- The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was: promoted by Vaticidalprophet talk 12:01, 29 September 2023 (UTC)
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Thomas Mancuso
- ... that Thomas Mancuso showed how deaths among factory workers could be understood by looking at social security data? Source: It was Mancuso who demonstrated that records collected by the Social Security Administration could be effectively used to understand the patterns of death among factory workers. [1]
- Reviewed: Ernest Rutherford memorial
- Comment:
Still working on it. Will comment and give ALTs when done.
Created by Whispyhistory (talk). Self-nominated at 05:15, 6 September 2023 (UTC). Post-promotion hook changes for this nom will be logged at Template talk:Did you know nominations/Thomas Mancuso; consider watching this nomination, if it is successful, until the hook appears on the Main Page.
- Review underway... Hassocks5489 (Floreat Hova!) 14:57, 15 September 2023 (UTC)
- Newly created on 30 August and nominated in time.
- No issues with close paraphrasing or plagiarism, based both on the Earwig report and manual checking of the online sources.
- Sources are of high quality. All claims/statements are supported, dates and facts check out, and nothing significant appears to be missing.
- Article length is fine: over 5KB (800+ words). Not a stub; conservatively graded at Start-class.
- Well-written and neutrally expressed.
- No images are used.
- Hook meets all criteria and is backed up and directly cited by sources of good quality. I find it interesting: social security data and mortality/health outcomes are not obviously connected on the face of it, so it "hooked" me in.
- QPQ review has been done.