Word: publishes
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...expected to fight against the limited permission to spy on Americans overseas. Other Senators and Congressmen will surely push for fewer restrictions on the intelligence agencies. Democratic Senator Pat Moynihan of New York has already introduced his own bill, which would make it a criminal offense for anyone to publish classified material or the names of agents still on active duty. In contrast, the Administration-backed charter would confine the criminal offense to CIA officers or former officers, exempting third parties such as journalists...
...humiliating defeat for Callaghan, Labor's 29-member National Executive Committee voted not to publish a report documenting plans by a cadre of Trotskyite zealots to infiltrate the party. The N.E.C. also reneged on a promise to replace some leftists with moderates on a special committee that is studying the organization and finances of the party, and it restored to good graces a militant leftist who had been expelled for radical activism. Moderate Laborites were outraged. Neville Sandelson, a Member of Parliament for nine years, charged that the N.E.C. had "given their approval and support to subversive and diseased...
Many students are frustrated because they sense that the men--and all too few women--who teach them do not really care very much about their intellectual development. Another world consumes the professors' time, the demanding world of scholarship. They must publish, research, direct the training of future scholars, serve on endless committees--no wonder the undergraduate is a burden. If they try to make time for teaching, Harvard smiles and turns them away. Besides, the undergraduate is often inarticulate, ill-prepared. Many Harvard professors showed their contempt for the undergraduate by fiercely resisting Glen Bowersock's attempt to reform...
...obtained by the Kennedy staff two weeks ago from J. Gordon Ogden, a longtime summer resident of Martha's Vineyard who has compiled a book on the area's tides. But the Star did have the Oct. 24 photo. The newspaper's editors decided not to publish it because it was taken from an oblique angle and did not show the channel clearly enough -though it demonstrates that the channel had not narrowed since May, despite the Star's assertion to the contrary...
...analysis in West-ward's lab that tiny particles of iron peel away from the ship's hull and form measurable concentrations in water samples taken within a few feet of the ship, a possible source of error in chemical analyses of sea water. Braaten hopes to publish his findings in a scientific journal. Says he: "The sea isn't something you can easily generalize about. It changes so much...