It sounds odd at first (free cat with purchase of kidney!) but makes a lot of sense. Best of luck to you!
'Safe'
Natter 54: Right here, dammit.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Wow, I had no idea there were programs like that. Teddy gets a kidney, donor kitty gets a home, neat!
YAYAY! My 11:30 meeting was cancelled! Or, more truthfully, it was apparently never actually scheduled with the Higher-Ups. That makes my day so much better.
Wow on the kitty kidney! I'm afraid my Jo is too weak and possibly too old for that (at 13). Also, I'm sure the cost is ginormous. Still I love the idea!
Anyone know APA style? I need to know what to do with in-text citations where you have one that follows another when both cite the same source. Like I'm sure the first time you do the norm (Lawrence, 2007), but the second time (and even a third time) in a row, do you do something like (IBID)? I'm not up on APA style and would prefer not the purchase the damn thing. I've found some online resources, but not one tht answers this specific question.
GC, hang on, I'll go get the manual.
GC - I did something like, "blah blah blah" and also stated "blah blah blah" (Lawrence, 2007) and never got marked down for it or had it mentioned.
Kitty kidney transplant is really cool. Everything work out ~ma for you, Teddy and the donor.
OMG I HATE MY JOB/COMPANY/COWORKERS!
I knew I could count on my librarian peeps!
Aims, normally I'd just go with it, but this professor is notorious for being a stickler on pretty much every single damned detail. She frightens me.
Here's the official word - no ibid. "Within a paragraph, you need not include the year in subsequent references to a study so long as the study cannot be confused with other studies cited in the article."
Their example: "In a recent study of reaction times, Walker (2000) described the method ... Walker also found"
If you have citations with multiple authors, the following apply:
2 authors - always include both names
3, 4, 5 authors - cite all authors the first time; in subsequent citations cite the first author and use et al.
6 or more authors - cite only the first name plus et al. in text, but include all names in the Reference list.