Word: publishability
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There, in a trial that vied with the forum for global attention, the 22-year-old proprietor and editor of the Aram publishing house, Fatih Tas, stood accused of disseminating propaganda against the unity of the Turkish state. The charge is often leveled against those who question Turkey's treatment of its estimated 12 million Kurds (among a total population of 65 million). Tas' "crime" was to publish material critical of Turkey in American Interventionism, a collection of essays by Noam Chomsky, the renowned American linguistics professor and longtime thorn in the side of U.S. policymakers. Tas avoided conviction...
...children who worship corn (Children of the Corn). Only now do we learn that what curdles his blood is the idea of ending up a hack. Not exactly the same as being caught after dark in a pet cemetery, but chilling enough to make King, 54, decide to stop publishing at year's end. As he revealed to the Los Angeles Times, his greatest "nightmare" is "finish[ing] up like Harold Robbins," the novelist who churned out books into his 80s. King said he worries about repeating himself, which seems inevitable, since he's published at least a book...
Making journal entries is simplicity itself. Type your blindingly brilliant insight or cool link in a white box on the Blogger website, run it through the optional spellcheck, and hit the button marked PUBLISH. Blogger provides the date, the time and the layout. If you libeled Granny and didn't mean to, you can take back and edit any posting. I had one small hiccup: adding links for the first time isn't as intuitive as it could be. Otherwise there has never been a better way to let your voice be heard. We may not all look like RuPaul...
...accepting submissions from readers on concerts and similar events for “Out & About.” Submissions may be opinionated, should be 250 words or less and may be edited for content. Shorter submissions may receive preference, and we reserve the right to not to publish submissions. Please email submissions to music@thecrimson.com...
...Theatricals isn’t the only student group to bring prominent entertainers to Harvard. Each year the Harvard Lampoon, a semi-secret Sorrento Square organization that used to occasionally publish a so-called humor magazine, also gives out a limited number of unique awards and honorary memberships to celebrities. According to Lampoon editor Dennis J. Mak ’03, celebrities often contact the Lampoon through Lampoon graduates working in Hollywood to express their interest in coming to campus. “They often are interested in coming based on other celebrities’ positive experiences here...