Word: captioning
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...Packard claimed, view the population with unadulterated . Every newborn child is an-customer. But, the new customers some people that "pollute the air up the beaches." Commercial has obscured this obvious , he asserted. A caption to a advertisement depicting a stork the spirit: "This bird means...
...schools are opened to all pupils." This was dismissed with a smirk: "Then came the hedge." The sum of TIME'S account was in the snickering quip: "Not later, but not now." My question is: Does TIME report the facts honestly or twist them to secure a cute caption? Perhaps a more profound question could be asked: Did TIME read the pastoral letters, and if so, why were they not reported fairly...
After belittling items, picture and caption re J.F.K.'s senatorial successor, Ben Smith, from the heterogeneous seaport of 25,000 hardy Americans, you conclude that "his sole experience in political office was as a city councilman and mayor of Gloucester." It's to laugh...
...early days of American newspapers, if a big news story broke late or the editor wished to give it special emphasis, he ran it under the caption "Extraordinary Intelligence." As time went on, this cumbersome phrase was reduced to the simple word extra, came to mean a special edition to report some late-breaking, important news...
...that doesn't appeal to the client, how about this easy-to-remember product name: ZIT. The caption of the ad practically dictates itself: '''This is ZIT!" The subheadline to read: Does ZIT wash? Yes! Does Zit wear? Yes! Does ZIT do something more for your figure? You bet! If this is ZIT get LOST...