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Journalism Quarterly Index-History and Biography

March 21, 2012 by Kyshia

Volumes 61 to 70
1984 to 1993
Subject Index: History and Biography

Abortion News in the Late 1920s: A New York Case Study (Marvin Olasky), 66:724-26.

African-American Women Journalists and Their Male Editors: A Tradition of Support (Rodger Streitmatter), 70:276-86.

Alternatives to Newspaper Advertising, 1890-1920: Printers’ Innovative Product and Message Designs (Claire Badaracco), 67:1042-1050.

American Muckraking of Technology Since 1900 (Harry H. Stein), 67:401-409.

American ‘New Journalism’ Takes Root in Europe at End of the 19th Century (Marion T. Marzolf), 61:529-36, 691.

American Over European Community? Newspaper Content Changes, 1808-1812 (Donald R. Avery), 63:311-14.

Assessing Public Opinion in the 1930s-1940s: Retrospective Views of Journalists (Susan Herbst), 67:943-49.

The Authority of Truth: Religion and the John Peter Zenger Case (David Paul Nord), 62:227-35.

Battling Censors, Chiding Home Office: Harrison Salisbury’s Russian Assignment (Don Grierson), 64:313-16.

The Bay of Pigs and The New York Times: Another View of What Happened (Daniel D. Kennedy), 63:524-29.

Benjamin Franklin to Watergate: The Press in U.S. History Textbooks (Dan B. Fleming), 61:885-88.

Birth of a Network’s “Conscience”: The NBC Advisory Council, 1927 (Louise M. Benjamin), 66:587-90.

The Body Politics: The Changing Shape of Uncle Sam (Thomas H. Bivins), 64:13-20.

Brand-Name Use in News Columns of American Newspapers Since 1964 (Monroe Friedman), 63:161-66.

Breaking the Ice: An In Depth Look at Oriana Fallaci’s Interview Techniques (Santo L. Arico), 63:587-93.

The Business Values of American Newspapers: The 19th Century Watershed in Chicago (David Paul Nord). 61:265-73.

Calvin Chase’s Washington Bee and Black Middle-Class Ideology, 1882-1900 (David Howard-Pitney), 63:89-97.

“Cave Man” Meets “Student Champion”: Sports Page Storytelling for a Nervous Generation during AmericaÕs Jazz Age (Bruce J. Evenson), 70:767-79.

Changes in Editorials: A Study of Three Newspapers, 1955-1985 (Ernest C. Hynds), 67:302-312.

Chauvinism, Populism and Pre-War TV: Two Views as Seen by the Press, 1937-42 (Dave Berkman), 65:347-51.

Chicago Journalists at the Turn of the Century: Bohemians All? (Norma Green, Steve Lacy, and Jean Folkerts), 66:813-21.

Civil Rights Vanguard in the Deep South: Newspaper Portrayal of Fannie Lou Hamer, 1964-1977 (Sharon Bramlett-Solomon) 68:515-21.

A Clash Over Race: Tennessee Governor Ellington versus CBS, 1960 (David E. Sumner), 68:541-47.

Class, Polemics, and America’s First Newspaper (William David Sloan), 70:666-81. Comparing Gender Differentiation in the New York Times, 1885 and 1985 (Lee B. Jolliffe), 66:683-91.

A Content Analysis of Press Views of Darwin’s Evolution Theory, 1860-1925 (Ed Caudill), 64:782-86.

Democracy’s Guardians: Hollywood’s Portrait of Reporters, 1930-1945 (Stephen Vaughn and Bruce Evensen), 68:829-38.

‘Dear Companion, Every-Ready Co-Worker:’ A Woman’s Role in a Media Dynasty (Susan Henry), 64:301-12.

Design Trends in U.S. Front Pages, 1885-1985 (Kevin G. Barnhurst and John C. Nerone), 68:796-804.

The Dolt Laughs: Satirical Publications under Hitler and Honecker (Randall L. Bytwerk), 69:1029-38.

E.L. Godkin and His (Special and Influential) View of 19th Century Journalism (Edward Caudill), 69:1039-50. E.L.

Godkin and the Science of Society (Edward Caudill), 66:57-64.

Early Television on Public Watch: Kefauver and His Crime Investigation (Gregory C. Lisby), 62:236-42.

Economic Elements of Opposition to Abolition and Support of South by Bennett in New York Herald (Gary Whitby), 65:78-84.

An Editor Speaks for the Natives: Robert Knight in 19th Century India (Edwin Hirschmann), 63:260-67.

Eleanor Roosevelt’s Press Conferences: Symbolic Importance of a Pseudo-Event (Maurine Beasley), 61:274-79, 338.

Establishing the Frontier Newspaper: A Study of Eight Western Territories (Barbara Cloud), 61:805-11.

Exception to the Female Model: Colonial Printer Mary Crouch (Susan Henry), 62:725-33, 749.

Father Coughlin in the Periodical Press, 1931-1942 (Robert M. Ogles and Herbert H. Howard), 6l:280-86, 363.

FCC Standard-Setting with Regard to FM Stereo and AM Stereo (W.A. Kelly Huff), 68:483-90.

FDR Versus His Own Attorney General: The Struggle over Sedition 1941-42 (Patrick S. Washburn), 62:717-24.

FDR Wins (and Loses) Journalist Friends in the Rising Age of News Interpretation (Betty Houchin Winfield), 64:698-706.

First Amendment Theories and Press Responsibility: The Work of Zechariah Chafee, Thomas Emerson, Vincent Blasi and Edwin Baker (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman), 69:48-64.

From Black Politics to Black Community: Harry C. Smith and the Cleveland Gazette (Summer E. Stevens and Owen V. Johnson), 67:1090-1102.

Germany’s Kurt Korff: An Emigre’s Influence on Early Life (C. Zoe Smith), 59:412-19.

The Greek-American Press: A 90-Year Compendium (Yorgo Pasadeos), 62:140-44.

Hard News/Soft News Content of the National Television Networks, 1972-1987 (David K. Scott and Robert H. Gobetz), 69:406-12.

Hawks or Doves: Texas Press and Spanish-American War (Marvin Olasky), 64:205-08.

Horace Greeley and Social Responsibility (Warren G. Bovee), 63:25l-59.

Horns of a Dilemma: The Sun, Abolition, and the 1833-34 New York Riots (Gary L. Whitby), 67:410-19.

How Excess Profits Tax Brought Ads to Black Newspapers in World War II (Mary Alice Sentman and Patrick S. Washburn), 64:769-74.

How Radical Were the Muckrakers? Socialist Press Views, 1902-1906 (Shiela Reaves), 61:763-70.

How Readers’ Letters May Influence Editors and News Emphasis: A Content Analysis of 10 Newspapers, 1948-1978 (David Pritchard and Dan Berkowitz), 68:388-95.

Influence of Telegraph on Wisconsin Newspaper Growth (Bradford W. Scharlott), 66:710-15.

The Influences of Publicity Typologies on Sherwood Anderson’s News Values (Claire Badarraco), 66:979-86.

Intellectual History, Social History, Cultural History, and Our History (David Paul Nord), 67:645-48.

Jacksonians Discipline a Party Editor: Economic Leverage and Political Exile (Robert K. Stewart), 66:591-99.

Japanese-American Relocation During World War II: A Study of California Editorial Reactions (Lloyd Chiasson), 68:263-68.

Journalism Behind Barbed Wire, 1942-44: An Arkansas Relocation Center Newspaper (Jay Freidlander), 62:243-46, 271.

Journalism History Writing, 1975-1983 (Jean Folkerts and Stephen Lacy), 62:585-88.

The Journalism of David Graham Phillips (Robert Miraldi), 63:83-88.

The Journalist in Fiction, 1890-1930 (Howard Good), 62:352-57.

Journalists and Novelists: A Study of Diverging Styles (Wayne A. Danielson, Dominic L. Lasorsa and Dae S. Im), 69:436-46.

Labor Press Demands Equal Education in Age of Jackson (C. K. McFarland and Robert L. Thistlewaite), 65:600-08.

Law That Led to Free Press Passed Just 500 Years Ago (Charles Stuart), 61:689-91.

Let’s Sightsee Radiovision –TV Terms That Didn’t Last (Dave Berkman), 63:626-27.

The Libel Climate of the Late 19th Century: A Survey of Libel Litigation, 1884-1899 (Timothy Gleason), 70:893-906.

The McLuhan Papers: Some Preliminary Notes (William R. Lindley), 63:391-93.

National Security Benchmark: Truman, Executive Order 10290, and the Press (Kathleen L. Endres), 67:1071-1077.

The New Deal Publicity Operation: Foundation for the Modern Presidency (Betty Houchin Winfield), 61:40-48, 218.

New York City’s Penny Press and the Issue of Woman’s Rights, 1848-1860 (Sylvia D. Hoffert), 70:656-65.

News About Slavery from 1820-1860 in Newspapers of South, North and West (Donald Lewis Shaw), 61:483-92.

News Conferences on TV: Ike Age Politics Revisited (Craig Allen), 70:13-25.

News of the ‘Good War’: World War II News Management (Richard W. Steele), 62:707-16, 783.

The Newspaper Industry’s Campaign against Spacegrabbers, 1917-1921 (Susan Lucarelli), 70:883-92.

Newspaper Photo Coverage of Censure of McCarthy (Larry Z. Leslie) , 63:850-53.

Newspapers Call for Swift Justice: A Study of the McKinley Assassination (Don Sneed), 65:360-67.

The 19th Century World Versus the Sun: Promoting Consumption (Rather than the Working Man) (Janet E. Steele), 67:592-601.

No Taste for Fluff: Ethel L. Payne, African-American Journalist (Rodger L. Streitmatter), 68:528-40.

Not an Empty Box with Beautiful Words on It: The First Amendment in Progressive Era Scholarship (Linda Cobb-Reiley), 69:37-47.

Numbers versus Pictures: Did Network Television Sensationalize Chernobyl Coverage? (Carole Gorney), 69:455-65.

Objectivity in Journalism: A Search and a Reassessment (Richard Streckfuss), 67:973-83.

Opposing Abortion Clinics: A New York Times 1871 Crusade (Marvin N. Olasky), 63:305-10.

The Origins of NBC’s Project XX in Compilation Documentaries (Vance Kepley, Jr.), 6l:20-26.

Our First “Television” Candidate: Eisenhower over Stevenson in 1956 (Craig Allen), 65:352-59.

Politics and Radio in the 1924 Campaign (Dave Berkman), 64:422-28.

The Post-Revolutionary Woman Idealized: Philadelphia Media’s Republican Mother (Karen K. List), 66:65-75.

The Precedent that Almost Was: A 1926 Court Effort to Regulate Radio (Louise M. Benjamin), 67:578-85.

Presidential Endorsement Patterns By Chain-Owned Papers, 1976-84 (John C. Busterna and Kathleen A. Hansen), 67:286-94.

Press and U.S. Policy Toward Nicaragua, 1983-1987: A Study of the New York Times and Washington Post (Sandra H. Dickson), 69:562-71.

Racial References in the Texas Press, 1813-1836 (Michael Buchholz), 67:586-91.

A Reappraisal of Legislative Privilege and American Colonial Journalism (Jeffrey A. Smith), 61:97-103, 141.

Robert Henry Best: The Path To Treason, 1921-1945 (James C. Clark), 67:1051-1061.

The Rogue Elephant of Radio Legislation: Senator William E. Borah (Donald G. Godfrey and Val E. Limburg), 67:214-24.

Roots of the Space Race: Sputnik and the Language of U.S. News in 1957 (Jack Lule), 68:76-86.

Roscoe Dunjee: Crusading Editor of Oklahoma’s Black Dispatch, 1915-1955 (William S. Sullins and Paul Parsons), 69:204-13.

Scripps’ Competitive Strategy: The Art of Non-Competition (Gerald J. Baldasty and Myron K. Jordan), 70:265-75.

Sharpening of The Blade: Black Consciousness in Kansas, 1892-97 (Teresa C. Klassen and Owen V. Johnson), 63:298-304.

Sibling Interactions in 1950s versus 1980s Sitcoms: A Comparison (Mary Strom Larson), 68:381-87.

Social Darwinism on the Editorial Page: American Newspapers and the Boer War (Marvin Olasky), 65:420-24.

Social Responsibility of the Texas Revolutionary Press (Michael Buchholz), 59:185-89.

Social Utility of Sensational News: Murder and Divorce in the 1920’s (John D. Stevens), 62:53-58.

Soldiers Reflect on War Coverage at Turn of Century (Wallace B. Eberhard), 66:706-10.

Southern Magazine Publishing, 1964-1984 (Sam G. Riley and Gary Selnow), 65:898-901.

Space Race Propaganda: U.S. Coverage of the Soviet Sputniks in 1957 (Cheryl L. Marlin), 64:544-49.

State Constitutions and the Press: Historical Context and Resurgence of a Libertarian Tradition? (James R. Parramore), 69:105-23.

‘Strictly Confidential’: Birth-Control Advertising in 19th Century City (Kathleen L. Endres), 63:748-51.

Surrogate State Department? Times Coverage of Palestine, 1948 (Bruce J. Evensen), 67:391-400.

Testing Siebert’s Proposition in Civil War Indiana (Jon Paul Dilts), 63:365-68.

Trends in Journalism Quarterly: Reflections of the Retired Editor (Guido H. Stempel III), 67:277-81.

Trying to Harness Atomic Energy, 1946-1951: Albert Einstein’s Publicity Campaign for World Government (Susan Caudill), 68:253-62.

Unlicensed Broadcasting and the Federal Radio Commission: The 1930 George W. Fellowes Challenge (Steven P. Phipps), 68:823-28.

Weekly Editors in 1900: A Quantitative Study of Demographic Characteristics (Jean Folkerts and Stephen Lacy), 64:429-33.

World Wars at Home: U.S. Response to World War II Propaganda (Alex Nagy), 67:207-213.

<< JQ 61-70 Subject Index

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