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I've listed this article for peer review as preparation for WP:FAC. It could probably do with some feedback from non-mathematicians.
OK, R.e.b., you know that I like you, and I have nice memories of our work together on Emmy Noether. So please don't take it amiss if I give you my personal opinion: the article is not close to being ready for FAC. I feel the chief problems are these two:
I fear the present article is unintelligible to almost every reader. I cringe at saying this, since my own articles are rarely intelligible. But I do know some basic math and physics, including some index and fixed-point theorems; and I wrote photon, including the gauge-symmetry and quantum-field-theory parts. But this article is light-years beyond that level, and I have to admit that I understood basically nothing of your description of his work. If that's true for me, then imagine what it would feel like for our English-literature friends, Awadewit and Scartol. Please don't write us off from the beginning. You can sacrifice some of the details at the top-level article and incorporate them later into more technical daughter articles.
With the exception of the biography section, the article reads like a collation of lists: list of collaborators, list of publications, list of awards, etc. Please understand that we readers don't need such lists; we can always get them from online publication databases, or from Atiyah's CV and his Conflict of Interest forms. ;) We don't need a list of every problem Atiyah has ever worked on, or every publication he's issued. Rather, we need you to make sense of his work for us, to organize his publications into themes and story-arcs and narrative. Motivate the problems, set them in the context of other work and great trends in physics/math, that sort of thing. To help create space for that narrative, you might consider farming out some lists into daughter articles, e.g., those of his collaborators, students and publications, as we did (in part) for Emmy Noether.
I sympathize, I really do, and I hope you don't think I'm being unnecessarily harsh or critical. Sometimes I'll ask my better educated friends here (from grad students to professors) to review a geometry or physics article that I've worked months on, articles that I've always striven to make intelligible and which can't be that complicated, if I can understand them. :) And yet, despite my mightiest efforts to explain and the wealth of my excellent thesaurus, my friends often give up and say, "it's way over my head." Examples would be the Laplace-Runge-Lenz vector or the problem of Apollonius, both of which I'm sure must seem trivially simple to you. Your task is a quantum leap or two in complexity beyond those — but I feel that we have to at least try to make our articles readable. Experts don't need — and I daresay won't read — a Wikipedia article on their own subject; it's for everyone else's benefit that we're writing, don't you agree?
I would agree with Willow's assessment here. Luckily I got to copyedit the Biography section before her review :-) as it was also a bit of a list (of job titles and places). I got a bit stuck after that, but Willow's suggestion to develop daughter articles sounds like a good way forward.
There is one issue I would like to add in the light of "Rather, we need you to make sense of his work for us". I would modify this to say "Rather, we need you to use reliable secondary sources to make sense of his work for us" (where "you" is really anyone who wants to help improve the article: I'm in!). In my view, the current weaknesses of the article are ultimately caused by its heavy reliance on primary source material, i.e., Atiyah's papers, recollections and remarks. This is illustrated (for example) by the large number of quotes attributed to Atiyah. These are not, for the most part, notable, and certainly not what makes Atiyah notable.
It is a crying shame that there isn't (to my knowledge) a decent biography of Atiyah (i.e., a researched, authoritative book). So we shall have to make do with Mactutor and the various mini-bio's that are available. We also need to bring out the human side more. For instance, Atiyah has been quite politically active: see e.g., his 1995 Royal Society Presidential address (available on JSTOR) for his views on nuclear weapons.
However, R.e.b. has gathered a lot of good and useful material here, and I am optimistic it can be forged into a great article in time. In doing so, we need to remember that whatever the motivation for bringing this article to FA standard, it is first and foremost an encyclopedia article, and should be written with that in mind. Geometry guy10:11, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. This confirms what I'd been suspecting about the article: the sections are either boring lists, or incomprehensible. (I'd been sort of hoping that reviewers at FAC would be too busy counting citations to actually read the article and notice this.) As far as I know there aren't really any serious secondary sources on Atiyah or his work (only a few eulogies in journal issues in his honor and so on), and his life outside his mathematical work seems to have been uneventful. It is clear from your comments that fixing the problems with the article will require someone who has complementary skills to mine. R.e.b. (talk) 14:18, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Willow returns
Be comforted, R.e.b.; the lists aren't boring, and incomprehensible things are often fascinating — or at least so I get told. ;) If you truly care about bringing this article to FA, then I for one — and I think G-guy, for two — will help you give your dream a "local habitation and a name", if not the bronze star. What are friends for? :)
On the other hand, you'll have to be patient with me. When I took on the Universe last year, I said, "I'm all too apt to take on more than I can handle..." But this article is way more scary to me than the Universe, so I'll need time to get up to speed, and I can't promise to be ready even by April of next year. For one thing, I need to find a new job and a new place to live.... :(
I wouldn't despair about the secondary sources. I'm less strict-minded than G-guy on that. I believe we can avoid WP:NOR and still give a compelling, sweeping narrative of Atiyah's work without parroting someone else's work. On the other hand, I'm admittedly a creature of faith, faith that sometimes overreaches itself. Still, I feel we must try, in all good faith, and hope that you feel likewise. :) Willow (talk) 23:59, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
After meditating awhile on your comments, I've decided that the sections on his work probably wont be a problem. The folks at FA presumably expect math to be incomprehensible and just check it for spelling errors and citations, and wont notice (or care) that it is even more incomprehensible than usual. On the other hand, the sections about Atiyah himself are really boring and need some serious rewriting; at the moment they are little more than a dump from his CV. The 2 books by Yau might have something useful in them; I havn't looked at them yet.
I don't feeling strongly about FA status so don't go out of your way to help unless you really want to. The only reason I'm thinking about it is that it would be amusing to have the article, with some serious math, on the front page for his birthday, but it's not a big deal. (And it would be nice to have a change from those endless main page articles on obscure songs and video games.)
Thanks so much for your thoughtful and kind words! :) I'll try to be helpful to you when the time comes, but I probably won't be able to do anything useful for months. But if you'll allow me some friendly and well-meant advice, please try to make the article more narrative, more story-like, even on the math parts. I'm worried that you'll have trouble at FAC otherwise; not all those reviewers are mere reference-counters and dash-spacers, and some may insist that you make the math comprehensible. :P Willow (talk) 04:25, 17 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I am hoping to make this article GA; I don't believe it will reach FA. Any comments would be welcome.
"In a letter to Probst – one of his publishers, dated October 2, Schubert mentioned..." — subordinate clause should be made clear here.
"The first theme shifts from C minor to C major - another Schubertian feature, and contains many..." — same. Dashes need to be dashes too (—), not hyphens (-). Super-picky, I know, but that's what people like to get you for, unfortunately.
Because I'm a huge stickler for this, and for that reason only, I'm going to need to see more citations around the "Structure" section of the article. These sections of articles tend to be very OR, and synthesizing your own conclusions, however obvious they may be, is, unfortunately OR. ("the penultimate chord is highly unusual for a closing cadence...for Schubert's time." — for example. Who says? If you, then that's OR.)
I would appreciate more linking, it 'increases the volume' of the article by many times, adding various points of departure for the reader. Some words you could link include most of the key signatures, technical musical terms (ternary, coda).. I see that you've done it a couple times, but the guideline that I follow so as not to overlink is once per L2 heading.
I prefer to do this, but I'm not sure if people hate it: I like to link some specialized musical terms to Wiktionary, just because a large part of the readership might not be familiar with basic terminology like forte, and I know I need help when you start talking about things like "tonal stasis".
"The inner movements were sketched up to the barline..." — as far as I know, barline refers to a line between any two measures. The "music end" (final barline), perhaps?
"Schubert's mature music often manipulates our sense of time..." — I'm wary of using "our" here. Maybe "one's"?
Repeating the above, the lead must be expanded greatly. It should summarize the entire article in a couple paragraphs.
On reading the talk page, it seems like this is a merged article. It really looks like it would benefit from ancillary articles though, not the least of covering the sonatas themselves, so that in this 'comparison' article you can focus more on the overarching concepts and ideas.
You reference Charles Fisk frequently. Who is he? Elucidate his credentials on first mention.
"appearance of the three piano pieces D. 946...", "and the string quintet, among others..." — It seems odd to me to juxtapose the definite article with lower case letters, when referring to a specific piece. I would advise to capitalize the piece names, such as "String Quartet", when it is in fact the name of the piece and not a genre.
"dedicated to Johann Nepomuk Hummel, whom he greatly admired - a pupil of Mozart, composer (a pioneer of the Romantic style, like Schubert himself), and leading pianist..." — again, clean up the clauses.
"(in major mode works) or to the relative major (in minor mode works)..." — mode, to me, refers to Musical mode, as in lydian and dorian. It sounds weird to me to hear 'major/minor mode', but it might be just me.
Regarding the section "Extramusical connotations and suggestions of a narrative": here I start getting the feeling that there are outside ideas pulled in to be made relevant to these three sonatas. At this point in this large article, you have to consider what information this article needs as a core. It might be more appropriate to have a separate article addressing the phenomenon in a general sense, and then clarify how it applies in these sonatas only in here. Rather than describe the entire technique in this article. See, your lead for this section "Schubert's mature music often manipulates our sense of time and forward movement." implies that his 'mature music' includes not only these sonatas but his other later works as well. The whole section up to cite #51 doesn't seem to be specific to these sonatas, since it's outlining the technique in a very general since. In this way, I think that material should be cut. Moved, preferably.
I feel the same about "Beethoven's Influence". It might benefit to create a separate article (somewhat like "Beethoven's influence on Schubert") if these are not the only works in which it is apparent. Just so the basics of Schubert's admiration of Beethoven don't have to be repeated several times.
"Beethoven's Influence" should be "Beethoven's influence" anyways, unless Influence is a proper noun somehow.
You visit the idea of them being presented as a set, but it isn't mentioned later. In the reception section you mention briefly "the final trilogy", but I'm just curious, was that idea abandonded by interpreters of these pieces? Besides Brendel's staunch support of them as a set, did other pianists recognize that they were such unified works, or is it merely of interest to musicologists?
"As mentioned above, Schubert's last..." — I personally don't like self-referencing in any form. I don't think the corresponding guideline (WP:SELF) agrees with me, so, your call.
"Schubert was a great admirer of Beethoven, and..." — I prefer to use the composer's full name first time around. Some people might think you're talking about Johann van Beethoven... Same thing here ( influenced by it: Schumann and Brahms.) (style of Liszt and even of Schoenberg) and the performers here, especially, because I don't know who they are (performance, Schnabel and Erdmann, are known).
This is an incredibly detailed article, and goes to an unprecedented depth of understanding. I learned a lot going over it these couple times. I am very excited for this article to become one of the gems of the classical music articles. It seems well on its way toward being recognized as such. ALTON.ıl08:16, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I'm not going to nominate this article to good or featured articles. I simply want to know your opinion about the language in this article: is it good or poor and does it need improvement.
Thanks, --16:38, 6 August 2008 (UTC)Slav9ln (talk)
Ruhrfisch comments: While a lot of work has gone into this, it is nowhere near FA quality and needs some work for GA. Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. The first sentence is typically the most important / notable informaion about the subject - I think that would be the fact that he was the lead actor in several films, not just his father. Please see WP:LEAD
Article needs a major copyedit - the first sentence in the lead has no verb, the last sentnece of the lead has no punctuation, and there are phrases like In his childhood he liked to be alone and "successfully handled with himself"[2]. that make no sense and seem to be poor translations (what is an "ashman" too?) Ask at WP:PRV for copyedit help.
Article does not follow MOS:QUOTE - it uses {{cquote}} where it should use {{blockquote}}, but block quotes are only for quotes that are at least four lines long. Most of these quotes should just be in the text.
Refs are a mess. Per WP:CITE references come AFTER punctuation, and are usually at the end of a sentence or phrase. Article needs more references, for example whole paragraphs are uncited. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Refs need to give enough info that an interested person could look up the source and check it or learn more. New York Times article needs date of publication, author, page. Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
My main purpose was to know the quality of translation, the level of language used in article: if the language is poor or rather good, if it needs improvement.--Slav9ln (talk) 14:03, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The quality of the translation appears to be fair to poor - as noted there are places that just don't make sense in English, maybe they would if I spoke Russian. It definitely needs improvement. The backlog is a list of other requests for peer review that have not yet been commented on. There is no obligation to do so, but if you see something there and want to comment on it, feel free to. That is how I found your article to review. Ruhrfisch><>°°23:11, 17 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I'm hoping to bring this article to featured article soon. I'm curious particularly about length, the lead, and the sections on Legacy and Beliefs to see if they are up to par. Many thanks. --Midnightdreary (talk) 12:18, 11 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Finetooth comments: This is beautifully done and is nearly ready for FAC, in my opinion. I have a few minor suggestions for improvement.
You asked about the lead. I think it's good, but I'd consider breaking the long middle paragraph into two paragraphs to give the reader a bit of a rest. The break point could come pretty naturally between the sentence ending with "higher education" and the sentence starting with "She became the first editor... " Perhaps the change would necessitate adding a phrase or a sentence to the new third paragraph to smooth the transition.
You asked about length. I think it's about right. If you decide to shorten it a bit, I'd suggest trimming the second paragraph of the "New York Tribune" section. Fuller's part in the Poe affair seems minor, and most of the information in the paragraph is not about her. I wouldn't throw the whole paragraph out, but I'd try to squash it to its essence: she annoyed Poe by butting in.
I was thinking more about expansion rather than shortening. But I do agree about the section relating to Poe. I tend to focus heavily on Poe-related events (as you might imagine). I'll summarize better. --Midnightdreary (talk) 23:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I'm awfully fond of concision, and I wouldn't make the article any longer. Reader fatigue sets in at some point. If something important is missing, I'd suggest a swap rather than an add so that the total doesn't keep creeping up. Finetooth (talk) 04:42, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The sections "Legacy" and "Beliefs" seem fine to me, most interesting.
The photos "Birthplace and childhood home" and "Memorial marker" will need to be moved elsewhere because they violate the MoS guideline suggesting that images not be placed directly under second-level heads.
I kept the birthplace home image on the left because it's sort of "facing" right... I know it's not a portrait but it seems reasonable to me. What do you think? --Midnightdreary (talk) 23:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
My concern is that it violates the MoS guideline that says, "Do not place left-aligned images directly below second-level (===) headings, as this disconnects the heading from the text it precedes." See MOS:IMAGES. I don't think it will get through FAC where it is. You could move it to the right, or you might move it down to the middle of the subsection if you want it to stay on the left. Finetooth (talk) 04:42, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In "Early life and family", a sentence says, " ...Timothy Fuller did not run for re-election so that he could help John Quincy Adams with his presidential campaign in 1824..." How about "...Timothy Fuller, in order to help John Quincy Adams with his presidential campaign in 1824, did not run for re-election"?
In "Assignment in Europe", a sentence reads, " ...Italy had been left in various pieces, part of which was under the control of the Papacy." How about " ...Italy was divided into small states, some controlled by the Papacy"?
It wasn't "some" as far as I know, but one large piece. And none of the pieces were really legitimate, as I understand, so "states" might be a misnomer. Someone might know better than me. --Midnightdreary (talk) 23:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Urk! Yes, sorry. I don't know the history either. My thought is that "left in various pieces" sounds like a weasel. "Various" is the red flag here. So is "part", come to think of it. It would be better to hunt around for some more data and make the statement more specific. Finetooth (talk) 04:42, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In "Death", "chastised her personal life" might better be "said disapproving things about her personal life".
In "Legacy and criticism", "... Browning was also a strong admirer, but believed that her unconventional views were unappreciated in the United States and, therefore, she was better off dead" is a bit ambiguous. Probably "her unconventional views" should be replaced by "Fuller's unconventional views".
The last sentence of the article says, "She compared herself to Fuller in her own move from Boston to New York, saying that it was not a good place for intellectuals, despite the assumption that it was the best place for intellectuals." How about "She compared her own move from Boston to New York to Fuller's, saying that New York... "?
The constructions including digits modifying units or other nouns need to be glued together with no-break codes to prevent them from being separated by line-wrap. Two examples are "50 years" and "34th birthday". I fixed one or two others, but I didn't fix them all.
If you find these comments to be helpful, please consider reviewing another article, perhaps from the backlog. That is where I found this one. Finetooth (talk) 05:30, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you, Finetooth! Your copy edits were extremely helpful... it's always better getting a fresh pair of eyes to catch your poor writing. Thanks again!! --Midnightdreary (talk) 23:13, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC. The sourcing looks good.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:34, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because I really admire William Hanna and would like to get this to FA. Listing here as a prep. FYI, several have tried but no one has found a free image of him. I've been working this hard for three weeks so far. Any help appreciated.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Particular pet peeve, using a tertiary general encyclopedia to source information in a tertiary general encyclopedia. Try and replace the Britannica cites with something else?
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 19:12, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
But how long may it stay accurate, that's the issue. In this case, I'd leave it in with the book cite to back it up. Call it a courtesy link, if you will. Ealdgyth - Talk21:44, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here. Ruhrfisch comments
Generally well done, these will mostly be nit picks. There are a few places where it seems to be missing something, for example Over the next 17 years Hanna and Barbera worked exclusively on Tom and Jerry,[20] directing more than [?] cartoon shorts, winning great popularity and a number of Oscars along the way.[19] Since they won seven Oscars, I would say that here too. fixed
I would also mention more of their MGM film career in the lead, particularly Tom and Jerry. Also the lead makes it sound as if T&J was their work after MGM cut their cartoon department, but Chuck Jones and others directed more T&J after H&B left MGM, so this seems misleading or downright wrong. fixed
I would identify the characters in the lead image in a caption fixed
I think a case could be made for including a fair use image of Tom and Jerry here. found a PD one on Commons
Odd word choice "live action" usually means something different than a cartoon in Tom and Jerry relied most on live action instead of dialog.[18] strike "live"? chg'd to motion, on the other one added link to article on films with real people and animation
I have never seen {{rp}} before - I found it distracting. Joseph Priestley House uses ref tags and may be a better system here respect the opinion but not a valid oppose at FAC, all systems have + and -
Any chance for more critical commentary on Hanna and his work - I think his MGM film work was great, but agree that their TV animation left much to be desired.refs just seem to talk about what I said, how money caused a cut in animation quality
The article seems a bit hagiographic, which may be a problem at FAC. worked
I also think this needs a copyedit for polish - there are several places where it could be made smoother. worked
I do up to three peer reviews a day and don't do copyedits - sorry. Try asking at WP:PRV for copyedit help.
I reread it and think the lead needs a lot more on his 27 year film career - see WP:WEIGHTworked
PR is suggestions only - I had never seen RP citations, if they pass FA and you like them, no problem (though I think they are ugly - sorry) see above
Hagiography - it is more sort of the general tone - sounds like he was a very nice guy, but here are a few ideas
he died of throat cancer, so my guess is he was a smoker - if so, include that "A life-long smoker, Hanna died of throat cancer in ..." no rs found for that, only 2 non RS
The article on Fred Quimby says the animators working under him were often at odds with him etc - can any of this sort of material be included?done
How did Hanna react to criticisms of the violence in Tom and Jerry, or of the compartivley low quality animation used in his TV shows? can't find anything
Many of the older Tom and Jerry cartoons feature an African-American maid character who is sometimes censored or revoiced in modern versions. Was there any criticism of this (many of the cartoons of the day had racial stereotypes in them)? Did he ever talk about it or respond to criticisms?can't see that he talked of it, this is discussed in the T&J article and since Hanna doesn't talk of it that I can find, seems off topic
The lead says Hanna-Barbera won seven Academy Awards and eight Emmy Awards. which is not quite true, as Hanna and Barbera won seven Academy Awards working for MGM (not as the corporate entity H-B) clarified
I would rename the Early career section "Film" and rename "Television career" just "Television" (WP:HEAD says not to repeat the name of a header in a subheader if possible, and he worked 27 years in film so "Early career" seems a bit of a misnomer fixed
I would move Ruff and Ready, a TV show, to the TV section fixed
Watch for needless repetition, one example (of several) from end of Early career and beginning of TV sections This fizzled, and in 1957 he reteamed up with his old partner Joseph Barbera to produce their first series The Ruff & Reddy Show,[8] about a dog and cat that are pals,[6] under the company name H-B Enterprises, soon changed to Hanna-Barbera Productions.[27][28] Television career In 1957 Hanna and Barbera struck out on their own and formed Hanna-Barbera Productions, first ...fixed
Some things seem to contradict themselves - were Tom and Jerry based on an earlier cartoon or were the a fox and dog that became a cartoon about a cat and mouse (my guess is the idea of fox and dog predated the first proto-Tom and Jerry cartoon, which led to the real T & J - if so, make this clearer) the ref itself isn't totally clear on how this unfolded, so I rm'd the fox/dog part
Or when did Quimby leave? For a brief period following Fred Quimby's retirement in 1956, they were also in charge of production.[17] but later we read that Hanna and Barbera were placed in charge of MGM's animation division in late 1955;[27] this was short-lived, as MGM closed the division in 1957.[28] so is it 55 or 56? ALso more needless repetition. fixed and clarified
Last thoughts - I read the Hanna-Barbera article and it says the company was founded as side-venture in 1944. It also mentions some other things that are not in this - my guess is you've read all of this, but it still might be useful (even though it is not very well sourced). Second, it seems to me that Hanna was first an artist, but there is relatively little on him as an artist. Who came up with the designs of the various characters? Who made the decision to have Tom and Jerry be mute (mostly)? That sort of thing. There is also not a lot of critical reception. I think there could also be more on him as a business man who headed a major anumation studio. I fear without this kind of material the article (which is quite good as it is) will seen as lacking comprehensiveness. Finally, I realize it is easy for me to say do this and do that and yet I do not know the sources or material available. It just seems to me that there must be more out there somewhere - I really hope this helps, Ruhrfisch><>°°00:49, 29 August 2008 (UTC)working on it, good inputs, as for the 1944 side business, there' almost nothing on it, and yes those refs are not that good or detailed, there's also very little on him as a businessman, yes, very little on him as artist, that was more Barbera anyway and he probably did the designs, very little on critical reception or as businessman besides what I've mentioned.[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I believe it is close to the FL standards. What is missing?
This needs quite a bit of work - but I'm interested in helping out! Firstly, lead is pretty short. I've seen shorter, but 4 lines is a bit. I also unbolded the title, since it's not the same as the actual article name. I won't comment on anything else in the lead, since it can be reworked once it's expanded, and we can go from there.
Under each subheading, you'll need more information than just a brief line. Also there's a citation needed template... this article needs way more citations, particularly on dates and places.
Why are all the prose for each section italicised?
The references are... bad. A random mix of homemade websites, with a few good ones. They need to all be consistently reliable. These were British monarchs... there's tons of books about them, on Google Books. I'll go through and add references for each monarch using a reliable source. There's much work to be done before this can be featured, but it's something that can be achieved I think. Good luck! how do you turn this on13:53, 1 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Largely agree with the previous comments. I'd suggest expanding by discussing both the geography and a brief outline of the politics leading up to the Union.
I would suggest going to a library and looking for a good print source for birth and death dates, spouses, etc. and making uniform references to that rather than to the scattering of websites. Fraser's "The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England" would probably be good for this. 18:26, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm looking to get it to GA status and would like to know if there's any tweaks that need to be made.
Hi there, I'll be reviewing this article. Just the article - nothing personal - so please don't be offended by anything I write as its not a personal criticism of your work. I'll list things dispassionately. Please address these points by inserting '''DONE''' where necessary.
who plays for Wolverhampton Wanderers - consider "currently playing for Wolv.."
After an unsuccessful spell as a youth team player for Millwall - cite reference please
he began his professional career with Gillingham, making his Football League debut for the Kent team at the age of 17. - consider "he began his professional career at Gillingham, aged 17 years." - the link to the club will tell the reader it is in Kent.
for the "Gills" and became - consider removing "Gills", if that slang isn't addressed in the Gillingham article then you could perhaps add it.
he has gone on to establish himself - change to "he has established himself" as you have already said "After" in the same sentence/
but was released by the club, - remove the comma, no need for a pause
On 4 November 2003, at the age - remove the comma, and consider changing to "aged" instead of "at the age".
He came on as a 76th minute - assume the reader does not understand football, and reword to explain. Perhaps "started the match", or "was substituted for", etc.
but later claimed via his agent - I'm not sure what this means - did his agent say something, did the player instruct the agent to say something, or did the player issue a statement through his agent? Clarify, also, who is his agent? It should be easy to find out.
but Jarvis instead chose to join Wolverhampton Wanderers of the Championship - what is the Championship? Is it part of the club's name, or a separate league? Clarify.
Personal Life section - I'm not sure this should be at this point in the article - perhaps integrate the information here into the player's biog, after the lead section?
wikilinked dates - No need to wikilink dates any more, as per WP:Dates
Overall its a very good article, I think it could possibly do with a little more biography before his football career, perhaps some information about his education, training before being signed (academy training perhaps?), brothers and sisters, etc. I see no reason why it shouldn't progress to GA once these points have been addressed. Good luck! Parrot of Doom (talk) 22:24, 18 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed the article on Montreal for peer review because I have been working on this article a lot since its last peer review, and I want to know what the article needs to bring it to the next level (either GA, A or FA). It has over 100 sources (about twice as much as before) and evidently needs some more in the locations I've pinpointed. Any sort of commentary is useful in improving the article. In particular with regards to the way its written, information to add and remove, missing sections, layout, tone, etc. I want this to be a great article and with your input I can help to bring it there.
A lot of "citation needed" tags (but you already know that).
Some of the sections need to be summarized more.
I really think the whole "Neighborhoods" section should only be in its own article. (Of the cities I checked that were FA, a few cities (Cleveland, Ohio & Detroit, Michigan for example) had a section for neighborhoods (and they were at most 3 paragraphs) the rest either didn't mention them (Hamilton, Ontario) or had it as a "see also" (Minneapolis, Minnesota).
All the "Culture" sections should be merged and condensed.
"Transportation" should be split to a "Transporation in Montreal" and then summarized in the main "Montreal" article (there's a tag for that already in the article)
The "Road" section should also be merged with "Transportation" and with the majority of info moved to "Transporation in Montreal"
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
I want to see if it is ready for Feature Article nomination. I except any kind of criticism to better this article.
Ruhrfisch comments: I think it needs some work for FA. Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
What is here is nice, but it is a bit short. One of the criteria for FA is comprehensiveness, so shortness in an article may be a sign of something missing. There are five FA articles in Category:FA-Class Palaeontology articles that may be good models for ideas and examples to follow. Several dinosaur articles are also FA.
The lead is fairly short and has two paragraphs with only two sentences each - could these be expanded or perhaps combined? Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Article needs more references, for example The upper jaw, containing 30 teeth which decrease in size posteriorly, is well preserved in many individuals. Juveniles have six tusks, while adults have three. or The group of onychodontiformes, described in 1973 by the late Dr. Mahala Andrews, was characterized by a highly kinetic skull and tusk-like teeth. My rule of thumb is that every quote or attribution, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Article uses two different styles of refs - not allowed at FAC. I think most editors prefer the inline linked number, but the (Author, date) is fine too, just can't use both. And don't link the years.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. Book refs need publisher, location, ISBN if the book has one. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
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I've listed this article for peer review because one of the primary contributors has asked me to help bring the article to GA status. While I believe that I can help him, I think additional eyes would be better.
I've taken a look at the article from the perspective of GA assessment. The following points may need to be addressed:
Lead: "negative growth" - this sounds a bit management speak-ish. Do we mean "decline"?
Changed to decline
First paragraph of Origin: more explicit citations might be asked for. The cite at the end of the paragraph seems to cover much of the content, but it could be read as only applying to the closing sentence.
Working on it
Done. Is what I did satisfactory? Ref #2 pretty much covers the entire first paragraph, but I added a few other numbers in.
Incorporation–1996: what does "side business" mean?
Changed to "small business"
"By the time Odwalla went IPO..." Try to avoid industry jargon and unexplained abbreviations.
I changed it to "went public". I hope that's an accurate synonym; I learned the word from reading Dilbert comics. LOL
Why did the company relocate so often in the mid 1990s?
They moved their factory to meet production demands, added a bit about that. I'm not sure why they moved their HQ, perhaps to be close to San Francisco. I'll look up on that.
"Odwalla Inc. gained a growing fan base..." Can this be expressed more formally? More importantly though, I don't see this supported by the source given, which is mostly about the perils of getting 'sloppy' re the e. coli outbreak.
Dang it. It says "devoted fans" ... I'll see if I can come up with something.
I removed this.
1996 E. coli outbreak: this section comes across as a little disorganised. The opening sentence assumes the reader already knows about the outbreak and recall, although this isn't covered in the article until the following section. The assertion "Widely-publicized" needs backing up with citations, as does the sentence "...the company spent several million dollars to upgrade the plant's safety features."
Removed "widely-publicized," my proof was that there were a lot of article written about it but I don't think that counts. ;) Added ref # for the improvements sentence.
Try to avoid using "For example" (which appears elsewhere in the article too).
Working on it
Removed a couple of For examples, will continue to be on the lookout.
"Experts have praised Odwalla's new system as being 'the most comprehensive quality control and safety system in the fresh juice industry'." The source says 'some' experts - we have to be careful not to over-egg the pudding ;)
Added "some"; thanks for spotting that.
1997–Current: "Unfortunately, the company had to drop the plans because they were unable to allocate enough money for the project." It may be unfortunate, but we can't say this - it's editor commentary. Perhaps replace with 'However' if a transitional word is needed?
Changed to however
"Odwalla's growth continued to have good growth in 2007" Prose tweak needed ;)
haha. removed " 's growth "
It's not necessary to list every product the company makes or has made. We wouldn't normally do this; some articles would be huge if we did ;) A short section on the major products and product lines is probably sufficient; the lists should go. We also have to be careful of inadvertent advertising, which is how this could come across. Similarly, the article possibly over-uses non-free images of the company's products. One or two is probably enough.
Removed two non-vital images. I'll try to summarize the product lines like in Maraba Coffee. Thanks
Sources: I sampled these pretty much at random; most look pretty good, but Amazon is not regarded as a reliable source (and exists to sell the products so falls foul of WP:LINKSTOAVOID). I was unsure about others - for example, what makes www.fool.com a reliable source?
I've been beating my brains out trying to find a source that lists the prices of all the products! The price varies throughout the year, and each product is priced differently, and prices change year to year! I'll see what I can do. As for fool.com, that's The Motley Fool, a big business analyst finance website thingy (I have very sophisticated language; can you tell?). It's very similar to Yahoo Finance.
Hope this helps! Looking at the history, this article was once virtually an advertising puff-piece for the company, so you've done a great job to bring it so far. All the best, EyeSerenetalk09:59, 20 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: I agree with all of EyeSerene's comments. Very briefly, here are some more suggestions for improvement. If you want yet more comments, please ask here.
E. coli is usually italicized. Since the strain is known and wikilinked in the body of the article, I think it should also be linked in the lead (i.e. don't just link bacteria in the lead). Also does this article really need two images of E. coli?
The article has six fair use images (logo, four bottles, and products). This seems a bit excessive - please read WP:NFCC What do the four separate images of bottles contribute to our understanding of the company?
Removed two bottle pics, left two (one is the Future shake, a discontinued product and important to the company history, the other a current bottle, to show packaging of current products.)
Per WP:MOS#Images, images should be set to thumb width to allow reader preferences to take over. For portrait format images, "vertical" can be used to make the image narrower.
Done
The products section is very list-y.
Will work on summarizing lists
Removed lists :)
A model article is often useful for ideas and examples to follow - Maraba Coffee is a FA and may be a possible model.
Thank you both so much. I'll see if I can address all of your concerns ASAP. Just a couple of questions:
On Maraba Coffee, the first image shows the packaging of one of their products, and it's a free image. If I take the picture of one of Odwalla's products, is it a free image also? I was told (I think) on WP:Help (the media/copyright page) that Odwalla product pics should be Fair use. I'm assuming because it's an American product and the packaging shows the logo, but I'd sure love to have some free images on the page.
Should I create a List of Current Odwalla Products or something and link the Products section to it? I'm not sure if it'd pass the notablility test for some editors.
Would a picture of their HQ that I took be free or fair use?
I'm considering removing info about the price of the juice, because I can't find any reliable resources and Maraba coffee doesn't do that... so yeah. :)
The Maraba coffee image was taken in Rwanda, so copyright law there may be quite different. Look at the fair use rationale on Image:CokeII.jpg. One of the questions is would the Odwalla bottles be copyrighted or just trademarked? I would ask at the talk page for WP:Image or WP:Fair use. The HQ would be a free image. You can always leave things like the price in and try and get more PR comments and see what others think. I will try to take a second look at the article, but it may take a few days. Ruhrfisch><>°°03:04, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Image copyrights are a bit of a minefield! Regarding the prices, I'm not convinced they need to be there (I meant to bring that up in my earlier comments, but forgot). The problems are those you've already noted - they become out-of-date very quickly, and sourcing them without running into WP:RS problems can be tricky. I think it would be sufficient to mention where Odwalla's products fit into the market and how they compare with competing products (are they priced as a luxury brand or a mass-market one etc)... assuming, of course, that it can be sourced ;)
I hope you don't mind that I've copyedited the E. coli section a little, mainly trying to reduce redundancies in the prose. More copyediting will be needed at some point, especially if you're thinking of going for FA, but you're doing a fantastic job on the article - it's surprisingly difficult to write about a company in a way that's both neutral and objective, so great work! EyeSerenetalk09:35, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That's what I thought (referring to the logo copyrights). I'll see if I can get to Half Moon Bay to take a picture of the HQ since it'll be free. I'll also see what I can do about general information about prices. Thank you a lot for the copyedit. I've asked for a couple of other copyedits from different editors, so hopefully that'll help. Intothewoods29 (talk) 15:55, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Good job in improving the article. Here are some issues that I have:
Use of "By date" and "In date" - In the history section you start a good number of sentences with those two phrases, could you reword them a little so that the date is better incorporated into said passages.
Done. If you see any more, just tell me and I'll move 'em around.
Images - I have been told that images should not be placed on the left side when under a heading, please move them to the right side of the page.
Done
Wikilinks - You appear to be over linking some obvious terms, just do a quick review and judge for yourself.
Done unless you see any more that need to be removed, then just tell me.
Whitespace - Some images are generating large swaths of white space, please move them so that the article flows better.
QUESTION: Is there any image in particular? It could just be the default size you set in "My preferences".
Image:Odwalla Food Bars.JPG in the last section, at 1280x1024 there is a large white space. You can fix this by relocating the image to the top of the section.
Red liks - One or two remaining
COMMENT: I was told (scolded more like) by a couple of admins for removing red links at WP:GAN, so I'm just going to leave them in for now.
Citations, dates - Sorry, but this one is a bitch: you did not use the |date= field in many of the citations from sources with defined dates. On those sources with the full with (dd, mm, and yyyy) use the ISO format and please link them (2008-08-24); do not link those that only have a mm/yyyy format, use the the standard mm yy format (August 2008).
Done I hope
Citations, authors - Another biggie: you did not use the |author=, |coauthors= or |others= in many of the citations from sources with credited authors. On those articles that have an author, please add them. Use these three fields:
Use the |author= field for a single contributor.
Add the |coauthors= field for articles with two contributors, this must be used with the preceding field.
Add the |others= field for articles with three or more authors, this must be used with the preceding two fields.
Done
Citations, publisher - Many of the Beverage Age sources are reprints, please list the original source by putting Beverage Age reprinted from (source) in the |publisher= field. It would be even better if you can find the source from the original publisher.
DoneQUESTION: None of them are from Beverage Age... do you mean BNET? I'll work on that ASAP.
They are:
BNet
AllBusiness
Beverage World
Also, PRNewswire articles are press releases as are a couple of BNet links.
Reference #49 is malformed and displaying the link data instead of actually linking to the source
I know these things are arduous, but take your time and do it right.
Some suggestions -
Here are some suggestions that are not required for your GA nomination.
Formatting - If you wish, ask Epbr123 (talk·contribs) to copy edit for Wiki-formatting After you have completed the things I have listed. He is good and will find things you, others and I have missed.
I replied to your questions, and check all of the links with the FA article tools (these are not required for GA, but will help for FA). everything else looks good. --Jeremy ( Blah blah...) 22:20, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Okay. I think I've taken care of everything needed for GA.
The food bar pic has been moved; I think the big white space results because the image is at the end of the article and because of individual image size preferences.
I think I got all the stuff needed for the refs. Two of the Beverage World articles didn't seem to be from somewhere else, but they were ads, so I changed the refs to press releases.
I know #49 (now #48) is malformed; I can't seem to get it right. I think it's because it's a PDF and the URL is weird. So yeah.
Replies:
Just in case, I moved it up a little more. I have no custom views setup on WP, everything is stock
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I've listed this article for peer review because I have just completed a major rewrite to clean it up. I need someone else to take a look at it and point out what I have missed. Also, I wish for a reviewer to take a look at the classification and see if it qualifies as a B-class article.
My main comment is that I don't think it was necessary to split this out from the main In-N-Out Burger article, which at 23k is far from huge. I think this could be merged back into the Menu section. However I will continue to review the content that is here.
In the first sentence, "only provided" should be "provided only".
If this is to remain as a separate article, the lead should be expanded per WP:LEAD. Although the article is relatively short, I don't think two sentences is enough. Try to add at least a couple more sentences, maybe summarizing the types of food served.
"which similar to Thousand Island dressing" should be "which is similar to Thousand Island dressing"
"The company' customization" should be "The company's customization"
Generally, I think you need to add more in-line citations. The "Beverages" section for example does not have any specific references.
This was just a quick read through, but I hope some of this was useful. --Jameboy (talk) 20:27, 19 August 2008 (UTC
Thank you for pointing those out, I will fix them ASAP. The article size was significantly largere before a recent copy edit that removed tons of redundant data and cruft. I use the term cruft very sporadically at best and when I do it is only because there is no better term. The article was a mess before. --Jeremy ( Blah blah...) 21:16, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The menu, as interesting as it is, probably doesn't need its own article.
The section "Menu items" starts off with an explanation of why In-N-Out is a regional chain, which is jarring. It should start with an introduction to the menu. Even better, since the entire article is about the menu, eliminate the section and move it to the intro.
The transition from the subsection "The Secret Menu" to the section "Burgers" is also jarring. On first reading, I interpreted the "Burgers" section as "Secret burgers". To improve this, either eliminate the "Menu items" section, or reorganize "Burgers", "French fries", and "Beverages" into "Regular menu items" and "Secret menu items".
The " - " generally stands in for the em dash, which you can enter by typing "—".
Variable substitution as in "m x c" is probably too complicated a concept for an article about burger products. Maybe just say that the patty goes first and the cheese goes second.
The least understandable sentence in the article is "In-N-Out uses the Kennebec strain of potato for its fries and prepares them in store as opposed to purchasing them pre-made from companies such as McCain Foods, one of the primary manufacturer of french fries for the fast food industry". Break the ideas up into at least two sentences.
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
I am somewhat stumped on where to go with it. Faulkner was considered an important political writer for his time. News at the beginning of the 20th century was more state or local and not national. In some ways the respect for him as a writer, and his fair treatment to politicians from both parties, made him ahead of his time. One could say that Tim Russert was much like him, and the response to Faulkner's death was much like the response to Russert's death.
I would like to get the article up a couple notches on the quality scale and I need ideas on what to improve.
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I'm interested in taking this to WP:FL and would like some feedback. Some questions I have about the list; is the intro ok in length? Should redlinked alumni be included? Should they be unlinked? (I've seen FL's with both) Is information about the Drexel 100 presented in a way that's understandable? Any feedback would be great, thanks! --ImmortalGoddezz (t/c) 20:50, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The current feeling at WP:FL is that lists should not begin with "This is a list of...". Is there a more interesting way you can start?
Also, you can now just write the introductory few sentences without feeling you need any words in bold: see this (a recent rewording: see here under "Lead section")
A few sentences about some of the people in the list in the introduction wouldn't hurt
Personally, I'd prefer photos alongside the appropriate section, rather than all at the start - it's easier to find the details of the person that way.
"Reference" could be cut to "Ref" in each table
The redlinks are a problem: if they're "notable" enough to be mentioned here, they really ought to have at least a stub about them.
One likely question at WP:FL will be what steps you've taken to make the list "comprehensive" in terms of finding names to add - your answer?
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I've listed this article for peer review because (1) I am not sure weather I should aim for FAC or FLC; (2) what do I need to fix before submitting it to either one of those.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I feel that it is now very close to reaching Featured Article status and I'd just like some last pointers before taking it to WP:FLC. All of the points from the previous PR and GA Review that I felt needed addressing have been taken into account, so there shouldn't be much that needs commenting on, but any help you guys can give would be awesome.
Football isn't wikilinked anywhere. I would actually suggest saying in the first line "is an all-seater football stadium in the Trafford borough of Greater Manchester, England." and wikilink football there. I realise football isn't the stadium's only use, but is certainly its vast majority use.
Done
History
"Therefore, following the club's rescue from near-bankruptcy and renaming, the new chairman decided" Do you know the chairman's name?
Done
"However, further investment to the tune of about £30,000 would have been required," I'm not sure "to the tune of" is quite formal. I may be wrong though.
Y Changed to "further investment of approximately £30,000..."
"The first of these was the 1911 FA Cup Final Replay" replay doesn't need to be capped.
Done
"as 70,504 spectators watched the Red Devils lose 3–1 Aston Villa." Should that be "lose 3–1 to Aston Villa"?
Done
Wasn't there a period of time during the redevelopments that there was no space for visiting supporters? Is it worth adding in?
I can't remember such a period. Do you have a ref?
Unfortunately not. I'm working a little off memory. I seem to remember a game against Liverpool, maybe even when Cantona made his return (?) which was either the final game before away supporters returned or the first game they did. Peanut4 (talk) 23:31, 22 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"However, from 2003 to 2007, when Wembley Stadium was completed and England began to play their home games there again, Old Trafford hosted 12 of England's 23 home matches, more than any other stadium." I think this looks ambiguous about the re-opening of Wembley.
Y I've removed the bit that says "when Wembley Stadium was completed and England began to play their home games there again".
"The facility will next host the preliminary matches of the 2012 Summer Olympics." Do you have a ref?
Y Removed.
Structure
"The Museum was opened" museum doesn't need to be capped since this isn't the full name.
Done
"Members of the media are seated in the middle of the Upper South Stand to give them the best view of the match." Do you have a ref, or is it covered by ref 9 at the end of the next sentence?
No, I actually don't have a ref for that statement. I can provide a ref that says that clubs have to provide members of the media with seats with a good view of the match, but, despite it being true, I've not been able to find anything about the media being located in the Upper South Stand.
"Traditionally, the stand is where the hard-core United fans are located, and also the ones who make the most noise." Needs a ref.
I've added a ref that I think is appropriate.
"The shop then gradually moved along the length of the South Stand," I suggest changing gradually moved as literally it implies the shop moved very slowly of its own accord. Or maybe I'm being very picky.
Y Changed to "The shop was then moved..." to imply it moving passively rather than actively of its own accord.
"Alex Ferguson often requests that the pitch be relaid,[29][30] most notably half way through the 1998–99 season," Why most notably in 98-99? And do you have a reference? I'd also suggest wikilinking and maybe describing Alex Ferguson for those somehow getting this far and not knowing who he is.
Done
Future
"Ideally, the expansion would include bringing the South Stand up to at least two tiers and filling in the South-West and South-East quadrants to restore the "bowl" effect of the stadium." Ideally seems POV.
Done
Other uses
"Old Trafford has been used for various purposes other than football since its construction. Before the construction of the Old Trafford football stadium," construction x2.
Y Changed the first "construction" to "since it was first built".
"During the First World War, the stadium was used by American soldiers for games of baseball and, in 1981, matches of cricket's Lambert & Butler Cup were held there." Wikilink baseball and cricket.
Done
Transport
Anything about buses or park & ride schemes?
Y Added info about bus service from Manchester Piccadilly and reffed, but I couldn't find anything about Park & Ride schemes.
General
The first three football club names, Manchester United F.C., Newton Heath F.C. and Liverpool F.C. all use F.C. None of the rest do. Any reason?
No reason, I just thought it read better to have the F.C. in there. I've piped the links now.
Per new policy, I don't think all dates need to be wikilinked.
Would it be a bad thing if I said it's just too much work for me to do now?
Ensure all numerals and their respective unit are broken by a non-breaking space per WP:MOSNUM.
Y I've done all of the ones that need doing, I think, and they're all done with the {{convert}} template, so the non-breaking space is automatically in there.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Per the MOS, link titles shouldn't be in all capitals.
I don't understand what you are referring to here. Can you provide some examples so that I know what I'm looking to correct?
This site was used as a reference for the recently-published "The Official Manchester United Almanac" by John White (ISBN978-0-7528-9192-7), and I'm sure it has been used for other published works too.
WHY is it trusted though? To determine the reliablity of the site, we need to know what sort of fact checking they do. You can establish this by showing news articles that say the site is reliable/noteworthy/etc. or you can show a page on the site that gives their rules for submissions/etc. or you can show they are backed by a media company/university/institute, or you can show that the website gives its sources and methods, or there are some other ways that would work too. It's their reputation for reliabilty that needs to be demonstrated. Please see Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2008-06-26/Dispatches for further detailed information. Ealdgyth - Talk20:33, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This is one of the more trivial citations in the article, as the statement it references is not particularly contentious. The reliability of this particular source is not particularly important, IMO.
Despite not having been updated in a while, the majority of the statistics on this site can be cross-referenced to other sources. The convenience is that this site collates the info in one easy-to-reference location.
Info contained on this site can easily be confirmed by other sources, but the fact that it's all in one place makes it easier to reference this site.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:44, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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Just a few comments
The lead section is too short and repetitive. In the same paragraph you mention the word barbiturate at least 3 times.
In the history section you also start every paragraph with "barbituric...". I know that the article is about barbiturate, but that is poor writing.
The same goes for the Therepeutic uses section.
Legal status section needs refs and also should be expanded.
You should also check the refs #12 and #14 (Retrieved: 6-2-2008.. should be 06-02-2008)
The lead sentence doesn't define barbiturates. It needs the "derivatives of barbituric acid" bit.
I agree the lead is too short. It also uses jargon: "central nervous system depressant", "anxiolytics" and "hypnotic".
Much of the History section should go into a Classification section as it discusses the differences between short-, medium- and long-acting barbiturates. There's no history beyond 1912, which surely isn't comprehensive. A short discussion of historic and current usage is needed.
"Phenobarbital is used as an anticonvulsant for people suffering from seizure disorders such as febrile seizures, tonic-clonic seizures, status epilepticus, and eclampsia." is flawed. Please don't use the horrible euphemism "seizure disorders". Plus, most of those listed things aren't "disorders", they are clinical events that may well be isolated. Have a look at the Phenobarbital article. The book citation isn't complete as it needs a date. A book published in 1984 is really not an acceptable source for current drug usage.
The "Recreational misuse and abuse" contains much that belongs elsewhere. The opening paragraph discusses intoxication (overdose, really). The middle paragraph has a sentence on the same issue. It also notes the (presumably legitimate) use of barbiturates to counter the effects of illicit drug withdrawal. Veterinary use doesn't belong in this section.
You're going to have problems keeping the slang section well sourced. I've already removed an IP addition. I seriously doubt the accuracy of that list as 'ludes is slang for Quaaludes (Methaqualone), which aren't barbiturates. I recommend you drop it.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, and my first suggestion would be to get your references into order. A number of your website references lack publisher and/or last access dates, which are the bare minimum needed for WP:V. Books need publisher, author, and page number on top of title. When you've got those mostly straightened out, drop me a note on my talk page and I'll be glad to come back and look at the actual sources themselves, and see how they look in terms of reliability, like I would at FAC. 13:56, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
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Hi guys, I'd like to request a peer review of Hekla. I've already run the script and fixed many of the issues (apart from prose quality). I assume I won't be able to get it to FA without more sources as some of the sections can't really claim to be comprehensive yet, so maybe a review before going for GA might be appropriate. Issues I'd particularly like some advice on (although anything is welcome):
What to do with the many small paragraphs on particular eruptions etc - is there a logical way to divide them up?
The article is quite long and so could be split up, the obvious candidates would be the longer eruption sections. Is this necessary?
The article is quite dense with numbers in parts. This is partly because I've tried to summarise but could affect readability. Any thoughts?
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
What if there was a List of Hekla eruptions then summary style could be used (1980s), especially for the minor eruptions?
So would you suggest essentially copying the entire eruptions section to the new main List of Hekla eruptions article, refering to it with a {{main}} template and having say one paragraph per major eruption or group of minor eruptions in this article?
I also would think about combining some of the short paragraphs (one or two sentences) and sections, or perhaps expanding them. For example, could Name be added to Reputation?
I've done some of this but will wait now if much of this is going to end up in a list article
Units need to be consistently in both metric and English units for all measurements / numbers given. {{convert}} may be useful here
This is going to take some work! I'm tempted to claim the 1st exception in MOS:CONVERSIONS as this is a scientific article to some extent and I would have thought that converting the 1st instance of each unit should be sufficient. I'll think about this and probably ask on the talk page.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Well spotted.
Per WP:MOS#Images, images should be set to thumb width to allow reader preferences to take over. For portrait format images, "vertical" can be used to make the image narrower.
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This article was created shortly after the announcement of the game in September 2007. The game is still unreleased, and it is updated as new information is released. Because of a change in Featured topic criteria, this game and the other unreleased games need to go through peer review for the Kingdom Hearts topic to stay featured. The other two games have already been reviewed here and here.
I guess this is just to fulfill FTC requirements now, but I'll take a look anyway:
A strange one, but what is the confirmation that "coded" should be in lower case; are you going from the logo alone?
Would it be possible to replace "takes place" with "is set"? I just feel that it's technically ambiguous as to having an in-universe meaning or not.
Need an idea of gameplay and plot in the lead to differentiate it from previous installments.
"Coded will be a puzzle game with action elements mixed into the gameplay" Seems to contradict lead and infobox info. If you feel that it is still predominantly RPG, then tone it down to "will feature puzzle elements" or something similar.
"The action gameplay is believed to be similar to the action-RPG style of the previous games in the series and features a similar basic interface" Repetition: "similar" ...."similar".
minigame is not hyphenated in the WP article name so probably shouldn't be here for consistency's sake.
"The game will feature 3D graphics, with backgrounds in 3D and characters in 2D" Given the proceeding clause, the first becomes somewhat redundant and illogical. If this breaks flow/is too short, consider merging into another sentence.
"The initial trailer showcased Sora in dungeons with floating red and black blocks." I don't see why gameplay features have to be attributed to trailers as this is only a representation of what is in the game. Actually, thinking about it, what is the use/meaning of this sentence?
I know this hasn't been released yet, but there's a very vague sense of what happens in gameplay and how the puzzle system actually works.
Need to wikilink or explain who Sora is. Same for other unexplained terms.
I'm wondering why there is three consecutive short sentences at the start of this section.
"screen shots" It's one word
"Early screen shots showed the game in a wide screen format; based on the idea that more future models will feature a swivel screen". I'm no expert in grammar and punc but I'm not seeing why this semi-colon isn't a comma. Maybe I'm wrong.
The refs don't consistently follow a *surname**forename* format.
Any chance of finding the full name of Enrico S?
Are there better sources for those attributed to Kingdom Hearts Ultimania? What is the status of this site? Same for QJ.net.
Thanks for the comments, they were very helpful. Here's the progress on them.
The image was used as well as an article from GameSpot [1].
"Takes place" is now "is set". A very good point on out-of-universe perspective.
With the minimal amount of gameplay and story info, I'm not entirely sure what to add. I added one extra sentence about the story.
The lead and infobox now say "Puzzle game", however, this may change as more info is released.
Repetition toned down.
"Mini-game" is now "minigame"
Sentence about 3D graphics tweaked
I'm not sure what to do about the sentence for now because such little info is know. I'm certain that sentence will be gone, or at least moved to "Development", by the time the game is released.
Once again about the gameplay, what's in the article is about all that is known. More should be released down the road.
Sora is wikilinked, nothing else stood out to me as needing a link. Are there any others you spotted?
Two of the short sentence have been combined.
"Screen shot" is now "screenshot"
I've switched to a comma, I believe you're right about it.
Author names in refs are now consistent.
Enrico S. was the only name given in the article.
The KHU links are pages with translated interviews from magazines. I expanded one of the KHU refs by citing the magazine article it originated from and linked it as a translation. I'll try to do the same with the other ones, but I'll have to track down the source info first. The QJ.net site is owned by a corporation, but I now realize that it is a blog posting that got its info from a forum posting. I've removed the ref and the content associated with it.
I'm thinking of the "Heartless" and "Destiny Islands", but that's about it. I can see how there can be difficulties related to unreleased games when it comes to information, but I'm sure things such as the lead and gameplay will fall into shape once it's released. If you ever want me to give it a lookover before or after release, then just ask. Cheers, Guy. AshnardTalkContribs17:54, 20 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Would love to have some feedback on this since wanted to nominate it for FA once done. This would also help to improve Hindu-German Conspiracy to FA standards, so all help will be appreciated. Particularly looking for help with prose, grammar, suggestions at condensing, etc. rueben_lys (talk·contribs) 14:06, 4 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hemlock Martinis comments
Vague
Thank you for including a "Background" section an a "Influence" section (although the latter might be better renamed to "Aftermath" or "Impact").
There are a few instances where some of the sentences are excessively complex. Example: "The Niedermayer-Hentig Expedition, sometimes referred to as The German mission to Kabul was a diplomatic mission sent by the Central Powers to Afghanistan in 1915-1916 that sought to encourage Afghanistan to declare independence from Britain, draw her into World War I on the side of the Central Powers, and attack British India." A possible fix: "The Niedermayer-Hentig Expedition, sometimes referred to as The German mission to Kabul, was a diplomatic mission sent by the Central Powers to Afghanistan in 1915 and 1916. The expedition's primary goal was to encourage Emir Habibullah to declare independence from the British Empire and bring Afghanistan into World War I on the side of the Central Powers by attacking British India."
In the above example, you originally referred to Afghanistan as a "her". I would prefer to refrain from addressing countries with personal pronouns that ascribe a gender. While I don't know if such a thing is written down anywhere as policy, either for or against, I certainly don't like it.
Make sure you standardize the name you ascribe to the United Kingdom. In this case you've used "Britain" (which is fine) although 1) make sure you address it as either "the United Kingdom" or "the British Empire" in the first instance in which it appears and 2) make sure you use only "Britain" thereafter, not England (as you have in a few instances).
When discussing Turkey before 1922, refer to it as the Ottoman Empire unless specifically addressing the Turkish part of the empire.
Specific
"It may have further influenced policies of the nascent Bolshevik Russia to propagate socialist revolution to Asia and the western colonial empire." Do you mean "western" as in the direction or as in the Western civilization sense?
"Mehmed V, the Sultan of Turkey, was then regarded as the Caliph by a substantial part of the Islamic world." Do you have a citation for this? Also, see the Turkey-Ottoman Empire thing above.
"The Kaiser himself toured Constantinople, Damascus and Jerusalem in 1898 to portray solidarity with Mussalmans, who at the time were predominantly subjects of the British Empire." Kaiser who? Please specify. And although I personally disagree with Wikipedia's choice to refer to Kaiser Wilhelm II as German Emperor William II, I would be lax in my review if I didn't suggest that you change all instances to the latter.
"In this situation, Britain perceived Afghanistan as the only entity capable of directly destabilising India." Do you mean the British people or the British government?
"As the war started, advice from the foreign office, the military, and from Moltke considered using the pan-Islamic movement to destabilise the British Empire and begin a revolution in India as early as the first week of August 1914." Specify which foreign office and military.
"With the onset of the war, revolutionary unrest itself increased in India, and a number of Hindu and Muslim leaders left clandestinely to seek help of the Central power for an Indian revolution." No need for "itself" and specify where they left to go. "the Central power" should also be changed to "Germany" for clarity.
"The pan-Islamic movement in India (particularly the Darul Uloom Deoband) also made plans for an insurrection in the tribal belt of North-west India with support from the Afghan Amir, the Ottoman Empire and Imperial Germany." A few things here. Should "north-west" be hypenated? Please standardize Emir/Amir, the aforementioned Ottoman Empire/Turkey and Imperial Germany/Germany.
"Aware of the sensitivities of the Persian tribes, it was suggested that the Germans wear Turkish army uniforms but this idea was rejected by the Germans." Suggested by whom?
"Moreover, the aims of the expedition were far from clear, and this was expected to be confirmed only after it reached Constantinople." This should be clarified.
"Werner Otto von Hentig was a Prussian military officer who before the war had served as the military attaché to Beijing and Constantinople in 1910 and 1912 respectively." Is Prussian the correct term here or German? Also, you might want to check if Beijing was Peking at this time.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Per the MOS, quotations shouldn't be inclosed with the graphical curly quotes. {{blockquote}} works fine.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 14:02, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because I've done a lot of work in expanding it recently and I'd really like to get some other opinions on what needs work and how I can improve it further.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I wish for it to become a GA.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Other unreleased tracks - what makes this notable? It needs a ref or two at the least. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Article could use a copyedit - ask for help at WP:PRV. As one example see After recording In Defense of the Genre, Say Anything band members Max Bemis and Coby Linder worked with Saves the Day's Chris Conley and David Soloway on a side project reportedly named Two Tongues originally set for release sometime in summer 2008.
A model article is often helpful for ideas and examples to follow - Radiohead is a FA and may be a useful model
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm really interested in bringing it up to FA-quality. I received some fantastic feedback in the article's last peer review which was invaluable in seeing it promoted to Good Article status, so I'd be delighted if anybody was able to offer any suggestions on how to improve it further.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Looks pretty good, so these will be nipicky. Some segments recur periodically, such as "Back in Black" with Lewis Black, "This Week in God", "Trendspotting" with Demetri Martin, "Are You Prepared?!?", "Wilmore-Oliver Investigates", and "You Don't Know Dick" ... two things here - all of these are linked to the same article List of The Daily Show recurring segments which would probably be seen as overlinking at FAC. Also I would try to provide more context - identify correspondents who now do the segment).
While it generally reads well, try to avoid passive voice where possible, such as In the show's third act, an interview is conducted by the host with a celebrity guest. could be In the show's third act, the host conducts an interview with a celebrity guest. which is active and more concise
Problem sentence: A book titled The Daily Show: Five Questions (ISBN0-8362-5325-6) was released by Comedy Central in 1998 and highlighted many of the best interview moments from Craig Kilborn's stint as host. needs a ref, I owuld put the ISBN into a footnote / ref, and as a one sentence paragraph I think it breaks the flow of the article and should be combined with another paragraph or expanded, if possible
Technically I think Steve Carell should be linked at the first mention of his name, not in the staff section (second mention).
Per WP:MOS, block quotes need to be about four lines long - "The show you are about to watch is a news parody. Its stories are not fact checked. Its reporters are not journalists. And its opinions are not fully thought through." is only one line on my screen and should be in the text.
I was hoping someone else would comment so you'd get more / a different perspective since the last PR. Hope this helps. If my comments are useful, please consider peer reviewing an article, especially one at Wikipedia:Peer review/backlog (which is how I found this article). Yours, Ruhrfisch><>°°01:34, 11 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Current refs 8, 72 are lacking publisher, last access dates and/or other bibliographical information required.
Per the MOS, titles of links shouldn't be in all capitals.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 23:27, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to see other editors feedback to get this article to FA status. I've worked hard on this article (obviously) and have brought it up to GA status. I've used up all links I could find (books, magazine articles, websites, etc.) to get great info for Batman. I have very few things to look at (such as DVD special features). Anyway I need your opinion. Should I add any "Themes" or pictures or what?
Comments-Good article (obviously). Here's how you can make it an FA (very brief and shallow runthrough):
Expand the stubby, one-sentence paragraphs or combine them with others (I'm talking about the legacy section).
Is there any reason that the ISBN of Batman: Strange Application is included in the body of the text?
"In the late 1970s, Batman's popularity was waning." I don't like to be the verification police for every single statement, but according to whom or what statistic was Batman's popularity waning?
Thanks for reviewing. I tend to include the ISBN of a book/novel/comic book if it doesn't have its own Wikipedia article. I don't really know why I do that. Producer Michael Uslan made that comment of Batman's popularity waning in the late 1970s. I will get to work on the Legacy section. —Wildroot (talk) 05:28, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Could you provide a source in the article thay verifies that Michael Ulsan says that quote?
"The film would eventually gross $251.2 million in North America and $160,160,000 in foreign countries, coming at a total of $411.35 million." Make all numbers written in the same format. Also, "coming at a total of" can be shortened to "totaling".
"To compose the film score Burton opted to hire Danny Elfman, his collaborator on Pee-wee's Big Adventure and Beetlejuice." A simpler sentence would be:"Burton hired Danny Elfman, his collaborator on Pee-wee's Big Adventure and Beetlejuice, to compose the film score." In general, the text needs a thorough copyedit before FAC. To me, the most pressing problems are awkward sentence structures and redundant wording.
Ideas for images include: props, behind-the-scenes pictures, film posters, and pictures of cast members.
I just wanted to leave a comment here that if you're interested I have a People Weekly from July 3 1989 with a review of the movie and an article about the Hollywood Premiere. Leave me a note on my talk page and I will either email you the stories or paste lines into the article's talk page.
Bzuk Comments Overall, the article reads well, and my comments are to address mainly minor points:
Referencing: The use of APA (American Psychological Association) style is used but with some inaccurate notations. Author is written as last name, first name with second and following authors/editors appearing as first name, last name. ISBN is a book identification code for booksellers and is not used normally in a citation. Citations should include Author, date and page number in sequence, followed by a full stop.
Minor spelling, grammar: The phrase, "over the tone and direction the film was going in" could be written as "over the tone and direction in which the film was going." The phrase, "but Englehart had mixed emotions with his work" could be "but Englehart had mixed emotions in regards to (in respect to, over) his work." The phrase, "The car was built upon a Chevrolet Impala" could be "The car was built on a Chevrolet Impala chassis." The one use of foot is most often written as "a 38-ft (12 m) model." Note there is a mix of two different quotation styles.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
You link to the IMDb for the awards won, but many of those awards have their own sites, would make sense when possible to link directly to the awards site for the information.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 19:39, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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This is one of the Video games Project's top priority articles, and seeing as this year is the game's 30th anniversary, I'd like to go for FA. Any and all comments would be appreciated.
For those willing to go a bit deeper, I've had a little trouble with the "Re-releases and sequels" section. I know I'm missing some info from about the early 90s till mid-2000. However, I've also considered simply summarizing things a bit more to try to work around this. The section is already rather long anyway. Any thoughts, sources, comments, etc. in this area would be greatly appreciated. (Guyinblack25talk19:57, 5 August 2008 (UTC))[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
This really looks good, except for the incomplete banner, I would say this looks fairly ready for FAC. Would it make any sense to divide the Re-releases and sequels section into arcade versions and personal system versions? That would make each subsection shorter and I was frankly a bit uncertain at times if an arcade version (drop a quarter) or a system version was being discussed.
Make sure the references all meet WP:RS - I am not a video game person, but some of the internet sources are ones I have not heard of.
I would be clearer in the lead - it caused a shortage of yen coins (100), not all yen. How many levels of aliens were there (or was it infinite)?
Any reason why the Futurama epsidoe is spelled out in more detail than DangerMouse and the others?
I am still researching the various re-releases and sequels. Right now it's in chronological order, but I do think a different format would clarify things some. I'm currently working on a draft of a stand-alone list in my sandbox to better organize the info.
I've tried to stay away from questionable internet sources and use links only from the major gaming networks.
I've tweaked the info about the yen in the lead.
I do not know how many levels are included in the game. I initially considered it a trivial detail. But if it is indefinite, I agree that should be mentioned. I'll look into it.
The other TV episodes only contain a short 15–60 second reference to the game, while the Futurama episode includes a 5–6 minute segment which constantly references the game. I figured it would be best to organize it the way it is to avoid giving undue weight.
Thank you for the help. I'll continue to look into the re-release and sequel info, and the number of levels. Any other comments would be greatly appreciated. (Guyinblack25talk18:04, 11 August 2008 (UTC))[reply]
Regarding levels, it depends which version of the game. If you're talking about the original arcade version(s) (Space Invaders and Space Invaders deluxe), like all wave based games (if not all games) at the time, there is no "ending". Levels are infinite (although the score is often not). Games with an actual limit to levels by providing an ending came later. --Marty Goldberg (talk) 04:15, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Image:SpaceInvaders-Gameplay.gif - fill out the 'portion-used' field, and add a bit more on the resolution- state how much it was reduced from the original size, for example.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:58, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
Thank you for the review. The Killer List of Videogames has been covered by various entities.
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I've listed this article for peer review because…its Britney Spears. The ungodly obsessive-compulsive media scrutiny this woman has suffered as one of the worlds most tragic cultural icons warrants wikipedias finest work and requires a strict adherence to equal weight of criticism and praise as well as basic human dignity. Before anyone begins to review this article, let me make it explicitly clear I am not a fan of Spears- do not accuse me of adding fancruft to the article as I have not made any significant contributions to it other than minor copy-editing. Likewise, I do not buy into the "spear Britney" hate campaign against her. I was not responsible for nominating it for GA and my sole interest in preparing it for FAC is my universal interest in protecting basic human dignity of living people.
Upon reading through the article, my major criticism is that it fails to see the forest for the trees. The bio is extremely detailed, yet it gives the reader a poor idea of who she is as a cultural figure and as a musician. The notion of Britney Spears as this tragic teen idol turned sex bomb turned cautionary tale is what makes her interesting, but the details bog down the story. The Atlantic piece on her paparazzi followers is interesting and relevant, and I'll see if I can track down more essay-like pieces on Britney as a whole. Obviously it's somewhat soon to get perspective on her life and career. I would recommend reviewing the Michael Jackson article and adding sections such as legacy/cultural image, musical/vocal style, critical assessment, etc as appropriate. Calliopejen1 (talk) 00:37, 6 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment There's a huge paragraph about critical reception to Baby One More Time better reserved for the album page. That whole section is disproportionally large compared to the other article sections. WesleyDodds (talk) 03:25, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: The products and endorsements section should be integrated, it certainly shouldn't come after the legacy section. — Realist220:19, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Note that given the sheer size of the references list, I don't claim to have caught every small MOS error. I mainly reviewed for source reliability. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 20:12, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because it has gone through some significant rewrites and has not had a formal review in some time (although some editors have offered miscellaneous input; much thanks).
Specific issues I'd like reviewed:
General article quality.
Physiological descriptions: No medical/nutritional experts have reviewed this in some time. I would request, though, that any feedback or changes please distinguish between widely held opinions in the medical community and proven facts. As an example some experts argue that ketosis and ketoacidosis differ only in degree whereas others argue that they are related but different processes (or rather one involves the other but involves other factors as well). Treating one position or the other as established fact, even if the majority agrees with it, would be misleading.
Bias check: The topic is severely controversial. I have tried to balance making clear the stance of the proponents of the concept while making clear the stance of the majority of the medical/nutritional community. The most difficult aspect has been trying to objectively portray the research and the science because there is currently a great lack of consensus on these topics in the medical community.
Organization of the research information: In an effort to check bias the section on research links to a separate article which presents a cross-section of the research. Although that is a little unusual it seems the best approach since there is such extreme controversy in even interpreting the results of the studies.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to see if it can be upgraded to A status, and to add any input from reviewers in terms of overall improvements.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Per WP:LEAD the bolded words in the lead should not be linked. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way but Memorialization does not seem to be there.
Please see WP:HEAD - headers should not repeat the title of the article, so "New York early in the war" needs to be changed. Since this section talks about the end of the war in 1865, calling this section "early in the war" seems a bit odd too.
Organization of the article is also somewhat non-chronological. The election of 1860 (before the war) is desribed after the military history, the politics section also describes the NYC draft riots briefly before the section on them. I looked at the Civil War in Ohio article and it seems better organized.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Galleries are discouraged if you want to go to FA.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because its earlier messy state was controversial (to the point of making the news and causing an academic incident), and after having extensively reworked and expanded it, I would like feedback on its current state and how it may be yet improved.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article and needs to be two or three paragraphs. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
The article needs more references and needs to attribute some its statements better. For example, As such, the image of a fully "peasant" uprising is also not entirely accurate. reads like original research without a cite, or Even the Dutch, who had a trading post nearby and were anti-Catholic, were startled at the excessive degree of repression. These policies were continued by Shigemasa's heir, Katsuie. is not referenced. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Several places need to provide more context for the reader - see WP:PCR. For example, explaining who Jizō is in the caption Statues of Jizō beheaded by rebelling Christians. or if a map that shows where all this occurred is available, that would be good.
The list of forces fighting - could this be made into prose / text?
Wikipedia is NOT a reliable source (even the Japanese version)
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I've gotten this article (and all of the Discographies of FF 1-12) up to GA status, and I'm looking to start pushing them to FA. As such, I'm starting with Discography of Final Fantasy VII. Any help would be appreciated. --PresN (talk) 19:27, 18 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Let's speak honestly - This is a type of article that I do not believe has been seen at FAC recently, if ever. You have four issues to deal with to get to FA: You will have people say it should be a featured list, so be prepared mentally to fend that off. Also, make sure it is copyedited by you, so there are no obvious mistakes, make sure you are secure in your images, so they are minimal and well sourced and rationaled, and most important, check out your references, as I remember you mentioning that some of the music article sources are not considered reliable, which will obviously not fly at FA. Do that, and I think you won't have any problem. :) Judgesurreal777 (talk) 03:31, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I know. Before the peer review, I went looking for FAs that were discographies- there were none. My argument for that is that any FL that is a "discography" article is nothing but tables. I don't have a one in this article. I have one image and one sound clip (I got bitten about that before), which I think I can justify, and will do so in the nomination to head off problems. My biggest problem is references. I've dropped ffmusic.info, which was a straight up fansite, if a great source of information. I've left RPGFan - on the VG source list; soundtrack central- user submitted, but edited by the site before publication (only used once, I'll drop if it need be) and Square Enix Music Online- same idea, but they also have staff reviews, which I'm going to try and move to exclusively, if possible. My plus side- this is music, not games. There's not much to verify- as long as the site has some sort of editorial policy, it's just someone's opinion, nothing that can be challenged. I hope. --PresN (talk) 05:49, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Current refs 1, 10, are missing publishers, last acces dates, and/or other bibliographical information that's required.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:55, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
The first para of the lead is rather repetitive, with both things being released in 1997 and 2004, etc.
"The original music received very positive reviews, with reviewers finding many of the tunes to be very memorable." - I doubt the second "very" is needed.
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I've listed this article for peer review because this GA is a potential FA candidate which has been copy-edited recently. Any and all comments are welcome.
Ruhrfisch comments:
Looks quite nice overall and seems close to being ready for FAC. Here are my nit-picky suggestions:
Per WP:MOS#Images, images should be set to thumb width to allow reader preferences to take over. For portrait format images, "vertical" "upright" can be used to make the image narrower. I think a set width on the lead image is OK.
Done
Left justified images directly under headers are also a no-no.
Done (I think - looks a bit weird to me.)
This is one of those MOS things that I do not understand myself. I had an FAC where it slipped through with left justified images under a header, but there seems to be more image checking at FAC lately. Ruhrfisch><>°°13:05, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Unclear sentence Under the auspices of the European Union's Habitats Directive, as at 31 March 2003 a total of 230 sites in Scotland covering 8,748.08 square kilometres (3,377.65 sq mi) had been submitted by the UK government to the European Commission as candidate Special Areas of Conservation (cSAC).[15] This might be AE (vs BE) but I think "as of 31 March 2003" is meant. Also, is there any more recent information (this is over 5 years ago) - are these now just SACs? Have more cSACs been submitted?
Done good catch.
Also not sure what they refers to in In total they extend to an area of around 350 square kilometres (140 sq mi). Is it the nine coastal sites? Or the 24 marine sites and the nine coastal sites?
Done
Provide context to the reader WP:PCR - perhaps mention in The UK government is considering designating an area known as the Darwin Mounds, covering about 100 square kilometres (39 sq mi) [of the ocean floor?], as the first offshore cSAC.[15] Wouldn't an island be an offshore cSAC too?
Done by adding a brief footnote for citizens of land-locked states. GB is an island, so this just means not including any land. "Working offshore" means on an oil rig, as opposed to on Barra.
References generally go at the end of a sentence or phrase, so perhaps change Scotland was entirely[17] covered in ice during the Pleistocene glaciations.
Done
A few places might be seen as jargon - the article nicely explains member of the biological order artiodactyla or "even-toed ungulates" but does not explain lagomorphs and I must confess that I was a bit fuzzy on what an endemic species was.
Done - piped link for "unique" although I am note sure this is easy to fix without defining "endemic" within the article. Attempted a lagomorph fix. Unfortunately in this instance "lagomorph" is the common name for 'lagomorpha'.
There are a few places where population percentages have a year given in the text, in most though this information is presumably found only in the reference. I am not sure if there should be consistency on this or not, but wanted to note it.
I have an ongoing concern that the article resembles a list in prose form. It would be possible to attempt to make this consistent, but I think it would just clutter up the text with additional numbers I don't think are necessary in such a broad overview. Hopefully FA reviewers will agree!
There are also a few places where the absence of a species is noted without further explanation, for example A small colony of the introduced Golden Pheasant exists, but Lady Amherst's Pheasant is absent.[92] I suppose the wild Dodo and Ostrich are also absent from Scotland, but am not sure why the absence of Lady Amherst's Pheasant is significant - presumably it is found elsewhere in the UK? I like how this is written Smooth Snakes, found elsewhere in the UK are absent, and Grass Snakes are rarely reported.[133] as it makes clear why the absent species is mentioned.
Done - at least I have fixed a couple. In one or two cases the species that are absent are very common elsewhere in the UK, which is why its mentioned. I'll have another look at this. Actually you are (nearly) wrong - there is an ostrich farm near Inverness - the burgers are surprisingly succulent.
There are Llama and alpaca farms in parts of Ohio and Pennsylvania. Would it make sense to have a blanket statement early in the article that species mentioned as absent are typically found elsewhere in the UK? Ruhrfisch><>°°13:05, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It's an idea although of course we might then wade into the lamentable territory of UK/GB/British Isles from which few return with their sanity intact. I'll see what can be done. I think in every instance there is also a reference to some other part of the B. Isles now, hopefully suggesting the reason why this is mentioned.
I was curious as to why so many NNRs lost their status - would it make sense to add a sentence explaining this to Until 2004 there were 73, but a review carried out in that year resulted in a significant number of sites losing their NNR status, and as of 2006 there are 55.[158]?
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Done Remote places sometimes lack mainstream coverage and this source is used a fair amount in articles about Scottish islands. I'd describe them as "very reliable" in that context, although clearly they are not an organisation with a professional background in natural history. It's replaceable if need be.
Done A strong focus on wildlife matters, albeit with a journalistic focus rather than an academic one. As the subject in this case is a piece of local PR that was published for a national audience I think its acceptable in this case.
Done Publisher fixed. The source is hardly the most reputable, but this is cryptozoology after all. It refers to academic work undertaken by the Royal Scottish Museum but sadly this project does not seem to lie within reach of Google. All the other hits appear to be of a similar nature. I could replace it with one where the publisher sounds more plausible, but I fear that would be window dressing only. There are references in local newspapers but they say little in addition and arguably are no more reliable.
Done I'd like to think that Dr. Yvonne A. Simpson's report for the Orkney Natural History Association is acceptable. I fear I may regret the whole cryptozoology section, although it seems supine to ignore it.
Please spell out abbreviations in the notes. (Examples... RSPB, SAC, JNCC, etc.)
Done "RSPB" is probably better known than the full name and is used by the organisation itself- see for example their Home page where the full name is tucked away in the small print.
"SAC" only appears once in the Notes and is simply a reflection of the title of the page JNCC produced.
The publisher was mixed up with the page title. Fixed. Its a primary source that indicates the depth of the controversy in some circles. This may be ultra vires?
Current ref 36, shouldn't the publisher be Uist Wader Project?
The publisher was mixed up with the page title again. ( I don't like these templates - a kind and helpful user added them all shortly after the article made GA and I didn't have the heart to revert them all.)
Current ref 149 is lacking a publisher. It also deadlinks.
Replaced
Current ref 160 is lacking a publisher
Fixed
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:49, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
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Hi. I've worked on this one for a few months, and it recently passed a GA nomination. I'd like feedback especially on the content (does it need to cover anything else? is there too much weight given to anything?) and the prose, obviously, with the aim of going to FAC at some point in the not too distant future. Many thanks in advance. —Giggy04:45, 22 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
This particular piece was published by Rob Malda (CmdrTaco), the founder of Slashdot. I'd consider that pretty reliable (what are the chances of him publishing something that's crap?). —Giggy01:44, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:36, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
"Launched on October 1, 2003 by "moot" ("Christopher Poole"), its boards are based primarily around the posting of pictures and discussion of Japanese comics and television shows." around-->on, and primarily should go before based.
"4chan's '/b/' board, dedicated to random postings, is the most active and is notorious on the Internet; Gawker.com claimed in jest that 'reading /b/ will melt your brain'." "dedicated to random postings"—what does this mean?
I did some further copyediting, and found one more instance of clarification needed: "4chan's "/b/" board is both active and notorious." What does active mean, and what is 4chan notorious for? Addressing these nitpicks now will save time at FAC. Dabomb87 (talk) 01:12, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"However, the pornographic content hosted on 4chan makes it difficult to advertise, with few businesses wanting to be associated with the site's content." A bit awkward, try: "However, the pornographic content hosted on 4chan has detered businesses—who do not want to be associated with the site's content—from advertising." I'm sure there's a better way to rephrase the sentence than my suggestion, though.
"4chan has been labeled as the starting point of the Anonymous meme by The Baltimore City Paper,[17] due to the norm of posts being made with the "Anonymous" moniker." "being" is unnecessary; "made" should probably be changed to "signed".
"Certain post numbers, such as 12345678, 22222222 and every millionth post, are sought after with a large amount of posting taking place to 'GET' them." Besides being grammatically awkward, how important is this information to the article?
Moderately important. I think it was missing the key bit of info (moot's opinion on scaling) which I've now added, and fixed the grammar (hopefully). —Giggy07:57, 26 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The sentence could probably be improved a little more but I can't think of a better solution right now. The more pressing problem is one of clarification: What is a "GET"? Dabomb87 (talk) 01:12, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
WP:ENGVAR inconsistencies: summarised(British English), but humor (American English). Please check for instances throughout the article and change them to one format.
"The lolcat meme later spread to other animals, resulting in the O RLY? owl." This sentence is confusing—it says that the meme spread to other animals, but then branches off into an example.
You might want to add that the whole Grand Theft Auto thing led to the term "rickrolling". It's in the subheader, but we want the article to be as clear as possible.
"The portion of the song in which Zonday turns away from the microphone, with a caption stating "I move away from the mic to breathe in", became a an oft-repeated meme on 4chan,[30] also inspiring numerous remixes." "also inspiring numerous remixes"-->"and inspired remixes.
"More new memes would be developed by 4chan, such as 'So I herd u liek mudkipz', a meme involving a phrase based on Pokemon, which resulted in numerous YouTube tribute videos." Use the simple past tense—"would be"-->were.
"On January 9, 2006 eBaum's World violated copyright in hosting an image of Lindsay Lohan originally posted on YTMND." Comma after 2006; violated copyright-->violated copyright laws.
"In December 2006 and January 2007, users of 4chan and other websites 'raided' Hal Turner, taking his site offline through DDoS attacks, and prank calling his phone-in radio show." "taking his site offline through DDoS attacks, and prank calling his phone-in radio show"—the attacks themselves didn't take his site offline, they led to that result. Reword as necessary.
There needs to be information in the body of text that informs the reader that the student who threatened to blow up his high school attended Pflugerville High School in Austin, Texas (or wherever the school is).
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
The script has several useful items that need to be addressed. I have re-assessed the article, as it is not remotely close to A-class. It is severely lacking in citations, contains weasle words, extreme listiness in See also and Further reading, a rambling TOC, and needs significant WP:MOS cleanup. It will take a lot of work to bring this to WP:GA standard; I suggest using the tips at WP:FCDW/March 17, 2008 to locate other editors interested in collaborating in this content area. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 06:15, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A few general remarks:
I'm not sure how appropriate the Roman parts of the history section are. Without any academic references to back these statements up, I'm tempted to say that they don't make much sense. Aristotle has his own limited contribution to Liberalism, for example - one sentence in Livy or Marcus Aurelius doesn't say much. In short, get a reference to back this up.
Cite the Oxford English Dictionary in a footnote in the paragraph about it.
As it is currently written, the last section belongs in the "Development of thought" section, where most of the material here is repeated, in fact. Write a few very factual sentences on etymology and usage of the word and leave the historical notes for the development section.
Please delete the whole trends section (well, move it to a sandbox or so). It is utterly confusing for the article structure, and parts of it are blatantly false or at least controversial enough to not merit inclusion without sources. The section equates political liberalism with individualism (no, it's not), and equates economic liberalism with classical liberalism, which is only makes some kind of sense from a modern American perspective. Moreover, most of it is redundant with the Development of thought section.
The development of thought section is ok, but suffers from an utter lack of sources. There's some questionable statements in there which just need sourcing. Also, I think the current section could use a bit of structure.
Subsequent sections are questionable.
... that's where I stopped reviewing and decided that I could better go and edit the article. I've got the sources in my bookcase here. :) User:Krator (tc) 09:27, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I would like to get it to GA status. It needs alot of work for it to be a FA. I tried to add as much information as i can. It needs better grammar. If you guys will improve the grammar, that will be thankful. If you could help please see this.
Thanks, BlueRed07:17, 12 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
PR is not typically a place where copyedits happen - you can ask for a copyedit from one of the volunteers at WP:PRV. I owuld also look carefully at all the points raised in the GA review - many of them are still applicable in the current version of the article (relative size of the history subsections, for example)
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself (Land of 10,000 Lakes is only in the lead). My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Article has many one or two sentence paragraphs that break up the flow - these should be combined with others or perhaps expanded.
Per WP:Summary Style, there should be a brief summary of the main article referred to, but there are no such summaries for Franchise and NBA records or the Logo and uniforms or Head coaches sections
Season-by-season records has zero refs, My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref. Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
I was requested to comment on this article in its pursuit of GA status:
I think that when you refer to players colleges you should pipe the link to the basketball program if it exists and if it does not create a redirect where it should be so that you are linked to an article when it is created. E.g. "The Lakers selected 6'9" Earvin Johnson from Michigan State" s/b "The Lakers selected 6'9" Earvin Johnson from Michigan State" and "The team selected Jerry West from West Virginia University" s/b "The team selected Jerry West from West Virginia University".
In their Last year in Minneapolis s/b followed by a comma.
Prose is sloppy:
E.g., "During the offseason Milkan [sp?] announced his retirement, ending his ten year basketball career." The way the sentence reads his retirement ended his career, which is of course technically correct. What you mean is something like 'Mikan's announcement of his retirement during the offseason ended his ten-year basketball career.'
"With Mikan leading the way, their first years as the Lakers, easily won their division by 13 games with a 43–17 record." has no real subject for the noun won. s/b 'With Mikan leading the way during their first year, the Lakers easily won their division by 13 games with a 43–17 record.'
Following should not be capitalized.
You link finals MVP, I think you should also link the first occurrence of reg season MVP.
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This article is an unreleased, recently announced game that is going to be part of a big Halo series featured topic. There is limited content, so please review what's here and give us some improvements to make what is here really good :) Thanks! Judgesurreal777 (talk) 03:23, 7 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Not much to comment on really, all information seems good and present. Do not expand more on rumours/speculation about the development as information tends to be completely useless/irrelevant a few months later. As more info is announced (official no rumour) add that to the article. The development should be the start of its own section when the article is complete in a year's time or so.
To be honest I'm not really sure what more you wanted a peer review to say. Bring it back after the games' release and we'll see what happens.
If you found this peer review helpful please consider doing one yourself. Choose one from the backlog, where i found this article or take a look at WP:Peer Review.
Comment by Randomran: There isn't much to comment on, but what you have is good so far. I might encourage you to break some of the run-on sentences down into multiple shorter sentences... or just shorten them altogether. Otherwise, the article needs to be more comprehensive, but I understand you're doing the best you can with the research you can find. Randomran (talk) 04:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'd really like to improve this article, yet I do not know how. It seems a decent size, and his home to a filled-out infobox, yet it is still rated as a Start-class article. I could also use what is decided here for future reference when creating other articles on schools and school districts (hopefully). I apologize if this is an inappropriate usage of peer review or is simply a difficult peer review session, as this is my first jab at it.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way Please see WP:LEAD
Article needs more references, for example the History and Activities sections have no refs. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref. Fix the citation needed tags.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Activities seems pretty crufty - needs cited to reliable sources. Also Adlai Stevenson was not a Minuteman (Revolutionary War soldier) yet it says Many other aspects of the school, such as its nickname (Patriots), the school magazine (Minuteman), and Newspaper(Statesmen) were also named after characteristics of Adlai E. Stevenson.
What make the red link alumni and no link teachers notable? See WP:NN - my rule of them is to write an article on them first, then add them to the list.
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I've listed this article for peer review because the quality of this article has recently significantly improved and the article was previously assessed as stub class. The article appears to meet the criteria for a B article, however I would appreciate a second opinion.
Per Wikipedia:Manual of Style (numbers), there should be a non-breaking space - between a number and the unit of measurement. For example, instead of 0Nl, use 0 Nl, which when you are editing the page, should look like: 0 Nl.[?]
Done
Per Wikipedia:Manual of Style (headings), headings generally do not start with articles ('the', 'a(n)'). For example, if there was a section called ==The Biography==, it should be changed to ==Biography==.[?]
Done
Per Wikipedia:Manual of Style (headings), headings generally should not repeat the title of the article. For example, if the article was Ferdinand Magellan, instead of using the heading ==Magellan's journey==, use ==Journey==.[?]
Done
The script has spotted the following contractions: wasn't, wasn't, Haven't, if these are outside of quotations, they should be expanded.
Done
The article will need references. See WP:CITE and WP:V for more information.[?]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I think is really complete, it contains an amount of information reallt difficult to find in the web and in general, so I want to candidate it as a Featured Article.
Just a note - The lead seems very sparsely wikilinked - Max Born, Pascual Jordan, Nobel Prize in Physics, Adolf Hitler , SS and Uranium Club should all be linked for example. On the opposite end of the scale, some parts of the body are heavily linked - such as the Uranium Club section. I think this is a necessary evil however given the number of physicists, scientific terms and german words linked. Don't link Werner Heisenberg in the text as this causes unnecessary bolding. Cheers. Sillyfolkboy (talk) 19:37, 22 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Per WP:LEAD the lead should not be more than four paragraphs long. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way
The article has a lot of very short (one or two sentence) paragraphs which break up the flow of the article. These should be combined with others or perhaps expanded. See WP:Proseline too
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Why the lists of Internal Reports? Especially when the titles are generally untranslated - this is the English Wikipedia. Perhaps these could be slit off as a list - see the FL List of scientific publications by Albert Einstein for a model.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I am not sure whether it has all needed requirements for featured article status, and I don't want to directly nominate it without getting second opinions first. It has tons of information, but I feel the "Summary" section needs to be expanded, and if this is not possible, it should be renamed to "Off-season". What else needs to be changed?
Why bother linking the dates under "Key dates"? For that matter, why link any standalone month/day dates?
Check for proper dashes.
I don't consider it necessary to wikilink more than once within the same section. Overlinking is most obvious in the "Records" section.
"Curiously, Jones was involved in a trade back in the 2003 NBA Draft, in which the Celtics drafted him with the 20th overall selection, but immediately traded him with the 16th pick, Troy Bell, to the Memphis Grizzlies in exchange for the 13th pick, Marcus Banks, and the 27th pick, Kendrick Perkins." Curiously?
The overwhelming majority of the article pertains to statistics, results and lists. Where is the prose? It just stopped after the pre-season transactions. You can't just condense the regular season and playoffs into a list.
Notice that every table looks so different from each other?
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because it was recently promoted to WP:GA and I would like to nominate it for WP:FA at a future date. Advice and feedback would be appreciated.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 23:19, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
I have fixed the URLs above and have generally cleaned up the article according to some of the suggestions above. However, at the moment I now need to take a long wikibreak. Thanks to those who have helped and I hope that other editors will continue to improve the article. Regards, -Classicfilms (talk) 05:05, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to know if it could be pushed to FA level.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Current refs 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 33, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 45, 55, and 70 are lacking publisher and/or other required bibliographical information, such as last access dates or authors when known.
Either list your referenced authors last name first or first name first. Pick one style and stick to it.
Current ref 26 (Legal magic... ) has the author listed in the wrong spot.
Sources that are in languages other than English need to have that language noted in the reference.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:32, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
While it is clear that the "Allegations of copyright and trademark infringement" section is chronological, I was less sure of the overall idea behind the organization of the article.
The eBay section is very short - could it be combined with another section or perhaps expanded? There are also several very short paragraphs (one or two sentences) which should also be combined or expanded. The RDR section is especially in need of attention for this.
RDR also ends oddly - the judge has not yet ruled, but the refs are from April - it is nearly September, surely there has been some progress?
Also ref 77 is broken
Legal injunctions - first paragraph needs a ref, provide context for the reader (which book was there an injunction for in 2003? - see WP:PCR
There is a lot of detail here - for FAC I would be concerned because there does not seem to be much flow between sections (again organization). I would also try to get a similar level of detail in each section (eBay vs RDR - two extremes).
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because me and Rambo's Revenge have been working hard on this list and feel it is close to Featured list standard, so we hope this peer review can address any issues and problems we may have missed. NapHit (talk) 18:27, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
But if you expanded the lead of this list to include the trophy changes, it would mirror the UEFA Super Cup article almost exactly. If a list is an important part of an article and can be managed within that article, why create a separate list for the sake of it? Surely we should consider an article/list not just on its own merits but also how it fits into Wikipedia and links to other articles. --Jameboy (talk) 23:25, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
But there is huge scope for improvement on the UEFA Super Cup article, it is very poor in my opinion and a lot more could be mentioned especially the history and the recent trophy change which is mentioned minimally. Personally I think the table should be removed from the main article and a link placed to direct it to this list. NapHit (talk) 17:52, 20 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Just a quick comment from me: You seem to have coloured the winning competitions in the tables, but not the losers. And therefore, the logic goes, the competition that the loser won to get there can be inferred. While the lead states which two competitions competed for the cup each year, I still think it would be clearer to colour the loser, as well. See for example here - rst20xx (talk) 22:12, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That looks good, thanks. Though I might change one of the green and blue as they're quite similar and some people may have trouble telling them apart. Unless there's some particular reason those colours are particularly appropriate. Obviously this change can be made quite easily using a replace all - rst20xx (talk) 21:01, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I'd appreciate a peer review of this article before suggesting it as a Good Article (GA) nominee or Featured Article (FA) candidate. Is it understandable? Are the Figures enlightening? Does anything need a reference? Am I understanding everything correctly? Have I overlooked something?
Honestly, I'm not sure whether GA or FA would be appropriate; that might be another helpful question to address in the peer review? The present article is significantly shorter than a typical Featured Article, but very few people have ever discussed this topic; its entire scholarly literature seems to consist of a few papers/books. There's even a 1995 quote from expert physicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar that the theorem is discussed in only one major book, that of E. T. Whittaker. I haven't mentioned that in the article, but I could.
I thought about adding a "History" section, but it'd be very short, e.g., "Newton discovered it in 1687 and applied it to lunar motion. Largely ignored for four centuries, with the exception of the 1937 dynamics book by Whittaker. First generalized in 2000 by Mahomed and Vawda."
I don't think it should be excluded from GA or FA on the basis of its length. Some topics need long articles and others need short ones. This needs a short one.
That's reassuring, but perhaps it's better to take it to GA first? I've never actually succeeded in getting a Good Article, so it might be nice for that reason as well. Willow (talk) 18:27, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In the "Overview" section, you comment that when we exclude time, we obtain the path of the particle (a minor comment: "particle" becomes "planet"). Then you juxtapose this with the statement, "If the path of the first particle is described in the form r = g(θ1)" (emphasis added). That's a big if, and unfortunately it's easy to misread as, "When we forget about time, the path of the first particle..." (That's how I read it the first time.) And of course that's not true, because then the orbit couldn't precess. (The same thing happens in the "Generalizations" section.) So while the article is literally correct, I think there must be a better wording for that sentence.
I tried to explain the unusual definition of θ being used, and in particular that θ need not be bounded between -180° and 180°. Is it better now? Willow (talk) 17:57, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In the "Qualitative behavior and orbital precession" section, I am not so sure that the article is correct, and I have attempted to fix it. What got me thinking was that the statement "its orbit would resemble the first particle's orbit" is a little vague. How precisely does it resemble the first particle's orbit? When I tried to figure it out my conclusion was that the article was getting tangled up in different reference frames; while the statement and the algebra were correct, I don't think the text reflected the physics. But please read my change carefully, because you're an expert in this and I'm not.
In the "Limit of nearly circular orbits" section, you mention that Valluri, Wilson and Harper explain why Newton felt justified in applying his method to large eccentricities. Could you include a one-sentence summary of their explanation? (Do you have access to the article? I could probably do this if you don't.) Or is the explanation in the following paragraphs?
I tried to sketch their argument in a sentence or two. The basic idea is that the precession rate shouldn't be identically zero for arbitrary forces and arbitrary orbital eccentricities ε. For a given force, it might well be zero for particular values of ε, but a randomly chosen ε (such as those of the planetary orbits of the solar system) is unlikely to yield a zero precession rate. Willow (talk) 17:57, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Also in that section, the meaning of the displayed equation with dC/dr seems rather opaque to me. How does it cause the long axis "to rotate as Newton's theorem of revolving orbits"? What does that last sentence mean? Is this what is being explained in the following paragraphs?
The idea is that you can derive an effective k for an arbitrary central force, as long as you consider only orbits that are very close to being circular. The mean precession rate Ω of the orbit equals (k-1) ω, where ω is the mean angular speed of the particle revolving about the central point. Willow (talk) 17:57, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
By 2 4/243, I presume you mean the fraction 2 + 4/243; I think it doesn't show up well on the screen when the 4/243 is written horizontally, but I don't know how you could format it better without going into TeX: . And while that's clear it doesn't look very good.
Yes, that's exactly what I was trying to convey. I took both of your suggestions, writing it in a TeX formula initially and as 2 + 4/243 later in the text. Willow (talk) 17:57, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In the "Cotes' spirals" section, the diagram does not agree with the text: The diagram uses θ for the position of the particle while the text uses θ1. (The caption agrees with the diagram.)
Yes, I'd wanted to use θ instead of θ1 so that other people could re-use the image? But that seems unlikely, so I changed it to θ1. Willow (talk) 18:27, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It would be nice to have pictures of at least one form of Cotes' spirals.
Maybe there's a way to make the presentation of the different types of Cotes' spirals more uniform? If there's one particular kind that's especially important, then that should be first, of course, but otherwise the presentation suggests that the second form (which, oddly, is not named even though the other two are) is some sort of monstrous aberration of the first.
I've since learned that the cosh form is a type of Poinsot's spiral. :) The only difference between the cos and cosh spirals is the relative strength μ of the inverse-cube central force; if μ is less than a certain positive threshold, the cos spiral holds, whereas the cosh spiral holds if μ is greater than the threshold. Willow (talk) 18:27, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The "Closed orbits and inverse-cube central forces" section has some very special formatting. Is this necessary? If the two images were on opposite sides, then the text would flow better on my screen; right now, their vertically adjacency makes them taller than the section's text.
I tried that, too, but that squeezed the text, making it far taller than the images. A good way of formatting this section isn't obvious to me, unfortunately. :( Willow (talk) 18:27, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In "Newton's derivation", the notation is inconsistent: Sometimes it's r(t), other times it's r1(t) (later you comment on this, but it's not clear at the start); and sometimes it's theta(t) and other times θ1(t).
Also in "Newton's derivation", what is the derivation intended to show? The article says it's his Proposition 43, but doesn't state Proposition 43.
I added more to the Newton section. That makes a lot of sense, since his Principia is the only book that discusses his theorem in any length! :) Willow (talk) 18:27, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think it would be nice to include the Chandrasekhar quote on how little work has been done here.
Comments from Meldshal42 (talk·contribs)
This is my initial review. Article flows well, but FA is still pretty far. I would recommend that you nominate it at GAN following this peer review. Now for the real comments...
There may be too much compliance with the animations/diagrams in this article. A little bit of it is alright, but a large amount of this article depends on the images.
I think the images are needed for the readers who don't want to grind through the math. Perhaps they're eye-candy, but they're instructive eye-candy, no? ;) Willow (talk) 23:22, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The Closed orbits and inverse-cube central forces and generelization sections are a mess.
i couldn't find any prose issues because honestly I don't know how a FA level theory article would go, but this article is very well done. Very interesting, it really sucked me in. Well done, WillowW. --Meldshal42?11:52, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your review, Meldshal! :) I took your advice about GAN prematurely; I waited a few days, and I honestly didn't expect anyone else to review such a far-flung topic, when there are so many others more deserving. But thank you all for coming, and I'll try to incorporate your advice! :) Willow (talk) 23:22, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Mike Peel's review
Sweet effect!
Perhaps a definition of "radial motion" would be useful, e.g. "the distance from the central object as a function of time". My brain also got confused about "angular motion"; it read it as "angular momentum". I shouldn't try to proof-read things over breakfast...
I always need to wait until I've had my coffee, too; there's no telling what I might say, otherwise! ;)
I think you need an animation right at the top, showing what happens in the case of a circular orbit, rather than jumping straight to movies of elliptical orbits. That way you can show just the speed increase before the particles start behaving oddly in radius. Another possibility would be to do a diagram in 1D (or an inset into the current diagrams in 1D), that is, just showing the radial position of the particles over time to reinforce that they are the same. Also, a trace of the path that the green planet takes might be useful (unless that would complicate the diagrams too much...)
We think alike! :) The path of the green planet in Figures 2 and 3 is shown in Figures 8 and 9, respectively. The red planet was meant to show the radial motion without the angular motion, although it does that pretty indirectly, I concede. :P Your idea of a purely circular orbit is excellent, but given the previous review, I'm concerned about adding too many similar animations.
Could the movies be saved as animated GIFs, rather than Ogg movies? They would then be viewable by more people (Ogg isn't too well supported yet), and would also start playing automatically and loop.
Alas, you weren't around when I had this discussion with some mathematicians. The Figures were all originally looping, animated GIFs, but I changed them. The OGG videos are definitely of worse quality, but they don't incur the same memory penalty when loading the article. Perhaps I should include a link to the GIFs? That would keep the download memory load small, but offer a way to see the better images. Willow (talk) 23:22, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I wrote the above comments a few days ago, meaning to continue, but I haven't had the time yet. More comments will be coming when I get the time to give the article my full attention. Mike Peel (talk) 08:44, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:55, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm trying to get this list into a featured list and want replies to improve the article.
Comments from Dabomb87 (talk·contribs)—Unfortunately, I'm not much of an expert on tables and the like. However, I love basketball, and I'm still capable of reviewing prose, sourcing, etc.
"The Western Division was renamed to Western Conference and was split into the Midwest and Pacific divisions." An inline cite for this note perhaps?
The caption of the Staples Center picture needs a period (it's a complete sentence); on the other hand, the Magic Johnson statue picture caption is a fragment, no period.
On the article's talk page, you say that you based the article off the structure of the New York Yankees seasons article. The lead sentence of that article explicitly says that the Yankees are a pro baseball team. I suggest that this article follow that convention.
"With the help of Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant, and Hall of Fame coach Phil Jackson, the Lakers went to five of the nine NBA Finals in the 21st century, winning three of them consecutively from 2000 to 2002, and losing the last two in 2004 and, most recently in the 2008 NBA Finals without O'Neal." Issues:
"went to five of the nine NBA Finals", I don't like the use of went here, how about "played in five of the nine NBA Finals"
"and losing the last two in 2004 and, most recently in the 2008 NBA Finals without O'Neal." Add a comma after most recently and lose "in".
"The Lakers are notable for having (at the end of the 2007–08 season) the most wins (2,905), the highest winning percentage (61.5%), the most finals appearances (29) of any NBA franchise, and the second most championships with 14, behind the Boston Celtics' 17." No, the Lakers are notable because they are a professional basketball team from Los Angeles and before that, Minneapolis. How about: ""The Lakers hold records for having (at the end of the 2007–08 season) the most wins (2,905), the highest winning percentage (61.5%), the most finals appearances (29) of any NBA franchise, and have the second most championships with 14, behind the Boston Celtics' 17."
"The Lakers also hold the record for the longest consecutive win streak (33) in U.S. professional team sports (also an NBA record) beginning on November 5, 1971 and ending on January 7, 1972." If it's a record in U.S. pro team sports, then of course it's a record in the NBA, the NBA is a professional team sport league.
"The franchise has only missed the NBA playoffs five times." Only is a bit POV.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've asked for a peer review because I believe this article on a covered bridge that is on the National Register of Historic Places is nearly ready for FAC. It is based on the models of Cogan House Covered Bridge and Forksville Covered Bridge, which are both FAs. The article includes every bit of information I can find on the bridge itself, and any comments from fresh sets of eyes would be useful and appreciated. I plan to write an article for the one red link. Thanks in advance, Ruhrfisch><>°°16:09, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments I made a minor change fix an add to added. Why do bridges have windows? I am assuming that there is some sort of engineering reason for this, but maybe it's just for looks. Other than that question being unanswered, this article looks good and is ready for FAC. I haven't looked at any MOS issues and wouldn't know where to look if I did. Dincher (talk) 16:36, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks very much - yours are the fastest comments I have had at PR ever! I have never seen a reason for windows in the bridges - of the seven in the three county NRHP listing only two have more than one window and they are the longest two. This bridge is 186 feet long and without windows would be fairly dark, so my guess is it is a lighting issue. I also think Lewis added the windows in 1968, but have no sources on that. As it is the windows are staggered so there are five places of illumination. Ruhrfisch><>°°17:07, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I had thought that maybe the windows were there to allow wind to pass through insted of under or over and knocking the bridge down. I guess that was too much thinking. I didn't see the obvious lighting issue. Oh, the pics are quite nice. I really like sign about animals and fire, very funny. Dincher (talk) 17:17, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In the Federal Covered Bridge guide (Extrernal link) they describe bridges failing from uneven snow loads on the roof, so strong wind could probably do it too. Ice jams and floods seem worst - the Forksville and Sonestown bridges both had major damage from ice jams, Buttonwood was swept off its foundations by a flood, and a stone bridge in Plunketts Creek Twp (over Plunketts Creek) on the NRHP was destroyed by ice and flood in 1996. I still have to add these details to most of those articles. Ruhrfisch><>°°11:36, 31 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Brian Boulton comments: A couple of general points, before my list of specifics. First, is this kind of bridge construction unique to the United States, and if so, is there any reason known for this? Second – and this is a puzzle to me – the article talks of this structure as a transition between stone and metal bridges. In the UK, wooden bridges were replaced with stone structures, not the other way round. It seems very odd to me that stone bridges were demolished to be replaced by wooden ones – is that in fact what happened?
There are a few wooden covered bridges in Europe (see Kapellbrücke in Luzerne, Switzerland) and Asia (see this one in China). I believe most wooden covered bridges in the US did not replace stone bridges, but were new constructions. There is no mention of any predecessor bridge here, and in 1850 the county was new and just growing so it make sense that this was a new bridge. The wooden bridges were cheaper than stone and could span longer reaches than most stone bridges. Steel bridges were more durable and stronger than wooden ones. I will go back to the sources and see if I can justify a clearer explanation of all this from the sources cited. Ruhrfisch><>°°03:49, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Now, as to detail:-
Lead
I’d give the year it was built before details of its length, as that seems more logical
The "unincorporated" link is to the disambiguation page, and should be to one of the four options shown there
Something strange about the sentence: "Pennsylvania had the first covered bridge in the United States, and the most such bridges in both the 19th and 21st centuries". I can understand the first part, but am puzzled by the second, and perhaps some rewording could indicate what happened in the 20th century?
It is an attempt to summarize two sentences in the article. The Zacher source for the 19th century also gives a late 20th century datum that Pennsylvania had the most covered bridges in the US, so I will try to tweak this. Ruhrfisch><>°°04:45, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Changed to Pennsylvania had the first covered bridge in the United States, and the most such bridges from the 19th century to the present day. I will also see if the text in the article needs tweaked. Ruhrfisch><>°°04:06, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Repetition: is it necessary, in para 3, to state again that it is a "Burr arch truss" type, when these words have been used in the first line of the article to define the bridge?
Changed to The Hillsgrove bridge has a load-bearing Burr arch sandwiching multiple vertical king posts, for strength and rigidity. to avoid repetition. Thanks, Ruhrfisch><>°°04:45, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"It was restored in 1963, 1968 and 2001". The first two dates are very close, so I suspect that the 1963 restoration must have been partial. Would it be better to say "Restoration work was carried out in 1963, 1968 and 2001, and the bridge is still in use..."?
Some problem with grammar/punctuation in last sentence of lead. Too long/complex? Perhaps it should be split to read:"...unstable foundations and unacceptable railings. It also deemed its..."etc
Location map: this could easily confuse those with little knowledge of Pennsylvanian geography, i.e. about 99.9% of the non-American world, and an unknown but hopefully smaller percentage of the American world (including maybe some who live in Pennsylvania). It needs to be clear that the whole light-shaded area is the state of Pennsylvania (a prod from school history tells me that "Commonwealth" is the proper term), and that the area in which the location spot appears is Sullivan County.
Second para is written as though the reader should know who Daniel Ogden and John Hill were. Could they be briefly introduced?
Reworded to emphasize they are first settler in the township and founder and namesake of village and later township of Hillsgrove (and thus the bridge) thanks - Ruhrfisch><>°°04:06, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I had to read this several times before I realised that Hillsgrove Township and the village of Hillsgrove are different places. Can this be clarified? Something like: "The division of Lycoming County ran through Plunketts Creek Township, so there were initially townships of this name in each of the adjoining counties. To avoid confusion..."
Some unnecessary repetition of "covered bridge". I’d have thought you could say "All three were of Burr arch construction..." and begin the next sentence simply: "The Hillsgrove bridge..." The same tendency to give the full format "Hillsgrove Covered Bridge" at each mention occurs later down the section.
There seems to be some confusion about the road width. Is it 12 feet 2 inches, or 18 feet?
Two reliable sources, two widths. I did not know what else to do so I put them both in. It may be they are using different definitions - 18 feet maqy be wall to wall, while 12 feet plus may be the width of the drivable road surface. Ruhrfisch><>°°04:45, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It would be interesting to have a date for the notice relating to horses, mules, etc
What are these wheelguards that "separate the roadway from the pedestrian walkways" and also "protect the sides"? Nothing in evidence from the image.
They are just the wooden beams bolted to the floor to keep cars from driving too close to the sides, caption now reads Bridge interior view showing Burr arches and King posts, the wooden beams bolted to the floor on each side are the wheelguards. thanks, Ruhrfisch><>°°04:33, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps too much information in 1st para about the lumber trade, not directly related to the bridge. The para could end after "...Uncle Ben’s Landing for lumber rafts."
I trimmed it a little, but want to keep most of it - I think most people do not realize how large these rafts were, and how busy the creek beneath the bridge was then. An acre of forest today would only produce about 5000 board feet (one of the smaller rafts). Ruhrfisch><>°°05:30, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Again, is it necessary to detail the Forksville bridge repairs?
Since details on the Hillsgrove restoration are mostly lacking, and the same person restored both Forksville and Hillsgrove, I included some details. I cut out the steel beams, but left in the windows as they are odd and only these two bridges have them locally. Ruhrfisch><>°°05:30, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I’m afraid I got lost in the third paragraph, especially the last sentence, which appears to be talking about the replacement of a "modern bridge". Clarify this refers to replacement of the Elm Creek bridge?
Table: I may be missing something, but the table refers to the "Cogan House Covered Bridge" without explanation of this name. As to the table itself, I don’t really know what its function is, and without more explanatory text it's a bit confusing.
"Cogan House" was a copy and paste error - sorry. The table is just an attempt to show that several reliable sources do not come close to agreeing on simple data (length, width, etc.) for the bridge. I will ponder what to add to clarify this. Ruhrfisch><>°°04:45, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It would help, I think, if the section heading was changed from the rather vague "Literature comparisons" to something directly functional, e.g. "Bridge dimensions", and the preamble to the table extended to read something like; "Wide variations in the dimensions of the Hillsgrove Covered Bridge have been published, particularly as regards to width, indicating that several bases of measurement have been used. The following table is a comparison of published measurements of length, width and load recorded in different sources. The article uses primarily the NBI and NRHP data, as they are national programs". I'd also make the "Source" column the first (l/hand) column in the table, and call it "Source and year". Just suggestions, but perhaps they would clarify. A reference to this table earlier in the text, where you first mention the width disparity, might also be helpful. Brianboulton (talk) 08:40, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I like this idea and have gotten thecovered bridges books out of the library again to find what the basis of the different measurements are. The Evans measured the length and width themselves in 2001. Zacher (who both wrote a book and is listed as the NRHP form author) seems to have relied on two state-wide commonwealth-wide surveys ofcovered bridges (one for the book, perhaps one for the NRHP). Need to read up on the NBI. Will update this too, thanks for a good idea. Ruhrfisch><>°°05:30, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It is always interesting to read about something completely outside one's own experiences, and I am glad to have has the opportunity to have reviewed this article. I hope that my comments are useful. Brianboulton (talk) 18:52, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think all concerns have been met, and I see no reason why this shouldn't join the Forksville and Cogan House articles in the Hall of Fame. I note there are 221 covered bridges in Pennsylvania, so only 218 to go for the Featured Topic! Brianboulton (talk) 13:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because I am looking for any potential feedback before listing this article on WP:FAC.
More comments - Alright, don't shoot me for these -
No refs in the lead.
That said, some of the stuff in there should be moved to their respective sections (the AADT and traffic stuff, and the construction info. Those should be moved to the RD and history, respectively)
I don't see how the I-215 image pertains to this article; sure, it's the Redwood Road exit, but that's about it. We don't see any part of that road; all we get is a sign with the SR-68 shield.
One more thing; do we need the sub-headers in the RD? Two of them only have one paragraph in them. I find em unnecessary, but that's just me - CL — 04:20, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 16:52, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because the article is listed as A-class under Wikiproject Carnivorous plants and I would like input as to how we can prepare it for featured article candidacy.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC. The sourcing looks good.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:59, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Would it make sense in the lead to also give the common names of the closely related genera? Perhaps something like ... closely allied genera Darlingtonia (Cobra Lily) and Heliamphora (Marsh Pitcher Plants). Not everyone knows the scientific names
Could the figure show all five zones?
Per WP:MOS#Images, images should be set to thumb width to allow reader preferences to take over. For portrait format images, "upright" can be used to make the image narrower. Also do not sanwich text between two images, and avoid left justified images right under headers.
References need to be cleaned up a little, ISBN is repeated twice in ref 11, or Accessed online: 4 December 2007. vs. retrieved 17 May 2006 at 15:53. Using {{cite web}} or other cite templates might help.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because I'd like to hear how it can be improved and what parts of it need work.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
This seems to be well done, but needs more material to provide context for the reader not familiar with Japanese history. Even though some terms are linked, adding more years would help (not everyone knows when the Muromachi period was. I also think that some brief background on this era of Japanese history and its wars would help.
A map of Japan showing the places prominently mentioned in the article would also help.
There are several very short (one or two sentence) paragraphs that should generally be combined or perhaps expanded.
There are some places where it seems as if the description is of an individual, but the wording seems to be of the whole clan. For example, In the Muromachi period, the Satake served as provincial deputy (shugo) of Hitachi Province ... I think of a deputy as an individual, not a whole clan.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because I want a final review of the prose to ensure it is up to featured article standard before I list it on FAC. Instructions on how to improve the prose are welcome.
There have been FAC issues raised about the infobox image in these articles, right? I forget what they were... just make sure you meet whatever criteria it is you need to meet.
I think The Doctor should be wlinked in the lead if Astrid Perth is.
And then delink Perth and Kylie next paragraph.
"when the TARDIS collided with the Titanic" - Titanic collided with the TARDIS, didn't it? I don't think the TARDIS moves.
"He decides to stow away," --> "The Doctor decides..." (And after doing this, check the prose in the next few sentences for variety of The Doctor/he)
"Minogue during the Showgirl tour, which included Cyberman-inspired animatronics" - what's that got to do with this article?
Music tours shouldn't have their names in italics.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I was thinking of making this at least a GA. The problem is that I don't know what is there missing from this article. At this point I do not care about c/e issues or MOS, I just want to know what is not already in the article but should be in it.
In addition to more on the WR-SN connection, I'd like to see information on other mechanisms to produce the precursor. For example, atmospheric stripping through mass transfer in close binary systems (perhaps as a result of binary system evolution). Another example is WD-WD mergers, which may cause type Ib/Ic and type II SN. Thanks.—RJH (talk) 21:28, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I need to see what others think of it.
Comments by User:Yohhans - NB: these are all suggestions. Take them with a grain of salt.
The second and third sentence flow better if you merge them: The Toronto Raptors are a professional basketball team based in Toronto, Ontario. Theyand are the only National Basketball Association (NBA) team to be based in Canada.
The franchise's was first coached by Brendan Malone who coached only for a year. - reads better to me as, "The team's first coach was Brendan Malone who coached for one year."
Sam Mitchell is the franchise's all-time leader in both regular season coached and wins. --> Sam Mitchell is the franchise's all-time leader in the number of games coached, and the number of wins accumulated.
Is there a reason you list Sam Mitchell right after Brendan Malone? Would it not make more sense to list the coaches chronologically? That is, move the Sam Mitchell sentence so that it is after the one talking about Brendan Malone and Kevin O'Neill.
Lenny Wilkens is the only person to coach the Raptors and be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach. --> Lenny Wilkens is the only Raptors coach to have been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach.
Also, another comment on the Hall of Fame sentence: at the end it says, "as a coach". Does this mean some of the other coaches have been inducted as players? If not, I would suggest dropping the "as a coach" and adding this sentence, "It is worthy to note that Wilkens was inducted both as a player, and as a coach."
Brendan Malone and Kevin O'Neill are the only coaches who coached the Raptors that has never played for the NBA. --> Of the coaches, Brendan Malone and Kevin O'Neill are the only ones to have never played in the NBA.
The current coach Sam Mitchell has been coaching the Raptors since 2004. - commas after "coach" and "Mitchell"
Spent entire coaching career with the Raptors while in the NBA --> Spent entire NBA coaching career with the Raptors
I suggest removing the superscripts * and †. Rather, just highlight the entire row (makes it a little cleaner without all of those superscripts running around). Then the key would look like the following:
Elected into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach Spent entire NBA coaching career with the Raptors
#
Number of coaches
GC
Games Coached
W
Wins
L
Loses
T
Ties
W – L %
Win – Loss percentage
–
Returning from previous year(s) of coaching
You should include full titles in your references. So "The Offical Site of Canada's Team" becomes "Raptors.com - The Official Site of Canada's Team" and "Who are we?" becomes "Who are we? - The Air Canada Centre", etc.
Move Toronto Raptors Coach Register to an External Links section and get rid of the General and Specific subheadings. Place External Links after the References section.
Is there any way we could get an image of one of the coaches (preferably free)?
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I've listed this article for peer review because I have done extensive work on it. I wish to get some opinions on if it has GA potential at this point. I have been unable to find much information on his personal life, but his career his referenced throughly using the most reliable source I can find for each subject. It is still a work in progress. A few of the sources can't really be proven reliable, but my view was "better than nothing at all."
wikilink martial arts and gymnastics, I don't believe they are common therms.
Place (GCW) next to "the St. Louis, Missouri-based Gateway Championship Wrestling promotion."
Do you know anymore of the members in his stable? If you do place them besides the name in brackets.
Independent circuit
You should explain what a mixed tag team match is, but I'm not even sure how to explain it. Try you best.
Place the real names of each wrestler besides their ring name. i.e. A.J. Styles (Allen Jones)
change- "He beat El Generico, Tyler Black, and Sabin before eliminating Kevin Steen and Arik Cannon in the finals." to "During the tournament, he defeated El Generico, Tyler Black, and Sabin to secure himself a place in the finals. There he met Kevin Steen and Arik Cannon, in which he came out victorious."
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2004-2005)
Change- "Sydal was featured on the first TNA pay-per-view Victory Road as part of the 20 man X Division Gauntlet." to "Sydal was featured on TNA's first ever 3-hour [[pay-per-view]] [[List of Total Nonstop Action Wrestling events|event]] [[Victory Road (2004)|Victory Road]] in November of 2004 as a participant of the 20 man [[X Division]] [[Gauntlet for the Gold|Gauntlet match]].
wikilink X Division Championship to TNA X Division Championship.
Ring of Honor
Place the members of the "The Embassy" besides their name.
Change- "Generation Next fought The Embassy in numerous multi-man tag matches, culminating in a Steel Cage Warfare match on December 3 at Steel Cage Warfare that was won by Generation Next" to "Generation Next fought The Embassy in numerous multi-man tag matches, culminating in a Steel Cage Warfare match on December 3 at Steel Cage Warfare, in which was won by Generation Next."
change - "After coming up unsuccessful in attempts to win the title back along with Claudio Castagnoli, Sydal joined Larry Sweeney and his stable that also includes Chris Hero, Sara Del Ray and Tank Toland." to After coming up unsuccessful in attempts to win the title back along with Claudio Castagnoli, Sydal joined Larry Sweeney and his stable that also included Chris Hero, Sara Del Ray and Tank Toland." past tenths.
Change - "Sydal ended his Ring of Honor run on September 15, 2007 at Man Up in Chicago Ridge, IL in a match against Delirious, the same man he made his ROH debut against." to "Sydal ended his ROH run on September 15, 2007 at, ROH's third and most successful pay-per-view, Man Up in Chicago Ridge, IL in a match against Delirious, the same man he made his ROH debut against."
Change - "Sydal came up short to his masked opponent, but he got a warm farewell from the midwest crowd." to "Sydal came up short, however, after the match he was greeted with a warm farewell from the midwest crowd." or something like that. I don't get to watch ROH much. Though Man Up was their best ppv is what I hear.
Dragon Gate (2006, 2007)
What link are you looking for in CIMA?
World Wrestling Entertainment (2006-present)
Developmental territories
Write out WWE i.e. World Wrestling Entertainment.
ECW
change - "On the June 3, 2008 episode of ECW, Sydal made his WWE Television debut as a jobber where he lost in a match to Shelton Benjamin." to "On the June 3, 2008 edition of ECW, Sydal made his WWE Television debut, in a losing effort against Shelton Benjamin." He wasn't really a jobber in the match, he looked like Wang Yang does every little bit.
change - "The following weeks, he defeated Matt Striker[27], Nunzio[28] and former ECW Champion Chavo Guerrero[29] using a shooting star press as his finisher." to "The following weeks, he defeated Matt Striker[27], Nunzio[28] and former ECW Champion Chavo Guerrero[29] using a shooting star press as his finisher, a move that had been previously banned by the WWE for many years.
Notes
Why does it say notes instead of references? I prefer references but I don't work on single articles. Well not until I get a few ppvs to GA and BFG IV to FA, then I'll work on A.J. Styles article, working towards an FA.
Well I hope these helped you out a little bit, I've never done a peer review. I might be right and I might be wrong.--WillC22:59, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I haven't gotten to transferring it to be more out of universe as of yet, but it my pass GA without it anyway. I believe the standard format is "Notes" and not "References." the latter is used for book sources. Notes is for web sources. Also, was there actually any source that the SSP was banned in the first place? Gavyn Sykes (talk) 23:53, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No, but the SSP hasn't been seen since WrestleMania 2003 when Lesnar fucked it up. You've only seen it from time to time with low class wrestlers. Like London or Kendrick. Even when they did it they got punished. It is really common knowledge that WWE doesn't want their guys to use high fly moves like the 450 or the SSP.--WillC00:00, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In the late 1990s Korklan honed his collection of skills (martial arts, gymnastics, athletics) and combined them to his newest interest, professional wrestling. Along with a motley crew of neighborhood friends, Korklan constructed a professional quality wrestling ring. As Lance Sydal, he won fans over with his high-flying, fast-paced matches. - 1)No source 2)"combined them to his newest interest" sounds like POV.
Korklan was on his high school's wrestling team. While he was a senior in high school, Sydal began training with the St. Louis, Missouri-based Gateway Championship Wrestling (GCW) promotion. After three months of training, Korklan began wrestling for GCW on October 20, 2000. - Consistency is needed, are you going to use his real last name or his stage last name? Also no source for this.
I recommend renaming this section to Early career as this is the standard section naming for wrestling bio's.
Independent Circuit
He debuted in IWA Mid South in November of 2003. He won his first title, the IWA Mid-South Light Heavyweight Championship, on January 17, 2004, in Highland, Indiana, defeating J.C. Bailey. - Who did he debut against? or how did he debut?
Sydal lost the title to his recurring nemesis, Delirious, on June 26, 2004 in Oolitic, Indiana. - how is he the recurring nemesis? No earlier explanation is given about their rivalry.
He won the title back when he teamed up with Daizee Haze in a mixed tag team match (a tag team match in which a male wrestler and a female wrestler team up against other team, with all wrestlers competing against the opponent of the like gender on the opposite team) against Delirious and MsChif. Haze pinned MsChif to win Delirious's title for Sydal - instead of using the jargon term of "mixed tag team match" just say "intergender tag team match" - that is standard english and comprehensible. It should be elaborate earlier that MsChif can gain the win in order for Sydal to win the title.
Since then, he has only appeared in IWA on a select few occasions. - it sounds like he still goes there, does he?
Closing comments
There is a lot of jargon here and I do not want to get through the rest of the article until the article is out of universe.
Yes, OOU is needed for GA now, it is a standard that GA Reviewers are looking for.
If you need help with OOU, you can request me to copyedit the article on my talk page.
Appreciate the comments. I'll be working on the article tomorrow. Thanks. I'll drop you a line when it's OOU, so you can continue the review. Gavyn Sykes (talk) 00:41, 16 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nikki's comments
First of all, I haven't looked at the other people's comments, so mine may or may not overlap. Here we go:
Lead - I think it should be ~2 paragraphs and should better summarize the article.
His personal life is rather short, so anything else that can be added would be great. Does he have siblings? Where did he grow up? Is he married, or does he have children? Stuff like that.
The Dragon Gate and WSX sections are rather short. How do you feel about combining them? This article is relatively short, but has a ton of headers. I'd also eliminate the subheacers under WWE, for now anyway.
That's all the personal life info I was able to dig up. He hasn't had interviews with Wojick, SLAM or anything like that, so it's rather limited. I could add that he's not married and has no childre, but I'm not sure if that's necessary are not. And yeah, I could combine them, since he was in DG, left for WSX then went back to DG. Gavyn Sykes (talk) 18:01, 20 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If that's all you can find, then that's all you can find. Maybe if he stays with WWE for awhile, he might do an interview for one of those websites. Or...maybe he'll put up his bio on his official website. Nikki31123:03, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
ThinkBlue's comments
In the lead, a period is needed after Sydal.
In the early career, add his dob, makes it more "interesting".
In the Dragon Gate and Wrestling Society X (2006–2007) section, a period is needed for this sentence ---> "Sydal left Dragon Gate and signed with the new Wrestling Society X promotion. He was featured on their first televised edition on MTV, losing to Jack Evans (Jack Miller)[17] He was accompanied to the ring by his valet and on-screen girlfriend Lizzy Valentine (Elizabeth Miklosi)".
Same section, "In the spring of 2007", a comma is needed after 2007.
In the World Wrestling Entertainment (2007–present) section, this sentence ---> "It was announced on February 7, 2008 that the WWE had ceased affiliation with OVW", sounds a bit off, I think "the" should be removed.
In the wrestling section, references need to come after the parentheses.
Fixed, except for adding his date of birth to early career, it seems redundant as it was listed above in the lead a few sentences before. Gavyn Sykes (talk) 14:46, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'd like to receive advice on how to further improve it before nominating it for FA. Criticism and comments would be most appreciated.
Try adding info from the special features of the 2-disc special edition. If you have it. If not maybe I might help. I worked a little bit on that article around early-December (added some of those internet links alongside User:Alientraveller and User:Erik. You could get their opinion as well. —Wildroot (talk) 15:28, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Not to mention the plot section could be trimmed down a lot. There's also Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (ISBN1845767047) that includes some in-depth making of the movie. More info might there. Could list that in a "Further Reading" section.—Wildroot (talk) 03:54, 18 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, as for the plot section, there's not much we could do about that; I already trimmed it down a bit (and so did EyeSerene), but although it exceeds the 900 word rule it seems to be allowable by WP:FilmPlot because the plot is somewhat more complex than others. However, if you can find a way to trim it down (we can't) without omitting major points in the sypnosis, please do!
I brought the plot section to six paragraphs. Not really finished yet. Didn't take too long. I'm somewhat busy trying to get Tim Burton's Batman to FA status. Two Burton films to FA status in the same month. That would be amazing.—Wildroot (talk) 01:13, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I brought the plot down to four paragraphs, but you guys might one to check because I might have made an itty bitty mistake. —Wildroot (talk) 06:00, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Seems pretty good to me. Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Watch overlinking - for example Mrs. Lovett is linked twice in just the lead.
In the cast section about Depp's character, there is a direct quotation without a ref (and a citation needed tag). I did not see any other missing refs, but my rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
The first two paragraphs of the Release section are both quite short - any reason they could not be combined?
Since there is so much discussion of Depp and Bonham-Carter's singing, would it help to include a brief sound clip, perhaps of a duet by them?
Thanks Ruhrfisch. I've addressed a couple of the above points. However, with the various plot section revisions, we seem to have lost some information. Someone who knows the plot needs to take a look at the beggar woman's role; we can't just have her corpse appearing from nowhere in the final paragraph ;) EyeSerenetalk08:24, 20 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Bzuk comments Since I have had the article on my watchlist for awhile, I have noted a lot of improvements. Some minor points to consider:
Date format: December 21 2007 is written either December 21, 2007 or 21 December 2007. Note the use of commas. There are also at least two different date formats in use. For consistency, a single format is preferred.
Wikilinking: Note that actors do not need to be constantly wikilinked, e.g. Johnny Depp (among others) is wikilinked four times in succession, where the first or possibly second mention is all that is needed.
Citations: All publishers, whether book, new media or journal should be identified in italics, all title of works in quotation marks. Even though titles and pssages are often copied "as is", the use of all caps is deprecated.
Common words: The use of wikilinking should only apply to what the reader would not normally understand or need to know in order to understand context, see "grooming", "propose" and "waltz" among others.
Section formatting: The cast section could also have been written in a different way as cast-character precis. Where there is a large amount of information regarding a particular cast member that could be established as a secondary passage/paragraph at the conclusion of the cast section. The last templates should be reversed with the navigation templates to Tim Burton and Stephen Sondheim musicals appearing last.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 19:31, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I've recently rewritten the entire article to a point where I believe it follows the MoS. I believe I also need someone's second opinion. However, I still don't know if the tone is appropriate. Other things I would like to know:
Is the lead sufficient?
Is there any needless detail or is anything too general?
Are they any terms exclusive to the series that are not fully explained?
Are the paragraphs and sentences structured properly?
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
I agree with the cleanup tags - this needs to be rewritten from an out of universe perspective - see WP:IN-U Everything in here appears to be gleaned from reading the series - there is nothing in terms of critical reception (what have critics written about these characters) or even comments from the creator(s) of the series about them.
Almost all of the references are from the work of fiction itself - what makes this Family notable? WHere are the independent third-party sources wrting about this topic? See WP:NN
A model article is often useful for ideas and examples to follow - Jabba the Hutt and Palpatine are FAs on fictional characters
No images - hopw about a fair use image or perhaps a free one of the author / illustrator could be found?
Article needs more references, for example many paragraphs are uncited. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for September 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I feel that it has come a long way since it was an AfD, and because I believe that the topic is important enough to warrant an eventual FA-list status. Its quality is also on par with other FLs, but I'd like it to go through a peer review before nominating it. Finally, although its length is no where near other similar lists (i.e., List of poliomyelitis survivors and List of HIV-positive people), but I believe that's due to the strong bias against hepatitis C, which can be improved with this kind of list. Mostly, I'd like some copyediting assistance, as well as suggestions to improve it further.
"This is a list of notable people who are on public record as currently or formerly having having the infectious disease hepatitis C." no need to repeat the title of the list in the first sentence so remove it
I respectfully disagree. The two FLs listed above, which I've used as models, repeat the title of this list in their leads, as do most other lists I've seen.
"Hepatitis C is caused by the Hepatitis C virus (HCV), which affects the liver and is transmitted by blood-to-blood contact." this needs referencing
Done.
"Hepatitis C infects an estimated 170 million people worldwide and is the leading cause of liver transplant in the United States." definitely needs a reference
Done.
"As a result, celebrities diagnosed with the disease have decided to go public in order to raise awareness about hepatitis C and to encourage more people to get tested for the disease." again needs a reference
Done.
you could make the table sortable, certainly the first two columns and leave the last one unsortable, Use class=wikitable sortable to make the table sortable, the sortname template for the names, and the class="unsortable" to make the last column unsortable.
I think I did this right, although I don't see that it makes any difference. Please check it, since coding is not my strong point in WP editing.
"Child actor who played "Whitey" on Leave it to Beaver. He contracted hepatitis C from intravenous drug use. [4]" space between ref and full stop needs to be removed
Got it.
Full stops are not needed in the image captions.
Done.
add format=PDF to ref no.1
I would split the references into two columns, use
to do this
Now that I'm editing from Mozilla, I can see the difference. Explorer doesn't show columns, dontcha know.
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because the article has recently completed a GAN and i'm leaning towards trying to get this article to FAC at some point. Could reviewers please comment on the article as if this were an FAC?
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Per the MOS, the curly quotes shouldn't be used. This will get dinged at FAC.
Current ref 3 (Belek, Cassie) is lacking a publisher
Per the MOS, all capitals shouldn't be used in link titles.
Current ref 48 (30 ROck TV SHow Series...) has all the bibliographical information run into the title of the link. Should separate it out.
Current ref 52 (Goodman, Lee-Anne) is lacking a publisher.
Current ref 73 (Robert Able) is lacking a publisher. Also, last name should be first to match the rest of your citations.
Current ref 74 (Stanley, Alessandra) is lacking a publisher
Current ref 77 (Morrow, Terry) is lacking a publisher
Current ref 110 (Pick of the Day) has two p. abbreviations in the footnote.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 19:21, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
Ruhrfisch comments: While this is much improved from the last time I reviewed it, it still needs some work before FAC. Here are some suggestions for improvement.
Article needs a general copyedit to polish the prose - professional level writing is a FAC criterion and this is not there yet. Ask at WP:PRV for copyedit help or try reading it aloud slowly. A few example problem sentences Tracy has [had] encountered some marital problems with his wife Angie Jordan (Sherri Shepherd) and they become separated, but later reunite. or The cast of the series is an ensemble cast,[1] which means that each character is seen with roughly the same amount of importance in each episode. (plus last part of the sentence needs a ref - is this accurate, Fey, Bladwin and Morgan seem to get much more time than the other characters?
Some quotes are modified in ways that seem unneeded, for example the [he] here is really unneeded: ... Kevin Reilly felt that "Fey was using the news setting as a fig leaf for her own experience and [he] encouraged her to write what she knew."[20] or why not recast The song had its lyrics altered to accommodate the character Kenneth being "misinformed about the time [of the 11:45 train]."[37] as something like The song had its lyrics altered to accommodate the character Kenneth being "misinformed about the time" of the 11:45 train.[37] or "Despite her success with "Mean Girls," [Tina] Fey mostly hits too-familiar notes in the pilot. there is only one Fey, is [Tina] really needed?
In the lead, ratings for season one are mentioned, but not season two. Did it do better or worse or about the same?
Some statements may need refs at FAC, for example This aspect of the series was abandoned prior to its debut or The episodes of the second season can also be streamed for free on Hulu.com, with brief commercials at the normal interruption points. or Numerous supporting characters have been given recurring appearances in the series. They include Maulik Pancholy as Jack's loyal assistant Jonathan. Grizz Chapman and Kevin Brown make appearances as members of Tracy's entourage Grizz and Dot Com, respectively. John Lutz makes appearances as the food loving TGS writer J.D Lutz. (paragraph without refs)
Lots of fair use images - does they all meet WP:NFCC? This will be checked at FAC.
Per WP:MOSQUOTE, the {{cquote}} should not be used here, use {{blockquote}} instead (if it is 4 lines or longer)
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article as it passed GA in the last few months and I would like to see it up for A class reivew when it is ready (and, hopefully, FAC) in the near future. Qjuad (talk) 01:06, 22 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:06, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
Finetooth comments: This is interesting, generally well-written, and seems comprehensive, stable, and well-documented. I think your chances of working this up to FA are good, but I see some things that need fixing. Here are my suggestions:
The article in the main reads well, but I'd still ask a copyeditor to go through the whole article looking for the last of the low-level, nit-picky things like comma splices or extra commas and their evil twins, the missing commas. An example of an unneeded comma occurs in "Prince Rupert had been decisively beaten for the first time in the war, and lost his reputation for invincibility." Paradoxically, I might suggest fixing this by adding another comma, thus: "Prince Rupert, decisively beaten for the first time in the war, lost his reputation for invincibility." An example of a missing comma occurs in "From there he proceeded via Clitheroe and crossed the Pennines to Skipton where..." I'd recommend a comma between "Skipton" and "where". I see a few other kinds of low-level things; for example, "enfilade" could use a wikilink.
Pairs consisting of digits modifying nouns should be cemented together with no-break codes to prevent splitting on line-wrap. See WP:NBSP. An example would be "raising his force to 2,000 horse" in the "Relief moves" subsection.
I'm sorry to have to mention a problem with a map, because maps are a lot of work, and this one is lovely. The base map for Image:Marston-moor-campaign.jpg is licensed as "Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported". Alas, I think the "noncommercial" (NC) part of the license puts it out-of-bounds for Wikipedia. The license for the modified version used in the article is cc-by-sa-2.5, but I don't think that is valid because the NC in the original can't be ignored. See WP:IUP for an explanation of "free" vs. non-free images. Also, please ask another editor or editors familiar with licensing issues before you act on my warning. I know less about licensing than I'd like to, and it's possible that I'm not assessing the situation correctly. If my assessment is correct, I'd recommend explaining the situation to the copyright holder and asking him/her to consider re-licensing without the NC module.
I'd double-check the licensing on the other images as well because at least some of the image summary and source data is insufficient for fact-checkers at FAC or elsewhere to verify the validity of the copyright tag. For example, the Commons description for Image:Alexleslie.jpg lists Robi01 as the uploader, but Robi01 doesn't have a user page. A web link is given as the source of the image, but the link goes to the image alone rather than to a page with any other information. How can anyone verify that this face is that of Alexander Leslie? Who painted this portrait? When? Where?
A couple of the books in the Bibliography section are missing their ISBNs.
I'd suggest moving the orphan sentence, "Rupert personally commanded a reserve of 600 cavalry, including his elite Lifeguard of Horse" into the paragraph above it.
In the "Events" section, "James Lumsden managed to reform part of the allied centre" probably should be "re-form" to avoid confusion.
I'd suggest moving the Cromwell image to the left so that he looks into the page instead of out.
The ampersand in constructions like "Newman & Roberts" should be changed to "and". The ampersand is generally reserved for official company names like "Procter & Gamble".
WP:MOSNUM has changed since this article passed GA. It now says, "Dates are not linked unless there is a particular reason to do so." They still need to be internally consistent in the main text and in the citations. I don't see a particular reason for linked dates in this article, but it's your call. Only one in the notes, citation 42, is linked and would need to be fixed by hand. A script exists to remove the date links from the main text. I could run it for you if you let me know, or you can acquire and run it yourself. You can find a full explanation of the script here.
If you find these comments helpful, please consider reviewing another article, perhaps one from the backlog. That is where I found this one. Finetooth (talk) 02:52, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I believe it should become a good article again and I would like to know what else needs to be done to achieve that goal.
Good job! This is a good film and deserves a nice looking article like this! Some quick suggestions.
In the plot section maybe it's not best to say "obviously inspired" even if it is, because that's kind of a odd way to put it. It sounds too unfactual. If you want to include it, perhaps it's best to state that strongly resembles it.
In the infobox, the flags should be gone as WP:FilmRelease suggests against it. I'll change them myself!
Try to put ciations that come around commas after the comma to increase readability.
The award section in release is a bit list-y. Perhaps it could be in a chart or expanded? These awards don't suggest what year they were given out or what's the notability of them.
The musical and differences form the book section need citations but are also pretty well integrated otherwise.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to see what other Wikipedians think about it.
I don't see how this is a problem. The applicable FL criterion (3) states:
Comprehensiveness. It comprehensively covers the defined scope, providing a complete set of items where practical, or otherwise at least all of the major items; where appropriate, it has annotations that provide useful and appropriate information about entries.
The defined scope is the list of Memphis coaches (which is complete), and any appropriate details (history, interesting facts) have been included. Of course, if you can find any more information about the coaches, that would be great. I don't see why this cannot be submitted to WP:FLC. Dabomb87 (talk) 19:56, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If you do submit this to FLC, you must close the Peer Review. I was planning to add some comments in the next day at most, possibly sooner (this is second in line). Ask if you need help archiving this PR. Thanks, Ruhrfisch><>°°01:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Currently, I do not want to submit this for FL nomination because I currently think this list does not have FLC criteria. -- K. Annoyomous24
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I've recently expanded the article which I created and was hoping to get some feedback before attempting to get it featured. Thanks. :) Latics (talk) 08:27, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You shouldn't repeat the name of the list in the lead, look at Sunderland A.F.C. seasons to see how to word the lead better.
"by finishing as runners-up" change to "after finishing as runners-up"
"In the same season, the club earned their first trophy by winning the Lancashire Senior Cup." change to "The club won their trophy during this season, winning the Lancashire Senior Cup".
"It wouldn't be until the 1952–53 season" use would not instead of wouldn't contractions should be avoided
"By the late 1950s, the club was in the Football League Fourth Division and twice had to apply for re-election into the Football League." needs a reference
"runners-up in the Anglo-Scottish Cup as they fell to Burnley 4–1 on aggregate." fell is a bit POV I would change it to lost and perhaps wikilink aggregate?
"in 1989–90 season," add the before 1989-90
"1990 Football League Cup Final." needs wikilinking
"in 1992–93, were founding members of the FA Premier League." should include "the club" after the comma and before were
"gradually fell back into the First Division"not sure what this means exactly I think you should re word it
Do you have information for the top scorers and average attendance for each season as this should be included.
Thank you and PeeJay for the feedback. I really can't find the top scorers, I've been looking for them for a while now and I can only find stats going back to around 1997–98. I guess eventually I'll get around to doing it by going game-by-game. But again, thanks again for the comments. Latics (talk) 18:58, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
IMO, top scorers back to 1997-98 is better than nothing, but you're probably quite right by leaving them out as an FLC reviewer might look upon it as the list being incomplete. All I can suggest is that you invest in some statistical books about the club. – PeeJay08:00, 26 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The impression given by the list is that the club has only participated in the Lancs Senior Cup three times in its history, this surely isn't correct. Added to the fact that I would imagine the team that won it in 05/06 was most likely the club's reserves rather than first team, I'd be inclined to omit this competition altogether. -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 07:58, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, it's an annual competition as far as I know. I know that Manchester United and Liverpool use their reserves for the competition, but I'm not certain on any other teams. I'll look around for recent results and yeah, I'll probably end up removing it altogether. Latics (talk) 09:27, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
A model article is always helpful and there are several college and university FAs to use for ideas and examples to follow - see for example Ohio Wesleyan University
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself, but When the college was first founded, it was established as the J.S. Green Collegiate Institute named after a local banker. In 1899, the name was shortened to the J.S. Green College. By 1902, the college was formally renamed Piedmont College.[8] is only in the lead. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Per WP:CITE references come AFTER punctuation, and are usually at the end of a sentence or phrase, so change Piedmont is accredited by the following boards: Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS)[13]; National League of Nursing ...
Article needs more references, for example the sections on the Schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, and Nursing have no refs. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref. Also try for more third-party independent sources beyond the college and its publications.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Per WP:Summary style there should be a brief summary of the history article here, not just one sentence.
Use blockquote not cquote for the MIssion Statement (per WP:MOSQUOTE)
Was The Mountain Lantern the first magazine or yearbook? It is not clear from reading the article.
Second look by Ruhrfisch Here are a few more things I noticed on a second look (as requested):
Spell our percent (not %)
I would also spell out "student to faculty" (not "student/faculty")
I would organize the article differently - History first, then describe the college as it is today
Some of the sections are very sparse for their relative importance in the college - there is more on the newspaper than the School of Business, for example
Captions that are full sentences need to end with a period.
What is the rationale for including alumni? What is the order of their listing (not alphabetical or chronological)? Try to be consistent on the info given for each
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I've listed this article for peer review because… I want to know what needs to be done, so the article can become an FA.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Per the MOS, link titles shouldn't be in all capitals.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:49, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
You may want to explain why Cena got himself disqualified, though that may not be apprprioate for the lead, not positive.
Wait, what's written, in the lead, is not appropriate?
No, what's there is fine. I was unsure if my suggestion was appropriate for the lead.
Background
The real reason for Jericho being fired should be noted. I think the "lock" in "Master lock" should be capitalized. Why is Masters's name for the move here but there's no "which he calls the Angle slam" after "lifting Cena on his shoulders and spinning 90° to slam him down to the mat." It should be consistent throughout the article and it is not here and at several other places, which I won't mention below to avoid redundancy.
Explain why Hardy and Edge are feuding. It was a real life issue transformed into a storyline, so I think that should be mentioned. Change "He was unable to stop Snitsky, as he hit Hardy with the ring bell." to "He was unable to stop Snistky, and as a result, Snitsky succeeded in hitting Hardy with the bell." I think it flows better, but that's subjective.
Preliminary matches
An explanation for figure four leglock is needed. The "R" in "Roundhouse" should be lower case.< Headbutt is a common term, not just a wrestling one. I don't think the explantion is actually needed here.
Main event matches
Superkick is not a common term. It warrants an explanation. Non-wrestling fans may have no idea what it is and even new wrestling fan could think it's a missile dropkick per what the term Super is usually used to describe in wrestling.
Why did Cena get himself disqualified. Was it a heel turn? Was he a tweener? Did he kayfabe feel he couldn't beat Angle?
Well, he was on the ground, after an ankle lock hold by Angle, which led to Cena grabbing the title and hitting Angle in the process and the referee seeing this and calling for the bell.
Then you may want to add "because he was about to lose" or something to that affect.
I'll come up with something.
Aftermath and Results:
Looks good.
Done and thanks for the comments. But, left some of my own.
Sure.
Wrestlinglover's comments
Lead
I don't think it needs to be known how Cena got himself DQ'ed in the lead. To me it would just be better to say "in which WWE Champion John Cena lost to Kurt Angle after he intentionally disqualified himself" The event section should cover how he got DQ'ed.
"One of the primary preliminary matches was another standard match, in which Shawn Michaels defeated Chris Masters. The other primary match was a steel cage match, where the ring is enclosed by a steel cage. Matt Hardy defeated Edge." Maybe you can tell that there is two instead of saying "The Other". It makes it sound awkward in my opinion. Like say there was two matches on the undercard, one was an encounter between Shawn Michaels and Chris Masters, in which Michaels was victorious. The other primary match was a steel cage match, where the ring is enclosed by a steel cage. Matt Hardy defeated Edge.
Background
Since performances and other stuff are already linked in the lead, I wouldn't link Cena's name and anything else that appears in the background that is linked in the lead section in the background. The links are just too close together to be linked again.
Well, if you see SummerSlam '03, "Kurt Angle" and "Brock Lesnar" are linked in both the lead and the background.
There should be a space between Angelslam, Angle Slam.
"The two then brawled, thus turning Michaels as a hero," I don't really like that statement, maybe you can change it to "The two then brawled, thus turning Michaels into an on-screen hero,".
Event
"Flair took the advantage and applied the figure four leglock on Carlito, thus making him submit, and Flair the new Intercontinental Champion" The Flair becoming IC champ should be on another line since it doesn't work with the sentence. "Flair took the advantage and applied the figure four leglock on Carlito, thus making him submit. Which resulted in Flair becoming the new Intercontinental Champion." At least in my mind it is better.
Leg drop was already linked in the background, so it doesn't need to be linked agin. You have it linked in the Edge/Hardy match, which in my opinion was a very good match.
I'm not sure what your trying to say in this sentence "Michaels fought back, as he performed a drove his cocked elbow onto Masters' chest.", but I guess it is a driving elbow drop from the top rope like he does all the time. It needs to be fixed so it doesn't sound weird anymore, not sure what to change it too, it is late here and I'm tired so I'm coming up blank.
"Cena rolled out of the move, grabbed the Championship belt," Why is Championship capitalized?
Aftermath
Is Cade and Murdoch losing the belts important? It is one sentence and doesn't seem really notable since there was no reason to why they lost the belts.
Well, they won the titles at Unforgiven and lost them at the next PPV, not No Mercy, but Taboo Tuesday.
Closing statements
Okay, it reads very well. I believe it has a chance at FA. Though to me I've never really read an article that I've said was an FA. Not SummerSlam 03 or December to Dismember seem like an FAs to me. Even Guitar Hero (video game) does not seem like an FA to me. I must be hard ti please, but I feel this has a chance. So it will probably pass.--WillC04:47, 26 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I'm listing this article because I am interested in getting it to FA (possibly through GA first). I was just looking for some pointers and a bit of advice as this is my first FA attempt with an article.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself but ... financial penalties imposed for filming outside the "30-mile zone".[5] seems to only be in the lead. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Provide context to the reader - the same ... financial penalties imposed for filming outside the "30-mile zone".[5] is unexplained in the Filming section or elsewhere in the article that I could see. See WP:PCR
The plot section seems to be overly detailed - a commercial break is not really part of the plot, couldn't is just be "Later..."? Also make sure the plot is described from an out of universe perspective - see WP:IN-U.
Article could use a copyedit "it's" is used where "its" (possessive) is meant, there are other spots that need polish.
Per WP:CITE references come AFTER punctuation, and are usually at the end of a sentence or phrase. Make sure all of the sources meet WP:RS - what makes seeingstars.com a RS? Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Current refs 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29 are lacking publisher.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 19:45, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because in places it is written as something appraching a personal account without author attribution or sources listed.
Finetooth comment: The article, with three minor exceptions, completely lacks sourcing, and its information is therefore not verifiable. It violates one of Wikipedia's three core principles. Please see WP:V. Finetooth (talk) 04:31, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I rewrote it last week, expanding it considerably with full citations. I would like to take it to GA and FA. I'd like to get the opinions of a range of people, including non-gay and non-American. I welcome your scrutiny. Moni3 (talk) 17:09, 11 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OTRS Ticket#2008080810018509. I usually wait for the admin to add the OTRS ticket. Because I don't know how to. Just got email confirmation a couple hours ago. --Moni3 (talk) 19:19, 12 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, cool. Nice find, in that case. I've tried a slight levels adjustment and cropped out the white border. Please ping me when the OTRS notice goes up and I'll upload this as an alternate version for your consideration. Best wishes, DurovaCharge!19:25, 12 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think the article should provide more background on the history leading up to Stonewall, both in the second paragraph of the lead and in the first section of the Background. A key addition to the lead is to describe not only the legal, but also the repressive medical establishment of the time, e.g., the DSM classification of homosexuality and gender dysphorias, and their medical implications. For illustration, you might consider the case of Alan Turing, whose cryptography work helped save the war but who was driven to suicide at age 41 after being chemically castrated. He was British, but I think the analogy holds. Oh, as an aside, you should be more specific about the castration legal penalty in note 1.
I think it's excellent to begin your historical introduction just after World War II. Some episodes you might want to mention for more color and vividness: LGBT soldiers' service in WWII, Johnnie Phelps and General Eisenhower in 1946, President Eisenhower's executive order 10450 banning "sexual perverts" from federal employment in 1953; cracks in the wall beginning in the late 50's and early 60's such as this writer and this forerunner, etc. It might be nice to review the prevailing conceptions of LGBT people of that era: security risk because easily blackmailed, emotionally unstable, etc.; maybe a mention of a popular movie or two showing LGBT characters committing suicide, e.g., Ingmar Bergman's Thirst if I remember rightly? Do we have reliable data on the rate of attacks on LGBT people by police and by other people in that era?
YAY! Ok. Points well-taken. I was concerned that both the lead-in and aftermath/legacy sections were too extensive, taking away from the riots themselves, but I'll be more than happy to expand some of this.
Let me ask: Dank55 has been, of course, a wonderful and very helpful copy editor. His suggestion is to remove the section in the Legacy about the APA declassifying homosexuality as a mental disorder, mainly because much of the word by Evelyn Hooker was done before Stonewall. I think it should stay in, perhaps expanded a bit to include Hooker's contributions. Thoughts? (This is taking place on the article talk page, btw.) --Moni3 (talk) 22:00, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks kindly. And btw, I'm happy with the additional material in the APA section. I was mainly concerned with the impression that Stonewall in particular and activism in general were mainly responsible for changes at the APA. - Dan Dank55 (talk)(mistakes) 17:54, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments from Awadewit Wonderful article! It does an excellent job of contextualizing the riots.
How much searching for images have you done? The images seem a bit thin right now. It would be especially nice to have a good lead image. This site has an excellent collection of images, but I haven't started looking into their copyright status.
they have become the seminal event marking the gay rights movement in the United States and around the world - marking the beginning of the gay rights movement?
The last years of the 1960s were very socially contentious, as many social movements were active, including the African American Civil Rights Movement, the Counterculture of the 1960s, and the antiwar demonstrations. - awkward syntax
The raid was a normal occurrence for gay bars in the 1960s, but police quickly lost control of the situation - seems slightly awkward - perhaps reintroducing the specific raid would help?
attracting a crowd that was incited to riot - Eh?
They soon spread across the U.S. and to different countries - Is the "they" the newspapers?
Combined with the national emphasis on anti-Communism, conditions were created that allowed Senator Joseph McCarthy to conduct hearings to search for Communists in the U.S. government, the U.S. Army, and other government funded agencies and institutions that led to a national paranoia. - awkward syntax and wordy - "conditions were created..."
hey outlawed the wearing of opposite gender clothes, and universities expelled instructors suspected of being sex offenders - Doesn't "sex offender" mean something different than "homosexual"?
Most were forced to live a double life, keeping their private lives secret from their professional ones. - private vs. public is the usual split
In response to this trend, an organization for homosexuals was created named the Mattachine Society, in Los Angeles in 1951. - Why the passive voice?
One of their first challenges to government repression came in 1953. - referent for "their" is unclear
The Mattachine Society published a magazine called ONE, Inc., that the Postal Service refused to mail on the grounds that the topic concerned homosexuals in heterosexual marriages and that the magazine was obscene, although the magazine was mailed out in plain brown wrappers. - wordy
Homophile organizations—as gay groups were called—grew in number and spread to the east coast. - Should East Coast be capitalized?
The third paragraph of "Homophile activism" isn't focused - the sentences jump from topic and topic.
The enclave of what a newspaper story referred to as "short haired women and long haired men" developed a distinct subculture of establishments and events through the next two decades - A bit vague - what kind of subculture?
The advent of Prohibition only promoted gay establishments as drinking alcohol was pushed underground with other immoral behavior. - This sentence suggets homosexuality is immoral - it should suggest that it was thought immoral in the 1920s by a majority of American society.
A cohort of poets, to be named the Beat poets, had a particular affinity for writing about anarchy, drugs, and hedonistic pleasures. - wordy
visitors would have to be known by the doorman, or look gay - Are we going to describe what "looking gay" means?
Because the police were intending to transport the alcohol present at the bar, of which 28 cases of beer and 19 bottles of hard liquor were seized, patrol wagons were required to take the liquor back to the precinct as evidence. - awkward
The patrol wagons did not arrive with the appearance of the police, so patrons were required to wait in line for about 15 minutes. - wordy
Those who were not intended to be arrested were released from the front door - awkward
The sudden opportunity following the Stonewall riots to organize and concentrate on gay rights forced many groups to work together who had very little in common other than their same-sex attraction. - sounds a little odd
This was illustrated during the 1973 Stonewall rally when, moments after Barbara Gittings was exuberant in praising the diversity of the crowd, radical feminist activist Jean O'Leary protested what she perceived as the mocking of women by transvestites and drag queens in attendance. - What is a radical feminist exactly? I think we have to be very careful in using that phrase.
During a speech O'Leary was giving claiming that drag queens made fun of women for entertainment value and profit - a tad awkward
In 1977 there was a Lesbian Pride Rally as an alternative to being forced to share gay men's issues of "the violent, self-destructive world of the gay bars", according to Adrienne Rich. - awkard syntax
The article focuses on the resulting movements in the US - did Stonewall affect gay/lesbian movements in other countries to any significant degree?
Is it worth mentioning the Stonewall monument in Christopher Park?
On images - There seem to be 2 images taken during the riots. One taken the first night by UPI (is on the cover of David Carter's Stonewall) and another taken by Fred McDarrah the night of the 29th. I've requested to use the McDarrah image from the company that currently owns the copyright, and I've left a message on Elcobbola's talk page to assist me with advice on how to use either of the images. Craig Rodwell took some images according to my sources, but I can't find any. He has images at the New York Public Library digital collections, but none of the riots. Kay Lahusen has images of Gay Liberation Day of 1970, and I'm already using 2 of hers from NYPL in Barbara Gittings' article. I can ask to see if they would give me permission to use another. I just loaded an image of Lahusen marching in the Annual Reminder, perhaps in 1969. It's in her article, so I may use that one. --Moni3 (talk) 17:12, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Copy edits: I think I've addressed most of your concerns here. On "looking gay"...this is probably one of those instances that I should quote from an author directly if I can find an explanation of what looking gay is.
The only other issue I had was the sentence about Jean O'Leary's speech. I added a comma, not sure what else to change. Surely the answer can't be that simple, but I don't know what else to do to that sentence.
Ruhrfisch comments
Just a few from me, I agree this is well done and fascinating. Kudos on yet another job very well done.
The image with the caption Christopher Park, where many of the demonstrators met after the first night of rioting, to talk about what had happened says on its page that it is actually of Sheridan Square. If this is really Christopher Park, the Commons page description should be changed.
I read the description of Christopher Park linked on the Commons image page - the four white figures are clearly visible, would it make sense to mention the Gay Liberation Monument? The new lead image is great. Ruhrfisch><>°°00:14, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I am straight and had heard the Judy Garland story in association with the causes of the riot - I think perhaps there should be at least a sentence debunking this in the article itself, not just the note (which is fine, but I suspect many do not read notes). The note could then follow the new sentence.
That said, I read the notes and this in note 1 is awkward In 1961 the penalty for sodomy was between a light fine and life in prison, or castration. perhaps In 1961 the penalty for sodomy could range from a light fine to life in prison, or castration.?
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC. The sourcing looks good.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 23:21, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for September 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because my plan is to get it to FA some day. After I've addressed most of the issues raised at an unsuccessful GA nomination, I think the article is much better now. I would like some hints what else can be improved. Regarding many redlinks in the article, it is my opinion that those topics are of proper importance for Wikipedia and that the articles will be created sooner or later.
Thanks, Tone02:09, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The article is well-written, readable and interesting. I have a few comments regarding grammar, clarity etc. that I'd like to address. Regarding grammar:
"Other candidates opposed because of the lack of reliable records ...": suggest "Other candidates opposed the change" or "Other candidates were opposed to the change". Also, candidates other than whom?
"Opposition particularly reacted to the change since the voters from abroad seem to favorize right parties so they could change the result in favour of Peterle in case of close election result": "The opposition", "Opposition parties" or "Opposition candidates". "To favor", not "favorize". "Parties of the right" or "right-wing parties", not "right parties". "If the result was close", not "in case of close election result".
"Liberal Democracy of Slovenia that supported Gaspari in the first round announced it would support Türk in the second.": "Liberal Democracy of Slovenia, which supported Gaspari...", if not "Liberal Democracy of Slovenia, which supported Gaspari...", or "The Liberal Democracy party".
"Exit poll results published at the closing of the vote predicted a victory of 69% for Türk": "A victory for Türk, with 69% of the vote", or "a victory of 69% to 31% for Türk".
"The opposition parties declared talk of resignation just weeks before Slovenia took over European Union presidency presidency as irresponsible and unwise..." Not strictly speaking bad grammar, but "said that talk of...was irresponsible and unwise" reads a lot better.
Regarding clarity:
"For the first year, the President, who at the time was battling cancer, mostly stayed out of public sight. On reappearing he had changed his lifestyle; he became a vegan, moved out of the capital into the countryside and withdrew from party politics completely." Fascinating! But he didn't withdraw from politics altogether. What did he do? How did he come to clash with the government? Did the electorate know he had cancer when they voted him in? How did he retain his popularity?
"Topics discussed at televised debates included the rules governing the voting of non-resident nationals. These were changed by the National Electoral Commission during the campaign which sent voting materials to all non-residents entered in the electoral register and not merely to those who requested them, as had been the previous practice." This was addressed in the GA. Was it the action of the NEC that was discussed in the debates? Which candidate or candidates gained or lost by this debate? Did anything happen as a result of the debate?
"A petition alleging government meddling in journalism..." A petition is a request to an authority, not an allegation. So was this a petition to end alleged meddling in journalism? And what does "meddling in journalism" mean, exactly - interference in media coverage of government? Or of current affairs in general? Is it known who wrote the petition? Was there an immediate cause?
References: There is a disappointingly high number of references not in English (presumably in Slovene). I accept that this is better than no inline citations at all, but are some of these stories not available online at Google News, BBC News or CNN?
Redlinks: I would tend to agree with you as far as redlinks near the top of the article are concerned, but you might consider de-linking some of the ones further down, and possibly creating stubs for the ones you leave.
Hope this helps. If my comments are useful, please consider peer reviewing an article, especially one that is highlighted as not having received feedback, which is how I found this article. Scolaire (talk) 20:13, 10 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you! I have implemented some suggestions already, I'd like to discuss some things:
this Other candidates opposed must have stayed since there was first a sentence that Peterle supported this but I couldn't find a source for that. Opposition parties then.
the story about Drnovšek is long. I somehow feel that discussing all this in details would be out of focus of the article. However, there are two good references from NYT and Times that should answer the questions.
I wrote some more on the petition. Is it clearer now? Maybe too deatiled since it was about the government and just brought up during the elections...
I think it should be clearer now that indeed the thing that stirred the debate about non-residents was the move by NEC. I am unaware of any sources that would report any of the candidates profiting from this specfic topic and unaware of this new regulation being changed afterwards so it must have stayed like this for future elections as well. The two things that had clear consequences - the Rožman case and the diplomatic stance during the independence war - are explained as such.
Should I fix it further? I'll do my best to find some more English sources though it may be difficult for some topics. --Tone21:48, 10 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I do still think that the non-resident issue could be clearer. Perhaps if it said "...included the rules governing the voting of non-resident nationals, which had been changed by the National Electoral Commission during the campaign, with the result that voting materials had been sent to all non-residents entered in the electoral register..." That would give a definite timeline: change of rules → voting materials sent → debate.
The rest of that paragraph is now clearer, but there are now two consecutive sentences beginning with "Opposition parties". "They" would be sufficient in the second sentence. I'm also not sure about the word "reacted" there. "Reacted" usually means they did something. Perhaps "In particular, they objected to the change because..."
The petition paragraph is much clearer, and not too detailed. Just one small thing: you have introduced an acronym, IPI, which needs to be expanded the first time it's used.
On President Drnovšek, it's not so much a question of expanding the paragraph as making better use of the same number of words. To my mind his lifestyle changes - his vegetarianism and moving to the country - are the least relevant details. What's more of interest to this article is that he quit Liberal Democracy of Slovenia, that he embraced a more mystical (to quote the Times headline) kind of politics, trying to solve the problems of the world, and that his new style endeared him to, rather than alienated him from, his people. Another thing I've noticed: this article says he was out of the public eye for one year; the Janez Drnovšek article says three years. I'd like to see those figures reconciled.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to get this list to featured list standard, and I'm hoping any faults can be ironed out here. The red links will disappear over time. Thanks in advance for your comments. NapHit (talk) 20:20, 21 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments by Sillyfolkboy
First of all: just to say I'm not fully aware of FL criteria so some of my comments may contradict them — if so please ignore them.
Lead
I would full stop straight after "established in 1860" instead of comma.
I think it's fine where it is, as long as it is in the first paragraph I think it doesn't matter where it is
The second should mention the "played on third friday of July" and the third of the majors each year info.
Not sure what you mean here
It was a rewrite suggestion but it's solved now.
Amongst the missed tournament info — what about 1871? Why was it not held then?
Added this
There is no citation for this first paragraph. No need to go citation crazy but I'm sure there's a short history article that could verify most if not all this info and you could cite it at the end of the whole paragraph.
Added citation for 1871, common sense should suffice for the world war bit
Second paragraph — "The Open champions" is a little ambiguous in light of the fact there's a US Open too. Perhaps say "the reigning champion of the tournament is automatically invited to..."
Changed
Rephrase the claret jug info to "The prize of the tournament is the Golf Champion Trophy, commonly known as the claret jug, and the champion personally keeps the trophy until the next competition the following year." Or similar.
Done
Say they get to keep the gold medal permanently to contrast between the medal and the jug.
Done
Remove the citation next to "allowed to keep" as the source follows on until the end of the paragraph anyway.
Done
On a related note: Does the belt information have anything to do with the reason why there was no 1871 tournament?
Yes it does, I might add that in
Third paragraph: for the oldest youngest info split the sentence up to read "...in 1867. His son, Tom Morris Jr., became the youngest winner of the championship when he won the 1868 Open Championship aged 17 years and 181 days."
Done
The Greg Norman and Tiger Woods info seems slightly contradictory. Does the number of shots over the 72 holes change from year to year? I'm not a golfing expert but it suggests a variation of what par is from time to time. Can these changes be summarised in the lead or will that be excessive information?
There is a note for this; Note A which should suffice
I'm unsure if these next two suggestions step outside the articles scope but: The tournament has only been held in Scotland, England and once in Northern Ireland. Some note of this should be made in the lead. Also briefly note that the location changes each year.
I think it is outside the article scope, as it champions, there is a separate list for venues
Additionally, saying that the tournament was founded in Scotland is pretty important information and should be in the first paragraph.
Done
Table
Is both colour highlighting and symbol usage for the playoff/amateur necessary? If this is for ease of accessibility to disabled/colour blind users then keep it.
Yep it's for disabled/blind users
I was going to suggest delinking a name/place when it had already been mentioned but for means of presentation I think it probably works better as it is now.
Agree
I think a little explanation little "Not held" would be better than simply "None", when the gaps are there. The footnotes explain it well - good work.
None relates to there being no champion, which I think is better than not held
Multiple Champions
It appears this needs some rearrangement - I guess it's supposed to be listed by who won it first when the positions are tied. Willie Park Senior and John Henry Taylor are out of synch is this is the listing method
Done
References
Generally these are in really good shape. Sports Illustrated should be italicised though.
Done
Not that I know everything about golfing websites but... what makes "Golf Legends" a reliable source? Can the information it supports not be found elsewhere on a more official site?
I'll find a different source
Links all check out fine with the link checker tool (Very useful - see here if you want a go yourself) Firewalling from Sports Illustrated is normal just so you know
Other
I agree that redlinks will be bluelinked within time so it's not a major problem.
Images seem fine and chronologically order with succinct captions.
This seems to lack information and doesn't look like a usual self-made photo so it raises my suspicions about the intentions of the uploader. May have to be excluded at FLC.
You should delink Tom Morris, Jr. in the last paragraph as it appears and is linked in the second paragraph about the belt info anyway.
In terms of capitalisation I think it should either be "a gold medal" or "the Gold Medal". Does it have an official name or is it just informally called a gold medal?
You're going to hate me for this one but... you've used hyphens not minus signs for under par haven't you? You can find the minus sign in the "insert" section in the drop down under the save page button. Minus is between the "plussy-minussy" sign and the "times" sign. Yes, both hyphen and minus sign do appear exactly the same in edit mode but you can see the difference in the preview (minus is eeeeeever so slightly higher). Again, sorry for pointing out such a minor and tedious problem but that's what FLC is for anyway no?
I've added two red links to the article. I am unsure of the sources available on Andrew Kirkaldy (there's a recent racing driver of the same name unfortunately) but some information does seem to be out there. I know Roger Wethered is definitely possible. Do you have access to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography? Needs a subscription but may be available through a university connection. If not then I'll look to make the article myself from the information there.
If you found this peer review helpful please consider doing one yourself. Choose one from the backlog, where i found this article or take a look at WP:Peer Review.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I've fixed most of the glaring errors noted in its last peer review and was wondering what was left before it could be nominated for FA.
Thje last peer review closed on September 7, 2008. This was opened two days later. The policy is that An article that has had a peer review, or gone through the substantial review process at FAC unsuccessfully, can not be listed on WP:PR until at least two weeks after the archive of its previous review can be removed from Peer Review. See Wikipedia:Peer review/Request removal policy, so I am archiving this. Feel free to open one in two weeks, Ruhrfisch><>°°00:59, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I have done a little bit of work on this article recently, and I would appreciate other peoples views on what would be the ideal material to add to the article :)
"unprecedented success" bit POV I would change that
"They did, however easily qualify for Euro 2000, winning all 10 of their group games, conceding just 5 goals. The team failed to produce at the finals though, producing just one win, and crashing out in the group stage." quite a few POV statements like "crashing out" easily qualify" these need to be rectified. Also 5 should be written out, this is a general for numbers that are not double digits or greater
The history section in general is poor in my opinion and needs to be greatly expanded I would look at Croatia national football team for ideas on this.
There are no references either which should be added for anything that can be contested, i.e. qualifying easily for euro 2000
The tournament records section could do with being split into Euro and world cup and needs a few sentences to introduce the relevant tables
A statistics section would be helpful, as would a record section
Supporters and media section as well would be handy
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
This list is close to become a featured list, but there are still a few contributions needed for this page to achieve that status:
I've added the microstates clarification since I myself confused the terms, and I think others would too. Feel free to rewrite that part, or place it in a different place-just keep it around the introduction.
it is not clear to mea weather these micronations still exist, or they still claim the initial independence.
isn't there a reference proving that these are all the micronations?
the weakest point of the article is the lack of a reference for the definition of a micronation. For the list to become a FL one it definately needs a reference for that.
I would prefer having some kind of estimated sizes for these micronations-either for each of them, or in the introduction
the table definitely needs another column with either the continent where it is placed, coordinates, or the territory of whose country it actually pertains to-latter would be the best. There is a need for some some geographical location of these barely-known entities
check WP:MOS - especially for formatting references.
They are good suggestions. They are all definitely micronations, we only need references for their existence. As for location, there are possibilities that exist outside land - how about:
I am going to assume that there was no irony in your answer and suggest to add the continent where it is located (or region, or territory whose state it is/was claiming). The point of another column is simply to be able to order the stuff, and to quickly localize the micronation in discussion. Nergaal (talk) 05:38, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
There was no irony in my comment Nergaal - I wasn't being sarcastic either. I did think that your comments helped, and I think the idea of a location column is great - but it is not that simple. When I previewed the column it seemed to be a direct copy of the description box, and also inconsistent with the other locations (sea, space, virtual etc.). Micronations are not just limited to land (and even then, they are not always limited to one continent or territory). I don't oppose the idea because it is pointless, but I oppose the idea because, with micronations, it is not as simple as just naming a continent as it is with sovereign states. Onecanadasquarebishopsgate13:41, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to get the article to Good Article status. Thanks, ~ AmeIiorateUTC@20:03, 10 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
✓ Done Fixed the header picked up by the peer review script.
I'm glad that such an important article is being developed! The best dog I ever knew was a German Shepherd. :) The potential for promotion to GA-class is there, but I think that most of the sections suffer from skimpiness. In comparing it to Beagle (FA) and Labrador Retriever (GA), this article seems fairly underdeveloped. Here are some suggestions to plump things up:
The entire "History" section needs more; more context, more description, etc. The original idea of the breed dates back to 1891, when the Phylax Society was formed with the intention of standardising German dog breeds. So when did the breed begin? How did it evolve? What were its ancestors? Why did an "original idea of the breed" come about at all? What other German dog breeds were there? How did they evolve? What were they used for? (Note: the lead mentions that the breed was developed to herd sheep, which is great. However, this fact appears nowhere in the body of the article. In order to adhere to WP:LEAD, the lead section must be a summary of the entire article. Only include in the lead what appears in the rest of the article. In short, mention sheep and herding in the "History" section!)
Done but probably needs fixes. I would appreciate feedback about the changes I made to the origins section, is there anything else I should add? Is the information about the other dogs clear enough?
Horand von Grafrath is obviously important, but I'm confused about the dog's importance. He was the first, but how was the breed developed before and after him? Was he bred with another, similar dog? How did the breed itself spread and gain popularity after him?
Done explained Horand's role/claim to fame in the origins section.
The history section gives no context about the purpose or need for such a breed. What were the dogs used and heralded for?
Doneherding sheep and protecting flocks
Why is the breed called "German Shepherd"? What is the significance of the original German name, "Schäferhund"? What do these terms mean?
Done expanded the name section to include this and other details about the renaming.
The modern German Shepherd is criticised for straying away from von Stephanitz's original ideology for the breed. Which was...?
How does the modern breed differ from the original?
Intelligence is certainly an important facet of the breed, but like most things, it's not explained fully. How does their intelligence help while being police, guard and/or rescue dogs? What tasks are they able to perform? How are they trained? Some of this is explained in a later section, so I would suggest merging the two and of course expanding.
What, no pictures of puppies? :) Development would be another facet to explore, but once the article is expanded there are tons of possibilities with images. A picture of a Shepherd with a police vest on, for example, or even one of a famous Shepherd like Blondi?
I did a quick search for sources and it would seem that there are a few more notable and highly available books that can be tapped for research. A few are already used, which is great, but more will undoubtedly help expand the material. See what Beagle uses as far references go; it has a separate section for book sources that are identified (in short hand) under "Citations". I highly recommend this format. Hopefully these suggestions will help, but if you have any questions let me know. Best of luck! María(habla conmigo) 18:31, 13 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your suggestions, I have expanded the History-origins section and will work down your list further as I get time. ~ AmeIiorateUTC@10:54, 14 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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This article has already had a peer review and is currently at GA status. I'm hoping to see whether people think WP:FAC would be worth a shot with some work, and what the main problems are. I think the prose and a couple of quite stubbish sections could be the main stumbling blocks and would I would like to see how these can be dealt with appropriately. Thanks, Mattythewhite (talk)
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
Per the MOS, link titles shouldn't be in all capitals.
I belive the website is fan written, but the information given is always accurate and can be most likely be proven elsewhere. Which could easily mean I could use another source, probably one of the Complete Record books where possible. Mattythewhite (talk) 11:31, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Two references of this website remaining, and I can't find another source using a google search or looking through the Complete Record books so I'm stuck really. Mattythewhite (talk) 13:23, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 22:38, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
"The ground was equipped to be suitable for football, which saw the Main Stand and Popular Stands be erected." a better word than equipped should be used I tink, maybe "renovated", "improved" something along those lines
"Despite being shorter than the original floodlights, these are twice as bright and meet the requirements for Division One football." shouldn't this sentence be in past tense seeing as it's in the history section
Comment from Keith D (talk·contribs) -
Minor comment would be on the Footnotes to enable a return to where you came from in the text. You can either make the letter the final parameter to the {{Note label}} template or use a ^ as the return character if the superscripted letter does not look right. Keith D (talk) 20:41, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"KitKat Crescent (formerly Bootham Crescent)" I'd prefer to swap commas for brackets, i.e. "KitKat Crescent, formerly Bootham Crescent," To me, it looks far better, particularly in the lead.
"It has been the home of York City since 1932, when the club moved there from Fulfordgate following its purchase from York Cricket Club." It might just be me but it's not totally obvious what "its" refers to, i.e. whether Bootham Crescent or Fulfordgate was bought from York CC.
"York City F.C.'s original stadium Fulfordgate had been relatively inaccessible, with the tram service only having a single track to the ground, and concern about the poor support there had been raised, and director Mr G.W. Halliday was convinced that the only solution to this was to move to a new ground." It might just be me, but I think this sentence has basically three main clauses in "..., and ..., and ..." I would re-word it to something like "..., resulting in concern ..., and so ..." or maybe split into more than one sentence.
"During the 1954–55 season, York reached the semi-final of the FA Cup, of which two matches were played at Bootham Crescent.[9] The first round game against Scarborough, which was won 3–2, and the fifth round game against Tottenham Hotspur, which was won 3–1 in front of a crowd of 21,000, were both held at Bootham Crescent." I'd combine these two sentences in order to avoid repeating "were played at Bootham crescent". Possibly "During the 1954–55 season, York reached the semi-final of the FA Cup, of which two matches were played at Bootham Crescent[9]—the first round game against Scarborough, which was won 3–2, and the fifth round game against Tottenham Hotspur, which was won 3–1 in front of a crowd of 21,000."
"After half of the £1500,00 cost was paid for by the Football Trust," I presume this should be £150,000? I would change it but I didn't want to insert an error.
It may well be crystal ball. But what would happen to Bootham Crescent once York City move to the new stadium? (Aside - it'll be a shame to see another old ground close).
Well, the whole needing to move to a new ground is because Persimmon want to knock it down and build housing on the site. That will all need adding to the article in the history section, which should be quite simple to do with the new Complete Record book. Mattythewhite (talk) 10:50, 29 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"It held its first Schoolboy International in May 1952, when England, who were captained by Wilf McGuinness, who later became York manager, beat Ireland 5–0 with a crowd of 16,000." Again it might just be me, but I think two "who clauses" in the same sentence is difficult to read.
You've already said you were unsure about the size of this section. Other FAs do have short transport sections, but when I got Valley Parade promoted recently to FA, concern was raised about the size of the transport section until I fleshed it out.
With that in mind, what other transport details are available? Buses? Park and ride? Perhaps, even mention something mentioned above about the difficult of transport at Fulfordgate and why Bootham Crescent was deemed better at the time? Is this still the case?
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I've listed this article for peer review because… I've just created this article and I would like to take it all the way to FA status. But let's concentrating on working on GA first :)
Any suggestions or comments you have are much appreciated.
Thank you. One of my concerns, which I should have put above I guess, is whether or not the article needs a cast section and a plot section (though as a non-fiction piece, would it be called plot?) The article assessment from WP:FILM says so, but I'm not too sure. Matthewedwards (talk • contribs • email) 07:10, 29 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Interesting article, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
There seems to be too much empahsis in the lead on the producers etc. (the second paragraph) compared to the amount of text in the article itself WP:WEIGHT
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
I think the direct quotes from reviews in the lead need to be cited - see WP:LEAD and WP:MOSQUOTE
I do think a "Summary" section (plot) would be useful. Agree that calling it "Plot" seems odd though.
Also think a Cast section would help.
There are a few typos I saw - I read for comprehension, not proofreading. Here is a rough sentence When the documentary aired in the UK, overnight viewing figures showed that it was watched by 600,000 viewers, and by 3% of the total television audience.[27] I would say something like ... 600,000 viewers, which was 3 percent ... You can ask for a copyedit at WP:PRV
I do not review film GAs, but this seems pretty good for GA to me - well cited, mostly well written.
There were a few places that seem to be needlessly repetitious, alhtough they may be for emphasis - the camera may be taken as a sign the owner is a terrorist, for example.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I am doing an assignment for a general studies law course "Cyberspace Law" which asks for a traditional paper based case study turned into an authoritative wikipedia article. Unfortunately, wikipedia only has "good article" or "featured article". Could you peer review "Maguire v SOCOG 1999" by providing me with practical advice that can be easily be implemented so the article could be nominated for either "good article" or "featured article"? thanks
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here. Interesting topic, but needs a large amount of work to conform to the Manual of Style and be good article, let alone featured. Please read carefully WP:WIAGA and then WP:WIAFA.
Article has a one sentence lead. The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
References need to be formatted better - Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Avoid bullet point lists - convert to prose.
There are many one or two sentence paragraphs and sections that should be combined with others or perhaps expanded.
Language needs a copyedit
None of the categories are actual categories - these are not helpful as red links
Article has (almost) no links to anything else on Wikipedia
This peer review discussion has been closed.
I've listed this article for peer review because I believe this article is getting closer to FA quality, but is not yet there. As such, I request that reviewers read the article and respond with FA quality suggestions and improvements. Thanks, Noj r (talk) 03:22, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Besides a good copyedit, two things stood out: First, watch your abbreviations, I see "OSA" used without defining it first and a few places where things are abbreviated but never reused (FTL, I believe). Second, I think the gameshot image can use a more descriptive caption; explain that the slotted inventory system is at the top, and other features of the display. But sources look good, images look fine, I think it's ready. --MASEM02:01, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I agree about a copy-edit. I have already gone through the gameplay section and attempted some fixes. Please inform me if they helped. On the issue of the acronyms, we are never explicitly told what OSA or OS means. This has been discussed before, and the best I could do was create a reference for the first instance of each acronym explaining that it is never listed. Would an inline explanation be better? I have also expanded the caption on the picture. I hope it is better. Thanks for taking the time to review the article. -- Noj r (talk) 07:35, 10 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, one thing that bugs me is the "Legacy" section.
The sentence, "As a result, System Shock 2 is widely regarded as one of the greatest games ever made and has been inducted into several Hall of Fames".
I think "widely regarded" should be more specific; widely regarded by whom?
"one of the greatest games ever made" is substantiated by four refs, three of which are subsequent years of the same IGN top-100 list. It might be best to drop the prior years unless you want to say that it was on the IGN top-100 list for three years.
"Hall of Fames" is a bad plural; "Halls of Fame" is more appropriate.
"several Halls of Fame"; we see two refs substantiating this, one of which is a top-25 list and isn't specifically calling itself a HoF.
The sentence, "The title is also widely recognized as one of the most frightening games ever made".
"widely recognized"; same problem as above, by whom? While it's referenced I think it should be attributed in the text.
The next paragraph is a perfect example of what I think should be done with the "widely regarded" problems above.
The SS3 and BioShock sections ought to be flipped to maintain chronological order in their prose. The BS paragraph begins in 2007 while the SS3 one begins in 2006.
The rest of the article is pretty damn good. The one thing I'd like to see mentioned is the story about Levine forcing in the Psi-monkeys even though it didn't make any sense and wasn't explained except in the basketball easter egg (which might also bear mentioning). I wish I had a reference for the Levine thing. I'll poke around for that. —/Mendaliv/2¢/Δ's/ 00:35, 9 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, I expanded the "greatest, frightening" statements to include the names of the publications. I also fixed the references and placed them in the right places. I did not know they were jumbled up, haha. The "hall of fames" grammatical error is completely embarrassing. I didn't even think about it :0 Thanks for reviewing the article. Hope to hear from you at the FA review soon. -- Noj r (talk) 05:23, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to know how well it is doing and if it is good enough to become a featured list. Chrishomingtang will also help in answering questions.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
In an FA the lead summarizes the article and does not need citations, but in an FL the lead often serves as an introduction and so needs cites for anything not in the lists. This needs more cites / refs.
"Olajuwon and Knobler. pg. 207" needs more information as a ref
I would add an explanation of the introduction of the second team in 88-89. Why was it added?
Several places need a copyedit - for example Indicates the player who won the Rookie of the Year award in the same year (since these are both rookie awards, is there any way they could be in different years?) or Voting is conducted by the NBA head coaches; the coaches [who] are not allowed to vote for players on their own team.[1] or The All-Defensive Team is generally composed of two five-man lineups, a first and a second team, comprising a total of 10 roster spots. - I think most readers can add 5 +5 = 10 ;-)
I would add a free picture or two - surely some of the players have free imaqes here?
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I've listed this article for peer review because… I want to know what needs to be done, so the article can become an FA.
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC. The sourcing looks good.
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 16:49, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
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I've listed this article for peer review because we'd like to receive feedback on how to improve this article. It is short, which is the reason cited for failing its recent Good article nomination. If there are any suggestions on improving the article, then please post them. Thanks! GaryKing (talk)20:10, 29 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"all tracks from the band's self-titled debut were released earlier that year." --> "all tracks from the band's self titled debut album released earlier that year" (if you talk about the album release... needs a different reword if you talk about the single releases).
"The video was well received by fans and entered number one on the Billboard Top Music Videos chart and remained in the charts for 54 weeks." - cut the "and" overuse. Maybe "where it remained for 54 weeks"?
"The video was certified gold on December 21, 1999 and was later certified platinum on February 16, 2000" - trim some redundancies... "and platinum on Feb..."
I'd agree with Matisse on the talk page that this probably can't be a GA. There just isn't enough content out there, unfortunately. —Giggy08:21, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm planning on turning it into a Good article. I'd like to know what could and should be done to expand the article and make it look better, nicer and more professional.
Comments - Yohhans (talk) 01:07, 27 August 2008 (UTC) - Just going through this based on prose and MoS issues. I'll try and determine if content is comprehensive where I can, but chances are I'll just be looking at the writing. :) Keep in mind that these are all suggestions. Take them with a grain of salt. Also, don't be afraid of how long the review is. I'm picky. It's nothing against you, I promise. :)[reply]
General comments
I would suggest making the History section be the first section, rather than Geography. However, this is just preference.
Lead
It houses the ŠRC Šalata (Šalata Sport and Recreation Center) ... --> It houses the Šalata Sport and Recreation Center (ŠRC Šalata) ...
Why is the location of "the current center" buried in the link? Why not rewrite it as, "Being close to both the old city cores Gornji Grad and Kaptol and the current center, Donji Grad,...."? Preferably the entire sentence should be rewritten to, "the residents of Šalata are close to almost all major events outside the neighborhoods due to their proximity to both the old city cores of Gornji Grad and Kaptol, and the current center, Donji Grad."
Try not to start your sentences with "Being...". It makes the sentence feel weak. How about, "Šalata is praised for great views of the city because of its slightly higher altitude in relation to the rest of the city."
Due to all these factors, real estate in Šalata is very expensive and Šalata has become the home to many influential people from the political, musical and sports scene in Croatia.
Being located on the slopes of Medvednica Mountain, mostly containing woods inhabited by wildlife and only a half an hour walk from the Ban Jelačić Square, Šalata was quickly urbanized in the early and mid-20th century following a rapid expansion of Zagreb. Long cumbersome sentence. I would suggest axing the first half of the sentence unless the source at the end of the paragraph says that it is because of Šalata's location in the Medvednica Mountains that it was urbanized. If that's not the case, then I'd say just turn the sentence into, "Šalata was quickly urbanized in the early to mid-20th century following a rapid expansion of Zagreb." If that is the case, then I would follow that sentence up with this one, "The urbanization can be explained by its prime location on the slopes of the Medvednica Mountain and its close proximity to the Ban Jelačić Square."
Nonetheless, the neighborhood retains a green image, housing the botanical garden "Fran Kušan" in Zagreb, owned by the Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry of the University of Zagreb. - When you say, "green image", does that mean that the city is actually green in color, or that it is trying to be more environmentally friendly? Please rephrase to be less ambiguous. Also, change ... "Fran Kušan" in Zagreb, owned by the Faculty ... to "... Fran Kušan" in Zagreb which is owned by the Faculty ..."
2000 plant species. --> 2,000 plant species
Šalata's connection to the rest of Zagreb via mass transit consists of four bus lines: - This reads awkwardly. How about, "Šalata's mass transit consists of four bus lines:"?
At that point 106 and 226 continue --> At this point 106 and 226 continue
The neighborhood is not connected to the citywide tram system, but its inhabitants have to either descend to Medveščak Road or Vlaška Street, or take the bus to the Kaptol near Ban Jelačić Square to reach the nearest tram lines. --> change "but" to "so". Also, are directions really necessary? Could we not just change this sentence to, "The neighborhood is not connected to the citywide tram system, so residents must take other forms of transportation to get to the tram."?
... luxury apartment buildings three or four stories high, the first in Croatia to feature digital homes. --> "... luxury apartment buildings three to four stories high. They are the first in Croatia to feature digital homes." - Also, can we get a reference on this? Also, also, what exactly is a digital home?
a canyon, with their roofs seen from above --> which allows their roofs to be seen from nearby streets - Also, is "canyon" really the right word? Maybe, depression?
I really don't know a better word. A depression would fit a lake, but this is more like a pretty steep elongated river valley. Actually, a small stream used to flow down the valley before the Babonićeva Street was enlarged. The stream was mostly used for garbage and as a frog incubator, so I don't think it merits the inclusion, nor that I would be able to find a good source about it. Admiral Norton(talk)11:25, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Fair enough. I guess in that case I can't much think of a better word either. It is just that, being an American, when I hear "canyon", my brain tends to flit to the grand variety and so I figured this would be the same with other readers. I was just hoping to avoid confusion and to provide a better depiction of the lay of the land. - Yohhans (talk) 13:35, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
at the expense of some possessions of the local church. - Does this mean that the local church was destroyed to make room for the apartments? If so, can this be reworded to reflect that?
The enlargement was planned for 30 years, but the City was unable to buy the church property until the mid-2000s. - Needs a reference
Šalata was built in several axes, - took me forever to realize that this was in reference to a coordinate plane rather than the plural of axe. Even then it does not make much sense. I'd say either create a picture to illustrate this and change the sentence to "Šalata was built along several axes: Bijenička Road, Voćarska Road and Grškovićeva Street." or simply drop the sentence.
The entire first paragraph in the History section is without references. This needs to be fixed.
As the city grew, the neighborhood expanded northward, creating an interesting street pattern garbled in the south, but consisting of straight north-south streets and random east-west connectors north of Grškovićeva Street. --> As the city grew, the neighborhood expanded northward. This created garbled street patterns in the south, but led to straight north-south streets and random east-west connectors north of Grškovićeva Street.
East of Voćarska and Bijenička Street the neighborhood is located on steep slopes and canyons, generating long, steep north-south streets connected by staircases. -- Does not contribute to this section at all. It should either be moved to "geography" or dropped completely. I suggest the latter. In fact... reading the rest of the paragraph, it seems to me that this entire paragraph should just be dropped. It does not contribute to the history of the neighborhood, or what little history it does provide, is restated in the next paragraph.
Šalata used to comprise a village --> Šalata used to be a village
Up until 1990 the definition was coded --> Up until 1990 the definition of a neighborhood was coded
Šalata is currently undergoing a real estate prices increase, due to the neighborhood being close to most city amenities. --> Real estate prices are currently increasing due to the neighborhood being close to most city amenities.
Education
See also: Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium - This is not needed as it has already been linked in the article.
As for tertiary education, Šalata hosts the Ruđer Bošković Institute and Faculties of Science (Departments of Mathematics and Physics), Medicine and Chemistry of the University of Zagreb. - I.... don't even know. Maybe, "As for tertiary education, Šalata hosts the Ruđer Bošković Institute of the University of Zagreb which includes the faculties of science, medicine and chemistry." - I hope that was the correct interpretation of that sentence
Move the botanical gardens picture to the Culture section and the Gymnasium to the Education section. Also, the caption for the Gymnasium photo should be "Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium on Voćarska Road"
Culture
First paragraph needs citations, specifically the first and third sentences.
near the Medveščak Road intersection - I think this might be too much detail. Probably just me though (only reason I'm saying anything is because the phrase clutters up this sentence).
in the far northern part of Bijenička Road. --> on the far northern part of Bijenička Road.
in Zmajevac Street --> on Zmajevac Street
I always make this error since we have a "in"/"on" distinction for streets and avenues in Croatian, but it's always "on" for roads, ways, boulevards etc. Admiral Norton(talk)17:41, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
such as the sculptor Vanja Radauš, who owned an atelier in Zmajevac Street, which has been converted into a art restauration company, or the painter Vasilije Jordan.
Šalata is widely known throughout Zagreb for its festivals, including Šalata Open Air Festival, VIP INmusic Festival and others, and the concerts on the ŠRC Šalata football stadium. - Couple things. 1.) Needs a citation. 2.) change "including Šalata Open Air Festival, VIP INmusic Festival and others, and the concerts on the ŠRC Šalata football stadium." to "including the Šalata Open Air Festival, VIP INmusic Festival, concerts at the ŠRC Šalata football stadium, and others."
These concerts are oftentimes held by world-famous bands - I don't think the bands themselves host the concerts, so change this to "These concerts often host world-famous bands"
The famous Papaya nightclub --> "The Papaya nightclub" - Try to avoid peacock words.
Source 15 mentions Hermann Bollé, but it does not say this was his most famous work. Nor does it say it earned him eternal fame. These statements need a citations. Also, try to avoid those peacock terms... I'm not sure anyone can claim eternal fame.
On the Mirogojska Road north of Mirogoj, the Krematorij is located. It is a smaller cemetery devoted for cremations. - What does this have to do with culture? Also, it should be, "It is a smaller cemetery devoted to cremations."
Šalata is known for ŠRC Šalata, the Sports and Recreational Center Šalata. ŠRC Šalata was built in the 1930s instead of expanding KBC Šalata. - Until you provide a source for the first sentence, change these two sentences to, "The Sports and Recreational Center Šalata (ŠRC Šalata) was built in the 1930s." (I omitted the KBC Šalata from the sentence as it is never mentioned again in the article.)
It hosts large public --> It contains large public
and an outdoor soccer stadium converted during the winter to use for ice hockey and ice skating. --> and an outdoor soccer stadium that converts to an ice rink in the winter.
The center is very attractive for both amateur and professional tennis players, having nine tennis courts, a normal-sized one and eight small courts --> "The center attracts both amateur and professional tennis players with its one regulation-sized tennis courts and eight smaller courts." -- Also, this needs a citation.
, most notable being ice hockey club Medveščak, basketball club KK Medveščak, swimming club PK Medveščak, handball club RK Medveščak, water polo club VK Medveščak and tennis club TK Medveščak. --> The most notable are the ice hockey, basketball, swimming, handball, water polo and tennis clubs.
NB I've refrained from saying this earlier because I felt it was warranted at the time, but this sentence just seems excessive. You are writing for an English audience. Using so many Croatian terms (or in this case, one term used multiple times) in a row is going to scare away your readers. Also, the the acronyms (at least I assume that's what they are) KK, PK, RK, need to be spelled out or just not used at all.
Famous inhabitants
near its center and Grškovićeva Road --> near its center on Grškovićeva Road
Change [[Josip Broz|Tito]] to [[Josip Broz Tito]]
Andrija Hebrang, an influential Croatian politician, --> need a source for "influential", or drop the word.
You might want to rethink the inclusion of some of the "notable" inhabitants. Some that you link to don't even have an article on Wikipedia.
Two residential villas on Grškovićeva Street were meant to become the residences of President Stipe Mesić and the Speaker of the Croatian Parliament, but they were abandoned in favor of the old locations. -- This kind of feels like grasping at straws. That is, it seems like it is included for inclusion's sake.
Embassies
Due to its reputation, - The great thing about a reputation is that it can be backed up with... you guessed it! Sources! ;) Also, what kind of reputation? I assume you mean a good diplomatic one, but it would be better to say that explicitly.
Yugoslavia broke into Serbia and Montenegro - "broke into"? How about "invaded"
located in the quiet Torbarova Street --> located on Torbarova Street
located on the intersection of --> located at the intersection of
It is the only embassy in Šalata under constant monitoring by security guards. - Needs citation
I live in Šalata, so it's OR. I was careful about writing only referenced things, but obviously not careful enough. {{fact}} for now, I'll delete if I don't find anything. Admiral Norton(talk)16:43, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A few more comments - Yohhans (talk) 04:52, 29 August 2008 (UTC) - The article is looking much better! I think you'll have no problem getting this through GAN when you've finished cleaning up the prose.[reply]
owned by the Ffaculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry of the University of Zagreb.
Since the southeastern part remains unconnected, the City of Zagreb administration has pointed out that Šalata is badly connected to the rest of the city, and plans to add more bus lines.[5] The neighborhood is not connected ... So many "connected"s!
four stories high, the first in Croatia --> four stories high, and is the first in Croatia
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I've listed this article for peer review because it is too short to go to WP:GAN but I'd still like to receive comments on what could be done to improve the article – mostly prose-related issues. Thanks! GaryKing (talk)21:48, 31 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This sentence ---> ""What's It Gonna Be" was originally released as a promotional recording by Columbia Records and as a physical release with the L'Oréal logo on the cover because of the song's use in Knowles' advertisements for L'Oréal", the statement "physical" release, what exactly does that mean?
"A 7" promo single containing the song along with instrumental and a cappella versions and the same three different versions of Faith Evans' cover of Donna Summer's 1978 "Heaven Knows" (which was part of the official soundtrack to The Fighting Temptations) was released." Run-on sentence.
Any external links (music videos, official lyrics, etc.)?
Information about themes, music videos, and music features could be put in, only if there's info.
I did the first point. The rest will be difficult; this article is indeed short and that is because it isn't a popular single so there isn't much information about it. GaryKing (talk)03:37, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
These span over four seasons, while a fifth season is scheduled to air starting in fall 2008. Why not give the actual September date of the first episode of the fifth season in the US?
Awkward sentence - needs to be split into two or cleaned up Created as an adaptation by Greg Daniels of the British series The Office that was originally created by Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais, it is a mockumentary that follows the day-to-day lives of the employees of the Scranton, Pennsylvania branch of Dunder Mifflin, a paper supply company.[1]
This makes it sound like the seasons were the same number of episodes This was followed by a full-length second season in 2005–2006, and another full-length one, in 2006–2007. but they were not - I would give the numbers of episodes in each season.
I think the article would look better if all the tables were the same width.
Identify who Roy Anderson is within the show (warehouse guy) in ... while she struggles with her relationship with Roy Anderson (David Denman).
Needs a ref perhaps It featured 23 episodes, including two hour-long editions, and guest directors such as J.J. Abrams (creator of ABC series Alias, Lost, and the movie Cloverfield), Joss Whedon (creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly) and Harold Ramis.
In the notes, why not combine the two without symbols, i.e. "Producers' cut versions are not included." and "Episode titles are subject to change."
Ok, thanks for the feedback. I still have those two clarifications to work on, but otherwise should I go ahead and nominate this for FLC? Nergaal (talk) 03:08, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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This article recently (narrowly, imo) failed a FAC. A few of the late reviers that ultimately contributed to the thumbs down suggested a PR before resubmission. Therefore this listing. Comments and suggestions most welcome. Note that compared to the version that was up for FAC, this version includes a section on Legacy at the end, which was also asked for at the FAC. There is deliberately no independent section on Personal Life, as Frank Zappa's life was his music and career, and because he was not a celebrity-style person with a life in media (like, e.g., Michael Jackson). This argument was accepted at the FAC, and therefore no such section exists.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm getting ready to nominate it as a good article and I would like to know what I've missed or what I can focus on for improvement.
The article looks good. The one thing I'd expand on a bit is more of a description of the plant: how does it differ from other Amaranthus species? Probably a bit of "like other Amaranths, it blah blah blah" too. Does it reproduce vegetatively or by seed (if known)? If there's anything else such as medicinal uses or ornamental uses or anything, they'd go here too (although I suppose that's unlikely for a plant with such a small range). Kingdon (talk) 05:16, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be expanded per WP:LEAD to at least two paragraphs. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way.
I owuld try to be more specific (use a date) than "more recently" in More recently, the invasive Schistocerca nitens, a nonnative grasshopper, has presented an even larger threat to A. brownii. In five years it will not be as recent.
This needs a ref: The plant is sometimes referred to as Brown's Amaranth, Brown's Pigweed, or Browns Amaranth, although it is unclear which, if any, common name is in use. Also the whole Nomenclature section is only two sentences - could it be combined with another section? "Nomenclature and morphology" perhaps?
Partly done. USDA and UH botany dept. cited. I've deleted the latter part. I'll see what I can do about expanding or merging the section. Viriditas (talk) 05:15, 4 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Any chance of adding a map so the location of the island is clearer?
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I have worked on this for a while and am planning to nominate it for GA as soon as I've fixed all the problems. In particular:
How does the lead look? How could I improve it?
Before, I thought "Classification of batteries" (now called "Types of batteries") was too long, so I moved a lot of the content to List of battery types. How is the current section ("Types of batteries")?
How is the organization? Does the article cover all major aspects? Any trivial info that should be removed?
Tip on expanding the lead—Make sure there is at least a sentence for each section in the article summarizing the contents and important details in that section.
This paragraph:"Secondary batteries must be charged before use; they are usually assembled with active materials in the discharged state. Rechargeable batteries or secondary cells can be recharged by applying electrical current, which reverses the chemical reactions that occur during its use. Devices to supply the appropriate current are called chargers or rechargers."
"Because of vibration, shock, heat, cold, and sulfation of their lead plates, few automotive batteries last beyond six years of regular use."
"Hole formation in the plates leads to less surface area for the current-producing chemical reactions, resulting in less available current when under load. Leaving a lead-acid battery in a deeply discharged state for any significant length of time allows the lead sulfate to crystallize, making it difficult or impossible to remove during the charging process. This can result in a permanent reduction in the available plate surface, and therefore reduced current output and energy capacity."
"The main benefit of the lead-acid battery is its low cost; the main drawbacks are its large size and weight for a given capacity and voltage."
"Special "reserve" batteries intended for long storage in emergency equipment or munitions keep the electrolyte of the battery separate from the plates until the battery is activated, allowing the cells to be filled with the electrolyte. Shelf times for such batteries can be years or decades."
"When a battery is recharged at an excessive rate, an explosive gas mixture of hydrogen and oxygen may be produced faster than it can escape from within the walls of the battery, leading to pressure build-up and the possibility of the battery case bursting."
Get the article copyedited by someone unfamiliar with the text.
Format all the references—add publisher, publisher dates, works, etc.
Trim the external links and leave only the essential ones. See WP:EL.
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This GA was at FAC recently and suffered from a lack of comments. The nomination was archived with two votes: one neutral who felt that the article could use another copyedit and one oppose who offered to strike his vote if no one supported his view on the image, which no one did. I tried to renominate it, but Sandy pointed to one of the sources, which has been taken to the reliable sources noticeboard; however, I expect it to pass. Basically, I do not want there to be any excuses when I renominate it. Thanks, –thedemonhogtalk • edits18:40, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
I have read the article and the failed FAC. I now see that a full two weeks had not passed between the end of the FAC and the nomination here at PR, but since I have already read the article and have comments I will let it slide. I found the FAC to be much different than the impression the summary above gave - there were many comments from different people, just not much support. I always think an FAC is the most comprehensive peer review an article can get - I agree with several of the points raised there and would ask the FAC reviewers to look at the article again to see if their concerns have been met before nominating this again. That said, here are some suggestions:
I have never seen the program or this episode. I found the plot and several of the references to the mythology confusing, which for me is a sign that the article is not yet at a professional level of prose (see WP:WIAFA and/or needs to be written from more of an out of universe perspective (see WP:IN-U). Examples of unclear items for me at least - Juliet's life on the island is depicted in flashbacks. A week after she arrives in mid-September 2001, she begins to receive therapy from Harper Stanhope (Andrea Roth). Now the lead says the plane crashed there in 2004, so I have no idea how Juliet is already on the island in 2001, or who Harper Stanhope is.
I also note that the episode takes place on Christmas Eve and Christmas day - does this play a role in the plot in any way? I am also not sure about the title - who exactly is the Other Woman? Or reading the Dharma Initiative article I find this is the first episode in which the Tempest appears - should that be be mentioned here?
Awkward phrase ... criticizing the flashbacks as being redundant and the Tempest storyline due to a lack of explanation for the station's original purpose.[46] I had to read it three times before I figured it out
The Reception section seemed a bit of a quote farm to me - is there any way the different quotes could be pulled together more? As it is it mostly seems to be "Critic A of Paper X found it _________, while Critic B of paper Y thought the acting was _________, and Critic C of media outlet Z said _________" Could the paragraphs be more thamatically arranged or have brief topic sentences or phrases to help make the point clearer? Try to do the ... that the episode was more heavily focused on Ben, instead of Juliet ... thing for each paragraph.
Are there more comments from writers / producers / director that could go into the Production section? I fear I am tired and confused by my lack of knowledge of the show - I hope this is helpful, this feels close to FA, but not quite there.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to receive feedback to complete this list in the most accurate way possible
"universe of merchants" bit POV I would suggest a better word than universe. DONE!
You have eight references in a row in the last paragraph in the lead, which is not necssary remove some or move them about, to say after the relevant artist. DONE!
An image of one of the artists would be good. DONE!
The weeks at number one table seems a bit weird; firstly the numbers in the weeks at number one column should be centrally aligned, and I would move this column to the end. Also any reason for the current order?. DONE: I got rid of that table.
You can remove .com from the refernces they are not Billboard on its own for example would suffice. Answer: Should I removed the ".com" from all refs?. Jaespinoza (talk) 05:05, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
In the last few months it has had a complete overhaul. It is now:
1. Broad in coverage (broader than any of the print encyclopedias used as sources)
2. Fully wikified
3. Referenced.
4. Well written (in my own opinion!)
5. Has free images.
So i'm hoping to submit for GAR soon. As i've written almost all of it alone, i want outside input, especially on the writing and overall flow.
You need to add more explanation to the lead image. Are these symbols conventionally and widely adopted in SF fiction? Or they have only been used in a single work or by a single author? Or created by a Wikipedian? Eklipse (talk) 17:07, 31 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OK, changed the caption to show they are invented by the artist. Image will be changed to include women, once i figure out how.Yobmod (talk) 10:59, 1 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
But you still didn't answer WHO did invent them or WHERE were they precisely used. I suspect it is the work of a wikipedian, so it qualifies as OR. Eklipse (talk) 15:35, 1 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Not the work of a wikipedian, but a guy i know in the real world. They weren't used anywhere, they're just pretty (free) images. It seems easier to include copyrighted imaged as "fair use" than orginial art! -rmvd.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Interesting article - I agree that the lead image does not really fit though. There is no robot sex described in the article and very little alien sex - also by using male symbols, the figure excludes females.
Oki, the picture will be changed, to include women and exclude robots.
I wonder if it would make sense to change the title of the article to something broader - one problem is that many SF works that explore homosexuality also explore other types of sex - Odd John implies incest, Varley's Titan, Wizard, and Demon triloogy has lesbian protagonists, but features interspecies sex and the detailed centaur matings possible, etc. Alien sex is hard to define as homosexual, but may certainly require the reader to think outside the box - see Asimov's The Gods Themselves with its three alien species having sex (two using male pronouns, one female) or Varley's centaur variations above.
There is already an (extremely poor) article for Sexuality in SF in general, that article should cover SF approach to sex overall, with a summary of this article in the section there.
I thought the first section explained about alien sexualities being used as metaphors etc - i'll have to make it clearer. ::Anything more would be OR - as far as i remember, the aliens in The Gods Themselves reproduce by a method completely different from humans, so the gramatical genders had nothing to do with actual gender, no? Without gametes, the idea of binary sex soesn't exist, hence nor does homosexuality, except as a metaphor.
I thought the lead focused a shade too much on the bad old repressed days of no sex at all in SF and the article could use more examples from recent works, especially the 1990s
I'll cut back on the repression in the lead, although for most critics this is the most notable thing. "Homophobia is no longer considered acceptable..." is about all the sources say.
Article needs more references, for example four of six paragraphs in Modern SF (post New Wave) have no refs. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
All paras now have more than one cite. And all quotes.
Jepp - as SF got more accepting, far less people wrote about it! So the post new wave section will be trimmed and sourced.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
will do.
Lots of short one or two sentence paragraphs and some vey short sections - these should be combined with others or perhaps expanded.
I'll combine them, are no real sources showing notability for the lesbian presses for example.
See WP:MOSQUOTE - son't use the cquote template here
Done.
I would split out the list and make it sortable.
Done the split - to List of gay SF. Never seen a sortable list on WP, so no idea how to change that, but is now a different article anyway.
Alpha Flight's Northstar - was he gay from day one or was it only revealed in 1983 (hints) and definitively in 1992? This needs to be clearer.
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I've listed this article for peer review. It recently got GA status and has been considerably improved lately. Feedback on how to further improve this towards FA status would be welcome.
Passing on a review, as someone finally reviewed an article i submitted :-)
1. Lead seems very short for such a long article. Try summarising each of the sections to one paragrapgh each (History, Market, Development plans) and inserting into lead, making it 4 paras altogether. "The lead should be able to stand alone as a concise overview of the article."
2. Citations! I counted 6 paragraphs makng factual claims with no citations, and other long paragraphs making multiple claims with a cite in the middle, but none for the rest of the text. Maybe some can be diplicated (not for every sentence, but more than now), or new references need to be found.
3. When founded / built? It's history section starts with an undated naming, then jumps to the monastaries. Was Smooth fields just the name of the fields, or was the area already devoloped? Did it grow up around the monasteries? It currently sounds like a village was already there?
4. Should the Nightlife and Racing stuff not be under 20th century / Today sections, rather than history? Or those should be subsections of history, without market etc in between? Ah, now i see: Why are the subsections of "The Market" called "Victorian Smithfield" instead of "Victorian Smithfield Market" (and similar subheadings? It makes is seem that that section is talking about the whole area, and not just the market.
5. Are there any explanations as to why it has such a large market, and was the site for excecutions. It is easily accesible / flat / some aristocrat decided so...? If the sources exist, would be interesting to know. What makes it an area worth a seperate name? Is that just historical? Does it have a legal meaning (separate councillor? School district?)? Would it be marked so on maps or in the A to Z, or is it a name for locals? I'm unsure at the moment!
A script has been used to generate a semi-automated review of the article for issues relating to grammar and house style; it can be found on the automated peer review page for August 2008.
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I've listed this article for peer review because, apart from the always welcome suggestions for textual improvements, I am particularly interested in getting feedback on the images. I have often had image problems at FAC, and I'd like these, if they exist, to be identified and dealt with before FAC, should the article get there. The article is about a more-or-less forgotten British-Norwegian Antarctic expedition, important mainly because it preceded all the famous expeditions of a few years later, opened doors for them, but got little or no recognition. It forms part of a series of expedition articles, all others of which are now FAs, and it would be nice if this can be brought to a standard whereby it can join them. Thank you. Brianboulton (talk) 21:20, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Image check: I corrected problems with the NOAA images, but the following issues remain:
Image:Bernacchi at WIdnes.jpg - needs a verifiable source (WP:IUP) and, as a derivative work, needs a copyright tag reflecting the status of the subject (CC-by 3.0 cannot possibly be correct for a 1910 image; CC was founded in 2001)
The source is presumably the postcard which the uploader scanned in, having obtained permission to do so from Catalyst Science Discovery, Widnes. That is what I have assumed from the details provided, and I have no other information. I have no idea what the correct copyright tag should be. The image is of secondary importance to the article – should I simply delete it, or do I have other options?
Several things: if the uploader had scanned it personally, the image would likely contain metadata and have a higher resolution. Also, if Catalyst Science Discovery Centre provided permission, that would need to be verifiable (i.e. we'd need contact information for the permission granter at the Centre or, preferably, an OTRS ticket). ЭLСОВВОLДtalk14:38, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Image:SouthernXdeparture.jpg - source does not set forth an author or date of publication; how can we corroborate the copyright tag?
I don’t think I can prove beyond doubt the date of first publication. My best bet may be to contact the web manager on the source, and ask permission to use the picture. Or if possible find a better ship image.
Image:Clem markham.jpg - source links directly to the image itself; where can we confirm the publication date to corroborate the PD-US tag?
I am working on this, but not too hopefully, and Clem may have to go.
Image:Borchgrevink.jpg - image does not appear at the linked source. Source also has the troubling disclaimer of "All images used on the Polar Pathways website are subject to copyright and can only be used with the express permission of the various copyright owners."
Well, it does appear at the linked source when I click on it. This image of Borchgrevink appears in his 1901 book, and I have assumed it to be PD on those grounds alone. As to the warning, can a source claim copyright over an image that appears to be PD through age?
I see it now (my adblock settings were too high). If this image appeared in a 1901 book, it's fine. Just add that book's details to the source information. ЭLСОВВОLДtalk14:41, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don’t understand your comments about metadata, drive-by uploads etc, but I take it that you have reason to doubt that the uploader actually is the author of the image. The question is, what am I supposed to do about it?
Whether or not to include this image is merely a personal suggestion; there isn’t necessarily a policy or guideline to which I can point. My experience simply tells me that something doesn’t smell right. I wouldn’t oppose an FAC, or probably even comment, because all I have is a gut feeling; this image fits the profile of a typical copyvio, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that it is. From a perhaps philosophical standpoint, I think it's irresponsible for Wikipedia (FAs especially) to contain images for which there is reasonable doubt as to their provenance. I freely admit this to be a conservative approach, perhaps overly so, but I simply don’t care to risk misrepresentations. That being said, however, use your best judgment. If you’re not concerned with the image and believe its inclusion to be necessary, go ahead and leave it in. ЭLСОВВОLДtalk15:01, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
One further question: on this is an image entitled: "Mr Colbeck, Mr Bernacchi and Mr Evans skinning a seal", which is explicitly stated as being from Borchgrevink’s expedition account. If I chose to use this image (say instead of the present Bernacchi one), would this statement of origin be enough to establish PD? In confusion, Brianboulton (talk) 21:46, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I yield to your expertise on this subject matter and these persons; if you believe the credit to "Borchgrevink's 1901 account of the expedition" refers to this, then the support is indeed present, although not optimally so. ЭLСОВВОLДtalk18:37, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think "Borchgrevink's account of the 1901 expedition" can only refer to that book, since he wrote only one account, it was published in 1901 - and as you might put it, "Quack". Bits of the book (not the best bits) are available in e-book form; the actual volume is extremely rare and prohibitatively expensive. Brianboulton (talk) 19:40, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, so I looked at the sourcing and referencing with that in mind. I reviewed the article's sources as I would at FAC.
The site is the work of David Harrowfield, an acknowledged expert on the Cape Adare site which he has visited many times. He has authored various published articles and papers on the site, as well as contributing to the Antarctic Heritage Trust's 1995 book Icy Heritage. I think he can be considered reliable. I ought to have acknowledged his authorship in the list of sources, and now have. Brianboulton (talk) 17:08, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This is a very comprehensive site dealing with all aspects of Antarctic exploration history - I have frequently drawn material from it. Its individual articles all list reputable sources, and where I have particular knowledge, e.g. with the Shackleton and Scott expeditions, I can confirm that the relevant articles stick close to these sources. I have no doubts about the site's general reliability. Brianboulton (talk) 17:27, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Coolantarctica is another very wide-ranging, and much-visited site. It is the brainchild of Zoologist Paul Ward, a former marine biologist with the British Antarctic Survey. He has built the site up to be an accessible source of information on many aspects of Antarctic history, geography, wildlife and conservation. I consider this to be an important and reliable source. Brianboulton (talk) 17:28, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hope this helps. Please note that I don't watchlist Peer Reviews I've done. If you have a question about something, you'll have to drop a note on my talk page to get my attention. (My watchlist is already WAY too long, adding peer reviews would make things much worse.) 13:10, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
Note: In the light of the above comments on images, while I await further clarifications, I have deleted the first four mentioned above, at least until I can verify beyond doubt their PD status. I have kept the hut image, because I can't fully understand the reasons for objecting to it. I have found some replacement images and maps; what this article desperately needs is a prose review. If someone doesn't come along soon, I'll review it myself. Brianboulton (talk) 17:13, 28 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments:
A party including Bull and Borchgrevink had briefly landed, becoming (so they claimed) the first men to set foot on the Antarctic continent. – Wording is odd due to the “so they claimed” parenthetical statement. If there is doubt over whether they were indeed the first men to set foot on the Antarctic continent, that should be addressed in the text but perhaps worded differently.
I've transferred the explanation, in reworded form, from f/note to text.
In numerous addresses to learned societies he stressed the scientific work that could be carried out by a resident expedition, including the possibility of establishing the location of the South Magnetic Pole. - I'm sorry, but I'm not sure what a "learned society" is. Perhaps it is a UK term for a group of educated people?
I think its use goes beyond the UK - Wikipedia has a List of learned societies which includes 30 or more from the USA. But, to avoid possible difficulty with the term, I've reworded the sentence.
The others were Anton Fougner, scientific assistant and general handyman; Kolbein Ellifsen, cook and general assistant, and the two Sami dog-handlers, Per Savio and Ole Must. Savio and Must, at 21 and 20 years of age respectively, were the youngest of the party. - Check for puncuation consistency.
I've got rid of the semicolon, so the commas are consistent, but I'm still not happy with the sentence and will probably rework it.
Unloading began on 17 February. First ashore were the dogs (now reduced to 75 in number) with their two Sami handlers, who remained with them and thus became the first men to spend a night on the Antarctic continent. - I presume the number of dogs was reduced due to death, but some clarification as to why would be helpful.
You're probably right, but no explanation is given by the sources. Only one source mentios that 90 were taken, several mention 75 landing. I've dropped the mention of 90, and just left it that 75 landed
That day, Southern Cross departed for Australia. - Why?
To spend the winter there, I've added this.
The zoologist, Nikolai Hansen, had fallen ill during the winter. On 14 October he died, apparently of an intestinal disorder, and became the first person to be buried on the Antarctic continent. - The fact that he became the first person to be buried on the Antarctic continent is stated earlier. I would probably get rid of the first mention of it.
Done
Unfortunately, their chosen location was cut off from the continent's interior by high mountain ranges, and journeys along the coastline were frustrated by unsafe sea ice. - We shouldn't take a position on the matter, so I would get rid of "Unfortunately".
Done
This discovery was derided a few years later, by members of the Discovery Expedition, who claimed that the island "did not exist", but its position has since been confirmed at 71°38'S, 170°04'E. - Derided does not seem to be the right word. Perhaps doubted?
No, it's definitely "derided", if you read the sneery tone of the Discovery Expedition comments as recorded by Huxley, to the distress of Bernacchi, who was on both expeditions and thought well of Borchgrevink.
The first port of call in the Ross Sea was Possession Island, where a tin box left by Borchgrevink and Bull on the 1895 expedition was recovered. - What is the significance of this?
The significance (what the box contained, why it was left) is unexplained by the sources. I imagine it was left as proof that the Bull expedition had landed there.
They then proceeded southwards, following the Victoria Land coast, discovering further islands, one of which Borchgrevink named after Sir Clements Markham (who remained unimpressed). - By what? the Voyage itself or the naming of an island after him? And why?
I've expanded the text a bit, to clarify Markham's grudging attitude
Southern Cross returned to England in June 1900, to a cool welcome. – What is a cool welcome?
Opposite of a warm welcome. They were treated indifferently, rather than as heroes
General comment on footnotes: When you have two footnotes back-to-back, there should not be any spaces between them (ex: Correct:,[1][2] Incorrect [3][4])
I read this a few days ago and only got to make comments now - the comments from Happyme22 have improved what was already an extremely good article (and I have heard of learned societies in the US, and cool welcomes). Anyway, here are a few suggestions
Why is Norwegian linked in the lead, but British is not? I would either link both (or neither).
Thought I'd delinked both - have now.
Would it make sense to mention the earlier visit to Possession Island in the Background section?
Yes, now included
Is the second "in" here needed: Determined that he would lead such an expedition himself, Borchgrevink spent much of the next three years in Australia and in England attempting to gain financial backing.?
I've tweaked the sentence.
Was the ship in 1894-1895 named Antarctica (per Background) or just Antarctic (per Personnel)?
Antarctic is correct - fixed.
Would it make sense to link Hobart, Tasmania?
Yes, done.
How about A few years later his discovery was derided by members of the Discovery Expedition, who claimed that the island "did not exist",[44] but its position has since been confirmed at 71°38'S, 170°04'E.[45]?
Yes, done.
Would a different verb than "recovered" be better in samples of the continent's natural fauna and flora, and of its geology, had been recovered.[43]? Perhaps collected?
Yes. I am adding a bit more here, about he expedition's finds.
Would it make sense to include the many Antarctic firsts associated with the expedition in the lead? First overnight stay, first stuctures, etc.
Glad to have helped - once the picture issues are resolved, and it is at FAC, please let me know. Have you tried looking on Flickr - there are enough tourists to Antarctica now that there may be some photos there that are free or could have their license changed on request perhaps. Ruhrfisch><>°°12:43, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Marging is a seperate issue (see talk), but i don't see much here to review.
Good
A. It is a list, and does it's stated job of listing characters, and keeps the entries concise.
B. It is apporpriately laid out and wikified.
Improvable
1. Would it be possible to use a simpsons poster image as fair use? I've seen some with many many minor characters - a relevant caption might make that allowed for fair use.
2. To get to featured list it needs citations for all of the characters, preferable not just citation to the episode they are in, but to a secondary and/or reliable source (DVD comentary is ok, and there are a quite a few Simpsons non-fiction books). Some are missing even cites to the primary source (the episode).
Yobmod (talk) 16:14, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I owuld make it clear in the lead (which needs refs) what the criteria are for inclusion in this list - does a character have to appear in a certain number of episodes (two) to be listed here? Ruhrfisch><>°°01:08, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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This article has been subject to three consecutive failed GA nominations, following a deslist in 2006. For most of them, substantial effort has been put into getting these to a modern GA level. For example, each reviewer holds the GA and gives ideas on how to improve the article, which are all considered and improved upon. However, each nomination fails with something along the lines of "there are more problems that are present that are not listed". I'm establishing this peer review to stamp out all possible problems so that we not waste time and milestone template space on failed GAs.
I think the main thing holding this one back is the little things, and these things can be fixed! A few things that stand out at a glance;
Italics. Stuff like MTV shouldn't have it. Blender should. Check your ref publishers too (Ctrl+F is your friend).
I don't think Christina Aguilera (disambiguation) is necessary, as everything is linked in the article (so I'd get rid of the hatnote on the main article and delete the dab page).
All the images look fine, which is good.
"She was signed to RCA Records after recording "Reflection"[2] for the film Mulan." - the most reliable source you can find for this is a Romanian travel guide? Can do better.
The first few sentences need resorting. Ideally the first paragraph would be really broad; it should jump out and slap the reader with why she is notable. She's not notable for writing a song for a movie and getting a record label contract anywhere near as much as she's notable for Stripped, Back to Basics, and the other "big things" she's done.
Consider the article length the lead could definitely be expanded some more. It really needs to make (decent) mention of each section.
Random prose issue: "Aguilera, however, had not yet publicly confirmed her pregnancy at the time" - remove the "however" and the commas and see if it flows better. I'll try and do a full prose review at some point.
A few sentences that don't read as smoothly as they could, and suggestions for improvement
Sentence 1
In 2000 Aguilera was the face for make-up line Fetish where she worked in choosing colors and packaging for the line, she ended her contract the following year.
This needs more than a comma after "for the line". It could be separate sentences, or separate clauses of a single sentence. Suggestions:
In 2000 Aguilera was the face for make-up line Fetish where she worked in choosing colors and packaging for the line. She ended her contract the following year.
In 2000 Aguilera was the face for make-up line Fetish where she worked in choosing colors and packaging for the line; she ended her contract the following year.
Sentence 2
The second single, "Beautiful" received critical praise, the classically influenced ballad reached number one in several countries and peaked at #2 in the US.
Like the first example above, this should be two sentences, or at least two clauses. Put a period or a semicolon after "praise", or try this (note the change from "peaked" to "peaking" to have consistent verb tense):
The second single, the classically influenced ballad "Beautiful", received critical praise, reaching number one in several countries and peaking at #2 in the US.
Sentence 3
Aguilera's work has earned her numerous awards including five Grammy Awards amongst eighteen nominations.
This needs one or two commas, depending on the meaning. Were all 18 nominations for Grammies? In that case:
Aguilera's work has earned her numerous awards, including five Grammy Awards amongst eighteen nominations.
If some of the eighteen were for other awards, then:
Aguilera's work has earned her numerous awards, including five Grammy Awards, amongst eighteen nominations.
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I'm hopful I can get this to FL status.
The bold text seems forced; it's not necessary, especially over a list of that many cities. For that matter, I think that it should just be Arizona Cardinals. You can talk about the other cities later.
'The Cardinals franchise originates in 1898," - should be "originated"
Reference needed for the "Cardinal red" statement.
"They then joined the APFA in 1920 making them the oldest franchise in the NFL." - that doesn't make them the oldest team in the NFL.
There is a large proportion of red links in the table, I would really like to see stubs created for some/most of them before it hits the FLC.
Many people at FLC are going to ask for a sortable table and removal of the colspans. That will require you to re-link each occurence of each name and each season. That way, coaches' tenures are not split up either.
For the playoff columns and the repeated coaches, I would much prefer to see em-dashes as opposed to en-dashes used for the blank years.
Coach of the year should be Coach of the Year.
Your footnote is blank.
"Arizona History" under General references is misspelled.
"The all-time leader in games coached is Jim Hanifan, with 89 and in wins is Don Coryell with 42.[2]" - Split this into two sentences or use a semicolon. It's stunted right now.
"Zero" is not a winning percentage - it should be "with a winning percentage of .000"
Don't italicize Racine Street Cardinals.
There should be a comma after Racine Street Cardinals.
"They then joined the APFA" - remove then.
De-link "As of 2008".
"over 1,100 games" - an exact number would be much nicer.
"in a total of 88 seasons" - "a total of" is redundant; just "in 88 seasons" is good.
"In those games" - you can just get rid of that altogether.
"while Ray Willsey, Ray Prochaska and Chuck Drulis combined, are statistically the best, with a winning percentage of 1.000." - Having three coaches is a unique circumstance; a short explanation of why this happened should be included in the lead.
I hope this helps. I can re-review after you've looked it over if you'd like; just tell me on my talk page. If not, I will see it again at its FLC as well. KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!21:41, 18 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'm going to make a push for WP:FL with it. I've decided to do this first rather than going straight to the FLCs because this list is quite a different format from the usual lists that I make. All input is welcome. Thank you! KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!21:12, 18 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OK, the reason is so that there are no line breaks in cells at lower resolutions. In addition, this is the way I've been doing symbols in my other FLs. I personally think it's ok, but it's my opinion. KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!03:03, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Could the first two notes be placed in the key section would probably make more sense
I wondered if there were some team photos that could be used for the team records sections? Any team photo before 1923 would be PD-Old presumably.
I've found 1904 and 1915 team pictures on the Library of Congress website. Nothing remarkable about the 1904 team, but the 1915 team was the first year that the Phillies made the playoffs. I am going to retouch the photo and upload it soon. KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!22:44, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I also wondered if it would make sense to have any introductory text at the start of the four major sections (Individual career records, Individual single-season records, Team single-game records, and Team season records. For example the team season records might also mention playoffs or World Series appearances, or the Team single game records might mention who the opponenets were for some of the records. Just an idea.
I could definitely do some mini-leads since this is divided up into sections; I don't know what I would write to add substance to the list. I'm having a hard time deciding what to put in there. Suggestions? KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!22:44, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
There been a strong movement to remove date linking in articles - it is not required, but it is something to be aware of. Not sure if it will arise at FLC.
Actually, in baseball articles, stand-alone years are supposed to be linked to the appropriate Major League baseball season or year in baseball article. I haven't seen anything like that pop up at FLC, but thanks for the heads-up! KV5 • Squawk box • Fight on!22:44, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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This article, needs a peer review if it is going to become a FA. It is currently GA, but I think that improvment is still needed. All comments are welcome!! -Marcusmax (talk) 03:00, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You said you wanted to know what to work on before taking to FAC, and my first suggestion would be to get your references into order. A number of your website references lack publisher and/or last access dates, which are the bare minimum needed for WP:V. Books need publisher, author, and page number on top of title. When you've got those mostly straightened out, drop me a note on my talk page and I'll be glad to come back and look at the actual sources themselves, and see how they look in terms of reliability, like I would at FAC. 13:29, 24 August 2008 (UTC)
Comments from HG (talk·contribs)
Hope these thoughts are useful.
The lead is too long. I think some of the locational information can be moved below and key points put up higher. Looks to me like too many links, hard to read that way. Many some of the numerical details can be moved into relevant sections.
Good photos, add dates. Are they regular size?
Ok, I've never looked at an airport article before, but it's a bit dense with information that strikes me, no offense, as sometimes trivial. Like all the runway numbers or the list of Southwest's cities.
Should previous airlines be under the airline section?
The table of incidents is a good start. Maybe give full sentences in the summaries. Maybe combine "Aircraft (Registration)" as one column.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want this article to be a featured one, not just a good one.
Thanks, Hadrianos1990 (talk) 10:17, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I'll review in more detail later, but the lead needs to be expanded. The lead should have at least one sentence summarizing each section (level 2 header).
Section headers should not have inline citations in them.
Some web references are missing accessdates.
Prose isn't bad, but get a third-party copyedit anyway beforeFAC. Some examples:
"In July 2000, Florentino Pérez was elected club president vowing to erase the club's debt and modernise the club's facilities, however the primary electoral promise that propelled Pérez to victory was the signing of Luís Figo." Wrong verb tense.
"In the early 1990s, La Quinta del Buitre splited up after Martín Vázquez, Emilio Butragueño and Míchel left the club." Wrong verb tense and splitted is spelled wrong anyway.
"The fee of €76 million (over US$100 million, £45.8 million) for Zinedine Zidane's transfer from Juventus to Real Madrid in 2001 is the highest ever paid in History of football." The link should be to the history of football article (which shouldn't be capitalized), and insert a "the" before history.
"In January 2007, Real Madrid paid their debts of €224 million and fell to second spot behind Manchester United. However, they reached the top again in March by getting massive image rights of €762 million. Manchester United's debt was €872 million in 2007, down from €1.25 billion in 2005." Needs a source
Image captions should have periods only if they are complete sentences.
Consecutive inline citations should be in numerical order—"As a result, Real Madrid (with the addition of Fernando Morientes in 1997) finally ended its 32-year wait for the seventh European Cup in 1998 under manager Jupp Heynckes, defeating Juventus 1–0 in the final, thanks to a goal from Predrag Mijatović.[29][7]" Should be [7][29].
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want the strengths and weaknesses noted, to focus efforts for improvement.
Ruhrfisch comments: Here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here. Interesting article, but needs some work to get it to GA standards.
A major problem is that the article needs many more references, for example the whole Authentication and logon section has no refs. There are also lots of paragraphs without refs. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
I saw at least one internal link in the article - convert these to inline citations. Many of the current internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article and nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way - as it is the article may need fewer sections / header too. Please see WP:LEAD
Lots of listy stuff that needs to be converted to prose
Watch for jargon - reduce or explain wherever possible - see WP:JARGON
The article is currently just a description of the features - there is almost no history of the development of the new features and there is no critical reaction to them either - what do the trade magazines say about these? Given the generally poor recation to Vista, I am guessing at least some of these have been criticized negatively.
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This is a new listing that will hopefully provide a good way of jumping off into lots of interesting biographical articles. I've collated almost all of the information that is available online. To fill in the gaps I need to go and visit the University Library to look in the Cambridge University Calendar archives. I hope that once this is done, this list will be a good candidate for a Featured List, but would like some feedback on it generally to help it along the way.
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I've listed this article for peer review because while clearly not FA material, the article is quite thorough in its descriptions of the disease's signs & symptoms, causes, pathophysiology, treatment, etiology etc.. It seems at a good point to ask for review from the Wikipedia community at large as I prepare to nominate it for GA status.
A good effort, with extensive sources. I would suggest applying WP:MEDMOS for the section headers, and generally try to adopt a style that is more likely to be intelligible to the layperson. For instance, not everyone knows what "incidence" means, but they will understand "occurs in X per 100,000 every year". JFW | T@lk05:55, 18 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments (from a complete non-expert)
DoneForm links to a dab page. Do you really need to link it at all?
Done Image caption in the infobox is a fragment so it doesn't need a full stop.
Done "as well as catching and locking " would it better to say "as well as the joint catching and locking..."? and "... restriction in its range .."?
Done "100,000 every year,[4] " - I would make this a full stop.
Done "with dogs - specifically the German Shepherd - being " - use en or em dash here instead of hyphen.
Done No need to relink bone/cartilage in the pathophysiology section.
"of necrotic fragments, intertrabecular osteoid deposition" any chance of linking any of this?
Done "Functional Anatomy" and other headings - no need to overcapitalise unless you're talking about proper nouns.
Done "Dr. Smillie" who's he? What makes what he says relevant?
Done Under the Physical Examination section (which should be Physical examiniation), you can once again either delink the things you've linked once already or just link femoral condyle to the article I suggested above.
Done "Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is useful " - you've already abbreviated this once so just use MRI.
Done What about CT in diagnosis? And MR and CT photos?
What are the chances of a good outcome with conservative treatment? How much do they improve with surgical management? All it says is "prognosis is favorable"
What is the history of the disorder?
Done In the prognosis section you bring up the stages of the condition when this was not discussed earlier.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I would like feedback on how to improve this list before I take it to FLC thanks, NapHit (talk) 18:12, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A long way to go to be featured, I fear.
I think that the two basic problems in the title of the article need to be clearly and specifically addressed at the outset (there is no cup, and there were multiple winners each year until 2005).
I would have clearer separation of years
I would just use the well known a.e.t. rather than a rust-coloured box that requires the reader to go hunting for a key. If the text says "Aggregate 2–2, Montpellier won 3–0 in a penalty shootout " it seems unnecessary to have a box coloured to indicate that the game went to penalties.
Use of flags is overdone: if Karlsruher is in Germany and Bordeaux is in France on line one, they are likely to still be in the same countries on line two.
Not unique to this article, but those trigrammes are not helpful: is someone does not recognise that flag with horizontal red, white and blue bands, the letters SCG are not going to solve it for them.
If qualification for the UEFA cup is considered to be winning the Intertoto (which it is here from 1995-2005), then should there be 11 "winners" in recent years? If not, this discrpancy should be made clearer.
It is in the lead, which states that the format changed from 2005, whereby the team progressing furthest in the UEFA Cup wins the competition outright
In essence, I am not at all sure that the structure of this tournament (which is, in essence, not a tournament at all, but a qualification stage for another tournament) lends itself to a list in this format at all. Sorry I can't be more positive about it.Kevin McE (talk) 22:04, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well it is a tournament albeit a qualification one, but its recognised by UEFA as an official tournament, therefore a list of winners I feel is relevant, certainly if a list of winning managers can achieve featured status. NapHit (talk) 14:33, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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For more out-of-universe writing, "A few days earlier" should be "A few episodes earlier" in the Cast section.
As I have expressed in the Lost WP, Kristin of E! has proven in the last two seasons that most of her information are just her guesses, and bad guesses at that. She never cites her sources (unless she interviews Darlton of course) and her judgement is clouded by vendettas against certain actors/characters. I cannot, in good faith, let her pass as a reliable source.
Got more ref info about June 16, 2008 Issue of The Dominion Post. for Gaunt's return, even if it's just a link to a fan post? Because that info is new to me (or I just have a poor memory).
Ref 22 says Sonya Walger is likely to return, but the wiki article drops the "likely".
Ref 25 is about last season, and we can't extrapolate from the writers' season 4 plan to what will happen in season 5.
Maybe mention that an ARG is going on (has it been stated that it leads up to S5 like the last ARG did?)
That's all I can find, and I am pretty much up-to-date with Lost stuff
Comment This may seem a tad nit-picky but can we really call Richard Alpert "ageless"? I mean, it's Lost, the answer is not always the obvious one. For all we know, at this point, he's a time traveller or something. Maybe put "apparently" before the word ageless. -- [User]JamieJCA[Talk]23:01, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Hoping for a GA with this article, please let me know if there's anything I still need to work on..............
[[Queen's Park Rangers F.C.|Queen's Park Rangers]] should be [[Queens Park Rangers F.C.|Queens Park Rangers]] x2. The redirect in itself is acceptable, but the club name must be rendered correctly in the article, i.e. no apostrophe.
I can't see a source that says that Millwall were interested in his services as manager(?) (The BBC article mentions only Gillingham and Vale)
His playing career (19 years) is given similar coverage to his managerial career (5 years) - just an observation really, I'm not meaning to imply recentism, but I was wondering if any more info could be added to his playing career? (although not just for the sake of it, obviously)
I'll sort out the first three points ASAP. As for the last one, maybe his managerial career needs to be trimmed slightly but to be honest I couldn't really find much else to say about his playing career. He was very much a "journeyman" player who achieved very little of note (he didn't play in any "major" matches, set any records, or really do any especially noteworthy. I don't think the greater emphasis on his managerial career is a case of recentism, there's just much more to say! :-) -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 19:53, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Thinking of FAC; need other pairs of eyes to look for items that would be obvious to an expert but are confusing to general readers, along with any other gotches. Also, this article is relatively brief, as not all that much is known about this important figure; is the article too short to be featured?
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"was the most important intellectual in the early years of Hellenistic civilization, and was the first major writer who was both a poet and a scholar." Not an example of brilliant prose. And it is the introducing sentence. The rest however reads quite well IMO (though not a native English speaker).
"A Greek associated with Alexandria, he flourished in the second half of the 4th century BC". Check MoS about wikilinking. The last trend in FAC is not to link anything (neither full dates or simple years or centuries).
Some sources' full data are in "Bibliography"; some other full data are in "References". Why did you choose not to have all the books together? For instance, why Kayser, Bach etc. aren't they together with Spanoudakis, and the full data are in References? Maybe (and this is just an idea not necessarily correct) you could think about turning "Bibliography" into a prose section explaining how his fragments survived diachronically and are now available to us.
Reading the picture in the infobox I see that most sources say that this is not Philitas' image. Then, why should it be there? Just for the sake of having an image?
"and his mother, perhaps, Euctione". Why perhaps? Which is the ancient source here?
WP:MOS needs " " between any number and unit, symbol or abbreviation that it goes with, such as 92 BC or c. 340. Have a look here. I did some of this stuff. Check the rest.
"4th century BC", "Sixth Century B.C.". Inconsistencies in style. I fixed this one. Check the rest.
If this note at the end of the article is after you work inaccurate, remove it.
The article is short, but you said yourself that we don't know much about his life. I don't know therefore if it can be further expanded. I liked it in general, but I am not sure if it is ready for FAC; you could try first GAC for further feedback.--Yannismarou (talk) 08:22, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the review. To address the points one by one:
This edit trims one of the "was"es from the intro sentence. I don't see an easy way to trim the other one; for what it's worth, the 2nd one doesn't grate on my ear.
Your edit removed the wiklink to 4th century BC; thanks. I was never much of a fan of wikilinking to dates.
Philitas of Cos #Bibliography is about Philitas' works (as published in several editions). They're all books; I'm not sure what is meant by "all the books together". Only Spanoudakis is cited in References because his edition's commentary is in English, and the other editions' are not.
Image:Pseudo-Seneca-Brogi.jpg was there because it is an ancient representation of a type of person that Philitas is supposed to have looked like. It is no more a portrait of Philitas than it is of Hesiod (an article that also uses that image), as the ancient sculptor was just imagining the type (and had no access to an actual portrait of either Hesiod or Philitas). It is a bit of a liberty, yes, but this sort of thing is common in scholarly works that talk about ancient authors, so long as the image is accurately identified. For the same purpose, Andrew Stewart in The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book (2005, ISBN0199267812), page 201, uses a photograph of a bronze dubbed Philospher from the Antikythera wreck (c. 250–200 BC) to illustrate his discussion of the (now-lost) Hecataeus bronze of Philitas. This is a much-better source than the 19th-century Brizio speculation, so I switched to Image:Antikythera philosopher.JPG, an image of the Philosopher. Thanks for bringing this up.
The cited source (Spanoudakis, p. 26) says of Philitas' parents: "His father was called Τήλεφος (Σ Theoc. Tt. 12a?, b, Procl. T. 18a — and Σ A.R. fr. 22?) and if T. 12a is correctly supplemented, his mother Εὐκτιόνη." I made this edit to fold this information in.
I checked for more spaces-before-"BC" problems and made this edit to fix what I found.
Normally the text uses the usual Wikipedia style "4th century BC", but "Sixth Century B.C." is part of the title of a work, so we should leave that alone. I searched for other inconsistencies with the usual Wikipedia style and found and fixed one, and also changed the title back to match that of the original book.
By "If this note at the end of the article is after you work inaccurate" I assume you are referring to the {{1911}}, which says "This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)". That note is still accurate; some of the phrases in Philitas of Cos are still taken from the 1911 encyclopedia.
The first sentence should include the years of his birth and death, as per WP:MOSBIO.
•
You could get by with fewer inline citations in the introduction.
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I think some references to three digit years could be improved by adding "the year" or "BC".
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This sentence is too long:
According to St. George Stock's analysis of the story in the Deipnosophistae (9.401e) of Athenaeus of Naucratis, Philitas worried so much over the liar paradox that he wasted away and died of insomnia, as, according to Athenaeus, his epitaph recorded:
Suggested replacement, which can probably be improved further:
Philitas worried so much over the liar paradox that he wasted away and died of insomnia, according to St. George Stock's analysis of the story in the Deipnosophistae (9.401e) of Athenaeus of Naucratis. According to Athenaeus, his epitaph recorded:
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Again with this one:
His pupil Hermesianax wrote that a statue of him was erected by the people of Cos, depicting him as "frail with all the glosses"; his contemporary Posidippus wrote that a bronze of Philitas in old age was commissioned from the sculptor Hecataeus of Lesbos by Ptolemy II Philadelphus, and that it "included nothing from the physique of heroes.
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A short definition of preceptor would help to establish continuity with the later sentence "later tutors of Ptolemaic royal offspring..."
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"After he returned to Cos he seems to have led a brotherhood of poets including Theocritus and Aratus" needs a reference citation.
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Very briefly explain notation such as "9.401e" on first use.
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"Fictitious funerary epigram merely pokes fun at Philitas' literary exactitude" uses uncommon words unnecessarily. Replace it with something simpler.
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"Fragments quoted in later authors" should be "fragments quoted by later authors".
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Rework sentences at the beginning of paragraphs to say the most familiar things first, for example this sentence:
Philitas wrote Disorderly Words (Ἂτακτοι γλῶσσαι, Ataktoi glôssai), a vocabulary explaining the meanings of rare and obscure poetic words, including words peculiar to certain dialects.
Philitas wrote a vocabulary explaining the meanings of rare and obscure poetic words, including words peculiar to certain dialects, titled Disorderly Words (Ἂτακτοι γλῶσσαι, Ataktoi glôssai).
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"His most famous was Demeter (elegiacs)" it might be helpful to expand this to say again that elegiacs is a poetic style.
As a non-expert in Greek history, I found this article to be unnecessarily difficult to comprehend. There's plenty of room to add content to this short article, and I think you should use it by explaining some less common terms. Also, the article would be more readable if you broke up your longer sentences. Hope this helps. Wronkiew (talk) 22:36, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Also, since you explicitly asked for it, here is a list of terms in the article that I was not entirely familiar with: lexical study, elegiac verse, Dodecanese island, Anatolia, Suda, preceptor, Ptolemaic, grammarian, Antigonus I Monophthalmus, Megarian dialectic, Deipnosophistae, Boeotia, Persephone, hexameters, paegnia, epigram, and Musaeum. These terms could use some explanation. For example, nowhere in the article is it stated that Cos is an island in the Aegean Sea. Wronkiew (talk) 23:27, 5 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for that review, particularly for the list of unfamiliar terms. I made a series of edits that tried to address each of your points. With one exception: I couldn't come up with a good definition of grammarian that didn't make matters worse ("writer about and teacher of grammar"? but that's pretty wordy, and if grammarian is unfamiliar then grammar is also likely to be unfamiliar too), so I left grammarian alone and hope its wikilink to Grammarian will suffice. Eubulides (talk) 06:54, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want this to become a featured list. Before I take it to FLC, I'd like some ideas for refinement. There are two specific concerns of mine that I'd like advice on. First, there are quite a few red links for Giants seasons. Should pages be created for them in advance of a nomination? Second, I've recently read that colors in lists need symbols for accessibility. What exactly needs to be done in that regard?
Yes, I would create articles for the seasons, even if they are, right now, just summaries. Otherwise the list may fall foul of the "few red links" business.
As for colours and symbols, I suggest you read WP:MOS#Colors if you haven't already. For a good example of how your list appears to people with various types of colour blindness, run the page through this website - you soon see that some of the colours become very close to one another. Hence the need to add, say, an asterisk, a dagger etc as well as a colour to ensure that no-one is prejudiced against.
Link $ to the US version, just to be sure.
I'm seeing an odd column issue on the right-hand side of the table...
UPI could use being expanded on its first use.
"The statistics in the table above are current as of February 3, 2008." - I tend to italicise and simply state "Statistics correct as of February 3, 2008"
I would guess that New York Giants seasons is a sub-cat of New York Giants, so the supercat is redundant.
Haven't gotten to the two important ones yet, but I have made the other changes. There were actually multiple issues on the right side, which are now fixed. Also, I assumed you meant that I should remove the general Giants category, which I did. Giants2008 (17-14) 15:50, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't like to contradict other reviewers, but per WP:$, "it is generally unnecessary to link the symbols of well-known currencies." (the $ sign) I doubt that readers will question what type of dollar the article is talking about, this an US-centric article.
"Four years later, the Giants earned another championship, and they made four appearances in the NFL Championship Game from 1939 to 1946, losing each time." "earned"-->won. I think "they" can be removed.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I've expanded it and I want to submit it for GA. Thanks, Nergaal (talk) 22:52, 13 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"Unlike most other groups of dinosaurs, most tyrannosaurids are known from very complete remains." "known from" confuses me.
"This has allowed a wide variety of research into their biology."
"Alioramus is known from the remains of an individual estimated at between 5 and 6 meters (16.5 to 20 ft) long" Same issue as above.
"Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus, and Daspletosaurus had skulls which exceeded 1 meter (3.3 ft) in length,[10] with the largest Tyrannosaurus skull measuring over 1.5 meters (5 ft) long." with + -ing constuction makes for an awkward read.
"Unlike earlier tyrannosauroids and most other theropods, however, the maxillary and mandibular teeth of mature tyrannosaurids are not blade-like but extremely thickened and often circular in cross-section."
"Tyrannosauridae is uncontroversially divided into two subfamilies." Why is "uncontroversially" specified, readers will assume that.
"such as FMNH PR2081 ("Sue") most likely weighed over 5400 kg (6 short tons)" Short tons has already been linked in the lead.
"There is some limited evidence of social behavior among some of the tyrannosaurids."
"It has also been proposed that tyrannosaurids had such protofeathers." "proposed" doesn't seem to be the right word, maybe "theorized"?
"Bony crests are found on the skulls of many theropods, including numerous tyrannosaurids." "numerous" is vague.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I would like to have it at FA status by the end of the year. It still has a ways to go, but any tips or advice would be most welcome.
"as become the most popular and influential character in the series" - needs a reference
Per WP:LEAD, references are not needed in the lead if they are provided later on, and a lot of evidence of this is provided in the reception and influence sections
I just prefer to see disputable statements like this to be linked to a ref
"embodies ...stereotypes" also
What's wrong with that?
I meant it having a ref too
e Tracey Ullman Show short "Good Night" - appears twice in the intro
"nt "D'oh!", is now included in the Oxford English Dictionary." since what edition? needs reference
Reference is provided in the d'oh section. Year is now included
I am not 100% happy with naming of the section "Character"
Any suggestions for what it could be renamed to?
"Character development" should probably be development
I've checked some other FAs, and they all call it "character development"
since article talks about appearances in the show, what about appearances in other places?
I am extremely against "in pop culture" lists. Now if we're talking about something reported in reliable sources like Homer giving a Leno monologue or appearing in the cancer special, yes. But if we're talking about "Homer appeared in the Family Guy episode PTV where he was hit by Stewie" then I say no because most of these appearances are extremely minor and NN.
I added "series" at teh end of the title of the section Role... which might not be 100% correct. It might have been better to use franchise instead. Anyways, try to split the show and other parts of the franchise, and present them separately.
The role in the Simpsons section is only about his role in the show. His other appearances may be given their own section later (I haven't decided yet). Thanks for the review. -- Scorpion042214:09, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, then try having a section with his role other parts (e.g. games?) When I reviewed the article, it was 100% targeted at the series while made the reader feel like Homer might have a role somewhere else. Nergaal (talk) 03:29, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The sentence "The book The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer includes a chapter analyzing Homer's character from the perspective of Aristotelian virtue ethics." should be expanded and moved to the analysis section. Even though I have the philosophy book, I don't feel qualified to write about it. --Maitch (talk) 12:21, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to make sure it covers everything it needs to become a FA. Thanks, Nergaal (talk) 23:21, 13 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I just gave the article a quick read. It is extensively referenced and looks fairly complete, but I'm no germanium expert! I apologize for the vagueness of the following comments because because I was not taking notes of each individual issue during this first reading. That said, the article does need copy editing. I noticed several spelling and grammar mistakes, and sentences that could be clearer and paragraphs that could be made more cohesive. There are one-sentence paragraphs that will almost surely raise complaints during the FA process. And there are the usual "unreliable" web sources. There is one webelements.com citation, one to jrank.org, and a few other .com's that I haven't examined in detail (maybe some are appropriate). Finally, the lead looks a bit disorganized. It is not clear what the topic of each paragraph is; I have the impression that organometallic compounds are mentioned too soon in the lead and for no apparent reason; the lead does not make explicit that ekasilicon is germanium. --Itub (talk) 12:26, 15 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You are right facts covered by the strange references need a second look, but my first search resulted in nothing. Copyediting for sentence improvment should be done, but for sure not from me, a native speeker is 10times faster. Some of the strange sentences are my fabrications, so I invite anybody to play around with them! The lead was shorter yesterday, and I added things, but not perfect enough. and the ekasilicon was also part of this addition.--Stone (talk) 13:59, 15 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The reverences which are green are OK from my side.
WebElements.com.
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
Elementymology & Elements Multidict
Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft
The Manufacturer and Builder
J. Prak. Chemie
J. Prak. Chemie
Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft
Comptes rendus
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
NY Times (1953).
Computer History Museum. might be substituted by Teal, G.K. (1976). "Single crystals of germanium and silicon—Basic to the transistor and integrated circuit". IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices. 23 (7): 621–639.or [5]
University of Cambridge.
Chemical & Engineering News, American Chemical Society.
Physical Reviews
National Academy of Engineering.
U.S. Geological Survey (2008 2008)
Oxford: Oxford University Press
de Gruyter
Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Science.jrank.org.
Kristall und Technik
WebElements.com
Journal of the American Ceramic Society
Journal of Applied Spectroscopy
Chemical Communications
Pure Appl. Chem.
Chemical Reviews
Nuclear Physics A
Alpha Fusion Electrical Energy Valve Patent
Ore Geology Reviews
Investor.com the USGS Comodity report states the same
Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse:
Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse:
Astrophysical J.
Nature
U.S. Geological
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Russian Journal of Non-Ferrous Metals
Minerals Engineering
U.S. Geological Survey.
Stanford Research Institute
Annu. Rev. Astro. Astrophys.
International Journal of Polymeric Materials
III-Vs Review
Kubton.com
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
Progress in Photovoltaics Research and Applications
Progress in Photovoltaics Research and Applications
while the oxidation state +3 occurs only in the Ge26+ cation. The sentence and the reference to germanium III hydride seems dubiuos. The digermane which is Ge2H6 formally is germaniumIII but it is not germaniumIII hydride, C2H6 is also not carbonIII hydrid , but ethane.--Stone (talk) 06:45, 19 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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This article recently passed GAN, and I want to know how it could be further improved.
Image:Hlcomic.png doesn't really meet NFCC requirements at the moment. Add some critical commentary or something like that to the infobox related to that specific scene, if possible. Using that image for identification goes against WP:NFCC#8, I believe.
"a printed version of the comic. However, this proved impractical due to the low resolution of the comic" - repetition of "comic"... maybe "its low resolution" instead?
Maybe talk about the comic's storyline (etc.) in the lead too?
"as a "hobby"" - does that need to be quoted?
"In the same interview he also stated" - either "in the same interview" or "also" is redundant (take your pick)
"a comic similarly based" --> "a similar comic based", perhaps?
"The creator of Concerned also said" - it gets repetitive to have almost every sentence starting with "X said..." if you get my drift.
"The webcomic Concerned..." - just say "Concerned", by now you've made it clear it's a comic.
"Throughout the comic Gordon Frohman..." - who's he?
"this name was suggested to Livingston by Sam Golgert" - who's Sam Golgert?
"the company was complementary about the comic based on their game" - this could be worded better... "the company was pleased to have a comic based on their game" (is that too basic?)...
"Valve also intended collaborating" - intended ON collaborating?
Thanks for the review. I tried to address all the issues you raised. About Hlcomic.png, I edited the infobox caption, and also wrote a more detailed description of its purpose of use on the image's page. Diego_pmcTalk16:34, 21 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because after a recent FA review that resulted in the article not being promoted, I made several changes and fixes as well as had others review the article for structure and errors. I am hoping to have others review the article to see if there is any more that needs to be done before I renominate it.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
I agree with most of the FAC complaints about this article - it is overly wordy and could be better organized. I would look at each FAC comment and try to make sure it had been addressed. I would ask for help with the prose from one of the copyeditors at WP:PRV. When several people think it is much improved, I would ask the FAC commenters to take a second look.
The article is titled Burger King legal issues so why is the Animal welfare section in the article? Is there a lawsuit in there I missed? Should the article be called Burger King legal issues and controversies instead? Same for the Labor and Islam sections. Why are they in this article?
I also fail to see the applicability of some of the information in the Infobox to this article - what does the percent increase in net income in 2007 over 2006 have to do with any of the rest of the article?
Provide context for the reader - for example the v. Hoots, v. Hungry Jacks, and Labor sections do not have the date in the first sentence. See WP:PCR
The article is very choppy and disconnected - what is the common thread besides the involvement of Burger King in all of these incidents? They are not all legal cases, they are not in chronological order, they do not seem to be grouped in some legal sense (but I am not a legal expert). This needs to be better organized and flow better.
I don't understand, I didn't read that from their comments.
The article deals with legal issues, and not all legal issues involve lawsuits. It also covers areas such legal ethics, lawful business practices and legal compliance. Additionally matters of business ethics also fall under the aegis of legal issues. explanation:
The animal welfare section is about animal rights as well as contract law (BK changed their supplier contract format in response to the protests);
The nutrition section shows how the company complies with laws that have sprung up over the years, and how they have adapted their business practices to deal with them;
Labor is about compliance with labor laws and business ethics. The call for a congressional panel in the company's behavior is pretty serious unto itself with possible congressional action against the company being a pretty serious legal matter;
The Islamic section deals with international law, contractual law and the Islamic concept of Shariah. Shariah is the Islamic version of canon law, or the legal framework within which the public and private aspects of life are regulated for those living in a legal system based on Islamic principles of jurisprudence and for Muslims living outside the domain (from the article). For those offended, they truly feel that the perceived blasphemy that occurred was also a crime under the precepts of Shariah. Since Muslims make up a sixth of the global population, this could have huge implications for the company as it expands in the Mideast; in some countries, such as Saudi Arabia, the company could theoretically be tried for heresy because Shariah is the law.
The infobox is a header on all mainline Burger King related articles, that is to say those articles that deal specifically with the corporate operations of the company as a whole. See this discussion here.
Most dates are in the first two sentences, I think that works pretty well. If there is a MoS requirement, I can change that. I did add one to the BK v. HJ section.
The order is pretty much the way I typed it, I can clean that up.
OK from the FAC here is jbmurray's problem example of two sentences from the lead:
"Situations involving a myriad of topics have affected all aspects of the company. Depending upon its ownership and executive staff at the time, its responses to these challenges have ranged from a conciliatory dialog with its critics to a more aggressive opposition with questionable tactics and negative consequences." is now changed by adding two words (italicized)
"Situations involving a myriad of legal topics have affected all aspects of the company's operations. Depending on its ownership and executive staff at the time, its responses to these challenges have ranged from a conciliatory dialog with its critics to a more aggressive opposition with questionable tactics and negative consequences."
How is this better? How is it not still "both mangled and impossibly vague"?
I think most readers will think of lawsuits and being accused of lawbreaking as "legal issues" - the article needs to make it much clearer that contacts are also legal documents (and this still feels like a bit of a stretch). Ditto for the other points you raise above, make it clearer how they are legal issues and not just protests that got results. I still am not sure what some of the details in the infobox add to the article, but this has been settled already apparently. Hope this helps, Ruhrfisch><>°°02:40, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry it took me until now - I misread the note and thought you wanted me to reread the whole article. Anyway, the lead reads better and does a better job of setting the legal context for what follows. I did not reread the rest, but hope that the individual sections also do this consistently now. The other caveat I would raise is to avoid excessively flowery language - myriad (literally 10,000) is used once and seems a bit extreme. I also note that geopolotical conflagration seems a bit extreme in the dispute eventually erupted into a geopolitical conflagration involving Muslim and Jewish groups - more like a war than a squabble over a burger shop. Ruhrfisch><>°°19:39, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Bilby's comments
I can only do this in small bursts, as I'm progressively going through and comparing all of the references against the text. I'll make any fixes I can as I go along. So far it is good, but as a couple of initial comments:
Animal welfare: The first two lines are unreferenced, although some of the later refs probably provide enough to support them. The majority of the references used in the first paragraph are also Peta press releases, which is probably ok, but makes me a tad concerned about NPOV. If there were more neutral refs it might work out better.
Nutrition: A few minor problems, which I fixed. The main one was the line: The company's statement went on to explain that it had always worked "to reduce the risk of illness provoked by an inadequate diet and to promote a balanced ... diet". This wasn't directly referenced, which it should have been, and there was nothing to suggest in the ref that it came from the same statement as the previous claim.
IvoShandor comments
OK, usually I scan the thing first and just write down whatever jumps out at me. Eventually I'll go through, make a few minor edits and make some more detailed notes.
First, I hate 4 paragraph leads, they make my head go boom!. But they aren't in breach of the MOS so you can take my comment here FWIW.
Dear lord, this is a daunting article. If there is any way to further break up the text, do it. I feel like I am looking at the long gray line as I scan down. No offense or anything, there may be no way to break it up but I can't help but think that the text is dense. Anyway, I am only scanning now, I will follow this up as I read more thoroughly. More images might be one way to help alleviate this feeling.
Any other see alsos? Maybe a few of the articles that are referred to at the head of sections could be moved down, perhaps the Burger King (Mattoon, Illinois) one?
A further reading section, with stuff not referenced or used in the ELs would be good. Has anyone written extensively and independently on this topic? Maybe there are some books out there?
Alright buddy, that's it for now. I worked all night, so I'm kinda in chill mode right now, mustn't overwhelm myself. I'll get on it though, don't worry. Hopefully I wasn't too harsh, these peer reviews can be jarring. --IvoShandor (talk) 14:03, 11 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I have no issue with the FAC as any subsequent expansion or changes to the article do not alter it's worthiness for a nomination as a featured article candidate. If anything , only enhances it. Petedavo talk contributions06:39, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I have substantially contributed to and expanded this article over the past couple of months, bringing it from this state, up to the standard it is at now. I hope to nominate it for a good article in the not so distant future, however I thought it best to submit it for peer review to see what other editors' opinions are on its current quality and what can be improved/expanded upon (such as any content missing which would be expected for an article on a company). The prose has not had a rigourous checking that I am aware of, so any suggestions on improvements to it are also welcome.
Ruhrfisch comments: Interesting article on a store chain I never heard of, here are some brief suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article, so nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself (mobile phones, USDAW). My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way but where is Criticisms? Please see WP:LEAD
Spell out abbreviations like USDAW on first use with the abbreviation following in brackets
Avoid needless repetition - does the article really need to have both ... and aims to open 60 new stores throughout 2008 and 2009. in Formation and His plans for expansion could see an additional 30 stores opening throughout 2008, and an equal number in 2009. in the very next section (Management)?
Lots of short paragraphs (one or two sentences) that should be combined with others of expanded, if possible.
Is Poundland singular or plural - seems singular (it is a chain of stores) but inconsistent grammar
Per WP:CITE references come AFTER punctuation, and are usually at the end of a sentence or phrase.
Article needs more references, for example the first paragraph of Sales strategy is unsourced. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Problem sentence In response, a 130,000sq ft warehouse was constructed 15 miles away... needs both English and metirc units - {{convert}} may help, need a space before square feet (spell out initial units), and we have no idea what it is 15 miles from - see WP:PCR
Lots of places where the prose could be polished - try printing this out and reading it aloud.
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I've listed this article for peer review because Malcolmxl5 (talk·contribs) has done some really good work on this article, and I myself have also contributed, although to a lesser extent. We think the article is now getting close to Good Article quality and would welcome comments with that goal in mind, but any advice that would improve the article generally would be excellent. I'd be interested to hear people's thoughts on how we should cover the Croatia game, without overplaying or underplaying its significance, and what quotes (if any) we might use around it. Cheers, Jameboy (talk) 20:28, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Carson did not make any appearances for Leeds in the 2004–05 season,[11] and although Leeds were keen to retain Carson,[12] he rejected offers of a new contract and with his contract due to expire in the summer of 2004, he was sold to Liverpool in January 2005 for a transfer fee of £750,000.[13][14]
Done Shortened and split the sentence into two sentences. Corrected the error: his contract was to expire in 2005 not 2004.
He returned to Liverpool at the end of the season and in July 2006, extended his contract with Liverpool by two years, keeping him at the club until 2011.[22]
Done Now "...extended his contract with Liverpool until 2011."
Carson did not want to sit on the substitute bench at Liverpool for another season while Liverpool wanted him to gain experience and return to compete with Jose Reina for a place in the first-team in the 2007–08 season,[23] and in August 2006, Carson joined Charlton Athletic on loan for the 2006–07 season,[24] after Charlton failed in a bid for Norwich City goalkeeper Robert Green.[25]
This sentence needs to be broken up. One way of fixing it is to remove the first part, because I doubt if there is evidence that Carson wanted to play elsewhere at that point. The fact Liverpool wanted him to gain experience is evidenced by the fact he was loaned out. Jmorrison230582 (talk) 20:51, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Donepartly done - have broken up the sentence but not yet looked at the evidence aspect. Used a direct quotation from Carson to explain his reasoning for the move.
he played in all but three of Villa's 38 league matches, keeping 11 clean sheets, during the 2007–08 season.[30][31]
From memory, I think two of the games he missed were due to Villa not being able to use him against Liverpool due to the contract between the two clubs. This may be worth mentioning. Jmorrison230582 (talk) 20:54, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Done + citations.
A week later, he made his competitive debut in a crucial match against Croatia, which England lost 3–2 and were eliminated from Euro 2008, with Carson being held particularly culpable for the first goal.[46]
Maybe I'm biased, but I think the way that goal was conceded by Carson is worth mentioning. "Shot from 25-30 yards by Niko Kranjčar that was straight at Carson, who could only spill the ball into the net". Or something like that. Jmorrison230582 (talk) 20:57, 25 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"He played nine games, keeping five clean sheets and helping Wednesday to 18 points, and was a key factor in helping Wednesday to escape relegation." I had to read this a couple of times to understand it. I suggest a re-word after points.
done
"Carson did not want to sit on the substitute bench at Liverpool for another season while Liverpool wanted him to gain experience and return to compete with Jose Reina for a place in the first-team in the 2007–08 season,[23] and in August 2006, Carson joined Charlton Athletic on loan for the 2006–07 season,[24] after Charlton failed in a bid for Norwich City goalkeeper Robert Green." A long sentence. I suggest breaking it up.
done
"He made 38 appearances and was in outstanding form" POV; needs a reference.
done (removed "outstanding form" until I can find a supporting quote. The fact that he won the supporters' award is evidence enough that he performed well for now).
Restored 'outstanding' and added a citation to the Evening Standard to support it.
"Charlton Supporters' Club" Is this their name or is it "Charlton Athletic Supporters' Club"?
not yet done Link seems to have gone dead, trying to find replacement if that is the case.
Now done You're right, it is "Charlton Athletic Supporters' Club". Dead link now replaced with live one.
Why did he finally leave Liverpool? Was it his choice or Benitez's?
done Added a quote and citation. Carson wanted to settle down at a club having played for five clubs in four years.
International
"Carson was first called up to the England Under-21 squad in October 2003, a month after his 18th birthday, for the UEFA Under-21 Championship 2004 qualifier against Turkey, despite having played only four games for England at other levels and having not yet made his competitive debut for Leeds United's first team,[4] and made his under-21 debut four months later in a 3–2 win for England against the Netherlands in February 2004." Another long sentence.
done
"with Carson being held particularly culpable for the first goal." I would say why he was culpable.
In the lead, why is the league he plays in called the "English Premier League"? That's not its name, and it's not like he's a foreign player where maybe you need to make clear that he plays in England - it should just say "Premier League"
Done.
Why is Workington AFC referred to as "Workington Reds"? Again, that's not the club's name
"and although Leeds were keen to retain Carson" - I'd just say "and although Leeds were keen to retain him", it's clear who is being referred to
Done This part was reworded in response to Jmorrison230582's comment but I think it also reflects your comment.
"with his contract due to expire in the summer of 2004, he was sold to Liverpool in January 2005" - a bit of timeline confusion there, methinks....
Done Yes, should have been summer of 2005...
"He made four appearances in the 2005–06 season, all in cup competitions" - I'd maybe say "He only made four appearances in the 2005–06 season, all in cup competitions" to stress that he was struggling to gain a place and that's why they loaned him out
Done
"helping the club to escape relegation" - should just be "helping the club escape relegation"
Done
"Carson did not want to sit on the substitute bench" - "substitutes' bench" is a more usual turn of phrase
Done This part has been reworded and the reference to 'substitute bench' lost completely.
"Carson was loaned out again to Aston Villa for a fee of £2 million" - how can a player be loaned out for a transfer fee? I don't understand
Done The BBC says, "Aston Villa have signed Liverpool goalkeeper Scott Carson on a season-long loan in a deal costing £2m." I have removed the reference to a 'fee' and just mention a 'cost'.
"Carson returned to Liverpool at the end of the 2007–08 season and in July 2008 joined West Bromwich Albion on a four year contract for a £3.25 million fee" - maybe change "and joined" to "but joined", as currently there's no natural progression between him returning to Anfield and then leaving
Done.
A general point - is it usual to have quotations in italics?
"made his second appearance for the England B team in a 3–1 win over Albania national football team" - should simply say "made his second appearance for the England B team in a 3–1 win over Albania" (unpiped link)
Done.
The award he won at Charlton is referred to in one place as the "Charlton Athletic Supporters' Club Player of the Year" and in another as the "Charlton Athletic Fan's Player of the Year" - which is correct.........?
Done. Charlton Athletic Supporters' Club player of the year.
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I've been working on this article on and off for most of this year, forever getting distracted and wandering off onto other things. But now I've knuckled down and I think it's nearly of FA quality. Please let me know what I still need to do.........
Do we have to put single quotes around the 'B' in England B, given that they don't appear in that article's title? (ditto same in Norwich section)
Changed
Lead
The second and third paragraphs begin quite similarly ("began his playing/managerial career"), so it may be worth a minor reword, just to make it more interesting to read.
Changed
"He twice led them to promotion". I'm not sure if it is clear enough who them are, but my judgement is affected by the fact that I already know the answer. I guess I probably would assume it was the last team mentioned in the previous sentence if I didn't know. It's probably fine, but may be worth just checking with someone who is not familiar with the subject, and clarifying further if necessary.
Changed
Early life
Newcastle needs disambiguating (or worse, according to Sunderland fans)
Changed - it's already wikilinked two sentences earlier in the quotation, so I just unlinked the second usage
Ballboy actually goes to a dab page, so you'll want to point the link to the more PC Ballkid.
Is it worth mentioning United losing out on the title to Leeds in 1991-92? Given his injury, I'm not sure how big a role he played in the title chase or if he had any significant thoughts (ie quotes) on them losing out.
I'll have a look through the relevant section of his autobiog tonight and see if there are any quotes worth pulling out.....
Bryan Robson says of Bruce: "There's no doubt he was one of the best English players not to be capped by his country." (p118 of "Robbo", Robson's autobiography) I think you have this aspect well-covered but I just thought I'd mention it in case you wanted to throw in another quote or reference. That's about all I could find on Bruce in that book that may be of use.
I think I'll hold it in reserve for now, but cheers for the heads-up!
Blues (as player)
First sentence ("Bruce was among...") contains several facts, consider breaking it up somehow.
Changed
Management
"In his first season in charge the club (Huddersfield) came close to reaching the Division One play-offs," - if my memory is correct, I'm sure they were top at one point (maybe October/November?) but faded and ended up missing the play-offs, so it may be worth mentioning this, assuming that I'm correct and there's a reference for it. Actually it may have been Palace I was thinking of - didn't he take them to the top of the league and then leave? All the seasons blend into one after a while - I'll see what I can find out though.
On April 29 2007 - should be 29 April 2007 (UK format)
Changed
He effectively "swapped jobs" with Trevor Francis (Francis succeeded him at Palace), but I'm not sure how you could mention this, if at all.
Probably worht mentioning, as it drew a lot of comment at the time, but I'll have to have a think about how to word this in such a way that I don't end up implying that any sort of formal "job swap" arrangement had been made......
Early life section. without paying would go better after St James Park
a bob maybe needs linking to something, for the benefit of non-English readers, or English readers under 30, probably
Like many other future professionals from the area needs citing
represented Newcastle at football Newcastle schools, or something else?
Gillingham section. Do reserve team and first team want linking, or is that going too far?
Should PFA team of the year be capitalised (along the lines of Gillingham's Player of the Year)
Norwich City. Does own goal need linking?
Perhaps state explicitly Norwich City's or the club's player of the year, firstly for clarification, and secondly to justify linking it to List of Norwich City F.C. Players of the Year
The quote about Bobby Robson needs single quotes round Robson's words, not double
Manchester United. Is all bar one a bit too colloquial?
Not sure latterday is the right word (and if it is, it should be hyphenated)
The Jack Charlton Ireland selection sentence could do with a restructure. And perhaps split the next sentence into two
Perhaps As previous Double-winning captains Dave Mackay and Alan Hansen were from Scotland and Danny Blanchflower from Northern Ireland, ...
Later playing career section has a couple of dates still linked
Career stats. Had you considered putting club total rows, as here? Though that format probably works better when the player was at each club for several seasons
Also, consider making the number columns all the same width as the Football League/Premier League one
Early managerial career. Arsenal sentence goes on a bit. And it's probably worth mentioning that the game was declared void and replayed.
Birmingham City. This section may contain elements of POV and OR, and you're welcome to ignore it.
Bruce chose to remain at Birmingham because, according to the Indy at the time, "Birmingham let it be known that although there is a "get-out" clause in Bruce's pounds 1.5m-a-year deal, it can be activated only during a three-week period at the end of the season. Birmingham would be entitled to pounds 3m in compensation. The only other way Bruce could leave would be either if he walked out - which would result in legal action - or if Newcastle offered even more in compensation which would be hugely expensive."[6], or, according to Sullivan last year, "We priced Steve out of a move to Newcastle three years ago. In his contract there is a £7m compensation clause. The reality is that I don't know whether anyone would pay that."[7]
2 n's in Glenn Roeder
Perhaps too much is made of the travelling Birmingham fans showed their support by chanting Bruce's name. Some travelling fans always did/do chant the manager's name whatever the circumstances, and I don't remember there being any more than a couple of "Brucie, Brucie" which stopped once he reacted. Though it's typical of the man (to be fair, possibly typical of any man under fire) that he reckoned those few were the "real" fans, as per your reference, "The supporters you saw today are all loyalist. They don't go on internet sites or call radio phone-ins."
Too many sentences starting Despite.... Though you seem to have omitted the one that goes Despite going into the 2005-06 season with what the chairman described as "the best squad of players for 25 years",[8] Bruce was unable to make them play as a team, persisted with a "hoofball" style which kept Birmingham in the relegation zone for months on end, and presided over the club's record FA Cup defeat – a performance so dire that even he had the grace to be embarrassed – and the eventual, inevitable, return to the Championship. Sorry. Perhaps I've got that out of my system now.
Wigan. Need to bring this section up to date, or at least up to the end of last season.
Managerial stats. I'd take the flags out of the table. They contravene WP:MOSICON#Accompany flags with country names (I'm sure it used to be called WP:FLAGS...) in that flags should be accompanied by country-name on first use, and in this case they're purely decorative anyway (in my opinion).
Personal life. Did you consider mentioning the accusations of nepotism which eventually forced Alex's move to Ipswich?[9]
External links. Are you sure about the succession boxes? Particularly the Norwich one, where his predecessor is unknown.
If you add width: 90% or whatever into the style parameters at the start of the table, that'll bring the RH edge in. Do you think it's improved with the totals lines as they are at the moment, or not? not convinced I do. Also, should it be called Playing statistics, as opposed to Managerial statistics further down. cheers, Struway2 (talk) 08:45, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've taken out the totals by club, but left in the full career totals. Also, the problem with the last column falling into the gutter just seems to have been an issue with my browser...... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 08:54, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I am hoping to reach GA status.
The main part of the article is one big wall of text. Could this be broken up in some way? (for example an image, a quote box or by applying subheaders)
Broken up using "Charlton Athletic", "Millwall", "Bury", "Southend United" and "Non-League career" sub headings.
In 1998, Stuart has previously served a six-month ban from football... (the word "served" immediately establishes the tense, so say when it happened (1998) rather than "previously"). As the ban evidently continued into 1999, you may want to say he "received" a ban rather than "served" it, or you could say he served it "during the 1998–99 season".
Changed to "In 1998, Stuart served a six month..."
add a comma immediately after "Stuart started his career at Charlton Athletic"
Done
In the first "career" paragraph you have linked Charlton Athletic three times. Only the first instance should be linked.
Done
"six-months" should not be hyphenated
Done
"Stuart turned out a following seven times..." - not sure what this means. A further seven times? Or just "seven times"?
Changed to "Stuart turned out a further seven times for..."
"he had an unsuccessful trial with Cambridge United," - needs full stop, not comma
Done
"the clubs' plans to sign the defender were halted" - if it is one club then the apostrophe goes before the s, i.e. "club's plans"
Done
"Stuart played 61 appearances in Third Division," - he played 61 games or made 61 appearances
Changed to "made 61 appearances"
"in the 18-months he was with Bury," 18-months should not be hyphenated (although 18-month period would be, I think)
"reacted in grabbing Elliott's shirt" - should be "reacted by grabbing Elliott's shirt", I believe
Done
The referee is the adjudicator, so they do more than "claim", even if they get it wrong sometimes. I think it would be better to say that Winter "adjudged" Stuart to have punched his opponent.
Changed
"claiming he wanted to move nearer his family in London" - again the word "claim" should be avoided here, as it sounds like you don't believe him. You could use "saying" instead.
Changed
"He was released from Southend United..."
Done
"possesing" - spelling
Changed
Southend United and Hornchurch are each linked numerous times in one paragraph. Again, the first instance only should be linked, unless the term being linked is distant from that already linked.
Done
I imagine he was handed the captaincy, rather than the captain, for the remainder of the season. Captain should be linked just the once.
Changed to captaincy and removed overlinking
"grevious" should be "grievous" x2. "Grievous bodily harm" should be linked in the last-but-one paragraph rather then the last one.
Aside from the infobox and a single mention in passing, we are not told what position Stuart plays. Is is a stopper in the Tony Adams mould? A speedy full-back who likes to get forward?
I was a bit puzzled by how to add this in before. Stuart started his career as a left full-back, but was converted to a centre-back when he joined Hornchurch in non-league. I couldn't find any proof of this so thought it was best to leave out. I thought it would have needed to be sourced if added in?
served a six month ban from football for failing a doping test and was subsequently sacked by Charlton. - this contradicts the time order in the body. Here it says that he served his ban and was then sacked, in the body it says that his sacking and the ban happened at about the same time.
Reworded to "In 1998, Stuart was sacked by Charlton and served a six month ban from football for failing a doping test"
Unless it is a particularly high or low number, the amount of yellow cards received is unimportant.
Removed one instance (...picking up one more yellow card before being released). I think the rest show his poor discipline record in the earlier stage of his career.
It would help the flow and the reader's understanding if more description was added in addition to the number of matches played for each club e.g. "During his 18-month spell with Bury, Stuart was a first-team regular, making 61 appearances..." Similarly, events from a play-off semi are described, this would link in better if we were told that Bury finished in the play-off places while he was playing for them.
Done
which resulted in his nose being broken and reacted by grabbing Elliott's shirt. ought to be reworded, as it could be read as though his nose grabbed Elliott's shirt.
Changed to "...being broken and Stuart reacting by grabbing Elliott's shirt."
Any more information on his rare goals? Given that he is a defender, are they usually headers from set-pieces?
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to nom for FA, but have learned that peer review will help out an article before nominating for featured status. Has already gone through GA review, which can be found on the article's talk page.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Since this is an article about a speech, it seems to me that there should be less detail about the speech itself and much more about its reception. An article about a novel usually limits the plot to about 900 words. The plot here is the meat of the article, but the focus should be on more of what happened after, history of how it became an internet phenomenon, etc. What did critics or commentators say about his speech?
I am not sure a 1304 by 2000 pixel image - Image:RandySept18TalkPoster.jpg - is really low resolution for Fair Use, especially at FAC.
The Background should do a better job of explaining who Pausch was and giving his biography in a more organized way - provide context for the reader, see WP:PCR
One of the hardest FA criteria for most articles to reach is professional level English - this is nowhere near that yet and needs a copy edit, preferably after some of the other issues have been addressed.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I would like to know how the current article is, how it reads, if it is too much or too little, if it should be broken down or in any way improved.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead is way too long - should be no more than four paragraphs. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way, but the article may need fewer sections / header too. Please see WP:LEAD
Images should not sandwich text between them per WP:MOS#Images
Per WP:MOSQUOTE do not put quotes in italics or use {{cquote}} or "curly quotes". Use {{blockquote}} instead.
Article needs more references, for example the Site section is uncited (pun intended). My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Avoid short (one or two sentence) sections (like "Courtyard of the Queen Mother") and paragraphs - combine these with others or perhaps expand them.
Read WP:Summary style - could any of this article be split off and a shorter summary be left behind?
As noted in a cleanup tag, this needs a copyedit to clean up the language and grammar. I would try and fix the other issues first.
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I've listed this article for peer review because it's been a GA class article for some time and feels like it ought to be within reach of FA class, but will probably need a little assistance with getting some specific things that need focus.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead seems a bit sparse for an article of this length. The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Article needs more references, for example Contributions to the advancement of science has zero effects. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
Article is very list-y in places - these will need to be to converted to prose in most cases.
At least two sections are only one or two sentences - Publishing and Public Examinations (neither have refs either). Short sections should either be combined with others or perhaps expanded. Ditto for short paragraphs.
This is an extremely well known university - my guess is any errors or omissions will be caught in FAC, so make sure as much as possible is correct / complete as possible.
History seems very sparse for the second oldest English speaking University
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I've listed this article for peer review because this article had failed GAN last time. Suggestions to elevate its status to GA will be very much helpful.
Ruhrfisch comments: Looks much improved since the last time I read it, but agree it is not yet to GA. Briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Biggest problem is the need for a copyedit - while WP:LOCE is dead (alas), you can ask for help at WP:PRV. I would try and address some of the other issues below first though.
The lead does not seem to summarize the article - for example, much of the culture section does not seem to be in the lead. See WP:LEAD Also provide context in several places, so in the lead the date of Tippu Sultan is not given
There are other places to provide context for the reader - I would expalin in some way who Joachim Alva is in the Infobox caption, for example. See WP:PCR
Some places need to have better logical flow / clearer connections made. For example, I am still not clear about the connection between the Pre-migration and Migration eras - I know much of the early records were lost, but what are the most common theories? Were there small numbers of catholics before the migration?
Footnotes need to be in order, so fix things like Out of the total 396,672 people living in Mangalore, the Christian population was 10,877.[13][25][26][15]
Perhaps add dates to Notable Mangalorean Catholics for context?
Biggest problem is the need for a copyedit - while WP:LOCE is dead (alas), you can ask for help at WP:PRV. I would try and address some of the other issues below first though.
Some places need to have better logical flow / clearer connections made. For example, I am still not clear about the connection between the Pre-migration and Migration eras - I know much of the early records were lost, but what are the most common theories? Were there small numbers of catholics before the migration?
Not sure what you are tring to say here. The pre-migration subsection recounts the details before the migration and the post after that. All records of an early existence of Christians in Mangalore were lost at the time of their deportation by Tippu Sultan in 1784. Hence, it is unknown when exactly Christianity was introduced in Mangalore, but it is possible that Syrian Christians, who were converted to Christianity by St Thomas in 52 CE, settled in Mangalore as they did in Kerala, a region south of Mangalore- These sentences clearly state the common theories. And later on, due to weak Portuguese evangelization, there were Catholics before migration.
If my comments are useful, please consider peer reviewing an article, especially one at Wikipedia:Peer review/backlog (which is how I found this article)
First of all, I wish to appreciate the excellent work that has been put forth towards the improvement of the article. The maps on population distribution, migration, etc. are really good. Others might be having different views, but I've jotted down what I feel
The section on history is larger when compared to other sections. I wouldn't say disproportionate for if I did I would be exaggerating things. Anyhow, I feel that the section is comparitively bigger.
Please add more pictures of Mangalorean Catholics. (A Mangalorean Catholic wedding photo, or some prominent member of the community) The only image of a Mangalorean Catholic appears to be in the infobox.
The section on history is larger when compared to other sections. I wouldn't say disproportionate for if I did I would be exaggerating things. Anyhow, I feel that the section is comparitively bigger.
Yes, I'll fix that. History and Culture sections should be huge for ethnic group articles.
Please add more pictures of Mangalorean Catholics. (A Mangalorean Catholic wedding photo, or some prominent member of the community) The only image of a Mangalorean Catholic appears to be in the infobox.
I would really love to If I had pictures. Currently, I don't have any pics. Even the Infobox pic is not free.
Dineshkannambadi comments
The lead, IMO, sould contain only info about their migration from Goa, culture, language, cuisine, customs, demographic distribution etc. The following sentences seem out of place.
The sentence in the lead, Portuguese shipping arrived in Mangalore in 1526, and Catholic missionary activities began around 1534... suddently takes the reader away from the topic of Mangalorean Catholics. Seems the sentence belongs elsewhere, in the history section perhaps?
The sentence about the 15 year imprisonment of Catholics by Tippu also should not be in the lead, but rather only in the history section, despite its historical importance to the Mangalore Catholics.
The sentence about their entering the record books for singing 40 hours, again, seems out of place and should be under society/music (or equivalent) subsection.
Alan Machado Prabhu has written a book Sarasvati's Children: A History of the Mangalorean Christians. He has done a tremendous research on the history of Mangalorean Catholics there. Hence, his research is considered very much reliable. Anyway, I'll try to add more and more context to the text. Thanks, Kensplanet (talk) 15:43, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This sentence comes off as contradictory. In 1534, Mangalore was placed under the ecclesiastic jurisdiction of the Bishop of Goa. Missionaries soon arrived and gained converts. The number of local converts in Mangalore slowly increased.[6] During the mid 15th century, the Portuguese were unsuccessful in gaining converts in Mangalore because of resistance from the Vijayanagara ruler..'. You may want to say the number of converts increased, although slowly, because of resistance from Vijayanagara rulers...
There are some sentnces that are very lengthy. Please break up for better readability.
Try not to use too many "Thus", "Hence".
Thanks for the excellent suggestion. I'll run the prose through a good copyedit or contact an copyeditor. The article is still not ready for a GA. Kensplanet (talk) 15:46, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The first paragraph of "post migration era" section is totally uncited. Please provide book citations from reliable sources in this section. As the section mentions religious persecution, it will surely come under the scanner in later reviews. If the info is already available in the books by Natan, Bowring etc, just add more citations to the fist para.
The template in the lead says the population of Mangalore Catholics is some 350,000 thousand, but "Mangalore" is linked to Tulu Nadu and Mangalore itself has a population of less than 400,000. All this is very confusing to a non-Karnataka reader.
Throughout the article, the Mangalore term refers to Tulu Nadu. Some may be confused that Mangalore here refers to Mangalore City. But that is not so. It has already been clarified in the Ethnic identity section that the Mangalore which we are speaking of are the Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts, and not Mangalore city alone. One suggestion is we can put Tulu Nadu instead of Mangalore there in the Infobox, but then Tulu Nadu has no official status. So its better to put Mangalore since it goes with the name Mangalorean Catholics. One more suggestion maybe let's put Dakshina Kannada and Udupi there, but then it would be difficult to find the no of Catholics for each district. So, a compromise has to be made inspite of the confusion. Kensplanet (talk) 14:11, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thankyou for your excellent comments and observations.
The sentence in the lead, Portuguese shipping arrived in Mangalore in 1526, and Catholic missionary activities began around 1534... suddently takes the reader away from the topic of Mangalorean Catholics. Seems the sentence belongs elsewhere, in the history section perhaps?
Will remove it soon.
The sentence about the 15 year imprisonment of Catholics by Tippu also should not be in the lead, but rather only in the history section, despite its historical importance to the Mangalore Catholics.
Well, I don't find any reason why this sentence should not appear in the lead. Out of the 60,000 captured Christians, only 10,000 could make it out. A very significant point in their history. Anyway, why do you say so?
The topic suddenty jumps from their migration to persecuton by Tippu. If you could create a seperate small para which discusses their most cherished moment in history to date, then you could continue to add their most sorrowful memory also. I have read books too, which describe Tippu's cruelty towards Christians in coastal Karnataka and his entirely different attitude towards non-muslims in the Mysore region, perhaps a well played out political balance.Dineshkannambadi (talk) 14:59, 15 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sadly, the community didn't have any cherised memory. Throughout history, they had to live in constant fear for their lives since they were Christians. Later on Tippu destroyed atleast 85% of the entire community. Anyway, I'll try to work on it. Thanks, Kensplanet (talk) 15:53, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The sentence about their entering the record books for singing 40 hours, again, seems out of place and should be under society/music (or equivalent) subsection.
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I got this article to GA a while back, and would like to improve it further. Any comments at all are welcomed, but the most important thing is that the article needs a free-use image of Dale. If you have one, or can obtain one somehow, it would be incredibly useful.
Comment, I've just added a fair use rationale image, but I still think the article could use some more illustrations. That aside the article seems fine, maybe you should make it a FAc. --Music26/1112:25, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I suppose one fair-use image is okay, thanks. As for FAC, not yet, I want to improve it, but I'm not a fan of FAs of living people. Gran212:56, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Finetooth comments: By and large, this reads well. I have two suggestions for improvement.
A once-over by a copyeditor would be a good idea. The article contains many small errors or awkward phrasings. Examples include the use of "ident" and "killed off", which are probably slang, and phrases like "upon which Spamalot is 'lovingly ripped off' from". "Learnt" should be "learned". A copyeditor would probably catch redundancies such as "Dale went over to the station...", in which "over" has no function. A fresh eye would catch things like "...he regrets not spend enough time with them."
The "Personal life" section might be a place for expansion. I wondered about Dale's hobbies, sports interests, travels, and work with charities or political groups or other organizations. Maybe he still likes rugby or rides a motorcycle or excels at golf. It would make the article more interesting if you could find details like this that can be sourced.
If you found this brief review helpful, please consider reviewing another article, especially one from the peer-review backlog. That is where I found this one. Finetooth (talk) 03:37, 11 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I'd like to try and get it to FL status. The format is a straight crib from equivalent articles for other clubs which are already at FL, but please let me know if there's anything I still need to tweak.......
The Hessy image looks fine in my browser, the bottom of it being about halway down the block of italic text, so I'm really not sure what needs to be done to fix it for weird other browsers - any thoughts? Everything else I will fix shortly..... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 19:56, 20 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments
The current trend appears to be to separate footnotes from references (as here, for instance)
Hillyard image. I might make the caption into one sentence: "Ron Hillyard, Gillingham's appearance record holder, played ..."
Honours. I'd include the Southern League and Kent League titles, and any cups that were first-team competitions. If they're important enough to be on the main club article, they certainly ought to be included here
Hessenthaler image caption "only player to play for Gillingham aged 40" needs citing
Appearances. Is there are particular reason for linking the years
Goals. You need to include both Gillingham and New Brompton refs for most/fewest goals scored at any level; e.g. FCHD Gillingham page verifies that they scored 111 goals in 1946, but not that New Brompton never scored more. Similarly for most/fewest points at any level.
Consider putting the column-heading notes as footnotes below the table (as here)
Previous stats'n'records lists have included substitute apps in brackets in the Most appearances table, and appearances in brackets in the Top goalscorer table. Any reason why you chose not to?
Sub apps are not noted separately because the book which I used as a source for "pre-Soccerbase" players does not break them out separately in its totals. As this probably only covers three players, I will get a pen and paper out and go through all the individual line-ups and note the sub apps and put them in......
Caps table. Notes column shouldn't be sortable
Transfer fee tables. Delink dates
Matches. Firsts. The article for "friendly" is called Exhibition game, not Exhibition match
Record FA Cup defeat. For completeness and consistency, add the exact date. The FA Cup archive on thefa.com will have it, if your books don't.
Attendances. Maybe lose the brackets, for consistency of presentation
All now done apart from putting the apps in brackets in the goalscorers table and finding a few players' apps as sub, those will have to wait till this evening...... -- ChrisTheDude (talk) 08:09, 22 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because it has to be reviewed in order to be included in Wikipedia:Featured topics/Seasons of Degrassi: The Next Generation. The article has just been created and contains as much information as is available at the moment. If this isn't Peer Reviewed, then this article cannot be included in the Featured Topic, and the Topic will become delisted.
"Claire Edwards, Darcy Edwards's younger sister" - do you need the Edwards after Darcy?
Done
If you are redlinking all those actors of new characters why not Sam Earle?
It was linked at one point, but then I tagged the article for speedy deletion as it was a copy vio of The N's website. Twinkle removed all backlinks. I've added it back in.
"Evan Williams as Kelly,[13], and" - extra comma
done
External links - I expect they have been copied from season 7 and need updating
Could you not link the specific drop down season for TV.com e.g. this (I think this could be done for all seasons :p)
Hmmmm.. TV.com has changed all its site around. Anyway, Done.
"Season 7 episode synopses" relevant in a season 8 article?
Done
Is there a citation for the season being 22 episodes.
Only if we use the degrassi.tv forum, which I'm trying to avoid.
Add networks to infobox?
It's already there? The N isn't included because that's not the original network -- as of now, all episodes will premiere on CTV this season. If some do air first on The N, then it will be included in the infobox.
The N website [10] confirms that the premiere is a one hour one on Friday 10th 8 p.m. ET, maybe you use this as a ref in the lead.
done
CTV website confirms premiere on th 5th at 7:30 p.m. - add time and ref [11]
done
Add a WP:RS for the first episode being named "Uptown Girl Part I" This was the best I could find. I think you need to reference it whilst it is not widely known, as there is plenty of speculation of names for all 22 episodes which we want to avoid being added.
Wrt those redlinks, if they are not notable should they be redlinks? - this is an actual question as I'm not sure.
I'm sure they'll be created at some point. And I see redlinks and a sort of encouragement for people to actually go and create articles.
Whilst it is bordering on WP:OR the fact that the first episode on The N is an hour long (10/11/08) and the one on CTV (5/11/08) seems to be half an hour would suggest that Part II will air in America first, unless CTV plans to change the night it shows on, which seems unlikely. And if so The N into infobox.
I made it clear that at this point it is aring as an hour long special in the US only
To that end, I would change the lead "the season eight episodes will premiere in Canada" as you are assuming they will. Maybe just comment that unlike S6 & S7 the season is premiering in Canada not the US.
done
Add episode summary for Uptown Girl? [12] - I found this press release with info on the content of the first two parts and further details about the new cast you might like. I realise The Futon Critic is not a WP:RS but I think it has been established that press releases hosted on their site are ok. Am I right? Even if you don't use it I thought it may be of interest to you.
I found it published at Netscape, so I'll use that version. Thanks!
If it is acceptable to use that source "The N will run an all-day marathon, leading up the anticipated one-hour premiere at 8:00 p.m. (ET)." would be of interest.
They tend to do that quite often when they premiere new seasons. I don't think it's as encyclopedic as it is relevant to fans.
That source also gives enough info. to make a reasonable crew section e.g. Epitome Pictures etc.
Will do :)
You could add something about Season 8 production being in Toronto. [13] or [14]
"the season opener will once again premiere in Canada" - once again seems a bit excessive maybe just again.
" university freshman Kelly Ashoona, played by Evan Williams as Kelly" - extra Kelly
"Claire Edwards (Darcy's younger sister), played by Aislinn Paul, will also become a new student at the school. Paul has already made a number of guest appearances in seasons six and seven as Claire." - just reads funny with the brackets and the commas. maybe link up those sentences perhaps with "having already made" and possible remove brackets so it's "Darcy Edwards' younger sister Claire, played by Aislinn Paul" - whatever I just thing it needs a change of some sort.
add time zone after the times.
still not sure that it's clear that the hour long special is in the U.S. as the two parts bit applies to Canada & U.S. maybe tag on "in the U.S." to aired as hour long special.
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
I recently nominated it for Good Article status and was advised by the GA reviewer (when it failed to meet the GA criteria) that it might benefit from a Peer Review. I have made all the improvements and amendments requested as part of the GA review, so I would now like to know what areas need further work before it can be nominated as a Good Article.
Finetooth comments: Royal Tunbridge Wells sounds interesting. I have a few suggestions for improvement:
The lead should be a summary or abstract of the whole article. Ideally, it would at least mention the central ideas of each section in the article. The existing lead does not mention education, sports, public services, transport, or some of the other sections. The lead could easily be expanded and should be. Please see WP:LEAD.
Some of the paragraphs in the lead and elsewhere are "orphans" consisting of only one or two sentences. It would be good to expand these short paragraphs or to combine them with other paragraphs.
Generally, quotations shorter than four lines would not be set off in block quotes. Thus, "I am used to Tunbridge Wells, where we are all hopelessly behind the times", would appear in quotation marks in the text and not be set off. Because this single sentence is an orphan paragraph, it would also need to be merged with one of the other paragraphs in the "Cultural references" section.
The three tables in the "Demography" section are visually unappealing. They might look better if you stacked them along the right. If that doesn't work, you might change one or two of the simple ones to plain text to create a better layout.
I see many small errors such as missing no-break codes, reference numbers incorrectly placed before punctuation rather than after, and metric-imperial conversion errors that a copyeditor would probably notice and fix.
The "Landmarks" section is too short to be a section. I'd suggest changing the "Community facilities" section head to "Parks and landmarks" and merging the sections.
It's often helpful to use successful articles as models. See Chew Stoke, Wormshill, and Sheerness, featured articles that deal with subject matter similar to this one.
If you found these comments helpful, please consider reviewing another article, especially one from the backlog. That is where I found this one. Finetooth (talk) 00:25, 2 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because I would like to get it to GA status. It has sources but i think it needs more. Could you guys give ideas to improve the article
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Article needs more references, for example the High school, Personal, and Pop culture reference sections are all uncited. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article, so nothing important should be in the lead only. Since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself but her brother is only in the lead. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Watch out for possible peacock language like "uniquly versatile player" - if this is a direct quote, put it in quotes, cite it and use it. See WP:PEACOCK
Article has several short (one or two sentence) paragraphs and sections that should wither be combined with others or perhaps expanded.
Personal reads like a trivia section - to be avoided. Make it prose (not a list) and see WP:TRIVIA
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I would like feedback on issues likely to be raised upon nominating this article at FAC so that I can divvy up getting eaten alive between here and there. Copyediting, suggestions on organization and content, and any other comments would be highly valued. Thank you! Emw2012 (talk) 01:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Review of the Lead
I am starting with this section which is the most important. Problems in the Lead often occur again in the body so please cross-check. The article has many good points which I will not dwell on; this is a critical review.
The first sentence should mention protein structure solving. This what the project is all about, and this sentence will appear in a Google, or other search.
Done.
Look out for redundancy like computationally here:
Rosetta@home aims to computationally predict protein structures, protein-protein docking and design new proteins with the help of over 86,000 volunteer computers processing over 68 teraFLOPS on average as of September 7, 2008.
Done.
...and note that computers do not have free will and cannot volunteer.
In this sentence:
the project is oriented towards basic research in improving the accuracy and robustness of those proteomics methods - there is a problem with the grammar, it should be research on or research into, and I thin those should be simply the.
Done
A lot of redundancy here:
Rosetta@home also does applied research to address diseases like malaria and Alzheimer's disease. The to address diseases like simply means on.
I was trying to think of ways to mention that Rosetta@home does applied on malaria, Alzheimer's disease and other diseases, but didn't want to use the word 'diseases' twice so closely together. "Pathologies" seems better than "diseases like", but not by much.
Later with have volunteer computers again.
Changed to "volunteers' computers".
This phrase is woolly:
to perform calculations on individual workunits, which are sent to a central project server where they are validated and assimilated into project databases upon completion - Presumably it is the results that are sent. This should be said straight away: The results are sent ...
Fixed.
Never use upon when on will do.
Done.
Check to see if disease related should be hyphenated.
I hyphenated it early on, but changed my mind because the main source used in the 'Disease related research' section (http://boinc.bakerlab.org/rosetta/rah_medical_relevance.php) features the phrase, unhyphenated, in its title. The hyphenation does make it less ambiguous though, so I fixed it.
Here, structural bioinformatics has not been aforementioned, well not directly. I would avoid using terms aforementioned or see below, (not that I have seen one yet), readers and reviewers do not like these.
Done.
Here is some repetition:
large and diverse collection of volunteer computers - this could be simply volunteers' computers.
The phrase "large and diverse" isn't fluff. Testing software on many different software and hardware is important in alpha and beta products (which RALPH@home and Rosetta@home respectively are, in part). The phrase indicates the robustness of the testing. Unless it's a really stylistically jarring, I'd prefer to at least get a second opinion before making your suggested change. Changed "volunteer" to "volunteers'"
This section: Remote and local control of the BOINC client use port 31416 and port 1043, which may need to be specifically unblocked if they are behind a firewall. - Seems to have mixture of singular and plural, and "may" should be "might".
In that case I'm referring to 'remote' and 'local' as separate things, which I believe makes it plural. Could you point out the mixture? Made "may" "might".
Here we have tautology with regard to structure: Depicted immediately to the right of this is the structure of the most recent accepted structure.
This -> that
Whenever you write in other words, seriously consider deleting the sentence that precedes it and then deleting "In other words".
Done
I think this hours of the day means "times".
To avoid readings thinking that one of the project's preferences is limiting how many instances of Rosetta@home can run (e.g., only three times, or perhaps three program instances), I've amended that phrase to "times of the day".
Presumably, underlying application means "software"?
Done.
Facilitate = allow?
Done.
I don't like debuted
Changed to "released".
Here, The software is freely licensed to the academic community; it is available to pharmaceutical companies through a fee. I suggest you remove the semi-colon and write and.
Done
Protein significance
This is a poor heading; how about Protein structure, docking and design?
The heading is actually 'Project significance', not 'Protein significance'. While the section is fairly oriented towards the significance of protein structure and docking prediction and protein design and how Rosetta features into that, I would not be too opposed if you still think it should be retitled. Let me know though.
Here, With the proliferation of genome sequencing projects, scientists can infer the amino acid sequence, or primary structure, of many proteins that carry out various functions within the cell. In order to better understand a protein's function and aid in rational drug design, scientists need to know the protein's 3-dimensional, tertiary structure. - I would dump various and definitely dump in order to; it's just to.
Done
I notice you using Emdashs and Endashes, please check with WP:MOS that you have got them correct.
Here, in which researchers from around the world attempt to provide a protein's structure from the protein's amino acid sequence - I don't think provide is the best word, perhaps, derive or predict or prove?
Agreed, fixed.
I would avoid CASP5 with the number, just put CASP and the year.
In both journals and the Rosetta@home site, specific CASP experiments are usually specified by number instead of year. If it's enough of a problem I can change it, but I can imagine readers looking at "in the 2002 CASP competition" and counting back from CASP 8 by pairs of years to figure out which CASP that referred to.
Generally, I would not recommend using Latin, particularly ab intio so much, and where there is as well as, this should just be and.
The phrase ab initio or de novo is central to what Rosetta@home does. The alternative description, using a phrase like "prediction made without sequence or structural homology", is awkward and probably more bewildering. I also can't think of a suitable alternative for the only other Latin phrase I used ("de facto standard-bearers"), but there may be one. I changed all instances of "as well as" to "and"
I would delete hard-gotten, (they probably got lesser mortals to do all the hard work in anycase).
I changed it to "particularly difficult-to-obtain", because it indicates that one of RosettaDock's biggest appeals is that it models particularly difficult-to-crystallize protein-protein interfaces, which are uncooperative to begin with.
Here we have big problems with snaking sentences which must be chopped up:
Development of RosettaDock diverged into two branches for subsequent CAPRI rounds as Jeffrey Gray, who laid the groundwork for RosettaDock while at the University of Washington, continued working on the method in his new position at John Hopkins University, and members of the Baker laboratory further developed RosettaDock in Gray's absence.The two versions differed slightly in side-chain modeling, decoy selection and other areas,[30][50] but both the Baker and Gray methods performed well in the second CAPRI assessment, placing fifth and seventh respectively out of 30 predictor groups.
The method used a fast, crude docking model phase using only the protein backbone, followed by a slow full-atom refinement phase in which the orientation of the two interacting proteins relative to each other, as well as side-chain interactions at the protein-protein interface, were simultaneously optimized to find the lowest energy conformation. . The vastly increased computational power afforded by the Rosetta@home network, in combination with revised "fold-tree" representations for backbone flexibility and loop modeling, made RosettaDock sixth out of 63 prediction groups in the third CAPRI assessment.
Thank you so much! Getting input from an experienced editor is something this article had very much been in need of, before you and Mattisse came along. I'll go with your advice and get another source of input before nominating it for FA. Emw2012 (talk) 22:39, 11 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
I want to see what other contributors think of the article. It has recently achieved GA status and I would like more input to improve the page if possible. I would also like to know if the article is FA ready.
Comment - this article is quite a difficult read. Wordy, convoluted phrases like Featuring only one original band member in the form of Gillespie (could just be "As Gillespie was the only remaining original band member...") seem to be the problem. Also, the article fails to mention what happens to Taylor after he left. Didn't he join Maylene and the Sons of Disaster? (actually, I see it says so further down, but I still feel it is worthy of inclusion in the body) I think I remember reading that there is some acrimony between him and the band. The Musical Style and Influences section tells you very little about what the band actually sounds like. Some music samples might be good here also. AutomaticWriting21:13, 9 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, i'll try to rewrite alot of the article soon. Also I've never heard of them being called Homophobic, i'll google it though. – Jerryteps05:01, 11 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Agree it needs language cleanup. Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The captions say "respectively" which is unclear - how about left and right?
Avoid "currently" such as They are currently signed to Solid State Records and ..., use the year instead (perhaps something like As of 2008, they are the top-selling artist for their label, ...) In a year would "currently" still be tru?
I found the red X's in the members table confusing - perhaps omit them? What is the rationale for the order of the members of the band? Does not seem to be chronlogical or alphabetical.
FA requires the use of reliable sources, but Myspace is not a RS and I am not sure about a lot of the others - this would be a problem aqt FAC.
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I've listed this article for peer review because… I think this article might have a chance at becoming a Featured Article, but I would like to know what needs to be done first.
Ruhrfisch comments: As requested, here are some suggestions for improvement (and I agree with TRM's points above). If you want more comments, please ask here.
I think if this is going to go to FAC it needs a copyedit to polish the language a bit. Some examples:
Aaron Edward Eckhart (born March 12, 1968) is an American actor of film and stage [actor]. He made his film debut in Neil LaBute’s black comedy film In the Company of Men ... (second film is not needed, moving actor to the end of the first sentence seems smoother)
During his childhood, Eckhart had a Mormon upbringing.[3][4] Why not just Eckhart was raised as a Mormon.[3][4] perhaps combine this sentence with the one on his mission work. Also avoid overlinking - both Mormon and The Church of Jesus Christ of LDS are linked and are the same link.
... the comedy Meet Bill, in which he plays Bill a sad executive[,] working for at his father-in-law's bank.[42][43] For the title role, Eckhart gained 30lbs. [30 pounds (14 kg)] for the character.[8] Provide metric units too - I did so with the {{convert}} template here. As for the phrase "for the character", I would either say "to play the character" or "for the role".
I would be consistent about providing dates of films. I like them as they provide context to the reader - see WP:PCR. I also note that in the lead Possession is a 2002 film, and the sentence after says Eckhart was then cast in Sean Penn's The Pledge ... which is a 2001 film, so "then" is not the correct word choice
Where did he graduate from high school? When? When did he do his mission work? Is he still a practicing Mormon? I realize that some of these may not be in your sources, but comprehensiveness is a FA criterion and these questions would likely arise in an FAC.
The lead is all about his films - since there are sections on his Early life and Personal life, could they be included in the lead in some way (a sentence or phrase)? I would also mention he has appeared on television.
This seems a bit short for an FA. WHile there is no length requirement there, comprehensiveness is a requirement (as noted) and the article size could be an indication something needs to be added or expanded. I would look at some FAs on actors as models for ideas, see Wikipedia:Featured_articles#Media. One possible model is Jake Gyllenhall
It looks better, but I still think there are some rough places that could be polished by a copyedit before FAC (as professional English is a FA criterion). Either print it out and read it out loud or ask for someone to copyedit it (perhaps in the first section at WP:PRV). I had not seen the Eric Bana FA, I am out-modeled! Ruhrfisch><>°°02:17, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Have asked some people with copy-editing help and will see from there where the article goes. Thank you to both the Rambling Man and Ruhrfisch for leaving comments regarding the article, they have been appreciated. :) -- ThinkBlue (HitBLUE)19:34, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because… I want to know what needs to be done, so the article can become an FA.
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I would like to try and get this article to FA status; I don't think it should be too far off. Most of all I would appreciate if someone could check the language - I know I can be sloppy and inaccurate sometimes. I'd also like comments on the clarity of the article, and if there are places where the meaning doesn't come through as well as it should.
Thanks for the semi-automated stuff, I've implemented the useful bits. I'd still like a human being to have a look at the article though. Lampman (talk) 19:16, 3 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
JMiall comments
'On the death of his elder brother, Richard became second in line – after his father Edward, the Black Prince – to succeed King Edward III' - this is a really clausy sentence. How about 'Richard became second in line to the throne when his older brother Edward of Angoulême died and heir apparent when their father Edward, the Black Prince died in 1376. When King Edward died the following year, Richard succeeded to the throne at the age of ten.'
Personally I'd like the 1st paragraph to
'was back in charge' -> 'had regained control'
'During Richard's first years as king, government was in the hands of a series of councils' - because this was how the previous king had left it, because he was only young, or because that's what John of Gaunt wanted?
'caused discontent' - with whom?
The 1st paragraph of the Early Life section starts with his birth and then jumps all over the place in time before and after his birth.
'By 1381 there was a deep-felt resentment against the governing classes in the lower levels of English society.' - can we have a reference for this
'from which John of Gaunt was excluded.[1] John of Gaunt, together' - 2 John of Gaunts very close together
'The rebellion started in Kent and Essex in late May, and on 12 June, bands of rebellious peasants' - is it not obvious that they are rebellious?
'Savoy Palace had been burnt down' 'Robert Hales, had been killed' - when? on that day?
'Their demands' - whose?
'It was agreed upon' - who agreed?
'it proved impossible to land, and the barge had to return' - why? and was the king on the barge when it returned
'though it has been suggested that he was among the proponents of negotiations.' - by whom? at the time or recently?
'At any rate' - is this necessary?
'Though the poll tax' - taxes? or was it one in particular?
'but the rebel leader was not placated.' - why?
Note b - who has speculated? Is this a widely held view or the view of the author of one book? This applies elsewhere too.
'starts to emerge clearly as a historical figure' - what does this mean? he was a historical figure. was nothing much written about him before?
'The union' 'the alliance' - are these refering to the marriage or the political union?
'gave any results' - ?
'The marriage was also childless by the time that Anne died in 1394.' - but after she died the marriage had lots of children? Why not just say that Anne did not have any children before she died?
'upstart merchant family' - which is?
'the king's absolute favourite' - favourite what? or if this is a common term then explain what this meant.
'De Vere's family, while ancient, was relatively modest in the peerage of England' - so they were all really old and didn't show off much then?
should 'duke of Ireland' be capitalized?
'It was indeed suggested' - is the indeed needed?
'the situation in France' - which situation? did something happen in the 100 years war?
'led an expedition to the north' - to do what?
'the leadership of the dissent' - was it an organized campaign, with the campaign getting new leaders, or were lots of people just unhappy and those 2 were the most prominent?
That's enough specific points from the 1st sections. More generally I think that the article reads too much like an essay, try to remove the conversational or speculative bits. Also the early life section has almost no details about his early life - we have where he was born and the age he was when his relations died. Is nothing else known? I also get the feeling that it is written from a 'history whilst Richard II was King' perspective rather than being an article about Richard II but I'm having difficulty finding concrete examples. Hopefully this is enough to start off with. JMiall₰21:12, 8 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for a thorough review, I've tried to implement the changes. If you would like to make comments on the remainder of the text, please do. What exactly do you mean by "Personally I'd like the 1st paragraph to", this seems like an incomplete sentence. Also, what exactly is the issue with the 'upstart merchant family'?
Upstart - what I meant by this is that calling something an upstart is potentially POV and it is not clear from this why they were regarded as such. Were they rich merchants who had recently gained political power through their wealth or just merchants who had recently gained a lot of wealth. Presumably it was the established nobility who thought they were upstarts or was this a widely held view at the time?
The de la Pole family's rise from merchants to the highest levels of the nobility is unique in medieval England, so this is more than a matter of perception. Perhaps a better word than 'upstart' could be found though.
I think what I was going to say in the incomplete sentence is that the 1st paragraph of the article is quite weak. I'd prefer to sum up his life in 1 paragraph 1st and then expand a little in the next 2. Part of the job of the intro is to grab the attention and I don't think a paragraph stating when he became xth in line to the throne to start with quite does it. JMiall₰21:29, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hm, I'm not quite sure how to do this. It seems what you're suggesting would mean summing up the article twice in the lead section. In any case, I'm gonna close this peer review now and take my chances with FAC. Many thanks! Lampman (talk) 15:51, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I'm afraid very little is known about the first ten years of Richard's life. Saul spends something like 17 pages on this in a book of over 500 pages, and even this bit mostly deals with his parents. It is probably true that the article reads like a "history of England under Richard II", or at least a "political history of England under Richard II", but I believe this is a natural consequence of the difficulty in distinguishing between a medieval king as a person and the political actions of his government, or even the nation as a political entity. Lampman (talk) 17:58, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because it fails the criteria for B2, coverage and accuracy, and it's been stumping me. It's the only thing keeping it from B-class, I think and I would like it to get there.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
Article needs cleaned up for language / grammar. Just in the lead there is The series follows the adventures of Allen Walker, an Exorcists who uses the power of a divine weapon called "Innocence”, and his comrades in the Black Order as they fight against the Akuma, demons created from human souls, of [by] an ancient sorcerer known as the Earl of Millennium[, who] and his plan[s] to destroy all of humanity. You can ask for a copyedit at WP:PRV
I assume the chapters are individual issues of the book? Could this be made clearer? Also unclear if there are multiple Innocences are just many pieces of one Innocence.
Watch needless repetition - just in the first volume "headquarters of the Black Order" is repeated twice. Could it be something like Allen Walker travels to Great Britain to the headquarters of the Black Order, an organization of Exorcists created by the Vatican. There he is introduced to the other Exorcists by Komui Lee and destroys multiple Akuma, which are created by the Earl of Millennium from the souls of the deceased when their loved ones curse God for their loss.
"Chapters not yet in tankōbon format" - this section needs some explanatory text
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Hi, i've listed this article for peer review becuase I think it has the potential to become a featured list, and I'm willing to work on any errors and fix up anything that needs fixing to bring it up to featured status.
Thanks, Superflewis (talk) 03:29, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comments - this can make it to FL but only with some considerable work. Here are my suggestions.
References should be placed immediately following punctuation where possible, per WP:CITE.
Just checking, is "recognizes " Australian English or should it be "recognises"?
'Recognize' is the standard spelling - this is deduced tby the fact that it has over 100 Million hits on google, compared to 'recognises' with 20 million.
Can you explain how you personally feel able to release Image:Jesaulenko1.jpg under CC?
I found it in flickr which is general CC 2.0 providing you quote the author. Maybe in this case just to be safe we should relist it as {non-free historic image}?
Explain AFL before using the acronym (i.e. put (AFL) after the first use).
You need to identify still active players and goal of the year winners with something in addition to colours per WP:MOS#COLORS - e.g. an asterisk or a dagger.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I've been working on the article for some time now with other editors and was wondering if anything else would be required before I bring it up for an FAC. Any comments, good or bad would be greatly appreciated.
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I had expanded this article (from 3,380 to 65,303 bytes)[15] would like to get feedback on this article's suitability for Featured Article's status before its nomination. I believe it still needs a scrutiny of prose, use of engineering terms, and other little bits and pieces.
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I got this article to GA a while back, and I was thinking of maybe promoting up to FA quality. Any comments are welcome, please, even if you think the article is really bad, just say so.
Finetooth comments: I see that you are having a problem finding free-use images, and I don't know what to suggest. However, I have some other thoughts about improving the article.
The biggest problem here involves unsourced claims and the lack of care about fairness to a living person. For that reason alone, I would not call this a good article. Examples include the claim that Sheen shot a girlfriend and the claims about Sheen's relationships with Ginger Lynn and Heather Hunter. Unsourced claims about living people are especially unwise. You can't assume anything. Even if Sheen says that he did A, it does not follow that he therefore did B. I recommend being much more cautious about the gossipy claims even if sourced. For example, if Sheen denied Itzler's allegations, it is unfair to use the verb "revealed" for what Itzler did. "Alleged" would be more accurate. The article violates a core Wikipedia principle. It is not entirely verifiable. Please see WP:V.
A once-over by a good copyeditor would help catch things such as the missing "the" in "... Bud Fox in 1987 film... " in the second sentence of the lead and the grammar problems in the first sentence of the second paragraph of the lead. The first sentence of the "Early life" section is a run-on that might be better re-cast as two sentences. I see other run-ons. A copyeditor would probably catch and fix these.
The paragraphs that begin the "Personal life" section would be better if expanded or combined. Such short paragraphs are generally deprecated.
Recent changes to the Manual of Style suggest unlinking the dates. See MOS:UNLINKDATES.
I see some overlinking involving two or more links next to each other in the text, so that it looks like one link. An example is "... in the Vietnam WardramaPlatoon (1986)." To fix this particular one, I'd suggest unlinking "drama", which is well-understood by most readers.
The "Awards" section is too short to be a separate section.
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I've listed this article for peer review because…
I think this is a good article, approaching feature quality, that probably needs some tightening up. Specifically, I would like to know if this article maintains a NPOV throughout, or if it is overly biased in favour of RATM. Also, any advice about prose issues would be very helpful.
sometimes abbreviated RATM or Rage Rage is such a common word as to make notation of this abbreviation meaningless. I would use RATM rather than Rage when using an abbreviation in the article, it's too fan-ish (but fine in the quote later, obv.)
The band's continual members are Not sure what you mean here, but i don't like it. Perhaps "core members"? Or just "members"? If you're making the point explicitly that the lineup has been unchanged since formation, i feel you'll have to do so in a separate clause. "The band's lineup, unchanged since formation, consists of" or "The band's lineup in every incarnation has consisted of" or similar.
drew inspiration from from early metal instrumentation Again, this meaning is unclear on a few levels. I presume you mean something like "were influenced by heavy metal". Do you also mean something specific, for instance brand of guitar or some such? In any case, the slangy, hip abbreviation to "metal" will probably have to go. "Heavy metal" is square, but so are encyclopedias, after all.
The group's music is distinguished primarily by de la Rocha's rhyming styles, powerful stage energy and Morello's unorthodox guitar techniques Is that de la Rocha's energy, or the group's? If the former, then "de la Rocha's rhyming styles and powerful stage energy, and Morello's ..." If the latter, then perhaps "is distinguished primarily by its powerful stage energy, by de la Rocha's rhyming styles, and by Morello's unorthodox guitar techniques".
Zack de la Rocha started a low-key solo career A bit vague.
Early years (1991–1992)
de la Rocha was free-style rapping Link to Freestyle rap?
Inside Out: I might have mentioned this as de la Rocha's previous band along with info on Lock Up, i.e. before meeting of morello & de la rocha, then explaining connection to RATM name after. But no biggie.
The blueprint for the group's major-label debut album, demo tape Rage Against the Machine, was laid on a twelve-song self-released cassette, the cover image of which was the stock-market with a single match taped to the inlay card. Problems here. Needs rewording, probably into three sentences. Grammatically you're saying the demo was laid on a twelve-song cassette, which doesn't work, sounds like it was physically put somewhere, for one thing. You mean they "laid down" 12 songs to cassette, and this was their demo tape. Use "recorded" to avoid the "laid" jargon. "the stock market" Which? Try "a stock market floor" if that is what is meant, perhaps with a wikilink. "the cover image of which was ... with a single match taped to the inlay card" Strictly speaking the match isn't part of the cover image, is it? Perhaps avoid linking these grammatically. How about "The blueprint for the group's major-label debut album was a self-titled, self-released demo tape made in 1991. The demo Rage Against the Machine featured twelve songs, and had an image of a stock market floor for its cover. A single match was taped to each inlay card." Or something like that, yanno. It's pretty cool. (Actually looked up the image, and it depicts newspaper reports of what i would call stock market tables, stock market quotes or stock market results, not a stock market at all.)
Mainstream success (1992–2000)
Text is squeezed between image and song file, image is on left below subsection header, both these things are discouraged by our MoS somewhere.
attempted to hang inverted American flags from their amplifiers (a sign of distress or great danger)."[10], a protest against having Republican presidential candidate Steve Forbes as guest host Clean up the period and quote mark, probably lose the comma too and say "as a protest"
selling 450,000 copies the first week and then going double-platinum Bit vague and slangy to me, perhaps because i am not american. I would have said "in its first week, and certified double platinum by the year's end"[16] <-- warning: long-ass URL
Break-up and subsequent projects (2000–2005)
on September 12 and 13, 2000 Looks funny to me, maybe repeat September, or use 12–13, though somebody else will probably tell you that implies they played for two days straight.
The band vowed to have a "one-album-per-year" schedule, until the departure of Chris Cornell on February 15, 2007.[19] Implies they knew Cornell would leave on this date when making the vow, reword.
He first participated in Billy Bragg's Tell Us the Truth tour[20] with no plans to record,[21] but later recorded a song for Songs and Artists that Inspired Fahrenheit 9/11, "No One Left". Maybe it's just me but this led me to think the Moore album was connected to Bragg.
but the album will probably never be released Why's that? Don't leave me hangin', bro.
Reunion (2007–present)
and were confirmed on January 22.[30] The band was confirmed to be headlining the final day of Coachella 2007 Realize these are prolly two separate confirmations, but still a bit repetitive.
in Chicago as one of the headlines (Radiohead, Kanye West and Nine Inch Nails being the other three) for the 2008 Lollapalooza Music Festival "headliners" i should think. and maybe move the parenthetical info to end of sentence.
Political views and activism
Actually earlier i expected a line or two on this each time it related to a mentioned release (literature displayed in debut liner, leonard peltier, eurocentric curriculum, bulls anti-cop, "people of the sun" or whatever, "sleep now" vid etc.) but i guess that's summary style. It means you don't know quite what's so political about them musically. Also i really hate the distracting big blue quotes here, i'm a plain ol' blockquote kinda guy, but hey.
The Reading Festival crowd on the August 22, 2008 overwhelmingly agreed. Hrmm. maybe they applauded or whatever but this is a bit smug. Is it from the NME source? Also is an extra "the".
2000 Democratic National Convention
This seems rather a large section, were you there or something? ;)
2008 Republican National Convention
Better, but still too detailed. Descends to the level of boring protest stories, especially when yer not talking about the band. Say this many fans caused a ruckus, this many arrests. This isn't indymedia.
Other activism
Good, but i found the last paragraph a bit large to digest
After a moment's thought, I wanna re-enforce the idea that you need more on their work, both in terms of music and of lyrics, for this to be top notch. It's most of your lead paragraph, but that isn't reflected in the article sufficiently, in my view. I'm sure there are good sources on this, and prolly even academic ones, which would make a nice change for an ostensible "pop culture" article. Your pal, 86.44.27.188 (talk) 19:26, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because we'd like to receive feedback on how to improve this article. It is short, which is the reason cited for failing its recent Good article nomination. If there are any suggestions on improving the article, then please post them. Thanks! GaryKing (talk)20:04, 29 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Italics not required as this isn't the official name for the demo. It's a name that the community has agreed on for it, basically. The rest are done. GaryKing (talk)14:42, 30 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that italics should not be used for its name, but should the "D" in "Slipknot Demo" be in lower case, I suggest changing the title to "Slipknot demo".
I don't think its comprehensive; try adding Release information; its publicity and response. Perhaps they decided to undertake a small tour?
It wasn't "released" persay.... it was demo which was handed out to record labels and produces in hope of becoming signed.... which it did. REZTERTALKø14:24, 13 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The lead needs also needs expanding; see Transfusion (EP) for a prime example.
If it has not charted, then include "The album received no chart success and no music videos were recorded for it." or similiar.
Include atleast a sentence or paragraph on the inspiration of the album and state "Slipknot demo is the third (or whatever it is) release by nu-metal band Slipknot."
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I've listed this article for peer review because I have never written a law-related Wiki article before, and need to know if what I have done so far is in accordance with current standards. Also, I am concerned that the article's current tone is decidedly anti-plaintiff. This is particularly relevant since the judge in this case ruled in the plaintiff's favour. The tone is mainly due to what would appear to be a systemic bias in the news coverage of this case. In my research for this article, the only source which provided useful information from the plaintiff's perspective was The Leaky Cauldron, a fan-run news site that previous peer reviews have flagged as unreliable.
Well (says this user, about to put up a recent SCOTUS case for PR himself), I would get rid of the intellectual-property box. That's for general topics in IP law, not specific cases. There are boxes for appellate-level opinions of the federal and various state courts, but none yet for trial-level courts since their decisions are not precedent. In fact, it may not need an infobox really; the case's notability (at least currently) comes from who one of the plaintiffs was. Daniel Case (talk) 20:09, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Another issue right off the bat: both the intro and the body should tell us where and what level of court this was filed in. As it is, we find out as we read that it was filed in federal District Court in Manhattan: i.e. United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. That's important, since after all it is a copyright-infringment suit, where federal courts have original jurisdiction, and those are often heard there due to so many publishers being located in Manhattan. But the article treats that as incidental information. It's not.
Another thing: It's an article about a lawsuit filed in an American court by an American publisher and a British author against an American defendant. Therefore it ought to use US spelling and usage, not UK, unless it chances to quote anything Rowling has written. Daniel Case (talk) 20:16, 12 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because this is an important topic, closely related to the start of The Troubles in Northern Ireland. I think it is good enough for GA but I'd like to have some feedback.
The lead should be a stand-alone summary of the rest of the article and for an article of this length should be 3 - 4 paras per WP:LEAD. BTW, all dates should be unlinked as they are deprecated. ww2censor (talk) 19:11, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
To clarify, (1) are the current two paragraphs, which summarise the article, long enough to split into three or four paragraphs per WP:LEAD? (2) MOS says "dates are not linked unless there is a particular reason to do so"; all linked dates refer to events that are dealt with in the corresponding date and year articles - is that not a reason to link them? Scolaire (talk) 19:58, 15 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps the most recent Signpost will explain it better Scolaire. Further down the MOS page deprecation is mentioned. Many articles are having their dates unlinked by a bot though I don't know the criteria for being included in the processing, so one way or another dates will be unlinked. I was just trying to update you, to avoid you unnecessary work. Cheers ww2censor (talk) 22:43, 15 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for that. I'd been hoping somebody could point me to the most recent discussion. I gather that what is deprecated is the linking of dates purely for the purpose of autoformatting. I would say that any links in Free Derry are still justified, and I'd be inclined to undo any delinking by a bot. Scolaire (talk) 06:42, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Those decisions on dates are up to editors of the article, it's not for me. Regarding the lead, It seems somewhat too detailed to me but could likely be divided into 3 paras at least, perhaps even four, but I would be inclined to shorten it a little in a precis style. I enjoyed the read as I had forgotten most of the details after so long. Good luck ww2censor (talk) 13:23, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because it just underwent a pretty large expansion, and I want to make sure it flows well and covers enough material. If you check out this article's history, it is a popular target for content blanking, POV-pushing ([18], [19]), linkspam, and bad attitudes. I greatly expanded this, cited everything, and tried to balance the tone of the article between the very real scandals and controversies versus the long history and strong influence of the organization. Essentially, I tried to make this a legitimate piece. I am most concerned with flow, tone, and Reliable Sourcing. Thanks, Dr. Ivo Shandor (talk) 05:51, 20 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: As requested, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article and should be expanded to more than just one paragraph. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way - please see WP:LEAD. Done
Some sections still need refs - for example Each Republican state federation and local chapter maintains a degree of autonomy from the national committee. Locally elected officers are responsible for the majority of on-campus activities, which may include organizing conservative speakers and debates with the local chapter of College Democrats of America. needs a ref. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref. Done
Per WP:CITE references come AFTER punctuation (with no spaces), and are usually at the end of a sentence or phrase. See WP:CITE and WP:V Done
Direct quotes need refs, such as During election years, the CRNC focuses on developing a "mass based youth effort" directed toward ... Done
Any chance for a free image? Doing...
Explain abbreviations before first use, such CRNC in The CRNC organizes election-year field representative ... Done
Typo?? ... which was finally sun off in 1970 to prevent infighting among the two groups.[3] Done
Big gaps in history - what happened between 1924 and 1970? - Done
This is about the national organization, should there be some description of what local chapters are like / do locally? Done
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I've listed this article for peer review because, although all of the obvious issues with it have been fixed during the ongoing featured article nomination, I think a review of the article by someone more expert in quantum chromodynamics would help locating less obvious problems, if there are any.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I am looking for comments before I send this to FA.
It serves as a short connector between SR-126 in downtown Clearfield, Interstate 15 (I-15) and Hill Air Force Base. - This sentence is confusing. Assuming I understand it correctly, I suggest rewording it to, "It branches off from SR-126 in downtown Clearfield, Utah and extends east to Interstate 15 (I-15), terminating at Hill Air Force Base."
SR-103 begins at an intersection of Main Street (SR-126) and 650 North, and begins a gentle northerly turn, crossing over the Davis–Weber Canal and meets up with the eastern interchange with I-15. - and... and... and... Avoid run-on sentences. A full stop should come after "Canal" and then the second clause forms a new sentence.
After passing underneath the interstate, - How is it passing underneath the interstate? Under an overpass maybe? Also, this is a run-on sentence that reads very awkwardly. It needs to be restructured and (probably) broken into two sentences.
Directly northeast of SR-103, Arsenal Road passes near but does not connect to the highway. - If so, why is it not on the map? Is it just a map of Routes and Highways? And if that is the case, why is SR-107 not labeled? Or SR-108? Or SR-37? etc... Also, don't you mean 6th street instead of Arsenal Road?
the eastern terminus, restricting access to authorized personnel visiting or working at Hill Air Force Base. → the eastern terminus, and only grants access to authorized Hill Air Force Base personnel.
After the control gate the road connects - You just said the access gate served as the terminus. Which is right? Does it extend beyond the gate or does it not?
which has a break in the route just north of the gate. - I cannot figure out what this means. Is it saying that SR-103's route is broken up by the gate?
On average, in 2007 22,525 cars traveled - Did that many cars cross in that year? Or was it an average amount of cars per day? week? month? Average amount per year as of 2007?
between Hill Air Force base and I-15 - Still confused on this. As far as I can tell, there is maybe 100 yards or less between the overpass of I-15 and the air force base. Did you mean between the air force base and SR-126? Why not just say, "For the year 2005, a daily average of 21,275 cars traveled along SR-103, a number that remained consistent for 2006 (22,215) and 2007 (22,525).[4] Three percent of this traffic was composed of trucks.[5]"
The measurement point is 1/2 way between I-15 and H AFB. There is no counter on the otherside of the highway. Changed wording, explained AADT. --Admrboltz (talk) 01:05, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
SR-103 is one of only four Utah state highways that connect to Hill Air Force Base, the others being SR-97[6], SR-168[7] and SR-232[8], and has the second lowest average daily traffic, only higher than SR-168[4]. - I would suggest tacking this on to the end of the first paragraph.
US-91, before the formation of I-15, was the major thoroughfare between California and the Canadian border in Montana, and connected the town of Clearfield, and residents along the new interstate highway to Hill Air Force Base. - Run-on sentence.
except for the name of the road on which it is routed. - Not sure what "on which it is routed" means. Also, this is the second use of "route" in this sentence.
The base as of 2002 was the fifth largest employer in the state of Utah, and second largest employer which is neither the state government or a state-funded higher education institution.[9] - Has nothing to do with the history of the road. If you're providing context for why the road is so important, state as much. Otherwise, it just looks like a random fact.
Suggestions? I'm coming up with something like "SR-103 serves as a connection to the second largest non-state government or state funded higher education institution" but I am not sure if that flows well. --Admrboltz (talk) 01:17, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
How about simply changing the previous sentence to, "SR-103 serves the important function of connecting the town of Clearfield, and residents along the new interstate highway to Hill Air Force Base."? - Yohhanstalk02:27, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
1c factually accurate
US-91, before the formation of I-15, was the major thoroughfare between California and the Canadian border in Montana, - Needs a citation.
0.225 Arsenal Road Eastern terminus - You stated in Route description that it never connects to Arsenal Road... how is it then its terminus? I thought it terminated upon reaching the base?
Link uncommon terms in the article. For example, SR-126 should be linked in the body. It is already linked in the lead, yes, but a good rule of thumb is to treat the lead and the body as two separate articles. So even if an item is linked once in the lead, it should still be linked in the body.
The entire route is located in Davis County. - Probably should go in Route description
Moved, the placement of this is suggested in WP:ELG as its optional to list the county if only one county is crossed.
2c consistent citations
Make sure all your references immediately come after punctuation. For example, "SR-97[6]," should be "SR-97,[6]" and "SR-168[4]." becomes "SR-168.[4]".
What does the yellow signify on the map? A key would be helpful.
Also would be helpful if you marked the location of Clearfield. I see you did in an older version of the file, why remove it?
Very helpful, but not mandatory, would be a photo of the highway.
(all in one) - The map is incorrect, I have asked the creator to fix it, as well as label the city and the surrounding routes. It will only show state and interstate routes, not local roads. A picture has been requested on the Talk page, but as I don't live near there, and its such a small route, I am not sure if anyone will snap a picture of it. I have already searched flickr for appropriate images, but did not find any. --Admrboltz (talk) 01:19, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ok. I look forward to the new map! The current one is lacking in my humble opinion. And again, no worries about the photo. I know you've been asked about it three times now (if not more). I just figured I'd remind you that it would be good to have a picture. ;) - Yohhanstalk02:27, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Wow! You work fast! And do a great job, too. The article looks top-notch now. I'd be happy to throw my support into the ring when you take this to FAC. - Yohhanstalk02:27, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because this is the parent article for the featured topic I am trying to create. Hopefully this peer review will iron out any kinks this list has, Thanks in advance for your comments NapHit (talk) 18:41, 7 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Foremost, I had to spend a few second understanding what do the CWC/UIC/SL mean. I suggest linking all the title entries in the table and perhaps even delete the key, but spell out the names using a smaller format.
I don't understand why you had problems understanding the acronyms when the key explains what they mean, surely you would read this before you looked at the table
Write defunct by the CWC title.
No need it says in the lead it is defunct
I would prefer seeing the years of the titles right beneath the number.
This would make the table pointless, the idea is to list the number of titles won, not when they were won, if you want to know the years the were won, go on the respective winners list
Juventus and Milan need to be specified that are Italian.
Done
In the intro I would list all the teams that have 10 trophies.
Done
Same for nations.
Done
I have problems equating UIC titles with the other ones. Perhaps add another entry with only the major titles? (CL+UC+SC?)
It is a UEFA competition there is no reason why it should not be included
Perhaps spell out how many teams won 4 of the trophies, 3 of them, 2 of them, and any of them.
Not sure what you mean
Might be relevant to say which are the countries with the most number of teams that won any trophies.
That's mentioned in the lead
Perhaps add a field in the second table with this number.
Not sure what you mean
"This table lists the total number of titles won by managers of each nationality." This is extreeeeemly confusing. Is this list supposed to show club winners or managers of clubs that won?
Whoops, fixed
Might be neat to say how many of the ~55 UEFA nations have won any major title.
Don't think it's necessary
You should merge the two types of refs and clearly link the general ones to the relevant table entries.
They don't need merging the specific refs are used to reference claims not victories
I believe at least some of the refs have dates clearly listed.
Included these
The title (1) seems wrong; (2) seems awkward/hard to read. Try instead "List of club winners of UEFA competitions" or "List of UEFA competitions winners"
I think it's fine as it is, changing the title to either of these would imply the inclusion of international competitions, this way it is made clear that it is only club competitions included
Because it focuses on one specific subject, and others more detail, plus that list focuses on records, and therefore the table in that list should be removed and a link placed to this list. NapHit (talk) 16:02, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No that list has inaccurate entries, concerning the UEFA Intertoto Cup, only victories since 1995 are included as this is when the competition came under UEFA sanction, the records list contains victories from before 1995. It also includes the Intercontinental Cup which is not a UEFA competition NapHit (talk) 17:57, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, but it still adds too little and I believe that all the information can be easily integrated in the competition records one. Anyways, I will let the community decide weather it is worth having a separate list for this. Nergaal (talk) 18:48, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed Zinfandel for peer review because I'd like to elevate it to Good Article status, it has already been nominated, but nobody has reviewed it yet, so I thought I'd take the opportunity to get a quick peer review first. In particular, I am interested in the automated script looking it over for cleanup issues that I may have missed.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead seems to me to be a bit sparse. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way but the "United States East Coast" (no apostrophe by the way) does not seem to be in the lead for example. Please see WP:LEAD
I added a couple sentences about its introduction to Puglia and the U.S., and mentioned the uncertain origin of the name.
Article needs more references, for example there are several citation needed tags in the article.
All "citation needed" and other questionable tags have been addressed.
Refs are inconsistent - for example books are not consistently cited. Internet refs need URL, title, author if known, publisher and date accessed. {{cite web}} and other cite templates may be helpful. See WP:CITE and WP:V
All cleaned up.
Per WP:MOS#Images, images should be set to thumb width to allow reader preferences to take over. For portrait format images, "upright" can be used to make the image narrower.
Done.
My biggest concern with the article is its logical / organizational structure. For example in History, United States East Coast starts with this sentence Parts of Croatia had been ruled by the Habsburg Monarchy since 1527, although Dalmatia was not absorbed until the fall of the Venetian Empire in 1797. - doesn't this belong in the preceding Europe section?
It certainly does. I haven't figured out a good way to rearrange the history yet.
Thank you for your comments. A GA reviewer also had similar comments about the history section, and that will be rewritten. As for the lead section, I'll see what I can work in from the major sections. ~Amatulić (talk) 00:40, 9 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've been working on this article for the past few days, and I'd eventually like to get it to FA status. Since I have no experience in that field, I'd like some feedback on this article and how to make it better.
First impressions: Good job so far, and I'm not sure why it isn't still a WP:GA nom; one thing that springs out is the number of redlinks, and although that is not fatal to a GA assessment, the acid test is whether they are ever likely to be articles in their own right. I'm not so familiar with those programmes, but my suspicion is that they would be difficult to sustain notability on their own and might be better unlinked. One reference to Speight's CV would cover his involvement with them. I would think that GA should be tried first, and if time permits I will give some more detailed analysis with that in mind. --Rodhullandemu23:33, 24 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I got some advice from someone who told me to take it straight to PR if I wanted to get it featured. I don't think it would be wise to run a GA at the same time as a Peer Review.
I've removed most of the links. The red ones left I feel are notable enough to be created.
Good job Hdytto! I remember I was involved in the debate over this article when Collins and he died, arguably being the reason Collins is still an article (after two AfDs). I'll see what I can do with the reviewing (though I'm not much of one).
Yes. No - is that a serious question?? In any case, bear in mind that a lot of those are subscription/registration based sites. I'll have a look through the ones I can. I just noticed I've missed off a rather important section :/ -- how do you turn this on20:00, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well I've added some stuff about legacy, and made it clearer why he committed suicide. However, there really isn't much else in those news sources that isn't already in the article. -- how do you turn this on20:27, 26 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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I've listed this article for peer review because per WP:FT requirements, this has to be peer reviewed per bla bla bla. Read it here at criterion 3.c. The actual creator of the FTgave me permission to start this PR. I'm not particularily familiar with the subject, but I'll ask Brook if I have any questions.
It should be mentioned in the lead that Jacksonville was the former site of the game.
"The ACC Championship Game traditionally matches up the winner of the Coastal and Atlantic Divisions of the Atlantic Coast Conference."
"First played in 2005, the game came about as a result of the league's 2004 expansion, which added former Big East members Miami, Virginia Tech, and (in 2005) Boston College." "came about"-->was created.
"A hard-fought game between the two teams resulted in a 30-16 Virginia Tech victory." It's obvious the game was between the two teams.
"Even before Virginia Tech was declared the 2007 ACC football champion, cities other than Jacksonville (site of the 2007 ACC Championship Game) presented their plans to be the site of the 2008 ACC Championship Game."
"Prior to the beginning of the 2008 college football season, the annual poll of members of the media who cover ACC football resulted in the Clemson Tigers being picked to win the Atlantic Division and Virginia Tech being picked to win the Coastal Division, with both predicted to participate in that season's ACC football championship game." Needs a rewrite: "Prior to the beginning of the 2008 college football season, the annual poll of members of the media who cover ACC football picked Clemson to win the Atlantic Division and Virginia Tech to win the Coastal Division. Both teams were predicted to play in that season's ACC football championship game."
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I've listed this article for peer review because I have just spent a fair bit of time editing the article and think that it is starting to go somewhere, and would like some feedback on how it is looking, and what more could be done, and what needs to be changed.
Ruhrfisch comments: Very briefly, here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here.
The lead needs to be expanded and should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article. Nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way. Please see WP:LEAD
Per WP:MOSQUOTE, do not put quotations in italics.
Watch out for jargon - explain or remove it. Just a few examples - White's kicking accuracy was of particular note for a ruckman ... ruckman??? or He was selected as an emergency for Victoria in 1999 ... an emergency?? See WP:JARGON
Provide context for the reader - for example put dates in the first sentence or two of new sections - when did the Victoria section take place. for example?
Identify who holds these opinions, for example He was known as a consistent exponent of the specky (a spectacular mark), preferring to take chest marks high over packs. known by who?
Hi Ruhrfisch, thanks for the comments. I think I have now fixed all of these problems. On the 'jargon' one, is it acceptable to use, for example with "ruckman", a wikilink to the "ruckman" page at its first use on the page, then just use it throughout the page there after?
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I've listed this article for peer review because it's recently failed another FAC for prose issues and not being easy enough to understand for people who have never seen the series. Could people focus of these concerns in their comments please and comment as if this was at FAC?
Ruhrfisch comments Here are a copuple of rough patches in the prose
Who is the subject of After inadvertently insulting her, Liz takes an initial dislike to Jack. - it seems Jack is the subject of the first phrase, Liz of the second
Unclear in several ways In comparison to Liz, the narcissistic star of The Girlie Show, Jenna Maroney (Jane Krakowski) takes to Jack upon their first meeting. She begins to worry when she hears that Tracy may become the new star of the show. First I think "In contrast to" is meant instead of "In comparison to"; the placement of "the narcissistic star of The Girlie Show" makes it unclear if it is refering to Liz or Jenna; "She" in the second sentence is also unclear - assume Jenna, could be Liz
Typo While Liz tried to convince Tracy not to join The Girlie Show, he discuseses conspiracy theories.
Only other comment is that this seems very short for an FA - that may be OK, but sometimes it is a sign that it lacks comprehensiveness - not sure about this in TV articles in general though, so nothing missing comes to mind.
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I've listed this article for peer review because the article seems like FA quality and and it is time that I get some other opinions. Numerous notes which seem credible, the page deeply describes the hazards and its history, and the Applications paragraph seems well written.
Thanks, Wii Wiki (talk) 21:46, 6 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ha, I worked on this article a few months ago and did not continue submitting it because of the precautions section. It is overly lengthy and somewhat repetitious. Otherwise, the compounds section needs beefing up (I've left references on Rn compunds on the talkpage). Feel free to use those refs and then to copyedit the precautions section and it should look good for FAC. Nergaal (talk) 03:33, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ruhrfisch comments: Here are some suggestions for improvement. If you want more comments, please ask here. I think this needs some work before it is ready fopr FAC.
Any chance for more images? Perhaps photos of a radon test kit or a radon mitigation ventilation system?
Per WP:LEAD I think the lead should probably be three paragraphs (only two now). The lead should be an accessible and inviting overview of the whole article and nothing important should be in the lead only - since it is a summary, it should all be repeated in the body of the article itself - but The ratio of Radon molecules to Air molecules is 1:1021. is only in the lead. My rule of thumb is to include every header in the lead in some way.
Watch numbers - spell out sixth in Radon is the second most frequent cause of lung cancer, after cigarette smoking, and radon-induced lung cancer is thought to be the 6th leading cause of cancer death overall. Generally spell out numbers under ten. Also make sure WP:NBSP is followed
Can more details be given on how it was actually discovered? Currently it only says Discovered in 1898 by Friedrich Ernst Dorn, radon was the third radioactive element to be discovered, after radium and polonium.[3][4][5] then goes to 1900, then back to 1899 - could the order be more chronological?
I would make clearer early on that the three radioactive gases are actually all isotopes of radon
Watch needless repetition ... as a result there are very few reported compounds of radon, all either fluorides or oxides. Radon can be oxidized by a few powerful oxidizing agents such as F2, thus forming radon fluoride.[33][34] Radon oxides are among the few other reported compounds of radon.[35]
A few places need a ref - paragraph that starts Radon, along with the noble gases krypton and xenon, is also produced during the operation of nuclear power plants. has none, and the stats and recommendation here The EPA estimates that nationally, 8% to 12% of all houses are above their maximum "safe levels" (four picocuries per liter – the equivalent to roughly 200 chest x-rays). The United States Surgeon General and the EPA both recommend that all homes be tested for radon. plus other places. My rule of thumb is that every quote, every statistic, every extraordinary claim and every paragraph needs a ref.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I wish to get this list to a WP:FL, and am keen not to use FLC as a substitute for peer reviews. Thanks in advance for any comments.
"United States" is so widely known that it doesn't need wikilinking Done
"...blah blah blah. However from..." needs fixing. Now I'm not in Britain, I can see this a lot in writing by British people. It should be "...blah blah blah; however, from..." Done, didn't know that.
"wealty community of Orange County, California," add Newport Beach Done
does "Ryan's savior complex" need a reference?
✗Not done, already ref'd by [4]
"The season revolves around Ryan's savior complex causing trouble, Seth's lies posing problems in his relationship with Summer." sentence appears unfinished - it just needs an "and" Done
"Also Kirsten attempts to put her life back together, Sandy assumes leadership of the Newport Group". A comma is needed after "also"; however, using "also" is a bad way to begin a sentence. Could you explain why she needs to put her life back together, and who it is Sandy assumes leadership from? Stick a "while" right before "Sandy", too Done
"Kaitlin – a Julie Cooper in the making" slightly WP:ORish? Reference perhaps?
✗Not done, already ref'd by [4]
Region for DVD release? Region 1, I presume, but does it include Canada too? Has it been released in any other countries/regions?
On hold, see the bottom of the DVD table at the end. Does it need clarifying?
"In the UK the third season premiered January 10, 2006 (E4) and January 15 (Channel 4)." By the very meaning of "premiere", it can only happen once. Get rid of the Channel 4 bit
"In Australia episodes were broadcast a couple of months after they were first premeired," "couple" is unencyclopedic and vague. Typo in that sentence, too
I made a change to the paragraph about international broadcasts
Thanks
Perhaps say that Wonderland is owned by McG and Stephanie Savage Done
"Tate Donovan, as Jimmy Cooper, only returned as a recurring character." Tate is the actor, so perhaps "Tate Donovan, as Jimmy Cooper, returned only in a recurring role." Done
"their respective previous characters." I'm not sure if this makes complete sense. It kind of implies they had different characters at one point Done
"Willa Holland took over from Shailene Woodley, in portraying Marissa's younger sister" comma unnecessary Done
"who returns to the cast after being away at boarding school last year." well, Holland didn't return to the cast, because she's new, and Kaitlin is a character. You could say "who returned to the series after being away at boarding school the previous season" Done
"Season three was widely regarded as the worst season of The O.C." I know it's referenced, but could you say by whom? Critics, fans, etc? Done
"For the third season the show was nominated for five Teen Choice Awards" slightly ambiguous. Does it mean that that the previous two seasons were also nominated for five awards? How about "The third season was nominated..." Done
"Adam Brody won the Choice TV Actor in the Drama category for the third consecutive year." Is this a different award to TCA, or is "Choice TV Actor in the Drama" a category of TCA? Pehaps wikilink, and reference Done
"IGN faulted "far too much time and too many episodes spent with the less than beloved character Johnny" and the fact that "Kirsten and Sandy both suffered from unsatisfying stories"." Seems like an incomplete sentence. Try "IGN faulted the season for spending "far too much time..." Done
"New addition to cast Taylor Townsend" Taylor's a character, not a cast member. Try "The new character Taylor Townsend" Done
Don't overlink character and actor names that were already linked in the previous section Done
"USA Today critic, Robert Bianco" publication needs itallics, comma not needed Done
"Some of the story lines were described as "very intelligent and also incorporate a great deal of humor to keep your interest"" -- "story lines" or "storylines"? I'm unsure. Full stop at the end of the sentence, and could you say who said it, so it doesn't appear to still be from IGN? Done
"...show ever gave us",[27] The season finale was commended..." capital letter? Try "...show ever gave us",[27] but the season finale was commended...", and right here, say by who Done
"final season" sounds better than "last season" Done
Is it available on iTunes, XBOX Live Marketplace, or anywhere as downloadable?
✗Not done, not yet. But in checking I've noticed Season 2 got added to iTunes this month, so I expect it may and will keep watching and add it if/when it does.
Don't start sentences with "But" Done
"Ryan's brother, Trey" remove the comma Done
"cops" is unencyclopedic. Use either "sheriff" or "police". I don't know what they had on the show, but there is a Newport Beach Police Department so that would make sense. That said, there is also the OCSD Done
"Will Ryan take the fall for Marissa?" sounds more like a teaser than an encyclopedic entry. Remember, these are PLOT summaries Done
"Dean of Discipline" is this supposed to be capitalized?
On hold, OC Insider and other reliable sources capitalise it. [21][22] So it appears to be a title that should be capitalised. What do you think?
"And Jimmy offers Julie a surprising proposal." tsk, And Done
"When the scheme works, Marissa and Ryan have a night to remember," again, summarize. What was the scheme? Describe the night to remember Done
"Marissa adjusts to life in her new surroundings" what new surroundings? Done
"Kirsten's friend Charlotte lands in Newport" arrives Done
What is Newport Union? Done
"Marissa's new friendships at public school worry Summer, and she enlists Ryan's help." for what? Done
"And Charlotte convinces Julie and Kirsten to edge back into Newport society." And Done
"and Ryan needs to use his head for once." what does this mean? Done
"Julie is forced to return to her roots," what roots? Unclear to non-fans Done
"they devise a special plan to help a friend in need" who? Done
Is it The Harbor School or Harbor High School? DoneNote I
"mom" --> "mother" Done
"Johnny's sudden misfortune forces him to take matters into his own hands." clarify either one, or both, of those Done
"Johnny struggles between a friends happiness" apostrophy Done
No need to link Orange County in the episode summary Done
perhaps link "boarding school"? Done
"Much more in the mold of her mother, Julie, than her sister, Marissa," remove the first and third commas Done
"Sandy encourages Seth about college," the rest of the sentence suggests he attempts to Done
"Summer discovers the truth about Seth, Sandy and Matt encounter an obstacle to their hospital project," semi colon after Seth Done
"Tragic news forces the friends to sort out their problems and face the reality of the situation." this is extremely vague Done
Does Valentines Day need linking?
✗Not done, V's Day is only really an American & European holiday so from a worldwide perspective it probably does.
"Could this mean the end of Ryan and Marissa's relationship." this is a question, but doesn't have a question-mark; however, I'm more concerned that it's verging on teasing the reader, instead of informing Done
"Marissa drifts away from the group and Summer" is Summer no longer part of the group? Done
"The kids receive their college acceptance and rejection letters," kids is a bit unencyclopedic Done
"mom" --> "mother" again Done
"but before they meet, he has a steamy encounter" remove the comma Done
"Berkeley and Brown" unlink Berkely, cause that's been done already, and say "UC Berkeley and Brown University" Done
"Harbor School's senior prom" Third different name for the school DoneNote I
"Taylor has a great time, while Summer does not enjoy herself with her surprising prom date." "although" would be better Done
"prom night turns brutal." need something more encyclopedic than brutal. Could this be clarified, too? Done
"And Seth's actions ignite even more trouble in Newport." And Done
"The end of senior year is finally here," WP:INUNIVERSE Done
"But first Seth must" comma after first, but "but" shouldn't be used to start a sentence Done
"mom" --> "mother" Done
"And Summer, facing the prospect of going away without Seth, says her emotional farewells to her freinds." And, and a typo Done
"But amidst the speeches" But Done
"But amidst the speeches and toasts, nothing is ever simple in Newport." hmmm. does this make sense? Why does nothing make sense in Newport amidst speeches? Are things only confusing in Newport when speeches are made? Done, gone as it was too peacock anyway.
^I - I've seen different reliable sources use all three of them. This uses all three, but i'll be consistent and use Harbor School as on Warner Bros.' site OC Insider.
In this case the CTV site isn't as reliable as it just belongs to a network. What appears on OC Insider is better, since that belongs to the production company; however, whatever was used on the episodes is the most reliable. Did anyone ever refer to the school by "Harbor High"? If so, it's real name is probably "Harbor High School" as the trend is to not say the word "School", even if it is part of the official name. If it was only referred to as "Harbor" or "Harbor School" on screen, then use "Harbor School". Finally, did the front of the school or the signage ever appear on screen? What did that say? That would be the most reliable source for the correct name. Matthewedwards (talk • contribs • email) 05:45, 30 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Watched bits of "The Graduates", and it has official signs that say both Harbor School & crest shown for a split second that says The Harbor School. Found a graduating book picture from that episode which says "The Harbor School" so I guess I'll go with that then. Changed all occurances to either "The Harbor School" or "Harbor", an abbreviation of the full name.
Reply
Diff Many thanks for the review, I think I've addressed all the issues you've raised or explained why I haven't. I am open to discussion on anything I havn't done, I just thought I'd state my reasons. If you think any of these still need doing or clarifying please say.
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I've listed this article for peer review because I want to get some comments on how I can improve the article further. Thanks. Sunderland06 (talk) 19:58, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nice work on the article. I haven't reviewed an article before so here it goes...
Squad number infobox shouldn't be italic Done - Removed italics.
"Towards the end of his Liverpool career he spent a loan spell at Marseille scoring eight goals in 21 appearances, he then made the deal permanent" - Spent seems a bit out of place. Change to either, "...he spent time on loan at Marseille..." or "...he had a loan spell at..." Done - Opted for latter.
"Djibril was born to Mangue and Karidjata Cissé, who divorced soon after his birth, were from the Ivory Coast" - Needs rearranging/rewording, it doesn't flow when reading. Done - Reworded.
"His parents moved from the Ivory Coast to France in 1974," - end sentance Done
The guests to his wedding isn't definate in the reference - only speculation over Henry and Zidane. Is there a more definative source? Done - Removed those two.
"Liverpool had pursued Cissé for a long time, and it was an open secret that the then Liverpool manager Gérard Houllier admired Cissé's qualities." - How long is a long time? Reference needed regarding Houllier's admiration of Cissé. Done - A year, and referenced.
"ice cool penalty" - Subjective/POV Done - Just said penalty. :)
"From the summer of 2005 ," - spacing after 2005. Done - Removed space.
Continuity with dates throughout article. They seem to be set out differently - stick to one. E.g. 20 October 2006 or October 20, 2006. Done
"However, by April, with only four goals in..." - needs rewording to something like "With only four goals by April, Cissé's..." Done
"...an estimated fee of 8 million Euros" - in previous transfer deal you have put £14 million, should this transfer fee be written as €8 million? Done
Sunderland AFC - needs piping Done - Piped.
"...Liverpool debut, Djibril scored the winning header..." Change Djbril to Cissé - over familiarisation Done - Changed to Cissé.
"...make it 2Extra time1 to..." - is this suppose to be 2–1? Done
"Before he played for the senior France national football team he also played for the Under-19's and Under-21's sides" - remove "also" and change to "he had previously" - I think it reads slightly better. Done - Changed.
"French coach Roger Lemerre included Cissé in his 23 man squad for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, [49] he played in all of the group matches against Senegal,[50] Uruguay,[51] and Denmark ,[52] coming on as a substitute in all three games." Split into two sentances. Done - Split.
Cissé was part of the 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup winning French team, he scored one goal in the tournement against Columbia coming from the penalty spot on 18 June 2003 where France won 1–0.[54]" Split into two again. Reword last part about his goal to something along the lines of "He scored his only goal of the tournament from the penalty spot in France's 1–0 win against Columbia, on 18 June 2003." Done