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Kovarik, Bill – 1989
A case study examined a 1920 controversy between two newspapers. One of the last vestiges of the era of "yellow journalism" was the editorial "war" between the Kansas City "Star" and the Kansas City "Post" which culminated in a 1921 showdown. The "Star," a champion of main street interests and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Editorials, Journalism History, Mass Media Role
Lawson, Linda – 1986
H. A. Chadwick bought one-half interest in the Seattle "Argus" in 1894 and through this newspaper expressed the sentiments of the progressive movement of his time, a combination of reform-oriented and conservative forces. The newspaper was only six weeks old and deep in debt when Chadwick took over the editorial duties and he quickly…
Descriptors: Business Responsibility, Conservatism, Editorials, Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wolfe, G. Joseph – Journalism Quarterly, 1980
An analysis of 1938 newspaper editorials about Orson Welles' notorious "War of the Worlds" broadcast reveals that they explained audience reaction on the grounds of gullibility, the ominous threat of war, and the technique of the broadcast, and that they offered radio a rather stern lecture on the relationship between freedom and responsibility.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Editorials, Emotional Response, Freedom of Speech
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Domke, David – Journalism History, 1994
Examines 12 black newspapers' coverage of the "Civil Rights Cases" in 1883 and "Plessy v. Ferguson" in 1896, to determine if these newspapers reflect a shift from optimism in 1883 to discouragement by 1896 over the state of race relations. Tries to determine whether these newspapers counseled their black readers to have…
Descriptors: Blacks, Editorials, Higher Education, Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Moses, James L. – Journalism History, 1994
Examines the impartiality of Thomas Fleet, Sr.'s "Boston Evening Post" during the years leading up to the Revolutionary War, a period during which patriots put pressure on newspapers take their side. Reviews data illustrating the paper's even-handed dealing with issues concerning Patriots and Loyalists. (TB)
Descriptors: Editorials, Ethics, Higher Education, Journalism
Heinze, Kirk – 1980
Although the suppression in 1917 of "The Masses," an influential Socialist magazine, has been depicted as an American tragedy, such a narrow interpretation ignores the bizarre, confused, often comic developments and episodes that attended the magazine's end. A reexamination of the demise of "The Masses" has been made to show…
Descriptors: Activism, Censorship, Dissent, Editorials
Marsh, Harry D. – 1985
Noting that Hodding Carter, Jr., editor and majority owner of the Greenville, Mississippi, "Delta Democrat-Times," was considered a spokesman of and to the South regarding racial matters during the two decades between the end of World War II and the escalation of the Vietnam war, this monograph examines Carter's newspaper in the two-year…
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Content Analysis, Desegregation Effects, Editorials
Coward, John – 1987
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877, a national catastrophe and the major news story of the year, was the first national labor strike in U.S. history. Because of the ideological bias of the press, specifically its implicit commitment to capitalism and to objectivity (itself a "myth" of social order), newspapers of the period could be…
Descriptors: Conservatism, Content Analysis, Cultural Influences, Editorials