Bibliography Formats for Internet Sources

Note: In the final form of any bibliography entry, any line after the first line must      be indented.

Website citations:
Creator(s) of site. "Title of site." <URL> (Date you accessed it Month Year).
Example of final form:
Burka, Lauren P. "A Hypertext History of Multi-User Dimensions."     http://www.apocalypse.org/pub/u/lpb/muddex/essay/  (5 Dec. 1998).

Helpful Notes about this format:

Creator of the site
Who created this site? Go to the top of the screen, then go to the bottom of the screen.
*If it's not clear on the screen you've gotten information from, try to find a "Home" link or an "About Us" link. Go there to see who the creator(s) are.
· *If it is a person, list the creator in your bibliography as Last Name, First Name.
·* If it is a company, list it as it is written.
·* If all you can find is an email address, this might not be a valid site to use as a research source.
URL: Be sure to list the URL of the screen from which you've gotten your information, not from the Home page if you've had to move there to find the creator of the site.

Online newspapers or newswire service citations:

Create a citation for an article in an online newspaper, or from a newswire service like PR Newswire.
Last Name, First Name Middle Name. "Title of Article." Name of Newspaper or Newswire Date of      Publication, Edition ed. Date You Read It <URL>.
Example of final form:
Curry, Tom "A Weather Vane for Social Security." MSNBC News 23 Mar. 2005. 23 Mar. 2005        <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7173128/>.

E-mail Citations:
Give the author's name or alias (if known), the subject line from the posting in quotation marks, the     date of the message (if different from the date accessed), and the address of the listserv, along      with the date of access in parentheses. For personal e-mail listings, omit the e-mail address.
Example of final form:
Thomson, Barry. "Virtual Reality." Personal e-mail (25 Jan. 1995).