heavily favored [[St. Louis Rams]] 29-24.
*Mustard, Laurie (February 11, 2005). "Romance Can Be a Real Slice". ''Winnipeg Sun''.
*:Article about miscellaneous stuff, includes the Selected Anniversaries bit from the Main Page for February 11.
*"Letters to the Editor" (February 20, 2005). ''Toronto Sun''.
*:One letter cites [[Simon Wiesenthal]] to confirm that he is still alive (the Sun had said "prior to his death" in a February 13 article):
::IN HIS Feb. 13 column, "Sgro took last kick at the can," Peter Worthington quotes the Nazi war crime researcher and chronicler Simon Wiesenthal as having stated "prior to his death" that any Nazi war criminals of significance would now be too old and infirm to stand trial. I took the liberty of checking the Internet encyclopedia Wikipedia for confirmation of this. Mr. Wiesenthal did say this in April 2003 upon his retirement. However, there is no mention of Mr. Wiesenthal having died.
*Pizer, Dave (February 20, 2005). "Names of the Game". ''Ottawa Sun''.
*:Article about miscellaneous stuff in the Money section:
*:"Wikipedia.org reports that [[Mitel]] comes from Mike and Terry's Lawnmowers, after the founders Michael Cowpland and Terry Matthews and the company's original business plan."
*:"The [[Nortel Networks]] name came from Nortel (Northern Telecom) and Bay Networks, says Wikipedia.org."
*McGovern, Geoff (February 28, 2005). "A Hidden Afghani Gem". ''The Record'' (Harvard Law School).
*:Reference [[Buzkashi]]:
*:"Students of Middle Eastern culture might be surprised at the restaurant's choice of nomenclature. Buzkashi the Sport combines the basic elements of soccer and polo with a goat carcass in a way that is--let's admit it-wholly unappetizing and likely to make one avoid a charming international eatery so named. For the curious and strong of stomach, Wikipedia has a tasteful description of the game."
 
He earned his second trip to the Pro Bowl (was originally elected as an alternate) following the 2001 season after combining for 3,715 yards of total offense and establishing career highs in TD passes (25) and QB rating (84.3). Including playoffs, threw TD passes in 15 of 18 games and 2-or-more in 12 of those games. Named by his teammates as the club's offensive MVP in 2000 and 2001.
===March===
====March 1-10====
* "Arise, Sir Bill: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II To Confer Knighthood on Microsoft Founder Tomorrow." March 1, 2005. ''LinuxWorld''. <small>[http://www.linuxworld.com/story/48433.htm]</small>
*: References [[Order of the British Empire]]:
*: "According to Wikipedia, if you subsequently become a British citizen, you are upgraded to full Knight status - there's been no word yet on whether the Gates family has any plans to uproot itself from Redmond and head over to the UK, though. (The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation did set up a $210 million international scholarship program at Cambridge University, though.)"
* Richardson, Chris. "New Phishing Law Could Net Offenders 5 Years". March 3, 2005. ''WebProNews''. <small>[http://www.webpronews.com/news/ebusinessnews/wpn-45-20050303NewPhishingLawCouldNetOffenders5Years.html]</small>
*:"For those who are still unsure of what exactly [[phishing]] does, Wikipedia offers a thorough description...
*::"''Phishers usually work by sending out spam e-mail to large numbers of potential victims. These direct the recipient to a Web page which appears to belong to their online bank, for instance, but in fact captures their account information for the phisher's use.''
*::"''Typically, a phishing email will appear to come from a trustworthy company and contain a subject and message intended to alarm the recipient into taking action. A common approach is to tell the recipient that their account has been de-activated due to a problem and inform them that they must take action to re-activate their account.''"
*Petty, Liz. "Senator Clinton to visit university during Spring Break". March 4, 2005. ''Daily Orange''. <small>[http://www.dailyorange.com/news/2005/03/04/News/Senator.Clinton.To.Visit.University.During.Spring.Break-885608.shtml]</small>
*:"[[Daniel Patrick Moynihan]] was a Democratic New York Senator who was first elected to the Senate in 1976 and served four terms. He was succeeded in the Senate by Sen. Clinton and passed away in March of 2003, according to the Internet encyclopedia, Wikipedia. Because of a large endowment in his name, the Institute was named after him, the Moynihan Institute's Web site stated."
*"Let me call on my Walkman". March 5, 2005. ''ABC-CBN News''. <small>[http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?section=Infotech&oid=69586]</small>
*:"From Wikipedia: “The Sony [[Walkman]] personal stereo was a transistorized miniature portable cassette tape player invented by Akio Morita, Masaru Ibuka and Kozo Ohsone, and manufactured by Sony Corp. The original blue-and-silver Walkman model TPS-L2 went on sale in Japan on July 1, 1979.… Offering the ability for people to carry their own choice of music with them, the Walkman stereo was one of the most successful new consumer product introductions of the 1980s.”"
*Herlich, Dustin. "Relief in Asia and Spending at Home". March 4, 2005. ''SB Independent''. <small>[http://sbindependent.org/node/200]</small>
*:"According to Wikipedia.org, the U.S. is actually on the low end of donations ''(Nope, the article is not referenced! - [[User:Ta bu shi da yu|Ta bu shi da yu]])'' . While our amount of donations, in dollars, is larger than many countries, as far as percentage of GDP goes, we’re one of the worst. You have nations like Australia, which have pledged as much as 1.16 per mille of their GDP, while the US has pledged a paltry .1 per mille."
* Ashcroft, Tom. "Killjoys ban fox hunts in England". March 5, 2005. ''Chalotte Observer''. <small>[http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/news/opinion/11057635.htm]</small>
*:But before [[fox hunting]] was fun, it was necessary. Foxes can wreak havoc with farmers' livestock. According to the online encyclopedia Wikipedia, the "earliest known attempt to hunt a fox with hounds was in Norfolk, England, in 1534, where farmers began chasing down foxes with their dogs as pest control."
* "Bugs Online" ([[pseudonym]]). "Sounding out Snoop Dogg". March 8, 2005. ''The Star Online Malaysia Entertainment''. <small>[http://www.star-ecentral.com/news/story.asp?file=/2005/3/8/music/10332336&sec=music]</small>
*:You can learn more about [[Snoop Dogg]]’s life, his career and his music from the numerous websites that are dedicated to him on the Internet. His official website (www.snoopdogg.com) doesn’t really provide much information, but pay a visit to online encyclopaedia Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.com) for something more substantial.
*:For example, did you know that many of the rapper’s songs mention the letters “LBC”? This, according to the site, is a reference to Long Beach, California, as well as the Long Beach Crips, a group he formed in his hometown. The site also teaches you how to speak in Snoop Dogg slang, which he borrowed from another prolific rapper named E-40. This can be achieved by simply adding an “izz” or “izzle” to the end of a word or letter. Some of the phrases regularly used by Snoop Dog include “fo’ shizzle”, which means for sure or the real thing, and D-O-double-Gizzle in the hizzle, which means “DOGG in the house”. You gizzle-e-tizzle (you g-e-t)?
*Waters, Darren. "How Doctor Who spread on the net". March 8, 2005. ''BBC News Online''. <small>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4328781.stm]</small>
*:[[BitTorrent]] article cited as "related internet link" on article concerning the upload of the first episode of the new ''[[Doctor Who]]'' series onto P2P and other filesharing sites and programs.
*Meland, Astrid. "Tonight he was done." March 10,2005. ''Dagbladet''. <small>[http://www.dagbladet.no/kultur/2005/03/09/425734.html]</small>
*:Refers to [[Walter Cronkite]] in this [[Dan Rather]] article. Norwegian text.
* Burke, Brendan. "Tower outside Gillette sets Wyo record". March 10, 2005. ''Casper Star Tribune''. <small>[http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2005/03/10/news/wyoming/eff43d9ec654f64887256fbf006ce6fc.txt]</small>
*:"But the Jim Bridger Plant is not the tallest thing man has built in Wyoming.
*:"That honor goes to a [[Tallest structures in the U.S.|700-foot antenna located outside of Gillette]]<!-- do you know how hard this was for me to track down? Ta bu shi da yu-->, according to Wikipedia, an on-line encyclopedia (www.en.wikipedia.org)."
* Wilson, Nick. "Playing Tagsy - Folksonomies, Firefox & Search". March 10, 2005. ''WebProNews''. <small>[http://www.webpronews.com/news/ebusinessnews/wpn-45-20050310PlayingTagsyFolksonomiesFirefoxSearch.html]</small>
*:''[[Folksonomy]], as described in Wikipedia, refers to the "practice of collaborative categorization using freely chosen keywords." With the increasing flow of content ranging from blog feeds to podcasts, people need a way to not only categorize and later search for the interesting bits, but also find new and recent content that is being published. Tagging provides that ability in a weird but surprisingly functional way. In essence, social networks are being automatically built based on everyone's personal affinity which is described by their tags.''
* Grabianowski, Ed. "How Firefox Works". March, 2005. ''Howstuffworks.com''. <small>[http://computer.howstuffworks.com/firefox.htm]</small>
*:Cites ''Wikipedia: [[Mozilla Firefox]]'' as a source. [http://computer.howstuffworks.com/firefox7.htm]
 
====March 112002-20=2003===
In week 11 of the 2002 season, McNabb was injured. On the third play of the game, he was sacked by the Cardinals' [[Adrian Wilson]] and LeVar Woods. He fumbled the ball, fell to the ground, and held his right leg. He went to the locker room to have his ankle taped, but returned for the Eagles' second drive. His injury was reported to be a sprained ankle, but X-rays after the game revealed that it was a broken ankle. During the game, however, McNabb made an impressive show of toughness. In one of the best passing games of his career, he was 20 of 25 passing, with 255 yards and 4 touchdowns. He also threw an interception. McNabb was out for the last six weeks of the regular season, and returned to face the [[Atlanta Falcons]] in the playoffs, but he recovered slowly. The Eagles defeated the Falcons 20-6, but were beaten by the underdog [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] 27-10 in the NFC championship game.
* Schorow, Stephanie. "E-ager to join the debate". March 11, 2005. ''Boston Herald''. <small>[http://theedge.bostonherald.com/bookNews/view.bg?articleid=72691]</small>
*:How do you spell email: [[email]] or [[e-mail]]?
*:"Diva checked the dictionary, several in fact - all online, of course. Merriam-Webster, Britannica Online and the Cambridge Dictionary of American English use e-mail. Wikipedia, the people-powered online encyclopedia, and American Heritage list both forms."
 
In late September of 2003, Donovan McNabb was the subject of very controversial comments made by [[Rush Limbaugh]], who worked as a commentator for ESPN at the time, stating that the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback was overrated because the media wanted to see a black quarterback succeed. The comments came after the Eagles began the season 0-2, losing to defending Super Bowl champion Buccaneers and eventual champion [[New England Patriots|New England]], both losses coming in their newly opened stadium, [[Lincoln Financial Field]]. There has been much discussion about the merit of these comments, which resulted in Limbaugh's resignation from ESPN.
* Vontilla, Steven. "A brand-new ranking to classify sports". March 11, 2005. ''The Hurricane Online''. <small>[http://www.thehurricaneonline.com/news/2005/03/11/Opinion/A.BrandNew.Ranking.To.Classify.Sports-892220.shtml]</small>
*:Wikipedia encyclopedia defines [[sport]] as "consist[ing] of a normal physical activity or skill carried out under a[n]... agreed set of rules...: for competition, for self-enjoyment, to attain excellence, for the development of skill, or some combination of these. A sport has physical activity, side-by-side competition and a scoring system. The difference of purpose is what characterizes sport, combined with the notion of individual (or team) skill or prowess."
 
Despite the slow start in the 2003 season, McNabb again led his team to the NFC Championship game - yet his detractors pointed out that in his five years in the NFL, McNabb had yet to complete 60 percent of his passes or average seven yards per attempt over the course of an entire season, two statistical thresholds widely accepted as benchmarks for what constitutes a successful season for a modern-day NFL quarterback. Although the slow start hindered his overall statistics for 2003, Mcnabb had the highest quarterback rating(97.5)in the NFL for the second half of the season and also completed over 62% of his passes for over eight yards per attempt. With Philadelphia's 14-3 loss to the [[Carolina Panthers]] in the 2003 NFC championship game, McNabb became the first NFL quarterback since [[Danny White]] of the [[Dallas Cowboys]] (1980-1982) to lead a team to three consecutive defeats in conference title games, prompting some observers to conclude that McNabb "[[choke (sports)|choke]]s" in big games (his cumulative [[passer rating]] in the three conference championship games was 50.5 - a figure that is approximately 10 points lower than what the worst quarterback in the league earns over the course of a typical year).
* Strand, Sigbjørn. "Tre lag i én fotballkamp". March 12, 2005. ''Dagbladet (Magasinet)''. <small>[http://www.dagbladet.no/magasinet/2005/03/11/425898.html]</small>
*:Refers to [[three sided football]], [[London Psychogeographical Association]] and [[Situationist]]. Norwegian text.
 
McNabb's defenders, however, point out that Philadelphia had the worst contingent of wide receivers in the NFL throughout McNabb's tenure with the team up to that point, and perhaps in modern professional football history. In 2003, for example, Philadelphia's wide receivers caught only five touchdown passes - tying the record for fewest in a season since the regular-season schedule was lengthened to its present 16 games in 1978 and that, by going the entire months of September and October without having a wide receiver catch a touchdown pass, the 2003 Eagles became the first NFL team since 1945 not to have gotten a touchdown pass from any of its wide receivers in the first two months of a season.
*Harding, David. "Overview &mdash; A tough cookie". March 14, 2005. ''Accountancy Age'' <small>[http://www.accountancyage.com/features/1139678]</small>
*:"For a start, as if to prove his <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Paul Volcker]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> relative fame, there are not that many economists or bankers who have their own entry on the Internet encyclopedia site, Wikipedia."
 
===2004===
* Timothy. "'Online Poker' Googlebomb". March 15, 2005. ''Slashdot''. <small>[http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/03/15/0035225&tid=217&tid=1]</small>
McNabb finally amassed the kind of numbers that placed him firmly as one of the elite NFL quarterbacks statistically. He averaged 8.26 yards per attempt, completed 64.0 percent of his passes, threw 31 touchdown passes (he also ran for three more), and only eight interceptions. These numbers translated to a [[Passer Rating]] of 104.7. Furthermore, he became the first quarterback in league history to throw over 30 touchdowns and less than 10 interceptions in a single season. This dramatic improvement coincided with a massive upgrading of the Eagles' receiving corps, namely the arrival of [[Terrell Owens]], who caught 14 touchdowns. As a result, the Eagles won their first seven games of the season for the first time in franchise history, clinched first place in their division with five weeks still to play in the regular season (becoming only the third team in modern NFL history to do this) and won the NFC's Eastern Division by a record-tying seven-game margin in posting a 13-3 record, the franchise's best 16-game season ever. In the playoffs, McNabb led the Eagles to their first [[Super Bowl]] in almost a quarter century, with victories over the [[Minnesota Vikings]] 27-14 in the divisional game and the [[Atlanta Falcons]] 27-10 in the [[NFC Championship Game]]. Owens was not in the lineup during the two playoff victories, and was recovering from a broken ankle. McNabb became only the third [[African-American]] quarterback to start in a [[Super Bowl]] after [[Doug Williams (football player)|Doug Williams]] in the 1987 season and [[Steve McNair]] in 1999.
*:"The blogger community is fighting back, though in ways not everyone may like: they are Googlebombing the Wikipedia page on online poker for the phrase "[http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=mozclient&scoring=d&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&q=%22online+poker%22 online poker]" to make it rank higher in search engines."
 
====Super Bowl XXXIX====
* Hibbitts, Bernard. "Corporations and securities brief ~ SEC files lawsuit against Qwest executives". March 15, 2005. ''Jurist''. <small>[http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/03/corporations-and-securities-brief-sec_15.php]</small>
McNabb and Owens led their team against a newly-forming dynasty, the [[New England Patriots]], in [[Super Bowl XXXIX]]. McNabb struggled at points, throwing three crucial [[interception]]s. Two of these were thrown in New England territory, and one of those two was a rare mistake for McNabb in the [[red zone]]. The final interception was a last-gasp hail mary at the end of the game. He was also sacked four times. Controversy surrounds the end of the game, as McNabb was reportedly dehydrated and vomited in the huddle, as stated by former 1st Round pick and Philadelphia Eagle teammate Freddie Mitchell, leading to the inability to call a play and poor clock management by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]] on their final drive. Some reports claim that McNabb had the wind knocked out of him by an earlier hit while others assert that he was unduly fatigued (interestingly, McNabb also suffered from a bout of nausea at the conclusion of a 2002 regular-season game played at Alltel Stadium, where [[Super Bowl XXXIX]] was contested). Some have speculated that McNabb had end of game butterflies and is not capable of winning the big game. Both Coach [[Andy Reid]] and McNabb have denied any physical problems which led to the puzzlingly slow pace of play, but they did not address mental problems. McNabb finished the game with 30 completions for 357 yards, the third highest total for both categories in Super Bowl history, and 3 touchdowns. The Eagles lost 24-21.
*: References [[Kenneth Lay]].
 
Pundits often use Super Bowl XXXIX to point out both McNabb's gifts and failures. He showed flashes of his athleticism and on field calm, but he also brought up the nagging questions of whether or not he has the heart of a champion. Critics of McNabb continually place the success and failure of the Philadelphia Eagles squarely on his shoulders. McNabb's performance in the Super Bowl has been criticized, but statistically, he excelled. The third interception that McNabb threw, in fact, was the result of a dropped pass by tight end L.J. Smith. With under a minute to go in the game and no timeouts, a 95-yard march proved improbable.
* Bennett, Chris. "Glad You Asked". March 17, 2005. ''The Journal Times Online''. <small>[http://www.journaltimes.com/articles/2005/03/17/local/columns/iq_3440085.txt]</small>
*:"According to the online encyclopedia Wikipedia, found at http://www.wikipedia.com, a [[New York Minute]] is also: the title of a popular song by Don Henley of The Eagles; An album of jazz singer Ian Shaw, released in 1998; or a 2004 film starring the Olsen twins - the delightful Mary Kate and Ashley, favorites of Assistant Sports Editor Alan Nunn."
 
===2006===
* Raimondo, Justin. "Handmaiden of the state: Role of media in the information age". March 18, 2005. ''Ether Zone''. <small>[http://www.etherzone.com/2005/raim031605.shtml]</small>
McNabb and the Eagles began the 2006 season at 5-4 heading into a week 11 game with [[Tennessee Titans]] on Sunday November 19. At that point, McNabb had been having an up and down season. His weekly passing ratings ranged from a lofty 113 all the way down to 65. Overall, the team was struggling. During the game, McNabb tore the [[anterior cruciate ligament]] and meniscus in his right knee while jumping out of bounds, ending his season, the third time in five years McNabb has gone down with six or more games remaining in the regular season.<ref>[http://www.nfl.com/teams/story/PHI/9814886 Eagles' McNabb hurts knee, out for season] NFL.com</ref> Eagles officials stated that his rehabilitation will likely last eight to twelve months, which completely ends his 2006 season and even raises questions as to whether he will be ready to begin playing by the beginning of the 2007 season. In the meantime, backup quarterback [[Jeff Garcia]] is to take McNabb's place as the Eagles' quarterback. Since McNabb became starting quarterback in 1999, the Eagles are 8-7 without him. A dominant defense in 2002 helped A.J. Feeley and Koy Detmer go a combined 5-1 to finish the season after McNabb broke his ankle against the Arizona Cardinals. Detmer lost a meaningless game during the Eagles Super Bowl season in 2004. In 2005, Mike McMahon went 2-5 when McNabb's season was lost to a [[sports hernia]]<ref name=McNabb>J Cluett. "[http://orthopedics.about.com/od/famousinjuries/p/dovovanmcnabb.htm Donovan McNabb - Sports Hernia]". Retrieved December 3, 2006.</ref> in Week 10 against the Cowboys. In 2006, Jeff Garcia has had success, leading the Eagles from 5-5 after the Tennessee game to 10-6 and winners of the NFC East. The Eagles then went onto win their Home Playoff game in the Wild Card round of the playoffs against the New York Giants 23-20 with Jeff Garcia under center. However, in the following divisional round they were beaten by the New Orleans Saints in the Superdome 27-24.
*:"As the online encyclopedia Wikipedia puts it in their account of [[Michel Aoun|Aoun's]] career:
*::''Support from France and Iraq emboldened Aoun to declare war on Syria on March 14, 1989. Over the next few months, Aoun's army and the Syrians exchanged artillery fire in Beirut until only 100,000 people remained from the original 1 million, the rest having fled. During this period, Aoun became critical of American support for Syria and moved closer to Iraq, accepting arms supplies from Saddam Hussein.''
 
==NFL year by year statistics==
* Purdum, Traci. "But Wait! There's More!". March 18, 2005. ''IndustryWeek''. <small>[http://www.industryweek.com/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=10059]</small>
{{Cleanup|date=February 2007}}
*:"According to Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia, [[infomercial]]s proliferated in the U.S. after 1984 when the Federal Communications Commission eliminated certain regulations, which were established in the 1950s and '60s, on the commercial content of television -- specifically, the FCC lifted the 12-minute-per-hour limit on TV ads."
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
!Year
!Games
!Games Started
!Attempts
!Completions
!Completion %
!Yards
!Yards/Attempt
!Touchdowns
!Interceptions
|-
|1999||12||6||216||106||49.1||948||4.39||8||7
|-
|2000||16||16||569||330||58.0||3365||5.91||21||13
|-
|2001||16||16||493||285||57.8||3233||6.56||25||12
|-
|2002||10||10||361||211||58.4||2289||6.34||17||6
|-
|2003||16||16||478||275||57.5||3216||6.73||16||11
|-
|2004||15||15||469||300||64.0||3875||8.26||31||8
|-
|2005||9||9||357||211||59.1||2507||7.00||16||9
|-
|2006||10||10||316||180||57.0||2647||8.36||18||6
|-
|<b>Totals||<b>104||<b>98||<b>3259||<b>1898||<b>58.2||<b>22080||<b>6.78||<b>152||<b>72
|-
|Playoffs||12||12||419||249||59.4||2630||6.26||18||12
|}
 
Rushing Totals
* Patel, Amil. "Corporations and securities brief ~ FTC to halt Blockbuster deal" March 17, 2005. ''Jurist''. <small>[http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/03/corporations-and-securities-brief-ftc.php]</small> *: References [[Maurice Greenberg]].
*447 attempts 2726 yards 6.1 average 24 TDS Regular Season, 63 attempts 362 yards 5.8 average, 3 TDS Playoffs
 
McNabb has a winning record in postseason games at 7-5.
*Guzman, Rene A. "Charman of the Board ; History of Monopoly goes beyond 70 years" March 18, 2005. ''San Antonio Express-News''
*:"Sources: Hasbro, Wikipedia.org, the National Toy Hall of Fame and 'History Detectives' (PBS.org)."
 
McNabb holds the record for most consecutive pass attempts completed with 24 against the New York Giants and Green Bay Packers in 2004 over two games. [[Mark Brunell]] and [[David Carr]] hold the record for most consecutive completed passes in a single game with 22. McNabb also completed 25 consecutive passes against the San Diego Chargers in 2005, but this record is not counted by the NFL as it included a spiking of the ball to stop the clock at the end of the half. The 2005 game was also noteworthy for Coach Reid calling for McNabb to have 25 pass attempts in a row, without interruption by a running play.
====March 21-31====
* Ackman, Dan. "John DeLorean, Car Man Of The Future". March 21, 2005. ''[[Forbes]]''. <small>[http://www.forbes.com/business/manufacturing/2005/03/21/cx_da_0321topnews.html]</small>
*:"[[John DeLorean|DeLorean]], it is often said, had a genius for auto design and is credited with the invention of recessed and articulated windshield-wipers, the lane-change turn signal and the elastomeric bumper, according to Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia. But he became famous first for the introduction of the Pontiac GTO, the famed muscle car in 1964."
 
McNabb is the second least intercepted quarterback per pass attempt in NFL history, behind only [[Neil O'Donnell]], formerly of the Pittsburgh Steelers. McNabb's career ratio is 1 interception in every 45.26 pass attempts, while O'Donnell was intercepted only once every 47.49 pass attempts.
* "The Bush Beat". March 21, 2005. ''The Village Voice''. <small>[http://villagevoice.com/blogs/bushbeat/archive/000794.php]</small>
*:"That and other things about Kennan are abundant online. You could start with Wikipedia's [[George F. Kennan|bio]]."
 
==Personal life==
* "Rove, Bush's top strategist, to speak here on Thursday". March 30, 2005 <small>[http://www.helenair.com/articles/2005/03/30/helena_top/a01033005_05.txt]</small>
McNabb and his college sweetheart, Raquel "Roxy" Nurse, were married in June of 2003. His daughter Alexis was born in [[September 23]], [[2004]]. His other loves include his two dogs, Sinbad and Diego and his parakeet named Tudy. They reside in [[Chandler, Arizona]].
*:"He helped George H.W. Bush's 1980 vice-presidential campaign before founding a direct mail consulting firm based in Austin, Texas, Wikipedia, the free Internet encyclopedia said."
McNabb's parents, Sam and Wilma McNabb, have gained fame appearing as themselves in the [[Campbell's]] Chunky Soup commercial series. Wilma is also a vice president of the NFL Mother's Association, the executive director of the Donovan McNabb Foundation, and runs McNabb Unlimited, which oversees Donovan's endorsements.
In 2002, he was named to the [[Syracuse University]] Board of Trustees; the youngest to do so.
He has a degree in speech communications.
In 2006, he released a [[clothing line]] which he designed, called [[Super Five]].
 
He also played basketball at Syracuse University as a reserve guard.
* "FBI Pressures Anarchist Internet Administrator Into Disclosing IP Addresses". March 31, 2005. ''[[New York City Indymedia]] (main page)''. <small>[http://nyc.indymedia.org/feature/display/146897/index.php]</small>
*:"According to the report on their discussion forums, two comments were posted to subdomains hosted by the server, including Infoshop.org, which claimed responsibility for '[[propaganda of the deed]].'"
 
===April=Footnotes==
<references/>
====April 1-10====
*Baker, Loren. "Microsoft Sues Phishers Over Identity Theft". ''Search Engine Journal''. April 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1519]</small>
::"[[Phishing]] is defined by the Wikipedia as the act of attempting to fraudulently acquire through deception sensitive personal information such as passwords and credit card details by masquerading in an official-looking email, IM, etc. as someone trustworthy with a real need for such information."
 
*Berkowitz, Bill. "The Schiavo case's intended and unintended consequences". ''WorkingForChange''. April 5, 2005. <small>[http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemID=18840]</small>
::"Wikipedia credits sociologist Robert K. Merton -- best known for having coined the phrases "self-fulfilling prophecy" and "role model" among others -- with coming up with "the Law of [[unintended consequence]]s," which "holds that almost all human actions have at least one unintended consequence. In other words, each cause has more than one effect including unforeseen effects.""
 
*Lavakare, Arvind. "Catch up on history, Mr Aziz". ''Rediff.com''. April 5, 2005. <small>[http://in.rediff.com/news/2005/apr/06arvind.htm]</small>
::"According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, '[[Self-determination]] is a principle in international law that a people ought to be able to determine their own governmental forms and structure free from outside influence.'"
 
*Meland, Astrid. "39 døde på fotballkamp". ''Dagbladet.no''. April 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.dagbladet.no/magasinet/2005/04/04/427878.html]</small>
::"Vi må renske sporten fra denne [[hooliganism|hooliganismen]] hjemme, så kan vi kanskje dra utenlands igjen, sa statsministeren Margaret Thatcher, som tok grep om opprydningen."
 
==External links==
====April 11-21====
*[http://www.donovanmcnabb.com Donovan's Official Website]
*Graham-Cumming, John. "Naïve Bayesian Text Classification". ''Dr. Dobb's Journal''. May 2005 issue. <small>[http://www.ddj.com/documents/s=9698/ddj0505a/0505a.html]</small>
*{{espn nfl|id=4650|name=Donovan McNabb}}
::"A far more extensive discussion of the Bayes Rule and its general implications can be found on the Wikipedia ([[Bayes'_Theorem]])."
*{{pro-football-reference|id=McNaDo00|name=Donovan McNabb}}
*Anderson, Kevin. " US politicians embrace podcasts". ''BBC News''. April 13. <small>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4441135.stm]</small>
*[http://www.mcnabbfoundation.org/ The McNabb Foundation Website]
::"...online grassroots encyclopaedia Wikipedia compares podcasts to online audio magazine subscriptions."
*[http://www.footballvibe.com/nfl/nfl-players/donovan-mcnabb-ar2356.html Donovan McNabb bio, interview, pictures & wallpapers]
*Salomo Simanungkalit. "Machine and Mechanics". ''Kompas'' (Indonesia). April 16.
*[http://sidewalkstv.com/webclips/m/mcnabbs.html Donovan McNabb 2006 Interview] on ''[[Sidewalks Entertainment]]''
::"According to Wikipedia, television networks in at least 48 out of 51 countries around the world name the title of the show ''[[Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?]]'' in their own local languages."
*Frum, Larry Jr. "Protecting Your Computer From Wardriving." ''WBAL TV''. April 15, 2005. <small>[http://www.thewbalchannel.com/technology/4382209/detail.html]</small>
*:"According to Wikipedia, the average [[Wardriving|wardriver]] is typically only out to log and collect information from the access points they find while driving. However, some people are concerned about identity theft from their unsecured computers." Article also links to [[Wardriving]].
*Patel, Amit. "Corporations and securities brief ~ Lay fights spring trial date for personal fraud charges." ''Jurist''. April 14, 2005. <small>[http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/04/corporations-and-securities-brief-lay.php]</small>
*:"Leading Thursday corporations and securities law news, ex-Enron [corporate website; JURIST Hot Topic news archive] Chairman [[Ken Lay]] [Wikipedia profile] filed a motion with US District Court Judge Sim Lake asking for his trial on personal bank charges be moved to next year." The name "Ken Lay" links to the Wikipedia article.
*Steigerwald, Bill. "Four economic precepts for everyday life." ''Pittsburgh Tribune-Review''. April 17, 2005. <small>[http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/opinion/columnists/steigerwald/s_324660.html]</small>
*:"I also told him a little about '[[The Tragedy of the Commons]],' a useful metaphor that Wikipedia.org, the online encyclopedia, says is employed by economists "to illustrate the conflict between individual interests and the common good."
*Wilkinson, Tracy and Boudreaux, Richard. "SELECTING A NEW POPE;
Electors Gather to Pick a Pope;
The process is secret, but jockeying beforehand is noticeable. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the chief doctrinal monitor, may be an early favorite." ''Los Angeles Times''. April 18, 2005.
: Of many cited sources at bottom - wikipedia is one
*Feedback, ''New Scientist'', Issue dated 16 April 2005 [http://www.newscientist.com/backpage.ns?id=mg18624953.100]
*:'She tells us of another celebration that recently took place - the "Mill-one-ium", also known as the the "geek millennium". In case you missed it, this historic moment occured at 1:58:31 UTC on 18 March, exactly 1,111,111,111 seconds since the Unix epoch began at 00:00 UTC on 1 January, 1970. A large celebration was helf on the Internet Relay Chat (IRC) freenode channel ##1,111,111,111. According to [[Unix time|Wikipedia]], at its peak the channel averaged 24 messages a second.'
*Hill, Greg. "The newest occupational hazard: Poetry". ''Fairbanks Daily News-Miner''. April 18, 2005. <small>[http://www.news-miner.com/Stories/0,1413,113~7244~2822520,00.html]</small>
*:"It's worth noting that the Kaufman and Ludwig reports studied prominent poets, so those of us whose main poetic efforts involve moving magnetized words around on our refrigerators shouldn't worry. In fact, we ought to take more pride in our creations, for this is a form of "[[found poetry]]," which is described by Wikipedia.com as "the rearrangement of words or phrases taken randomly from other sources."
*Brown, Sylvester Jr. "Start of spring draws more than just beautiful weather". ''St. Louis Post-Dispatch''. April 19, 2005. <small>[http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/columnists.nsf/sylvesterbrownjr/story/98C0A2CC812C3C8C86256FE8003216C9?OpenDocument]</small>
*:"I read on Wikipedia.com, a Web-based encyclopedia, that most [[suicide]]s occur in spring."
*"Cardinal Ratzinger is the new pope." News 14 North Carolina. April 19, 2005. <small>[http://rdu.news14.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=67731]</small>
*:"[[Pope Benedict XVI|Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger]] of Germany is the new pope. He has chosen the name Pope Benedict XVI."
*Anes Alic. "Serb recruits refuse allegiance to Bosnia". ''ISN Security Watch''. April 19, 2005. <small>[http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?id=11128]</small>
*:''(article is illustrated with what appears to be [[:sr:Image:Republika srpska.png]], with attribution "Wikipedia")''
*Jain, Rajesh. "ASPs failed ? but are now making a comeback". ''Business Standard''. April 20, 2005. <small>[http://www.business-standard.com/iceworld/storypage.php?chklogin=&autono=186549&leftnm=lmnu9&leftindx=9&lselect=6]</small>
:"Wikipedia outlines the advantages: software integration issues are eliminated from the client site; software costs for the application are spread over a number of clients; and vendors can build more application experience than in-house staff.
:"It also mentions the disadvantages: the client must generally accept the application as provided since [[Application service provider|ASPs]] can only afford a customised solution for the largest clients; the client may rely on the provider to provide a critical business function, thus limiting their ability to handle that function to that of the provider; continuing consolidation of ASP providers may cause changes in the type or level of service available."
*Mari Nicholson, "Timeless appeal of flip-flops" San Bernardino Sun. April 21, 2005. <small>[http://u.sbsun.com/Stories/0,1413,216~24290~2826259,00.html]</small>
*:"In many developing countries, according to the Internet's Wikipedia, rubber [[flip-flop]]s are the cheapest manufactured footwear available"
*Tucker, Christine. "Jacko's Famous Friends". ''[[Dose (magazine)|Dose]]'', page 6. April 21, 2005.
:"'''18''' The Number of Grammys [Michael] Jackson has won. (Wikipedia) | '''300''' Million. The estimated number of albums Jackson has sold. (Wikipedia)"
 
{{start box}}
====April 22-30====
{{succession box | title=[[Madden NFL|Madden NFL Cover Athlete]] | before=[[Ray Lewis (NFL)|Ray Lewis]] | years=Madden '06 | after=[[Shaun Alexander]]}}
{{succession box | title=Philadelphia Eagles Starting Quarterbacks | before=[[Doug Pederson]]| years=1999-present
(interrupted by [[Koy Detmer]], [[A.J. Feeley]], [[Mike McMahon (football)|Mike McMahon]], and [[Jeff Garcia]] due to injury) | after=Incumbent}}
{{end box}}
 
{{1999 NFL Draft}}
*Slothower, Chuch. "No tact in the Citi". ''Oregon Daily Emerald''. April 22, 2005. <small>[http://www.dailyemerald.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/04/22/4268e269c200f]</small>
{{MaddenNFL-Athlete}}
*:"The friendly local Citi representative &mdash; his actual relationship to [[Citigroup]], the world's largest financial services company according to the online encyclopedia Wikipedia, isn't clear &mdash; was inside the sub shop talking on his cell phone."
{{DEFAULTSORT:McNabb, Donovan}}
 
[[Category:1976 births]]
*Perry, Jan. "Celebrating Indiana in the movies". ''Cincinnati Post''. April 22, 2005. <small>[http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050422/LIFE/504220349/1005]</small>
[[Category:American basketball players]]
*:"'''[[Hoosiers|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoosiers]]'''. ... The story [of the movie ''Hoosiers''] is loosely based on the Milan Indians' trip to the 1954 hoops finals. (This site points out just how loosely.)" ''Article links to Wikipedia article as shown.''
[[Category:American football quarterbacks]]
[[Category:People from Chicago]]
[[Category:People from Philadelphia]]
[[Category:People from Chandler, Arizona]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Philadelphia Eagles players]]
[[Category:Syracuse Orange football players]]
[[Category:Syracuse Orange men's basketball players]]
[[Category:National Conference Pro Bowl players]]
 
[[de:Donovan McNabb]]
*"Papal installation". ''Los Angeles Times''. April 23, 2005. <small>[http://www.latimes.com/features/religion/la-fg-popebox23apr23,1,5348951.story?coll=la-news-religion&ctrack=1&cset=true]</small>
[[es:Donovan McNabb]]
*:End of article lists "Sources: Associated Press; United States Conference of Catholic Bishops; Maureen A. Tilley, associate professor of religious studies, Dayton University; [[Main Page|wikipedia.org]]; newadvent.org."
[[fr:Donovan McNabb]]
 
*"Through the pain barrier". ''Guardian Unlimited''. April 23, 2005. <small>[http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,1468336,00.html?gusrc=rss]</small>
*:''At end of article, there is a section titled "Useful links" with seven links following it. The third is "[[Andrea Dworkin|Wikipedia: More about Dworkin]]".''
 
*"Whatever happened to machines that think?" ''New Scientist''. April 23, 2005, No. 2496, p. 32. [http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18624961.700]
*:Uses the definition from [[Technological singularity]] as its lead-in quote.
 
*Dotinga, Randy. "Virtual Reality May Help Troubled Vets". ''HealthDay''. April 24, 2005. <small>[http://www.healthcentral.com/news/NewsFullText.cfm?id=525170]</small>, reprinted by ''ABC News'' (<small>[http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Healthology/story?id=698727]</small>) and ''Forbes'' (<small>[http://www.forbes.com/lifestyle/health/feeds/hscout/2005/04/24/hscout525170.html]</small>).
*:"Learn more about [[virtual reality]] from the online encyclopedia wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org)." ''HealthDay version does not link; ABC News and Forbes versions do.''
 
*Kanaley, Reid. "Religion on the Internet". ''Philadelphia Inquirer''. April 25, 2005. <small>[http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/business/11479829.htm]</small>
*:"We find ourselves turning again and again to Wikipedia, the user-produced Web encyclopedia. Its article on papal elections covers church practices from the ancient to the modern, and includes links to online source material. [[Papal election|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_election]]." ''Article feature three web sites; Wikipedia is the first and is linked as shown.''
 
*Amberger, Madeleine and Durnford, Laura. "Killer flu mysteries". ''Radio Netherlands''. April 25, 2005. <small>[http://www2.rnw.nl/rnw/en/features/science/050425rf?view=Standard]</small>
*:"An infection is [[Endemic (epidemiology)|endemic]] when it is 'native' in a place or in a population and is maintained without the need for external inputs. For example, there is no sustained transmission of malaria in northern Europe due to the lack of a suitable mosquito species.
*:"An [[epidemic]] is generally a widespread disease that affects many individuals in a population. An epidemic may be restricted to one locale or may even be global (pandemic). An epidemic is defined, however, not by how many members or what proportion of the population it infects but by how fast it is growing, depending on how many people an infected individual is infecting. So even if the number of people affected is small, the phenomenon may still be called an epidemic, although for small epidemics the term 'outbreak' is more often used. ([[Endemic|Wikipedia]])" ''Article links the source "Wikipedia" unfortunately to the disambiguation page [[Endemic]]. First paragraph is paraphrased from [[Endemic]]; second paragraph is directly quoted from [[Epidemic]].''
 
*Enderle, Rob. "IPod's Dirty Little Secret and the Power of the Internet". ''TechNewsWorld''. April 25, 2005. <small>[http://www.technewsworld.com/story/commentary/42328.html]</small>
*:"While researching this piece, I once again ran into the Wikipedia &mdash; a free online encyclopedia which I think does a really nice job of summing up some of the world's most famous chief executives. If you get a chance you should read up on [[Steve Jobs]], [[Bill Gates]], and [[Linus Torvalds]]. (Linus isn't really a CEO but he may be the closest thing that Linux has)." ''Article links to the three articles as shown.''
 
*Neville, Geoff. "Webwatch: Podcasting talks the talk". ''Belfast Telegraph''. April 25, 2005. <small>[http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/business_telegraph/story.jsp?story=632999]</small>
*:"Podcasts can be heard on any PC with a sound card and speakers. For a comprehensive definition of the term, go to [[Podcasting|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasting]]."
 
*Sullivan, Tara. "'Rotten egg' mice to revolutionize space travel, medical practice". ''The South End''. April 25, 2005. <small>[http://www.southend.wayne.edu/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1333]</small>
*:"According to Wikipedia.com, a Web database, the <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[hydrogen sulfide]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> gas can result from bacterial breakdown of sulfur-containing proteins and occurs naturally in crude petroleum, natural gas, volcanic gases, and hot springs."
 
*Dickerson, Chad. "InfoWorld SOA Executive Forum: CTO Reality Check panel". ''InfoWorld''. April 27, 2005. <small>[http://weblog.infoworld.com/dickerson/001318.html]</small>.
*:"(As I have become accustomed to expect, Wikipedia takes a solid stab at [[Service-oriented architecture|defining SOA]]. And if you don't agree, change it, right?)" ''Links to article as shown.''
 
*Stewart, Phil. "Doomsayers Say Benedict Fits World End Prophecy." ''Yahoo News''. Reuters: April 28, 2005. <small>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050428/od_nm/pope_prophecy_dc;_ylt=AiuveJydEYZZDAExMZYCeZwSH9EA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl]</small>
*:"'When (he) chose the name Benedict XVI, this was seen as fulfilling the prophecy for this pope,' wrote one entry on www.wikipedia.org."
 
*Judd, Damon D. "Geocollaboration using Peer-Peer GIS". ''Directions Magazine''. April 28, 2005. <small>[http://www.directionsmag.com/article.php?article_id=850&trv=1]</small>
*:"The web site, [[Main Page|Wikipedia]], is an encyclopedia written collaboratively by many of its readers. It illustrates an interesting level of collaboration at the less interactive, open community side of the spectrum. Wikipedia [[Collaboration|defines]] collaboration as follows." ''Article then quotes first paragraph of [[Collaboration]]. Article links to main page and article as shown.''
 
*Jones, Lee H. "Be Gentle to the Novices". ''Card Player Magazine''. April 28, 2005. <small>[http://www.cardplayer.com/poker_magazine/archives/showarticle.php?a_id=14687]</small>
*:"We are, for now, living in the "eternal September" of poker (check out [[Eternal September|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September]] for more about this term)."
 
*Leopold, Todd. "The meaning of life". ''CNN''. April 28, 2005. <small>[http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/04/26/eye.ent.adams/]</small>.
*:"And then, darn the luck, Earth was destroyed five minutes before the question was to be produced. (See [[The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything|Wikipedia]] for a fascinating description of the Answer, the Question, and the many ways in which '42' is more of an answer than even Adams may have suspected. '''Carl Jung''' would be proud.)"
 
*Dunk, William. "You Can't Step in the Same River Twice While Seeking To Develop Meaningful Companies". ''Local Tech Wire''. April 29, 2005. <small>[http://www.localtechwire.com/article.cfm?u=11173]</small>.
*:"Circa 1990, Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad essayed about 'core competencies.' These are the key strengths of a company which you enhance and do nothing to impair. .. (See [[Core competency|en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_competency]].)" ''and'' "Schumpter would call this a period of 'creative destruction,' although those of a conservative frame of mind would like to think they are preserving, not destroying. (For more on Schumpter, see [[Joseph Schumpeter|en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Schumpeter]].)" ''Links to both articles as shown.''
 
*"China's old foes seek an end to conflict". ''The Economist''. April 29, 2005. <small>[http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3930577]</small>
*:"Wikipedia has [[Chinese Civil War|background information]] on the civil war." ''Listed in sidebar under "Related Items: Websites"; links to article as shown.''
 
*"Heard the news? Challenge readers know their journalists". ''The Herald-Sun''. April 30, 2005. <small>[http://www.herald-sun.com/orange/10-602843.html]</small>.
*:"According to en.wikipedia.org, [[Edward R. Murrow|Murrow]] 'was born near Polecat Creek in Guilford County, North Carolina, the youngest son of Quaker abolitionists. His home was a log cabin without electricity or plumbing, on a farm bringing in only a few hundred dollars a year from corn and hay ... Murrow joined CBS as director of talks in 1935, and would remain with the network for his entire broadcast journalism career..." ''Article goes on to quote an additional two paragraphs from [[Edward R. Murrow]].''
 
*"Only Zouk and laksa, so there's work to be done". ''The Straits Times (Singapore)''. April 30, 2005.
*:"Where is Singapore's pop culture at the moment? Seeking enlightenment, I turned to that peculiar Internet encyclopaedia, www.Wikipedia.org (itself an example of pop culture). Singapore, this 'small and relatively modern amalgam of Chinese, Malay and Indian migrants', Wikipedia intones, 'appears to have little in the way of specifically Singaporean culture'. The website's list of 'uniquely Singaporean cultural concepts' is rather short."
 
===May===
====May 1-10====
*Bill Sones and Rich Sones. "Strange But True" column. The Winnipeg Sun, May 1, 2005.
:*"So-called "polydactyls" may have six or more digits on either their hands or feet or both, an inherited condition, says Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia."
*Crets, Douglas. "Fire ants to put bite into summer". ''The Standard''. May 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.thestandard.com.hk/stdn/std/Metro/GE02Ak01.html]</small>.
:*"The ''invicta'' in the scientific name [of [[red imported fire ant]]s<nowiki>]</nowiki> means 'unconquerable,' and these ants are so resilient, according to the wikipedia online dictionary, that if you flood the nest, the ants will huddle around their queen and create a water-resistant ball. Then they float away."
 
*Carton, Sean. "What Does RSS Mean for Advertisers?" ''ClickZ News''. May 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.clickz.com/experts/ad/lead_edge/article.php/3501226]</small>.
:*"it's not all that important to understand the ins and outs of the RSS protocol (though if you want to know more, Wikipedia is a good place to [[RSS (file format)|start]])". ''Article links to [[RSS (protocol)]], which redirects to [[RSS (file format)]].''
 
*Brown, Aaron J. "Mayday, Mayday: It's May Day". ''The Daily Tribune''. May 2, 2005. <small>[http://www.hibbingmn.com/placed/index.php?sect_rank=4&story_id=199678]</small>
:*"Many traditions make [[May Day]] special. A quick survey of Wikipedia.com yields many of them. For instance, there's the popular 'maypole,' and the dancing that goes with it. Magdalen College in England still follows elaborate May Day traditions including singing from rooftops. However, according to Wikipedia.com, revelers have ceased the once-common practice of throwing of red-hot coins from the top of a building to a crowd of people below. I, for one, hope we can revive that one, perhaps using collectible mint state Quarters."
 
*Stephen Baker and Heather Green, "Blogs Will Change Your Business". ''BusinessWeek''. May 2, 2005.
<small>[http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm]</small>
:*"We're even sprinkling it with [[Hyperlink|links]]."
 
*Berger, Eric. "Environment, Science & Space; Science Fact; A Clear View of Glass". ''The Houston Chronicle''. May 3, 2005.
:*"Source: Wikipedia, GlassOnWeb.com"
 
*Frialde, Mike. "10 sacks of TNT bound for Davao seized at North Harbor". ''The Philippine Star''. May 4, 2005. <small>[http://www.philstar.com/philstar/News200505040403.htm]</small>
*:"According to www.wikipedia.org, TNT or [[trinitrotoluene]] is a pale yellow crystalline compound that is part of many explosive mixtures. In its refined form, TNT is very stable, and unlike nitroglycerin, it is insensitive to friction, blows or jarring. This means that it must be set off by a detonator. It does not react with metals or absorb water, and so unlike dynamite it can be safely stored for many years. It is, however, readily acted upon by alkalis to form unstable compounds that are very sensitive to heat and impact."
 
*Roberts-Gudeman, Kim. "Film lacks history's complexity Crusades chronicle". ''Omaha World-Herald''. May 8, 2005.
*:"Source: http://en.wikipedia.org"
 
*Chandy, Ann Marie. "''American Idol'''s top five". ''Malaysia Star''. May 4, 2005. <small>[http://www.star-ecentral.com/news/story.asp?file=/2005/5/4/tvnradio/10807975&sec=tvnradio]</small>
*:"She <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Carrie Underwood]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> is the very first and only ''American Idol'' contestant who wasn't born in a hospital, according to online encyclopaedia Wikipedia.org. (We suspect she was born in a barn ? just kidding)."
 
*Macworld staff. "'Bluesnarfing' Macs, Apple acts". ''Macworld''. May 4, 2005. <small>[http://www.macworld.co.uk/news/index.cfm?NewsID=11487&Page=1&pagePos=2]</small>
*:"Bluesnarfing, according to [[Bluesnarf|Wikipedia]], is the, 'theft of information from a wireless device through a Bluetooth connection'. Bluesnarfers will access files&mdash;including calendars, contacts, emails and more, on victim phones or computers, and 'snarf' (steal) these." ''Links to article as shown.''
 
*Nworah, Uche. "Review of the Nigeria Image Project: Relevance of Communication Theories to Country Branding". ''Global Politician''. May 6, 2005. <small>[http://globalpolitician.com/articledes.asp?ID=689&cid=8&sid=0]</small>
*:"This view is upheld by the wikipedia entry on [[opinion leadership]]; it states that a person that is an opinion leader in one field may be a follower in another field." ''Also, lists under "Sources":'' "Opinion Leadership. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_leadership. Retrieved on the 7th of April 2005."
 
*Blumenau, Kurt. "Birthdays make strange bedfellows". ''MetroWest Daily News''. May 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/columnists/view.bg?articleid=98137]</small>
*:"[[Sonny Liston|en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Liston]] &mdash; Sonny Liston's compelling, if depressing, life story has been told many times. The online encyclopedia Wikipedia lays out the highs, lows and bizarre way stations of Liston's life. Perhaps the most bizarre was as a cameo role in The Monkees' 1968 movie ''Head''&mdash;a trivia fact worth knowing next time you play Six Degrees of Separation with Muhammad Ali and Peter Tork."
 
*Cone, Edward. "Your mama! But I mean that in a nice way". ''Greensboro News Record''. May 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.news-record.com/news/columnists/staff/h3cone_050805.htm]</small>
*:"According to the online reference site Wikipedia, '[[Mother of vinegar]] is a slime ... that develops on fermenting alcoholic liquids.' Wikipedia also has an entry for '[[Your mom]],' also known as 'yo mamma,' which it defines as 'a very specific form of crude joke, also known as the dozens or snapping, consisting of an exaggerated characteristic being attributed to the target's mother, usually pertaining to an often erroneous weight problem, or a mental deficiency of some sort.'"
 
*Eberhart, John Mark. "Hitchhike through this galaxy". ''The Sun Herald''. May 8, 2005. <small>[http://www.sunherald.com/mld/thesunherald/living/11593085.htm]</small>
*:"According to www.wikipedia.org, 'Many consider [''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]''] books' versions of events to be definitive, because they are the final versions Adams produced (and also the most readily accessible).'"
 
*Bronson, Peter. "There's no such thing as an ordinary mom". ''Cincinnati Enquirer''. May 8, 2005. <small>[http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050508/COL05/505080331/1009/EDIT]</small>
*:"Wikipedia says: 'The thermodynamic [[entropy]] S, often simply called the entropy in the context of thermodynamics, is a measure of the amount of energy in a physical system that cannot be used to do work. It is also a measure of the disorder present in a system.'"
 
===May/June===
*Palmore, Julian. "Ask The Expert" (Q&A column). ''Illinois Alumni''. May/June 2005.
*:"From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, we learn: 'The hour was originally defined in Egypt as 1/24 of a day, based on their duodecimal numbering system (which counted finger joints on each hand).'"