Katey Ann Klingel
Source Use and Citation
1. The writer of a book needs to include an author, title, publisher, date of publication, and a page number in the notes section. The source is noted after the section of which he uses the source at the end of the page, paragraph, or sentence.
2. He gives total credit to how each source was used only on the footnotes that are used thoroughly throughout the book to compliment the text and explain its use.
3. The notes that do not have a page number are 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 24, 25 because he is representing these ideas in the text as a whole not on a specific line in the writing. 10 through 14 are different because there are some specific lines that are focused to specific pages (12, 13, 14), while some notes are written for the text as a whole(10, 11).
4. Bess credited the sources from other people by using their specific words and quotes, as well as including their names and information about the writing that it is in. We would not know what part of the writing he uses this source for if we didn't have the page notes. This is because if it was placed in a random place then he would not be clear on which part is from the original source.
5. Bess uses the book Ordinary Men many times throughout the book as an example and source to back up his claims. His argument is original even though he uses so many other sources because he uses his own claims and ideas to write the book with other people's words to support him.

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