Word: published
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...Council did not see fit to support Harvard-Radcliffe's only publication devoted exclusively to fiction and poetry. However, such a decision, according to Council Treasurer Peter Smith, had nothing whatsoever to do with "poor organization" or unreliable financial projections but, rather, the belief that Padan Aram should publish an, issue in its new format before the Council would "invest" in the Review's future...
Seven-year-old campus literary magazine Padan Aram will, for the second year in a row, publish only one issue, cutting back from the traditional quarterly schedule...
...suggest that you publish Monday's strip, if only to inform Crimson readers of the banality of your prudery. Your misguidedly self-righteous concern over a nebulous offense is no more than a priggish display of editorial hubris. Ralph Vetters '85 Harry Browne...
...Reagonomics to the battlefields of "Firing Line" and The New York Review of Books. He might travel to France to participate in a conference on culture, where a major finding emerges that the American television series "Dallas" poses one of the greatest threats to advanced society. He could also publish an 80-page book entitled The Voice of the Poor...
...recent years there has been a growing number of such "disappointing events" in laboratories around the country. Yale, Cornell and Boston University have each had to contend with embarrassing cases of scientific fraud. According to a number of scientists, the tremendous pressures to "publish or perish" may be a factor in the trend. These pressures have been exacerbated by the intense competition for limited federal research funds. "Science is more expensive these days," says Albert H. Hastorf, Stanford's provost. "You need a big grant or you are out of business." Many leading research institutions have attempted to deal...