In 2005, the reporter Judith Miller of the New York Times spent eight-five days in jail because she would not reveal the name of the individual who told her
A) the name of a CIA employee.
B) the codes to an important NSA directive.
C) the names of several covert agents in the FBI.
D) the details of a secret meeting of members of Congress.
E) about secret memos in the Office of the Pardon Attorney.
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q24: Since the 1980s,broadcasting licenses are automatically renewed
Q26: The federal government sued the New York
Q29: The Carter-Reagan debate in 1980 was sponsored
Q31: For a newspaper to be found guilty
Q41: The abandonment of the fairness doctrine permitted
A) liberals
Q46: The equal time rule obliges stations
A) that sell
Q47: How frequently do television broadcasting licenses come
Q50: Which amendment to the U.S. Constitution prevents
Q53: Compared with newspaper reporters, television news broadcasters
Q54: How frequently do radio broadcasting licenses come
Unlock this Answer For Free Now!
View this answer and more for free by performing one of the following actions
Scan the QR code to install the App and get 2 free unlocks
Unlock quizzes for free by uploading documents