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According to Berry, signs are sometimes lost and it may take eight weeks to print signs for new menu items...

Author: By Ariel R. Frank, | Title: Accuracy of 'Nutrition Bites' Questioned | 1/31/1996 | See Source »

...show, be partly smoke and mirrors. Record contracts, like movie deals, are often larded with clauses and subclauses that make interpreting the value of a deal a brain-wilting affair, as mystifying as the recent reports that Forrest Gump hasn't turned a profit. "When you read the fine print, you find lots of changes," says record-industry attorney Don Engel. "Some of these contracts are 80 to 100 pages. There are various ways a record company makes a $60 million deal worth $20 million or $30 million." For example, many contracts come with performance clauses: if the hits stop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARE THEY WORTH ALL THAT CASH? | 1/29/1996 | See Source »

...Koyanis is suggesting that my collection is a variant of some authoritative printed anthology, she is mistaken because none exists. The typography of Poetic Work is my construal in that medium of Dickinson's poesis based on my own handwritten interpretations of photographic facsimiles and, in some instances, the original manuscripts. (Neither the principle of selection in Poetic Work nor my approach to the problem of representing the poetry in print for the general reader was derived from any particular typographic edition. And I made no photocopies of any source materials.) Koyanis' statement could even give the impression that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Press Unfair to Opus | 1/24/1996 | See Source »

...most troubling element of Koyanis' statement is the implied attitude toward the general reader. The idea seems to be that any print version of Dickinson poems designed--like "Final Harvest?" --with the non-specialist in mind threatens the integrity of the poet's work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Press Unfair to Opus | 1/24/1996 | See Source »

Predictably, civil libertarians are uneasy about the proposal, seeing it as yet another assault on free speech in cyberspace. Congress has already signaled its intent to enact legislation that would criminalize "indecent" speech online, rather than adopting the less onerous restriction against "obscene" speech that is the print standard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEDIA: HOME PAGES FOR HATE | 1/22/1996 | See Source »

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