Daily News Settles With 4 Journalists
Date: 14 June 1987
By Mary Connelly and Carlyle C. Douglas
Mary Connelly
LEAD: Coming after a trial that seemed to let no recrimination go unaired, the statement issued last week by The Daily News and the four black journalists who sued it was jarringly friendly. ''The past is over,'' they said on the occasion of reaching a settlement on damages. ''Trust has been restored.''
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NEWS SUMMARY: SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1987
Date: 13 June 1987
LEAD: International 2-5 Espionage charges against a marine were dropped. The Marine Corps said it had been unable to corroborate Cpl. Arnold Bracy's confession of spying at the United States Embassy in Moscow. Page 1 South Korean students fought police throughout the heart of Seoul, hurling bricks and gasoline bombs and chanting, ''Down with the military dictatorship.
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DAILY NEWS BIAS TRIAL VIEWED AS AID TO BLACKS
Date: 13 June 1987
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
LEAD: Leading black journalists have hailed the plaintiffs' success in a long and bitter racial discrimination trial against The Daily News as a significant development that will encourage the promotion and hiring of blacks in the nation's newsrooms.
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SATURDAY NEWS QUIZ
Date: 13 June 1987
By Donna Anderson
Donna Anderson
LEAD: Questions are based on news reports in The Times this week. Answers appear on page 50
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3 PANAMA PAPERS WON'T PUBLISH WITH CENSORSHIP
Date: 13 June 1987
By Stephen Kinzer, Special To the New York Times
Stephen Kinzer
LEAD: Three of Panama's six morning newspapers failed to appear today after editors refused to submit articles for censorship.
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ANSWERS TO QUIZ
Date: 13 June 1987
LEAD: Questions appear on page 10.
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A SUPERHERO FOR CARTOONISTS?
Date: 14 June 1987
By Katina Alexander
Katina Alexander
LEAD: RICHARD NEWCOMBE is fond of saying that he is ''like Lincoln, freeing the slaves.'' Six months ago, Mr. Newcombe founded Creators Syndicate, which claims to offer its cartoonists and artists emancipation from what he calls ''indentured servitude'' - the 10- to 20-year contracts and the signing over of ownership rights that have characterized the syndication business for years.
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Why Libels Suits Are 'Sand in the Gears'
Date: 13 June 1987
By Henry R. Kaufman
Henry Kaufman
LEAD: The settlement of a suit by former Senator Paul Laxalt against the McClatchy newspaper chain leaves in its wake serious questions about the good sense and propriety of libel suits by Presidential candidates and high public officials. In Mr. Laxalt's case, both sides proclaimed victory after an ambiguous settlement.
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