A bibliography is a list of resources you have used for a project. It must be complete so a reader can easily locate the exact information you used. All entries are listed alphabetically by the first word, ignoring initial words a, an, or the. If the entry continues for more than one line, indent the following lines so only the first line of the entry is at the left margin. Italics may be substituted for underlining; they mean the same thing.

PRINT RESOURCES

Book Entries
Format: Author's name. Title of book. City of publication: Publisher , Year of publication.
One author
Karlin, Len. Careers in Sports. New York: Guild Publishers, 1997.
Two or three authors
Fenwick, Elizabeth, and Dr. Tony Smith, and Jonathan R. Sorenson. Adolescence, the Survival
Guide for Parents and Teenagers. New York: Dorling Kindersley Publishing, 1996.
More than three authors (use first author's name only)
Gilman, Sander, et al. Hysteria beyond Freud. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1993.
Editor or compiler (no author)
Langer, Howard J., ed. American Indian Quotations. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press,1996.

Encyclopedia
Format: Author's name if given. "Title of the article." Name of encyclopedia. Year of publication.
(volume, page number)
Example: "Hangayn Mountains." The New Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1995. (vol 5, p.291)

Magazine
Format: Author of article. "Title of article." Name of magazine, Date of magazine: Page number(s).
No author
"The Forgotten Dionnes." Maclean's, 21 January 1998: 124.
Author
Chambers, Veronica. "The Myth of Cinderella." Newsweek 3 November 1997: 74-60.

Newspaper
Format: Author of article (if given). "Title of article." Name of newspaper. Date of newspaper: Page number(s).
No author
"Hollywood Video profits decline." Corvallis Gazette Times 5 Nov. 1997: B7.
Author
Keen, Judy. "UN postpones U-2 flights over Iraq." USA Today 5 Nov. 1997: 1A+.

Background Notes
Example: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, Office of Public Communication.
"Afghanistan." Background Notes. Washington: GPO, 1995.

Culturgram
Example: Brigham Young University, "Pakistan." Culturgram. Provo, Utah:
David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, 1999.

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INTERVIEW conducted by you.
Format: Name of person interviewed, Kind of interview (personal interview,telephone interview, e-mail
interview), Date.
Example: Kitzhaber, John. Personal interview. 22 Oct. 2000.

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MULTIMEDIA RESOURCES

NewsBank (microfiche)
Format: Begin with original newspaper information. Then add: NewsBank: catagory (year) fiche
card number, grid numbers.
Example: Champman, Dan. "Panel could help protect children." Winston-Salem Journal 14 Jan. 1990:
1A. NewsBank: Welfare and Social Problems (1990): fiche 2, grids A8-A11.

Film or Video
Format: Title. Director. Distributor, Year.
Example: Like Water for Chocolate. Dir. Alfonso Arau. Miramax, 1993.

Television or Radio
Format: "Title of episode or segment". Title of program. Title of series (if any). Name of network.
Call letter and city of local station (if any). Broadcast date. Include narrator and other
information if applicable.
Example: "Shakespearean Putdowns." Narr. Robert Diegel and Linda Wertneimer. All Things
Considered. PBS. 6 Apr. 1997.
Example: "Frankenstein: The Making of a Monster." Great Books. Narr. Donald Sutherland. Dir.
Jonathan Ward. Learning Channel. 8 Sept. 1993.

Interview from a television or radio broadcast
Format: Name of person interviewed. Interviewers name if known. Name of program, Broadcasting
company. Place, Date.
Example: Blackmun, Harry. Interview with Ted Kippel and Nina Totenberg. Nightline.
ABC. New York, 5 April 1994.

CD-ROM
Format: Author (if given). "Title of part of work." Title of CD. Edition, release, or version.
Publication medium (CD-ROM). City of publication (if given): Publisher. Year of
publication.
Example: "Piers Anthony, 1934 -, American." Discovering Authors. Version 2.0. CD-ROM.
Gale Research, 1996.

E-mail
Format: Sender's name . "Title of the message (from subject line)." Description of the message
including the statement: E-mail to recipient's name(your name). Date message was sent.
Example: Schmidt, Jennifer. "Monday greetings." E-mail to Justin Jones about report on global
warming. 29 May 2001.

World Wide Web
Format: Author. Title of document/homepage title. Date of document. Name of organization
associated with site (if given). Date of access .
Example: Pate, Allen. Amistad Home Page. 21 Nov. 1999. 19 Jan. 2001
.

Online Databases with Magazine/Newspaper Articles (EBSCO)
Format: Author. "Article title." Name of magazine or newspaper. Date of original source.
EBSCO. Date of access .
Example: Carney, James. "The Busiest Man in the White House." Time. 30 Apr. 2001.
EBSCO. 15 June 2001


Online Database (Grolier Online)
Format: "Title of article." Grolier Online. Encyclopedia name. Date of access
Example: "AIDS." Grolier Online. Encyclopedia Americana. 19 June 2001
.



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OTHER
In research papers and manuscripts submitted for publication, words that would be italicized in print are usually underlined. Many word-processing programs and computer printers permit the reproduction of italic type. In material that will be graded, edited or typeset, the type style of every letter ...must be easily recognizable. Italic type is sometimes not distinctive enough for this purpose and you can avoid ambiguity. Check instructor's preferences

http://www.csd509j.net/chs/services/library/bibliography.htm

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