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BTW News Briefs
June 25, 2008
Preliminary Injunction to Block Oregon's "Harmful to Minors" Law
Denied
On Monday, June 23, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Mosman denied a request
for a preliminary injunction that would block enforcement of Oregon's "harmful
to minors" law until a trial could be held. The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
(ABFFE), Oregon booksellers, and a coalition of groups filed a lawsuit
in April challenging the constitutionality
of the law that restricts the display and sale of books and magazines, which
are protected by the First Amendment.
ABFFE President Chris Finan said that, while the foundation was disappointed
in the judges' ruling, an October 3 trial date was set, and at that time, ABFFE
will be able to call witnesses and lay out the case in detail.
Women's National Book Association Names New Leadership
On June 23, the Women's National Book Association (WNBA) named Joan Gelfand,
a writer with a focus on poetry and short stories, as its new president. The
announcement was made at the WNBAs annual meeting in San Francisco.
Gelfand, longtime Bay Area resident now living in San Francisco, is a past
president of the San Francisco chapter and has served on the national board
for four years. She is the recipient of numerous awards and is the author of
the poetry collection Seeking Center, published by Two Bridges Press.
Joining Gelfand on the WNBA board are Vice President Mary Grey James, lead
buyer for Ingram in LaVergne, Tennessee; Treasurer Margaret Auer, dean of University
Libraries/Instructional Design Studio at the University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit,
Michigan; and Secretary Ruth Light, a Los Angeles-based writer.
ABFFE Book of the Month for June Claim of Privilege
The ABFFE Book of the Month for June is Claim
of Privilege: A Mysterious Plane Crash, a Landmark Supreme Court Case, and the
Rise of State Secrets by Barry Siegel, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist.
The title from HarperCollins examines the mystery
behind a 1948 plane crash and the Supreme Court's landmark ruling in U.S. v.
Reynolds, which formally recognized the State Secrets Privilege. The case set
a legal precedent enabling federal agencies to refuse to turn over sensitive
documents that they say might endanger national security. Claim of Privilege
reveals the dangerous consequences of government secrecy and how it threatens
our civil liberties.
An interview with Siegel
is available on the ABFFE website, www.abffe.com.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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