Page:U.S. Government Printing Office Style Manual 2008.djvu/232

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Chapter 8

It will be found in "Part XI: Early Thought."
The editorial "Haphazard Budgeting"
"Compensation," by Emerson (essay)
"United States To Appoint Representative to U.N." (heading for headline)
In "Search for Paradise" (motion picture); "South Pacific" (play)
A paper on "Constant-Pressure Combustion" was read.
"O Captain! My Captain!" (short poem)
The report "Atomic Energy: What It Means to the Nation"; but annual report of the Public Printer
This was followed by the singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner."
Under the subhead "Sixty Days of Turmoil" will be found* * *.
The subject (or theme) of the conference is "Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy."

also Account 5, "Management fees."

Under the heading "Management and Operation."
Under the appropriation "Building of ships, Navy."
8.130.
At the beginning of each paragraph of a quotation, but at the end of the last paragraph only.
8.131.
To enclose a letter or communication, which bears both date and signature, within a letter.
8.132.
To enclose misnomers, slang expressions, sobriquets, coined words, or ordinary words used in an arbitrary way.
His report was "bunk."
It was a "gentlemen's agreement."
The "invisible government" is responsible.
George Herman "Babe" Ruth.

but He voted for the lameduck amendment.

8.133.
Quotation marks close up to adjacent characters except when they precede a fraction or an apostrophe or precede or follow a superior figure or letter, in which case a thin space is used. A thin space is used to separate double and single quotation marks.

Quotation marks are not used—

8.134.
In poetry. The lines of a poem should align on the left, those that rhyme taking the same indention.

Why seek to scale Mount Everest,

Queen of the air?

Why strive to crown that cruel crest

And deathward dare?