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The Fairness Factor, Everette E. Dennis, Ted Pease
The Fairness Factor, Everette E. Dennis, Ted Pease
Journalism and Communication Faculty Publications
As THE FIRST POST-COLD WAR ADMINISTRATION takes office in Washington, there is general agreement that the media will play a significant role in its success or failure. Whether Americans wish President Clinton well or ill, they will all agree on at least one thing: that the media ought to be fair in reporting his efforts.
Utah Families- The Issues They Face, Ted W. Warstadt, Larry Forthun
Utah Families- The Issues They Face, Ted W. Warstadt, Larry Forthun
All Archived Publications
With the wide variety of difficulties that our society faces and the limited funding available to address these concerns, it is important to identify and prioritize critical family issues. Because the family is a major contributor to individual and societal development, it is important to focus attention on issues which have a direct impact on family functioning. In identifying issues it is also helpful to understand demographic and geographic influences which may contribute to an individual's perceived urgency of a given issue. This can assist policy makers in their efforts to appropriately allocate limited funds to the best suited and …
Publishing Books, Ted Pease
Publishing Books, Ted Pease
Journalism and Communication Faculty Publications
WISE COMMENTATORS have long evaluated books and bookmaking. "Man builds no structure which outlives a book," wrote Eugene Fitch Ware in The Book, and Justin M'Carthy's A Ballade of Book-Making declared, "The critics challenge and defend ... of making books there is no end." Others have written loving odes to the book. Garrison Keillor, for instance: The book is a "great and ancient invention," he marveled, "slow to hatch, as durable as a turtle, light and shapely as befits a descendant of the tree .... A handsome, useful object begotten by the passion for truth ... [books] contain our common …
News 2000: Not My Kid! Journalists Leery Of Newspapers’ Future, Ted Pease
News 2000: Not My Kid! Journalists Leery Of Newspapers’ Future, Ted Pease
Journalism and Communication Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Common Beliefs About The Rural Elderly: Myth Or Fact?, U.S. Senate Special Committee On Aging
Common Beliefs About The Rural Elderly: Myth Or Fact?, U.S. Senate Special Committee On Aging
All U.S. Government Documents (Utah Regional Depository)
focuses on the most disadvantaged elderly: the rural elderly. Identifies common beliefs about rural persons aged 65 and over, and provides accompanying statistical information to refute or confirm these beliefs. This synthesis of data translates detailed statistics into useable knowledge.
A Home Arranged For Learning, Don Carter Ed. D.
A Home Arranged For Learning, Don Carter Ed. D.
All Archived Publications
People used to believe that how a child turned out was predetermined. All children do seem to follow the same stages of development and in the same sequence. But, those whose life circumstances have been more favorable, and who have had a more enriched learning environment, progress more rapidly than those whose opportunities for learning have been limited. As evidence accumulates regarding the importance of the early years, there is increasing need to focus attention on the child’s experiences and environment.