Word: publishes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...condemned operations by insufficiently qualified surgeons, fee splitting between surgeons and the physicians who send them patients, and needless surgery. But while the college's professed policies are unimpeachably correct, effectiveness and enforcement are another matter. The college expels few of its errant members and does not publish the names of those expelled. Even after expulsion, a doctor can continue to practice "cut more, make more" surgery until some remote state board lifts his license-if it ever does. In fact, many state boards have not revoked a single license in years. As for character, the states...
...Arkansas Power and Light's proposed coal-burning power plant near Pine Bluff, Ark. The Arkansas Public Service Commission's licensing hearings on the plant will be sometime in January. The Investor Responsibility Research Center--a Washington organization Harvard helped found and has asked to investigate the plant--will publish its report on the plant tomorrow...
...Supreme Court last month declined to hear an appeal of contempt citations against two Baton Rouge La., reporters, Larry Dickenson of the State Times and Gibbs Adams of the Morning Advocate. The Journalists' offence: they published accounts of an open federal court hearing in defiance of a court order. The Reporter's committee for freedom of the Press, a Washington-based group that offers legal aid to endangered colleagues, said last week that the high court's refusal to hear the case "means that any judge can order a newspaper not to publish any news items...
...Corporation appointees would regularly leak material from confidential files to The Crimson, which would regularly publish them if they fell short of criminal libel. Critics of this practice would be pilloried as enemies of freedom of speech...
...Hiss case for scholarly use, so the pursuers of that fleeting mystery will soon have a new store of ammunition. Hopefully they will make better use of it than Texan professor Anthony Kubek made of a batch of dispatches from wartime China that the Senate Judiciary Committee decided to publish three years ago. That committee, which is not in the habit of collecting scholarly information on the Far East, obtained this material in 1945 in a rather spectacular fashion. After an agent of the OSS (wartime precursor of the CIA) noticed passages from a classified report printed verbatim...