Word: editing
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...Those are barriers which somehow or another have to be dismantled. Those ( are our cold war manners. Of course, all intelligence services like to retain their mystique. The first thing the Americans do if they get a wonderful report from the Israelis is edit it, retitle it, put all sorts of stamps all over it and shove it upstairs. This is another reason, incidentally, why intelligence assessments are so frequently distorted: the same source can fund a whole lot of seemingly separate intelligence documents. Let's say, the Israelis prepare a document which they're prepared to give...
First, you take "When Harry Met Sally." Edit out the good jokes. Take away any hint of realism. Then make the Meg Ryan character even more self-absorbed and whiny...
Rumors circulated on campus that the article had not actually been authored by Ogletree, but in fact was entirely a creation of the Law Review staffers assigned to "edit" the piece...
...Review editors note that it is common practice to edit articles heavily before publication, pointing to an earlier piece by Guido Calabrese, dean of Yale Law School, as a clear case in point. Editors disagree, ,however, on whether Ogletree's article was a particularly egregious example of pre-publication "editing...
Ogletree's article became the locus of controversy in the fall, when then-Law Review President Emily R. Schulman '85 was accused of racial bias by fellow editors for allegedly refusing to let a Black woman edit the piece because it was written by a Black faculty member...