Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Writing for the Mass Media 3.9, 3.10 and 3.11

3.9
1. Estalene Smoots dropped her French class the first day of school.
2. Sadie Hoots won $3.2 million on "Wheel of Fortune."
3. Frustrated that their professor required them to eat fried rutabagas, the students walked out of the class at 9 a.m Thursday.
4. The office manager had 21 plants, 62 cats and two puppies.
5. President Aubrey Lucas is originally from Compton, Calif.
6. On Oct. 25, Ruth Ann Bobetski will turn 41.
7. Goober Hicks lives at 10 W. Hardy St. He used to live in a run-down shack at 2803 Williamsburg road.
8. Abby gave birth to a 9-pound boy.
9. The president invited me to dinner at the White House, but I could not fit it into my schedule.
10. Sen. Davies said his earnings had increased 10 percent in the 1980s.
11. Barney the Dinosaur will be executed Nov. 2.
12. Twenty-five vagabonds attacked me from behind, in front of the hub.
13. Snarkle found a 10-inch bug crawling in her spaghetti. "Great! Now I won't need seconds," she exclaimed.
14. All the men in the ROTC chapter wore red, white and blue pantyhose to class in January 1991.
15. The Bay City baseball team lost its final game 2-1 and climbed dejectedly back onto its bus.

3.10
1. mph
2. A civil case is one in which an individual, business or agency of government seeks damages or relief  from another individual, business or agency of government. A criminal case is one that the state or the federal government brings against an individual charged with committing a crime.
3. The eyewitness found himself in an eye-to-eye confrontation.
4. A clock reading.
5. Never.
6. Scene 2.
7. Q-tips
8. Capitol.
9. When it is used as an adjective.
10. Christian Science Church. Both.

3.11
1. The United States comprises 50 states.
2. A.D. 33.
3. czar.
4. QE2
5. courts-martials
6. International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
7.  Navy ROTC
8. liberal.
9. Pour.
10. Atlanta.

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