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This is a selection of recently created new articles and greatly expanded former stub articles on Wikipedia that were featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know? You can submit new pages for consideration. (Archives are in sets of 50–100 items each.)
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Did you know...
Please add the line *'''''~~~~~''''' at the top for the newly posted set of archived hooks. This page should be archived once a week, anytime on a Friday. Leave any already archived Friday hooks here and archive from the final Thursday update. Thanks.
- 12:29, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Rohitha Bogollagama (pictured) represented Sri Lanka at peace talks with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam at Geneva in 2006?
- ... that "Back 2 You / Still Grey" was simultaneously the first single by drum and bass band Pendulum to feature either a guest vocalist, or a guest instrumentalist?
- ... that in addition to being a government aide during the Vietnam Conflict, Michael Forrestal was also a mediator in international disputes between the USSR and the US?
- ... that the album title Ordinary Dreamers is about doing extraordinary things with a "dreamer mentality" as an ordinary person?
- ... that two summits of Potter Fell in the Lake District are mentioned in Alfred Wainwright's The Outlying Fells of Lakeland?
- ... that musician Bruce Conforth was the first curator at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio?
- ... that the Church of Our Lady of Light in Chennai, India was built in 1516 by Portuguese missionaries?
- ... that Dutch Arts and Crafts designer Peter Waals was the nephew of a Nobel Prize-winning physicist?
- ... that Bangladesh Police plan to recruit 3,000 women to expand the newly-created Special Women Police Contingent across Bangladesh?
- ... that as a result of Janina San Miguel's response to a question in the 2008 Binibining Pilipinas World pageant, the Philippine government proposed English courses for beauty pageant contestants?
- 07:06, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the first public Swedish orienteering competition, held in 1901, had two churches, Spånga and Bromma kyrka (pictured) as control points?
- ... that the 1944 Avery-MacLeod-McCarty experiment, later celebrated for showing that DNA is the genetic material, challenged the prevailing wisdom that genes were made of protein?
- ... that in 1992, when Oddny Aleksandersen was appointed Norwegian Minister of Government Administration and Labour, no male had yet held this position?
- ... that the recent series of "I'm a PC" advertisements for Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system were created using Apple Macintosh computers?
- ... that Steve Souchock was possibly going to be first baseman for the New York Yankees, but instead served military service during World War II, eventually earning five battle stars and one Bronze Star?
- ... that the opera Les vêpres siciliennes (1885) by Giuseppe Verdi was based in part on the medieval Sicilian tract Lu rebellamentu di Sichilia (1290)?
- ... that the Dhaka Metropolitan Police first inducted female officers in 1978?
- ... that American Australian astronomer Penny Sackett has been appointed as the next Chief Scientist of Australia and will commence her duties in November 2008?
- 23:44, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
- ... that suggestions for rejuvenating the Big Orange (pictured), near Berri, South Australia, include turning it into a big golf ball?
- ... that the press box at the University of Wyoming is named for Larry Birleffi, who announced all Wyoming Cowboys football and basketball games from 1947–1986?
- ... that former Chief Justice of Queensland Neal Macrossan's brother and nephew were also Chief Justice as well?
- ... that The Independent Journal, a New York newspaper and journal edited and published by John McLean, was the first newspaper to publish the first of the eighty-five Federalist Papers?
- ... that Roger Vanderfield, an Australian doctor, rugby union referee and administrator, was instrumental in establishing the first Rugby World Cup?
- ... that after witnessing first hand the carnage of the First World War, English artist David Bomberg lost his faith in modernism and Russian Ballet was his last work in a vorticist idiom?
- ... that, during the 1994 Major League Baseball strike, umpire Larry Young refereed a match at WrestleMania XI?
- ... that San Marino debuted at the Eurovision Song Contest 2008 with "Complice", a song performed by Miodio?
- ... that Swedish-American ornithologist Thure Kumlien was probably poisoned by preservatives used on bird specimens sent to him?
- 16:39, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
- ... that a jeogori (pictured) is a Korean basic upper garment of traditional hanbok having been worn by both men and women?
- ... that publisher Irvin J. Borowsky created TV Digest, America's first television program listing, which was sold to Walter Annenberg and became part of TV Guide?
- ... that the HMS Inconstant, a Royal Navy frigate, captured three French warships during the French Revolutionary Wars?
- ... that Bob Miller lost his first 12 games with the 1962 New York Mets and played for 10 different teams in his Major League Baseball career, tying modern-day records for both that have since been broken?
- ... that painter Karp Zolotaryov created a handmade Zodiac calendar for teaching then-seven-year-old Peter I of Russia?
- ... that Christopher Munch had to shoot his film The Sleepy Time Gal over an extended two-and-a-half year period due to a lack of finances?
- ... that Nils Claus Ihlen served as Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs for seven years, but as Minister of Industrial Provisioning for only seven days?
- ... that the Bangladesh Police inherits much of its structure from the police of British India and contributes to U.N. peace-keeping missions?
- 10:37, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Ochna serrulata is called "Mickey Mouse Plant" because the plant's bright-red sepals (pictured) resemble the face of Mickey Mouse?
- ... that the Umikaze class destroyers of the Imperial Japanese Navy were the first large destroyers designed for open ocean service to be built in Japan?
- ... that John T. David, a small-town Louisiana mayor, was elected to his parish governing council in 1956, less than a year after resigning as mayor because of two bootlegging convictions?
- ... that Iceland and India established diplomatic relations in 1972?
- ... that William T. Kane, a physicist with Corning Incorporated, held three patents in crystallography important to the development of fiber optics?
- ... that the Supreme Court of Cocos (Keeling) Island once administered laws described as "Byzantine" in complexity?
- ... that Artus de Lionne, who went to China for missionary work in 1689, played a role against Jesuits in the Chinese Rites controversy?
- ... that the ballad Mulga Bill's Bicycle by Australian bush poet Banjo Paterson was inspired by an outback worker who purchased a bicycle when drought meant there was no feed for horses?
- ... that Don Ultang co-won the 1952 Pulitzer Prize for images of the Johnny Bright Incident, showing a violent hit by an Oklahoma A&M player on Drake University's Johnny Bright that broke Bright's jaw?
