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Me in words instead of Userboxes :)

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I am a teenage boy living in Pennsylvania. I like to read and mess around with computer stuff, especially Wikipedia. I am also a Boy Scout.

I heartily support placing stub templates on pages; I'm sick of clicking "random article" and getting an article with two lines! Often, I have the list of stubs up in a different tab.

Check out the Main Page Redesign Proposal!

Along with anything else Webkinz, Survivor, and NCIS related.

Please sign my guestbook!

Note to vandals: If you wish, you may vandalize this page. I will, however, revert the edit asap.

I have a secret page! For instructions on finding it, click here

--Spider1224


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Awards! Yay!

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  The Wwesocks #1 signer of Guestbook Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded to Spider1224 for being the first one to sign wwesockssign's Guestbook.
 
Thanks for signing my Guestbook! To futher thank you, this is one free bootleg German ticket to see The Dark Knight at any bootleg movie theater neer you! Gears of War 2

Funny-as-heck-things

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WP:LAME WP:LAST WP:UA LaPianista's Humor Page Funny Quotes! Museum defies pope over crucified frog Drug-addicted elephant kicks heroin habit

 
Content of Wikipedia, June 2008


The Book of Fixed Stars (Arabic: كتاب صور الكواكب kitāb suwar al-kawākib, literally The Book of the Shapes of Stars) is an astronomical text written by Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (Azophi) around 964. Following the Graeco-Arabic translation movement in the 9th century AD, the book was written in Arabic, the common language for scholars across the vast Islamic territories, although the author himself was Persian. It was an attempt to create a synthesis of the comprehensive star catalogue in Ptolemy's Almagest (books VII and VIII) with the indigenous Arabic astronomical traditions on the constellations (notably the Arabic constellation system of the Anwā'). The original manuscript no longer survives as an autograph, however, the Book of Stars has survived in later-made copies. This image from the book shows the constellation of Orion, in mirror image as if on a celestial globe, and is from a copy in the Bodleian Library dated to the 12th century AD.Ilustration credit: Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi