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Published byTerence Stokes Modified over 9 years ago
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Headlines Journalism Mr. Dudek
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Headlines Rules
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Telegraphic Style All extra words are trimmed. Articles like a, an and the are left out. Principal wins Nobel Prize
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Verb Tense Written in the present tense to give readers a feeling of immediacy: Eagles win State Championship
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Verb Tense Headlines about future events are written with infinitives to indicate future tense: 145 Seniors to Graduate Sunday
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Verb Avoid parts of the verb to be, such as is, are… Use lively, active verbs 15 Seniors are Chosen 15 Seniors Chosen
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Punctuation A comma is used in place of the word and Smith, Jones win scholarships
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Punctuation Exclamation points are rarely used. Periods are never used, except in abbreviations. Semicolons are used in places where a period would be expected. President announces budget; Congress to vote
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Punctuation Quotations should be placed within single quotes Dudek says ‘I quit’
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Punctuation Colons can be used to show what a person or organization said Dudek: ‘I quit’ CPS Report: Graduation rates increase
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Style Avoid splitting an infinitive. Congress to vote Sunday
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Style Avoid splitting names Jim Smith, John Doe win election
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Style Avoid ending a line with a preposition Martin critical of America’s laws
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Style Avoid repeating a word Student Council to discuss student rights
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Headlines Styles
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Basic This is the Headline
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Hammerhead Big on top, small on bottom is one style
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Kicker This is the kicker, or overline Main Headline is here
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Wicket The introductory paragraph, which may run several lines long and offer enticing facts – even quotes, leads the reader natural to the Main Headline
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Read Out Get Their Attention You can expand on the attention grabber here, using just about as many words as you need the reader to get really interested.
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