Word: publishability
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...supervisor summoned DeNoble and ordered him to turn off the machines, kill the rats and turn over his notes. A few days later, DeNoble came to work and found that "the animals were gone; the data was gone. Everything was gone." Attempts by DeNoble and Mele to publish their findings were blocked...
Antismoking activists gained new ammunition when two former scientists for Philip Morris testified before a House panel that the cigarette company had suppressed research on the effect of nicotine on rats. According to the scientists, Philip Morris refused to allow them to publish studies on the addictive potential of nicotine, barred them from discussing the research, and ultimately closed down their lab, also halting research on a possible nicotine substitute...
Robb vehemently denies use of drugs or even being present when others used them. But last month, preparing his formal campaign launch as the Washington Post was about to publish the staff's findings, Robb drafted a six-page statement aimed at stifling the issue. "For a period of time in Virginia Beach," he conceded, "I let my guard down, and when I did, I also let Lynda down. But with Lynda's forgiveness, and God's, I put that private chapter behind me." Some voters do not see it that way. In a recent poll the man once considered...
...years, we have begun printing TIME's Canadian edition and six of our sister publications, including ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY and SPORTS ILLUSTRATED FOR KIDS, on paper that contains substantial amounts of recycled waste paper. This summer we will begin using recycled paper in TIME, PEOPLE and SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, which collectively publish more than 12 million copies a week. Within a few years, most of the 250,000 tons of paper Time Inc. uses annually to produce its magazines will be recycled stock. "In the past," says Refkin, "there simply was not enough recycled paper available to do this. But because...
...magazine editors said they strove to publish a wide variety of views in their first issue, including discussions of community, corporations and individual experiences at Harvard...