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15 Sentences With "subeditors"

How to use subeditors in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "subeditors" and check conjugation/comparative form for "subeditors". Mastering all the usages of "subeditors" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Always look at titles subeditors choose, there's something in those phrases.
Nobody gets them right every time, but subeditors might consider letting enormous font-sizes shrink to accommodate more information.
The National Council for the Training of Journalists also has a qualification for subeditors.
Clinic is a compilation album of the first three EPs by Clinic. The EPs included are I.P.C. Subeditors Dictate Our Youth (1997) (tracks 1–3), Monkey on Your Back (1998) (tracks 4–6) and Cement Mixer (1998) (tracks 7–9).
This new appointment was short-lived; Cardus's lengthy and discursive concert reviews were incompatible with this paper's style, and were ruthlessly cut by subeditors. At the end of 1948 he was back in Australia, proclaiming his intention to settle there permanently. This determination, too, was brief; the lure of London life proved irresistible.
F. H. A. Scrivener, A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New Testament (George Bell & Sons: London, 1894), vol. 1, p. 200. The third edition differed in 118 places from the second. Oecolampadius and Gerbelius, Erasmus' subeditors, insisted that he introduce more readings from the minuscule 1 in the third edition.
Editors include Nils Hønsvald from 1927 to 1929, and subeditors include Ola Brandstorp and Rolf Gerhardsen. In 1927, the Labour Party and the Social Democratic Labour Party reunited. The Labour Party now had two newspapers in the region. Some wanted Smaalenenes Social-Demokrat to be the only one, but in Sarpsborg they wanted to keep a newspaper.
There are also Subeditors who proofread and check articles for inaccuracies, and a photography team. These editors are collectively co-ordinated by the Deputy Editor-in-chief and Editor-in-chief. The Mancunion covers news occurring in the area around the University of Manchester campuses, as well as things that affect the national or international student body. It covers local cultural events and even national music festivals.
The band soon developed early notoriety for featuring instruments (primarily keyboards/organs) that were acquired at various jumble sales and flea markets. Shortly after, the EP I.P.C. Subeditors Dictate Our Youth was released on their own Aladdin's Cave of Golf record label. The EP made the top ten of John Peel's Festive Fifty at the end of the year, and two other self-financed singles followed in 1998.
From 1930 to 1933, Vallance was Assistant Editor of The Economist. He was then appointed Editor of the News Chronicle, which he took in a more radical direction, investigating and critically reporting on the British Union of Fascists, and recruiting writers such as Vernon Bartlett, Tangye Lean, Ian Mackay and Gerald Barry. He also launched a Saturday supplement on green newsprint. However, he resigned in 1936 after pressure from subeditors over his persistent drunkenness and lukewarm support for the Liberal Party.
250–51 In the ensuing months he worried about his deteriorating relationship with The Guardian; the paper had been renamed in 1959 following reorganisation, and its editorial offices had moved to London in 1964. Cardus felt that much of the old ethos had departed, and that his once-sacrosanct copy was now at the mercy of subeditors.Brookes, p. 252 He was particularly incensed by the treatment meted out to his 1969 Edinburgh Festival reports, and referred to the subeditors' room as "the Abattoir" in one of many letters complaining of editorial butchery.
The auditions for the Editorial Board took place in early 2015. Dr. Abdul Shakoor, held the interviews and reviewed the CV(s) of students from all five years of medicine, to select the Core members of the Editorial Board. In May 2015, the Final Editorial Board was formed and notified. Syed Hasnain Ali, of 3rd Year Mbbs was selected as the Editor in Chief and five other members were added to the Board as Sub-Editor Phoenix (Hareem Fatima), and Editors and Subeditors of English (Tayyaba Aslam and Ruqaya Idrees) and Urdu sections (Ali Shayyan and Hawa Qasim).
With a limited advertising budget, the re-launch struggled for attention, then was mocked for reinterpreting its original marketing slogan 'It Is – Are You' to read 'It's changed – have you?'. At the beginning of 1998, Marr was sacked, according to one version of events, for having refused to reduce the newspaper's production staff to just five subeditors. According to Nick Cohen's account, the sacking was due to the intervention of Alastair Campbell, director of communications for Tony Blair. Campbell had demanded that David Montgomery, the paper's publisher, fire Marr over an article in which he had compared Blair with his predecessor John Major.
When he submitted his proposed commentary to Frank Gaebelein, general editor of the series, Gaebelein pronounced the commentary acceptable; but the subeditors Merrill C. Tenney and James M. Boice objected to its use of redaction criticism. Gaebelein pronounced acceptable Gundry’s successive revised versions as well; but Tenney and Boice objected again, to both of them, so that D. A. Carson of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School was assigned to write on Matthew. This assignment caused a delay of several years in the publication of the EBC’s volume on the Synoptic Gospels. Meanwhile, Eerdmans Publishing Company brought out a longer, more technical version of Gundry’s work.
In the summer of 2014, WikiLeaks revealed the existence of an Australia-wide gagging order, issued 19 June by the Supreme Court of Victoria, to block reporting of bribery allegations involving several international political leaders in the region. In December 2018, International news sources have reported that Cardinal George Pell's conviction on child-molestation charges is subject to a gag order issued by Victoria, Australia court Judge Peter Kidd, suppressing coverage of the conviction by Australian media companies. In early February 2019, Victoria's DPP, Kerri Judd QC, wrote to around 50 Australian news publishers, editors, broadcasters, reporters and subeditors, accusing them of breaking the gag order. Peter Kidd told a closed court that some of the breaches were serious and editors faced jail.

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