Portal:India/Tomorrow's selected article

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<< Selected articles for May 2024 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01 02 03 04
05 06 07 08 09 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

(Today is Tuesday, 21 May2024; it is now 14:30 UTC)

This page contains links to articles which are about to appear on Portal:India's front page as "Today's selected Article". Recent and forthcoming featured articles for this month can be viewed at Portal:India/Today's selected article/May 2024, or by using the calendar on the right. Use the timeline above to see records of previous months (and years), and articles scheduled for next month.

If you want to nominate an article to appear on the front page of Indian Portal, please do so on this page's talk page. The article must already have Selected status. If you think an article deserves Selected status, nominate it at Portal:India/Selected article candidates first.

This is the last chance to tweak a forthcoming article before it goes live on the Main page, so please help put the finishing touches on it. However, major rewrites are not a good idea at this point; it would be best to wait until after the article has left the Main page.

Critical objections[edit]

If you think tomorrow's article is unsuitable for the Indian Portal's front page, lodge your objection below this paragraph, stating your reason briefly (one sentence). Given that the selected articles represent the best Wikipedia has to offer, objections should be serious (a major copyright violation, for example), and very, very rare (lesser issues should be fixed, not objected to).

  • Tomorrow's Selected Article (May 2nd), has only ONE mention of India in the entire article. I guess I am not going to contest it's Selected Article status at the moment. But it really should be Selected on some other Portal, not the Indian one. This is similar to past SA such as Graffiti and future SA such as Mozilla Firefox. Nobleeagle (Talk) 06:04, 1 May 2006 (UTC)


Note: This discussion lives for just 24 hours. All longer-term comments about the article should be directed to its talk page.