Easterly, Elenora. CMAA: Experiment in Self-Regulation. Columbia, Mo., Freedom of Information Center, School of Journalism, University of Missouri, 1967. 4p. (Report no. 178) E1
A discussion of self- regulation in the comic magazine industry imposed under the Code Authority of the Comics Magazine As sociation of America (CMAA).
Edenhofer, Lawrence E. "The Impartial Jury - Twentieth Century Dilemma: Some Solutions to the Conflict Between Free Press and Fair Trial." Cornell Law Quarterly, 51:306-27, Winter 1966. E2
Proposals of alternate solutions to muzzling the press include changes in the methods of selecting impartial juries.
Edwards, Frank. Flying- Saucers - Serious Business. New York, Stuart, 1966. 319p. E3
Throughout this journalistic account of evidence in support of "flying saucers," gathered largely from eyewitness accounts, the author criticizes the Air Force for its efforts to deny or censor all reports of UFO investigations.
Elman, Richard M. "Consensus TV." Cernorship, 4(2):42-45, Autumn 1966. E4
"Unless some means is found to ensure absolute press freedom (without further empowering the television monopolies) one cannot rule out the possibility that the medium will increasingly become the monolithic voice of the bureaucratic state."
Ely, John H. "Trial by Newspaper & Its Cure." Encounter, 28(3):80-92, March 1967. E5
"My purpose in this article is to suggest that the problem [trial by newspaper] is in fact not capable of easy solution, that the English answer - contempt of court - although it goes a long way towards safeguarding the right to be tried by an impartial jury and may on balance be the best answer to the problem, in fact falls short of its goal of ensuring trials uninfluenced by publicity and, into the bargain, pays dearly by diminishing the contribution the press can make to the efficient and fair administration of justice."
Emerson, Howard. Access to Medical News. Columbia, Mo., Freedom of Information Center, School of Journalism, University ofMissouri, 1966. 6p. (Publication no. 163) E6
A consideration of the conflict between access to medical news on the one hand and the patient's right to privacy and the doctor's fear of publicity on the other.
Emerson, John, S. A Full & Faithful Report of the Proceedings in His Majesty's Court of Exchequer in Ireland in the Case of the Hon. Mr. Justice Johnson. Dublin, Thomas Burnside, 1805. 196 p., 34p., 8p. E7
Johnson was charged with publishing at Westminster certain "scandalous and malicious libels" concerning His Majesty's government of Ireland.
Emery, Walter B. "Broadcasting Rights and Responsibilities in a Democratic Society." Centennial Review, 8:306-22, Summer 1965. E8
Epstein, Jason. "The Obscenity Business." Atlantic, 218(2):56-60, August 1966. (Reprinted in Library Journal, 1 October 1966) E9
"The tortuous, not altogether articulate attempt of the Supreme Court to deal with the growing traffic in obscenity and pornography must be examined in detail if its latest decision scrutinizing the motives of authors, editors, publishers, and booksellers, is to be understood. Mr. Epstein, a vice president of Random House, takes on that exacting task in this article and demonstrates that the issue at stake is not only individual freedom but the responsibility with which we use that freedom."
An Essay on the Liberty of the Press: Chiefly as it respects Personal Slander. Dublin, M. Williamson, 1755. 44p. E10
Essex, Harold. "Responsibility and Respectability in the Public Interest." Journal of Broadcasting, 9:285-90, Fall 1965. E11
Estrin, Herman A., and Arthur M. Sanderson, eds. Freedom and Cernorship of the College Press. Dubuque, Iowa, W. C. Brown, 1965. 310p. E12
"This book is a collection of seminal essays on functions and concepts for the student press, exploring its complex areas of freedom, censorship, and responsibilities." Includes Code of Ethics of the National Council of College Publications Advisors and the U.S. Student Press Association, a statement on Faculty Responsibility for the Academic Freedom of Students by the American Association of University Professors, a statement on Freedom of the College Press, by the AAUP, and Basic Policy Declaration on Freedom and Responsibility of the Student Press passed by the U.S. Student Press Association. Extensive bibliography includes many articles from college press sources not listed in this bibliography.
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