In the Book, Assisted Suicide, Barbara Dority, Vice President of The

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In the Book, Assisted Suicide, Barbara Dority, Vice President of The

Citing from a BOOK

In the book, Assisted Suicide, Barbara Dority, Vice President of the

Hemlock Society of Washington State, wrote “I believe that history will remember Jack Kevorkian as the truly great man he is” (81). Dr. Kevorkian believes he is doing the correct thing by assisting ill patients to death.

Or

Many people believe that “history will remember Jack Kevorkian as the truly great man he is” (Dority 81).

Dority, Barbara. “Assisted Suicide Is the Ultimate Civil Right.” Assisted

Suicide. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 1996. 23-82. Citing from a WEB SITE

According to Ron Gauzburger’s Politics1.com, Chuck Hagel has said, “We have misunderstood, misread, misplanned and mismanaged our honorable intentions in Iraq with an arrogant self-delusion reminiscent of Vietnam.”

Having fought in a war himself, Hagel, a former Vietnam combat veteran, is highly qualified to make that recommendation.

Or

Chuck Hagel has said, “We have misunderstood, misread, misplanned and mismanaged our honorable intentions in Iraq with an arrogant self-delusion reminiscent of Vietnam” (Gauzberger).

Gauzberger, Ron. “US Senator Charles (Chuck) Hagel (Nebraska).”

Presidency 2008. 2007. Politics 1.com. 25 Feb. 2007

http://www.politics1.com/p2008-gop.htm Citing from an ARTICLE

Not every parent is negligent because a child has turned out to be a bad seed.

The majority of our society feels that “teenagers are old enough to know right from wrong” (“Should” 3). Parents can instill many valuable life lessons to their children and the children will still ultimately do what they want to do.

OR

In an article titled “Should parents pay for their kid’s crimes,” Junior

Scholastic magazine claims that “teenagers are old enough to know right from wrong” (3).

“Should parents pay for their kid’s crimes?” Junior Scholastic 26 April

1999: 3. Citing from an TWO ARTICLES with the SAME AUTHOR

The morning commute aside, CTR representatives argue that it must be doing its job because “The non-drive-alone share of commute trips increased at 73% of worksites . . .” (WA State Government “Fourth” 6). What this figure doesn’t take into consideration, however, is the non-participating worksites.

Or

A Washington state government survey of the fourth year of the Washington

Commute Trip Reduction Program states that “the non drive-alone share of commute trips increased at 73% of the worksites” (6).

Washington State Government. “Fourth Year Survey Results.”

Washington’s Commute Trip Reduction Program. Olympia, WA:

Washington State Government Printing, 1998.

------. “Seventh Year Survey Results.” Washington’s Commute

Trip Reduction Program. Olympia, WA: Washington State

Government Printing, 1998. Citing LONG QUOTES (4+ lines)

Stuart Jackson, a nutritionist who writes health columns for the New York Times, explains why chocolate may actually cause physical fitness rather than physical problems: There is empirical evidence that…raises serious doubts about chocolate’s fattiness: few chocolate lovers can simply lie back and wait for chocolate to come to them. For most, getting and keeping chocolate often requires strenuous physical work. In fact, the physical craving can sometimes be so severe that chocolate lovers must dress, leave the house, get in their cars, and drive one block to the corner store to buy a chocolate fix. (5)

In this way, chocolate cravings serve as a means of exercise for those who might other wise get none. We should actually be encouraging chocolate addiction rather than trying to suppress it.

Jackson, Stuart. “The Funny Thing About Chocolate is That It Isn’t All That

Funny.” New York Times 18 May 1996: sec. 2: 5+.

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