This short phrase is what journalists call a headline.
What is a HED?
The likeness of this type of giant animal lives at the American Museum of Natural History.
What is a blue whale?
This is the New York Times section that Neel Patel edits.
What is Opinion?
What is Columbia University?
This is the subway station we have used the most during class.
What is Columbus Circle?
This tagline or teaser appears after the headline and is sometimes called a subheadline.
What is a DEK?
These structures process sludge and food waste at the Newton Creek Wastewater plant.
What are the "digester eggs"?
You can find this speaker's photo in the hall of Pulitzer winners at the New York Times office.
Who is Pam Belluck?
This is what we wish for Sarah as she enters motherhood.
What is rest, relaxation, spa days, love, a husband who waits on her hand and foot, anythign but malice will be accepted.
This is the largest (and greenest) public space in New York City, walking distance from campus.
What is Central Park?
This type of article answers a question, clarifies a concept, or debunks a misconception.
What is an explainer?
You can find this space shuttle at the Intrepid Museum.
What is the Enterprise?
This is the publication where Sarah worked with Neel, Yasmin, and Rollie.
What is Inverse?
This is the pitch that Billy is working on.
What is "9/11 memes"?
What is Brooklyn?
This critical part highlights the article's main point.
What is a nut graph?
What is 1927?
These strange little "blank"s are the subject of Kelcey Davis' mysterious research.
What are little red dots?
This is the city where Sarah is from.
What is Sacramento?
This is the subway line we took to Far Rockaway beach.
What is the A train?
This upside-down shape describes the basics of a news story structure.
What is the "inverted pyramid "?
This is the award that Yasmin Tayag won.
What is the James Beard award?
Billy will read any article about this animal.
What is a bear?
This is the colorful nickname for The New York Times.
What is The Grey Lady?