Abstract
The crisis in newspaper labor relations was still the most important development in the winter of 1947-48 as newspapers in Chicago, Springfield, Mass., and various other cities undertook to circumvent the rash of typographical union strikes which sought to test the Taft-Hartley act. In the radio field, the prospect of a general revision of the Federal Communications Act excited charges of censorship clauses and other threats to freedom of speech on the air. Radio expansion for 1948, however, was anticipated to be of record proportions.—W. F. S.
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