Anderson has turned Scroggins» action into an opportunity to speak out
against banned books, telling readers what they can do if books are challenged in their communities.
Not exact matches
The warnings
against Jehovah's Witnesses have stacked up over the past decade in particular, with dozens of regional charges of extremism and more than 80 of its
books, pamphlets, and other texts (including its magazine, The Watchtower)
banned in Russia, according to The Moscow Times.
They include the «chilling effects» of libel suits, the perennial conflicts between property and access, the three out of four publishers who intervene in news decisions affecting their local markets, the advertisers» freedom to move their money to where their interests are, industry self - regulation in broadcasting and advertising, the backlash
against conveying under duress (as in a hostage crisis) points of view that are never aired as directly without duress, the flareups of
book banning and censorship of textbooks, the rout of the civil rights movement, the retreat from principles of fairness and equality (even where never implemented), the attack on scientific and humane teaching, the threat of self - appointed media watchdogs to also spy on teachers in the classroom, and the general vigor of ancient orthodoxies masquarading as neo-this and neo-that.
Ander Herrera has been
booked four times this season and a yellow card
against Burnley would see him pick up a one - match
ban, while the same can be said for Ashley Young and Marcos Rojo.
Wayne Rooney serves a one - match
ban after collecting his fifth
booking of the season
against the Hammers.
Nicolas Otamendi is also
banned for one Premier League game for cumulative
bookings and could feature
against the Hoops.
Her diary «Verbification worries» (TP, January) reminded me of a verbified noun to which I have taken offence in the past, but which I forgot to include in my
book, The
Banned List: A Manifesto
Against Jargon and Cliché.
The argument
against the
book ban is not necessarily an argument
against a privileges system.
Chris Grayling warned that he could face legal proceedings over the prisoner
book ban, as the campaign
against the policy escalates
Protest
against prisoner
book ban takes unusual new direction, after bestselling author announces she» l name the villain of her new novel after the justice secretary
Carol Ann Duffy takes lead in campaign
against the prisoner
book ban with poetry protest outside Pentonville prison
Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy, who protested
against justice secretary Chris Grayling's
ban on prisoners receiving
books earlier this year, has been made a dame in the new year's honour's list.
As this year's
Banned Books Week approaches — it's Sept. 17 to Oct. 3 — many NEA members are celebrating the voices, characters, and books that look at the issues that matter to students, and standing up against censor
Books Week approaches — it's Sept. 17 to Oct. 3 — many NEA members are celebrating the voices, characters, and
books that look at the issues that matter to students, and standing up against censor
books that look at the issues that matter to students, and standing up
against censorship.
Indeed, this very
book being
banned teaches values —
against racism.
Unlike
books such as Nabokov's Lolita, Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon or even Alfred Kinsey's The Kinsey Report, which were also
banned at times for «offensive» sexual content, the stated protests
against Fifty Shades were different.
Apparently, unable to squeeze any cash out of a lawsuit
against a restaurant owner who
banned Simpson from his establishment or from sales of his
book, If I Did It (which many consumers may boycott in deference to Nicole Brown's sister), Simpson devised another scheme: a private sting operation to recover what Simpson claims is his personal memorabilia from a dealer who had acquired it.