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STEP 1102 - STEP Into College: STEP 1102-7

Searching for articles

Welcome!

These resources will help you find an article about being a first-year college student from a primary source like a newspaper, archive, or yearbook.

If you have any questions or can't find what you're looking for, contact Jessica.

Potential keywords to try:

  • First Year 
  • Freshman/Freshmen
  • Dorms, dormitory, residence hall
  • ASUW
  • Orientation
  • College/university

Finding UW Publications & Wyoming Resources

Finding Magazines/Newspapers

Primary Source Documents

MLA Citations

Newspaper from a Database

Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article: Subtitle if Any." 

Name of Newspaper [city of newspaper if city name

not in name], Date of Publication, p. Page number if given. Name of Database, Permalink URL. 

Example

Russolillo, Steven. "Why the Housing Market is Getting Stronger: New-home

Sales and Quarterly Results from Toll

Brothers this Week Should Bolster the Housing Market's Solid Fundamentals." Wall Street Journal,   22 May 2016. ProQuest, unr.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://search.proquest.com/docview/1790256212?accountid=452. 

Newspaper

Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article: Subtitle if Any." Name of Newspaper, 

Date of Publication, p. Page number. 

Example

Cook, Lorne. "EU Warns 3 Nations of Legal Action." San Francisco Chronicle, 14 June 2017, p. A4+. 


Note: If the article appears on non-consecutive pages (e.g., the article starts on page 4 then continues on page 12), write the first page number and a plus (+) sign. E.g., 4

In-Text Citations

Parenthetical citations typically go at the end of a sentence that quote, paraphrases, or refers to a source. Closing punctuation for that sentence goes after the citation.

Each item cited in your text should have a corresponding item in your bibliography.

Standard citation
List the author's last name followed by a page number: (Barron 194).

Author has more than one work in your bibliography?
Add a short title to your citation: (Barron, "Redefining" 194).

Source has no author?
Use a short form of the title: (Reading at Risk 3)

Source has no page numbers?
Exclude page numbers or use a marker that is prominent in the text (like paragraph numbers, section numbers, time stamps, chapter numbers, line numbers, etc): (Chan, par. 41), (sec. 3), "Hush" 00:03:16-17), (ch. 17), ("Ode" 1-3), etc.

Citing more than one source in a single sentence?
Separate the citations with a semicolon: (Baron 194; Jacobs 55).

Already mentioned the author's name in the sentence?
Omit the author's name from the citation: (194).

Citing the Bible?
Use the title, followed by abbreviated book name, followed by chapter and verse separated by a period: (Bible, Ezek. 1.5-10).

Citing Shakespeare?
Use the play's abbreviated title followed by act, scene, and line numbers separated by periods: (Mac. 1.5.17).

Jessica Rardin

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Jessica Rardin
She/her/hers
Contact:
Research and Instruction
Coe Library, Rm. 304G
(307) 766-6833