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Articles filed under Conferences

Currently 203 articles in this category

April 1, 2016 Conferences

Settling style disputes with Carol Saller and the Chicago Manual of Style

A Q&A with editor Carol Saller of the Chicago Manual of Style Online.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

Lexicographers, editors converge for ‘Questions & Quibbles’

Lexicographers and editors answered questions from ACES conference attendees about words, definitions, and usage.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

#ACES2016: Day 1 in tweets

A compilation of tweets about the first day of the ACES 20th national conference.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

Set boundaries, use tact and other tips for working with self-publishing authors

Dick Margulis and Jodi Brandon explain that self-publishing clients often don't have an extensive background in receiving edits and feedback on their work.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

ACES announces 2015 Headline Contest winners

ACES recognized its 2015 National Headline Contest winners at the award banquet during its 20th annual conference in Portland, Ore.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

Vicki Krueger of Poynter Institute’s NewsU wins ACES Glamann Award

ACES honored Vicki Krueger as its eighth Glamann Award winner at its 20th annual conference in Portland, Oregon.


April 1, 2016 Conferences

Sarah Grey wins ACES 2015 Robinson Prize

Sarah Grey, owner of Grey Editing LLC, won theh 2015 Robinson Prize at the ACES 2015 national conference.


March 31, 2016 ACES News

ACES celebrates 20th annual conference with record numbers

Preliminary figures estimated that the 2016 ACES annual conference would have over 650 people in attendance— a record number.


March 31, 2016 Conferences

Mistakes editors make and how to fix them

Washington Post copy editor Bill Walsh reviewed common copy editing pitfalls in his presentation "Rookie Mistakes that Even Veterans Make."


March 31, 2016 Conferences

Adding poetic resonance to headlines

At ACES's 2016 national conference, Chris Wienandt shared how to squeeze an article's content into four to six words in headline writing.