Decency. A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity if while professing high moral .purpose it supplies incentives to base conduct, such as are to be found in details of crime and vice, publication of which is not demonstrably for the general... The World's Work - Strana 2091925Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Edgar Laing Heermance - 1924 - 544 str.
...correction of its own serious mistakes of fact or opinion, whatever their origin. VII. Decenc\ — A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity...represented can but express the hope that deliberate V. pandering to vicious instincts will encounter effective public disapproval or yield to the influence... | |
| Irving Squire, Kirtland A. Wilson - 1924 - 180 str.
...complete correction of its own serious mistakes of fact or opinion, whatever their origin. Decency. A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity...of which is not demonstrably for the general good. /_ The present-day newspaper, it is readily apparent, has come to depend in a measure upon the product... | |
| Leo Arthur Borah - 1925 - 296 str.
...The newspaper is held to a strict account and its sincerity is challenged if, while " professing a high moral purpose, it supplies incentives to base conduct, such as are found in details of crime and vice, publication of which is not demonstrably for the public good."... | |
| 1927 - 336 str.
...his opinions.2 From many quarters comes a demand for reform which shall include suppression of those details of crime and vice, publication of which is not demonstrably for the general good. Action taken by the National Society of Newspaper Editors on April 23, 1923, indicates that in the... | |
| 1946 - 518 str.
..."sincerity, truthfulness, accuracy, impartiality, fair play and decency." Under this latter category the code reads as follows : A newspaper cannot escape conviction...if, while professing high moral purpose, it supplies incentive to base conduct, such as are to be found in details of crime and vice, publication of which... | |
| 1955 - 716 str.
...crime is printed to warn the public and aid in the punishment of crime, the code says specifically : A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity...if, while professing high moral purpose, it supplies incentive to base conduct, such as are to be found in details of crime and vice, publication of which... | |
| Sandra Ball-Rokeach, David L. Lange - 1969 - 640 str.
...complete correction of its own serious mistakes of fact or opinion, whatever their origin. VII Decency. A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity...represented can but express the hope that deliberate panderings to vicious instincts will encounter effective public disapproval or yield to the influence... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Banking and Currency Committee - 1975 - 760 str.
...complete correct ion of its own fteriouii mistake* of fact or opinion, whatever their origin. I>ECENCY — A newspaper cannot escape conviction of insincerity...in details of crime and vice, publication of which ix not demonstrably for the general good. Lacking authority to enforce its canon.3 the journalism here... | |
| 1947 - 574 str.
..."sincerity, truthfulness, accuracy, impartiality, fair play and decency." Under this latter category the code reads as follows : A newspaper cannot escape conviction...if, while professing high moral purpose, it supplies incentive to base conduct, such as ave to be found in details of crime and vice, publication of which... | |
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