Hold.—An instruction written at the beginning of copy or proof, instructing the make-up man in the printing room to hold the article, not print it, until he has received further orders.
Human Interest Story.—See Feature Story.
I.N.S.—Abbreviation for International News Service.
Insert.—One or more sentences or paragraphs inserted in the body of a story already written, giving fuller or more accurate information.
Jump-head.—A headline put above the continuation of a story begun on a preceding page.
Justifier.—A short story of little or no news value inserted at the foot of a column to fill it out evenly.
Justify.—To make even or true by proper spacing, as lines of type or columns on a page.
Kill.—To destroy the whole or a part of a story, usually after it has been set in type.
Lead.—The initial sentence or paragraph of a story, into which is crammed the gist of the article. See page [68].
Lead.—Thin strips of metal placed between lines of type to make the lines stand farther apart, and hence to make the story stand out more prominently on the printed page.