Template:Did you know/Queue
| If there are 3 or more empty queues, this page will report as a backlog. () |
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| Main (T:DYK) |
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| Rules (WQ:DYK) |
| Additional rules (WQ:DYKAR) |
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| Discussion (WT:DYK) |
| Prep areas (P1 | P2 | P3 | P4) |
| Queue (T:DYK/Q) |
| Archive (WQ:DYKA) |
| Stats (WQ:DYKSTATS) |
This page gives an overview of all the hooks currently in the queue for promotion to the front page. By showing the content of all the queue and preparation area pages in one place, the overview helps administrators see how full the queue is, and also makes it easier for users to check that their hook has been promoted.
You may need to purge this page to get it to display the latest edits.
The next update will be produced from queue 2. After doing a manual update, please update the queue count.
Contents |
[edit] DYK time
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Earliest time for next update: Error: Invalid time. (UTC)
Current time: Sunday, 19 May 2013 06:19 (UTC) Last updated: 2 years ago. (verify · reset · purge) |
| There are no empty queues. |
[edit] Current number of hooks on the suggestions page
WikiQueer:Did you know/DYK hook count
[edit] Local update times
| Los Angeles | New York | London | New Delhi | Tokyo | Sydney | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Queue 2 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Queue 3 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Queue 4 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Queue 5 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Queue 6 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Queue 1 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Prep 4 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Prep 1 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Prep 2 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
| Prep 3 | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. | Error: Invalid time. |
[edit] Queues
[edit] Queue 2 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that Bach's cantata for the St. Thomas Sunday (pictured) of 1725, Am Abend aber desselbigen Sabbats, BWV 42, is the only one in his second annual cycle beginning with a Sinfonia?
- ... that Buddhist monk U Gambira was sentenced to sixty-three years in prison for his leadership role in Burma's Saffron Revolution?
- ... that the Plain of Torvioll saw the first battle of Skanderbeg's war against the Ottoman Empire?
- ... that Adrian Lombard, who had no formal training in aerodynamics, became one of the world's foremost designers of jet engines?
- ... that professional wrestling events have been held to honor Sherri Martel, Shinya Hashimoto (also known as Hustle King), and Fred Ward?
- ... that on the north wall of St Nicholas' Church in Freefolk, Hampshire, are three layers of wall paintings?
- ... that Ghada Amer created the Encyclopedia of Pleasure sculpture in 2001 to illustrate parts of the eponymous Islamic Golden Age encyclopedia that discusses female sexual pleasure?
[edit] Queue 3 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that Polish Countess Eveline Hańska (pictured) was once ordered by a doctor to stick her feet into a small pig in order to treat her gout?
- ... that the former station house at the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway depot in Galesburg, Illinois, had two waiting rooms, one for men and one for women?
- ... that journalist Iryna Khalip is under incommunicado house arrest following a protest of the 2010 Belarusian presidential election, in which her husband was also a candidate?
- ... that Sophie Christiansen, the youngest athlete for Great Britain at the 2004 Summer Paralympics, won a bronze medal in dressage?
- ... that despite intending to cast a 40–50 year old Japanese actor in the upcoming Fringe episode "The Day We Died", American actor Brad Dourif was chosen instead?
- ... that the Cloth of St Gereon is the oldest known European tapestry still existing?
- ... that Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's state funeral took place twice, once immediately after his death in 1938 and then again in 1953?
[edit] Queue 4 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that the church of Llangadfan (pictured), near Dyfnant Forest, was visited by Saint Cadfan who founded a church there before moving to Bardsey Island in 516?
- ... that the upscale boutiques and exclusive nightclub that Aspen, Colorado, developer Harley Baldwin put in the Brand Building and Collins Block earned them the nickname "Glitter Gulch"?
- ... that Albanian leader Skanderbeg ambushed his would-be ambusher at the Battle of Meçad?
- ... that the Emissions Control Technology Association (ECTA) claims that more than $20 in healthcare savings is generated for every dollar spent on the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act?
- ... that Admiral Samuel Goodall fought in three wars, seeing action at Ushant, the Saintes, Genoa and the Hyères Islands?
- ... that Arroyo Seco, Querétaro, Mexico, is home to the Sótano del Barro, a pit cave which is one of the largest cavities of the world by volume?
- ... that a proposal by Republican Charles Austin Tweed allowing California to hire women at the same rate of pay offered to men was defeated by the California State Senate?
[edit] Queue 5 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that in 2010, Washington Nationals pitcher Collin Balester (pictured) hit two batters in the head in a span of nine days?
- ... that British physicist Alexander Rankine gave the 1932 Royal Institution Christmas Lecture and worked on fog dispersal systems during World War II?
- ... that Chinese explorer Jin Feibao has completed the Explorers Grand Slam in only 18 months and 24 days, the fastest recorded time?
- ... that Penny White lost her seat on the Tennessee Supreme Court because of her vote in a single court decision?
- ... that the Los Angeles Times calls Love, Loss, and What I Wore a The Vagina Monologues-What Not to Wear mix, and The New York Times calls it a "show about matters of the heart and matters of the closet"?
- ... that during World War II, men of the American 818th Tank Destroyer Battalion were awarded nine Silver Stars and seventy-two Bronze Stars?
- ... that the Sunmobile, world's first solar-powered automobile, was demonstrated in a 1955 General Motors car show?
[edit] Queue 6 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that early Western Australian settler George Layman Sr. was speared to death by a Wardandi elder at Wonnerup House (pictured) in 1841?
- ... the government of the Crimean Socialist Soviet Republic was headed by Dmitry Ilyich Ulyanov, Vladimir Lenin's brother?
- ... that democracy activist Htay Kywe was described as Burma's "most-wanted man" following his leadership role in the 2007 anti-government protests?
- ... that Heart Peaks in northern British Columbia, Canada is the third largest volcano in the Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province?
- ... that 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting winner Paige St. John is married to John Wark, a former Pulitzer Prize finalist?
- ... that the past captains of the Indian cricket team were honoured during the 1997 Pepsi Independence Cup, which was organised to celebrate India's 50th anniversary of independence?
- ... that size matters when the jumping spider Phidippus clarus selects mates?
[edit] Queue 1 [edit]
| The hooks below have been approved by an administrator and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that the name of Fisheating Creek (pictured) is derived from the Seminole name for the stream, Thlothlopopka-Hatchee, or "the river where fish are eaten"?
- ... that the M2 gas mask protected the wearer for at least five hours against the common World War I chemical weapon phosgene?
- ... that during the 2010–11 NBA Development League season, 20 players were called-up to the NBA, while 39 NBA players were assigned to the D-League?
- ... that during the 2010 Australian federal elections Bruce Hawker helped the incumbent Labor Party form a minority government after negotiations with the independents?
- ... that South Africa's winning of the 1997 Wills Golden Jubilee Tournament marked its first tournament victory in the Indian subcontinent and in their seventh attempt?
- ... that Bertrand Teyou is serving two years in jail for attempting to read publicly from his book about Chantal Biya, the first lady of Cameroon?
- ... that a Bastard at Oxford University once dismissed Australian cricket captain Billy Murdoch?
[edit] Prep areas
NOTE: The next prep set to move into the queue is prep 4 [update count].
[edit] Prep area 4 [edit]
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that the film Ronald Reagan called "the worst picture I ever made" inspired Jerry Parr to join the Secret Service, and that Parr saved President Reagan's life during the 1981 assassination attempt (pictured)?
- ... that the UK House of Commons Treasury Committee challenged the Payments Council's plan to abolish cheques by 2018?
- ... that RNA thermometers are found in human cells and help protect them from overheating?
- ... that on Mt. Murchison in New Zealand's Braeburn Range, a small population of large carnivorous snails, Powelliphanta "Nelson Lakes", is only found above the bush line?
- ... that Clement W. Payton won a British Distinguished Flying Cross and a Belgian Croix de guerre?
- ... that Morića Han is the only surviving han in Sarajevo?
- ... that Brian Bowman performed the first euphonium recital at Carnegie Hall?
[edit] Prep area 1 [edit]
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that the design competition for Our City (pictured) caused huge controversy, as the winning architect was young, inexperienced and proposed an architectural style that New Zealanders were unfamiliar with?
- ... that "What's Your Name", a 2008 electro single by Usher and will.i.am, was noted by some critics as one of the best tracks on Here I Stand, while others described it as "downright awful"?
- ... that American sailor Ed Baird has won the America's Cup with syndicates from New Zealand and Switzerland, but failed at two attempts to win it with teams from his native country?
- ... that the skinny triangle is used by snipers to estimate target range?
- ... that among the all-time list of AAU Men's Basketball All-Americans, 33 have competed in the Olympic Games while nine have been enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame?
- ... that in Luoji Township in Yunnan, there are laws against the picking of young matsutake mushrooms smaller than 6 cm (2.4 in) in diameter?
- ... that the maiden voyage of Empire Cowdray was delayed because most of her crew were drunk?
[edit] Prep area 2 [edit]
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that Cézanne may have painted Pyramid of Skulls (pictured) because he was drawn to the forms, exclaiming, "How beautiful a skull is to paint!"?
- ... that Gwangju Prize for Human Rights winner Angkhana Neelaphaijit has been investigating the forced disappearance of her husband for more than seven years?
- ... that the American Civil War delayed the construction of the George Stumpf House in Indianapolis by nearly 10 years?
- ... that Milton Olander, who led the Western Michigan football team to an unbeaten and unscored upon record in 1922, was later offered a position as Assistant U.S. Secretary of Labor?
- ... that author Ephraim Emerton taught medieval ecclesiastical history at Harvard Divinity School for over 40 years?
- ... that apartheid in South Africa and the Mozambican Civil War caused an increase in the number of tourists visiting Swaziland?
- ... that the wedding dress of Lady Diana Spencer became one of the most famous outfits in the world and featured a 25 foot (7.62 metre) train?
[edit] Prep area 3 [edit]
From WikiQueer's newest articles:
- ... that ... (pictured) ...
- ... that ...
- ... that ...
- ... that ...
- ... that ...
- ... that ...
- ... that ...

