(TURABIAN.)
Examples:
One author:
Wurman, Richard Saul. Information Anxiety 2. Indianapolis, IN: QUE,
2001.
Two to three authors:
Strunk, William, and E. B. White. The Elements of Style. New York:
Macmillan, 1972.
More than three authors:
Russon, Anne, Kim Bard, and Sue Taylor Parker, eds. Reaching Into Thought:The
Minds of the Great Apes. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Book with no author given:
New Life Options: The Working Women's Re- source Book. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1976.
Editor:
Tarrant, John, ed. Farming and Food. New York: Oxford, 1991.
Examples:
Article in a Newspaper or Magazine:
Di Rado, Alicia. 1995. Trekking through college: Classes explore
modern society using the world of Star trek. Los Angeles Times, 15
March, A3.
Article in a Newspaper
or Magazine, unsigned:
"Passion in Winnpieg," Maclean's, 6 November 1989, 97.
Article in a Journal:
Wilcox, Rhonda V. 1991. Shifting roles and synthetic women in Star trek: The
next generation. Studies in Popular Culture 13 (June): 53-65.
Encyclopedia entry, signed:
Young, Philip. "Hemingway, Ernest." Encyclopedia Americana.
1997 ed.
Encyclopedia entry, unsigned:
"Bosnia." International Encyclopedia. 1993 ed.
Examples:
CD-ROM:
Discover the Great Lakes: The Ecosystem of the Great Lakes - St. Lawrence.
CD-ROM. Ottawa: Environment Canada, 1997.
Examples:
Film:
Dances With Wolves. Directed by Kevin Costner. TIG/Orion, Los Angeles,
1990.
Format:
Author. Title of Document. Date of Publication or revision.
Available [medium]: <URL> [access date].
Examples:
Website with author:
Crouse, Maurice. Citing Electronix Information in History Papers. 26 March 1998.
Available [online]: <http://www.people.memphis.edu/~mcrouse/elcite.html>
[12 September 1998].
Source.