Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Other High School Newspapers

1. My favorite cover was the The Roar because it was very neat and professional looking.
2. The Mustang immediately grabbed my interest because the cover was very interesting looking and I was curious to see how interesting the inside would be.
3. I really enjoyed the Best of 2013 section. I was interested in it because I was curious to see what everyone thought of all the different subjects listed.
4. There are no stories on the cover page. There were 7 stories on the first pages.
5. All the newspapers each have their own style. Also, they all have a general layout.
6. Some have different types of pictures, some have just words and some have just pictures.
7. They all generally had a large headline on the cover and smaller stories with it. Some of the high school newspapers are more like magazines.


Broadsheet
-The Lone Star Dispatch
-The View
-The Long-View

Tabloid
-The Highlander
-The Lance
-The Lion's Roar

NewsMagazine
-The Mustang
-Tom Tom
-The Flash


Headlines- the heading or caption of a newspaper article
Subheadlines- a smaller, secondary headline that usually elaborates on the main headline above it. 
Lines- the betting line which quite often appears in the daily newspapers
Boxes-a weekly or daily publication consisting of folded sheets and containing articles on the news, features, reviews, and advertisements
Photos- the use of pictures to represent a story
Teaser- 
a short item, a headline, or photo with caption referring to or promoting a news article or feature on inside pages.
Flag- the nameplate of a newspaper.
Folios- the number of each page together with the date and the name of the newspaper.
Captions- words printed above or below a picture in a book or newspaper or on a television screen to explain what the picture is showing
Stories- a news report of any length, usually presented in a straightforward style and without editorial comment.
Bylines- the name of the person who wrote a newspaper story. 
Jumps- what an article does when it continues, unfinished, from one page to another.
Story dividers- something which forms a barrier between two areas or sets of things.  
Screens- pattern of tiny dots used to create gray areas; to screen a photo is to turn it into a halftone.
Masthead/staff box- a two-meaning term: (1) a listing of executives, staff, operating and circulation data, or (2) the nameplate title at the top of Page One.
Infographics- newsroom slang for "informational graphic"; any map, chart or diagram used to analyze an event, object or place.



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