Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4

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.

For help with this exercise, see Integrating sources.

ORIGINAL SOURCE

Winnie [Mandela] had played no part in [Nelson] Mandela’s social life since they separated: “It was as if they did not exist for each other,” said their daughter Zindzi. But she still caused political problems. After campaigning vigorously and successfully as an ANC [African National Congress] candidate at the election she had become a prominent Member of Parliament. Mandela unwisely appointed her Deputy Minister of Arts, but she soon became involved in financial scandals: shady diamond deals, a dubious tourist project for black Americans, and an antipoverty program which allowed her huge expenses. Mandela made no move until she became openly disloyal: she accused the ANC of being preoccupied with appeasing whites, and challenged them to show they were in power.

From Sampson, Anthony. Mandela: The Authorized Biography. New York: Knopf, 1999.

[The source passage is from page 491.]

1 of 5

Question

undefined. After Nelson Mandela and his wife, Winnie, separated, “It was as if they did not exist for each other.”1
◯ Error
◯ OK
Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4 – 1

2 of 5

Question

undefined. Sampson argues that after the Mandelas separated, Winnie Mandela “still caused political problems” for her husband.2
◯ Error
◯ OK
Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4 – 2

3 of 5

Question

undefined. Sampson explains that when Winnie Mandela served as deputy minister of arts, “she became openly disloyal and accused the ANC of being preoccupied with appeasing whites.”3
◯ Error
◯ OK
Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4 – 3

4 of 5

Question

undefined. According to Sampson, Nelson Mandela “made no move [in response to Winnie’s actions] until she became openly disloyal.”4
◯ Error
◯ OK
Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4 – 4

5 of 5

Question

undefined. When Winnie Mandela was deputy minister of arts, she benefited financially from “shady diamond deals, a dubious tourist project for black Americans, and an antipoverty program which allowed her huge expenses,” according to Sampson’s biography of Nelson Mandela.5
◯ Error
◯ OK
Integrating sources in Chicago (CMS) papers 4 – 5