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...Writing With Sources” guide published by Harvard’s Expository Writing Program states in its section on plagiarism that “your citation must accurately reflect your process.” The guide instructs students to cite the document where they found information or quotations??even if that document in turn cites a separate source. To students who disobey this rule, the guide warns, “you are misleading your reader and possibly embarrassing yourself...

Author: By Anton S. Troianovski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Crimson Cuts Columnist for Lifting Material | 10/27/2006 | See Source »

...have seen director Pastel take a slightly more adventurous approach. There was something too literal about her direction. The play desperately called for a crazy, surrealist approach that never materialized. Nonetheless, Pastel made sure that the most important elements of the play—the allusions and intertexuality of quotations??were clearly emphasized through the actors’ clean delivery of their lines.Stoppard’s “A Separate Peace,” the second play in the program, is a comedy centered on a mysterious man, John Brown (Sean R. Fredricks...

Author: By Eric W. Lin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Terrific 'Shots' at Greatness in Ex | 10/12/2006 | See Source »

...charges were part of a politically motivated campaign by a hard-left, anti-Israel academic who was falsely charging “plagiarism” against me and several other pro-Israel writers. The false charge was that I found several quotations??by Mark Twain, Lord Peel, and others—in a secondary source, but cited them to the primary sources in which they originally appeared. That is the citation method approved by The Chicago Manual of Style. Moreover, I cited the secondary source eight times and was using several of the quotes years before the secondary...

Author: By Alan M. Dershowitz | Title: Plagiarism Accusations Unfairly Characterized | 5/5/2006 | See Source »

Something is wrong here. Krugman does attribute the direct quotations from the diplomat to The Economist, but he describes the quotations?? contexts—particularly in the second sentence—as though it is his voice and not The Economist’s. In doing so, he passes off entire sequences of words (e.g. “...compared the situation to that of Japanese-Americans who were interned after 1941, and wondered whether Mexico...”) written by The Economist...

Author: By Zachary S. Podolsky, | Title: Et Tu, Paul Krugman? | 3/13/2003 | See Source »

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