CITATION TIPS
Place
parenthetical citations as close as possible to the relevant material.
Often writers use the author's
name in a phrase to introduce the material:
Jonnasen believes that ...
Grabe argues ...
Bandura demonstrates ...
When the author's name is not mentioned in an introductory phrase, include the author's last name with the page number(s) in parentheses. Do not use any punctuation between the author's name and the page number(s). Place the period after the parentheses (Jonassen 24).
If the author's name is in the text of the sentence, include only the page number(s) in parentheses.
If
the author has written more than one of the sources, the note MUST
include a shortened form of the title unless it is mentioned in the
text.
Jonassen explores a variety of
ways to use computers ...
(Computers 27-33).
For
two or three authors, use all the author's last names in the
introductory
phrase or in parentheses.
Pintrich and Schunk examine
student motivation . . . .
For four or more authors, use the first author's name and et al. or name all the authors in an introductory phrase or in parentheses.
For an unknown author, use the full title
in the text or in parentheses.
If it is short, use the full title, otherwise use an abbreviated title.
Use Instructional-Design Theories for Instructional-Design
Theories and
Models: An Overview of Their Current Status
With quotations of 40 or more words, DO NOT use quotation marks. Set off the quotation in Block style format (Start quote on new line indented ten spaces. Each subsequent line is also indented) Block quotations
Works
Cited
Type the heading Works Cited
centered, one inch from the top of the page.
Do not underline Works Cited; do
not use quotation marks.
Double space the references.
Use 1 inch margins on all sides.
Use 12 point font.
Start each entry along the left
margin - indent subsequent lines.
The second line of the citation
is indented 5-6 letters.
List sources alphabetically by
the author's last name.
If the author is unknown, alphabetize by the first major word in the
title.
Use and between authors' names
Last name first, followed by
middle name
For most names, place the last name first, and
separate with commas, e.g. Jordan, Michael.
In text citations
Place parenthetical citations as close as
possible to the relevant material.
Often writers use the author's name in a
phrase to introduce the material:
Jonnasen believes that ...
Grabe argues ...
Bandura demonstrates ...
When the author's name is not mentioned in an introductory phrase, include the author's last name with the page number(s) in parentheses. Do not use any punctuation between the author's name and the page number(s). Place the period after the parentheses (Jonassen 24).
If the author's name is in the text of the sentence, include only the page number(s) in parentheses.
If the author has written more than one of
the sources, the note MUST include a shortened form of the title unless
it is mentioned in the text.
Jonassen explores a variety of ways to use
computers ...
(Computers 27-33).
For two or three authors, use all the
author's last names in the introductory
phrase or in parentheses.
Pintrich and Schunk examine student motivation
...
For four or more authors, use the first
author's name and et al. or name all
the authors in an introductory phrase or in
parentheses.
For an unknown author, use the full title
in the text or in parentheses.
If it is short, use the full title, otherwise
use an abbreviated title.
Use Instructional-Design Theories for Instructional-Design
Theories and
Models: An Overview of Their Current Status
Works Cited List
Type the heading Works
Cited centered, one inch from
the top of the page.
Do not underline Works Cited -- do not use quotation
marks.
Double space the references
Use 1 inch margins on all sides
Use 12 point font
Start each entry along the left margin - indent
subsequent lines
The second line of the citation is indented 5 letters
List sources alphabetically by the author's last name
If the author is unknown,
alphabetize by the first major word in the title
Use and between authors' names
Last name first, followed by middle name
Make sure that everything referenced in your paper is
cited on your
Works Cited page and
everything on your Works Cited page is used
in your text.
A book with one author
Inlude the author's name, the title of the
book - underlined, the city of publication, the publisher, and the date
of publication. Check the title page for this information. Reverse the
author's name for alphabetizing. Include the full titile of the book;
in the examlpe below, the title includes a sub title. For cities like
London, New York, or Boston which are well known, include only the name
of the city. If the city is likely to be ambiguous or unknown to the
reader, include the name of the state or country. If several cities are
listed on the title page, include only the first. Shorten the name of
the publisher. (Charles Scribner's Sons - Scribner's, Houghton-Mifflin
Co. - Houghton, Macmillan Publishing Co. Inc. - Macmillan, McGraw-Hill
Inc. - McGraw, St. Martin's Press - St. Martin's, Oxford
University Press - Oxford UP ) Note that periods are placed after each
piece of information.
See MLA Handbook for Writers p. 244
(remember to
double space)
Author(s) or editor(s). [If
more than 3 authors, use the name
of the first author and add
"et al." for "and others."]
Title of Book. Place
of publication: Publisher, year.
Book with one author:
author
title
Mondimore, Francis Mark. Bipolar Disorder: A Guide for Patients and
city
publisher
date
Families.
Jonassen, David H. Computers in the Classroom: Mindtools for Critical
Thinking. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. 1996.
Two or more books by the same authorThinking. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. 1996.
--- . Hypertext/Hypermedia. Educational Technology Publications. 1989.
Two or more authors
To cite a book by two or more authors, give the names
in the same order as they appear on the title page. Reverse the name of
the first author, add a comma, and give the name of the next author or
authors in the normal order. Place a period after the last name. If the
persons listed on the title page are editors or translators, place a
comma after the final name and add the abbreviation eds. or trans.
Grabe, Mark, and Cindy Grabe. Integrating the Internet for Meaningful
Learning. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2000.
Murphy, G., L. B. Murphy, and T. M. Newcomb. Experimental Social
Psychology. New York: Harper. 1937.
Pintrich, P. R., and D. H. Schunk. Motivation in Education: Theory,
Research, & Applications. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1996.
Rabkin, Eric S., Martin H Greenberg, and Joseph D. Olander, eds. No Place
Else: Explorations in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction. Carbondale:
Southern Illinois UP, 1983.
If there are more than three authors, name
only the first and add et al.(and others)
Book with four or more authors:
Nielsen, Niels C., Jr., et al. Religions of the World. 3rd ed.
New York: St. Martin's,
1992.
Book with no author or editor
(begin with title):
Rand McNally Commercial Atlas. Skokie: Rand
McNally, 1993.
For a translation:
Tolstoy, Leo. War and Peace. Trans. Constance Garnett. London:
Pan, 1972.
For an edited collection:
Carter, Kathryn, and Carole Spitzack, eds. Doing Research on
Women's Communication. Norwood:
Ablex, 1989.
An anthology
Begin with the author or editor followed by a comma and
the abbreviation ed. List the title, the city of publication, the
publishing company, and the date of publication.
McRae, Murdo William, ed. The Literature of Science: Perspectives on Popular
Science Writing. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1993.
Work in an anthology or chapter in a book with an
editor
When citing an essay in an anthology/collection:
Begin with the author and title of the piece, enclosed
in quotation marks. If the work was published independently (a play or
novel for example) underline the title.Then list the title of the
anthology/collection underlined. If the book has an editor, write Ed.
after the title and give the name. Give the city of publication and the
publisher. List the page numbers of the entire article you are
citing.
author
title of article
title of anthology / book
Keller, J. M. "Motivational Design of Instruction." Instructional-Design
editor
Theories and Models: An Overview of Their
Current Status. Ed. C. M.
city
publisher
date pages of the article
Reigeluth. Hillsdale, N.J.:
Lawrence Erlbaum, 1983. 23-32.
Keller, J. M., and T. Kopp, "Applications of the ARCS Model of
Motivational Design." Instructional Theories in Action: Lessons
Illustrating Theories and Models. Ed. C. M. Reigeluth. Hillsdale, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum. 1987. 23-32.Collins, J. L., and E. A. Sommers, eds. Writing OnLine: Using Computers
in
the Teaching of Writing. Montclair, NJ: Boynton/Cook, 1984.
Unknown author
Alphabetize by the title. Do not use either
Anonymous or Anon. Ignore A, An, or The.
National Geographic Atlas of the World. (1988). Washington, DC: National
Geographic Society.
A Multivolume work
If you are using two or more volumes of a multivolume work, cite the total number of volumes in the work (4 volumes). This information comes after the title or after the editor's name and before the publication information. Specific references to volume and page numbers (2: 134-37) belong in the text of the paper.
Blanco, Richard L., ed. The American Revolution, 1775 - 1783: An Encyclopedia.
2 vols. Hamden: Garland, 1993.
Doyle, Aurthur Conan. The Oxford Sherlock Holmes. Ed. Owen Dudley
Edwards. 9 vols. New York: Oxford UP, 1993.
A Book in a Series
If the book is part of a series, include the name of
the series and the series number followed by a period before the
publication information.
Maravall, Jose Antonio. Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical
Structure. Trans. Terry Cochran. Theory and History of Literature. 25.
Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1986.
Government documentBegin with the author if the name is given. If not, start with the name of the government, followed by the agency and any subdivision. Give the title - underlined. With congressional documents, cite the number, session, and house, the type and the number. For the Congressional Record, give the date and page number. End with the publication information. This is often the Government Printing Office (GPO).
United States, U. S. Bureau of the Census. Historical Statistics of the United
States, Colonial Times to 1870. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office. 1975.
A Pamphlet
Treat a pamphlet as you would a book. Alphabetize by
the author's name if it is available; if not, use the title of the
pamphlet.
Best Museums in New York City. New York: Trip Builder, 1993.
Sugar, Bert Randolph, ed. Mecca 1911 Double-Folder Baseball Cards. Mineola:
Dover, 1991.
Articles from print
journals
Bangert-Drowns, R. L., J. A. Kulik, and C. C. Kulik "Effectiveness of
Computer-Based Education in Secondary Schools." Journal of
Computer-Based Instruction 12 (1985): 59-68.
Fletcher, W. E., and J. P. Deeds "Computer Anxiety and Other Factors
Preventing Computer use Among United States Secondary Agricultural
Educators." Journal of Agricultural Education 35 (1994):16-21.
Hallin, Daniel C. "Sound Bite News: Television Coverage of Elections, 1968 -
1988." Journal of Communication 42.2 (1992) : 5 - 24.
Spitzer, D. R. "Motivation: The Neglected Factor in Instructional Design."
Educational Technology 36 (1996): 45-49.
Some scholarly journals do not use volume numbers. Treat the issue numbers of such journals as you would volume numbers.
Bowering, George. "Baseball and the Canadian Imagination." Canadian
Literature
108 (1986) : 115-24.
An article in a journal paginated by volume
Some journals may appear quarterly; these
often use continuous pagination. Begin with the author's name, then the
title of the article, the title of the journal - underlined, the volume
number, the date - in parestheses, and the page numbers of the article.
The page numbers should include the complete article, not just the page
or pages you cite in the text of your report.
Bandura, A. "Human Agency in Social Cognitive Theory." American
Psychologist 44 (1989): 1175-1184.
Hounshell, P. B., and S. R. Hill Jr. "The Microcomputer and Achievement
and Attitudes in High School Biology." Journal of Research in Science
Teaching 26 (1989): 543-549.
Tobias, S. "Anxiety Research in Educational Psychology." Journal of
Educational Psychology 71 (1979): 573-582.
Magazine article
1993: 13-14.
Berss, M. "Protein Man." Forbes 154, 24 October 1998: 64-66.
Gralla, P. "How to Enter Cyberspace."
PC Computing. April 1994: 60-62.
Magazine published every month or two months
Gorrell, Carin. “Christina
Ricci’s Primal Scream.” Psychology Today
Mar./Apr. 2003: 42-46.
An unsigned article
If no author's name is given, begin with the
article title. Do not alphabetize using A, An, or The.
"Dubious Venture." Time 3 Jan. 1994: 64-65.
"What Sort of Person Reads Creative Computing?" Creative Computing
August 1985: 8, 10.
Newspaper articles
After the author and title of the article,
give the name of the newspaper, underlined, without a, and, or the:
The New York Times = New York Times
Give the name of the city in brackets if it is
not part of the title.
Give the date and the edition. Add a colon
followed by the section number or letter and then the page number.
If the article appears on pages which are
separated, give the first page followed by a plus sign.
Author (if stated). "Title of Article." Name of Newspaper date, edition: section pages.
"Globalization Often Means That the Fast Track Leads Overseas."
Washington Post 16 June 1998: A10.
Martin, Claire. "Primary Care System under Attack." Denver Post 3 Jan.
2000: F1+.
An editorial:
"Stepping Backward." Editorial. Los Angeles Times 4 July 1989: B6.
Sunday
Burns, Jonathan F. "Afghans Seek
Direct Talks with U.S. on Elections." New York
Times 6 May 1990, late ed., sec. 4: 22.
Video recordings
Title of Film. Director.
Major Performers (if necessary). Original year of release.
Format.
Company name, release year.
Dr. Strangelove. Dir.
Stanley Kubrick. Perf. Peter Sellers and George C. Scott. 1966.
Videocassette.
Television program
Anatomy of a Hate Crime. Perf. Cy Carter
and Brendan Fletcher. MTV. 10 Jan. 2001.
Online sources are different from print sources in important ways: they usually don’t have page numbers, and it can be difficult to determine authorship and composition dates.
In order to correctly cite online sources, you need the following information:
AuthorLast Name, First Name. “Title of Article.” Name of Periodical volume. issue number (date of
publication):
Number of pages/paragraphs, sections.
Date of access <URL
address>.
access
date
<URL>.
24 June 1998
<http://www.pum.umontreal.ca/revues/surfaces/vol5/elam.html>.
Supplier (if given). Date. Date of access
<URL>.
Web
site article with an author:
Hansen, Tom. “On ‘
<http://www.English.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/Hughes/harlem.htm>.
Web
site article without an author:
“What Is Acid Rain and What Causes
It?” Clean Air
Markets-Environmental Issues.
<http://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/acidrain/index.html>.
“Stem
Cells: A Primer.” National
Institutes of Health. NIH. May
2000. 6 July 2003
<http://www.nih.gov/news/stemcell/primer.htm>.
News
Web Site
Gupta, Sanjay. "AIDS Cases in the
CNN.com. Cable News
Network. 8 July 2002. 8 Dec. 2003
<http://www.cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/conditions/07/07/aid/index.htm>.
An article on the WWW
Arnold, M. "Using the Web to Augment Teaching and Learning." 1997,
November 20. Sept. 13, 1999
<http://www.curtin.edu.au/conference/ASCILITE97/papers/Arnold/Arnold.html>
Brown, A. "Designing for Learning: What are the Essential Features of an
Effective Online Course?" (1997). April 24, 2000
<http://cleo.murdoch.edu.au/ajet/ajet13/su97p115.html>
Online magazine article
To cite an article from an online journal,
magazine, or newspaper, begin with the author's name. Give the title of
the article in quotation marks, the name of the periodical, underlined,
the volume number or issue number, the date of publication, and the
page number(s). End with the access date and the URL in angle brackets.
The access date is included so that the reader will know which version
of the document you have cited.
Bostock, William W. "The Global Corporatisation of Universities: Causes
and Consequences." AntePodium 3 (1999). 27 Jan. 2000
<http://www.vuw.ac.nz/atp/articles/bostock.html>
Denning, Peter J. "Business Designs for the New University." Educom
Review. 31.6 (1996). 23 June 1998 <http://educom.edu/web/pubs/
review/reviewArticles/31620.html>
Markoff, J. "Voluntary Rules Proposed to help Insure Privacy for Internet
Users. New York Times. (5 June 1995). 9 June 1999
<http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/y05dat.html>
Murphy, H. L. "Saturn's Orbit Still High with Consumers." Marketing News
Online. (4 March 1997). 13 May 1998 <http://www.ama.org/pubs/
mn/0818n1.htm>.
Vasquez, John. "Peace and the New World Order" AntePodium 4 (1996).
<http://www.vuw.ac.nz/atp/articles/vasquez_9507.html>
Online book
Some books are being made available online. Provide the author's name, the title - underlined, if the online text has not been published before, give the date of the electronic publication and the name of the sponsoring organization, Include the publication information about the original print version if they are given in the source (city of publication, publisher, date of publication), include the date of access and the network address.
Barsky, Robert F. Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent. Cambridge: MIT P,
1997. 8 May 1998 <http://mitpress.mit.edu/e-books/chomsky/
intro.html>.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment." Twice-Told Tales.
Ed. George Parsons Lathrop. Boston: Houghton, 1883. 1 Mar. 1998
<http://eldred.ne.mediaone.net/nh/dhe.html>
A Document within a Scholarly Project or Information Database
To cite an article ... or a similar short
work or document within a project or database, begin the citation with
the author's name and, in quotation marks, the title of the work. If no
author is given, begin the citation with the title of the material, in
quotation marks. Continue with the relevant information for the project
or database, the date of access, and the URL; be sure to give the URL of the specific work or document rather
than that of the project or database if they are diferent.
Author. "Title of Article." Title of Journal volume
number. issue number (date): page numbers. Database
name. Vendor/supplier of database. Name of Library.
City,
State. date Date of access <URL>.
"Catalan." Si Espana. Ed. Jose Felix Barrio. Vers. 2.0. Oct. 1996. Embassy
of Spain, Ottawa. 3 Feb. 1998. <http://www.docuweb.ca/SiSpain/
spanish/language/language/catalan.html>
"City Profile: San Farncisco." CNN Interactive. 19 June 1998. Cable News
Network. 19 June 1998 <http://www.cnn.com/TRAVEL/CITY.
GUIDES/WTR/north.america.profiles/nap.sanfrancisco.html>
Dove, Rita. "Lady Freedom among Us." The Electronic Text Center. Ed.
David Seeman. 1998. Alderman Lib., U of Virginia. 19 June 1998
<http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/subjects/afam.html>
"Selected Seventeenth-Century Events." Romantic Chronology. Ed. Laura
Mandell and Alan Liu. Oct 1996. U of California, Santa Barbara.
22 June 1998 <http://humanitas.ucsb.edu/projects/pack/rom-chrono/
chronola.htm>
citations copied from Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers 5th ed. pp. 181-182
Source on CD ROM
Some works are published in more than one form. When you cite a publication on CD-ROM, it is important to state the medium in order to differentiate the source from other print or online versions. When citing a CD ROM, provide the author or editor's name, title (underlined), the title of the entire disk (underlined), the medium (CD ROM), place of publication, publisher, and date of publication.
Braunmuller, A. R., ed. Macbeth. By William Shakespeare. CD-ROM.
New York: Voyager, 1994.
"Distance Education." Concise Columbia Encyclopedia. 3rd ed. Microsoft
Bookshelf. CD ROM. 1996-97 ed. Redmond: Microsoft, 1996.
"Picasso, Pablo." The 1997 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. CD-ROM.
Danbury: Grolier, 1997.
If you are only citing part of the work, state which part. If the part is a book length work, underline the title. If it is a shorter work like an article or an essay, enclose the title in quotation marks. If the source includes page numbers, paragraph numbers, or some kind of section numbers, state their total if the numbering starts over with each part, but state the range of the numbers in the part if a single numbering encompasses all the parts.
"Albatross." The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. CD-ROM. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1992.
Rodes, David S. "The Language of Ambiguity and Equivocation." Macbeth.
By William Shakespeare. Ed. A. R. Braunmuller. CD-ROM. New York:
Voyager, 1994. 5 pp.
Some periodicals and reference works are published in both print and on CD-ROM as databases. To cite such a work, include the author's name, the title of the work, the publication information, the title of the database, the publication medium (CD-ROM), the name of the vendor, and the electronic publication date.
Coates, Steve. "Et Tu, Cybernetica Machina User?" New York Times 28
Oct. 1996, late ed.: D4. New York Times Ondisc. CD-ROM. UMI-
Proquest. Dec. 1996.
Guidelines for Family Television Viewing. Urbana: ERIC Clearinghouse on
on Elementary and Early Childhood Educ., 1990. ERIC. CD-ROM.
CD-ROM. SilverPlatter. June 1993.
Russo, Michelle Cash. "Recovering from Bibliographic Instruction Blahs."
RQ: Reference Quarterly 32 (1992): 178-83. InfoTrac: Magazine
Index Plus. CD-ROM. Information Access. Dec. 1993.
NC Live
magazines, journals and pamphlets:
Begin with the standard MLA citation, then
add at the end: the database, the vendor, the host of the
electronic subscription service (this could be a college library), the host’s address, the date the
resource was accessed, the web site of the vendor.
A scholarly
journal:
Dickstein,
Morris. "Hope Against Hope: Orwell's Posthumous Novel." American
Scholar
73.2
(Spring 2004): 101-113. InfoTrac One File. Gale.
Broyhill Learning Resource
Center,
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Academic Search Elite:
Wallace, James M. 'Faulkner's A Rose for Emily.' Explicator 50.2
(1992):
105+. Academic Search Elite.
EBSCO. Durham Technical Community
Coll. Lib., Durham, NC. 6 Aug.
2004 <http://www.nclive.org>.
InfoTrac OneFile:
Sladen, Chris. "Holidays at Home in the Second World War."
Journal of Contemporary History
37.1 (2002): 67+.InfoTrac
OneFile. Infotrac. Durham Technical
Community Coll. Lib.,
Durham, NC. 10 Apr. 2002
<http://www.nclive.org>.
Full-Text magazine articles from
electronic databases
A popular magazine:
Huber, Peter. "The KGB on CD-ROM." Forbes 22 Nov.
1993: 176-177. InfoTrac OneFile.
Gale.
<http://www.infotrac.galegroup.com/>.
Author. "Title of
Article." Title of Magazine
date: page numbers.
Database name.
Vendor/supplier of database. Name of Library.
City, State. Date of
access <URL>.
MasterFile Premier:
Lanken, Dane. "When the Earth Moves." Canadian Geographic Mar.-
Apr. 1996: 66-73. MasterFile Premier. EBSCO.
Durham
Technical Community Coll.
Lib., Durham, NC. 15 Apr. 1998
<http://www.nclive.org>.
InfoTrac OneFile:
Ripley, Amanda. "Blaming the Messenger." Time 29 Jan. 2001: 56. InfoTrac OneFile. Infotrac.
Durham Technical Community
Coll. Lib., Durham, NC. 30 May 2003
<http://www.nclive.org>.
ProQuest Nursing Journals
D'Arrigo, Terri. "The Chromium Conundrum." Diabetes Forecast 54.9
(2001): 91-92.
ProQuest Nursing Journals.
ProQuest. Durham Technical Community Coll. Lib.,
Durham, NC. 28 Aug.
2004 <http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb>.
ERIC
Document
Author. "Article Title." Journal in which
Article appeared Originally Date
Published.
of Service (if available). Library, which
subscribes to Databases.
[Access Date]
<http://Site/Path/File>.
Settle, Shirley. "Social Persistence
Following Failure in boys and girls with LD." Journal of
Learning Disabilities May/June 1999: 201-212. Wilson Select Plus. OCLC First Search. St.
Johns
U.,
Fuss-Reineck, Marilyn. Sibling Communication
in Star Trek: The Next Generation:
Conflicts between Brothers.
Reproduction Service ED364932.
Milgram,
Norman A. The Many Faces of Procrastination:
Implications and Recommendations
for Counselors. Paper presented at the Annual International Council of Psychologists
Convention. 22-16 Aug. 1987.
A newspaper:
Marks, Peter. "Catalyst's 1984: A Still-Fresh
Chill."
Newspaper Source. EBSCO.
4 Oct. 2004 <http://weblinks2.epnet.com/>.
ProQuest - New York Times
Raver, Anne. "A Hayloft
for the Heart." New York
Times 23 Aug. 2001, late ed.: F1.
ProQuest Newspapers.
ProQuest. Durham Technical Community Coll. Lib.
Durham, NC. 28
Aug. 2003 <http://www.nclive.org>.
InfoTrac
– PsycARTICLES
Schwartz, David, and
Andrea H. Gorman. “Community Violence Exposure and
Children’s Academic
Functioning.” Journal of
Educational Psychology 95.1
(2003): 163+. PsycARTICLES. ProQuest.
Durham Technical Community Coll. Lib.,
Durham, NC. 10 May
2004 <http://www.proquest.umi.com/pqdweb>.
NC Live
books:
Use the appropriate MLA citation for the book, adding at the end:
The host of the
electronic resource, the address of the host, the date accessed, the
web site of the electronic resource (netLibrary).
Example of a book:
Dickens,
Charles. A Christmas Carol.
Center,
Health Reference
Center-Academic:
Pfeifer, Michael A. "Eye Care: Catching Problems Early."Diabetes Forecast
54.6 (2001): 10. Health Reference Center Academic.
Infotrac.
Durham Technical Community
Coll.Lib., Durham, NC. 30 May 2004
<http://infotrac.galegroup.com>.
Health and
Moon, Mary. "Therapy for Lymphoma Relapse in HIV."Internal Medicine
News 15 July 2001: 23. Health and Wellness Resource Center.
Infotrac.
Durham Technical Community
Coll. Lib., Durham, NC. 29 Aug. 2004
<http://infotrac.galegroup.com>.
News
and Observer Database
Silberman, Todd. “Federal Rules Ease Testing Burden.” The News & Observer
17 March 2004: A10. News & Observer. NewsBank
InfoWeb.
Community Coll. Lib.,
Last edited Aug. 15, 2005.