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Last revised 21:19, 9 February 2015 (UTC) (9 years ago) by Hafspajen (refresh)
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Featured content

A Grizzly Bear, Operation Mascot, Freedom Planet & Liberty Island, Cosmic Dust clouds, a cricket five-wicket list, more fine art, & a terrible, terrible opera...

Contribute  —   Share this By Adam Cuerden, WPPilot, Xanthomelanoussprog & Hafspajen February 2015
Liberty Island is a federally owned island in Upper New York Bay in the United States, the location of the Lady Liberty, one of the most well known of all U.S. landmarks. The origin of the Statue of Liberty project is sometimes traced back to a comment made by French law professor and politician Édouard René de Laboulaye in mid-1865. Join WPPilot on the aerial shoot over Liberty Island New York Harbor for a spectacular aerial tour of Lower Manhattan.
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This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted to featured status from 25 January to 31 January. Text may be adapted from the respective articles and lists; see their page histories for attribution.

Featured articles

Two featured articles were promoted this week.

Corsair fighters and Barracuda bombers ranged on the flight deck of HMS Formidable during operations off Norway in July 1944.
  • Operation Mascot (nominated by Nick-D) Operation Mascot was an unsuccessful British air raid conducted by carrier-borne aircraft against the German battleship Tirpitz at her anchorage in Kaafjord, Norway, on 17 July 1944. The attack was just one of a series of strikes against the battleship launched from aircraft carriers between April and August 1944, initiated after Allied intelligence determined that the damage inflicted during the Operation Tungsten raid on 3 April had been repaired. A force of 44 British dive bombers and 40 fighters took off from three aircraft carriers on the 17th of July. German radar stations detected these aircraft while they were en route to Kaafjord, but the Tirpitz was protected by a smoke screen when the strike force arrived.

Featured lists

Three featured lists were promoted this week.

Anderson bowling during the second Test of India's tour of England in 2007

Featured pictures

Twenty-five featured pictures were promoted this week.

Grizzly Bear looking at the photographer on today's menu :). Photographer Timothy Treadwell studied grizzly bears for 13 years before being devoured by one them ....
Luckily, this bear couldn't decide whether our photographer would be best boiled or fried, and missed his chance.
The Threatened Swan by Jan Asselijn.
'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves...
Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, widefield view, by Rogelio Bernal Andreo. Space is the final frontier. As early as 1964, Gene Roddenberry drafted a proposal for the science fiction series that would become Star Trek. Today Space is at long last in the hands of the public due in part to Spaceship One.
Whaler's Cove, in Point Lobos, California. Sadly, the number of tall ships has diminished, but the number of tourists has increased. Poor Whaler's Cove.
Elliðaey, an island south of Iceland, has avoided those nasty tourists. Mainly by only having one house on it.
File:Northeaster by Winslow Homer 1895.jpg
Hereford Cathedral wants people to visit: what a strange place. It's as if it's built for people to come to!
  • William III of the Netherlands (created by Nicolaas Pieneman, nominated by Editør) William III was born on 1 January 1809 in Amersfoort in the Kingdom of Holland. He was King of the Netherlands and Grand Duke of Luxembourg from 1849 until his death in 1890. He was also the Duke of Limburg from 1849 until the abolition of the duchy in 1866. He married his first cousin, Sophie, daughter of King William I of Württemberg and Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia, in Stuttgart on 18 June 1839. His extramarital enthusiasms, however, led the New York Times to call him "the greatest debauchee of the age". On the 17th. of March 1849 his father died and William succeeded to the throne of the Netherlands. He was at that moment a guest of the Duchess of Cleveland in Raby Castle. Representatives of the Dutch government traveled to London to meet their new king in London. William was reluctant to return, but he was convinced to do so. Upon arrival the new Queen welcomed her spouse with the question "did you accept?". The new king nodded, but he remained uncertain about the matter for some time.
  • Northeaster (created by Winslow Homer, nominated by Hafspajen) Northeaster is one of several paintings on marine subjects and seascapes by the talented late-19th-century American painter (1836 –1910), he painted it during his time in Maine. Here he painted several enchanting paintings on wonderful marine subjects, depicting the fishermen's life, their work and their families. Later he chose more and more to paint the sea itself, especially painting beautiful paintings of the dramatic, stormy seas. Many of his paintings depict the battlefront of the sea and the shore and the waves crashing onto the rocky shore. It has been said that they "are among the strongest expressions in all art of the power and dangerous beauty of the sea." He is considered one of the foremost painters from the 19th-century in America and a proeminent figure in American art. Homer's studio at Prouts Neck, Maine is a museum now.
  • Louis Guéymard in Robert le diable (created by Gustave Courbet, nominated by Crisco 1492) This is a painting of Louis Guéymard in Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera Robert le diable, painted by Jean Désiré Gustave Courbet, a French painter who led the Realist movement in 19th-century French painting. It's rather a treat to get something interesting and unique, such a major painter illustrating an opera. It's a pity the opera's absolute shite. No, seriously. Let me summarize the plot. Robert, Duke of Normandy, is a terrible person, hence him being called "Robert the Devil". However he shows signs of his good nature, such as when he gives a woman over to be raped by his men... but then thinks better of it and stops them... when he realizes she's his half-sister. I'm not even exaggerating. His father, Bertram, is a more literal devil, and is trying to convince him to damn himself by signing his soul away, because Robert's such a good person that he'd lose him otherwise. He does this by sending him to an abbey full of the ghosts of naughty nuns to get a magic branch that he can use to gain the Princess Isabelle, his object of lust. Because apparently using the branch is equivalent to signing his soul away. Never mind, the whole point is to titillate the men in the audience who have a naughty nun fetish, so who cares about a coherent plot. When he goes to get Isabelle, she thinks Robert is using witchcraft to overpower everyone. Because he is. She convinces him to break the branch, and, having lost the ability to play witchcraft freeze tag, he has to flee without her. Last act! Bertram finally reveals he's Robert's father! And Robert's about to sign the contract! But his half-sister - you know, the one he was going to allow to be raped - arrives and tells him that Isabelle is waiting in a carriage just over there, ready to go off and marry him. Robert decides he should sign the contract anyway, just to be safe. Then he hears a religious hymn floating over the breeze... and in a life-changing moment... decides to not sign the contract, and just get everything he wanted without it. Big chorus about how he has succeeded in overcoming evil, despite having never done a single likeable act in the entire opera.
Of course, plenty of good operas have stupidities in their plot - Der fliegende Holländer is basically a teenage girl's Twilight undead pirate fanfic, about how noone understands her, and if only she could save someone bad with her love! It's saved by some extremely good music. The Magic Flute has a plot that's completely ridiculous. It's by Mozart, hence has excellent music (though why it's more popular than Don Giovanni, which is also by Mozart, but has a coherent, interesting plot, I'll never know). Maybe Robert le diable is saved by its music? No: it's written by Meyerbeer, so it was doomed from the start.
The piece was titled "Stanza of Anglo-Saxon Poetry" and read:

Twas bryllyg, and ye slythy toves
Did gyre and gymble in ye wabe:
All mimsy were ye borogoves;
And ye mome raths outgrabe.

Other strophes soon followed. John Tenniel reluctantly agreed to illustrate the book in 1871, and his illustrations are still the defining images of the poem. The illustration of the Jabberwocky may reflect the contemporary Victorian obsession with natural history and the fast-evolving sciences of palaeontology and geology. The poem was soon translated (!) to other laguages too, and lot's of interesting poetry come out of that. I German it goes like this:

Es brillig war. Die schlichten Toven
Wirrten und wimmelten in Waben:
Und aller-mümsige Burggoven
Die mohmen Räth' ausgraben.

The Old Musician, an 1862 oil painting by Édouard Manet.
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In this issue11 February 2015 (all comments)
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    Il brilgue: les tôves lubricilleux
    Se gyrent en vrillant dans le guave.
    Enmîmés sont les gougebosqueux
    Et le mômerade horsgrave.
    Hafspajen (talk) 22:13, 18 February 2015 (UTC)
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