5. Look forward for new features to possible results and consequences.
6. Get interviews with persons of prominence and authority on all important events, as new features.
7. Look at the event from a new angle before beginning your rewrite story.
8. Play up the latest possible phase of the news in the lead.
9. Find a new feature to play up in rewriting when you have no more facts.
10. Anticipate the next development of the event in beginning the lead of your rewrite story.
11. Bring the rewritten story "up to the minute" by giving prominence to features of "to-day."
PRACTICE WORK
1. Rewrite the following story, putting the unusual feature
at the beginning of the story.
Samuel J. Willsie, an insurance broker living at 1991 Riverside
Drive, did not appear in the City Court yesterday for examination
in the supplementary proceedings in a suit over a loan of $200,
and Hein & Krug of 281 Broadway, the attorneys who obtained
the order, concluded that Mr. Willsie didn't feel that he had been
properly served.
The lawyers had turned the order over to Samuel Greenman, a process server of 188 East Ninety-Eighth Street. After trying to serve the order without success he finally notified the lawyers that he had seen Mr. Willsie sitting at his window in the Riverside Drive house one night and that he had tied a copy of the order to a brick and thrown the brick into the window, hitting Mr. Willsie with it. The process server said that when Mr. Willsie picked up the paper and looked at it he, the process server, immediately read the original to Mr. Willsie at long distance and said "You're served."
Mr. Willsie said yesterday that no attempt, so far as he knew, had been made to serve the order on him, and that he could be found at his office every day. He said that while he and his family were at dinner one night something landed on the floor of the room by way of an open window. His son, he said, went in to see what it was and threw the stone back into the street. The boy told his father the object was a stone wrapped in a piece of paper. That was all Mr. Willsie knew of the alleged "service."