EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes

EXERCISE 63–13Chicago documentation: notes

Click on the Chicago note that is handled correctly.

1 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 1 of 10: The student has quoted from page 48 of the third edition of The AIA Guide to New York City, by Elliot Willensky and Norval White; the book was published in 1988 in San Diego by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. This is the first reference to the source in this paper.

2 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 2 of 10: The student has quoted from page 140 of Cities Then and Now by Jim Antoniou; the book was published in New York in 1994 by Macmillan. This is the second reference to this source in the paper, and it does not immediately follow the first reference.

3 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 3 of 10: The student has summarized information found on pages 16-17 of Low Life, by Luc Santé, a book published in New York by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in 1991. This is the second reference to the book in the paper, and it immediately follows the first reference.

4 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 4 of 10: The student has quoted from page 7 of an article in the Bridge, volume 32, issue 1, published in 2002. The article, by Leslie E. Robertson, is titled “Reflections on the World Trade Center.” This is the first reference to the article in the paper.

5 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 5 of 10: The student has quoted from page 76 of “Building Plans,” by Paul Goldberger. The article appeared in the weekly magazine the New Yorker on September 24, 2001. This is the first reference to the article in the paper.

6 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 6 of 10: The student has quoted from page 78 of “Building Plans,” by Paul Goldberger. The article appeared in the New Yorker on September 24, 2001. This is the second reference to the article in the paper, and it does not immediately follow the first reference.

7 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 7 of 10: The student has quoted from page 14 of Why Buildings Fall Down, by Matthys Levy and Mario Salvadori, published in New York by W. W. Norton and Company in 1992. This is the second reference to the book in the paper, and it does not immediately follow the first reference.

8 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 8 of 10: The student has quoted from an interview with Brian Clark conducted by Matt Barrett. The interview, which appeared in an episode titled “Why the Towers Fell” on the television program Nova, was broadcast on April 30, 2002, on the Public Broadcasting System. The source is a broadcast interview, so there is no page number.

9 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 9 of 10: The student has quoted from an article, “Wider Inquiry into Towers Is Proposed,” by James Glanz. It appeared on May 2, 2002, in the online version of the New York Times. The URL is http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/02/nyregion/02TOWE.html, and this is the first reference to the article in the paper.

10 of 10

Question

EXERCISE 63–13 Chicago documentation: notes - 10 of 10: The student has summarized information from the article “Why Did the World Trade Center Collapse?” by Thomas W. Eagar and Christopher Musso. The article appeared in the online journal JOM: The Journal of the Minerals, Metals, and Materials Society, volume 53, issue 12, published in 2001. The URL of the article is http://www.tms.org/pubs/journals/JOM/0112/Eagar/Eagar-0112.html. This is the first reference to the article in the paper.