2012?
Preparedness 101: Zombie Pandemic
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.); United States. Department of Health and Human Services
Silver, Maggie
This is a graphic novella published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which portrays a fictionalized situation in which there is an outbreak of a zombie virus. This document is "meant to be both educational and entertaining. Now that you've seen the importance of being prepared, take the time to put together an emergency kit with the items included in the checklist on the following page. You'll be ready for any kind of disaster, even zombies." This document also provides an all-hazards emergency kit list.
    Details
  • URL
  • Author
    Silver, Maggie
  • Publishers
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
    United States. Department of Health and Human Services
  • Date
    2012?
  • Copyright
    Public Domain
  • Retrieved From
    Centers for Disease Control: www.cdc.gov/
  • Format
    pdf
  • Media Type
    application/pdf
  • Subject
    Disaster preparedness--Plans

Citing HSDL Resources

Documents from the HSDL collection cannot automatically be added to citation managers (e.g. Refworks, Endnotes, etc). This HSDL abstract page contains some of the pieces you may need when citing a resource, such as the author, publisher and date information. We highly recommend you always refer to the resource itself as the most accurate source of information when citing. Here are some sources that can help with formatting citations (particularly for government documents).

Worldcat: http://www.worldcat.org/

Indiana University Guide: Citing U.S. Government Publications: http://libraries.iub.edu/guide-citing-us-government-publications
Clear examples for citing specific types of government publications in a variety of formats. It does not address citing according to specific style guides.

Naval Postgraduate School: Dudley Knox Library. Citing Styles: http://libguides.nps.edu/citation
Specific examples for citing government publications according to APA and Chicago style guides. Click on the link for your preferred style then navigate to the specific type of government publication.

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