J&MC Quarterly Index – International

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: International

Australian Journalists’ Professional and Ethical Values (John Henningham) 73:1, 206-218.

Balancing Trust in Media and Trust in Government during Political Change in Taiwan (Albert C. Gunther, Yah-Huei Hong, and Lulu Rodriguez) 71:3, 628-636.

A Battle for Humor: Satire and Censorship in Le Bavard (Ross F. Collins) 73:3, 645-656.

Bridging Latin America’s Digital Divide: Government Policies and Internet Access (Eliza Tanner Hawkins with Kirk A. Hawkins) 80:3, 646-665.

Can a Single Incident Create an Issue? Exemplars in German Television Magazine Shows (Gregor Daschmann and Hans-Bernd Brosius) 76:1, 35-51.

Candidate Images in Spanish Elections: Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects (Maxwell McCombs, Juan Pablo Llamas, Esteban Lopez-Escobar, and Federico Rey) 74:4, 703-717.

Constructing Public Opinion and Manipulating Symbols: China’s Press Coverage of the Student Movement in 1989 (Guo-Qiang Zhang and Sidney Kraus) 72:2, 412-425.

Contrast in U.S. Media Coverage of Two Major Canadian Elections (L. Paul Husselbee and Guido H. Stempel III) 74:3, 591-601.

Development News in Elite and Non-Elite Newspapers in Indonesia (Hemant Shah and Gati Gayatri) 71:2, 411-420.

Diversity versus Concentration in the Deregulated Mass Media Domain (Petros Iosifides) 76:1, 152-162.

The Ebb and Flow of the Liberalization of the Jordanian Press: 1985-1997 (Orayb Aref Najjar) 75:1, 127-142.

The Effectiveness of Locator Maps in Increasing Reader Understanding of the Geography of Foreign News (Jeffrey L. Griffin and Robert L. Stevenson) 71:4, 937-946.

Effects of U.S. Television Programs on Foreign Audiences: A Meta-Analysis (William Ware and Michel Dupagne) 71:4, 947-959.

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.

Experts in the Mass Media: Researchers as Sources in Danish Daily Newspapers, 1961-2001 (Erik Albæk, Peter Munk Christiansen, and Lise Togeby) 80:4, 937-948.

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

Foreign Media Exposure and Perceptions of Americans in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Singapore (Lars Willnat, Zhou He, and Hao Xiaoming) 74:4, 738-756.

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

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.

Global News, National Stories: Producers as Mythmakers at Germany’s Deutsche Welle Television (B. William Silcock) 79:2, 339-352.

Importing Foreign News: A Case Study of the German Service of the Associated Press (Jürgen Wilke and Bernhard Rosenberger) 71:2, 421-432.

Individual, Organizational, and Societal Influences on Media Role Perceptions: A Comparative Study of Journalists in China, Taiwan, and the United States (Jian-Hua Zhu, David Weaver, Ven-Hwei Lo, Chongshan Chen, and Wei Wu) 74:1, 84-96.

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

The Journalist’s Personality: An Exploratory Study (John Henningham) 74:3, 615-624.

Latino Media Use for Cultural Maintenance (Diana I. Rios and Stanley O. Gaines Jr.) 75:4, 746-761.

Licensing Journalists in Latin America: An Appraisal (Jerry W. Knudson) 73:4, 878-889.

Making a Difference: U.S. Press Coverage of the Kwangju and Tiananmen Pro-Democracy Movements (Sun Tae Kim) 77:1, 22-36.

Nation, Capitalism, Myth: Covering News of Economic Globalization (Elfriede Fürsich) 79:2, 353-373.

National News Cultures: A Comparison of Dutch, German, British, Australian, and U.S. Journalists (Mark Deuze) 79:1, 134-149.

New York Times and Network TV News Coverage of Foreign Disasters: The Significance of the Insignificant Variables (Douglas A. Van Belle) 77:1, 50-70.

News Agencies, National Images, and Global Media Events (C. Anthony Giffard and Nancy K. Rivenburgh) 77:1, 8-21.

Perceived Effects of Sexually Explicit Internet Content: The Third-Person Effect in Singapore (Wei Wu and Soh Hoon Koo) 78:2, 260-274.

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.

Political Reality and Editorial Cartoons in Japan: How the National Dailies Illustrate the Japanese Prime Minister (Ofer Feldman) 72:3, 571-580.

The Potential of Online Media: A Coorientational Analysis of Conflict between PR Professionals and Journalists in South Korea (Jae-Hwa Shin and Glen T. Cameron) 80:3, 583-602.

Predicting News Flow from Mexico (Melissa A. Johnson) 74:2, 315-330.

Press and Political Liberalization in Taiwan (Kuldip R. Rampal) 71:3, 637-651.

Professional Roles of Russian and U.S. Journalists: A Comparative Study (Wei Wu, David Weaver, and Owen V. Johnson) 73:3, 534-548.

Proximity and Power Factors in Western Coverage of the Sub-Saharan AIDS Crisis (Kristen Alley Swain) 80:1, 145-165.

Reconstructing Suicide: Reporting Suicide in the Israeli Press (Gabriel Weimann and Gideon Fishman) 72:3, 551-558.

Regulation of Sexually Explicit Videotex Services in France (Michel Dupagne) 71:1, 121-134.

Reliability in Cross-National Content Analysis (Jochen Peter and Edmund Lauf) 79:4, 815-832.

Speaking Up and Silencing Out in Face of a Changing Climate of Opinion (Jacob Shamir) 74:3, 602-614.

State Control of Television News in 1990s Lebanon (Marwan M. Kraidy) 76:3, 485-498.

State and Media in the English-Speaking Caribbean: The Case of Antigua (Leara Rhodes and Paget Henry) 72:3, 654-665.

Toward an Understanding of Cultural Values Manifest in Advertising: A Content Analysis of Chinese Television Commercials in 1990 and 1995 (Hong Cheng) 74:4, 773-796.

U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Human Rights in Latin America, 1975-1982: Exploring President Carter’s Agenda-Building Influence (Catherine Cassara) 75:3, 478-486.

Violence against the Press in Latin America: Protections and Remedies in International Law (Michael Perkins) 78:2, 275-290.

When the News Doesn’t Fit: The New York Times and Hitler’s First Two Months in Office, February/March 1933 (Gary Klein) 78:1, 127-149.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index – Health and Medicine

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Health and Medicine

Behavioral Journalism for HIV Prevention: Community Newsletters Influence Risk-Related Attitudes and Behavior (Alfred McAlister, Wayne Johnson, Carolyn Guenther-Grey, Martin Fishbein, Donna Higgins, Kevin O’Reilly, and the AIDS Community Demonstration Projects) 77:1, 143-159.

Ethical Language and Themes in News Coverage of Genetic Testing (David A. Craig) 77:1, 160-174.

The “Forgotten” 1918 Influenza Epidemic and Press Portrayal of Public Anxiety (Janice Hume) 77:4, 898-915.

How Newspapers Framed Breast Implants in the 1990s (Angela Powers and Julie L. Andsager) 76:3, 551-64.

Medicine, Media, and Celebrities: News Coverage of Breast Cancer, 1960-1995 (Julia B. Corbett and Motomi Mori) 76:2, 229-249.

Social or Economic Concerns: How News and Women‘s Magazines Framed Breast Cancer in the 1990s (Julie L. Andsager and Angela Powers) 76:3, 531-50.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index – Content Analysis

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Content Analysis

ABC’s “Person of the Week”: American Values in Television News (Stephanie Greco Larson and Martha Bailey) 75:3, 487-499.

Alternative Things Considered: A Comparison of National Public Radio and Pacifica Radio News Coverage (Alan G. Stavitsky and Timothy W. Gleason) 71:4, 775-786.

A Battle for Humor: Satire and Censorship in Le Bavard (Ross F. Collins) 73:3, 645-656.

A Benchmark Study of Elaboration and Sourcing in Science Stories for Eight American Newspapers (Shirley Ramsey) 76:1, 87-98.

The Birth of a Notion: Media Coverage of Contraception, 1915-1917 (Dolores Flamiano) 75:3, 560-571.

The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.

A Case Study of Deliberative Democracy on Television: Civic Dialogue on C-SPAN Call-in Shows (David D. Kurpius and Andrew Mendelson) 79:3, 587-601.

Changes in News Use on the Front Pages of the American Newspaper, 1986-1993 (Janet A. Bridges and Lamar W. Bridges) 74:4, 826-838.

Civic Duties: Newspaper Journalists’ Views on Public Journalism (Paul S. Voakes) 76:4, 756-774.

The Color of Crime and the Court: A Content Analysis of Minority Representation on Television (Ron Tamborini, Dana E. Mastro, Rebecca M. Chory-Assad, and Ren He Huang) 77:3, 639-653.

A Content Analysis of Content Analyses: Twenty-Five Years of Journalism Quarterly (Daniel Riffe and Alan Freitag) 74:4, 873-882.

Content Differences between Daily Newspapers with Strong and Weak Market Orientations (Randal A. Beam) 80:2, 368-390.

Contrast in U.S. Media Coverage of Two Major Canadian Elections (L. Paul Husselbee and Guido H. Stempel III) 74:3, 591-601.

Corporate Newspaper Structure, Editorial Page Vigor, and Social Change (David Demers) 73:4, 857-877.

Covering Domestic Violence: How the O.J. Simpson Case Shaped Reporting of Domestic Violence in the News Media (Kimberly A. Maxwell, John Huxford, Catherine Borum, and Robert Hornik) 77:2, 258-272.

Cultural Standards of Attractiveness: A Thirty-Year Look at Changes in Male Images in Magazines (Cheryl Law and Magdala Peixoto Labre) 79:3, 697-711.

“A Death in the American Family”: Myth, Memory, and National Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr. (Carolyn Kitch) 79:2, 294-309.

Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults (Tom Reichert, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz) 80:3, 513-527.

Diversity in the News: A Conceptual and Methodological Framework (Paul S. Voakes, Jack Kapfer, David Kurpius, and David Shano-Yeon Chern) 73:3, 582-593.

Divining the Social Order: Class, Gender, and Magazine Astrology Columns (William Evans) 73:2, 389-400.

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

The Economy and Second-Level Agenda Setting: A Time-Series Analysis of Economic News and Public Opinion about the Economy (Joe Bob Hester and Rhonda Gibson) 80:1, 73-90.

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

Experts in the Mass Media: Researchers as Sources in Danish Daily Newspapers, 1961-2001 (Erik Albæk, Peter Munk Christiansen, and Lise Togeby) 80:4, 937-948.

Fairness and Balance in the Structural Characteristics of Newspaper Stories on the 1996 Presidential Election (Frederick Fico and William Cote) 76:1, 124-137.

Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.

Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.

The Global Village in Atlanta: A Textual Analysis of Olympic News Coverage for Children in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Elli P. Lester-Roushanzamir and Usha Raman) 76:4, 699-712.

Going Negative: Candidate Usage of Internet Web Sites during the 2000 Presidential Campaign (Robert H. Wicks and Boubacar Souley) 80:1, 128-144.

Good News from a Bad Neighborhood: Toward an Alternative to the Discourse of Urban Pathology (James S. Ettema and Limor Peer) 73:4, 835-856.

How Editors and Readers Rank and Rate the Importance of Eighteen Traditional Standards of Newspaper Excellence (George Albert Gladney) 73:2, 319-331.

How Magazines Covered Media Companies’ Mergers: The Case of the Evolution of Time Inc. (Jaemin Jung) 79:3, 681-696.

How Newspapers Framed Breast Implants in the 1990s (Angela Powers and Julie L. Andsager) 76:3, 551-64.

The Ideology of Success in Major American Farm Magazines, 1934-1991 (Gerry Walter) 73:3, 594-608.

The Influence of Layout on the Perceived Tone of News Articles (Susan E. Middlestadt and Kevin G. Barnhurst) 76:2, 264-276.

Interactive Disaster Communication on the Internet: A Content Analysis of Sixty-Four Disaster Relief Home Pages (Mary Jae Paul) 78:4, 739-753.

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

Journalistic Authority: Textual Strategies of Legitimation (Lisbeth Lipari) 73:4, 821-834.

Local Press Coverage of Environmental Conflict (Claire E. Taylor, Jung-Sook Lee, and William R. Davie) 77:1, 175-192.

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.

“Lynch-Mob Journalism” vs. “Compelling Human Drama”: Editorial Responses to Coverage of the Pretrial Phase of the O.J. Simpson Case (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 76:3, 499-515.

Mass Communication Research Trends from 1980 to 1999 (Rasha Kamhawi and David Weaver) 80:1, 7-27.

Media Coverage of AIDS, Cancer, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Test of the Public Arenas Model (James K. Hertog, John R. Finnegan, Jr., and Emily Kahn) 71:2, 291-304.

Medicine, Media, and Celebrities: News Coverage of Breast Cancer, 1960-1995 (Julia B. Corbett and Motomi Mori) 76:2, 229-249.

The Microscope and the Moving Target: The Challenge of Applying Content Analysis to the World Wide Web (Sally J. McMillan) 77:1, 80-98.

Myth in Charles Kuralt’s “On the Road” (Matthew C. Ehrlich) 79:2, 327-338.

Myth and Terror on the Editorial Page: The New York Times Responds to September 11, 2001 (Jack Lule) 79:2, 275-293.

Nation, Capitalism, Myth: Covering News of Economic Globalization (Elfriede Fürsich) 79:2, 353-373.

Network TV Sex as a Counterprogramming Strategy during a Sweeps Period: An Analysis of Content and Ratings (Jon A. Shidler and Dennis T. Lowry) 72:1, 147-157.

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

Newspaper Economic Coverage of Motor Vehicle Emissions Standards (David C. Coulson and Stephen Lacy) 75:1, 154-166.

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

Objective Evidence of Media Bias: Newspaper Coverage of Congressional Party Switchers (David Niven) 80:2, 311-326.

Old-Growth Forests on Network News: News Sources and the Framing of an Environmental Controversy (Carol M. Liebler and Jacob Bendix) 73:1, 53-65.

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.

Political Reality and Editorial Cartoons in Japan: How the National Dailies Illustrate the Japanese Prime Minister (Ofer Feldman) 72:3, 571-580.

“Portraits of Grief,” Reflectors of Values: The New York Times Remembers Victims of September 11 (Janice Hume) 80:1, 166-182.

Predictors of Viewing and Enjoyment of Reality-Based and Fictional Crime Shows (Mary Beth Oliver and G. Blake Armstrong) 72:3, 559-570.

The Presentation of Self in Virtual Life: Characteristics of Personal Home Pages (Zizi Papacharissi) 79:3, 643-660.

The Princess and the Paparazzi: Blame, Responsibility, and the Media’s Role in the Death of Diana (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 80:3, 666-688.

The Promise and Peril of Anecdotes in News Coverage: An Ethical Analysis (David A. Craig) 80:4, 802-817.

Proximity and Power Factors in Western Coverage of the Sub-Saharan AIDS Crisis (Kristen Alley Swain) 80:1, 145-165.

Reliability in Cross-National Content Analysis (Jochen Peter and Edmund Lauf) 79:4, 815-832.

Representation and Reality in the Portrayal of Blacks on Network Television News (Robert M. Entman) 71:3, 509-520.

Revisiting the Clinton/Lewinsky Scandal: The Convergence of Agenda Setting and Framing (Julie Yioutas and Ivana Segvic) 80:3, 567-582.

Second-Level Agenda Setting in the New Hampshire Primary: A Comparison of Coverage in Three Newspapers and Public Perceptions of Candidates (Guy Golan and Wayne Wanta) 78:2, 247-259.

Sex and the Soaps: A Comparative Content Analysis of Health Issues (Beth Olson) 71:4, 840-850.

Sex and Violence in Slasher Films: Re-examining the Assumptions (Barry S. Sapolsky, Fred Molitor, and Sarah Luque) 80:1, 28-38.

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

Skin Tones and Physical Features of Blacks in Magazine Advertisements (Kevin L. Keenan) 73:4, 905-912.

Social Construction of Three Influenza Pandemics in the New York Times (Debra E. Blakely) 80:4, 884-902.

Social or Economic Concerns: How News and Women‘s Magazines Framed Breast Cancer in the 1990s (Julie L. Andsager and Angela Powers) 76:3, 531-550.

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.

Structural Pluralism, Ethnic Pluralism, and Community Newspapers (Douglas Blanks Hindman, Robert Littlefield, Ann Preston, and Dennis Neumann) 76:2, 250-263.

Tabloid and Traditional Television News Magazine Crime Stories: Crime Lessons and Reaffirmation of Social Class Distinctions (Maria Elizabeth Grabe) 73:4, 926-946.

Television’s Portrayal of the Environment: 1991-1995 (James Shanahan and Katherine McComas) 74:1, 147-159.

“Their Rising Voices”: A Study of Civil Rights, Social Movements, and Advertising in the New York Times (Susan Dente Ross) 75:3, 518-534.

This Just In … How National TV News Handled the Breaking “Live” Coverage of September 11 (Amy Reynolds and Brooke Barnett) 80:3, 689-703.

Toward a “Philosophy of Framing”: News Narratives for Public Journalism (Peter Parisi) 74:4, 673-686.

Unlicensed Broadcasting: Content and Conformity (Steve Jones) 71:2, 395-402.

Vibrant, But Invisible: A Study of Contemporary Religious Periodicals (Ken Waters) 78:2, 307-320.

VNRs and Air Checks: A Content Analysis of the Use of Video News Releases in Television Newscasts (Glen T. Cameron and David Blount) 73:4, 890-904.

Web Page Design and Graphic Use of Three U.S. Newspapers (Xigen Li) 75:2, 353-365.

When the News Doesn’t Fit: The New York Times and Hitler’s First Two Months in Office, February/March 1933 (Gary Klein) 78:1, 127-149.

Women’s Pages or People’s Pages: The Production of News for Women in the Washington Post in the 1950s (Mei-Ling Yang) 73:2, 364-378.

The World Outside: Local TV News Treatment of Imported News (Raymond L. Carroll and C.A. Tuggle) 74:1, 123-133.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index – Communication Effects

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Communication Effects

The Economy and Second-Level Agenda Setting: A Time-Series Analysis of Economic News and Public Opinion about the Economy (Joe Bob Hester and Rhonda Gibson) 80:1, 73-90.

The Effectiveness of Banner Advertisements: Involvement and Click-through (Chang-Hoan Cho) 80:3, 623-645.

Effects of Salience Dimensions of Informational Utility on Selective Exposure to Online News (Silvia Knobloch, Francesca Dillman Carpentier, and Dolf Zillmann) 80:1, 91-108.

An Experimental Examination of Readers’ Perceptions of Media Bias (Dave D’Alessio) 80:2, 282-294.

An Experimental Investigation of News Source and the Hostile Media Effect (Laura M. Arpan and Arthur A. Raney) 80:2, 265-281.

The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing (Gyotae Ku, Lynda Lee Kaid, and Michael Pfau) 80:3, 528-547.

Media Credibility Reconsidered: Synergy Effects between On-Air and Online News (Erik P. Bucy) 80:2, 247-264.

Media Effects on Public Opinion about a Newspaper Strike (Patricia Moy, Kelley McCoy, Meg Spratt, and Michael R. McCluskey) 80:2, 391-409.

News Information Processing as Mediator of the Relationship between Motivations and Political Knowledge (William P. Eveland Jr.) 79:1, 26-40.

Nonrecursive Models of Internet Use and Community Engagement: Questioning Whether Time Spent Online Erodes Social Capital (Dhavan Shah, Michael Schmierbach, Joshua Hawkins, Rodolfo Espino, and Janet Donavan) 79:4, 964-987.

Race and Ethical Reasoning: The Importance of Race to Journalistic Decision Making (Renita Coleman) 80:2, 295-310.

Racial and Regional Differences in Readers’ Evaluations of the Credibility of Political Columnists by Race and Sex (Julie L. Andsager and Teresa Mastin) 80:1, 57-72.

Think about It This Way: Attribute Agenda-Setting Function of the Press and the Public’s Evaluation of a Local Issue (Sei-Hill Kim, Dietram A. Scheufele, and James Shanahan) 79:1, 7-25.

Webelievability: A Path Model Examining How Convenience and Reliance Predict Online Credibility (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 79:3, 619-642.

Who Cares about Local Politics? Media Influences on Local Political Involvement, Issue Awareness, and Attitude Strength (Dietram A. Scheufele, James Shanahan, and Sei-Hill Kim) 79:2, 427-444.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index – Audience Studies

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Audience Studies

Acculturation, Cultivation, and Daytime TV Talk Shows (Hyung-Jin Woo and Joseph R. Dominick) 80:1, 109-127.

Adolescent Responses to TV Beer Ads and Sports Content/Context: Gender and Ethnic Differences (Michael D. Slater, Donna Rouner, Melanie Domenech-Rodriguez, Frederick Beauvais, Kevin Murphy, and James K. Van Leuven) 74:1, 108-122.

Audience Recall of AIDS PSAs Among U.S. and International College Students (Jung-Sook Lee and William R. Davie) 74:1, 7-22.

The Case of “Alvarez” vs. “Albertson”: Effects of Author’s Ethnicity on Evaluation of News Stories (Ford N. Burkhart, Carol Sigelman, and Katherine T. Frith) 74:2, 304-314.

Communication, Community Attachment, and Involvement (Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Lawrence J. Mullen, Richard Delaurell, and Choon Ryul Ryu) 73:2, 445-466.

Considering Interacting Factors in the Third-Person Effect: Argument Strength and Social Distance (H. Allen White) 74:3, 557-564.

The Contribution of Local Media to Community Involvement (Keith R. Stamm, Arthur G. Emig, and Michael B. Hesse) 74:1, 97-107.

Cruising Is Believing?: Comparing Internet and Traditional Sources on Media Credibility Measures (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 75:2, 325-340.

Does Personal Experience in a Community Increase or Decrease Newspaper Reading? (David Pearce Demers) 73:2, 304-318.

Does Web Advertising Work? Memory for Print vs. Online Media (S. Shyam Sundar, Sunetra Narayan, Rafael Obregon, and Charu Uppal) 75:4, 822-835.

The Economy and Second-Level Agenda Setting: A Time-Series Analysis of Economic News and Public Opinion about the Economy (Joe Bob Hester and Rhonda Gibson) 80:1, 73-90.

Effect of Source Attribution on Perception of Online News Stories (S. Shyam Sundar) 75:1, 55-68.

Effects of Citation in Exemplifying Testimony on Issue Perception (Rhonda Gibson and Dolf Zillmann) 75:1, 167-176.

Effects of Victim Exemplification in Television News on Viewer Perception of Social Issues (Charles F. Aust and Dolf Zillmann) 73:4, 787-803.

Forecast 2000: Widening Knowledge Gaps (Cecilie Gaziano) 74:2, 237-264.

Health and Beauty Magazine Reading and Body Shape Concerns among a Group of College Women (Steven R. Thomsen) 79:4, 988-1007.

The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing (Gyotae Ku, Lynda Lee Kaid, and Michael Pfau) 80:3, 528-547.

Individual, Organizational, and Societal Influences on Media Role Perceptions: A Comparative Study of Journalists in China, Taiwan, and the United States (Jian-Hua Zhu, David Weaver, Ven-Hwei Lo, Chongshan Chen, and Wei Wu) 74:1, 84-96.

The Locus of Metaphorical Persuasion: An Empirical Test (Jacqueline C. Hitchon) 74:1, 55-68.

Mass Media Audiences in a Changing Media Environment (Guido H. Stempel III and Thomas Hargrove) 73:3, 549-558.

Media Effects on Public Opinion about a Newspaper Strike (Patricia Moy, Kelley McCoy, Meg Spratt, and Michael R. McCluskey) 80:2, 391-409.

Native American Stereotypes, Television Portrayals, and Personal Contact (Alexis Tan, Yuki Fujioka, and Nancy Lucht) 74:2, 265-284.

Nonrecursive Models of Internet Use and Community Engagement: Questioning Whether Time Spent Online Erodes Social Capital (Dhavan Shah, Michael Schmierbach, Joshua Hawkins, Rodolfo Espino, and Janet Donavan) 79:4, 964-987.

Preaching to the Choir? Parents’ Use of TV Ratings to Mediate Children’s Viewing (Ron Warren) 79:4, 867-886.

Print Media and Public Reaction to the Controversy over NEA Funding for Robert Mapplethorpe’s “The Perfect Moment” Exhibit (Douglas M. McLeod and Jill A. Mackenzie) 75:2, 278-291.

Public Opinion on Investigative Reporting in the 1990s: Has Anything Changed since the 1980s? (Lars Willnat and David H. Weaver) 75:3, 449-463.

Public Perceptions of Journalists’ Ethical Motivations (Paul S. Voakes) 74:1, 23-38.

Question-Order Effects in Surveys: The Case of Political Interest, News Attention, and Knowledge (Dominic L. Lasorsa) 80:3, 499-512.

Race as a Variable in Agenda Setting (Randy E. Miller and Wayne Wanta) 73:4, 913-925.

Role of Imagery in Recall of Deviant News (Prabu David) 73:4, 804-820.

Self-Perceived Knowledge of the O.J. Simpson Trial: Third-Person Perception and Perceptions of Guilt (Paul D. Driscoll and Michael B. Salwen) 74:3, 541-556.

Using TV News for Political Information during an Off-Year Election: Effects on Political Knowledge and Cynicism (Glenn Leshner and Michael L. McKean) 74:1, 69-83.

Web Site Use and News Topic and Type (H. Denis Wu and Arati Bechtel) 79:1, 73-86.

What the Public Thinks about Public Relations: An Impression Management Experiment (Lynne M. Sallot) 79:1, 150-171.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index- Age, Disability, Gender, Race, and Ethnicity

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Age, Disability, Gender, Race, and Ethnicity

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

Black in a Blonde World: Race and Girls’ Interpretations of the Feminine Ideal in Teen Magazines (Lisa Duke) 77:2, 367-392.

The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.

The Color of Crime and the Court: A Content Analysis of Minority Representation on Television (Ron Tamborini, Dana E. Mastro, Rebecca M. Chory-Assad, and Ren He Huang) 77:3, 639-653.

Covering Domestic Violence: How the O.J. Simpson Case Shaped Reporting of Domestic Violence in the News Media (Kimberly A. Maxwell, John Huxford, Catherine Borum, and Robert Hornik) 77:2, 258-272.

Cultural Standards of Attractiveness: A Thirty-Year Look at Changes in Male Images in Magazines (Cheryl Law and Magdala Peixoto Labre) 79:3, 697-711.

Differential Employment Rates in the Journalism and Mass Communication Labor Force Based on Gender, Race, and Ethnicity: Exploring the Impact of Affirmative Action (Lee B. Becker, Edmund Lauf, and Wilson Lowrey) 76:4, 631-645.

Flabless Is Fabulous: How Latina and Anglo Women Read and Incorporate the Excessively Thin Body Ideal into Everyday Experience (J. Robyn Goodman) 79:3, 712-727.

Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.

From Segmented to Fragmented: Latino Media in San Antonio, Texas (Vicki Mayer) 78:2, 291-306.

Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.

Girls, Media, and the Negotiation of Sexuality: A Study of Race, Class, and Gender in Adolescent Peer Groups (Meenakshi Gigi Durham) 76:2, 193-216.

Health and Beauty Magazine Reading and Body Shape Concerns among a Group of College Women (Steven R. Thomsen) 79:4, 988-1007.

Media Use and Civic Participation in the African-American Population: Exploring Participation among Professionals and Nonprofessionals (Teresa Mastin) 77:1, 115-127.

The Nativist Press: Demonizing the American Immigrant (Rodger Streitmatter) 76:4, 673-83.

Nowhere Near Picture Perfect: Images of the Elderly in Life and Ebony Magazine Ads, 1990-1997 (Sharon Bramlett-Solomon and Ganga Subramanian) 76:3, 565-72.

Olympic Athletes and Heroism in Advertising: Gendered Concepts of Valor? (J. Robyn Goodman, Lisa L. Duke, and John Sutherland) 79:2, 374-393.

Portrayal of Men and Women in U.S. Spanish-Language Television Commercials (Jami A. Fullerton and Alice Kendrick) 77:1, 128-142.

Producing Public Voice: Resource Mobilization and Media Access in the National Organization for Women (Bernadette Barker-Plummer) 79:1, 188-205.

Race and Ethical Reasoning: The Importance of Race to Journalistic Decision Making (Renita Coleman) 80:2, 295-310.

Racial and Regional Differences in Readers’ Evaluations of the Credibility of Political Columnists by Race and Sex (Julie L. Andsager and Teresa Mastin) 80:1, 57-72.

Reactions to People with Disabilities: Personal Contact versus Viewing of Specific Media Portrayals (Olan Farnall and Kim A. Smith) 76:4, 659-72.

Television Portrayals and African-American Stereotypes: Examination of Television Effects when Direct Contact Is Lacking (Yuki Fujioka) 76:1, 52-75.

Women Who Succeed in Broadcast Communications Academe: A Feminist Success Story (Kathryn S. Egan) 71:4, 960-972.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

J&MC Quarterly Index-Advertising

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Advertising

Adolescent Responses to TV Beer Ads and Sports Content/Context: Gender and Ethnic Differences (Michael D. Slater, Donna Rouner, Melanie Domenech-Rodriguez, Frederick Beauvais, Kevin Murphy, and James K. Van Leuven) 74:1, 108-122.

The Advertising Content of African-American Newspapers (Stephen Lacy and Karyn A. Ramsey) 71:3, 521-530.

Advertising Managers’ Perceptions of Sales Effects and Creative Properties of National Newspaper Advertising: The Medium Revisited (Leonard N. Reid and Karen Whitehill King) 80:2, 410-430.

Advertorials in Magazines: Current Use and Compliance with Industry Guidelines (Glen T. Cameron, Kuen-Hee Ju-Pak, and Bong-Hyun Kim) 73:3, 722-733.

Appropriating Reality: Consumers’ Perceptions of Schema-Inconsistent Advertising (Hazel G. Warlaumont) 74:1, 39-54.

Black and White Models and Their Activities in Modern Cigarette and Alcohol Ads (Leonard N. Reid, Karen Whitehill King, and Peggy J. Kreshel) 71:4, 873-886.

Cause-Related Marketing Ads in the Light of Negative News (Sameer Deshpande and Jacqueline C. Hitchon) 79:4, 905-926.

Cheesecake and Beefcake: No Matter How You Slice It, Sexual Explicitness in Advertising Continues to Increase (Tom Reichert, Jacqueline Lambiase, Susan Morgan, Meta Carstarphen, and Susan Zavoina) 76:1, 7-20.

Cognitive Impact of Banner Ad Characteristics: An Experimental Study (Hairong Li and Janice L. Bukovac) 76:2, 341-53.

Commercial Breaks: A Viewing Behavior Study (Sandra E. Moriarty and Shu-Ling Everett) 71:2, 346-355.

Communication Styles and Female Candidates: A Study of the Political Advertising during the 1986 Senate Elections (Anne Johnston and Anne Barton White) 71:2, 321-329.

Companionship in the Classifieds: The Adoption of Personal Advertisements by Daily Newspapers (Debra L. Merskin and Mara Huberlie) 73:1, 219-229.

The Cow, the Cook, and the Quaker: Fifty Years of Spokes-Character Advertising (Barbara J. Phillips and Barbara Gyoerick) 76:4, 713-28.

A Demand-Side View of Media Substitutability in National Advertising: A Study of Advertiser Opinions about Traditional Media Options (Leonard N. Reid and Karen Whitehill King) 77:2, 292-307.

Does the Watchdog Bite? Newspaper Ad Watch Articles and Political Attack Ads (Patrick B. O’Sullivan and Seth Geiger) 72:4, 771-785.

The Effectiveness of Banner Advertisements: Involvement and Click-through (Chang-Hoan Cho) 80:3, 623-645.

Effects of Anti-Tobacco Advertisements Based on Risk-Taking Tendencies: Realistic Fear vs. Vulgar Humor (Moon J. Lee and Mary Ann Ferguson) 79:4, 945-963.

Environmental Advertising: Norms and Levels of Advertiser Trust (Joel J. Davis) 71:2, 330-345.

Hispanic Marketing: National Advertiser Spending Patterns and Media Choices (Sabrina R. Goodson and Mary Alice Shaver) 71:1, 191-198.

Images of Rosie: A Content Analysis of Women Workers in American Magazine Advertising, 1940-1946 (Charles Lewis and John Neville) 72:1, 216-227.

The Impact of Competition on Weekly Newspaper Advertising Rates (Stephen Lacy, David C. Coulson, and Hiromi Cho) 78:3, 450-465.

The Impact of Intermedia and Newspaper Competition on Advertising Linage in Daily Newspapers (Mary Alice Shaver and Stephen Lacy) 76:4, 729-44.

Impartial Spectator in the Marketplace of Ideas: The Principles of Adam Smith as an Ethical Basis for Regulation of Corporate Speech (Robert L. Kerr) 79:2, 394-415.

The Institution of Advertising: Predictors of Cross-National Differences in Consumer Confidence (George M. Zinkhan and Anne L. Balazs) 75:3, 535-547.

Intertwining of Campaign News and Advertising: The Content and Electoral Effects of Newspaper Ad Watches (Young Min) 79:4, 927-944.

Looking through Gendered Lenses: Female Stereotyping in Advertisements and Gender Role Expectations (Sue Lafky, Margaret Duffy, Mary Steinmaus, and Dan Berkowitz) 73:2, 379-388.

Loud Tastes, Colored Fragrances, and Scented Sounds: How and When to Mix the Senses in Persuasive Communications (Michelle R. Nelson and Jacqueline C. Hitchon) 76:2, 354-372.

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

Minority Presence and Portrayal in Mainstream Magazine Advertising: An Update (Lawrence Bowen and Jill Schmid) 74:1, 134-146.

Modeling Format and Source Effects of an Advocacy Message (Dulcie Straughan, Glen L. Bleske, and Xinshu Zhao) 73:1, 135-146.

Olympic Athletes and Heroism in Advertising: Gendered Concepts of Valor? (J. Robyn Goodman, Lisa L. Duke, and John Sutherland) 79:2, 374-393.

Placing Alcohol Warnings before, during, and after TV Beer Ads: Effects on Knowledge and Responses to the Ads and the Warnings (Michael D. Slater, Donna Rouner, David Karan, Kevin Murphy, and Frederick Beauvais) 76:3, 468-484.

Policing Political Ads: An Analysis of Five Leading Newspapers’ Responses to 1992 Political Advertisements (Lori Melton McKinnon, Lynda Lee Kaid, Janet Murphy, and Cynthia K. Acree) 73:1, 66-76.

Portrayal of Men and Women in U.S. Spanish-Language Television Commercials (Jami A. Fullerton and Alice Kendrick) 77:1, 128-142.

Portrayals of Latinos in Magazine Advertising (Charles R. Taylor and Hae-Kyong Bang) 74:2, 285-303.

Skin Tones and Physical Features of Blacks in Magazine Advertisements (Kevin L. Keenan) 73:4, 905-912.

Slow Fade To?: Advertising in Ebony Magazine, 1957-1989 (Michael Leslie) 72:2, 426-435.

Theory of Synesthesia Applied to Persuasion in Print Advertising Headlines (Michelle R. Nelson and Jacqueline C. Hitchon) 72:2, 346-360.

Time: The “Silent” Cultural Value in American Television Advertising (Joyce M. Wolburg) 76:3, 419-432.

Time of Voting Decision and Use of Political Advertising: The Slade Gorton-Brock Adams Senatorial Campaign (Lawrence Bowen) 71:3, 665-675.

Toward an Understanding of Cultural Values Manifest in Advertising: A Content Analysis of Chinese Television Commercials in 1990 and 1995 (Hong Cheng) 74:4, 773-796.

Tracing Sources of Information Pollution: A Survey and Experimental Test of Print Media’s Labeling Policy for Feature Advertising (Glen T. Cameron and Patricia A. Curtin) 72:1, 178-189.

What’s Bad in an Ad: Thirty Years of Opinion from Ad Age’s “Ads-We-Can-Do-Without” Letters (Bruce G. Vanden Bergh, Nora J. Rifon, and Molly Catherine Ziske) 72:4, 948-959.

When Advertising and Public Relations Converge: An Application of Schema Theory to the Persuasive Impact of Alignment Ads (Toni L. Schmidt and Jacqueline C. Hitchon) 76:3, 433-55.

<< JMCQ 71-80 Subject Index

Author Index U-V, 71-80

J&MC Quarterly Index Vol. 71-80 • 1994 to 2003

U

UNDERWOOD, DOUG and KEITH STAMM, Are Journalists Really Irreligious? A Multidimensional Analysis, 78:4, 771-786.

UNDERWOOD, DOUG (See Stamm).

UPPAL, CHARU (See Sundar).

V

VALENTINO, NICHOLAS A., THOMAS A. BUHR, and MATTHEW N. BECKMANN, When the Frame Is the Game: Revisiting the Impact of “Strategic” Campaign Coverage on Citizens’ Information Retention, 78:1, 93-112.

VAN BELLE, DOUGLAS A., New York Times and Network TV News Coverage of Foreign Disasters: The Significance of the Insignificant Variables, 77:1, 50-70.

VAN LEUVEN, JAMES K. (See Slater).

VAN TUBERGEN, G. NORMAN (See Al-Makaty).

VANDEN BERGH, BRUCE G., NORA J. RIFON, and MOLLY CATHERINE ZISKE, What’s Bad in an Ad: Thirty Years of Opinion from Ad Age’s “Ads-We-Can-Do-Without” Letters, 72:4, 948-959.

VANHALA, HELENA (See Stavitsky).

VERMEER, JAN P., Multiple Newspapers and Electoral Competition: A County-Level Analysis, 72:1, 98-105.

VIG, WILLIAM (See Tewksbury).

VOAKES, PAUL S., JACK KAPFER, DAVID KURPIUS, and DAVID SHANO-YEON CHERN, Diversity in the News: A Conceptual and Methodological Framework, 73:3, 582-593.

VOAKES, PAUL S., Public Perceptions of Journalists’ Ethical Motivations, 74:1, 23-38.

VOAKES, PAUL S., What Were You Thinking? A Survey of Journalists Who Were Sued for Invasion of Privacy, 75:2, 378-393.

VOAKES, PAUL S., Civic Duties: Newspaper Journalists’ Views on Public Journalism, 76:4, 756-774.

<< Back

Author Index K, 71-80

J&MC Quarterly Index Vol. 71-80 • 1994 to 2003

KAHN, EMILY (See Hertog).

KAID, LYNDA LEE (See Ku).

KAID, LYNDA LEE (See McKinnon).

KAMHAWI, RASHA and DAVID WEAVER, Mass Communication Research Trends from 1980 to 1999, 80:1, 7-27.

KAPFER, JACK (See Voakes).

KARAN, DAVID (See Slater).

KATZ, CHERYL (See Baldassare).

KATZ, ELIHU (See Wyatt).

KAYE, BARBARA K. (See Johnson).

KEENAN, KEVIN L., Skin Tones and Physical Features of Blacks in Magazine Advertisements, 73:4, 905-912.

KEETER, SCOTT (See Carpini).

KELLY, KATHLEEN S., Utilizing Public Relations Theory to Conceptualize and Test Models of Fund Raising, 72:1, 106-127.

KENDRICK, ALICE (See Fullerton).

KENNAMER, J. DAVID and JULIE A. HONNOLD, Attitude toward Homosexuality and Attention to News about AIDS, 72:2, 322-335.

KENNAMER, J. DAVID (See Carpini).

KERR, PETER A. and PATRICIA MOY, Newspaper Coverage of Fundamentalist Christians, 1980-2000, 79:1, 54-72.

KERR, ROBERT L., Impartial Spectator in the Marketplace of Ideas: The Principles of Adam Smith as an Ethical Basis for Regulation of Corporate Speech, 79:2, 394-415.

KIERNAN, VINCENT, Embargoes and Science News, 80:4, 903-920.

KILMER, PAULETTE D., “Madstones,” Clever Toads, and Killer Tarantulas (Fairy-Tale Briefs in Wild West Newspapers), 78:4, 816-835.

KIM, BONG-HYUN (See Cameron).

KIM, EUNYI (See Shoemaker).

KIM, JOOHAN (See Wyatt).

KIM, SEI-HILL, DIETRAM A. SCHEUFELE, and JAMES SHANAHAN, Think about It This Way: Attribute Agenda-Setting Function of the Press and the Public’s Evaluation of a Local Issue, 79:1, 7-25.

KIM, SUNG TAE, Making a Difference: U.S. Press Coverage of the Kwangju and Tiananmen Pro-Democracy Movements, 77:1, 22-36.

KIM, SUNG TAE, DAVID WEAVER, and LARS WILLNAT, Media Reporting and Perceived Credibility of Online Polls, 77:4, 846-864.

KIM, YUNGWOOK, Measuring the Bottom-Line Impact of Corporate Public Relations, 77:2, 273-291.

KIM, YUNGWOOK, Searching for the Organization-Public Relationship: A Valid and Reliable Instrument, 78:4, 799-815.

KING, CYNTHIA M. (See Perry).

KING, ERIKA G., The Flawed Characters in the Campaign: Prestige Newspaper Assessments of the 1992 Presidential Candidates’ Integrity and Competence, 72:1, 84-97.

KING, ERIKA G. (See Wells).

KING, KAREN WHITEHILL (See Reid).

KINNICK, KATHERINE N., DEAN M. KRUGMAN, and GLEN T. CAMERON, Compassion Fatigue: Communication and Burnout toward Social Problems, 73:3, 687-707.

KITCH, CAROLYN, Changing Theoretical Perspectives on Women’s Media Images: The Emergence of Patterns in a New Area of Historical Scholarship, 74:3, 477-489.

KITCH, CAROLYN, The American Woman Series: Gender and Class in The Ladies’ Home Journal, 1897, 75:2, 243-262.

KITCH, CAROLYN, “A Death in the American Family”: Myth, Memory, and National Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr., 79:2, 294-309.

KLEIN, GARY, When the News Doesn’t Fit: The New York Times and Hitler’s First Two Months in Office, February/March 1933, 78:1, 127-149.

KNOBLOCH, SILVIA, FRANCESCA DILLMAN CARPENTIER, and DOLF ZILLMANN, Effects of Salience Dimensions of Informational Utility on Selective Exposure to Online News, 80:1, 91-108.

KNUDSON, JERRY W., Licensing Journalists in Latin America: An Appraisal, 73:4, 878-889.

KODRICH, KRIS, Finding a New Way: Nicaraguan Newspapers in a Globalized World, 79:1, 101-120.

KOEHLER, ELIZABETH M., The Variable Nature of Defamation: Social Mores and Accusations of Homosexuality, 76:2, 217-228.

KOO, SOH HOON (See Wu).

KOPENHAVER, LILLIAN LODGE and J. WILLIAM CLICK, High School Newspapers Still Censored Thirty Years after Tinker, 78:2, 321-339.

KOSICKI, GERALD M., LEE B. BECKER, and ERIC S. FREDIN, Buses and Ballots: The Role of Media Images in a Local Election, 71:1, 76-89.

KOSICKI, GERALD M. (See Fredin).

KRAIDY, MARWAN M., State Control of Television News in 1990s Lebanon, 76:3, 485-498.

KRAUS, SIDNEY (See Zhang).

KRESHEL, PEGGY J. (See Reid).

KRUGMAN, DEAN M. (See Kinnick).

KU, GYOTAE, LYNDA LEE KAID, and MICHAEL PFAU, The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing, 80:3, 528-547.

KUNZ, WILLIAM M. (See Wanta).

KURPIUS, DAVID D., Public Journalism and Commercial Local Television News: In Search of a Model, 77:2, 340-354.

KURPIUS, DAVID D. and ANDREW MENDELSON, A Case Study of Deliberative Democracy on Television: Civic Dialogue on C-SPAN Call-in Shows, 79:3, 587-601.

KURPIUS, DAVID D., Sources and Civic Journalism: Changing Patterns of Reporting?, 79:4, 853-866.

KURPIUS, DAVID (See Voakes).

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Author Index H, 71-80

J&MC Quarterly Index Vol. 71-80 • 1994 to 2003

HAAS, TANNI (See Massey).

HALSTUK, MARTIN E. and BILL F. CHAMBERLIN, Open Government in the Digital Age: The Legislative History of How Congress Established a Right of Public Access to Electronic Information Held by Federal Agencies, 78:1, 45-64.

HANSEN, ANNE (See Coulson).

HANSEN, KATHLEEN A., JEAN WARD, JOAN L. CONNERS, and MARK NEUZIL, Local Breaking News: Sources, Technology, and News Routines, 71:3, 561-572.

HANSEN, KATHLEEN A., MARK NEUZIL, and JEAN WARD, Newsroom Topic Teams: Journalists’ Assessments of Effects on News Routines and Newspaper Quality, 75:4, 803-821.

HARGROVE, THOMAS (See Stempel).

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

HAUGLAND, ANN, Books as Culture/Books as Commerce, 71:4, 787-799.

HAWKINS, DARNELL F. (See Johnstone).

HAWKINS, ELIZA TANNER with KIRK A. HAWKINS, Bridging Latin America’s Digital Divide: Government Policies and Internet Access, 80:3, 646-665.

HAWKINS, JOSHUA (See Shah).

HAWKINS, KIRK A. (See Hawkins, Eliza Tanner).

HE, ZHOU (See Willnat).

HENNINGHAM, JOHN, Australian Journalists’ Professional and Ethical Values, 73:1, 206-218.

HENNINGHAM, JOHN, The Journalist’s Personality: An Exploratory Study, 74:3, 615-624.

HENRY, PAGET (See Rhodes).

HERTOG, JAMES K., JOHN R. FINNEGAN, JR., and EMILY KAHN, Media Coverage of AIDS, Cancer, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Test of the Public Arenas Model, 71:2, 291-304.

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

HERTOG, JAMES K. (See Gutierrez-Villalobos).

HERZOG, KRISTIN (See Walsh-Childers).

HESSE, MICHAEL B. (See Stamm and Emig).

HESTER, JOE BOB and RHONDA GIBSON, The Economy and Second-Level Agenda Setting: A Time-Series Analysis of Economic News and Public Opinion about the Economy, 80:1, 73-90.

HESTER, JOE BOB (See Perry).

HIGGINS, DONNA (See McAlister).

HILLIARD, JERRY (See Hines).

HINDMAN, DOUGLAS BLANKS, Community Newspapers, Community Structural Pluralism, and Local Conflict with Nonlocal Groups, 73:3, 708-721.

HINDMAN, DOUGLAS BLANKS, ROBERT LITTLEFIELD, ANN PRESTON, and DENNIS NEUMANN, Structural Pluralism, Ethnic Pluralism, and Community Newspapers, 76:2, 250-263.

HINDMAN, DOUGLAS BLANKS, The Rural-Urban Digital Divide, 77:3, 549-560.

HINDMAN, ELIZABETH BLANKS, “Spectacles of the Poor”: Conventions of Alternative News, 75:1, 177-193.

HINDMAN, ELIZABETH BLANKS, “Lynch-Mob Journalism” vs. “Compelling Human Drama”: Editorial Responses to Coverage of the Pretrial Phase of the O.J. Simpson Case, 76:3, 499-515.

HINDMAN, ELIZABETH BLANKS, The Princess and the Paparazzi: Blame, Responsibility, and the Media’s Role in the Death of Diana, 80:3, 666-688.

HINES, RANDALL W. and JERRY HILLIARD, A Study of Tennessee Newspapers’ Use of Traditional Headline “Rules,” 72:3, 698-705.

HITCHON, JACQUELINE C., The Locus of Metaphorical Persuasion: An Empirical Test, 74:1, 55-68.

HITCHON, JACQUELINE C. (See Deshpande).

HITCHON, JACQUELINE C. (See Nelson).

HITCHON, JACQUELINE C. (See Schmidt).

HOERRNER, KEISHA L., Symbolic Politics: Congressional Interest in Television Violence from 1950 to 1996, 76:4, 684-698.

HOLBERT, R. LANCE (See Pfau).

HOLLANDER, BARRY A., The New News and the 1992 Presidential Campaign: Perceived vs. Actual Political Knowledge, 72:4, 786-798.

HOLLANDER, BARRY A., Talk Radio: Predictors of Use and Effects on Attitudes about Government, 73:1, 102-113.

HOLLIFIELD, C. ANN, The Specialized Business Press and Industry-Related Political Communication: A Comparative Study, 74:4, 757-772.

HOLLIFIELD, C. ANN (See Daniels).

HONG, YAH-HUEI (See Gunther).

HONNOLD, JULIE A. (See Kennamer).

HOPKINS, W. WAT, The Supreme Court Defines the Marketplace of Ideas, 73:1, 40-52.

HORNIK, ROBERT (See Maxwell).

HOROWITZ, EDWARD (See McLeod).

HOROWITZ, EDWARD M. (See Eveland).

HOWARD, HERBERT H., TV Station Group and Cross-Media Ownership: A 1995 Update, 72:2, 390-401.

HU, YU-WEI (See Wanta).

HUANG, HUIPING (See McLeod).

HUANG, LI-NING (See Price).

HUANG, REN HE (See Tamborini).

HUBERLIE, MARA (See Merskin).

HUCKINS, KYLE, Interest-Group Influence on the Media Agenda: A Case Study, 76:1, 76-86.

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

HUME, JANICE, The “Forgotten” 1918 Influenza Epidemic and Press Portrayal of Public Anxiety, 77:4, 898-915.

HUME, JANICE, “Portraits of Grief,” Reflectors of Values: The New York Times Remembers Victims of September 11, 80:1, 166-182.

HUSSELBEE, L. PAUL and GUIDO H. STEMPEL III, Contrast in U.S. Media Coverage of Two Major Canadian Elections, 74:3, 591-601.

HUSSELBEE, L. PAUL and LARRY ELLIOTT, Looking beyond Hate: How National and Regional Newspapers Framed Hate Crimes in Jasper, Texas, and Laramie Wyoming, 79:4, 833-852.

HUXFORD, JOHN (See Maxwell).

HYNDS, ERNEST C., Editors at Most U.S. Dailies See Vital Roles for Editorial Page, 71:3, 573-582.

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