Word: publishability
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That said, however, we urge the Ad Board to publish detailed descriptions of its cases each year without attaching names to them, an idea former Dean of the College L. Fred Jewett '57 said he would support. The User's Guide to the Ad Board already offers examples of possible cases and decisions, but students would be far better served by the honest disclosure of many actual cases. They would then know what punishment they would face for particular transgressions and, more importantly, be able to debate the Ad Board's decisions rather than helplessly standing by while a mysterious...
...pretended to be a first-year who was very happy at Harvard but was thinking of switching schools because he had just discovered that Harvard was ranked third by U.S. News and World Report. The FM editors, who had originally proposed the idea, found it amusing and decided to publish...
...often locked horns with the White House; one of the few times he supported Clinton was on the passage of NAFTA. Knollenberg won re-election in 1994 with nearly 70% of the vote, and doesn't seem worried this year: as of early September, he had yet to publish any campaign literature...
...Board does not only consider prank phone calls made for publication a violation of University rules but all such phone calls. If I had been sitting around making prank phone calls for fun and someone reported me, I too would be punished although I never had any intent to publish...
They were never punished, because there was no grounds for it. As Kirtley points out, we have something referred to as "freedom of the press." If he can really be faced with a requirement to withdraw for publishing another column in an incorporated newspaper that is independent of the University not infringing his, and the paper's rights? Whether or not he, or his column, is funny, or whether the College likes it, should not matter. The Supreme Court found a long time ago that as long as what one says does not jeopardize the national security...