Degree Discipline

Degree Level

States

Sports reporting and gender: Women journalists who broke the locker room barrier (open access)

Sports reporting and gender: Women journalists who broke the locker room barrier

This article examines female sportswriters' influences on sports journalism.
Date: 2010
Creator: Everbach, Tracy & Matysiak, Laura
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amarillo Globe-News: How Did Gene Howe and the Globe-News Help Guide Amarillo, Texas through the Dust Bowl and Great Depression? (open access)

Amarillo Globe-News: How Did Gene Howe and the Globe-News Help Guide Amarillo, Texas through the Dust Bowl and Great Depression?

For many years newspapers were locally owned by editors and publishers. However, today many are run by corporations from out of state. As a result, many communities have lost the personal relationship between the family owned publication and the community. Gene Howe, who served as editor, publisher and columnist of the Amarillo Globe-News from 1926 until his death in 1952, believed the community was where the focus should be and the newspaper should do all that it can to help their readers. Despite the fact that Howe was not born in Amarillo, Texas, his passion and love for the city and its inhabitants compensated for it. During the Dust Bowl and Great Depression Howe and the Globe-News helped Amarillo survive the dust and economic storms that blew through the Texas Panhandle, an area that has not been written as much as other parts of Texas. Through his “Tactless Texan” column, which served as a pulpit to the community, to the various contests and promotions the newspaper sprang up, including the creation of Mother in Law Day, Gene Howe gave the newspaper another dimension little has been studied about, the role of the editor and publisher in guiding a community through …
Date: May 2015
Creator: Hasman, Gregory R. C.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health Literacy and Health Information Technology Adoption: The Potential for a New Digital Divide (open access)

Health Literacy and Health Information Technology Adoption: The Potential for a New Digital Divide

This article discusses whether health literacy is associated with pateints' use of four types of health information technology (HIT) tools: fitness and nutrition apps, activity trackers, and patient portals.
Date: October 4, 2016
Creator: Mackert, Michael; Mabry-Flynn, Amanda; Champlin, Sara; Donovan, Erin E. & Pounders, Kathrynn
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library