Word: published
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...only hope that your decision to publish yesterday's letter of Geoffrey Bok '84, of al, was not an implicit endorsement of his weakly argued, bleeding-heart, pecudo-liberal position. Mr. Bok, erroneously grouping the Pi Eta Speaker's Club with all social clubs, attempts to make a clarion call for The Crimson to "impartially explore" how clubs such as the Pi Eta stand in contradiction with independent thinking and encouragement of diversity. In the case of the Pi Eta, this accusation could not be further from the truth and suggests that Mr. Bok has but partially explored the issue...
...Administration's recommendations stem from a March 11 directive aimed at tightening counterespionage efforts and reducing the number of news leaks to the press. Under the original directive, current and former employees with security clearances must submit to government censors any writing they mean to publish. The requirement also forced officials to consent to polygraph tests if suspected of unauthorized news releases. Failure to comply with the mandates can result in demotion or reassignment. The new orders proposed last week extend random lie-detector tests to all officials with access to classified information, even if no evidence of security breaches...
...this particular race, one candidate who may have been dearly hurt by the vacillation was Dennis J. Kearney. A first poll commissioned in early August--which the Globe wouldn't publish--showed Kearney a contender at 12 percent. That good news, at that point, "could have made it a four-man race," muses the Herald's Woodlief. But by the time of the Globe's second poll, released September 20. Kearney had slipped into single-figure obscurity...
...paper, which is distributed almost entirely by mail. The Monitor, moreover, is not a commercial venture that must answer to the marketplace but the official voice of the prosperous First Church of Christ, Scientist. The founder, Mary Baker Eddy, declared that Christian Science had a religious duty to publish the paper. All the senior editors are Christian Scientists (Fanning converted in 1965, in the wake of her divorce). So are most of the reporters. Representatives of the church's board watch over the paper, and staff members admit that church values are edited into the coverage. Chief among subjects...
...also advised the Chicago Sun-Times, Dallas Morning News and Baltimore Sun, was carried out in tandem with an aggressive circulation and advertising plan developed by John Hoagland, the paper's chief business executive. One key decision was to drop the paper's regional sections and publish a single national edition...