Include the name of the website as a whole as well as the title of the specific page you used. If you used several pages from the same site, just cite the home page. For publication date, use the date the page was last updated, or the copyright date if that is all that is available. The publisher/sponsoring organization may be the same as the name of the website. If the URL of the specific page you used is too long, shorten it to end at ".com," ".org," etc.
1. Michael Salda, "The Cinderella Project," October 2005, University of Southern Mississippi, http://www.usm.edu/english/fairytales/cinderella/cinderella.html.
2. Salda, "The Cinderella Project."
Salda, Michael. "The Cinderella Project." October 2005. University of Southern Mississippi. http://www.usm.edu/english/fairytales/cinderella/cinderella.html.
3. "Barack Obama on Budget & Economy," September 4, 2011, On the Issues, http://www.issues2000.org/2012/Barack_Obama_Budget_+_Economy.htm#Stimulus_Package.
4. "Barack Obama on Budget & Economy."
"Barack Obama on Immigration." September 4, 2011. On the Issues. http://www.issues2000.org/2012/Barack_Obama_Budget_+_Economy.htm#Stimulus_Package.
5. Bahá'í Faith, last modified 2011, http://www.bahai.us/.
6. Bahá'í Faith.
Bahá'í Faith. Last modified 2011. http://www.bahai.us/.
If you use several pages from a single website, cite the entire website instead of the individual pages.
7. Thomas Paine, "The American Crisis," December 23, 1776, Avalon Project, Yale Law School, http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/paine/pframe.htm.
8. Paine, "The American Crisis."
Paine, Thomas. "The American Crisis." December 23, 1776. Avalon Project. Yale Law School. http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/paine/pframe.htm.