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Articles to be added to the Bibliography: *
The following information is needed:
- Author's name,
- Title of the article,
- Name of journal in which it was published,
- Date of the journal issue,
- Volume and number of the journal issue,
- Page numbers in the journal
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Archival holdings, unpublished works, to be added to the Bibliography: *
The following information is needed:
- Author's name,
- Title (or letter from/to),
- Date,
- Collection,
- Box,
- Folder,
- Archive (where held),
- Location of archive
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Items found on-line, to be added to webpage: **
If you find an item online that you believe might be useful, be sure to get the url of the item. Much of the material on websites is considered copyrighted. If we copy it outright to our site, we can possibly be violating a copyright. If we link to it on its own site, no copyright violation can occur. This sounds much harder than it is. Give it your best shot, and we'll work it out from there. If in doubt, ask John Robertson
- If the source page does not use frames, all you have to do is select whatever appears in the little box at the top of your browser and copy it by using Edit/Copy or using control-C. You can paste this into your email using Edit/Paste or by using control-V.
- If the source webpage uses frames
- Netscape: you can obtain the item's url by right-clicking on the page of interest, then selecting "create shortcut", selecting & copying the url (Edit/Copy or control-C), then click "cancel", then paste the url into your email using Edit/Copy or control-v.
- Internet Explorer: you can obtain the item's url by right-clicking on the page of interest, then selecting "create shortcut". A shortcut will be placed on your desktop. You can right click on this shortcut, select and copy the url using Edit/Copy or control-C, and paste the url into your email usind Edit/Paste or control-C. You may then right click on the shortcut on your desktop and delete it at your convenience.
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