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15.00 Sample "Endnote" (content endnote)

An endnote for a printed version of this writing guide would look like this (See section 9.06 for discussion):


SAMPLE ENDNOTES PAGE

 

SACHCl Writing Guide 76

 


Endnotes

1We gratefully acknowledge the
important contributions made to this guide by

Stephen J. Adams, Nancy Disch, Arlan P.

Dohrenburg, Eleanor H. Hoffman, Roger C. Lips,

Kenneth C. Risdon, and Timothy G. Roufs.

2Aadapted from American Psychological
Association, Publication Manual ([3rd ed.]. [1984].)

3Legal materials--court cases, statues, and other

legislative materials--generally follow A Uniform System

of Citation (13th ed.) published in Cambridge, MA by the

Harvard Law Review Association (1983). See this

publication for further information on the more technical

aspects of citing legal materials.

4Adapted from Proceedings of the 53rd Annual

Meeting, American Sociological Society: Report of the

committee on research by E. W. Noland et al., 1958,

American Sociological Review, 23, 706.














If you have an "Endnote" page (see section 9.06), it should be typed double-space on a separate page and inserted between the text and the "Appendix" (if there is one) or the "References." See section 9.08, "Order of the Paper's Parts."