Article: List the author's last name first, followed by a comma and a space. Type the author's first name and middle name or initial, if provided. Place a period at the end of the author's name.  Example: Buchman, Dana. If there are 2 authors, separate their names with a comma, typing the word "and" before the last author's name. Only invert the first author's name. For example: Martin, Johnathan A., and Christopher Jackson. For 3 or more authors, list the first author's name, followed by a comma and the abbreviation "et. al." For example: Fontela, Pablo, et. al. Type the title of the article in title case, capitalizing the first word along with all nouns, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, and words with more than 4 letters. Place a period at the end of the title, inside the closing quotation marks.  Example: Buchman, Dana. "A Special Education." If the article has a subtitle, type a colon and a space after the title, then type the subtitle in title case. Place a period at the end of the subtitle, inside the closing quotation marks. Type the title of the periodical in italics, followed by a comma and a space. Type the date of publication in day-month-year format, using a 3-letter abbreviation for all months with names more than 4 letters long. Place a comma after the date.  Example: Buchman, Dana. "A Special Education." Good Housekeeping, Mar. 2006, For scholarly journals, include the volume and issue numbers after the name of the publication. Separate these elements with commas. For example: Bagchi, Alaknanda. "Conflicting Nationalisms": The Voice of the Subaltern in Mahasweta Devi's Bashai Tudu." Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature, vol. 15, no. 1, 1996, If the article appears in a smaller regional or local publication, type the location in brackets after the title of the publication. For example: Trembacki, Paul. "Brees Hopes to Win Heisman for Team." Purdue Exponent [West Lafayette, IN], 5 Dec. 2000, For print articles, list the page number or page range where the article appears. For online articles, include a URL or DOI. If you use a URL, do not include the "http://" portion of the address. Place a period at the end of your citation.  Print example: Buchman, Dana. "A Special Education." Good Housekeeping, Mar. 2006, pp. 143-148. Online example: Trembacki, Paul. "Brees Hopes to Win Heisman for Team." Purdue Exponent [West Lafayette, IN], 5 Dec. 2000, www.purdueexponent.org/sports/article_b6f722b8-9595-58b8-849b-5a8447bbf793.html. When you paraphrase or quote from the article, place a parenthetical citation at the end of the sentence, inside the closing punctuation. Include the author's last name only if it wasn't incorporated in your text.   For example, you might write: "For a woman who had encountered few obstacles on the road to success, having a daughter with learning disabilities presented challenges and an opportunity to grow as a person (Buchman 147)." If the source was not paginated, only the author's name is needed. If you incorporated the author's name in the body of your paper and the source is not paginated, you don't need a parenthetical citation.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Start your Works Cited entry with the author's name. Provide the title of the article in double quotation marks. Include the title of the periodical and date of publication. List where the article can be found. Use the author's last name and page number for in-text citations.

Problem: Article: Drink responsibly; the Long Island iced tea contains about as much alcohol as 5 beers. Drink it slowly and snack to balance alcohol intake.
Summary: Serve the beverage and enjoy.

If you want to make a bridge that can sustain large amounts of weight, you will need to use the best materials. As stated above, epoxy is the strongest bonding agent you can use. Also, you want to make sure you have plenty of pasta on-hand to make the necessary reinforcements to your bridge. Consider the benefits and disadvantages of various types of pasta.Rounded spaghetti noodles may be better for some parts of your bridge while flattened noodles, like linguine, may be better for other parts. The purpose of building a spaghetti bridge is to apply the theoretical principles of engineering to a real-life construction project. As such, how you design the bridge deeply impacts the overall strength of the bridge. Some tips for building a stronger bridge include:  Use triangular rather than rectangular trusses. Build the roadbed with multiple layers of pasta. You should leave the middle layer of your pasta roadbed unglued. Some flexibility in the pasta helps to redistribute weight across your bridge. The longer the gap a bridge has to span, the harder it will be to redistribute the weight from one area across the entire bridge. So, if it is up to you, making a shorter bridge will help your bridge sustain more weight. There is a relationship between the weight and strength of your bridge. Adding more pasta to your bridge during construction, when properly built, should add strength, but also adds more weight. The heavier your bridge is, the more likely it is that it will collapse when extra weight is applied. So, make sure you account for the weight of your bridge when designing your bridge.
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One-sentence summary --
Select the best building materials. Design a stronger bridge. Limit the space your bridge must cover. Strike a balance.