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1 Political Endorsements In Daily Newspapers and Photographic Coverage of Candidates in the 1995 Louisiana Gubernatorial Campaign A Research Paper Submitted to the Visual Communication Division 1997 AEJMC Convention Chicago, Illinois by John Mark King, Assistant Professor Office Address: 221 Journalism Building Manship School of Mass Communication Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, LA 70803 Home Address: 40144 Autumn's End Ave. Prairieville, LA 70769 Office: 504/388-2216 Home: 504/622-1626 FAX: 504/388-2125 E-mail: [log in to unmask] Background Voters in a political campaign depend on a variety of mass media organizations to inform them of issues, events, trends and analysis. Traditionally, voters have turned to newspapers to provide them with recommendations about voting choices. Newspapers, through their published endorsements and editorials, sometimes give readers insight and direction about who to vote for in a campaign. Editors do appear to consider the function of editorials to be serious. A 1975 survey of 186 daily newspaper editors found that 94 percent agreed that editorials "...should provide community leadership through stands on issues"1 and that 98 percent felt that editorials influence readers. Eighty percent of the national sample endorsed candidates at the state level.2 A chairman of a major journalism education program, after conducting a nationwide study of press coverage and editorials of one out of every four congressional districts in the United States, concluded that newspapers in 1981 were not doing a very good job of informing voters about choices nor issues, even though they may view editorials as having a serious function.3 Peter Clarke noted two major criticisms, the general low quality of editorials and the affection newspapers seem to display for incumbents. This affection for incumbents on the editorial page is echoed by news treatment in the rest of the paper to a degree that would make you blanch. We analyzed content of those news stories paragraph by paragraph. There were between 700 and 800 news stories that we gathered from some 73 major dailies. Challengers to incumbents are simply invisible.4 Sixty-nine percent of 194 newspaper editors in a 1972 survey identified themselves as independents, but the author of the research also determined that many of these editors have affinities for Republican-conservative or Democratic-liberal positions.5 While editors seem to be largely independent in their stated political affiliation, publishers and their newspapers generally tend to endorse Republicans in presidential elections and did so from 1964 until 1992, when a majority of daily newspapers in the nation supported Clinton in that year's election.6 In the 1996 election, Bob Dole, the Republican candidate, won the majority of endorsements.7 In 1996, 42 percent of publishers decided endorsements; 38 percent of endorsement decisions were made by editorial boards; and editors made 28 percent of endorsement decisions.8 Percentages of newspapers choosing not to endorse a candidate in presidential elections and the numbers of readers they serve was up in the 1996 Editor and Publisher poll; 69.9 percent chose not to endorse in 1996 compared to 67 percent in 1992.9 This represents a daily circulation of 26.2 million, up from from 22.2 million in 1992 who received no direct guidance about whom to vote for in the campaign.10 Bill Kovach, curator of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism and the former Atlanta Journal and Constitution editor, stated that these findings do much to dispel the myth of a liberal press. "Kovach summed up the myth as 'the difference between the people who own the newspapers and the people who work for them."11 If Clarke and Kovach are right, it would be expected that political endorsements may have some impact on how journalists cover, edit and display news about candidates during a campaign. Most research on newspaper endorsements, as outlined in the literature review below, have not focused on how newspaper endorsements may affect news coverage of political campaigns. Rather, most studies have centered on the impact of endorsements on voting. One way to begin to address the relationship between political endorsements and news coverage is to examine how newspaper endorsements may affect how photos are edited and displayed in newspapers in the coverage of a campaign. A body of visual communication research, also outlined in the literature review, has established that use of color, placement and the size of photos may have a fairly strong impact on reader response to stories and photos. Given this body of knowledge about the impact of color, placement and size of photos on reader responses, it is important to know if newspaper endorsements have any impact on how campaign photos are used and displayed in newspapers. The central question of this research then, is whether decisions about newspaper endorsements in campaigns, often determined by the publisher and top editors, has a corresponding relationship with the day-today use of visual images of the campaign and how they are displayed in the newspaper. Managing editors, graphics managers, page and section editors, photo editors and photographers have some choice about the images they use on campaign stories. Are these choices influenced by the political endorsements the newspaper makes? One measure which might provide some evidence of this possible unbalanced visual reporting effect is a comparison between newspaper political endorsements and use of campaign photos in terms of photo size, placement, color and selection of favorable or unfavorable photos of candidates for publication. That is the focus of this study. Literature Review Several scholarly articles have examined how newspaper endorsements affect voting patterns. Gregg12 found that even though many newspapers in California claimed to be independent, 79 percent endorsed candidates of only one party, the Republican party, 76 percent or more of the time and that local endorsements were more influential on voters than state or national endorsements. McCombs13 found that 17.5 percent of voters in a California gubernatorial race decided to vote for candidates endorsed by newspapers after exposure to the newspaper endorsements. Hooper14 determined that much of the variance on voting within parties in an Illinois legislative election was due to newspaper endorsement. Mason,15 researching the same election, reported that endorsements by major newspapers in all districts on average increased votes for the endorsed candidate one standard deviation above the mean. Fulero16 surveyed 104 voters who had written letters to the editor and found that most voters assigned more persuasive value to editorial endorsements on other voters than to themselves, suggesting a social desirability effect. Erikson,17 researching the 1964 presidential election in 223 nothern counties found that a Democratic endorsement from local newspapers resulted in a gain of five percentage points on average for Kennedy. In research on the 1980 presidential election, Hurd and Singletary18 found that about five percent of 501 voters who followed the campaign in a newspaper were influenced to vote for a candidate by newspaper endorsements, but that among voters who did not read newspapers, less than one percent were influenced by endorsements. In either case, Hurd and Singletary concluded that endorsements were not likely to influence the outcome of an election. In a study that examined the effects of multiple variables on voting, Counts19 determined that in the 1948 presidential election, the Republican candidate's vote percentages were positively related to resident home ownership, Republican Party registration and newspaper endorsements. Newspaper endorsements were found to have had no effect for the Democratic Party candidate. St.Dizier20 determined, in an experimental study, that newspaper endorsements have more impact than political party affiliation when information about a candidate is minimal. Two studies examined the effects of chain ownership and endorsements on voting. In a study of endorsements from 51 California newspapers over a 10 year period, Rystrom21 concluded that group-owned newspapers were slightly more liberal than independent newspapers, but that endorsements from both types of newspapers had little impact on voting. Gaziano22 found that between 1972 and 1980, chain-owned newspapers were homogenous in their presidential endorsements. Visual communication research has established several trends in reader response attributable to various approaches to visual display in newspapers. Color seems to be a powerful tool for attracting reader attention. Click and Stemple23 found, in an experiment, that newspaper pages with color photos on the front page were rated statistically significantly higher on 15 of 20 evaluative semantic differential scales. The pages with color were deemed more pleasant, valuable, interesting, fair, truthful, unbiased, responsible, exciting, fresh, easy, neat, colorful, bold, powerful and modern than pages with black and white photos. Bohle and Garcia24 tested reader reaction to color photographs in newspaper design and found that readers' initial eye movement was almost always toward the photo at the top of the page, whether the photo was in color or black and white. After seeing the photo, readers were attracted to spot color the most, even if it was at the bottom of the page. Gilbert and Schleuder25 concluded in an experimental study that subjects remembered color images more than black and white images and that complex photos did not require more mental effort to process. These studies suggest that candidates pictured in animated color photos may enjoy more attraction and recall than candidates pictured in black and white. In his classic Eye Trac experimental research on color, Garcia26 found that dominant photos attract readers to pages more than black and white photos. Forty-nine percent of readers entered the front page through a dominant color photo; 35 percent entered through a black and white lead photo. Garcia also found that initial attention to a photo on a newspaper page is also influenced by the size of the photo, especially black and white photos. The larger the photo, the more likely it is to be processed by readers. Finally, Garcia found that 75 percent of photos are processed by readers, but only 25 percent of text is processed. This suggests that photos may have strong influences on attraction and readership. McCombs, Mauro and Son27 found in a survey of 350 newspaper readers that some of the best predictors of readership of news stories were location on the front page of a section, local-staff sources, topic and pictures. "News stories with a picture have higher readership than those without a picture."28 Wolf and Grotto29 found that animated photos aided attention to stories, but had no effect on recall. Even mug shots, according to a study by Lain,30 have the ability to help readers form opinions of subjects in the news. Wanta31 concluded in a carefully-controlled experiment that dominant photos on newspaper pages may have an agenda-setting effect, increasing issue salience as size increases. A few studies have examined election photos directly. Moriarty and Garramone32 studied bias in newsmagazine photos during the 1984 presidential election and concluded that more photos were published of Reagan, 124, than Mondale, 87. Reagan also enjoyed more favorable coverage in photos than Mondale. Photos of Bush represented him more favorably than photos of Ferraro, but in terms of frequency, Ferraro had twice as many published photos as Bush. Overall, Time, Newsweek and U.S. News and World Report did publish photos of the candidates that differed in terms of frequency and favorable depiction. A similar study of the 1988 presidential election by Moriarty and Popovich33 found that the newsmagazines tended to balance the visual coverage more than in the 1984 election. As in the first study, coding of more favorable or less favorable campaign photos was based on an analysis of activity, posture, arms, hands, eyes, expression, interaction, camera angle and portrayal. Plaster34 used Moriarty's methodology to examine photos from the 1992 presidential election in eight elite newspapers. Analysis of 486 campaign photos showed no statistical difference between Clinton, Bush and Perot in terms of frequency, size of photo, dominance of photo, position on the page or the timing in the campaign. However, camera angle, facial expression, arm behavior, hand behavior, setting and interacting with others all favored Clinton. Williams35 conducted an experiment based on an actual campaign for mayor of the City of Alton, Ill. Two weeks before the election, the local newspaper ran a story with mug shots of the five candidates. All were pictured in suits and ties, except for one of the front runners, whose published photo showed with him dressed in a casual shirt and windbreaker in an informal, outdoor setting. This candidate ended up losing the election by one-half of one percent. In the experiment conducted with persons unfamiliar with the campaign, two groups of respondents were asked to "vote" for the candidate based solely on the photographs. One group saw all five candidates dressed in suits and ties; the other group saw the published photos. The candidate who lost the election by 50 votes was raised from last place to second place by being pictured in a suit and tie in the experiment. Interestingly, it was clear that most respondents, who also wrote comments about the men based solely on their photos, assumed that the candidates all submitted the photos themselves. This in itself could cause readers, who may assume that all mug shots are submitted to the paper by the candidates, to assign some value judgment to the candidates. In other words, readers might think that if the guy was dumb enough to give the paper such a bad photo of himself, why would he be a good mayor? Hypotheses As the above discussion demonstrates, the relationship between political endorsements and campaign news coverage is largely unknown. Ten hypotheses were developed to examine the relationship between campaign endorsements in newspapers and photographic coverage of candidates. Dependent variables were size of the campaign photo in square picas, whether the photo was in color or black and white, whether the photo was above or below the fold, whether the photo was on the front page/section front or on an inside page and whether the photo depicted the candidate favorably or unfavorably. Independent variables were whether the candidate in the photo was endorsed by the paper in the primary election and whether the candidate in the photo was endorsed by the paper in the general election, termed a runoff election in Louisiana. Each hypothesis predicts that the endorsed candidate will receive better photographic coverage than candidates who were not endorsed in both the primary election and the general election. H1: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be larger than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H2: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be in color than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H3: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be on the front page or on a section front than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H4: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be above the fold than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H5: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to depict the endorsed candidate favorably than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H6: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be larger than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H7: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be in color than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H8: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be on the front page or on a section front than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H9: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be above the fold than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H10: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to depict the endorsed candidate favorably than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. Method A content analysis of 1,075 Louisiana gubernatorial campaign photos from 24 daily newspapers in Louisiana published between Sept. 1, 1995 through Nov. 18, 1995, election day, was performed. The unit of analysis was the published photo containing one or more of the 18 gubernatorial candidates. In cases where more than one candidate was pictured in the same photo, each candidate was treated as a separate photo. Items coded included the newspaper name, publication date, name of the candidate endorsed by each paper, name of the candidate in the photo, favorable/unfavorable depiction, front/inside, above fold/below fold, black and white/color and size of photo in square picas. Two coders, a graduate student and an upper division undergraduate student majoring in mass communication at a major AEJMC accredited institution, performed the coding. Intercoder reliability, based on percentage of agreement, was measured on a test of 31 campaign photos, selected from a random week of publication. Each variable had an intercoder reliability of 1.00 except for size, which had a .97 intercoder reliability and favorable/unfavorable treatment, which had a .94 intercoder reliability. The significance level for all of the hypotheses in the study was set at .05. Dependent variables were size (in square picas), color/black and white, fold location (above/ below), placement (front page/section front or inside page) and depiction of the candidate (favorable/unfavorable). Depiction of the candidate as favorable or unfavorable in photos was determined by using coding evaluation guidelines developed by Moriarty and Garramore36 and refined by Moriarty and Popovich37. These guidelines measure activity, posture, arms, hands, eyes, expression, interaction, camera angle and portrayal of candidates in photos to arrive at a measure that is more favorable or less favorable. For example, a photo in which the candidate is gesturing or doing something is considered more favorable than a photo in which a candidate has hands at the side or at rest. Independent variables were endorsed in primary (whether the candidate in the photo was endorsed by the newpaper in the primary election and endorsed in runoff (whether the candidate in the photo was endorsed by the newspaper in the general election, termed a runoff election in Louisiana). These variables were constructed by matching coding of the candidate's name in the photo and coding of which candidate was endorsed by each paper. The result for each case was whether the candidate pictured in the photo had been endorsed by the paper in which the photo was published or not. Results H1: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be larger than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H1 was not supported. As Table 1 shows, there was no statistically significant difference between the size of photos for candidates endorsed by the newspapers that published their photographs versus candidates who were not endorsed by the newspapers that published their photos. Candidates who were not endorsed were likely to have photos of themselves published about the same size as those who were endorsed. Table 1: T-test of mean size of photos during the primary election in square picas n Mean Std. Dev. Std. Error Did not endorse 640 314.07 438.94 17.35 Did endorse 96 302.58 382.09 39 Note. N = 736, mean diff. = 11.49, t= .24, p = .41 H2: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be in color than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. Table 2 shows no support for H2. The difference between the percentages of photos in color and percentages of photos in black and white did not differ between photos of candidates who were endorsed and candidates who were not endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos. In other words, a candidate was no more likely to have his or her photo published in color if the paper publishing the photo endorsed the candidate pictured than if the paper publishing the photo did not endorse the candidate pictured. A large majority of campaign photos during the primary election, more than 80 percent, appeared in black and white. Table 2: Chi-square test of endorsement in primary photos by color/black and white Color Black and White Did not endorse candidate in photo 105 (16.4%) 536 (83.6%) Did endorse candidate in photo 11 (11.5%) 85 (88.5%) Note: N= 737, Chi-Square= 1.53, df= 1, p= .11 H3: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be on the front page or on a section front than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H3 is not supported. As Table 3 indicates, candidates appearing in photos who were not endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos were just as likely to end up on the front page/section front or on inside pages as candidates who were endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos. Overall, most campaign photos during the primary election appeared on inside pages. Table 3: Chi-square test of endorsement in primary photos by placement Front/Section Front Inside Pages Did not endorse candidate in photo 262 (40.9%) 379 (59.1%) Did endorse candidate in photo 36 (37.5%) 60 (62.5%) Note: N= 737, Chi-Square= .40, df= 1, p= .27 H4: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to be above the fold than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H4 is not supported. As Table 4 shows, whether endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos or not, both groups of candidates were just as likely to have their photos appear above the fold or below the fold. Interestingly, 74 percent of the campaign photos appeared above the fold, suggesting that editors deem them somewhat important. Or this could simply be a convention of contemporary newspaper design which calls for placing the dominant image above the fold. Table 4: Chi-square test of endorsement in primary photos by fold location Above Fold Below Fold Did not endorse candidate in photo 476 (74.3%) 165 (27.5%) Did endorse candidate in photo 71 (74%) 25 (26%) Note: N= 737, Chi-Square= .004, df= 1, p= .48 H5: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the primary election will be more likely to depict the endorsed candidate favorably than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the primary election. H5 is not supported. Table 5 indicates that there is no significant difference between the likelihood of being depicted favorably or unfavorably based on whether the candidate in the published photographs were endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos. Candidates who were not endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos were just as likely to get favorable photos as candidates who were endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos. Overall, more than 80 percent of the campaign photos depicted candidates in a favorable way. Table 5: Chi-square test of endorsement in primary photos by depiction of candidates Favorable Unfavorable Did not endorse candidate in photo 516 (80.5%) 125 (19.5%) Did endorse candidate in photo 82 (85.4%) 14 (14.6%) Note: N= 737, Chi-Square= 1.32, df= 1, p= .13 H6: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be larger than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H6 is not supported by the results in Table 6. The difference in the size of photos for the two groups is statistically significant, but the difference is not in the predicted direction. Candidates who appeared in photos in newspapers which did not endorse those candidates had photos 167 square picas larger than candidates who appeared in photos in newspapers which did endorse them. Table 6: T-test of mean size of photos during the runoff election in square picas n Mean Std. Dev. Std. Error Did not endorse 271 631.38 744.11 45.2 Did endorse 67 464.36 481.71 58.85 Note. N = 338, mean diff. = 167.02, t= 1.75, p = .04 H7: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be in color than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H7 is clearly not supported. Table 7 shows that there is absolutely no difference between the percentages of photos run in black and white or color for either group of candidates. Overall, however it is interesting to note that about twice as many of the photos in the runoff election were in color compared to the primary election. Table 7: Chi-square test of endorsement in runoff photos by color/black and white Color Black and White Did not endorse candidate in photo 93 (34.3%) 178 (65.7%) Did endorse candidate in photo 23 (34.3%) 44 (65.7%) Note: N= 338, Chi-Square= .00, df= 1, p= .50 H8: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be on the front page or on a section front than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H8 was supported, as is evident in Table 8. As predicted, photos of candidates in newspapers in which the newspapers endorsed those candidates were more likely to be on the front page or a section front than photos of candidates not endorsed by the newspapers which published them in the runoff election. Table 8: Chi-square test of endorsement in runoff photos by placement Front/Section Front Inside Pages Did not endorse candidate in photo 144 (53.1%) 127 (46.9%) Did endorse candidate in photo 44 (65.7%) 23 (34.3%) Note: N= 338, Chi-Square= 3.42, df= 1, p= <.05 H9: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to be above the fold than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H9 is not supported. Table 9 shows no significant difference between the two groups of candidates. Candidates who were pictured in newspapers which did not endorse their candidacies were just as likely to have their photographs placed above the fold as candidates who were endorsed by the newspapers publishing the photos. Table 9: Chi-square test of endorsement in runoff photos by fold location Above Fold Below Fold Did not endorse candidate in photo 194 (71.6%) 77 (28.4%) Did endorse candidate in photo 53 (79.1%) 14 (20.9%) Note: N= 338, Chi-Square= 1.54, df= 1, p= .10 H10: Photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which endorsed that candidate during the runoff election will be more likely to depict the endorsed candidate favorably than photos of candidates appearing in newspapers which did not endorse the pictured candidate during the runoff election. H10 is supported. Table 10 indicates that photos running in newspapers which endorsed the candidate pictured were more likely to show the candidate in a favorable depiction than photos running in newspapers which did not endorse the candidate pictured. Table 10: Chi-square test of endorsement in runoff photos by depiction of candidates Favorable Unfavorable Did not endorse candidate in photo 220 (81.2%) 51 (18.8%) Did endorse candidate in photo 62 (92.5%) 5 (7.5%) Note: N= 338, Chi-Square= 5.01, df= 1, p= <.05 Discussion This study found that newspaper endorsement of candidates pictured resulted in more placement of photos on the front page or on section fronts and more favorable depiction than non-endorsement of candidates pictured in the runoff election. In other words, the candidate endorsed by the newspapers publishing his pictures was more likely to be seen on the front page or on section fronts and more likely to receive favorable depiction in published photos than the candidate who was not endorsed by the newspapers publishing his pictures in the runoff election. Newspaper endorsement of pictured candidates appeared to have no effect on any of the five dependent variables in the primary election nor three of the dependent variables in the runoff election. In the primary election, none of the dependent variables; including size, color/black and white, placement, fold location nor depiction; were affected by the independent variables. In the general election size, color/black and white and fold location were not impacted by the independent variables. Overall, it appears that decision makers at Louisiana daily newspapers made a good effort to provide balanced visual coverage of the campaign, at least in terms of providing endorsed candidates and non-endorsed candidates similar visual coverage. Evidence of unbalanced visual communication during the primary election was not found in this study. Small unbalanced visual communication effects were evident in the runoff election. A crowded field of 18 candidates was narrowed to two for the runoff election. The winner of the election was a conservative republican businessman (Mike Foster). His opponent was a liberal African American democrat who held office as a U.S. Representative (Cleo Fields). Ten daily newspapers endorsed Foster. No daily newspapers endorsed Fields. Fifteen of the 28 newspapers (more than half) did not endorse any candidate in the runoff election. Perhaps as the election intensified, editors may have made decisions to place more photos of the endorsed candidate, Foster, on the front page and to use more photos depicting him more favorably. It is difficult to say that newspaper endorsement played a big role in these decisions. Yet, there is some evidence that newspaper endorsement may have impacted how photos were edited and displayed. But, for the most part, editors in Louisiana daily newspapers did not appear to be strongly influenced by political newspaper endorsements in their visual coverage of the campaign. This study included a narrow range of independent variables purposefully. Further research may reveal new insights into the research questions posed here. Other variables which may have an impact on decisions made about visual communication during a political campaign should be explored. Other research could also examine how non-daily newspapers might differ from daily newspapers regarding political endorsements in newspapers and visual communication. Since some predicted evidence was found, a similar analysis of a presidential campaign might prove useful to scholars, political campaign managers and journalists. Endnotes 1. Earnest C. Hynds, "Editorials, Opinion Pages Still Have Vital Roles at Most Newspapers," Journalism Quarterly 61 (1984): 634-639. 2. Earnest C. Hynds, "Editorials, Opinion Pages Still Have Vital Roles at Most Newspapers, 636. 3. Peter Clarke, "Endorsement Editorials: 'Sense of Dismay at the Quality,' 'Crafted by an Extremely Adolescent Mind,' 'Very, Very Thin Gruel," The Masthead, spring 1981, 36-37. 4. Peter Clarke, "Endorsement Editorials: 'Sense of Dismay at the Quality,' 'Crafted by an Extremely Adolescent Mind,' 'Very, Very Thin Gruel," 36-37. 5. Malcolm B. Parsons, "A Political Profile of Newspaper Editors," Journalism Quarterly 54 (1976): 700-705. 6. George Garneau, "Clinton's the Choice," Editor and Publisher, 24 Oct. 1992, 9-11, 44-45. 7. Dorothy Giobbe, "Dole Wins...In Endorsements," Editor and Publisher, 26 Oct. 1996, 7-11. 8. Dorothy Giobbe, "Dole Wins...In Endorsements," 9. 9. Stacy Jones, "Declining Endorsements," Editor and Publisher, 26 Oct. 1996, 12-14. 10. Stacy Jones, "Declining Endorsements," 12. 11. Stacy Jones, "Declining Endorsements," 14. 12. James E. Greg, "Newspaper Editorial Endorsements and California Elections, 1948-1962," Journalism Quarterly 42 (1965): 532-538. 13. Maxwell McCombs, "Editorial Endorsements: A Study of Influence," Journalism Quarterly 44 (1967): 545-547. 14. Michael Hooper, "Party and Newspaper Endorsement as Predictors of Voter Choice," Journalism Quarterly 46 (1969): 302-305. 15. William M. Mason, "The Impact of Endorsements on Voting," Sociological Methods and Research 1 (1973): 463-495. 16. Solomon Fulero, "Perceived Influence of Endorsements on Voting," Journalism Quarterly 54 (1977): 789-791. 17. Robert S. Erikson, "The Influence of Newspaper Endorsements in Presidential Elections: The Case of 1964," American Journal of Political Science 20 (1976): 207-233. 18. Robert E. Hurd and Michael W. Singletary, "Newspaper Endorsement Influence on the 1980 Presidential Election Vote," Journalism Quarterly 61 (1984): 332-338. 19. Tim Counts, "Effect of Endorsements on Presidential Vote," Journalism Quarterly 62 (1985): 644-647. 20. Byron St.Dizier, "The Effect of Newspaper Endorsements and Party Identification on Voting Choice," Journalism Quarterly 62 (1985): 589-594. 21. Kenneth Rystrom, "Apparent Impact of Endorsements by Group and Independent Newspapers," Journalism Quarterly 64 (1987): 449-453, 532. 22. Cecilie Gaziano, "Chain Newspaper Homogeneity and Presidential Endorsements, 1972-1988," Journalism Quarterly 66 (1989): 836-845. 23. J.W. Click and Guido H. Stemple III, "Reader Response to Front Pages with Four-color Halftones," Journalism Quarterly 53 (1976): 736-738. 24. Robert H. Bohle and Mario R. Garcia, "Reader Response to Color Halftones and Spot Color in Newspaper Design," Journalism Quarterly 64 (1987): 731-739. 25. Kathy Gilbert and Joan Schleuder, "Effects of Color and Complexity in Still Photographs on Mental Effort and Memory," Journalism Quarterly 67 (1990): 749-756. 26. Mario R. Garcia and Pegie Stark, Eyes on the News (St. Petersburg, FL: The Poynter Institute for Media Studies). 27. Maxwell E. McCombs, John B. Mauro and Jinok Son, "Predicting Newspaper Readership from Content Characteristics: A Replication," Newspaper Research Journal 10 (1988): 25-31. 28. Maxwell E. McCombs, John B. Mauro and Jinok Son, "Predicting Newspaper Readership from Content Characteristics: A Replication," 28. 29. Rita Wolf and Gerald L. Grotta, "Images: A Question of Readership," Newspaper Research Journal 6 (1985): 30-36. 30. Laurence B. Lain and Philip J. Harwood, "Mug Shots and Reader Attitudes Toward People in the News," Journalism Quarterly 69 (1992): 293-300; Laurence B. Lain, "How Readers View Mug Shots," Newspaper Research Journal 8 (1987): 43-52. 31. Wayne Wanta, "The Effects of Dominant Photographs: An Agenda-Setting Experiment," Journalism Quarterly 65 (1988): 107-111. 32. Sandra E. Moriarty and Gina M. Garramone, "A Study of Newsmagazine Photographs of the 1984 Presidential Campaign," Journalism Quarterly 63 (1986): 728-735. 33. Sandra E. Moriarty and Mark N. Popovich, "Newsmagazine Visuals and the 1988 Presidential Election," Journalism Quarterly 68 (1991): 371-380. 34. Sarah W. Plaster, "An Analysis of Front Page Newspaper Photographic Coverage of the 1992 Presidential Election Campaign" (paper presented at the annual meeting of the AEJMC, Atlanta, GA, 1994). 35. John W. Williams, "Newspaper Mug Shots, Readers' Attitudes and an Illinois Case Study" (paper presented at the annual meeting of the AEJMC, Atlanta, GA, 1994). 36. Sandra E. Moriarty and Gina M. Garramone, "A Study of Newsmagazine Photographs of the 1984 Presidential Campaign," 730-731. 37. Sandra E. Moriarty and Mark N. Popovich, "Newsmagazine Visuals and the 1988 Presidential Election," 375.
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