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@Winkelvi:@Daniel Case:@Gourami Watcher:@Rich Farmbrough:@BabbaQ: Apart from that Little Miss Nobody was a Somebody. I'm mightily pissed off at people elsewhere online that claim places like Wikipedia and Websleuths shouldn't call her Little Miss as there is an infinitesimal small chance she might not have seen herself as a girl.
(sarcastic) Yeah, lots of little boys have colored hair and painted fingernails and toenails (sarcastic)
@InedibleHulk: Regarding this edit, I agree with you. I have no proof but I am suspicious that this is a case of the tail wagging the dog. I think The Huffington Post called it murder because Wikipedia was calling it murder. - Location (talk) 13:00, 8 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
No worries. From here on, just remember to follow the sources and not the hunches. On Wikipedia, anyway. A little wild speculation/thinking outside the box can be useful in solving mysteries. InedibleHulk(talk)17:06, 8 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I don't have a problem with someone creating an article and mentioning it elsewhere, but I find it a bit suspicious that The Line Up/The Huffington Post article came out shortly after the development of this article... particularly since there has been virtually no coverage of the disappearance over the past fifty years. One concern that I have is that the The Line Up/The Huffington Post may have used the Wikipedia article for their write-up [e.g. note the prominence of the "Somewhere, someone..." quote in both articles] and their write-up is now being used to support the WP:PERSISTENCE clause for determining notability. - Location (talk) 17:51, 8 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Incidentally, note that Wikipedia's version of the "Somewhere, someone..." quote (i.e. "Somewhere, someone is watching to learn what happened to a little girl left on the desert.") cites this source which actually states: "...but somewhere someone is going to be watching the paper to learn what happened to a little girl left in the desert.". - Location (talk) 17:53, 8 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
It was a different time. Didn't even have VCRs or national cable, let alone YouTube. A five-minute spot over the air lasted exactly five minutes (and reached only those in surrounding areas, if they had their TV on), while a five-paragraph spot in the paper can last for centuries. It's why we only have newspaper sources in the article today. InedibleHulk(talk)09:58, 9 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah.. someone once pointed out to me that so many old newspapers being stored on microfilm isn't actually a bad thing as microfilm can last for hundreds of years, and computer hard drives... can't. Paul Benjamin Austin (talk) 10:23, 9 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe. Streambeds are generally a good place to look for those finer things, but they're also a good place for the functional kind. The way it's worded, I'd lean toward plain rocks, but can't be sure. InedibleHulk(talk)11:34, 10 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Apparently, Congress lost its gold prosperity in the mid-'30s. Of course, what's considered "worth the trouble" by mining companies can be much different from family-sized standards. An ounce of 1960 gold only works out to $287 in 2015 money (a fifth of modern gold), but that's not exactly peanuts (an ounce of today's peanuts costs just one 1960 penny; one 1960 penny can cost $22 today). InedibleHulk(talk)00:01, 11 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The Huffington Post didn't even ask me, if it's true that they half-inched it from Wikipedia. Sheree Beasley and Karmein Chan may have been murdered in Melbourne but they both have Wikipedia articles because they are famous throughout Australia (although Karmein's should be at Murder of... as she's only famous for being kidnapped and killed, not as a person in her right). The fact that most of the articles about them come from the same media ownership is just because Rupert Murdoch owns most of our major newspapers. Paul Benjamin Austin (talk) 01:57, 9 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]