Word: printed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...this latest act of repression, Tito has made clear his determination to stamp out the opposition magazine before it even gets started. Freedom of the press remains a sometime thing in Yugoslavia. Publications are free to print crime stories and cheesecake; they are less free to criticize the regime, and they are not at all free to criticize Tito...
...number of well known and respected writers testified to the literary value of Naked Lunch, it was not judged obscene. In defense of Burrough's novel, Norman Mailer testified that "We are richer for the record; and we are more impressive as a nation because a publisher can print that record and sell it in an open bookstore, sell it legally." Mailer went on to say that there should be no censorship. Allen Ginsberg also testified to the novel's poetic value and read the Supreme Judicial Court justices a poem he had composed in its praise...
...shop Pike [Nov. 11] is indeed a man who "will not stay in place," and it is remarkable that you have managed what many still fail to capture in print: the portrait of a man honestly searching out reasonable answers for the conflict between the historical church and its place in the 20th century...
There are a few lines of fine print on the back of Harvard football tickets which, if anyone took them seriously, would put an end to one of the biggest booms in Boston's economic history: ticket scalping...
...Under Massachusetts laws," the fine print reads, "this ticket is a revocable license. If sold or offered for sale at a premium it becomes void." During most of the year, this warning is about as relevant as the Nineteenth Amendment. As the Yale game approaches, ticket scalping becomes hysteric, and nothing can stop...