News Analysis
Date: 17 January 1983
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
A Federal judge's failure to block a television broadcast about an upcoming trial reinforces the concept that, except in very rare instances, only journalists have a right to decide what a news story says and when it should be run, legal experts said yesterday.
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News Analysis
Date: 17 January 1983
By Steven R. Weisman, Special To the New York Times
Steven Weisman
The bipartisan accord achieved by the National Commission on Social Security Reform hands President Reagan a sorely needed political victory, White House officials said today, even though Mr.
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News Analysis
Date: 18 January 1983
By David Shribman, Special To the New York Times
David Shribman
The compromise Social Security proposal worked out over the weekend by a Presidential commission would do what many workers feared most: It would increase the taxes workers contribute to the pension system. It would, however, repay them with a reasonable assurance that the old-age benefits that have become an integral part of Americans' retirement planning will be available well into the next century.
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News Summary; MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1983
Date: 17 January 1983
International Eugene Rostow discussed the informal agreement on limiting mediumrange missiles in Europe worked out last July by United States and Soviet negotiators, led by Paul H. Nitze and Yuli A. Kvitsinky. He said it was ''a promising approach and well worth further study.'' The accord was rejected by both the United States and the Soviet Union. Mr. Rostow, recently dismissed as arms control chief by President Reagan, said that the United States, despite ojections raised in the Administration to what it said was Mr. Nitze's secret diplomacy, was more willing to keep the compromise idea alive than Moscow was. (Page A1, Column 2.) The world economic crisis will worsen unless other Western nations and Japan join the United States in getting their ecomomies moving again, an American policy maker said. Treasury Under Secretary Beryl Sprinkel said at a news conference in Paris that it was now ''critically important'' for the health of the world economy that nations that have made progress in reducing inflation to take steps to insure that they enjoy a ''credible economic expansion.'' (A1:3.)
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News Summary; TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1983
Date: 18 January 1983
International Andrei A. Gromyko warned Bonn that it would be caught in a sharpened nuclear confrontation if new American medium-range missiles were deployed in Western Europe. On the second day of a visit to West Germany, the Soviet Foreign Minister also said that Moscow was ready to negotiate a reduction of its shorter-range SS-21, SS-22 and SS-23 nuclear weapons systems targeted on Western Europe on the basis of ''mutuality'' with NATO. (Page A1, Columns 1-2.) The White House again repudiated as inadequate an informal agreement worked out by American and Soviet negotiators in Geneva last summer for limiting medium-range missiles in Europe. Officials underscored their opposition to any agreement that fell short of the American position, which calls for both sides to scrap all medium-range missiles. (A1:1.)
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BRIEFING
Date: 18 January 1983
By Phil Gailey and Warren Weaver Jr
Phil Gailey
Strategy on Labor
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2 JUSTICES REFUSE TO BAR BROADCAST
Date: 17 January 1983
By David Margolick
David Margolick
Three days of maneuvering over free press and fair trial issues ended yesterday when two justices of the United States Supreme Court declined to block a CBS News telecast about the conduct of seven New Orleans policemen.
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Salt Lake City Readers Given A Second Sunday Newspaper
Date: 17 January 1983
UPI
Upi
For the first time in nearly 30 years, Salt Lake City residents this weekend had their choice of two Sunday morning newpapers.
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'ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT,' TELEVISION'S 'NEWSZAK'
Date: 18 January 1983
By Sally Bedell
Sally Bedell
With a cheerful smile, the anchor makes her introduction. Coming up, she says: is a special report on ''the Broadway shows which have been blazing with glory ever since the current season began on June 1.''
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DEEPER MILITARY CUTS SOUGHT
Date: 17 January 1983
AP
Two Republican Senators said today that President Reagan must dig still deeper into military spending for 1984 to reduce projected budget deficits of $200 billion or more a year.
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Peking Chief Goes Home After Month in Africa
Date: 18 January 1983
AP
Prime Minister Zhao Ziyang of China flew home today at the end of an 11-nation tour of Africa aimed at reasserting China's influence on the continent.
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