Strike to End at Indian Paper
Date: 22 August 1979
New Delhi Times will reappear on Aug 23, ending 9-week-old strike (S)
The August 22, 1979 was a Wednesday under the star sign of ♌. It was the 233 day of the year. President of the United States was Jimmy Carter.
If you were born on this day, you are 46 years old. Your last birthday was on the Friday, August 22, 2025, 48 days ago. Your next birthday is on Saturday, August 22, 2026, in 316 days. You have lived for 16,850 days, or about 404,418 hours, or about 24,265,102 minutes, or about 1,455,906,120 seconds.
Date: 22 August 1979
New Delhi Times will reappear on Aug 23, ending 9-week-old strike (S)
Date: 23 August 1979
spokesman for army in Teheran says that all official information on events in Kurdish region will now have to be taken from Iranian newspapers and state-controlled radio and TV; with at least 26 newspapers and magazines closed by authorities, remaining papers are tightly controlled by law that came into force last week; law provides that Iranian journalists are subject to jail sentences for articles considered insulting to Government and religious leaders, and foreign correspondents have been warned not to write anything that could be construed as threat to nation's security (S)
Date: 22 August 1979
Iranian authorities, in continuing crackdown, order journalists Towyn Mason (BBC), Andrew Whitley (London Financial Times), Jerome Dumoulin (L'Express) and 2 from West Germany to leave country (S)
Date: 22 August 1979
Topics Column editorial lauds trend throughout US of courts opening up their proceedings to TV cameras
Date: 22 August 1979
Special to The New York Times
East Germany announces arrest of West German journalist Peter Felten on charges of espionage; it is 1st such case to become known since East German Government put into effect 3 weeks ago new restrictions that West Germany has criticized as hampering East-West ties (S)
Date: 22 August 1979
By RICHARD J. MEISLIN Special to The New York Times
Richard MEISLIN
New Government announces sweeping bill of rights for its citizens, promising them equal rights under law, orderly process of justice and, with some limits, right to free expression; civil liberties exempt from suspension provisions are prohibitions against torture, slavery, imprisonment for debt, use of compulsory methods of changing thought or religious beliefs and arbitrary revocation of nationality; bill becomes effective immediately for all but those people who are under investigation for possible crimes committed during Somoza regime; Government simultaneously announces that order giving it emergency power to rule has been extended for 30 days; bill also abolishes death penalty; other specifics of bill noted (M)
Date: 22 August 1979
By LES BROWN
Les BROWN
NBC vice chmn Richard S Salant reportedly has decided to replace Lester Crystal as pres of news division (M)
Date: 22 August 1979
By GLADWIN HILL
Gladwin HILL
Assessment of President Carter's 2d environmental message; notes comparison with '77 environmental message brings sense of problems persisting rather than problems solved; describes areas in which Carter has made accomplishments and areas in which little or no progress has been made (M)