This article is within the scope of WikiProject Magazines, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of magazines on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.MagazinesWikipedia:WikiProject MagazinesTemplate:WikiProject Magazinesmagazine articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Children's literature, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Children's literature on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Children's literatureWikipedia:WikiProject Children's literatureTemplate:WikiProject Children's literaturechildren and young adult literature articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Comics, a collaborative effort to build an encyclopedic guide to comics on Wikipedia. Get involved! If you would like to participate, you can help with the current tasks, visit the notice board, edit the attached article or discuss it at the project's talk page.ComicsWikipedia:WikiProject ComicsTemplate:WikiProject ComicsComics articles
This completely unsourced article ends with an ambiguously described list of writers who worked on something like "this and other" comics. It fails to tell whether each worked on both J&J and others, or each worked only on J&J and the others only on others (with the writer would appear to not know which are which).
I generously did a Google search, rather than removing it without investigation:
5 for "Eric Stephens" "Bert Felstead"
And those 5 are one 3 sites -- or 3 are on 2 sites, when the two WP hits are disregarded as sources. The one of those 3 that looked most promising is Bear Alley: July 2007, which has a similar list but cites WP next to some of the entries.
An article on the comic strip can say who worked on it, if that is known. If you want to name everyone who could have worked on it, which this smells of, you can do this, if the publisher is notable: write an article on the publisher, and include a list there of all the writers they ever hired, or those the hired between suitable two dates, and use a lk from the accompanying article in a sentence that says all the comic's writers worked for the publisher. But i'm removing the list from the article, as unencyclopedically vague. --Jerzy•t00:00, 11 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]