Montreal Paper Is Struck
Date: 06 November 1975
Montreal daily Le Devoir does not publish on Nov 5 as 29 members of paper's staff walk out after breakdown of contract negotiations (S)
6 november 1975 was een donderdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♏. Het was de 309e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was Gerald R. Ford.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 50 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op donderdag 6 november 2025, 241 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op vrijdag 6 november 2026, in 123 dagen. Je hebt 18.504 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 444.098 uur, of ongeveer 26.645.883 minuten, of ongeveer 1.598.752.980 seconden.
Date: 06 November 1975
Montreal daily Le Devoir does not publish on Nov 5 as 29 members of paper's staff walk out after breakdown of contract negotiations (S)
Date: 06 November 1975
Raymond E Dix, newly-elected pres of Inter-Amer Press Assn, on Nov 5 issues statement condemning 'new wave of repression' against journalists in Brazil, says that since assn's annual meeting in Sao Paulo, Brazilian Govt had started campaign against press; says assn is concerned over death of journalist Vladimir Herzog (S)
Date: 07 November 1975
By DAMON STETSON
Damon STETSON
Citywide Coordinating Com of Newspaper Guild on Nov 6 picks NY Times as union's strike target on Nov 11 if negotiators fail to reach contract settlement by then; guild exec vp Harry Fisdell comments; Stereotypers Union Local 1 and Times and Daily News are reptd close to settlement (M)
Date: 06 November 1975
Spokesman for union representing 855 editorial, ad and circulation workers at Phila Inquirer and Daily News says strike is certainty when contract expires on Nov 8 (S)
Date: 07 November 1975
By Jonathan PowerAssemblage by Michael Sullivan
Jonathan Michael
Jonathan Power on news events played up by media; holds too often media are obsessed with passing trivia of dramatic events; notes John Wilheim, dean of School of Journalism at Ohio Univ, observed that UPI in Feb '62 had no dispatch on events in Chile (S)
Date: 07 November 1975
By RICHARD D. LYONS Special to The New York Times
HR Ethics Com, 7-3, on Nov 6 dismisses complaint that Repr Michael J Harrington illegally disclosed classified testimony about CIA's covert activities in Chile; complaint dismissed on tech ground that no rules of Cong had been violated; com rules that April 22, '74 meeting at which CIA Dir William E Colby testified, had been convened under conditions that violated HR rules and therefore Repr Roland L Beard's complaint was invalid; Repr John J Flynt Jr, Ethics Com chmn, says no public notice was issued to call April 22 meeting; Harrington acknowledges that he discussed testimony with other Congressmen and reporters, but denies he had been source of several news accts of Colby's testimony; releases lr from Repr F Edward Hebert as evidence, referring to Congressman from Mass who is self-confessed breaker of rules of HR and self-confessed leaker of sensitive information of US to unauthorized people and to press; Harrington, defending his action, did not refer to illegality of April 22 meeting, which supports repts that Dem leaders are seeking to quash formal investigation (M)
Date: 07 November 1975
Sen rejects Sen Javits amendment to exempt system from legis to require most of Govt to open its meetings to public
Date: 06 November 1975
mil policemen in Lisbon on Nov 5 fire weapons into air to break up street fighting between Communists and Socialists battling for control of newspaper O Seculo; trouble reptdly began when group of Socialists went to paper to protest its Communist control despite vote by staff members to oust far-left and Communist editors (S)
Date: 06 November 1975
By HENRY GINIGER Special to The New York Times
Henry Special
journalist working in Bilbao, in Basque region of Spain, received lr from 'tribunal' announcing that he had been condemned to death but that sentence would be held in abeyance if he changed his reptg on Basque problems; journalist left Bilbao (S)
Date: 07 November 1975
By JOHN M. CREWDSON Special to The New York Times
CIA dir William Colby, in response to questions by HR Intelligence Com, acknowledges that CIA had continued its practice, 1st disclosed 2 yrs ago, of employing as informants abroad some part-time correspondents of major Amer news-gathering orgns; declines to discuss in public session names either of correspondents or orgns, but indicates that practice extends to free-lance radio and TV correspondents as well as part-time newspaper and magazine writers; emphasizes that CIA does not now employ any full-time correspondents of Amer news-gathering orgns (S)