Word: censorably
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...basic problem we have to be concerned about is right to publish. Harvard doesn't allow any classified research. Sometimes the government wants to have the right to censor or edit manuscripts," Barstow says...
When a government agency does ask for the right to edit or censor research results, ORC negotiators "try to persuade the government against it. The task of the negotiators is to get rid of publication restrictions or anything that makes doing research difficult for researchers," Barstow says...
...Editor Burton Pines, who had written the prerescue version of the hijacking story, Reporter-Researcher Sara Medina and Jerusalem Bureau Chief Donald Neff, who happened to be in New York. Neff maintained phone contact with Halevy, getting details of the story in spite of interruptions from a wary Israeli censor who listened in on the entire conversation. Calling from Nairobi with the latest details from there and from sources in Uganda was Correspondent Eric Robins...
...until it finally closed. Food prices soared, but cart vendors always seemed to have fresh produce for sale. Merchants who had lost their shops in downtown fighting transformed the once flashy Corniche into an open-air souk, closed only on days when the artillery thumped dangerously close. With no censor about, a few movie theaters even were daring enough to show European soft porn−afternoon diversion for weary militiamen back from the front line downtown...
...such content, including obscenity. But the FCC regulations, while also barring content control, provide that cable companies "shall establish rules ... prohibiting the presentation of ... obscene or indecent matter." In addition, New York City, which has the power to franchise further cable expansion, says the cable companies can only censor to conform to the "applicable" law-but does not specify which one. Appeals for governmental clarification having gone unsatisfied, Manhattan Cable took action on Blue, citing the impossibility of obeying the conflicting city, state and federal requirements...