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Mugleston, William F. – Journalism Quarterly, 1975
Discusses the difficulties of publishing in the antebellum South, and describes the demise of "Uncle Remus's Magazine" in 1913 after a long struggle to keep it alive. (RB)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Higher Education, Journalism, Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Click, J. W. – Journalism Quarterly, 1975
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis, Higher Education, Journalism
Bussel, Alan – 1974
Philadelphia poet and journalist Horace L. Traubel's work as biographer of Walt Whitman has overshadowed his role as crusading editor. Traubel (1858-1919) devoted 30 years to publishing the "Conservator," a monthly newspaper that reflected its editor's idiosyncratic philosophy and crusaded persistently for libertarian principles. He made…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Civil Rights, Freedom of Speech, Higher Education
Lentz, Richard – 1984
Between 1964 and 1968, "U. S. News and World Report" engaged in symbolic discourse with its readership through its coverage of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. "U. S. News" faced a dilemma in the mingling of King's force as a symbol with the power exerted by the egalitarian principles that Gunnar Myrdal identified as components of…
Descriptors: Black History, Black Leadership, Higher Education, Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Journalism Quarterly, 1985
Summarizes research dealing with a number of topics, including the following: (1) political communication and voter volatility, (2) daily newspaper publishers' preferences on reporter decision making, (3) media use by foreign students, and (4) coverage of discrimination cases in the "New York Times." (FL)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Communication Skills, Decision Making, Elections
Paine, Fred K. – 1984
To outline the development of smoking as a health issue as it was covered by magazines, a study tested the hypotheses that (1) the pattern of media attention to the issue would begin in professional and scientific journals, expand into books and government publications, and then appear in consumer magazines; and (2) the distribution of subtopics…
Descriptors: Health, Higher Education, Information Sources, Journalism
Bussel, Alan – 1975
In November 1901, "Country Life in America," an illustrated monthly magazine aimed at readers interested in suburban living, was introduced to the public. Although initially intended for the rural population, it soon concentrated its appeal on city folks who had the disposable income to purchase the automobiles and other products of the…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Editing, Higher Education, Journalism