- KARE (TV)
- Hurra-yi Khuttali
- Yugoslav torpedo boat T6
- Starship Troopers (film)
- German atrocities committed against Soviet prisoners of war
- Infant school
- Edith Roosevelt
- Smash Hit
- Leroy Chollet
- Chagatai Khan
- Boot Monument
- MOS:DATETIES tells me the date format for both the body and the citations should MDY instead of DMY. The exception listed there for articles on the modern US military, including biographical articles related to the modern US military doesn't seem to apply well to a history marker commemorating an 18th-century figure.
- When using Template:Poem quote, don't use the source parameter for the citations. That parameter is for the name of the person being quoted, which the reader already knows is the monument. Instead, move the citations to the main body so they attach to the end of the inscription, rather than appear on a new line, preceded by an emdash.
- Watson: Add a publication place since this is not a super well-known publication.
- I recommend piping The Telegraph Wikilink so "(Nashua, New Hampshire)" doesn't show up in italics.
- "Find Clue to Missing Monument": Wikilink goes to wrong paper.
- "May Find Toe of Only Statue to a Left Leg": Since there's no Wikilink for the newspaper, I recommend adding the publication city.
- Thompson: add publication date.
- Rather than including "(U.S. National Park Service)" in the web page title, you list National Park Service in the publisher parameter.
- "Digital Collections": It would be helpful to add New York State Archives using the publisher parameter. Also, capitalize "dedicated". Also, why is this the only web item without an archive link?
- If The Washington Post is Wikilinked, so should The New York Times.
- Coe: Capitalize the article title.
- I would say you should pipe The Evening Tribune Wikilink, but it goes to the wrong paper anyway. If there isn't a Wiki article for this paper, you should add Providence as the publication place.
- Duffus's initials appears to be R.I., not R.L.
Summary: Everything in the works cited list are either books held by university libraries (with the semi-exception of Ayres, per comment above) or articles in academic journals. The inline citations includes a few other sources, which all seem reliable. There's an impressive breadth of scholarship and journalism represented in this article for how short it is. Earwig finds plagiarism unlikely. Most of the similarities it can find are quotes. Citations are consistently formatted with the exception of minor issues, outlined above. Dugan Murphy (talk) 01:14, 23 October 2024 (UTC)