Larry M. Bartels describes “framing effects” as situations in which
a. the public has a basic misunderstanding of a major policy issue.
b. public opinion is affected by strong presidential leadership on a particular issue.
c. different ways of posing a policy issue produce distinctly different public responses.
d. public opinion is inconsistent with elite opinion.
c. different ways of posing a policy issue produce distinctly different public responses.
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If you sue your neighbor over damage to your property, how are you referred to in the legal documents?
a. defendant b. plaintiff c. adversary d. initiator
The Pentagon Papers case would generally be seen as __________
A) a victory for those concerned with sedition against the government B) a victory for those concerned about the threat of communism C) a victory for those concerned with abuses by President Nixon's opponents D) a victory for those concerned with rights of the press