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Whitaker, W. Richard – 1979
In 1921, during the course of a news conference, President Warren G. Harding misinterpreted the provisions of one of the treaties then under consideration by delegates to the Washington Disarmament Conference. His error was corrected in a few hours, but this incident was blown out of proportion by those who were convinced that Harding was an inept…
Descriptors: Credibility, Historiography, Journalism, News Media
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kalter, Susan – American Indian Quarterly, 2001
Euro-American historians have not allowed Native American scholars to participate as intellectual equals in academic debates concerning Native history. A comparison of received histories of Sequoyah and the emergence of the Cherokee syllabary and Traveller Bird's 1971 "Tell Them They Lie" reveals that Traveller Bird's argument is at…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Cherokee (Tribe), Credibility, Historical Interpretation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kirkwood, William G. – Southern Communication Journal, 1989
Shows why truthfulness, because of its link to spirituality, was the foremost standard for speech in ancient India, and how its practice was defined, emphasizing the consequences of truthfulness and deceit for speakers themselves. Considers possible contributions to current rhetorical and ethical studies. (SR)
Descriptors: Ancient History, Communication Research, Credibility, Deception
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. – 1992
The Advertising section of the proceedings contains the following 16 papers: "Ethics of Advertising Practitioners: An Explanation Based on a Classical Theoretical Framework" (Cornelius B. Pratt and E. Lincoln James); "Sex Roles in Frightening Film Newspaper Advertisements: An Overview of the Past 50 Years" (Melissa M. Spirek);…
Descriptors: Advertising, Broadcast Industry, Comparative Analysis, Condoms