It is sometimes termed a news " hed ", a deliberate misspelling that dates from production flow during hot type days, to notify the composing room that a written note from an editor concerned a headline and should not be set in type.
32.
ETAOIN SHRDLU is the approximate order of frequency of the twelve most commonly used letters in the English language, best known as a nonsense phrase that sometimes appeared in print in the days of " hot type " publishing due to a custom of Linotype machine operators.
33.
Amanda Rowland, 17, a former Conejo Valley High student, said chronic is the current hot type of marijuana at schools because " the high lasts longer, and the hits are longer and faster, and you don't have to smoke as much ."
34.
Directed by two-time Academy Award winner Barbara Kopple, and released in 2015 in conjunction with the 150th Anniversary of " The Nation " magazine, Hot Type goes behind the scenes at " The Nation " and examines the essential character of the independent journal.
35.
As a small press in the 1980s, Italica was recognized for its innovative approach to publishing, making early use of Macintosh computers and laser printers to produce pages with the look of hot type and other elements of traditional fine printing, while many university and scholarly presses were shooting from camera-ready pages produced on typewriters.
36.
Richard Cooke's " 10, 000 BTUs " included a few lines in a page of gossip; Cooke was an old friend of Damski's from the " Gay Chicago " days . The debacle became a rancor-filled airing of dirty laundry by Damki's and McCourt's supporters in both the " Chicago Reader "'s " Hot Type " media column and " Babble ."
37.
In Germany, the heatless varieties as well as the spice are called " Paprika " and the hot types are primarily called " Peperoni " or " Chili " while in Austria, " Pfefferoni " is more common for these; in Dutch, this word is also used exclusively for bell peppers, whereas " chilli " is reserved for powders, and hot pepper variants are referred to as " Spaanse pepers " ( Spanish peppers ).