23. března 1975 bylo neděle pod hvězdičkou ♈. Byl 81 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl Gerald R. Ford.
Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 51 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly pondělí 23. března 2026 před 112 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou úterý 23. března 2027, za 252 dní. Žili jste 18 740 dní nebo přibližně 449 781 hodin nebo přibližně 26 986 881 minut nebo přibližně 1 619 212 860 sekund.
23rd of March 1975 News
Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 23. března 1975
Saigon Curbs Reports On Troop Movements
Date: 23 March 1975
S Vietnamese Govt prohibits foreign and domestic news orgns from reporting tactical troop movements until they have been announced officially; move is made because of worsening mil situation in country; rule had been instituted in '71 but was largely ignored (S)
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NEWSMEN'S DINNER OPENED TO WOMEN; Guests at Gridiron Include Fords and Rockefellers
Date: 23 March 1975
Setting precedent, wives of Pres Ford and Vice Pres Rockefeller are guests with their husbands at Gridiron Club dinner as journalists group initiate 1st woman member in its 90-yr history, Helen Thomas of UPI (S)
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Anderson-Column Libel Case Due Trial.
Date: 23 March 1975
By BEN A. FRANKLIN Special to The New York Times
Ben FRANKLIN
US Dist Judge Howard F Corcoran upholds decision to rev libel suit against A Britton Hume and Jack Anderson for Hume's refusal to divulge source of item in Dec 13, '70, colunn by Anderson that Edward L Carey, former UMW gen counsel, and W A Boyle, former UMW pres, had been 'seen removing box full of documents from Boyle's office'; Boyle was then under investigation for complicity in '69 murder of Joseph A Yablonski; Carey filed $10-million libel action, including $1.5-million defamation claim against Hume; details (M)
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TV Review; Wallace Interviews Haldeman on CBS
Date: 24 March 1975
By JOHN J. O'CONNOR
John O'CONNOR
J J O'Connor rev of CBS TV program Haldeman: The Nixon Years--Conversations With Mike Wallace; notes controversy over 'checkbook journalism'; notes Haldeman has reptdly been paid 'more than $25,000' for exclusive int; notes CBS reptdly paid Watergate burglar G Gordon Liddy in 'neighborhood' of $15,000 for int earlier this yr; Haldeman, in int, pleaded guilty only foolishness and poor judgment and took advantage of public relations opportunity; says he waser never cruel, only tough; O'Connor questions morality of a soc that rewards its convicted felons with huge incomes from lectures, books, magazine articles and TV appearances; notes NBC has paid John W Dean 3d for ints
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Police in Chicago Kept Dossiers On Civic Leaders and Newsmen
Date: 23 March 1975
By SETH S. KING Special to The New York Times
Seth KING
Undercover agents of Chicago (Ill) Police Dept infiltrated several community action orgns during last several yrs and dept's intelligence unit has kept dossiers on scores of Chicago civic leaders, politicians and journalists; secret police surveillance of individuals is disclosed when Chicago Daily News obtains list of those on whom files were kept; list had been obtained by lawyers through subpoena in antidiscrimination ct action brought by black policemen's orgn; earlier in wk, Daily News found that police undercover agents had become active members of such groups as Met Area Housing Alliance, Rev Jesse L Jackson's People United to Save Humanity, Citizen's Action Program, Orgn for Better Austin, community improvement group in racially changing neighborhood of Austin, and Alliance to End Repression, which concerned itself with cases of alleged police brutality; Marcus W Salone, agent who infiltrated Austin orgn, served as group's pres from '72 until '74; surveillance list included First Natl Bank chmn Gaylord Freeman, Sears Roebuck chmn Arthur M Wood, Notre Dame pres Rev Theodore M Hesburgh, former Chicago Bears football star Gale Sayers, civil liberties lawyers Alexander Polikoff and Marshall Patner, State Sen Richard Newhouse, black lawyer who ran against Mayor Daley in recent primary, TV commentator Len O'Connor and Daily News columnist Mike Royko, both of whom have written books critical of Daley, and Repub State's Atty Bernard M Carey (M)
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Former United Press Head To Aid Journalism Students
Date: 23 March 1975
bank trustees have announced that late Karl A Bickel, former UP pres, set up scholarship fund for needy and deserving journalism and broadcast students at 3 univs; fund will provide $75,000 a yr for selected student attending communications and journalism colls at Stanford Univ, Univ of Fla and Univ of Tenn (S)
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Infectious Cronkitis
Date: 24 March 1975
By Roy Peter Clark
Roy Clark
Roy Peter Clark scores broadcast news media for discarding regional dialects, especially Southern dialect, for standard dialect promulgated by major networks and univ broadcasting schools; calls it 'Cronkitis'; suggests remedies
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FORD ASKS STUDY OF ASIAN POLICY; Terms Events 'Disturbing' and Says the U.S. Must Re-Examine Situation
Date: 23 March 1975
Pres Ford says he might veto tax cut bill if it calls for what he considers too large a reduction in taxes or contains too many extraneous amendments, int, Los Angeles Times (S)
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Food News; Breads: Rich and Unusual
Date: 23 March 1975
By HELEN P. SILVER Special to The New York Times
Helen SILVER
Article on different types of bread baked by Marion Josephson of W Orange, NJ; illus (M)
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BEAME OUTLINES PLAN TO REDUCE CITY BORROWING; Services Cutback to Result in Saving of $135-Million in Next Fiscal Year FINANCIAL VOW IS MADE Mayor Says All Obligations Will Be Paid Off on Time and All Payrolls Met Beame Outlines Plan for Sharp Reduction in City's Short-Term Borrowing
Date: 24 March 1975
By FRED FERRETTI
Fred FERRETTI
Mayor Beame announces that city will sharply reduce its short-term borrowing, as well as cut services, to save $135-million in fiscal '76; holds unusual Sunday news conf at Gracie Mansion to 'clear the air of some misconceptions and misunderstandings,' which, if left unchallenged, could seriously damage city's econ and its position in short-term and long-term money mkts; asserts city will pay all interest and redemption costs on time; remarks he is determined to balance fiscal '76 budget by recurring revenues in order to avoid further borrowing; criticizes city's banking community, and First Natl City Bank in particular, for indulging in what Beame calls 'current wave of unwarranted negative publicity' concerning city's credit; notes that bank vp Jac Friedgut had gone to Washington last wk and told city's Cong delegation that investing in city securities is risky; Friedgut is reptd to have said that his bank will no longer buy city securities; Beame declares banks have responsibility to let public know that NY securities are good investments; says he expects to reduce volume of next yr's borrowing by $2-billion, although city has been borrowing at rate of about $3-billion annually; observes that while indebtedness will increase by $800-million in fiscal '76, it would be down from $3-billion expected by June 30 (L)
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