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Continue With the NewsDate: 2015-10-07; view: 480. After providing a smooth transition between the lead and second paragraph, continue with the news: more information about the topic summarized in your lead. Mistakenly, some reporters shift to a different topic – a decision certain to confuse their readers:
(1) CORVALLIS, Ore. –The police spend more of their time responding to domestic squabbles than to any other type of call. Merritt Tendall has been the police chief in Corvallis for 15 years. He has seen a lot wrecks and a lot of crimes, but says he never wanted any other job. REVISED: CORVALLIS, Ore. – The police spend more of their time responding to domestic squabbles than to any other type of call. “We hate those calls,” says Police Chief Merritt Tendall. “You never know what to expect. We settle most of the disputes in a few minutes. But people get angry and irrational, and some take their anger out on us. I've been the police chief here for 15 years, and it's my biggest problem.”
(2) “No nation depends more upon its news media, and no media have more influence,” Marty Cirocca said. Cirocca added that this small group of people decides which stories millions of America will receive each day. REVISED: “No nation depends more upon its news media, and no media have more influence,” Marty Cirocca said. “Unfortunately,” Cirocca continued, “a small group of people, located primarily in New York, controls the most influential media, and that small group decides which stories millions of Americans receive each day”.
Before it was revised, the first story seemed to discuss two different topics. The lead summarizes a problem that confronts police officers everywhere: family disputes. The second paragraph shifts to the police chief: his career and goals. Until it was revised, the story's second paragraph failed to even mention the problem of family disputes. The second story seems disorganized because, originally, its second paragraph mentioned “small group of people” but failed to identify them or to link them to anything mentioned in the lead.
Names, Names − Dull, Dull Other reporters place too much emphasis upon their sources' identity. As a result their second paragraphs fail to convey any information of interest to readers. The following examples have been revised to emphasize the news – what the sources said or saw – not who they are:
(1) A construction worker was killed Monday afternoon when a gust of wind toppled the frame for a new apartment building on Conway Road. Julian Prevatte, a carpenter for John McCormack & Sons, was an eyewitness to the accident. REVISED: A construction worker was killed Monday afternoon when a gust of wind toppled the frame for a new apartment building on Conway Road. Julian Prevatte, a carpenter at the site, said he tried to warn the victim when the frame began to collapse, but the noise made by a saw drowned out his shouts. (2) Three gunmen who took $4,200 from a Safeway Supermarket at 1010 S. Broadway Ave. Friday were captured in a nearby motel room 20 minutes later. Kathy Laxalt, 21, of 1842 S. Gayle Road was one of two cashiers on duty when the men entered the store. REVISED: Three gunmen who took $4,200 from a Safeway Supermarket at 1010 S. Broadway Ave. Friday were captured in a nearby motel room 20 minutes later. Kathy Laxalt, a cashier at the supermarket, said the men stood near the entrance for five minutes before they came in, drew their pistols and forced an assistant manager to open the safe.
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