Wikipedia is not an online newspaper; but many Wikipedians are motivated to create and edit entries of timely interest, and because Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia, it does a much better job with entries of timely interest (or recent events of historical import) than a dead-tree encyclopedia.
(A historical note: the section began with the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack entries put up within minutes of the attacks. The entries led to a massive infusion of interest in the project.)
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In the news:
Václav Havel - Shuttle Columbia - Richard Reid - Super Bowl XXXVII - SQL worm
Recent deaths: The crew of STS-107 - Lord Younger - Lord Dacre - Gianni Agnelli - Bill Mauldin Ongoing events: Israeli-Palestinian conflict - Plan to invade Iraq - War on Terrorism - North Korea Historical anniversaries: Battle of Stalingrad - Explorer 1 - Native American - Nauru - Guy Fawkes - Pan Am flight 103 - Charles I - Gandhi - Adolf Hitler - The Beatles - Bloody Sunday - Vietnam War |
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adding links Anyone with sysop access can edit the Main Page and update the Selected Articles section. This may be the most glamorous reason to get sysop access, which is encouraged for regular Wikipedians.
Wikipedia talk:Selected Articles on the Main Page can be used to suggest links, though the criteria below should make the process relatively automatic.
Get a link added This is a quick-and-dirty summary of the criteria listed below. To get an entry listed on the Main Page, make sure it's a good entry and it isn't already listed appropriately in Current events (for In the news:...), Recent deaths (for Recent deaths:...), Background articles for ongoing events (for Ongoing events:...), or a recent day page (for Historical anniversaries:..).
criteria for inclusion on Main Page The most important rule is to use good judgment. If an event of collosal and staggering importance happens, even if a great entry hasn't been written on it, then it would be reasonable to add a link. Most of the time, the following informal but rigorous criteria should help take care of the section.
These criteria are informal and malleable. They do not represent, as of the current writing (October 2002), a formal consensus on how to handle the section. They are little more than an attempt to organize current practice into some degree of objective standards. (See talk to get the back story.)
Current informal criteria for what gets put in the Selected Articles section on the Main Page:
October 17, 2002
- astronomy: There is further evidence for the existence of a supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, the Milky Way galaxy. The object Sagittarius A has now been identified as the black hole at the galactic center by a team led by Rainer Schödel[?] of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics[?], who observed the behavior of the star S2[?] which is near Sagittarius A.
- U.S. officials announce the existence of a clandestine North Korea nuclear weapons program, admitted to by North Korean officials.
October 16, 2002
- Politics of the Netherlands: the first Balkenende cabinet resigns. Because of the constant internal fighting in the new party LPF, the other two governing parties, CDA and VVD decided that continuing the coalition was impossible. It seems almost certain that there will be new elections, possibly as early as December.
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