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Features and admins

First featured picture from the legally disputed National Portrait Gallery images; two Chicago icons

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By Tony1 and Dabomb87
New featured picture: a poster advertising "A century of progress", the world fair held in Chicago in 1933 to celebrate the city's centennial. The theme of the fair was technological innovation.
From the new featured article: The Monadnock Building, an icon of Chicago architecture


This week's "Features and admins" covers Saturday 8 – Friday 14 January 2011 (UTC)


New administrators

The Signpost welcomes our two new admins:

At the time of publication there was one live RfA: GiantSnowman, due to finish 21 January.


From the new featured article, a Royal Maundy ceremony in 1877
Five articles were promoted to featured status:
A large crowd standing in a deep railway cutting. On the railway tracks are three elaborately decorated carriages and a number of small locomotives.
From featured article Choice of the week: the Duke of Wellington's train and other locomotives being readied for departure from Liverpool, 15 September 1830.


Choice of the week. We asked FA nominator/reviewer EdChem for his choice of the best FA this week:

"Trying to choose a "best" FA from such a variety of topics is almost inevitably subjective, so I've chosen to base my decision on what I found most interesting. I was looking for an article that caught and held my attention, that made me want to keep reading. I was impressed by the Monadnock Building article, and was surprised that so much documented history could be squeezed into one building. I was intrigued by the Hill 303 massacre article, as it described a part of Korean War history of which I was unaware. And I certainly agree with the description of Royal Maundy as "one of those quirky British ceremonies which fascinate everyone".

My choice, however, is the article on the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway which describes the most eventful opening of a railway line that one might imagine. I'd generally expect that 105 kB for an article on the opening of a railway line would be overkill, or (let's be honest) dull. But with a derailment, an unrelated fatality, a Prime Minister pelted with vegetables, a world land speed record, a politician resigning on an issue of a lack of representation for his constituents, a funeral attended by an estimated 69,000 people. and the opportunity to a learn a new word ("deodand"), this article has plenty to hold your interest. Kudos to Iridescent: this is an impressive article and well worth taking the time to read."


From the newly promoted List of leaders of the Soviet Union: Mikhail Gorbachev in the White House Library in 1987, as his world-changing reform program of the Soviet Empire was gathering pace
Five lists were promoted:

Two featured lists were delisted:

One topic was promoted:

One featured topic, Celebration, was delisted for insufficient coverage of the topic.


Lady Margaret Beaufort, the mother of King Henry VII, a key figure in the Wars of the Roses, and an influential matriarch of the House of Tudor. This image was among thousands that were the subject of a legal threat by the National Portrait Gallery in London that raised interesting issues of how copyright law operates across jurisdictions.
Maxim Gorky (1868–1936), the Russian novelist
Eight images were promoted. Medium-sized images can be viewed by clicking on "nom":
From the newly featured List of Oslo Tramway and Metro operators, a tram at Egertorget / Carl Johans Gate in Oslo, Norway in 1907


Information about new admins at the top is drawn from their user pages and RfA texts, and occasionally from what they tell us directly.

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