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This template is not intended to be used alone, but only in conjunction with {{Infobox church}}.It changes the background colour of the headings in that template depending on the denomination of the church specified in the template, according to the following scheme:
The background colour of the template headings is specified for certain denominations; to view these colours, see "Template:Infobox church/denomination" and "Template:Infobox church/font color". Before changing the colours, or inserting new denominations and colours, please discuss the matter with other editors at "Template talk:Infobox church".
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The templates in this series are designed to be used in a table to make a cell with text in that cell, with an appropriately colored background. They are commonly used in comparison tables . Most of these templates should not be used simply to produce a background color, use them according to their meaning.
A guestbook (also guest book, visitor log, visitors' book, visitors' album) is a paper or electronic means for a visitor to acknowledge a visit to a site, physical or web-based, and leave details such as their name, postal or electronic address and any comments.
The Guestbook Project began ten years with the intention of using the power of storytelling to heal divided communities and societies around the world. [8] To that end, Guestbook often features conversations of people from dissenting backgrounds, and attempts to have them share their side of the story, listen to the other side, and evantually come to “invent a new story together.” [9] The ...
Do not beg others to sign your guestbook. Users eventually will come to see your user page, and many will click your guestbook and sign it without being asked. Don't ask a user to sign your guestbook by posting that message on a talk page. Be patient. Users will eventually come. After all, you should not be here only to see who signed your ...
Gordimer was born to Jewish parents near Springs, an East Rand mining town outside Johannesburg.She was the second daughter of Isidore Gordimer (1887–1962), a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant watchmaker from Žagarė in Lithuania (then part of the Russian Empire), [2] [3] and Hannah "Nan" (née Myers) Gordimer (1897–1973), a British Jewish immigrant from London.