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A-manual-for-writers-of-research-papers-theses-and-dissertations

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B: Schapiro, Mark. “New Power <strong>for</strong> ‘Old Europe.’” The Nation, December 27, 2004.If you cite a department or column that appears regularly, capitalize it headline style <strong>and</strong> donot enclose it in quotation marks. For a department without a named author, use the name <strong>of</strong>the magazine in place <strong>of</strong> the author in a bibliography entry.N: 2. Barbara Wallraff, Word Court, Atlantic Monthly, June 2005, 128.B: New Yorker. Talk <strong>of</strong> the Town. April 10, 2000.For online magazines, follow the guidelines <strong>for</strong> articles in print magazines. In addition,include the URL <strong>and</strong> the date you accessed the material (see 15.4.1). Note that a URL alone isnot sufficient; you must provide the full facts <strong>of</strong> publication, as far as they can be determined,so that a reader can search <strong>for</strong> the source even if the URL changes. Articles in onlinemagazines might not include page numbers, but you may identify the location <strong>of</strong> a citedpassage in a note by adding a descriptive locator (such as a preceding subheading) followingthe word under be<strong>for</strong>e the URL <strong>and</strong> access date.N: 7. Stephan Faris, “‘Freedom’: No Documents Found,” Salon.com, December 16, 2005, under “TheInternet Has No Memory in China,” http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2005/12/16/censorship/index1.html(accessed December 19, 2005).B: Faris, Stephan. “‘Freedom’: No Documents Found.” Salon.com, December 16, 2005.http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2005/12/16/censorship/index1 html (accessed December 19, 2005).17.4 Newspaper ArticlesIn most cases, cite articles <strong>and</strong> other pieces from daily news<strong>papers</strong> only in notes. Yougenerally need not include them in your bibliography, although you may choose to include aspecific article that is critical to your argument or frequently cited.Follow the general pattern <strong>for</strong> citation <strong>of</strong> articles in magazines (see 17.3). Omit pagenumbers, because a newspaper may have several editions in which items may appear ondifferent pages or may even be dropped. You may clarify which edition you consulted byadding final edition, Midwest edition, or some such identifier.N: 4. Editorial, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, June 1, 1998.6. Obituary <strong>of</strong> Jacques Derrida, New York Times, October 10, 2004, national edition.If you cite an article by its headline, you can use either headline- or sentence-stylecapitalization (see 22.3.1), but be consistent. News<strong>papers</strong> use both, so change all headlines tocon<strong>for</strong>m to the style you choose.N: 9. Blair Kamin, “Wrigley Building Clearly a L<strong>and</strong>mark,” Chicago Tribune, July 1, 2005.or9. Blair Kamin, “Wrigley Building clearly a l<strong>and</strong>mark,” Chicago Tribune, July 1, 2005.Instead <strong>of</strong> using a note, you can sometimes cite articles by weaving several key elementsinto your text; at a minimum, include the name <strong>and</strong> date <strong>of</strong> the paper <strong>and</strong> the author <strong>of</strong> thearticle (if any). Some <strong>of</strong> this in<strong>for</strong>mation can appear in paren<strong>theses</strong>, even if it does not followwww.itpub.net

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