
This issue was much better than the last one.
You paid attention and it shows. There were some good articles in this issue:
On Campus Housing Shortfall
Lack of Off-Campus Housing
Yell on Your Cell
Coastal Cleanup
Bad Weather and Tough Play
Having Fun With Your Furlough
I spotted some good ledes:
A tiki bar, women’s panties and scattered Playboy magazines. These are the things one would find at a college party and not on California’s coastlines. But these are just some of the items that volunteers find on trashed beaches. Good thing the annual California Coastal Cleanup Day is here to clean up the mess.And:
On a Monday evening, after a long day of school with piles of homework mounting on the floor, why would any half-sane person want to take another quiz? “I get to drink during this quiz!” said Katie Mills, a grad student at HSU studying Sociology.
I also spotted some good quotes:
“It’s the best when you have a row of little kids sitting at your feet listening with these big grins on their faces, and sometimes there’s even a few that actually have rhythm,” Isley said. This monthly event is a good way to bring the community together and experience all different types of new art.
And:
“It was a free kick on the other side of the field from me and as the ball came in I saw all the defenders shift over to the other side leaving a bunch of free space,” said Nakamoto. “I just waited to pounce on the ball if it got through and when it did I was there to punch it in.”
You came up with better headlines too
If the quality improves at the same level with each issue you will produce a great publication by the end of the term.
So here are ways to improve the next issue:
First, here is a quick guide to ledes:
- Default to "You" ledes, or a descriptive or anecdotal lede.
- Question ledes rarely work.
- The "who" is never the lede unless the "who" is Jessica Simpson.
- Unless you use a "you", descriptive or anecdotal lede, the "what" is usually your lede.
- Ditch the lede you start with on your first draft and look for it elsewhere in your story.
How to handle attributions:
The free kick came in from the opposite field.
Sara Nakamoto saw all the defenders shift to the other side, leaving a bunch of free space. "I just waited to pounce on the ball if it got through," she said of her lone goal that won the game for the women's soccer team Sunday. "And when it did, I was there to punch it in."
- For your first quote, you can start the quote before the attribution. On every other quote in your story you must first introduce your new speaker before the quote.
- Place the attribution immediately after the first break in the quote.
- When transitioning to a new speaker, try paraphrasing the first part of your quote as your introduction to the speaker
"Arts! is a good way to get your name out there. You ca take a demo to a vendor and if they like your music they'll let you play," Wallace said.Instead:
"Arts! is a good way to get your name out there," Wallace said. "You can take a demo..."

Musician Karrie Wallace said that Arts Alive! helps your get her name out. "You can take a demo to a vendor," she said, "and if they like your music they will let you play."Use Active Verbs!
Not:
Spice was greeted by an anxious crowd that sat through...
Instead:
After a few too many opening acts, the anxious crowd greeted Spice.
Other examples of passive verbs:
When a sentence is passive there is one or more words that separate the noun and the verb. So in the first example the word "are" separates the noun " from the verb "host." That is true for the third example, although the noun "People" and the word "are" are invisible. Sometimes you can turn a sentence active by making visible those invisible words. So:
- ...the Northcoast Environmental Center are hosting the event...
- Thousands of sea animals are harmed every year.
- Collecting and reporting the debris not only helps the wildlife...
- For students living on campus...
- The dorm rooms are slowly deteriorating.
- ...our school is trying to expand.
- The Jacks were unable to come up with the points and were defeated by WEstern Oregon University.
When people collect and report debris, they not only help wildlife...Show, don't tell. Here is telling not showing:
Spice was timid and seemed unsure of the crowd.To figure out if you are telling and not showing, look at your verb.
Spice has lived with violence.
The teams began to get livelier, yelling out wrong answers in hopes of messing up the competition.
...the game was filled with hard tackles and highly physical play.
Suggs capitalized on a beautiful pass from Simpson and scored his third goal of the season...Can you visualize capitalizing?
Here is another example.
...as rushed passes and the inability to put the ball in the net stopped any promising possession.Show us how they couldn't put the ball in the net. And:
Show us the big interception. So slow down when you write. You don't need to tell your reader everything. Just the highlights.
A big interception by the Wolves off Jack's quarterback Mike Peroux swung momentum out of the Jacks' hands.

Forget the play-by-play.
Instead, focus on the best players and how they played. And focus on the strengths and weaknesses of the team and how those will help or hurt the team in the next game and the rest of the season.
But don't forget

The nut graph is a paragraph high up in the story that summarizes all the major points. It tells the reader what the story will be about and so gives readers a reason to read to the end.
You don't need a nut graph in a story focused on only one piece of news or idea. But you need it whenever you have multiple elements.
In the Coastal Cleanup story, for example, these were the points that needed to be summarized in a nut graph:
- Icky things end up on beaches
- Animals die from the trash
- Picking up trash can be fun!
- It all started at HSU but now nationwide.
- The cleanup project finds wierd stuff.
- It is amazing how much garbage the project finds
Try writing your nut graph first, not last. To do that you will have to outline your story.
Delete the dull so it doesn't bury the good stuff
Here is an example:

When asked to explain Arts!, David Isley said, "It's a gift to citizens and patrons."
Now that is dull. What followed was much more interesting:
Isley is a music teacher who plays seven instruments including the guitar, banjo, mandolin, and fiddle.

When you think you are done, try flipping the whole story. Writers tend to write backwards.
Kill those adverbs.
They weaken, rather than strengthen your copy.
While College Creek will provide desperately needed on-campus living space...
Kill hyperbole and strengthen generic terms
Words like "unparalleled, "very", "incredible," and "unique."
Understatement is more effective than overstatement. Remember that readers tend towards skepticism. So if you understate they believe it is bigger than you say. If you overstate they believe it is less.
End your stories with a bang!
To do

Break apart run on sentences.
Consider how many things you smushed together in one sentence:
The Jacks continued to battle back into enemy territory until kicker Kyle Scheierholt was sent in for a field goal, ending teh first half with 3-3 tie.
- The Jacks battled back into enemy territory.
- The coach sent in kicker Kyle Scheierholt for field goal.
- That ended the first half with a tie of 3-3.

In some stories you need to seek out sources most relevant to your story
In a story about Rosh Hashonah, it doesn't help the reader to interview people who know nothing about the holiday.
In others you need to diversify. So while the Word on the Street is informative and entertaining, it does not reflect the diversity of the campus.

Box the fun stuff
They don't have to be just for essential information. Stick in a box the wierd stuff found on the beach during cleanup day. Or the questions and answers from Quiz night.
If you have fun with the information you collect, the reader will have fun reading your publication.
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