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hello CURPS, if not mistaken it looks like this short article is written and published by CURPS ??

any more information wanted about me ?

see you around

Hans-Emil Schuster

I am doing biographies of various astronomers, living and dead. Recently concentrating on discoverers of asteroids and comets.
Any career or biographical information is useful, major discoveries and contributions, etc. Probably limited to what would fit in several paragraphs, not a complete curriculum vitae.
By the way, do you know what the "M." stands for in "Richard M. West"?


ref.Richard M.West: as far as I know the M. stands for MARTIN, I assume that Dr.West is using the M. not getting confused with any other Richard West


ref: Hans-Emil Schuster (born 19.September 1934 in Hamburg) A) I am retired since October 1991, B) please take note for any future entrances that I have

  no PhD-title, so please avoid any DR. before my name.

C) there is another interesting comet, not periodic,

  first provisional designation was 1975 II, holding at that
  time the largest perhilion distance yet observed;
  more details should be found in the IAU cirulars or with
  Dr.Brian Mardsen
OK, thanks very much for the information. I've modified the article. Also, I was able to confirm M. = Martin from two other sources, found by typing "richard martin west" into Google. -- Curps

ok, that looks fine ref Hans-Emil Schuster: you may add: worked at Hamburg Observatory Bergedorf, then at European Southern Observatory ESO. (as already stated) Participitation in the two large ESO Southern Sky Surveys (QUICK BLUE and RED SURVEY) Plates taken with ESO Schmidt Telescope on La Silla

OK, I added these things

sorry for the upheaval, my English is not that prefect (No Shakespeare standard :) so I will not edit myself.

last not least you may add (if you like) I participated in two large exploration and site testing campaigns. For ESO La Silla Observatory and for the ESO Paranal Observatory , the VLT site.


thanks, H.-E.S.

OK.

looks like now we have it, impressive the rapid response new information is added, is done by an automatic editor ? Hardly to believe, or you guys are sitting there and working 24 hours around the clock ? Respect for this job, with nearly 70 years I may be allowed for a kind of black joke finally: now we are just waiting for the last editing ,if you see what I mean: (1934--xxxx?) all the best H.-E.S.

The way wikipedia works is, anyone can edit or contribute to any page. I'm not a staff member or employee of Wikipedia, just an ordinary Internet user.
If you register for a user name (like my user name "Curps"), then you can request that any page be added to your "watch list"... this alerts you whenever the page has been recently changed. Or you can change your preferences so that every page that you edit is automatically added to your watchlist (this is the setting I use).
I just happened to be working on a lot of pages this weekend (Gustav Witt, Arno Arthur Wachmann, Arnold Schwassmann, August Kopff, Vincenzo Cerulli, etc.) and was checking my watchlist from time to time, and noticed that this Talk:Hans-Emil Schuster page had been updated. So that's why there was "real-time" interaction. Normally, it might take a day or maybe even a week to respond, since I just contribute to Wikipedia in my spare time and not on any regular schedule.
By the way, there is a German Wikipedia at http://de.wikipedia.org/ if you are interested.
I wish you the best of health and hope there will not be a final update to your page any time soon. I think you can look back and be satisfied with the many contributions to astronomy you have made. -- Curps

hello Curps , could you eli,inate the stubs of "my article"

ref Phoenix dwarf: something is cooking with this extraordinary object At Penn State (as I heard) they are busy with it

see you around Desertsky HES