1. Books on Principles of JournalismAdams, Samuel Hopkins. The Clarion. A novel. 1914. Bleyer, W. G. Newspaper Writing and Editing. The Function of the Newspaper, pp. 331–389. 1913. Hapgood, Norman. Everyday Ethics. Ethics of Journalism, pp. 1–15. 1910. Holt, Hamilton. Commercialism and Journalism. 1909. Proceedings of the First National Newspaper Conference. University of Wisconsin. 1913. Reid, Whitelaw. American and English Studies. Journalistic Duties and Opportunities, v. 2, pp. 313–344. 1913. Rogers, Jason. Newspaper Building. 1918. Rogers, J. E. The American Newspaper. 1909. Scott-James, R. A. The Influence of the Press. 1913. Thorpe, Merle, editor. The Coming Newspaper. 1915. 2. What Typical Newspapers ContainWilcox, Delos F. The American Newspaper: A Study in Social Psychology. Annals of the American Academy, v. 16, p. 56. (July, 1900.) Garth, T. R. Statistical Study of the Contents of Newspapers. School and Society, v. 3, p. 140. (Jan. 22, 1916.) Tenney, A. A. Scientific Analysis of the Press. Independent, v. 73, p. 895. (Oct. 17, 1912.) Mathews, B. C. Study of a New York Daily. Independent, v. 68, p. 82. (Jan. 13, 1910.) 3. What the Public WantsThorpe, Merle, editor. The Coming Newspaper, pp. 223–247; Symposium: Giving the Public What It Wants, by newspaper and magazine editors. 1915. Independent Chicago Journalist, An. Is an Honest and Sane Newspaper Possible? American Journal of Sociology, v. 15, p. 321. (Nov. 1909.) Haskell, H. J. The Public, the Newspaper’s Problem. Outlook, v. 91, p. 791. (April 3, 1909.) Stansell, C. V. People’s Wants. Nation, v. 98, p. 236. (March 6, 1914.) Newspapers as Commodities. Nation, v. 94, p. 236. (May 9, 1912.) Scott, Walter Dill. The Psychology of Advertising, pp. 226–248. 1908. Bennett, Arnold. What the Public Wants. A play. 1910. 4. What Is News?What Is News? A Symposium from the Managing Editors of the Great American Newspapers. Collier’s Weekly, v. 46, p. 22 (March 18, 1911); v. 47, p. 44 (April 15, 1911); v. 47, p. 35 (May 6, 1911); v. 47, p. 42 (May 13, 1911); v. 47, p. 26 (May 20, 1911). Irwin, Will. What Is News? Collier’s Weekly, v. 46, p. 16. (March 11, 1911.) What Is News? Outlook, v. 89, p. 137. (May 23, 1908.) What Is News? Scribner, v. 44, p. 507. (Oct. 1908.) Brougham, H. B. News—What Is It? Harper’s Weekly, v. 56, p. 21. (Feb. 17, 1912.) 5. The Reporter and the NewsIrwin, Will. “All the News That’s Fit to Print.” Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (May 6, 1911.) Irwin, Will. The Reporter and the News. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 21. (April 22, 1911.) MÜnsterberg, Hugo. The Case of the Reporter. McClure’s Magazine, v. 36, p. 435. (Feb. 1911.) Strunsky, Simeon. Two Kinds of Reporters. Century, v. 85, p. 955. (April 1913.) Gentlemanly Reporter, The. Century, v. 79, p. 149. (Nov. 1909.) Dealing in Scandal. Outlook, v. 97, p. 811. (April 15, 1911.) Seldes, G. H. and G. V. The Press and the Reporter. Forum, v. 52, p. 722. (Nov. 1914.) 6. Effects of News of Crime and ScandalFenton, Francis. Influence of Newspaper Presentation upon the Growth of Crime and Other Anti-social Activity. 1911. Also in American Journal of Sociology, v. 16, pp. 342 and 538. (Nov. 1910, and Jan. 1911.) Phelps, E. B. Neurotic Books and Newspapers as Factors in the Mortality of Suicides and Crime. Bulletin of the American Academy of Medicine, v. 12, No. 5. (Oct. 1911.) Newspapers’ Sensations and Suggestion. Independent, v. 62, p. 449. (Feb. 21, 1907.) Tragic Sense. Nation, v. 87, p. 90. (July 30, 1908.) Danger of the Sensational Press. Craftsman, v. 19, p. 211. (Nov. 1910.) Howells, W. D. Shocking News. Harper’s Magazine, v. 127, p. 796. (Oct. 1913.) Irwin, Will. “All the News That’s Fit to Print.” Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (May 6, 1911.) Responsibility of the Press. Independent, v. 53, p. 2248. (Sept. 19, 1901.) Our Chamber of Horrors. Outlook, v. 99, p. 261. (Sept. 30, 1911.) The Newspaper as Childhood’s Enemy. Survey, v. 27, p. 1794. (Feb. 24, 1912.) Lessons in Crime at Fifty Cents per Month. Outlook, v. 85, p. 276. (Feb. 2, 1907.) The Man Who Ate Babies. Harper’s Weekly, v. 51, p. 296. (March 2, 1907.) Lawlessness and the Press. Century, v. 82, p. 146. (May 1911.) Newspaper Responsibility for Lawlessness. Nation, v. 77, p. 151. (Aug. 20, 1903.) Newspaper Invasion of Privacy. Century, v. 86, p. 310. (June 1913.) Newspaper Cruelty. Century, v. 84, p. 150. (May 1912.) Newspapers and Crime. Journal of Criminal Law, v. 2, p. 340. (Sept. 1912.) 7. Yellow and Sensational JournalismIrwin, Will. The Fourth Current. Collier’s Weekly, v. 46, p. 14. (Feb. 18, 1911.) Thomas, W. I. The Psychology of the Yellow Journal. American Magazine, v. 65, p. 491. (March 1908.) Brooks, Sydney. The Yellow Press: An English View. Harper’s Weekly, v. 55, p. 11. (Dec. 23, 1911.) Whibley, Charles. The American Yellow Press. Blackwood’s, v. 181, p. 531 (April 1907); also in Bookman, v. 25, p. 239. (May 1907.) Brisbane, Arthur. Yellow Journalism. Bookman, v. 19, p. 400. (June 1904.) Brisbane, Arthur. William Randolph Hearst. North American Review, v. 183, p. 511 (Sept. 21, 1906); editorial comment on this article, by George Harvey, on p. 569. Commander, Lydia K. The Significance of Yellow Journalism. Arena, v. 34, p. 150. (Aug. 1905.) Brunner, F. J. Home Newspapers and Others. Harper’s Weekly, v. 58, p. 24. (Jan. 10, 1914.) Pennypacker, S. W. Sensational Journalism and the Remedy. North American Review, v. 190, p. 587. (Nov. 1909.) Curb for the Sensational Press. Century, v. 83, p. 631. (Feb. 1912.) 8. InaccuracySmith, Munroe. The Dogma of Journalistic Inerrancy. North American Review, v. 187, p. 240. (Feb. 1908.) Collins, James H. The Newspaper—An Independent Business. Saturday Evening Post, v. 185, p. 25. (April 12, 1913.) Kelley, Fred C. Accuracy Pays in Any Business: New York World’s Bureau of Accuracy and Fair Play. American Magazine, v. 82, p. 50. (Nov. 1916.) New Credulity. Nation, v. 80, p. 241. (March 30, 1905.) Fakes and the Press. Science, v. 25, p. 391. (March 8, 1907.) Newspaper Science. Science, v. 25, p. 630. (April 19, 1907.) Gladden, Washington. Experiences with Newspapers. Outlook, v. 99, p. 387. (Oct. 14, 1911.) Irwin, Will. The New Era. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 15. (July 8, 1911.) Print the News. Outlook, v. 96, p. 563. (Nov. 12, 1910.) Falsification of the News. Independent, v. 84, p. 420. (Dec. 13, 1915.) 9. FakingFaking as a Fine Art. American Magazine, v. 75, p. 24. (Nov. 1912.) Bok, Edward. Why People Disbelieve the Newspapers. World’s Work, v. 7, p. 4567. (March 1904.) Offenses Against Good Journalism. Outlook, v. 88, p. 479. (Feb. 29, 1908.) Lying for the Sake of War. Nation, v. 98, p. 561. (May 14, 1914.) Wheeler, H. D. At the Front with Willie Hearst. Harper’s Weekly, v. 61, p. 340. (Oct. 9, 1915.) Russell, Isaac. Hearst-made War News. Harper’s Weekly, v. 59, p. 76. (July 25, 1914.) Hearst-made War News. Harper’s Weekly, v. 59, p. 186. (Aug. 22, 1914.) Dream Book. Outlook, v. 111, p. 535. (Nov. 3, 1915.) Hall, Howard. Hearst: War-maker. Harper’s Weekly, v. 61, p. 436. (Nov. 6, 1915.) Pulitzer, Ralph. Profession of Journalism: Accuracy in the News. Pamphlet published by the New York World. 1912. 10. Coloring the NewsIrwin, Will. The Editor and the News. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 18. (April 1, 1911.) Irwin, Will. Our Kind of People. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (June 17, 1911.) Irwin, Will. The New Era. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 15. (July 8, 1911.) Irwin, Will. The Press Agent. Collier’s Weekly, v. 48, p. 24. (Dec. 2, 1911.) Confessions of a Managing Editor. Collier’s Weekly, v. 48, p. 18. (Oct. 28, 1911.) Tainted News as Seen in the Making. Bookman, v. 24, p. 396. (Dec. 1906.) Baker, Ray Stannard. How Railroads Make Public Opinion. McClure’s Magazine, v. 26, p. 535. (March 1906.) How the Reactionary Press Poisons the Public Mind. Arena, v. 38, p. 318. (Sept. 1907.) 11. Suppression of NewsIrwin, Will. The Power of the Press. Collier’s Weekly, v. 46, p. 15. (Jan. 21, 1911.) Irwin, Will. Advertising Influence. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 15. (May 27, 1911.) Irwin, Will. Our Kind of People. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (June 17, 1911.) Irwin, Will. The Foe Within. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (July 1, 1911.) The Patent Medicine Conspiracy against the Freedom of the Press. Collier’s Weekly, v. 36, p. 13. (Nov. 4, 1905.) Silencing the Press. Nation, v. 76, p. 4. (Jan. 1, 1903.) Stansell, C. V. Ethics of News Suppression. Nation, v. 96, p. 54. (Jan. 16, 1913.) A Real Case of Tainted News. Collier’s Weekly, v. 53, p. 16. (June 6, 1914.) Seitz, Don C. The Honor of the Press. Harper’s Weekly, v. 55, p. 11. (May 6, 1911.) Can the Wool Trust Gag the Press? Collier’s Weekly, v. 46, p. 11. (March 18, 1911.) Holt, Hamilton. Commercialism and Journalism. 1909. 12. Editorial Policy and InfluenceKemp, R. W. The Policy of the Paper. Bookman, v. 20, p. 310. (Dec. 1904.) Blake, Tiffany. The Editorial: Past, Present, and Future. Collier’s Weekly, v. 48, p. 18. (Sept. 23, 1911.) The Editorial Yesterday and To-day. World’s Work, v. 21, p. 14071. (March 1911.) Editorialene. Nation, v. 74, p. 459. (June 12, 1902.) Irwin, Will. The Unhealthy Alliance. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 17. (June 3, 1911.) Shackled Editor. Collier’s Weekly, v. 51, p. 22. (April 12, 1913.) Fisher, Brooke. The Newspaper Industry. Atlantic Monthly, v. 89, p. 745. (June 1902.) Porritt, Edward. The Value of Political Editorials. Atlantic, v. 105, p. 62. (Jan. 1910.) Haste, R. A. Evolution of the Fourth Estate. Arena, v. 41, p. 348. (March 1909.) Bonaparte, Charles J. Government of Public Opinion. Forum, v. 40, p. 384. (Oct. 1908.) Ogden, Rollo. Journalism and Public Opinion. American Political Science Review, Supplement, v. 7, p. 194. (Feb. 1913.) Williams, Talcott. The Press and Public Opinion. American Political Science Review, Supplement, v. 7, p. 201. (Feb. 1913.) 13. The Associated Press and the United PressBeach, H. L. Getting Out the News. Saturday Evening Post, v. 182, p. 18. (March 12, 1910.) Noyes, F. B. The Associated Press. North American Review, v. 197, p. 701. (May 1913.) Stone, Melville E. The Associated Press. Century, vv. 69 and 70. (April to Aug. 1905.) Irwin, Will. What’s Wrong with the Associated Press? Harper’s Weekly, v. 58, p. 10. (March 28, 1914.) Is There a News Monopoly? Collier’s Weekly, v. 53, p. 16. (June 6, 1914.) Stone, Melville E. The Associated Press: A Defense. Collier’s Weekly, v. 53, p. 28. (July 11, 1914.) Mason, Gregory. The Associated Press: A Criticism. Outlook, v. 107, p. 237. (May 30, 1914.) Kennan, George. The Associated Press: A Defense. Outlook, v. 107, p. 240. (May 30, 1914.) The Associated Press as a Trust. Literary Digest, v. 48, p. 364. (Feb. 21, 1914.) The Associated Press Under Fire. Outlook, v. 106, p. 426. (Feb. 28, 1914.) Criticisms of the Associated Press. Outlook, v. 107, p. 631. (July 18, 1914.) Irwin, Will. The United Press. Harper’s Weekly, v. 58, p. 6. (April 25, 1914.) Roy W. Howard, General Manager of the United Press. American Magazine, V. 75, p. 41. (Nov. 1912.) Howard, Roy W. Government Regulation for Press Association in Thorpe’s The Coming Newspaper, pp. 188–204. 1915. 14. Ethics of Newspaper AdvertisingThe Patent Medicine Conspiracy against the Freedom of the Press. Collier’s Weekly, v. 36, p. 13. (Nov. 4, 1905.) Adams, Samuel Hopkins. The Great American Fraud. A series of articles in Collier’s Weekly, vv. 36 and 37. (Oct. 7, 1905, to Sept. 22, 1906.) Published as a book, with the same title, in 1906. Creel, George. The Press and Patent Medicines. Harper’s Weekly, v. 60, p. 155. (Feb. 13, 1915.) Roberts, W. D. Pursued by Cardui. Harper’s Weekly, v. 60, p. 175. (Feb. 20, 1915.) Waldo, Richard H. The Second Candle of Journalism, in Thorpe’s The Coming Newspaper, pp. 248–261. 1915. Roosevelt, Theodore. Applied Ethics in Journalism. Outlook, v. 97, p. 807. (April 15, 1911.) The Lure of Fake Sales. Current Opinion, v. 56, p. 223. (March 1914.) Adams, Samuel Hopkins. Tricks of the Trade. Collier’s Weekly, v. 48, p. 17. (Feb. 17, 1912.) Millions Lost in Fake Enterprises. Outlook, v. 100, p. 797. (April 13, 1912.) Brummer, F. J. The Home Newspaper and Others. Harper’s Weekly, v. 58, p. 24. (Jan. 10, 1914.) Houston, H. S. New Morals in Advertising. World’s Work, v. 28, p. 384. (Aug. 1914.) Stelze, Charles. Publicity Men in a Campaign for Clean Advertising. Outlook, v. 107, p. 589. (July 11, 1914.) 15. Dramatic CriticismConfessions of a Dramatic Critic. Independent, v. 60, p. 492. (March 1, 1906.) Armstrong, Paul, and Davis, Hartley. Manager vs. Critic. Everybody’s Magazine, v. 21, p. 119. (July 1909.) Cudgeling the Dramatic Critics. Literary Digest, v. 48, p. 321. (Feb. 14, 1914.) Serious Declaration of War Against the Dramatic Critic. Current Opinion, v. 57, p. 328. (Nov. 1914.) Trials and Duties of a Dramatic Critic. Current Literature, v. 39, p. 428. (Oct. 1905.) The Newspaper and the Theatre. Outlook, v. 93, p. 12. (Sept. 4, 1909.) 16. Book-Reviewing in NewspapersPerry, Bliss. Literary Criticism in American Periodicals. Yale Review, v. 3, p. 635. (July 1914). Grocery-shop Criticism. Dial, v. 57, p. 5. (July 1, 1914.) Reviewing the Reviewer. Nation, v. 98, p. 288. (March 19, 1914.) Varieties of Book-Reviewing. Nation, v. 99, p. 8. (July 2, 1914.) Haines, Helen E. Present-Day Book-Reviewing. Independent, v. 69, p. 1104. (Nov. 17, 1910.) Benson, A. C. Ethics of Book-Reviewing. Putnam’s, v. 1, p. 116. (Oct. 1906.) Matthews, Brander. Literary Criticism and Book-Reviewing, in Gateways to Literature, pp. 115–136. 1912. Woodward, W. E. Syndicate Service and Tainted Book-Reviews. Dial, v. 56, p. 173. (March 1, 1914.) Book-Reviewing À la Mode. Nation, v. 93, p. 139. (Aug. 17, 1911.) 17. Newspaper StyleJournalistic Style. Independent, v. 64, p. 541. (March 5, 1908.) Newspaper English. Literary Digest, v. 47, p. 1229. (Dec. 20, 1913.) Scott, Fred Newton. The Undefended Gate. English Journal, v. 3, p. 1. (Jan. 1914.) Bradford, Gamaliel. Journalism and Permanence. North American Review, v. 202, pp. 239–241. (Aug. 1915.) Henry James on Newspaper English. Current Literature, v. 39, p. 155. (Aug. 1905.) Boynton, H. W. The Literary Aspect of Journalism. Atlantic Monthly, v. 93, p. 845. (June, 1904.) Perils of Punch. Nation, v. 100, p. 240. (March 4, 1915.) Mr. Hardy and Our Headlines. World’s Work, v. 24, p. 385. (Aug. 1912.) Lowes, J. L. Headline English. Nation, v. 96, p. 179. (Feb. 20, 1913.) 18. Newspapers and the LawSchofield, Henry. Freedom of the Press in the United States. Papers and Proceedings of the American Sociological Society, v. 9, p. 67. 1914. Grasty, C. H. Reasonable Restrictions upon the Freedom of the Press and Discussion. Papers and Proceedings of the American Sociological Society, v. 9, p. 117. 1914. White, Isaac D. The Clubber in Journalism, in Thorpe’s The Coming Newspaper, pp. 81–90. 1915. Bourne, Jonathan. The Newspaper Publicity Law. Review of Reviews, v. 47, p. 175. (Feb. 1913.) Newspapers Opposing Publicity. Literary Digest, v. 45, p. 607. (Oct. 12, 1912.) Smith, C. E. The Press: Its Liberty and License. Independent, v. 55, p. 1371. (June 11, 1903.) Gamer, J. W. Trial by Newspapers. Journal of Criminal Law, v. 1, p. 849. (Mar. 1911.) Keedy, E. R. Third Degree and Trial by Newspapers. Journal of Criminal Law, v. 3, p. 502. (Nov. 1912.) Gilbert, S. Newspapers as Judiciary. American Journal of Sociology, v. 12, p. 289. (Nov. 1906.) O’Hara, Barratt. State License for Newspaper Men, in Thorpe’s The Coming Newspaper, pp. 148–161. 1915. Lawrence, David. International Freedom of the Press Essential to a Durable Peace. Annals of the American Academy, v. 72, p. 139. (July 1917.) 19. The Country NewspaperWhite, William Allen. The Country Newspaper. Harper’s Magazine, v. 132, p. 887. (May 1916.) Tennal, Ralph. A Modern Type of Country Journalism, in Thorpe’s The Coming Newspaper, pp. 112–147. 1915. Bing, P. C. The Country Weekly. 1917. 20. Newspapers of the FutureIrwin, Will. The Voice of a Generation. Collier’s Weekly, v. 47, p. 15. (July 29, 1911.) Low, A. Maurice. The Modern Newspaper as It Might Be. Yale Review, v. 2, p. 282. (Jan. 1913.) Munsey, Frank A. Journalism of the Future. Munsey Magazine, v. 28, p. 662. (Feb. 1903.) Ideal Newspaper. Current Literature, v. 48, p. 335. (March 1910.) Murray, W. H. An Endowed Press. Arena, v. 2, p. 553. (Oct. 1890.) Payne, W. M. An Endowed Newspaper, in Little Leaders, p. 178–185. 1902. Endowed Journalism. Literary Digest, v. 45, p. 303. (Aug. 24, 1912.) Holt, Hamilton. Plan for an Endowed Journal. Independent, v. 73, p. 299. (Aug. 12, 1912.) Taking the Endowed Newspaper Seriously. Current Literature, v. 53, p. 311. (Sept. 1912.) Municipal Newspaper, The. Independent, v. 71, p. 1342. (Dec. 14, 1911.) Municipal Newspapers. Survey, v. 26, p. 720. (Aug. 19, 1911.) Slosson, E. E. The Possibility of a University Newspaper. Independent, v. 72, p. 351. (Feb. 15, 1912.) |