May 06, 2005

News Story Mishap Results in Repeated Lead Sentence

PORTLAND, OR - The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

An out-of-context photo, also the by-product of the story mishap.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence. The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

The readers of a news article were confused on Friday when a story mishap resulted in the repeated use of its lead sentence.

3 Letters to the editor:

At 10:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous wrote...

Out of Context photo? What is the matter with all of you? That was 1928 at Amsterdam, and it was a freezing cold -- muddy day at the Olympics. USA was VICTORIOUS in the 1600 Meter Relay Race -- sprinters were Ray Barbuti, Emerson Spencer, Fred Alderman, and George Baird -- nothing out of context about that!!!

 
At 7:42 AM, Blogger stan wrote...

It was supposed to be a picture of a rubber ducky. But things got mixed up.

 
At 11:19 PM, Blogger Coley wrote...

Okay, this is great. I actually saw a story printed similar to this in The Carthage Press this week, as in Marc. '006. The paper actually printed the same article twice, on the same page, in sequence, as one continuous article, and it looked great, as long as no one actually read the article through. (Just think, small town paper, it is a small town paper.)

 

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