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This year two press laws have been enacted, carrying penalties that include temporary suspension of publication and jail terms of up to three years for newspaper editors who publish information the government thinks is "sensitive." Under these laws, Chamorro's newspaper has been shut down five times. Each time, the young editor has come out swinging as soon as his presses started to roll again...
Speaking in Russian, Garbanevskaya said yesterday the underground publishing network in the Soviet Union--known as "samizdat"--began a movement after Joseph Stalin's death in 1953 to publish "good and free poetry," not political dissent...
...controversy began when Kellen decided to publish a story about a student who was raped on campus. "We were told not to print the story to 'protect the victim'," Kellen said, adding that he did protect the student "morally and legally" by withholding the name, and that he ran the story because "the students have a right to know." Kellen said that school officials tried to suppress the story to avoid unfavorable publicity about campus security...
Galletly said most of the professors who have participated in the service have been very pleased, adding that each teacher receives a bound copy of the notes at the end of the semester. She said there has been some negative reaction from teachers who publish their own class notes...
Rich and prestigious institutions like Cal Tech, Harvard, M.I.T. and Stanford are able to dictate strong terms, including university control of patents and freedom to publish all research; the donor company usually just gets first bid on licensing. Says James Lewis, director of projects and grants at Columbia: "We want no publishing restrictions, no undue influence on courses and research, and no classified or secret research." But many universities accede to less favorable agreements. At Texas A & M, which gets 35% of its $30 million research budget from corporations, W. Arthur Porter, director of the Texas Engineering Experiment Station, acknowledges...