ISBN-13: 9781443726320 / Angielski / Twarda / 2008 / 432 str.
ISBN-13: 9781443726320 / Angielski / Twarda / 2008 / 432 str.
NEWSPAPER EDITING- A MANUAL FOR EDITORS, COPYREADERS, AND STUDENTS OF NEWSPAPER DESK WORK by GRANT MILNOR HYDE. Originally published in 1931. PREFACE: Much has happened in the newspaper profession and in the schools of journalism since this book was first published ten years ago. The newspapers have covered a World War and war periods have always brought the greatest changes in American newspapers have wrestled with doubled costs of production, reduced staffs, much merging, curtailed income, and are now deep in the perplexities of reconstruction. Meanwhile schools and courses in journalism have greatly increased in number, enrollment, and branches of instruction. When the book was presented in 1915, it was the first textbook entirely devoted to the problems and technique of newspaper desk work. It has, therefore, been widely used in classes in copyreading, headline writing, and make-up, as well as in newspaper offices. Its contents have been put to a severe test, and some have been found wanting. The author himself, in using it year after year in class, filled many page margins with suggestions for improvement. Hence, in preparation for its tenth anniversary, it is well that the book should receive a thorough overhauling to bring it up to date, to put in some things omitted before, to make it more usable and teachable. Its general structure has not been changed. Most of the alterations are in the chapters on copyreading, headline writing, make-up, and type, but many additions have been made in other chapters. Class exercises have now been added to each chapter to present in brief much of the technique of teaching, as it has developed in the larger schools. They are intended to be suggestive, not only to the teacher, but to independent students and young newspaper workers. A bibliography has been added to suggest further reading. In the schools of journalism, the methods of teaching copyreading have developed during the period since first publication probably more than any other branch, and have been somewhat standardized. These ideas are now quite gen erally accepted i the work can best be done with a small group working around a copy desk at high speed and under strict supervision 2 thorough knowledge of typography must be included and 3 extensive practice in make-up, either on the stone or with shears and paste pot, must bind together other phases of desk work. Hence, the horse shoe copy desk is now a standard piece of furniture in many schools of journalism, and some schools are installing the type laboratory of the kind that was first developed at the University of Wisconsin a printshop without a press where students do not merely stand around and watch printers, but actually set type, plan display, and make up pages on the stone. Not even now is this a volume on the ethics of desk work. It seems certain, from the trend of talk in newspaper offices and in schools of journalism, that books will be written on the ethical considerations of copyreading and headline writ ing. But this book was at first, and still is, principally devoted to technique. Here and there, however, hints at ethical considerations have been dropped in, and the public service aspects of some particular practices are suggested. The number of clipped examples is still kept down to a minimum for two reasons i any examples of head lines and make-up taken from current newspapers are so bound up with todays news that they will go out of date and become stale in a few months 2 search for examples, good or bad, is the best exercise for newspaper students...
NEWSPAPER EDITING- A MANUAL FOR EDITORS, COPYREADERS, AND STUDENTS OF NEWSPAPER DESK WORK by GRANT MILNOR HYDE. Originally published in 1931. PREFACE: Much has happened in the newspaper profession and in the schools of journalism since this book was first published ten years ago. The newspapers have covered a World War and war periods have always brought the greatest changes in American newspapers have wrestled with doubled costs of production, reduced staffs, much merging, curtailed income, and are now deep in the perplexities of reconstruction. Meanwhile schools and courses in journalism have greatly increased in number, enrollment, and branches of instruction. When the book was presented in 1915, it was the first textbook entirely devoted to the problems and technique of newspaper desk work. It has, therefore, been widely used in classes in copyreading, headline writing, and make-up, as well as in newspaper offices. Its contents have been put to a severe test, and some have been found wanting. The author himself, in using it year after year in class, filled many page margins with suggestions for improvement. Hence, in preparation for its tenth anniversary, it is well that the book should receive a thorough overhauling to bring it up to date, to put in some things omitted before, to make it more usable and teachable. Its general structure has not been changed. Most of the alterations are in the chapters on copyreading, headline writing, make-up, and type, but many additions have been made in other chapters. Class exercises have now been added to each chapter to present in brief much of the technique of teaching, as it has developed in the larger schools. They are intended to be suggestive, not only to the teacher, but to independent students and young newspaper workers. A bibliography has been added to suggest further reading. In the schools of journalism, the methods of teaching copyreading have developed during the period since first publication probably more than any other branch, and have been somewhat standardized. These ideas are now quite gen erally accepted i the work can best be done with a small group working around a copy desk at high speed and under strict supervision 2 thorough knowledge of typography must be included and 3 extensive practice in make-up, either on the stone or with shears and paste pot, must bind together other phases of desk work. Hence, the horse shoe copy desk is now a standard piece of furniture in many schools of journalism, and some schools are installing the type laboratory of the kind that was first developed at the University of Wisconsin a printshop without a press where students do not merely stand around and watch printers, but actually set type, plan display, and make up pages on the stone. Not even now is this a volume on the ethics of desk work. It seems certain, from the trend of talk in newspaper offices and in schools of journalism, that books will be written on the ethical considerations of copyreading and headline writ ing. But this book was at first, and still is, principally devoted to technique. Here and there, however, hints at ethical considerations have been dropped in, and the public service aspects of some particular practices are suggested. The number of clipped examples is still kept down to a minimum for two reasons i any examples of head lines and make-up taken from current newspapers are so bound up with todays news that they will go out of date and become stale in a few months 2 search for examples, good or bad, is the best exercise for newspaper students...