Fighting for the First Amendment: Stanton of CBS Vs. Congress and the Nixon White HouseHere is an inside look at how a Congressional Committee, supported by the Nixon White House, sought to establish control over broadcast news by investigating editorial news judgment. Frank Stanton, legendary President of CBS, refused to produce outtakes from the award-winning documentary, The Selling of the Pentagon, subpoenaed by the Committee in an attempt to condemn the program and CBS. The Committee voted to hold Stanton and CBS in contempt, and the House of Representatives held a full debate on its power to investigate and control broadcast news. Had Stanton not taken up the fight he describes to gain First Amendment protection, broadcast news would have been shaped by Congressional hearings and intimidation. Will new electronic media publishers resist such government efforts on the Information Superhighway? Fighting for the First Amendment can serve as a model for that struggle. |
Contents
Staggers First Hearing on the Subpoena | 23 |
The Broadcast Executive | 32 |
Stanton in Washington | 53 |
Copyright | |
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Fighting for the First Amendment: Stanton of CBS Vs. Congress and the Nixon ... Corydon B. Dunham No preview available - 1997 |