Il 12 giugno 1984 era una martedì sotto il segno zodiacale del ♊. Era il 163 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era Ronald Reagan.
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12th of June 1984 News
Notizie come è apparso sulla prima pagina del New York Times il 12 giugno 1984
U.S. NEWS IS SOLD TO ZUCKERMAN
Date: 12 June 1984
U.S. News & World Report Inc. and Mortimer Zuckerman announced today that the 47-year-old Boston real estate developer, who is also the publisher and owner of The Atlantic, had bought the weekly news magazine and the company's other properties for $168.5 million, or about $2,800 a share. Mr. Zuckerman, appearing with U.S. News executives at a news conference at the magazine's headquarters here, said the sale was subject to approval by the company's 300 employees, who are stockholders through a profit-sharing plan. However, the vote, probably to be held in the fall, is unlikely to block the sale because most of the company's shares are controlled by top editors and managers. That group, acting as directors of the company, has already approved Mr. Zuckerman's bid.
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Reagan News Conference
Date: 13 June 1984
UPI
Upi
President Reagan will hold a news conference Thursday at 8 P.M., Eastern daylight time, at the White House, it was announced today. The news conference, to be nationally televised, is to be the 25th of Mr. Reagan's Presidency. One of main topics is expected to be Mr. Reagan's reaction to a proposal by Senators Howard H. Baker Jr. and Charles H. Percy that the President hold annual summit meetings with Konstantin U. Chernenko, the Soviet leader.
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NEWS FROM PUNJAB: HOW NEW DELHI CURBS WHAT IS REPORTED
Date: 13 June 1984
By Sanjoy Hazarika
Sanjoy Hazarika
Anyone listening tonight to the Government-run All India Radio's main newscast would have learned that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was ''anguished'' by the developments in Punjab but that the situation there was improving. Listeners would have also learned that President Zail Singh felt that religion and politics should not be mixed. The newscast went on to report that the Government would help newspapers overcome newsprint shortages. On the international front, it reported that there was new fighting in Beirut and that officials from Communist countries were meeting in Moscow. But there was no word on All India Radio on the size or scope of the desertions by Sikhs in the Indian Army or that scores had been killed and wounded and more than 700 arrested in the most serious outbreak of unrest in the Indian Army since India became independent.
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RIGHTS UNIT'S NEW LEADER
Date: 13 June 1984
By Maurice Carroll
Maurice Carroll
Julius Levonne Chambers had been the first black editor in chief of The North Carolina Law Review and had gone on to earn a master of law degree at Columbia University when he was chosen as the first legal intern for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc. That happened in 1963. Now, after years as a civil rights lawyer, a career that saw him win the landmark case in which the United States Supreme Court upheld busing as a remedy for school segregation, Mr. Chambers is to succeed Jack Greenberg as head of the fund, which initiates lawsuits to combat racial discrimination. He was elected Monday at a meeting of the fund's board of directors. He will take over Sept. 1 at a tough time. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a separate entity, is suing to make the fund drop its initials and the fund is fighting to retain them. But those who know Mr. Chambers describe him as an ideal choice for a touchy job.
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EX-DAILY NEWS CORRESPONDENT
Date: 13 June 1984
Bernard Valery, a longtime Paris correspondent for The Daily News, died here Monday after a heart attack. He was 71 years old.
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; COMPANY NEWS
Date: 12 June 1984
Pic 'n' Save Rejects $23-a-Share Offer The Pic 'n' Save Corporation said yesterday that it does not plan to enter into negotiations on a $23-a-share acquisition offer that it has rejected. Adler & Shaykin, a New York- based investment fund that was part of a group that made the offer, said in a filing yesterday with the Securities and Exchange Commission that Pic 'n' Save directors had rejected the offer on Friday.
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COMPANY NEWS Castle & Cooke To Cut Some Units
Date: 12 June 1984
By Pamela G. Hollie
Pamela Hollie
Castle & Cooke Inc., the food company that markets Dole bananas and Bumble Bee tuna, said yesterday that it plans to get out of a number of low-return businesses and take a $78 million after-tax charge against fourth-quarter earnings. ''What we're doing here is cleaning house,'' said Ian Wilson, president and chief executive officer. For the fiscal year ended June 16, Castle & Cooke will report a $70 million after-tax loss, the company said. In the fiscal year 1983, the company had a loss of $49.7 million on revenues of $1.55 billion.
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TOP STATE COURT GIVES JOURNALISTS WIDER LIBEL PROTECTION IN RULING
Date: 13 June 1984
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
The New York State Court of Appeals gave new protection yesterday to news organizations that misstate details of a person's private life, so long as the misstatement is inadvertent and is part of a larger article about public issues. A 1975 decision by the court created a special test for waging libel suits over news articles of ''legitimate public concern.'' Plaintiffs in those cases must prove that the publication was ''grossly irresponsible'' in failing to check on whether its information was accurate.
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Foreign Issue Of USA Today
Date: 12 June 1984
AP
USA Today, the Gannett Company's national daily newspaper, will begin distributing an international edition in Europe and parts of the Middle East on July 10, according to Allen H. Neuharth, chairman. The new edition will be printed in New York's Westchester County and flown overseas, he said Sunday.
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JAPAN URGES A NUCLEAR TEST BAN
Date: 13 June 1984
UPI
Upi
Japan told the United States and the Soviet Union today that it was time they accepted their responsibilities toward the world by banning all nuclear tests. Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe told the 40-nation Disarmament Conference at the start of its summer session that current East-West tensions ''have serious implications of an unprecedented nature for the survival of the whole human race.'' ''I call upon the United States and the Soviet Union, the powers possessing the majority of the existing nuclear arsenals, to realize their very special responsibility to mankind,'' he said, proposing a step-by-step formula for acomprehensive test ban.
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