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Vol. 5, Issue 1, Winter 1988
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin and the “Day of Infamy”
By Alf Pratte
The Shaping of a Southern Opinion Leader: Ralph McGill and Freedom of Information
By Leonard Ray Teel
Historiographical Essay
Historians and the American Frontier Press
By William E. Huntzicker
Vol. 5, Issue 2, Spring 1988
“Little Ado About Something”: Philadelphia Newspapers and the Constitutional Convention
By Carol Sue Humphrey
Advertisements Masquerading as News In Turn-of-the-Century American Periodicals
By Linda Lawson
Scurrility and the Party Press, 1789-1816
By Wm. David Sloan
Vol. 5, Issue 3, Summer 1988
“A Brave and Beautiful City”: Henry Grady’s New South
By Harold E. Davis
Benjamin Franklin’s Printing Network
By Ralph Frasca
Freedom of the Press, 1690-1801 : Libertarian or Limited?
By Wm. David Sloan and Thomas A. Schwartz
Vol. 5, Issue 4, Autumn 1988
The Dubious Heritage of Media Ethics: Cause-and-Effect Criticism in the 1890s
By John P. Ferre
Franklin Roosevelt, His Administration, and the Communications Act of 1934
By Robert W. McChesney
Historiographical Essay
Historians and Freedom of the Press Since 1800
By Timothy W. Gleason