Word: planning
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Groups integrated at the first meeting simulated the conditions created by the "September plan," which throws students of both races together in the white schools with instructions "to get along...
...Tuesday foolishly voted 7-5 for a measure that will almost certainly restrict academic freedom at the University of Massachusetts. Responding to charges that instructors at the Boston campus had encouraged students to participate in last October's Arlington Street Church rally against the war, the Committee supported a plan to set up an investigative commission...
...idea worked so well that newspapers in 28 U.S. cities are now operating under some form of the plan, and others are considering it. Or at least they were. In Tucson, Ariz., Federal District Court Judge James A. Walsh has just called a halt to such newspaper combinations by ordering a complete divorce of mutual ownership, advertising, and circulation departments between the city's morning and afternoon papers...
Watching Stopped. For years, the Justice Department has kept an eye on the joint operations of the Tucson Daily Citizen and its morning counterpart, the Arizona Daily Star. Since the Citizen was ailing, Government trustbusters watched suspiciously but did not interfere when the papers adopted the Albuquerque Plan in 1940. In 1965, however, they stopped watching and started acting when the fully recovered Citizen bought out its competitor for $9,999,790. The Justice Department filed suit against the merger and contended that the 25-year operating agreement discouraged competition...
...will appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. Failing there, an avenue remains to the nation's many consolidation-minded publishers. The failing-newspaper bill, now languishing in a Senate subcommittee pigeonhole, would exempt from antitrust laws those papers combined along the Albuquerque Plan, provided that one of the pair was in serious financial trouble. The management of Tucson's dailies believe that their papers would qualify. So do scores of other publishers who are wondering this week what to do about the Walsh decision...