Strike at The Star Ends
Date: 09 June 1973
Strike by 10 electricians against Kansas City Star ends on June 8 with back-to-work agreement
Alexandra 'Lexa' Doig (Toronto, 8 de junio de 1973) es una actriz de cine y televisión canadiense, conocida por su personaje de «Andromeda Ascendant» en la serie de ciencia ficción Andrómeda.
Leer más...El 8 de junio de 1973 fue un viernes bajo el signo estelar de ♊. Era el día 158 del año. El presidente de los Estados Unidos fue Richard M. Nixon.
Si naciste en este día, tienes 52 años. Su último cumpleaños fue el domingo, 8 de junio de 2025, hace 357 días. Su próximo cumpleaños es el lunes, 8 de junio de 2026, en 7 días. Ha vivido durante 19.350 días, o aproximadamente 464.421 horas, o aproximadamente 27.865.274 minutos, o aproximadamente 1.671.916.440 segundos
Date: 09 June 1973
Strike by 10 electricians against Kansas City Star ends on June 8 with back-to-work agreement
Date: 09 June 1973
Baltimore Sunpapers and Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild on June 8 reach agreement on 20-mo contract; contract provisions detailed
Date: 09 June 1973
Three hundred members of Newspaper Guild on June 8 ratify new 3-yr contract with Consumers Union ending 16-day strike; contract provisions detailed
Date: 09 June 1973
By E. W. KENWORTHYSpecial to The New York Times
E. KENWORTHYSpecial
Atty Gen Richardson announces on June 8 that he is shifting to special Watergate prosecutor A Cox authority to investigate all ramifications of merger of ITT with Hartford Fire Ins Co, with object of seeking any evidence of perjury and obstruction of justice on part of ITT and Govt officials; says in lr to Sen J O Eastland, who is chmn of Sen Judiciary Com, that he is giving Cox authority because ITT inquiry has begun to overlap with Watergate investigation; Project on Corporate Responsibility files suit in Fed Dist Ct, Washington, DC, on June 8 seeking order to require Justice Dept to permit public access to ITT documents under Freedom of Information Act
Date: 08 June 1973
Los Angeles Dist Atty J Busch repts on June 7 that former White House aide E Krogh Jr has refused to appear before county grand jury investigating burglary of office of D Ellsberg's former psychiatrist Dr L J Fielding; Krogh's atty S Shulman says that Krogh is 'target' of investigation and he should not appear voluntarily
Date: 09 June 1973
By DAVID E. ROSENBAUMSpecial to The New York Tlmes
David ROSENBAUMSpecial
Sen S J Ervin Jr says on June 8 that Sen Watergate Com will expand its investigation to include burglary of office of D Ellsberg's former psychiatrist Dr L J Fielding insofar as it relates to '72 election campaign and Watergate break-in; Sen E J Gurney has objected to expanding inquiry, saying that such matters as domestic intelligence plan are 'no function of our committee'
Date: 08 June 1973
under unwritten directive from USIA Dir J Keogh, Voice of Amer may not broadcast accts about Watergate scandal based on rumor, innuendo, gossip or unidentified sources; Keogh says that Voice of Amer is official radio of Govt and must limit itself to reptg only facts that can be directly attributed to a person, orgn or agency, telephone int
Date: 09 June 1973
By STEVEN V. ROBERTSSpecial to The New York Times
Steven ROBERTSSpecial
ex-White House aide J D Ehrlichman again places blame for Watergate cover-up on ex-White House counsel J W Dean 3d, talk with newsmen after testifying before Los Angeles County grand jury that is investigating break-in at office of Dr Ellsberg's former psychiatrist; refuses to discuss his own grand jury testimony but says that 'to my certain knowledge Mr Dean conducted an intensive investigation' of Watergate incident and had been 'privy' to information gathered by other sources, principally FBI; says that in mo following Watergate incident 'fruits of that investigation and Mr Dean's conclusions were faithfully imparted to the Pres'; says that during this period, Dean gave him and other White House aides 'repeated assurances' that no Adm personnel had been involved in Watergate break-in; says it was not until last Feb that he began to have 'fibrillations of doubt' about Dean's credibility; in deposition released on June 7, Haldeman said that Dean 'was not supposed to be the chief investigator of the Watergate case' and 'had not submitted any written rept' to him or to Nixon; deposition, filed in connection with civil suit resulting from break-in, says that Haldeman and Ehrlichman, not Dean, were 'principal sources' of information for Pres; Ehrlichman agrees with Haldeman that no written rept was made but stresses repeatedly his reliance on Dean's oral repts; Dean insists he was never asked for any rept and never made 1
Date: 08 June 1973
By MARJORIE HUNTERSpecial to The New York Times
H R Haldeman says on June 7 that he was merely conduit between Pres Nixon and drafters of '70 plans for expanded domestic intelligence gathering, testimony before HR Armed Services subcom; copy of intelligence plan and 'related documents' were taken from White House by J W Dean 3d shortly before he was dismissed on Apr 30 as White House counsel; top-ranking members of Sen Watergate com and of Sen Armed Services Com say on June 7 that Dean documents were not leaked by those coms; Sen Baker says Joint Com on Atomic Energy, which has high security facilities, permitted Watergate com to store papers in separate safe in area protected 24 hrs a day by guards and automatic detection systems
Date: 09 June 1973
Special to The New York Times
White House office of Telecommunications Policy Dir C T Whitehead reasserts on June 8 his belief that broadcasters alone must determine what goes on air without any interference from Govt, speech, Indiana Broadcasters Assn; renews his attack on fairness doctrine and other rules of FCC that have required broadcasters to air both sides of controversies and to carry programming that is at least somewhat diversified; says that trend toward expended role for Fed Govt in broadcasting 'reached its peak' when FCC and cts ruled against Rev Dr C McIntire in his application for license renewal for station WXUR in Media, Pa, essentially for violations of fairness doctrine; expresses some concern that Adm's bill, charging rules under which broadcasters' licenses are renewed, might not be enacted