Word: published
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...critical issues, Fenno has abused it as a means of "imposing awful things about other people from behind the mask." The letter from the other professors underscored this point, saying: "Fenno's imaginings are so repugnant and mean-spirited that it is difficult to understand why the Record would publish them...
...order to publish material "on the Web", in the usual sense of the phrase, a person needs to place the material on a Web server, which can then serve the material to "clients" (for example browsers) who request the material. The server can be shared by the person's Internet service provider, or a personal one connected to the Internet via the person's Internet service provider. In either case, public registries on the Internet make it easy to find the person and/or organization responsible for the speech in question. In addition, in order for the speech to be presented...
Forty-two professors responded to these two columns with a signed letter saying that the Fenno's writings are "so repugnant and mean-spirited that it is difficult to understand why the Record would publish them...
...human being? We think it would be ethically unacceptable, and certainly would not want to be involved in the project." Meanwhile, President Clinton provided a typically Beltway response: He asked for a commission to review the implications. Wilmut and his colleagues at the Roslyn Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland, will publish a report on the sheep cloning Thursday in the journal Nature. Previously, scientists had cloned less complex life forms, like tadpoles, but the tadpoles had never developed into frogs. In the sheep experiment, tissue was taken from the ewe's udder and cultivated in a lab, using a process that...
...family if the former football star issues a signed, detailed confession that he killed Ronald Goldman. Steering clear of directly naming Simpson as the culprit, Goldman said, "The suggestion is that if the person . . . that murdered my son wants to write out a complete confession and publish it in newspapers around the country, we'll be glad to ignore the judgment." Even if Simpson is guilty, Goldman does not really expect him to accept the challenge: "That will never happen. This person hasn't owned responsibility for any of his actions through his lifetime." Although the audacious offer could save...