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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