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Featured content

The sun sets for featured article delegate SandyGeorgia

Sunset at Porto Covo, Portugual, a new featured picture

The featured article process was rocked this week by two events: the resignation of longtime FA delegate SandyGeorgia, effective no later than 7 February 2012; and a request for comment (RFC) started by TCO to make the positions of featured article director and delegate elected instead of appointed.

SandyGeorgia, a featured article delegate since 2008 and a prominent reviewer since 2005, tendered her resignation on 8 January. She cited the decreasing quality of Wikipedia's medical articles, POV issues in Venezuela-related articles, a push for quantity over quality, and recent issues at Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates as reasons for her resignation. SandyGeorgia wrote that she will continue to serve "no more than 30 days, or earlier if another delegate is appointed or Raul asks for [her] resignation sooner" and will return to content creation and improvement. Editors have expressed shock and dismay, but ultimately acceptance over the resignation.

On the same day, TCO opened an RFC that seeks to implement a yearly election cycle for featured article director and delegates, similar to the systems used to choose the Coordinators for WikiProject Military history and Guild of Copy Editors. Citing concerns over the declining rate of article promotions and a lack of activity by featured article director Raul654, TCO suggested that a new group of seven delegates should be elected in early February, with a director chosen from among them. This proposal received significant opposition, including 10 oppose votes within three hours and a posting at ANI. The RFC was withdrawn by the creator 13 hours in after receiving 25 opposes.

Nicky Barr, an Australian rugby player, airman, and subject of a new featured article
A Boeing 767; the model is the subject of a new featured article.
Part of Titchwell Marsh, the subject of a new featured article
A new featured picture of Salman Khurshid, Cabinet Minister of the Ministry of Law and Justice and Ministry of Minority Affairs of India
A new featured picture of a Great Crested Grebe

Eight featured articles were promoted this week.

  • Mathew Charles Lamb (nom) by Cliftonian. Lamb, born in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, on 5 January 1948, was arrested in June 1966 for the murder of two people and the wounding of another two. Found legally insane by the court, Lamb was sentenced to indefinite interment at a mental hospital but was released in 1973. Later that year he joined the Rhodesian Security Forces. He died from friendly fire on 7 November 1976 and was given a "hero's funeral" in Salisbury, with his ashes returned to Windsor.
  • Typhoon Gay (1992) (nom) by Hurricanehink. In the succinct words of the nominator, "A gay typhoon blew saltwater to turn plants brown, curiously ignoring gymnosperms". The Signpost notes that there have been four Gay blows, with the new featured article the most recent.
  • Nicky Barr (nom) by Ian Rose. Nicky Barr (right) was born on 10 December 1915 in Wellington, New Zealand, but moved to Australia in 1921. In 1939 he joined the Wallabies, the Australian national rugby team. However, after failing to play against the United Kingdom due to the outbreak of World War II, on 4 March 1940 he joined the Australian air force. As a pilot, he was posted to North Africa with No. 3 Squadron, eventually taking lead in May 1942; shortly afterwards, he was shot down and brought to Italy. He escaped, was repatriated to England, and helped with the invasion of Normandy. He died on 12 June 2006.
  • Titchwell Marsh (nom) by Jimfbleak. Titchwell Marsh (portion at right), in Norfolk, England, between the villages of Titchwell and Thornham, is a nature reserve owned and managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. Covering 171 hectares (423 acres), the marsh includes reed beds, salt marshes, a freshwater lagoon and a sandy beach, and is an important breeding site for some scare birds. Artefacts found in the marsh date back to the Upper Paleolithic, and there are some abandoned military constructions scattered throughout it.
  • German battleship Tirpitz (nom) by Parsecboy. The Tirpitz (below) was the second of two Bismarck-class battleships built by the German navy during World War II. It was laid in November 1936 and completed in February 1941. Immediately commissioned, the Tirpitz initially served as the centrepiece of the Baltic Fleet, later to be sent to Norway to serve as a fleet in being. The ship used its guns in anger the first time in September 1943, bombarding allied positions at Spitzbergen. After attacks by mini submarines and several air raids, the Tirpitz was sunk on 12 November 1944.
  • HMS New Zealand (1911) (nom) by Sturmvogel 66. The HMS New Zealand was launched in 1911 and given to Britain as a gift by the government of New Zealand. One of three Indefatigable-class battlecruisers, the ship was commissioned in 1912 and spent 10 months on a tour of the British Dominions. Back in British waters by the start of World War I, the New Zealand went on to participate in all three of the major North Sea battles of World War I and received no casualties. After the end of the war and another world tour, the ship was scrapped in 1922.
  • Boeing 767 (nom) by SynergyStar. The Boeing 767 (example at right) is a mid-size, wide-body twin-engine jet airliner built by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. The plane, with a range of 3,850–6,385 nautical miles (7,130–11,825 km) and a capacity of 181–375 persons depending on variant, had its maiden flight in in 1981 and was first flown commercially on 8 September 1982. By the 1990s it had become the most frequently used airliner for transatlantic flights between North America and Europe. As of July 2011, there are 837 Boeing 767s in service; the 767-300ER is the most popular variant.
  • Blonde on Blonde (nom) by Mick gold, I.M.S., Allreet, and Moisejp. The album Blonde on Blonde, singer-songwriter Bob Dylan's seventh, was released in May or June 1966 after more than six months of production. The last release in a trilogy of rock albums, Blonde on Blonde's songs have been described as operating on a grand scale musically, with the lyrics once called "a unique blend of the visionary and the colloquial." One of the first double albums in rock history, it peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard 200 chart in the US, while in the UK it reached No. 3; two of its songs were selected by Rolling Stone for their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Four featured lists were promoted this week:

  • List of Afghanistan T20I cricketers (nom) by Vibhijain. Thirteen players have represented the Afghanistan national cricket team in eight Twenty20 International (T20I) matches (matches between two teams with T20I certification) since their certification in 2010. The Afghan team has played in 8 T20I matches; eight players have played in all eight matches. Noor Ali is the leading run-scorer with 199 runs.
  • Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals (nom) by Albacore. The Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocal—historically also known as the Best Country Vocal Performance, Duet, and later Best Country Vocal Collaboration—was a Grammy Award for two or more country singers who collaborated on a song. In 2011 it was merged with two other categories to "tighten the number of categories" at the awards. Alison Krauss, with five wins, holds the most awards in this category; seven others have two. The most nominated are Emmylou Harris and Willie Nelson, with nine nominations apiece.
  • List of monarchs of East Anglia (nom) by Amitchell125. The independent Anglo-Saxon kingdom of East Anglia, consisting of what is now the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk (and perhaps the eastern part of the Fens), was ruled by up to 32 kings over its approximately 400 years of existence. The original rulers were members of the Wuffingas dynasty, while later rulers were either overlords of the conquering Mercians, of unknown descent, or of Danish descent.
  • List of 1964 Winter Olympics medal winners (nom) by Courcelles. At the 1964 Winter Olympic Games in Innsbruck, Austria, 1,095 athletes representing 36 National Olympic Committees competed in 34 events across 10 disciplines. The most successful country in total number of medals was the USSR, with 25 medals (11 of them gold), followed by Norway in second position and Austria in third. Two competitors, British luge competitor Kazimierz Kay-Skrzypeski and the Australian alpine skiier Ross Milne, died in training.

Three featured pictures were promoted this week.

  • Salman Khurshid (nom; related article) by Muhammad Mahdi Karim. The new featured picture (right) depicts Indian politician Salman Khurshid, cabinet minister of the Ministry of Law and Justice and Ministry of Minority Affairs of India. Khurshid (born 1953), began his career in politics as an officer on special duty under Indira Gandhi. The new featured picture was shot when the minister was to have a photoshoot with other VIPs.
  • Sunset at Porto Covo (nom; related article) by Alvesgaspar. The new featured picture (top), used in both Sunset and Sunset (color), depicts a sunset over Porto Covo in Portugal. Sunsets are generally more colourful than than sunrise because evening air contains more particles to refract the sunlight than morning air. In most places, the earliest sunsets are after the winter solstice and the latest after the summer solstice.
  • Great Crested Grebe at Lake Dulverton (nom; Related article) by JJ Harrison. The Great Crested Grebe (right), a bird 46–51 centimetres (18–20 in) long, found throughout the old world and Oceania, breeds in vegetated areas of freshwater lakes. It feeds on fish, crustaceans, insects, and frogs, and is classified as least concern.
A recognition drawing of the German battleship Tirpitz, the subject of a new featured article