Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...editorial of October 8 regarding the Department's reconsideration of its earlier recommendation of tenure. There is no truth to the claim that "clearly" the Department's action was a "reaction to outside publicity" or that the Department was engaged in "dictating to scholars how and what they should publish." It is inconceivable--indeed, it is ludicrous--to suppose that the Department was influenced by an editorial in the Wall Street Journal; if my colleagues took note of that at all, it would if anything have the opposite effect of what the paper intended. The Department met to consider...
Phony Letters. The trail from CIA to IRS was marked by a once secret CIA memo unearthed by Church. It related how in 1967 a CIA official had warned IRS that the radical magazine Ramparts was planning to publish articles critical of the CIA and the whole Lyndon Johnson Administration. The CIA memo urged that "the corporate tax returns of Ramparts, Inc., be examined [by IRS] and that any leads to possible financial supporters be followed up by an examination of their individual tax returns...
...controversy has been widely compared to the Pentagon papers case, in which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld on First Amendment grounds of press freedom the right of the New York Times and the Washington Post to publish secret government documents on U.S. involvement in Viet Nam. Britain has no such written constitutional guarantee; governments have in the past had little trouble bullying the press into bland quiescence, and the courts have stood idly by. Jubilant British journalists greeted Lord Widgery's decision as a long stride in the other direction. "It ends the notion that civil servants should...
...Illinois, tried to work out a compromise with the White House. One possible agreement would allow the Administration to delete the names of agents and foreign collaborators from any documents supplied to the committee. The committee would also give the Administration 24 hours' notice if it planned to publish classified material. Should the Administration object to the release, it would be given more time to explain its position. In some instances, the President might be granted final review. If that compromise is accepted, the House investigation will be ready to resume...
...magazine that has many, many problems--not the least of which is a tendency, month after month, to publish the same genre of gut-spilling personal experiences that once provided support for an emerging collective women's consciousness but now are merely boring. In spite of the special topic, this month is no different...