Citation digest edit

  • Western Mail (August 22, 2005): "Here's his entry in the online encyclopedia, Wikipedia:
Peter Stringfellow (born October 17, 1940) is a multi-millionaire businessman and minor British celebrity. He owns the Stringfellows table-dancing clubs in London and Paris. A Conservative Party supporter, he claims to have slept with more than 3,000 women.
Stringfellow is frequently ridiculed by the British media for behaving and dressing in a manner which they say is too young for his years. His permanent bleached blond, mullet-styled hair is a particular target of satire. In 2003, he was voted one of the '100 Worst Britons' by television audiences."
  • Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (August 22, 2005): "At least it didn't start that way. The online encyclopedia Wikipedia concedes that 'Texans have since appropriated it for general use,'..."
  • Denver Post (August 23, 2005): "A sampling of Donald Trump projects...Sources: Trumponline.com; Wikipedia.com"
  • San Antonio Express-News (August 23, 2005): "DID YOU KNOW? A few nations besides the United States use the U.S. dollar as their official currency. Ecuador, El Salvador and East Timor each adopted the dollar independently.

-- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_dollar#International_use"

  • Sacramento Bee (August 24, 2005): "But long before Rome was born, the Egyptians worshipped Sirius, or the star they named Sothis, according to Wikipedia."
  • Canberra Times (August 24, 2005): "It has a few houses, and fuel tanks for the locomotives but, according to the Wikipedia online encyclopedia, only two people still live there."
  • National Post (August 24, 2005): "After a reasonable start, Dungeons & Dragons took off later in the 1970s (as of 2004, says Wikipedia..."
  • The Capital Times (August 25, 2005): "An article on the medium in online encyclopedia Wikipedia said Google recorded 24 hits for the word 'podcast' on Sept. 28 last year."
  • Hamilton Spectator (August 26, 2005): "According to Wikipedia, a free online encyclopedia, Canada is, and always has been, the world's largest consumer of Kraft Dinner per capita. For generations of students, it has been the dinner of choice because it's just so simple to make."
  • Toronto Star (August 27, 2005): "According to online encyclopedia Wikipedia, watercress is one of oldest known leafy greens consumed by humans."
  • Rocky Mountain News (August 27, 2005): "United Airlines will be in rare company if it successfully emerges from bankruptcy protection...Source: Airchive.Com, Wikipedia.Org, Rocky Mountain News Research."
  • St. Petersburg Times (August 28, 2005): "Great Wall...Source: Kris Hundley, Times staff writer, and http://www.wikipedia.org."
  • Chattanooga Times Free Press (August 28, 2005): "The online encyclopedia Wikipedia gives the definition: 'Typically imagined as upper middle class, probably college-educated, most often suburban, and typically white.'"