Abstract
How do people respond when they are cut off from one of their regular sources of news? Some of the answers are given in this article, which reports reactions of New Yorkers to the Newspaper strike of December 1958. It is part of a larger study of the strike undertaken by the faculty and the students of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, where the author is Professor of Journalism. The author has been a writer, editor, and research consultant. He was formerly assistant to the Sunday Editor of the New York Times, senior editor of Collier's member of the TV-Radio Workshop of the Ford Foundation, and a partner of Louis Harris and Associates, opinion research analysts.

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