These issues are available through Communication and Mass Media Complete on EbscoHost.
Vol. 20, Issue 1, Winter 2003
The New York Tribune At Harper’s Ferry: “Horace Greeley on Trial”
By Gregory Borchard
The Student Voice: “Purging the Rabies of Racism”
By Vanessa D. Murphree
“Mobocratic Feeling”: Religious Outsiders, the Popular Press, and the American West
By Todd Kerstetter
Gobind Behari Lal: The Gentle Indian Firebrand of American Science Journalism
By Padmini Patwardhan
Vol. 20, Issue 2, Spring 2003
The Warren Report’s Forgotten Chapter: Press Response to Criticism of Kennedy Assassination Coverage
By Glen Feighery
‘Satanic Journalism and its Fate’:The Scripps Chain Strikes Out in Buffalo
By Michael Dillon
A Press Insider’s View of Reconstruction Era Journalism in Washington, D.C., 1865-1877
By Joseph P. McKerns
Selling the Southwestern Indian: Ideology and Image in Arizona Highways, 1925-1940
By John M. Coward
Vol. 20, Issue 3, Summer 2003
Blackface in Black and White: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in Frederick Douglass’ Hometown Newspapers, 1847
By Frank E. Fee, Jr.
The Famine Irish and the Irish-American Press: Strangers in a Hostile Land
By Mick Mulcrone
We Want In: The African American Press’s Negotiation for a White House Correspondent
By Earnest Perry
Jacob Riis: Immigrants Old and New, and the Making of Americans
By Joseph P. Cosco
Vol. 20, Issue 4, Fall 2003
Like Newsroom, Like Classroom: Women Journalism Educators Temper the Times
By Therese L. Lueck
Heralding Economic and Political Independence: Danville, Virginia’s Newspaper Editors Adopt James Gordon Bennett’s Penny Press Model During the Civil War
By Stephen V. Bird
Two Steps Forward and One Step Back: Coverage of Women Journalists in Editor & Publisher 1978 through 1988
By Cindy Elmore
An Emerging Emphasis on Image: Early Press Coverage of Politics and Television
By David A. Biard