EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers

EXERCISE 63–9Integrating sources in Chicago papers

Read the following passage and the information about its source. Then decide whether each student sample uses the source correctly. If the student has made an error in using the source, click on Error; if the student sample is correct, click on OK.

ORIGINAL SOURCE

Hezbollah, with bases in the Bekaa and in Beirut’s southern suburbs, quickly became the most successful terrorist organization in modern history. It has served as a role model for terror groups around the world; Magnus Ranstorp, the director of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence, at the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, says that Al Qaeda learned the value of choreographed violence from Hezbollah. The organization virtually invented the multipronged terror attack when, early on the morning of October 23, 1983, it synchronized the suicide bombings, in Beirut, of the United States Marine barracks and an apartment building housing a contingent of French peacekeepers. Those attacks occurred just twenty seconds apart; a third part of the plan, to destroy the compound of the Italian peacekeeping contingent, is said to have been jettisoned when the planners learned that the Italians were sleeping in tents, not in a high-rise building.

From Goldberg, Jeffrey. “In the Party of God.” New Yorker, October 7, 2002, 180-95.

[The source passage is from pages 182-83.]

1 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 1 of 10: According to Jeffrey Goldberg, Hezbollah “quickly became one of the most successful terrorist groups in modern history.”1

2 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 2 of 10: According to Jeffrey Goldberg, Hezbollah, with bases in the Bekaa and in Beirut’s southern suburbs, “quickly became the most successful terrorist organization in modern history.”2

3 of 10

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EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 3 of 10: Unfortunately, terrorist organizations learn from one another. Jeffrey Goldberg observes, for example, that Hezbollah “has served as a role model for terror groups around the world.”3

4 of 10

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EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 4 of 10: Hezbollah has been successful. “It has served as a role model for terror groups around the world.”4

5 of 10

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EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 5 of 10: Hezbollah has been so successful that Jeffrey Goldberg calls it “a role model for terror groups around the world.”5

6 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 6 of 10: Jeffrey Goldberg notes that Hezbollah “virtually invented the multipronged terror attack when . . . it synchronized the suicide bombings, in Beirut, of the United States Marine barracks and an apartment building housing a contingent of French peacekeepers.”6

7 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 7 of 10: According to Jeffrey Goldberg,“[Hezbollah] virtually invented the multipronged terror attack when . . . it synchronized the suicide bombings, in Beirut, of the United States Marine barracks and an apartment building housing a contingent of French peacekeepers. Those attacks occurred just twenty seconds apart; a third part of the plan, to destroy the compound of the Italian peacekeeping contingent, is said to have been jettisoned when the planners learned that the Italians were sleeping in tents, not in a high-rise building.”7

8 of 10

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EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 8 of 10: Jeffrey Goldberg credits Hezbollah with “virtually invent[ing] the multipronged terror attack” by bombing the quarters of the US Marines and French peacekeepers “just twenty seconds apart.”8

9 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 9 of 10: Hezbollah scrapped a plan to bomb a third location in Beirut in 1983, explains Jeffrey Goldberg, “when the planners learned that intended victims were not sleeping in a high-rise building.”9

10 of 10

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EXERCISE 63–9 Integrating sources in Chicago papers - 10 of 10: Jeffrey Goldberg claims that Hezbollah abandoned a proposed attack in Beirut “when the planners learned that the Italians [their intended victims] were sleeping in tents, not in a high-rise building.”10