Write an article based on this "List the title of the article first if no author is listed. Write n.d. Include the name of the organization, publication, or website in italics. Write “Retrieved from,” then include the website's URL. List the organization first in the reference if one is listed. Put anonymous first in your entry if it's given as the author."
article: Only capitalize the first word, words that come after a colon, and proper nouns. Don't put quotation marks around the title. Put a period after the title.  Let's say the name of the article you want to cite is “Ecuador: History and Culture.” The beginning of your entry would look like this: "Ecuador: History and culture." If the article includes an organization name or an anonymous author, you'll use that instead of the title. for "no date" in parentheses after the title. This tells the reader that no date was included. Use lowercase letters and include a period after the “n” and “d.” After the parentheses, put a period. Your entry would now look like this: "Ecuador: History and culture. (n.d.)." Capitalize each word of the name, except for “of,” “and,” and “to.” Put a period after the name. This is what your entry should look like now: "Ecuador: History and culture. (n.d.). Select Latin America." Include the entire URL of the site where you found the information you're citing. Do not put any punctuation at the end of the citation, unless it appears in the URL. Here's how your final entry might look: "Ecuador: History and culture. (n.d.). Select Latin America. Retrieved from http://www.sla.com/ecuador.html/" Just as in your in-text citations, you can use the organization that published the article if one was provided. Write the organization name first in your entry on your References page, in the same place you'd put the author.  If the website name is the same as the organization name, don't write it again after the page title. You can skip that part of the references entry and go straight to "Retrieved from." For example, let's say you're citing an article called “Relaxing with Deep Breathing,” which was published by the American Psychological Foundation. No date is provided. Here's what your entry would look like: "American Psychological Foundation. (n.d.). Relaxing with deep breathing. Retrieved from http://www.apf.com/Relaxing_and_deep_breathing/" Write “Anonymous” in place of the author in your citation, then format the rest of your entry as a typical website reference.  You might be citing a web page titled “Being Mindful During a Dog Walk,” written by an anonymous author. It's posted on a website called Bark Bark Friends, but there isn't a date. Here how your entry would look: "Anonymous. (n.d.) Being Mindful During a Dog Walk. Bark Bark Friends. Retrieved from http://www.barkbarkfriends.com/mindful_dog_walks/"

Write an article based on this "Prepare to record the narration. Record the narration. Complete the narration."
article:
Open the presentation and Click the Slide Show tab on the menu bar. Click the Record Slide Show button and select Start Recording From Beginning from the pull-down menu. The Record Slide Show dialog box will open. Place a check in the Narrations And Laser Pointer check box and click Start Recording. The Slide Show preview window will open. Click the right-pointing arrow in the left corner of the preview window to begin the narration. Pause the narration at any time by clicking the pause button on the Recording shortcut menu, located in the upper-left corner of the screen. Click the right-pointing arrow again to advance to the next slide and continue the narration. Once the narration for the final slide is complete, click the right-pointing arrow or right-click the slide and click End Show. Click Yes when prompted to keep the current slide show timings. The narration is complete.