Peru Naming Press Chiefs
Date: 28 July 1975
Govt to appt new directors for 7 previously nationalized newspapers to eliminate anti-govt bias (S)
Takanori Hatakeyama (畑山隆則, Hatakeyama Takanori; born July 28, 1975) is a Japanese former professional boxer who competed from 1993 to 2001. He is a world champion in two weight classes, having held the World Boxing Association (WBA) super-featherweight title from 1998 to 1999 and the WBA lightweight title from 2000 and 2001.
Preberite več...28. julij 1975 je bil ponedeljek pod znakom zvezdice ♌. Bil je 208 dan v letu. Predsednik Združenih držav je bil Gerald R. Ford.
Če ste rojeni na ta dan, ste stari 50 let. Vaš zadnji rojstni dan je bil ponedeljek, 28. julij 2025, pred 49 dnevi. Vaš naslednji rojstni dan je torek, 28. julij 2026, čez 315 dni. Živeli ste 18.312 dni ali približno 439.501 ur, ali približno 26.370.104 minut ali približno 1.582.206.240 sekund.
Date: 28 July 1975
Govt to appt new directors for 7 previously nationalized newspapers to eliminate anti-govt bias (S)
Date: 29 July 1975
Pittsburgh Post Gazette and Pittsburgh Press on July 28 resume publication after 1-mo strike by Teamsters (S)
Date: 29 July 1975
By LES BROWN
Les BROWN
NBC news div pres Richard C Wald says that div is seeking to purchase series of ints with former Pres Nixon to be based on his written memoirs when they are completed in '76; says that talks with Nixon's literary agent Irving Lazar are still exploratory but that Nixon has agreed to discuss Watergate affair; CBS News pres Richard S Salant, who has rejected paying for int with Nixon, says that he owes country explanation for Watergate and it would not be proper to pay him for explaining (S)
Date: 28 July 1975
By MARTIN ARNOLD
Martin ARNOLD
Comment on ways many govts attempt to regulate flow of news abroad, as evinced by India's effort to control reptg by foreign correspondents; countries include Israel, China, USSR, South Africa, Albania and East Germany
Date: 28 July 1975
ed on pol situtation in India notes that after expelling several foreign correspondents, Govt has lifted its demand for self-censorship pledge from all foreign journalists, but ominous threat to free flow of information from India remains
Date: 29 July 1975
correction on July 26 dispatch from New Delhi that said Christian Science Monitor correspondent Daniel Southerland had been allowed to remain in India after signing pledge to comply with self-censorship rules; what Southerland signed was India's new statement agreeing to take full responsibility for his repts (S)
Date: 28 July 1975
By JONATHAN KANDELL Special to The New York Times
Jonathan Special
recent departure of Jose Lopez Rega, former right-wing strongman of Argentine Govt, has opened interlude in which press, TV and other news media are employing more freedom of expression than at any time before in 2 yrs of Peronist rule; Govt, which nationalized TV stations 1 yr ago, has promised air time to non-Peronist parties and viewpoints; actors and journalists who fled country are beginning to return; many Argentines regard relaxation of censorship as sign that Govt is losing grip on its power; 7-wk reign of Pres Hector J Campora, beginning in May, '73, saw burst of leftist and protest literature, plays, films and TV programs (M)
Date: 29 July 1975
AP repts from New Delhi on July 28 that Indian Govt cut its news circuit to London and disconnected its bur phone because of what India charged were violations of self-censorship rules in 3 dispatches; Keith Fuller, agency's deputy gen mgr, asserted that articles did not violate guidelines and that Govt had indicated its willingness to talk about problem; AP said that India's chief censor, H J D'Penha, had told agency's bur chief Myron Belkind that Govt did not question articles' veracity but did consider them objectionable; dispatches described arrest of Indian Express editor Kuldip Nayar and arrest of 8 prominent persons who threatened to defy restrictions of press freedom (S)
Date: 28 July 1975
Eric Pace and William Borders, NY Times correspondents in India, after extensive consultations with Indian officials, sign statement acknowledging 'full responsibility' for their repts from India in regard to Indian Govt's rules for censorship (S)
Date: 29 July 1975
By ROBERT B. SEMPLE Jr. Special to The New York Times
Brit Atty Gen Samuel Silkin is seeking 2 injunctions that are being heard simultaneously by Lord Chief Justice, Lord Widgery, involving restraint of publication of pol diaries of late Richard Crossman by publishers Jonathan Cape and Hamish Hamilton, and forbidding London Sunday Times to publish further extracts from diaries or 'any other material' that would breach various criteria that Silkin has set forth to protect 'confidentiality' of high Govt discussions; Grossman served as min in Prime Min Harold Wilson's Labor Govt between '64 and '70; excerpts of his diaries were printed in several installments earlier in '75 by Times; criteria Silkin set forth to guarantee confidentiality have alarmed Brit journalists because they would seem to threaten legality of kind of 'inside' pol reptg that has become routinely accepted in GB and US; would prohibit published accounts of detailed discussions in Cabinet, detailed discussions between Govt mins and their advisers on formulation of public policy, and detailed discussions between mins and advisers over qualifications of other public servants; seem intended to apply not only to pol memoirs but to ordinary day-by-day reptg of public affairs; Times editor William Rees-Mogg and Guardian columnist Peter Jenkins comment; similarity of case to that of Pentagon papers publication noted; Crossman por (M)