Example 1: Print Voter's Pamphlet, County Insert.
White, Stan. Measure 26-184: Argument in Favor. Multnomah County Voter's Pamphlet, 2016, pp.M32 - M33. Voters' Pamphlet: General Election November 8, 2016, Oregon State Dept, 2016.
Broken down by color coding (see chart below).
White, Stan. Measure 26-184: Argument in Favor . Multnomah County Voter's Pamphlet, 2016, pp.M32 - M33. Voters' Pamphlet: General Election November 8, 2016, Oregon State Dept, 2016.
Citing this in your presentation: ex. Stan White, of Teamsters Local 206, argues that "the current system is unfair to working people," on page M33 of the Multnomah County Voter's Pamphlet.
Notes: the "Title of Source" doesn't have quotation marks in this example because it isn't properly a "Title". In this case it's a description of what the thing is, because Stan White didn't title the argument he furnished.
Remember that the physical State Voters' Pamphlet contains different inserts depending on the county.
Example 2: Print Voter's Pamphlet, State
Cameron, Gemey. "Measure 97 Would Hurt Fixed-Income Retirees." Voters' Pamphlet, Oregon General Election, November 8, 2016, Oregon Dept. of State, 2016, p88.
Cameron, Gemey. "Measure 97 Would Hurt Fixed-Income Retirees." Voters' Pamphlet, Oregon General Election, November 8, 2016, Oregon Dept. of State, 2016, p88.
Example 3: Online Voters' Pamphlet, Miliatry and Overseas Edition, State
Russell, Carol. "Protect Affordable Housing and Jobs for More Than 100,000 Oregon Construction Workers (Measure 104: Argument in Favor)." Online Voters' Pamphlet, Military and Overseas ed., 2016. Oregon Secretary of State, oregonvotes.gov/voters-guide-military/votersguide.html#Arguments%20in%20Favor .
Russell, Carol. "Protect Affordable Housing and Jobs for More Than 100,000 Oregon Construction Workers (Measure 104: Argument in Favor." Onilne Voters' Pamphlet, Military and Overseas ed., 2016. Oregon Secretary of State, oregonvotes.gov/voters-guide-military/votersguide.html#Arguments%20in%20Favor .
NOTE: The URL for the online Oregon Voters' Pamphlet DOES NOT link directly to the section of the page you actually used, so without the rest of the citation, you are not directing your reader as to how to find what information you used. I supplied the Measure Number and 'argument in favor' information, because that is what you'd need to know in order to continue from the link provided.
Reminders on Citations (in MLA Format) Example of a possible citation. Lastname, Firstname. “My Great Article.” Journal of Quality Things, photos by Arnie Toddlesworth, vol.1, no. 23, pp. 45-67. Super Useful Article Database, Subscribe Co., www.website.biz/junk/~netzel/ probablyabigmessofcharacters=+blerg+gross%7Csupergreat=/. Accessed 1 Mon. YEAR.
Lastname, Firstname. “My Great Article.” Journal of Quality Things, photos by Arnie Toddlesworth, vol.1, no. 23, pp. 45-67. Super Useful Article Database, Subscribe Co., www.website.biz/ junk/~netzel/ probablymessofcharacters=+blerg+gross%7Csupergreat=/. Accessed 1 Mon. YEAR. If you use a citation maker, stick with the OSLIS citation maker.
Remember: You may have more than one "container"...ex. an article [Source] is found in a journal [Container 1], which is found in a library database [Container 2].In the example citation above Journal of Quality Things is the title of Container 1, and Super Useful Article Database is the title of Container 2. Note that each container can have it's own other information elements. |