CHEM 1406 UCB Benefits & Challenges of Using Marijuana Medically Essay

Chemistry 1406 – Introductory to Chemistry I – Allied Health
Objective:
The purpose of this assignment is to help chemistry students use their scientific understanding and research to
understand public issues that relate to chemistry.
Signature Assignment: Medicinal Use of Marijuana
Medicinal use of marijuana to treat conditions such as cancer, HIV, neurological disorders, inflammatory pain and autoimmune
diseases has sparked numerous debates amongst therapeutic users and those who believe it should not be used medicinally.
Marijuana is currently classified as a Class I controlled substance by the federal government. As of 2019, 33 states, the District
of Columbia Guam and Puerto Rico have legalized the use of medical marijuana with each state requiring users to register but
also deciding on the amounts an individual is allowed.
Write a 4 page minimum paper discussing the benefits and challenges faced when using Marijuana medicinally. You may use
peer-reviewed research papers, academic journals, government sources such as science.gov, textbooks and other reliable
resources.
Your paper must include the following as stated in the grading rubric (attached separately):
1. Image – Select or draw an image that is properly referenced in your paper to show that you are able to relate
your image to your content. The selected image must help the reader understand the topic better.
2. Graph – You may plot a graph from a data table from your cited source or use a graph already drawn to show
that you are able to interpret the data table or graph. From the graph, what generalization can be made?
3. Mathematical Equations/ Calculations- Use relevant mathematical formulas used in chemistry to calculate an
unknown quantity in your paper such as molarity, charge, energy, calories, frequency, mass, slope, y-intercept
etc. In doing so you will demonstrate an ability to reason quantitatively.
4. Be sure to thoroughly discuss both sides of the issue and present your position. Presenting both sides of the
issue before you state your position demonstrates that you have critically analyzed the data and made a wellinformed decision.
5. Write your paper third person even as you write your position. Use proper grammar and punctuation.
6. Include in-text citations and cite sources on the last page. The APA 6th edition guide has been provided below
with examples to help you properly format your paper.
APA 6th Edition

Your essay should be a minimum of 1000 words typed and double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5″ x 11″),
with 1″ margins on all sides (top, bottom left and right margins)

APA recommends Times New Roman font size 12 pt.

Your essay should include four major sections: Title Page, Main Body, and References.
Title Page

Title of the paper, (12 words or less, use upper and lower case letter)

Include a page header (also known as the “running head”) at the top of every page and insert page numbers
flush top right. Type “SHORT VERSION OF YOUR TITLE” in the header flush left using all capital letters.
The running head is a shortened version of your paper’s title and cannot exceed 50 characters including
spacing and punctuation.

The words Running Head should only appear on the title page not the other pages, other pages should only
have SHORT VERSION OF TITLE.

the author’s name, (your name)

and the institutional affiliation. (Cedar Valley College)

Title Page should look like the example shown below:
References: How to Cite in APA example:
Contributors’ names (Last edited date). Title of resource. Retrieved from http://Web address for OWL resource
Paiz, J., Angeli, E., Wagner, J., Lawrick, E., Moore, K., Anderson, M.,…Keck, R. (2010, May 5). General format.
Retrieved from Online Weblink for APA Resource
APA Style 6th Edition YouTube link : Video Resource for Assistance in Using APA Standards
University of California Berkeley Library
APA Style Citations (American Psychological Association)
This document provides guidelines for citing sources according to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
(5th edition), often referred to as “APA style”. It incorporates the updated guidelines for citing electronic references, which the APA
has issued as an amendment to those originally published in the manual. This guide is an abbreviation of APA guidelines. If the kind
of work you wish to cite is not represented, or specifics about the resource you need to cite are not addressed, see the guide’s section
on obtaining more help.
How Do I Cite? When you refer to or base your ideas on another person’s work, you need to cite it. APA style requires you place
brief reference citations in your text and then complete citations for the works referenced at the end of your paper in an alphabetized
reference list.
1) In-Text Reference Citations. At the point of reference, provide your reader with a brief reference citation.
When quoting, or referring to a specific part of a work, include information on the specific page(s) or part of the work.
Citing a work, one author
As Maguire (2004) stated, your text continues.
OR
Your text or quotation here (Maguire, 2004).
Citing a work, two to five authors (or editors as authors)
According to Coward and Maguire (1999), your text continues.
OR
Your text or quotation here (Coward & Maguire, 1999).
Citing a specific part of a work
According to Coward and Maguire (1999, p. 45), your text continues.
OR
Your text or quotation here (Coward & Maguire, 1999, p. 45).
Citing a specific part of an electronic source that does not have page numbers
As Coward (2008, Conclusion section, para. 3) concluded, your text continues.
OR
Your text or quotation here (Coward, 2008, Conclusion section, para. 3).
General Rules for an In-Text Reference Citation
Elements
ƒ Note the last name(s) of the author(s) and the year of publication.
Include these elements within the text’s narrative or in accompanying parentheses;
include in parentheses any element that does not already appear in the narrative.
ƒ Separate elements in parentheses by a comma
ƒ Do not include suffixes such as Jr.
ƒ Cite only the year; do not include months or days
ƒ Subsequent citations to the same work, within the same paragraph, do not require you re-cite the year
Citing a specific part of a work
ƒ Always provide page numbers when quoting
ƒ Follow the year of publication with a comma and identify the page(s), chapter, table, etc.
ƒ Use abbreviations p. and chap. for page or chapter
ƒ For electronic sources without page numbers…if the source referenced provides paragraph numbers, use them (precede with
symbol ¶ or para. ). If it does not, but has section headings, cite the relevant heading for the section followed by a comma
and the number of the paragraph in that section.
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Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 2 of 8 pages
Works by more than one author
ƒ For a work by two authors, provide the last names of both each time the cited work is referenced
ƒ For a work by three to five authors, provide the last names of all authors the first time the work is cited; in any subsequent
references cite the last name of the first author followed by et al.
ƒ For a work by more than five authors, provide the last name of the first author followed by et al.
Include the year of publication in the first and any subsequent citations to the work.
ƒ When citing within parentheses, join multiple authors with &
ƒ When citing within the text’s narrative, join authors with the conjunction and
Author is a group, no author, and anonymous author
ƒ Group author. For a work authored by a group, spell out the group name. When it is long, and has a readily
understandable abbreviation, it may be abbreviated in subsequent references.
ƒ
Initial citation of group author
Subsequent citation(s)
(The National Organization for Women [NOW], 1999)
(NOW, 1999)
No author provided. For a work with no author, instead cite the first few words of the work’s entry as given in the “reference
list” (see “order of entries” in the section of this guide describing the reference list)
– Usually it will be the title. If it is a title of an article or book chapter, put it in “quotes”. If it is a title of a book,
periodical, or report, italicize it.
No author listed
As was noted (“The Disability Gulag,” 2003) at the time, your text continues.
Note: Capitalization of title words differs from their treatment in the reference list
ƒ
Anonymous work. For a work designated as anonymous, cite the author as Anonymous
Undated work
ƒ For undated works, note n.d.
Undated work
As Winton (n.d.) stated, your text continues.
OR
Your text or quotation here (Winton, n.d.).
2) Reference List. The reference list provides the full citations for the works you cite. Below are examples and the general
guidelines to follow when citing.
Examples: print publications (for electronic publications, see corresponding examples)
note: These examples are single-spaced to condense the length of this guide; however, APA style is to double-space
reference list entries
BOOKS
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (2004). Title of book. Location:
Publisher.
Holmberg, D., Orbuch, T., & Veroff, J. (2004). Thrice-told tales:
Married couples tell their stories. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
CHAPTER IN A BOOK
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A. (2004). Title of chapter. In A. Editor,
B. Editor, & C. Editor (Eds.), Title of book (p./pp. page
number/s). Location: Publisher.
Stein, A. (1997). Sex after ‘sexuality’: From sexology to poststructuralism. In D. Owen (Ed.), Sociology after postmodernism
(pp. 158-172). London: Sage.
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Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 3 of 8 pages
JOURNAL ARTICLES
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (2004). Title of article.
Title of Journal, volume(issue, when appropriate), page-number/s.
McCright, A. M., & Dunlap, R. E. (2003). Defeating Kyoto: The
conservative movement’s impact on U.S. climate change policy.
Social Problems, 50, 348-373.
Stein, H. F. (2003). The inner world of workplaces: Accessing this world
through poetry, narrative literature, music, and visual art.
Consulting Psychology Journal: Practice & Research, 55(2), 84-93.
MAGAZINE ARTICLES
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A. (2004, Month day). Title of article. Title of Magazine,
volume if any, page-number/s.
*Second example illustrates a citation when no author is named
and includes bracketed descriptive information
Kenji, M., & Tanako, K. (2003, February 13). Conflict and cognitive
control. Science, 303, 969-970.
The disability gulag [Letter to the editor]. (2003, December 14).
The New York Times Magazine, 28.
NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A. (2004, Month day). Title of article. Title of Newspaper,
p./pp. page number/s.
*Second example illustrates citation format when no author is named
and the article referenced is on non-consecutive pages
Nagourney, E. (2003, October 28). Impatience, at your own risk.
The New York Times, p. F6.
Skin deep: ‘Cosmetic wellness’ helps people feel good about their looks.
(2004, March 24). The Modesto Bee, pp. G1, G4.
REVIEW ARTICLES
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A. (2004, Month day as needed). Review title [Review of the
medium Title of item reviewed]. Title of Periodical, and
publication information following format for journal, magazine,
or newspaper, as appropriate.
*Second example illustrates citation where review is untitled
Petrakis, J. (2004, February 24). Regrets [Review of the motion picture
The fog of war]. The Christian Century, 121, 66-67.
Zulu, I. M. (1997). [Review of the book The opening of the American
mind: Canons, culture, and history]. College & Research
Libraries, 58, 487-488.
Examples: electronic publications
note: These examples are single-spaced to condense the length of this guide; however, APA style is to double-space
reference list entries
0NLINE PERIODICAL, JOURNAL ARTICLE (with DOI)
General Format
Examples:
Author, A. A., Author B. B., & Author C. C. (2004). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, volume(issue if needed), page-number/s.
doi:number
Gilbert, J. (2008). Against the commodification of everything.
Cultural Studies 22, 551-566. doi:10.1080/09502380802245811
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 4 of 8 pages
ONLINE PERIODICAL, JOURNAL ARTICLE (without DOI)
Journal Article
General Format
Author, A. A., Author B. B., & Author C. C. (2004). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, volume(issue if needed), page-number/s.
Retrieved from statement.
*What’s included in the Retrieved from statement varies, see additional
rules for electronic references for criteria.
Examples:
*Examples illustrate article citations for a freely available article,
an article from a subscription database, and an article from a
subscription database where the resource name is provided in lieu
of a homepage.
Wada, K. (2008). Illegal file sharing 101. Educause Quarterly, 31(4),
18-25. Retrieved from
http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/EQM0844.pdf
Hopkins, N., & Moore, C. (2001). Categorizing the neighbors: Identity,
distance, and stereotyping. Social Psychology Quarterly, 64, 239252. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org
Magazine Article
General Format
Example:
Newspaper Article
General Format
Singh, H. B., Prasad, P., & Rai L. K. (2002). Folk medicinal plants in
the Sikkim Himalayas of India. Asian Folklore Studies, 61,
295-310. Retrieved from ProQuest database.
Author, A. A. (2004, Month day). Title of article. Title of Magazine,
volume if any, page-number/s. Retrieved from statement.
*What’s included in the Retrieved from statement varies, see additional
rules for electronic references for criteria.
Newton-Small, J. (2009, February 11). Congress’s new love affair with
twitter. Time. Retrieved from
http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1878773,00.html
Author, A. A. (2004, Month day). Title of article. Title of Newspaper,
p./pp. page number/s. Retrieved from statement.
*What’s included in the Retrieved from statement varies, see additional
rules for electronic references for criteria.
Example:
*Example shows citation when no author is named.
Prohibition sustained. (1920, January 6). The New York Times, p. 14.
Retrieved from ProQuest Historical Newspapers database.
ONLINE BOOK
General Format
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (2004). Title of book. Retrieved from
statement including publisher information if appropriate.
*What’s included in the Retrieved from statement varies, see additional
rules for electronic references for criteria.
Examples:
*The first example shows a citation for an electronic book that was
retrieved from a subscription database. As the homepage is not
readily identifiable, the database name is provided. The second example
is a book that is freely available. In both cases, the publisher is not
otherwise evident and needs to be provided.
Bell, S., & Morse, S. (2003). Measuring sustainability: Learning by
doing. London: Earthscan Publications. Retrieved from the ebrary
database.
Goldman, E. (1914). The social significance of the modern drama.
Boston: Badger. Retrieved from
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/Writings/Drama/index.html
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 5 of 8 pages
Online document (institutional, personal website, etc.)
General Format
Author, A. A. (year if available, if not abbreviation for no date).
Title of document. Retrieved from statement.
*What’s included in the Retrieved from statement varies, see additional
rules for electronic references for criteria.
Examples:
*Example shows citation with group as author. As the content
may be changeable a retrieval date is provided.
NCAA Committee on Sportsmanship and Ethical Conduct. (n.d.). Operations
plan 2001-02 and 2002-03: Strategic planning and budgeting for the
2002-03 and 2003-04 Academic Years. Retrieved February 9, 2004,
from http://www1.ncaa.org/membership/governance/assoc-wide/
sportsmanship_ethics/index.html
General Rules for Reference Lists (see additional rules for electronic publications, below)
Titling and spacing
ƒ Start the list on a new page. Title it References (Reference if citing only one work) and center the title
ƒ Double-space entries
ƒ Individual entries should have a hanging indent (i.e. first line of entry is flush with the left margin, subsequent lines indented)
Order of entries
ƒ Entries are alphabetized by author’s last name
ƒ For works with multiple authors, alphabetize by the last name of the first listed author
ƒ Multiple works by the same author(s) are alphabetized by the first author’s last name and ordered amongst themselves by
year of publication (earliest first)
ƒ Multiple works by the same first author, but different subsequent authors, are alphabetized within the list by the last name of
the first author, and then alphabetized amongst themselves by the first unique last name
ƒ When the author is a group, alphabetize by the first significant word in the group’s name
ƒ Works signed Anonymous should be alphabetized as if that is the author’s name
ƒ Works with no author should move the title to the author position (before the date of publication) and alphabetize by the first
significant title word
Elements of an entry
ƒ Each entry usually contains the following four elements: a) author b) publication date c) title and d) publishing data
ƒ Commas generally separate items within an element
ƒ Periods are generally used to end an element
a) Author
– Invert authors’ names — e.g., Last name, A. A., Last name, B. B., & Last name, C. C.
– Use commas between an author’s last name and initials, between initials and suffixes, and between multiple authors.
When there are multiple authors, precede the last named author by &
Provide author last names and initials for works by one to six authors. For seven or more, follow the sixth author by a

comma and the abbreviation et al.
– If the author is a group, its name should be written in full, capitalizing the first letter of significant words. A parent body
precedes a subdivision of an organization — e.g., University of Somewhere, Department of Something
– If the work has no author, move the work’s title to the author position of the entry
– Edited books generally treat the editor as the author. Follow editor name with (Ed.) or (Eds.) as appropriate
However: If a book has only one author and also an editor, the editor’s name is given in parentheses, after the title -in the manner a translator would be treated. In this case, the editor name is not inverted – e.g., Title of book (A. A. Last
name, Ed.).
– For a chapter in a book, the chapter author is the author listed for the entry. Editor information, if any, precedes the book
title and is not inverted. See book chapter example for a sample citation.
• Multiple editors are separated with a comma; use & between the last two named editors
• If there are only two editors, use & without a comma between the editor names
• Follow editor name(s) with (Ed.), or (Eds.),
– Reviews treat the reviewer as the author for the entry
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 6 of 8 pages
b) Publication date
– The year of publication is enclosed in parentheses. It usually follows the author name and precedes the title.
– For magazines, newsletters, and newspapers, provide the year followed by the exact date as given on the publication –
i.e. month, month and day, or season of the issue – e.g., (YYYY, Month dd) or (YYYY, Season)
– If there is no date available, enter (n.d.)
c) Title
Capitalization & italics
– For published periodicals, capitalize the first letter of all significant title words
– For nonperiodicals, book chapters, and articles, capitalize only the first word, and proper nouns, of titles and subtitles
– Italicize titles of whole works for both periodicals and nonperiodicals. Also italicize the volume number, if any, for
periodicals. Do not italicize the titles of parts of a larger work – e.g., chapters in books, articles in journals, etc.
Title is a chapter in a book
After the author, cite the chapter title and add a period. Enter In and give the name of the book’s editor(s), if any, the title of
the book, and, in parentheses, the page numbers cited (use abbreviation p. or pp. as appropriate)
See book chapter example, for a sample citation
Edition, report number, volume information (for nonperiodicals & book chapters)
– With a book, enclose any of the above in parentheses after the title — e.g., Title of book: Subtitle (3rd ed.).
– For a chapter in a book, provide this information prior to, and in the same parentheses as, the relevant page numbers,
separated by a comma — e.g., Title of chapter. In Title of book (3rd. ed., pp. 6-12).
– Use Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) to indicate volume numbers
Other descriptive information.
Any non-standard descriptive information regarding the form, or type of source cited, that is important for the identification
of the material, is placed in brackets
– For descriptive information regarding articles & chapters in a book, place brackets after the article or chapter title -e.g., Title of article [Letter to the editor or Special issue, etc.].
– For descriptive information regarding books and other nonperiodicals, place brackets after the title and after any
parenthetical information as regards edition, volume, etc. –e.g.,
Title of nonperiodical (parenthetical information, if any) [Motion picture or Bibliography, etc.].
– For reviews, place brackets after the review title, identify it as a review, identify the medium reviewed and the title of the
work reviewed – e.g., Title of review [Review of the book/motion picture/television program/etc.
Title of Book, Motion Picture, etc.].
If a review is untitled, place the bracketed material after the review author and date; retain the brackets . See review
example, for sample citations.
Periodical
– Provide the title of the periodical, the volume number, if any, and inclusive page numbers
– Do not use abbreviation vol. before the number; use Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) to indicate volume numbers
– If a periodical does not use volume numbers, include the month, season, or other designation following the year of
publication – e.g., Author, A. A. (1991, July).
– If a journal paginates each issue separately (i.e. each issue starts its numbering with page 1), provide the issue number, in
parentheses, immediately after the volume number – e.g., 38(2), 12-17.
– When noting page number(s) in an entry for a newspaper article, precede number(s) with p. or pp.
– See article examples for sample citations
d) Place of publication and publisher (non-periodicals)
– Provide the city, state (or province where applicable) and country (if outside the United States.).
– Place a colon after the place of publication and provide the name of the publisher. Use 2-letter abbreviations for states
– If two or more publisher locations are listed, give the first or the home office (if known)
– If the publisher is a university and the university name includes the state or province, do not repeat that information in
the place of publication
– Write, in full, the name of associations, corporations & university presses. Omit terms like Publishers, Co., or Inc.,
not required to identify the publisher. Keep the words Books and Press.
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 7 of 8 pages
ADDITIONAL RULES FOR ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS
The rules for citing electronic publications build upon those of their print counterparts. In general, you include the same elements, in
the same order, as you would for a print copy of the material. Then you add a retrieval statement that provides details about electronic
access to your source. APA guidelines for resource types are given above, guidelines for the electronic retrieval statement are outlined
below. Note: what you include in a citation will depend partly on the information the source makes available. Sometimes a
judgement call, as to what information to include, is required. When this is the case, keep in mind that the overall goal of the citation
is to make a source findable to your readers.
Retrieval statement. A retrieval statement is provided at the end of a citation’s entry. It may include the date and/or source location.
Retrieval date. When the source content is likely to change, or is retrieved from the “open” web, include the date of access,
e.g., Retrieved Month day, year, from source/location.
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
When the cited work has no fixed publication date, edition, or version, a retrieval date documents the moment you referred
to a “changeable” source
A retrieval date is not needed when the content is not likely to change – e.g., the published version of a journal article or
book.
When in doubt about whether a retrieval date is needed, providing the date is acceptable style
Name/location of a source. A decision will need to be made between the provision of a DOI, a URL, or a database name,
and, for nonperiodicals, what publisher information needs to be included.
ƒ
DOI
– When a Digital Object Identifier is available for the cited source, provide it in lieu of a URL or database name
– Copy DOIs exactly and do not place a period at the end of the entry

See electronic journal article citation for an example entry with a DOI
DOIs are used by scholarly publishers to uniquely identify electronic content and provide a persistent way to retrieve it that is not
database specific. A fuller discussion of DOIs, including more information on how to locate them within a source,
is available via http://www.apastyle.org/elecmedia.html
ƒ
URL
– Give the full URL to the material cited when the source is freely available
– If the material cited was accessed via a subscription based resource (such as a library licensed database), give
the URL to the home page of that resource. Also give the URL to the home page of reference resources (such as online
dictionaries or encyclopedias).
Your reader may not have access to a given subscription database, and/or the database may generate URLs that are not permanent.
In both cases, providing the home page avoids the likelihood of a non-working URL.
However: URLs for subscription resources can be complex and may not easily reduce to a homepage. Should this prove
the case, providing the name of the database, in lieu of a URL, is acceptable – see next entry.



Copy URLs exactly and do not place a period at the end of the entry
If you need to break a URL across several lines of text, break it before a point of punctuation — do not break it after
http:// and do not use a hyphen to break it
When the URL leads to a page on how to obtain/purchase the material (for example, a vendor like Amazon),
state Available from instead of Retrieved from
ƒ
Database name
– For subscription-based resources (when no DOI is available for the material cited and the URL does not reduce
to an identifiable homepage) provide the database name — e.g., Retrieved from database name.
– Provide the name of a database used to access documents of limited circulation (hard to find books, etc.)
ƒ
Geographic location & publisher (non-periodicals)
– The geographic location of a publisher is not generally needed
– The name of the publisher is needed if it is not evident elsewhere in an entry (e.g., via the author’s name for selfpublished works, via the URL if it includes the publisher name, etc.)
– When you need to cite a publisher, you generally do so in the retrieval statement — e.g.,
Retrieved from Publisher at source location.
However, when the material was not retrieved from the publisher, include any publisher location/name
information available as you would for a print copy, and then add a retrieval statement according to the
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Page 8 of 8 pages

guidelines noted above. This will provide your reader with the information they need to locate the source, either online
or in print format. See online book citations for examples.
No publisher name is needed when a DOI is part of a citation
Need More Help??
For complete information regarding the structure of individual citations, order of entries, citing materials not represented, etc.,
consult the following APA guides:


Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. 5th ed. Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association, 2001. The official APA style guide. Call number: BF11 A5 P8 (Doe & Moffitt Reference and other
locations). Note: The rules for citing electronic resources have been updated since this guide was published. The APA has
made these updates available online – see next bullet point.
An official update to the APA print manual as regards the citation of electronic references is available at
http://www.apastyle.org/elecref.html
Bibliographic management software, like EndNote or RefWorks, can help automate the citation process. Similarly, many databases
allow the export of their citations in APA style. To learn more about these options, visit
http://lib.berkeley.edu/instruct/know_your_library.html#bib or talk with a reference librarian.
(3/09) TD
Created by Instructional Services, Moffitt Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Copyright 2009 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.

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Customer 454983, March 7th, 2022
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Amazing writer. Truly the best.
Customer 454983, February 19th, 2022
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I got an A in this project.
Customer 453877, February 6th, 2020
HIMA 310
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Customer 453913, May 23rd, 2021
Criminal Justice
great paper. came fast and exactly what I needed
Customer 455099, November 13th, 2021
Physics
AWESOME ASSINMENT
Customer 453877, March 7th, 2020
Psychology
+
Customer 454569, August 25th, 2021
Nursing
Great content, resources, and turn around!
Customer 454991, November 2nd, 2021
Other
Best writer ever
Customer 454983, February 21st, 2022
Criminal Justice
Absolutely LOVE the essay I received. I really appreciate it so much.
Customer 454561, February 16th, 2021
Business Studies
Exactly what I wanted to see in the paper. Thanks.
Customer 455001, October 20th, 2021
Sociology
This is an exceptional paper utilizing the sources provided. Thank you so much!
Customer 454953, October 14th, 2021
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