| Media Studies Journal 1998 |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| Absolute talk on the radio: hosts establish intimacy with their audiences and with it authority. | Mass communications | Smith, Ruth Bayard |
| A fall from grace? (decline of journalistic profession) | Mass communications | Hallin, Daniel |
| After Communism, journalism: ten commandments for a decent journalist. | Mass communications | Michnik, Adam |
| A generational divide at Columbia. (Columbia University) | Mass communications | |
| All is not fair in journalism: fairness to people vs. fairness to the truth. (philosophy and journalism) | Mass communications | Romano, Carlin |
| Alone with a crowd. (Richard M. Nixon) | Mass communications | Wicker, Tom |
| An embattled foreign correspondent: international stereotypes flow in two directions. | Mass communications | |
| A new birth in France. (French student protest movement in 1968) | Mass communications | Bertrand, Claude-Jean |
| An instant that lingers. (historic US photo of a South Vietnamese general in the moment of shooting a Viet Cong officer in the head) | Mass communications | Moeller, Susan |
| An Irish march from past to future. (Northern Ireland civil rights movement in 1968) | Mass communications | Holland, Mary |
| An unexpected aeration. (US journalism in 1968) | Mass communications | Gitlin, Todd |
| Backlash defined a gesture. (race discrimination at the 1968 Olympics) | Mass communications | Lipsyte, Robert |
| Big trouble: Celebrity trials and the good old days that never were. | Mass communications | Lukas, J.Anthony |
| Climbing down from Olympus: "CBS Evening News" from Walter Cronkite to Dan Rather. (news anchors) | Mass communications | Tyndall, Andrew |
| Dave Lawrence. (interview with 'The Miami Herald' publisher)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Divided people, divided press: interpreting the poisonous silences in a fractured society. (journalism in Ireland) | Mass communications | O'Farrell, John |
| Doing justice with cameras in the courts: How important is the public operation of the judicial system? | Mass communications | Graham, Fred |
| Dumping Johnson: the media set the stage for the president's fall but misunderstood the movement that toppled him. (Pres Lyndon B. Johnson) | Mass communications | Gans, Curtis |
| Enemas for elephants: a new political order has dumped new responsibilities on journalists. | Mass communications | Shogan, Robert |
| Feeding the ravenous appetite of the press: A defense attorney and law professor argues that reporting privileged information before it appears in court undermines the fairness of trials.(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Finding ourselves in the new journalism. | Mass communications | Pauly, John J. |
| Flash and trash: The reporter's task is to separate courtroom news from show business. | Mass communications | Deutsch, Linda |
| From underground to alternative: peace signs and dollar signs. (journalism in 1968 and in 1998) | Mass communications | Peck, Abe |
| Frozen defiance. (photo of Columbia University student protestors at a sit-in strike in 1968) | Mass communications | Zelizer, Barbie |
| Geneva Olverholser. (interview with former 'The Des Moines Register' editor)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Giving people what they deserve: why cover minor political parties? | Mass communications | |
| Goals for the year 2000 and beyond. (newsroom integration) | Mass communications | Ghiglione, Loren |
| Good copy: George Wallace understood that media thrived on confrontation. | Mass communications | Carter, Dan T. |
| Heresies of liberalism. (media and the year 1968) | Mass communications | Hodgson, Godfrey |
| High ideals and troubling news. (Martin Luther King, Jr.) | Mass communications | Carson, Clayborne |
| History slips away. (murder of presidential candidate, Sen Robert F. Kennedy in 1968) | Mass communications | Newfield, Jack |
| In all fairness: definitions of fair journalism have changed over the last two centuries. | Mass communications | Schudson, Michael |
| James Hoge. (interview with 'Foreign Affairs' editor)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Jerry Ceppos. (interview with 'San Jose Mercury News' executive editor)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Journalism meets art: Courtroom sketches convey subjective elements beyond the range of the camera. | Mass communications | Krupp, Katherine |
| Justice by the consent of the governed: Federal judges on reciprocity between the press and the judiciary and the prospects for cameras in federal courts.(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Justified doubts: reporters underestimated the strength and resilience of America's adversaries. (Viet Cong Tet Offensive of 1968 during the Vietnam War) | Mass communications | Halberstam, David |
| Lessons from the O.J. Simpson trial II: The camera is the defendant's friend.(Interview) | Mass communications | Cochran, Johnnie, L. Jr. |
| Lessons from the O.J. Simpson trial I: What makes a defendant compelling? | Mass communications | Toobin, Jeffrey |
| Lessons from the Timothy McVeigh trial II: It was drama for the sake of justice. | Mass communications | Cohen, Andrew |
| Lessons from the Timothy McVeigh Trial I: Was justice done? How do we know? | Mass communications | Kirtley, Jane |
| Looming battles in Britain: fairness regulations meet the marketplace. | Mass communications | Marsden, Christopher T. |
| Max Frankel. (interview with 'New York Times Magazine' media columnist)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Meaning from the muddle: journalists, ethicists and theologians have much to teach each other.(Interview) | Mass communications | Shriver, Donald W., Jr. |
| Murray Kempton - a perspective for the ages. (journalist) | Mass communications | Payne, Les |
| My failure to be fair to the president: the first step is to recognize your own biases. | Mass communications | |
| No contest: The trumped-up conflict between freedom of the press and the right to a fair trial. | Mass communications | Sanford, Bruce W. |
| Obvious lessons in hindsight: editorial self-examination is therapeutic and humiliating. | Mass communications | |
| Off the record, off the mark: the use of unnamed sources is a bad habit. | Mass communications | Shaw, David |
| Optimism, pessimism and the Kerner report. (Advisory Commission on Civil Disorder Chmn Otto Kerner's 1968 report on racial integration) | Mass communications | Kennedy, Randall |
| Painful limits. (assessing President Lyndon Johnson) | Mass communications | Wilkins, Roger |
| Preface: 1968.(Editorial) | Mass communications | |
| Reassessing the winners and losers: a reporter looks back at the events he covered in 1968. | Mass communications | Witcover, Jules |
| Rushing to judgment: in television, first impressions are the only impressions. | Mass communications | |
| Seeking higher ground with Tony Lukas. (author) | Mass communications | Diver, Joan, Diver, Colin |
| Shattering the prism of our own prejudice: when the media reach a consensus, question yourself. | Mass communications | |
| Shelby Coffey III. (interview with former 'Los Angeles Times' editor)(Interview) | Mass communications | |
| Standing up for the facts. | Mass communications | Mindich, David T.Z. |
| The best of times. (The New York Times publication) | Mass communications | Reeves, Richard |
| The camera-shy federal courts: why are cameras accepted in state courts but dreaded in federal courts? | Mass communications | Mauro, Tony |
| The Czech press - fighting for change. (role of the press in civil rights movement in Czechoslovakia that was to reach the height of its power in spring 1968) | Mass communications | Albright, Madeleine K. |
| The Hutchins Commission, half a century on. (part 1) | Mass communications | Tucher, Andie |
| The Hutchins Commission, half a century on. (part 2) | Mass communications | Trahant, Mark N. |
| The Hutchins Commission, half a century on. (part 3) | Mass communications | Bollinger, Lee C. |
| The impossibility of fairness: news reporting is subordinated to entertainment. | Mass communications | Squires, Jim |
| The Kerner legacy. (National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders led by Illinois Gov Otto Kerner and its report on racial integration; newsroom integration in 1998) | Mass communications | Newkirk, Pamela |
| The nightmare of Tlatelolco. (violence-marred demonstration in Mexico in 1968 that was to leave an estimated 600 people killed) | Mass communications | Palacio, Raymundo Riva |
| The Reardon ruckus: The press, the bar and 30 years of agreeing to disagree. | Mass communications | Schmidt, Richard M. Jr., Goldberg, Kevin M. |
| The role of the media in exposing crimes against humanity: Lessons learned in South Africa, Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. | Mass communications | Goldstone, Richard J. Judge. |
| The thicket of rules north of the border: Canadian perspectives on a free press and fair trials. | Mass communications | Adam, G. Stuart |
| The third branch and the fourth estate: A state judge pleads for balance in coverage of the courts. | Mass communications | Kay, Judith S. Judge |
| The transformation of Time magazine: from opinion leader to supporting player. (periodical) | Mass communications | Baughman, James L. |
| The truth was burned. (Miss America Pageant protest in 1968) | Mass communications | Levine, Suzanne Braun |
| The turning point that wasn't; changes in American views on the Vietnam War were building long before Tet. (1968 Viet Cong Tet Offensive) | Mass communications | Hallin, Daniel |
| Unfortunate stupidity: relations between the news media and the military are still poisoned by the memory of Tet. (1968 Viet Cong Tet offensive during the Vietnam War) | Mass communications | Sidle, Winan |
| Virgins, vamps and the tabloid mentality: A prosecutor contends that when rape makes news, the press offers titillation, not education.(Interview) | Mass communications | Fairstein, Linda |
| What gets on the networks?: The O.J. Simpson trial dominated recent coverage of the courts. | Mass communications | Tyndall, Andrew |
| What makes a journalist fair? | Mass communications | |
| What price fairness? (UK Independent Television Commission's fining of television station MED-TV) | Mass communications | Price, Monroe E. |
| "Why hurt me?": weighing obligations to sources and readers. | Mass communications | |
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.