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Staff members worked without pay to put out this week's edition, which went on sale Tuesday. The Phoenix will publish a trimmed-down edition next week, which will be the last until the struggle for power resolves itself...
...HJAA, itself a reconstruction of the Harvard Journal of Negro Affairs, is an attempt to create one of these mediums of "creative tensions" of which the movement is now in demand. Presenting itself as "a forum for Black young opinion" from all over the world the Journal hopes to publish in a manner of scholarship which is not "scholarship for the sake of scholarship" informed, "compassionate yet critical reflection" on the historical, contemporary, cultural and political dimensions of the black experience: while simultaneously solidifying the lines of communication within the international black community, particularly between students and scholars, and providing...
...deliver at his first press conference. Such characters appear in Doonesbury, a comic strip of campus life that began in the Yale Daily News in 1968, and is now syndicated in 125 papers, from the Washington Post to the San Francisco Chronicle. This week American Heritage Press will publish an anthology...
...obvious abuses in tax exemption. Balk urges states to narrow the legal definitions of eligible property. If legislatures insist on requiring localities to give exemptions to favored groups, he argues, states should then reimburse localities for the resulting tax loss. Most of all, local assessors should be forced to publish more comprehensive and accurate exemption data. Balk even questions whether federal and state property should be immune from local realty taxation, because the arrangement often leads to a profligate waste of expensive land...
...Inevitably such documents can contain inaccurate, outrageous "raw" data based on unchecked hearsay. Attorney General Mitchell's statement was a direct plea to the press to suppress the information at hand. Yet the Washington Post, quickly followed by the New York Times and Los Angeles Times, decided to publish accounts of the theft as well as the general contents of some of the documents. Said Ben Bagdikian, the Post's national editor, after a telephone call from Mitchell: "We thought it was a significant matter of public controversy, and once we confirmed that the documents were authentic...