Wikipedia:WikiProject Biography/Peer review/Douglas Bruce
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] Douglas Bruce
This turned into a lengthier article than I expected on one of the more... interesting... characters in contemporary Colorado politics. I hope to pull this article up to GA and then FA status after a bit of polishing, but, at the moment, I'm mainly interested in how well the more colorful aspects of Douglas Bruce's career are covered. -- Sethant (talk) 05:30, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Review by Psychless
This is an excellent, informative article. I'm glad to see an article on a state politician go beyond stub status! In terms of content, I'd like to read more about his younger years and personal life, but I understand that that information may just not exist in published sources. Here are my suggestions:
- The first sentence contains a list of the schools he graduated from. If you want to keep it in that format, you should remove the two "then"s
- Did he graduate from the USC Gould School of Law? If so, you should include that in the article.
- Replace " -- " with "—". Note the absence of space on both sides.
- Does the 38th Assembly district still include those two cities? If it does, you should write "includes" instead of "included". If it doesn't, you should consider adding "at the time" at the end of the sentence to clarify this.
- Is there any information on his switch from Democrat to Republican? That's a very big ideological switch.
- "A third and final attempt in 1992" could be cut down to "A third attempt in 1992"
- "tangling vocally" is very ambiguous. Don't be afraid to say he was shouting at the other person. If that's what he did, it's still NPOV. (This term was used in the lead as well.)
- Colorado State Senate is linked twice in a row. Unlink the second occurrence.
- "Bruce ran unsuccessfully for the Colorado State Senate again in 2000" sounds better than "Bruce ran unsuccessfully again for the Colorado State Senate in 2000" to me.
- Is the "during his senate campaign," part necessary in "In June 2000, during his senate campaign,"? I'm not sure how the issue is relevant to his senate campaign other than it happened in the same time frame.
- "Bruce was elected to the El Paso County, Colorado county commission" -> "Bruce was elected to the El Paso County, Colorado, county commission"
- The first sentence of the 2004 election section is a run-on. The second sentence should start with "In the general election, he defeated".
- "Bruce was frequently the lone vote in opposition to measures" -> "Bruce was frequently the only opposition to measures"
- "He cast the lone vote against" -> "He cast the only vote against"?
- References should always come after punctuation.
- I'm assuming he called it "handouts for deadbeats".
- This is a suggestion for the entire article: Make sure your quotation mark use adheres to Wikipedia:MOS#Quotation marks. (I don't want to point out each misuse.)
- I'm not quite sure why Amendment 38 is linked. Would there ever be an article on the amendment? If so, I don't think that would be the correct title.
- Does there need to be a comma in "of county staff, and told Bruce"? I don't think the "told Bruce ... " part is an independent clause. Also, should there be a [the] in the quote?
- Should challenge be changed to challenges in "Bruce also lost legal challenge"?
- In the second paragraph of the swearing in controversy, remove the comma after "Speaker Romanoff" and remove "both"
- "was not recognized by Speaker Romanoff during the morning session" is not an independent clause so remove the comma before "but". Or you may add "he" before "was not recognized" and keep the comma.
- "Javier Manzano, a Rocky Mountain News photographer" -> "Javier Manzano, a Rocky Mountain News photographer,"
- I think "Bruce later accused the photographer of "violating the order and decorum" of the house and refused to apologize." sounds better than "Bruce later accused the photographer of "violating the order and decorum" of the house, refusing to apologize." (The situation is hilarious no matter how you word it :).)
- How did Manzano respond to the controversy? Did he?
- "Bruce has also announced his intention to stand" -> "Bruce announced that he will stand"
- "and is expected to face a challenge both for the Republican nomination (from attorney Mark Waller) and in the general election (from Democrat Allison Hunter)" -> "and expects to face a challenge for both the Republican nomination (attorney Mark Waller) and the general election (Democrat Allison Hunter)." (Forgot the period! Also note that our Mark Waller is a doctor)
- The "free-ness" of the image is questionable. You may want to look around and see if you find this picture anywhere else.
Please leave a note on my talk page if you have any questions or comments. Good luck. Psychless 19:50, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
- For the references issue, see the third paragraph of Policy positions. Also, I'm fairly sure the style for mdashes (—) is to have no space on either side. Other than those minor things, it's a great article. Psychless 17:13, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
- Mdashes fixed! I'm afraid I still don't see the issues with placement of quotation marks or references that you allude to; I've gone through the whole article several times with the Manual of Style open to double-check the formatting. Perhaps if you gave specific reference numbers I could locate the mistakes more easily. -- Sethant (talk) 20:07, 22 March 2008 (UTC)