News From Nowhere; Television and the News. By Edward Jay Epstein. 321 pp. New York: Random House. $7.95.
Date: 03 June 1973
By HERBERT J. GANS
Herbert GANS
revd by H J Gans

Draghixa Laurent (born 3 June 1973), best known as Draghixa, is a French former pornographic actress and singer.
Leia mais...O dia 3 de junho de 1973 foi um domingo sob o signo de ♊. Foi o dia 153 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi Richard M. Nixon.
Se você nasceu neste dia, você tem 52 anos de idade. Seu último aniversário foi no dia terça-feira, 3 de junho de 2025, 353 dias atrás. Seu próximo aniversário é no dia quarta-feira, 3 de junho de 2026, em 11 dias. Você viveu 19.346 dias, ou cerca de 464.308 horas, ou cerca de 27.858.498 minutos, ou cerca de 1.671.509.880 segundos.
Date: 03 June 1973
By HERBERT J. GANS
Herbert GANS
revd by H J Gans
Date: 03 June 1973
By STEVEN V. ROBERTS
Steven ROBERTS
Dist Atty J P Busch says interest lies in whether there was conspiracy to commit crime of burglary or malicious trespassing; there have already been important conflicts in testimony that may bear on question of conspiracy; 5 men who have admitted staging break-in on Sept 3, '71, have all been granted immunity from prosecution in Los Angeles, so only real interest focuses on higher ups
Date: 03 June 1973
Pittsburgh Press Co and Printing Pressmen's Union Local 9 reach agreement on new 1-yr contract on June 2, averting threatened strike
Date: 03 June 1973
By JOHN M. CREWDSON
Justice Dept sources rept on June 2 that former White House aide E Krogh Jr in sworn statement said that contrary to assertions FBI had knowledge in late June,'71, that Soviet Govt did not possess Pentagon papers before they were published by N Y Times; rept that although bulk of Pentagon papers were mysteriously delivered to Soviet Embassy in Washington, they did not arrive until after Times printed its 1st 3 installments and had been placed under temporary ct order to halt further publication; Krogh, in affidavit submitted in May at Los Angeles trial of D Ellsberg, saids that he approved burglary at office of Ellsberg's former psychiatrist Dr L J Fielding as part of White House investigation into unauthorized disclosure of documents; testifies that among other factors that led him to authorize illegal break-in was rept from FBI that Pentagon papers were in possession of Soviet Embassy in Washington prior to their publication by Times; said that authorization to engage in covert activity to obtain 'psychology history' of Ellsberg was recd from former Pres adviser J D Ehrlichman and that plans for acquiring information were developed by G G Liddy and E H Hunt Jr; Krogh illus
Date: 04 June 1973
Special to The New York Times
excerpts from recent series of articles about US written by B Strelnikov, Washington correspondent of Pravda, and by V Peskov of Komosomolskaya Pravda, youth daily
Date: 04 June 1973
By THEODORE SHABADSpecial to The New York Times
comment on news about US carried in USSR by Soviet newspaper Pravda on eve of visit to US of Soviet leader L I Brezhnev
Date: 03 June 1973
Article by H Scoville Jr, former asst dir of Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and former deputy dir of CIA, on W Beecher's July 23 '71 story in NY Times on US negotiating position in SALT talks and on Nixon's recent statements on importance of secrecy to natl security and specifically charging that Beecher story 'seriously compromised' US negotiating position; recalls consternation in White House at publication of story and assignment to investigating group 'the plumbers' of task of tracking down leak; questions why Nixon was so disturbed by leak since US negotiating position revealed publicly was probably already in process of presentation in SALT talks and, furthermore, was biased and non-negotiable from Russian point of view; says indications are that it was not Russian but Amer people Nixon wished to keep ignorant of US stand; suggests leak stemmed from someone who wished to sabotage SALT or to keep US from agreeing to a realistic compromise on issues; says damage in Beecher story was not in what it revealed to Amer people but in tactics it inspired in name of natl security in the attempted cure, tactics leading to many of abuses now grouped under name of Watergate; concedes secrecy can be often justified to keep critical defense information out of foreign hands, but holds it can rarely be justified as means of depriving Amer people of information available to others