J&MC Quarterly Index – News, Newsgathering, and Newswriting

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: News, Newsgathering, and Newswriting

Beauty and the Beasts: Significance of Press Coverage of the 1913 National Suffrage Parade (Linda J. Lumsden) 77:3, 593-611.

Campaign Contributions: Online Newspaper Coverage of Election 2000 (Jane B. Singer) 80:1, 39-56.

Civic Journalism and Nonelite Sourcing: Making Routine Newswork of Community Connectedness (Brian L. Massey) 75:2, 394-407.

Comparing Distinctions and Similarities across Websites of Newspapers, Radio Stations, and Television Stations (Carolyn A. Lin and Leo W. Jeffres) 78:3, 555-573.

Covering Conflict: A Structural-Pluralist Analysis of How a Small-Town and a Big-City Newspaper Reported an Environmental Controversy (Joseph C. Harry) 78:3, 419-436.

The Creation of the “Free” Press in Japanese-American Camps: The War Relocation Authority’s Planning and Making of the Camp Newspaper Policy (Takeya Mizuno) 78:3, 503-518.

Differences in Knowledge Acquisition among Readers of the Paper and Online Versions of a National Newspaper (David Tewksbury and Scott L. Althaus) 77:3, 457-479.

Digital Imaging Skills and the Hiring and Training of Photojournalists (John Russial and Wayne Wanta) 75:3, 593-605.

Does It Pay To Be A Market-Oriented Daily Newspaper? (Randal A. Beam) 78:3, 466-483.

Does Making Journalism More Public Make a Difference? A Critical Review of Evaluative Research on Public Journalism (Brian L. Massey and Tanni Haas) 79:3, 559-586.

Editors at Most U.S. Dailies See Vital Roles for Editorial Page (Ernest C. Hynds) 71:3, 573-582.

Elite Press Coverage of the 1986 U.S.-Libya Conflict: A Case Study of Tactical and Strategic Critique (James K. Hertog) 77:3, 612-627.

Embargoes and Science News (Vincent Kiernan) 80:4, 903-920.

Experts and the Operational Bias of Television News: The Case of the Persian Gulf War (Janet E. Steele) 72:4, 799-812.

Fairness and Balance of Selected Newspaper Coverage of Controversial National, State, and Local Issues (Frederick Fico and Stan Soffin) 72:3, 621-633.

Finding a New Way: Nicaraguan Newspapers in a Globalized World (Kris Kodrich) 79:1, 101-120.

From Afghanistan to Chechnya: News Coverage by Izvestia and the New York Times (Olga V. Malinkina and Douglas M. McLeod) 77:1, 37-49.

From Barriers to Challenges: Career Perceptions of Women TV News Anchors (Erika Engstrom and Anthony J. Ferri) 75:4, 789-802.

Front Pages of Taiwan Daily Newspapers 1952-1996: How Ending Martial Law Influenced Publication Design (Ven-Hwei Lo, Anna Paddon, and Hsiaomei Wu) 77:4, 880-897.

Homicide Reporting in Chicago Dailies (John W. C. Johnstone, Darnell F. Hawkins, and Arthur Michener) 71:4, 860-872.

I.F. Stone: The Practice of Reporting (Jack Lule) 72:3, 499-510.

International Conflict Coverage in Japanese Local Daily Newspapers (Hiromi Cho and Stephen Lacy) 77:4, 830-845.

The Invisible Woman: Female Sports Journalists in the Workplace (Phyllis Miller and Randy Miller) 72:4, 883-889.

Journalists’ and Public Relations Practitioners’ News Values: Perceptions and Cross-Perceptions (Lynne M. Sallot, Thomas M. Steinfatt, and Michael B. Salwen) 75:2, 366-377.

Local Breaking News: Sources, Technology, and News Routines (Kathleen A. Hansen, Jean Ward, Joan L. Conners, and Mark Neuzil) 71:3, 561-572.

Looking beyond Hate: How National and Regional Newspapers Framed Hate Crimes in Jasper, Texas, and Laramie Wyoming (L. Paul Husselbee and Larry Elliott) 79:4, 833-852.

The Louisville Courier-Journal’s News Content after Purchase by Gannett (David C. Coulson and Anne Hansen) 72:1, 205-215.

Measurement Effects in Comparing Voter Learning from Television News and Campaign Advertisements (Xinshu Zhao and Glen L. Bleske) 72:1, 72-83.

The Metro Wide Web: Changes in Newspapers’ Gatekeeping Role Online (Jane B. Singer) 78:1, 65-80.

The Mundane and the Arcane: Prestige Media Coverage of Social and Natural Science (William Evans) 72:1, 168-177.

The New News and the 1992 Presidential Campaign: Perceived vs. Actual Political Knowledge (Barry A. Hollander) 72:4, 786-798.

The New York Times’ Conformity to AAPOR Standards of Disclosure for the Reporting of Public Opinion Polls (Krisztina Marton and Lowndes F. Stephens) 78:3, 484-502.

News of Hurricane Andrew: The Agenda of Sources and the Sources’ Agendas (Michael B. Salwen) 72:4, 826-840.

Newspaper Coverage of Fundamentalist Christians, 1980-2000 (Peter A. Kerr and Patricia Moy) 79:1, 54-72.

Newsroom Topic Teams: Journalists’ Assessments of Effects on News Routines and Newspaper Quality (Kathleen A. Hansen, Mark Neuzil, and Jean Ward) 75:4, 803-821.

The “Not-So-Genial” Conspiracy: The New York Times and Six Presidential “Honeymoons,” 1953-1993 (William J. Hughes) 72:4, 841-850.

Numeracy in the Newsroom: A Case Study of Mathematical Competence and Confidence (Scott R. Maier) 80:4, 921-936.

Occupational, Gender, and Geographic Representation of Information Sources in U.S. and Canadian Business Magazines (Steven L. McShane) 72:1, 190-204.

Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.

Perception of Interviewees with Less-Than-Perfect English: Implications for Newspaper Citations (Paul Isom, Edward Johnson, James McCollum, and Dolf Zillmann) 72:4, 874-882.

Picturing the Gulf War: Constructing an Image of War in Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report (Michael Griffin and Jongsoo Lee) 72:4, 813-825.

Sample Size for Newspaper Content Analysis in Multi-Year Studies (Stephen Lacy, Daniel Riffe, Staci Stoddard, Hugh Martin, and Kuang-Kuo Chang) 78:4, 836-845.

Sex, Violence, and Consonance/Differentiation: An Analysis of Local TV News Values (William R. Davie and Jung-Sook Lee) 72:1, 128-138.

The Sound Bites, the Biters, and the Bitten:An Analysis of Network TV News Bias in Campaign ’92 (Dennis T. Lowry and Jon A. Shidler) 72:1, 33-44.

Source Use in a “News Disaster” Account: A Content Analysis of Voter News Service Stories (Randall S. Sumpter and Melissa A. Braddock) 79:3, 539-558.

Sources and Civic Journalism: Changing Patterns of Reporting? (David D. Kurpius) 79:4, 853-866.

A Study of Tennessee Newspapers’ Use of Traditional Headline “Rules” (Randall W. Hines and Jerry Hilliard) 72:3, 698-705.

What Were You Thinking? A Survey of Journalists Who Were Sued for Invasion of Privacy (Paul S. Voakes) 75:2, 378-393.

Young Readers and the Newspaper: Factors Affecting Information Recall and Perceived Enjoyment, Readability, and Attractiveness (Wayne Wanta and Dandan Gao) 71:4, 926-936.

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