Not exact matches
In previous chapters I have
suggested what concerned citizens can do to deal with television without censorship: create local television councils and community
action to get
stations to accept their responsibility for the public welfare; introduce media education courses in the schools and churches to create media literacy; organize community groups to develop programs relating to community issues on the «narrowcast» media of cable - TV, videocassettes, low - power TV, public - broadcasting facilities, and commercial side - band channels; employ stockholder
action and other economic measures.
The New York Times says Cuomo's plan to fix Penn
Station falls short of the «radical intervention» that the «blighted hub» desperately needs, and
suggests the best course of
action is to get the Dolans to relocate and unearth much of the structure.
Based on that experience, he
suggested that the government needed to «analyze every one of them [fuel
stations] to see the legal basis for such decisions, and such directives» before any concrete
action is taken in this regard.
«[T] he weight of authority
suggests that accurate news reporting — even when it is likely to have an adverse impact on the subjects of the report — usually does not give rise to an
action for intentional infliction of emotional distress»: Yesterday, a unanimous three - judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit issued a decision affirming a federal district court's dismissal of claims for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress asserted by two former undercover police officers against a television
station in Albuquerque that had revealed their identities and their undercover status in the context of a televised report about their suspected involvement in an alleged incident of sexual assault.