Word: publishability
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...times when even The Herald cannot print information about missing people because it can endanger the lives of family members. "It's a very Kafka-like situation in which some people, although they are journalists, have come to the conclusion that the worst thing you can do is publish information. It sounds mad, but it's not. It's one of the symptoms of a society that's got sick," he says...
...Times seems preoccupied with other matters. The paper last week began printing in Chicago for distribution in nine Midwestern states, with home delivery in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus, as well as the Windy City. Mindful of the drubbing they took in the early '60s, when an attempt to publish in California collapsed for lack of ads and readers, Times executives are insisting that their Midwest venture is just a delivery improvement, not the kickoff of a plan to go national. Nonetheless, around the Times shop the Chicago offshoot is described as a "national" edition, and is modified...
Masters and Johnson turned down an offer to respond in print to the Psychology Today article. "We don't do that sort of thing," says Virginia Johnson. She concedes that she and her collaborator-husband may have been hasty in publishing Human Sexual Inadequacy before there was "time painstakingly to process and computerize our findings." But she maintains that the data that then: critics find missing are waiting in St. Louis. Says she: "Anyone who wishes to understand them had jolly well better come, because we're not going to publish prematurely again...
...that there are no civil rights in the U.S.S.R.? After all, you, a known enemy of that system, continue to publish in Pravda. One can only envy such tolerance!" He referred to your in correct identification of me as someone who "sometimes writes for Pravda. " At first I thought that the information was just a very amusing misprint - I have long stopped contributing to Pravda. Then I thought, thank God, TIME is not published in Moscow. In my days there, some editors of Pravda lost their jobs for far more innocent misprints. During the Stalin era many journalists ended their...
Potentially more important even than the trial issue is the court's assertion of a First Amendment right by the press to gather as well as to publish information. "This is a watershed case," said Stevens. "Today. . . for the first time, the court unequivocally holds that an arbitrary interference with access to important information is an abridgment of the freedoms of speech and of the press...