News Writing - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel News Writing Part 23 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
=B. F.=--Abbreviation for =bold-face=, =black-face type=.
=Blind Interview.=--An interview given by a man of authority on condition that his name be withheld.
=Blotter.=--The police record-book of crime.
=Box.=--A rectangular s.p.a.ce marked off in a story, usually at the beginning, for calling attention to the news within the box. The news is often a list of dead or injured or of athletic records, printed in bold-face type.
=Break-line.=--A line not filled to the end with letters, as the last line of a paragraph. In a head a break-line may contain white s.p.a.ce on each side.
=Bridge.=--The raised platform in front of the magistrate's desk in police court.
=Bull.=--A statement or a series of statements, the terms of which are manifestly inconsistent or contradictory.
=Bulldog Edition.=--The earliest regular edition.
=Bulletin.=--A brief telegraphic message giving the barest results of an event, often an accident, unaccompanied by details.
=Catch-line.=--(1) A short line set in display type within the body of a story to catch the eye of the reader and enable him to get the striking details by a hasty glance down the column. (2) A line at the top of each page of copy sent to the composing room one page at a time: as, "Society," "State," "Suicide." Such lines enable the bank-men to a.s.semble readily all the stories and parts of stories belonging together.
=Chase.=--A rectangular iron or steel frame into which the forms are locked for printing or stereotyping.
=Condensed Type.=--Type thin in comparison to its height; contrasted with extended type.
=Copy.=--Any ma.n.u.script prepared for the press. _Blind Copy_ is copy that is difficult to read. _Clean Copy_ is ma.n.u.script requiring little or no editing. _Time Copy_ is any matter for which there is no rush,--usually held to be set up by the compositors when they would otherwise be idle, or to be used in case of a scarcity of news. The Sunday paper is filled with time copy.
=Copy Cutter.=--An a.s.sistant in the composing room who receives copy from the head copy reader, or editor, cuts it into takes, and distributes the takes to the compositors to set up.
=Copyholder.=--A proof-reader's a.s.sistant who, to correct errors, reads copy for comparison of it with the proof.
=Copy-reader.=--One who revises copy and writes the headlines. Not to be confused with _proof-reader_.
=Cover.=--To go for the purpose of getting facts about an event or for the purpose of writing up the event: as, "Jones covered the prize fight."
=Dead.=--A term applied to composed type that is of no further use; also sometimes applied to copy.
=Deck.=--See _Bank_ (1).
=Department Men.=--Reporters who seek news regularly in the same places, as the police courts, city hall, coroner's office.
=Display Type.=--Type bolder of face or more conspicuous than ordinary type.
=Dope.=--Slang for any information or collection of facts to be used in a story; applied specifically to sporting stories, meaning a forecast of the outcome, as in a horse-race or a boxing contest.
=Em.=--The square of the body of any size of type; used as the unit of measurement for making indentions, indicating the length of dashes, etc.
=End Mark.=--A mark put at the end of a story to indicate to the compositor that the story is complete. The two end marks used are the figure 30 enclosed in a circle and a #.
=Feature.=--To give prominence to; to display prominently.
=Feature Story.=--A story, often with a whimsical turn, in which the interest lies in something else than the immediate news value; one that develops some interesting feature of the day's news for its own sake rather than for the worth of the story as a whole.
Also called "human interest" story. See page 224.
=Filler.=--A story of doubtful news value included for lack of better news in a column or section of a paper. The so-called "patent insides" in country weeklies and small dailies are known as fillers.
=Flash.=--A brief telegraphic message sandwiched between two sentences of a running story, giving the outcome before it is reached in the story: as, "Flash--Smith knocked out in fourteenth round," when the reporter's story has got only as far as the eleventh round; or, "Flash--Jury coming in; get ready for verdict," thrust into the body of a story a reporter is sending about a murder trial.
=Flimsy.=--Thin tissue paper used in duplicating telegraphic stories as they come off the wire.
=Flush.=--On an even line or margin with.
=Follow Copy.=--An instruction, written on the margin of ma.n.u.script, to the compositor that he must follow copy exactly, even though the matter may seem wrong.
=Folo.=--An abbreviation for _follow_, marked at the beginning of stories to indicate that they are to follow others of a similar nature: as, "Folo Suicide," meaning to the bank-man, "Put this story in the form immediately after the one slugged 'Suicide.'"
See page 15.
=Form.=--An a.s.semblage of type, usually seven or eight columns, locked in a chase preparatory to printing or stereotyping.
=Fudge.=--A small printing cylinder and chase that can be attached to a rotary press; used for printing late news. See page 18.
=Future Book.=--The book in which the city editor records future events: as, speeches, conventions, lawsuits, etc.
=Galley.=--A long, shallow, metal tray for holding composed type.
From the type in this tray the first or _galley proof_ is pulled for corrections.
=Galley Proof.=--An impression made from type in a galley.
=Gothic.=--A heavy, black-faced type, all the strokes of which are of uniform width.
=Guide Line.=--See _Catch Line_ (2).
=Hanging Indention.=--Equal indention of all the lines of a paragraph except the first, which extends one em farther to the left than those succeeding.
=Head.=--Abbreviation for _headline_.
_Drop-Line Head_
SECOND YEAR OF THE GREAT WAR OPENS TODAY
_Pyramid Head_
Clash between Germany and Russia Occurred August 1, 1914
_Cross-Line_
END NOT IN SIGHT
_Hanging Indention_