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Welcome to the Fall, 2003 Issue
We hope everyone has a wonderful time at APSA’s centenary
conference in the United States’ second capital city,
Philadelphia. May you find the weather more congenial than
the authors of the Constitution did. Before you go, you can
check out the slate
of candidates for leadership positions in APSA’s
political communication division for 2004 - 2005, courtesy
of the nominating committee and chair Mark Wattier.
Our roundtable for this
issue reunites some of the political communication scholars
who evaluated news media performance during the 1991 Persian
Gulf War in Taken by Storm. William A. Dorman, W.
Lance Bennett, and Robert M. Entman offer a first take on
how the news covered the latest war in Iraq, before, during
and after “major combat operations.”
We continue to mine the riches of the Library of Congress’s
On-Line Prints and Photographs collection for our featured
resource this issue. Joshua Compton provides a guide to
three collections of political cartoons available on-line.
Our list of recent and forthcoming books
includes a link to initial findings from the Indiana University
School of Journalism’s recent survey of American journalists
as well as new books on new media, political psychology, and
the rhetoric of both campaigns and single issues.
Fall is always a busy time for paper calls: both of our sponsoring
organizations’ calls
for papers have deadlines in November, and a number of
regional and national meetings of organizations that address
political communication issues also have fall deadlines.
In addition to the APSA conference over Labor Day weekend,
a number of other meetings
are scheduled for the fall, including regional political science
meetings and the National Communication Association’s
annual conference.
Fullbright scholarship deadlines continue to top our list
of funding opportunities.
Best wishes for the fall term.
Jill Edy
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