Word: publishers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Case, who is legally the publisher of the paper, and is technically entitled to control it, informed the editors that he intends to publish an editorial and a news story on the front page of this week's issue...
...prospect can hardly be pleasing to Fleet Street; painful experience has long since taught British papers the wisdom of living within the rules. After the 1949 arrest of John George Haigh, who was accused of killing women and sipping goblets of their blood, the Daily Mirror chose to publish all the available gory details. The paper took care to disassociate its accounts of the VAMPIRE HORROR IN LONDON from the Haigh story, but no one was really deceived. Haigh was convicted and executed, but as a result of his suit against the Mirror, the newspaper was fined...
...result of the investigation, according to Monro, may be a requirement that the HSA publish its charter-flight accounts or at least allow the University to audit its books...
...they aren't, the boys at the Harvard News Office are. Probably the most dependable and least exciting group, the News Office crew has little interest in the artistic projects of the Corbu crowd. They publish in the Alumni Bulletin and sometimes earn four figure salaries...
...thinkers grappling with the same issues; yet his unconventional revision of Aquinas outrages many doctrinaire Thomists. He has steered clear of ecclesiastical controversy, except once to blister an Italian theologian whose criticism, Lonergan believed, made him out to be a heretic. Moreover, he steadfastly refuses to popularize, or to publish applications of his theories to specific problems: a systematic Lonergan theology, he half-jokingly insists, should be left for second-rate minds...