MULTIPLE CITATIONS
When several different sources need to be cited for a sentence or paragraph they should be inserted into one single footnote divided by a semicolon:
Example:
3. Kenneth T. Jackson, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations: A Record of Forty Years (Chicago: Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, 1963), 20; Jay Allen, “The Spanish Nightmare II,” October 8, 1937, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations Papers, Special Collections, Daley Library, University of Illinois at Chicago; William E. Dodd, “The Dilemma of the International Situation,” February 28, 1938, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations Papers, Special Collections, Daley Library, University of Illinois at Chicago.
Sequences of Footnotes
Footnotes are numbered beginning with one through to the whatever is the last note in the manuscript. The numbers should not begin from one again on each page or refer to particular sources by a number.
Example:
4. Walter Johnson, ed., The Papers of Adlai E. Stevenson : Beginnings of Education 1900-1941, Vol. 1 (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1972), 377; Kenneth S. Davis, The Politics of Honor: A Biography of Adlai E. Stevenson (New York: G. P. Putnams’ Sons, 1967), 125.
5. C. Wright Mills, Power, Politics, and People: The Collected Essays of C. Wright Mills (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1963), 406.
6. Davis, Politics of Honor, 126; Lawrence Goodwyn, The Populist Moment: A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978), 84-87.
7. Goodwyn, Populist Moment, 88.