2 septembrie 1984 era un duminică sub semnul stelut al lui ♍. Era ziua 245 din an. Președintele Statelor Unite a fost Ronald Reagan.
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2nd of September 1984 News
Știri așa cum au apărut pe prima pagină a New York Times la 2 septembrie 1984
2 St. Paul Publications Plan To Join as Single Newspaper
Date: 02 September 1984
AP
The St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch, which combined their morning and afternoon news-gathering staffs this spring, will publish a single, all-day newspaper beginning Jan. 2, officials said. The combined newspaper, which will bear both names, will continue to provide home-delivery service to both morning Pioneer Press and afternoon Dispatch subscribers, said John Henry, vice president and general manager of the papers, which are owned by Knight- Ridder Inc. of Miami.
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Greek and Turkish Cypriots Accept U.N. Move for Talks
Date: 02 September 1984
AP
Greek and Turkish Cypriots both have approved the new United Nations proposals for peace talks the divided Eastern Mediterranean island. Rauf Denktash, the Turkish Cypriot leader, said the Turkish Cypriots had informed the United Nations Secretary General, Javier Perez de Cuellar, that they were ready to start talks ''at any time, anywhere'' on the basis of ''working points'' that the Secretary General submitted to both sides in August.
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JOURNALISTS PLAN TO CHALLENGE U.S. ON INSIDER TRADING CASE
Date: 02 September 1984
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
Concerned that Federal charges recently brought against a former reporter for The Wall Street Journal could threaten freedom of the press, several journalistic organizations intend to enter the litigation to challenge the Government's position. ''We think that a reporter has a duty to his publication and to his readers, but not one enforceable by the Government's insider securities law,'' said James E. Clayton, co-director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, a Washington-based organization that monitors First Amendment issues. Last Tuesday the Federal Government brought charges of criminal conspiracy, securities fraud and mail and wire fraud against R. Foster Winans, who had been one of two writers of The Journal's ''Heard on the Street'' column until he was dismissed in late March, when he confirmed he had systematically provided advance information about the column to outsiders. Indicted on the same charges were David J. Carpenter, a former news clerk at The Journal who was Mr. Winans's roommate in Manhattan, and Kenneth P. Felis, a former stockbroker with Kidder, Peabody & Company.
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CHERNENKO STATEMENT URGES TALKS WITH U.S. ON DISARMAMENT ISSUES
Date: 02 September 1984
By Seth Mydans, Special To the New York Times
Seth Mydans
Konstantin U. Chernenko, the Soviet leader, was quoted today as saying that an agreement with the United States on banning weapons in outer space would ease the way for discussions on other disarmament issues. The comment, in the form of answers to questions put to him by Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper, was the first major statement attributed to him since he left for a vacation July 15. It was not clear when or how the interview with Mr. Chernenko had been conducted. . The absence of the Soviet leader from public view has aroused rumors about his health and political standing. In the last week, his name has reappeared prominently in the official press on a number of minor statements. In the Pravda article Mr. Chernenko was quoted as repeating the Soviet position that the United States was scuttling the possibility of space-weapons talks because of its insistence on raising questions about stalled nuclear-weapons negotiations.
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NEWS SUMMARY;
Date: 03 September 1984
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1984 International Talks faltered in Israel on the formation of a bipartisan government to be formed by the Likud bloc and the Labor Alignment. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, the Likud leader, and Shimon Peres, the Labor leader, said on leaving a negotiating session that ''serious obstacles'' were blocking formation of a coalition cabinet. They parted without setting a date for a new meeting. (Page 1, Column 4.) Tens of thousands of Sikhs turned out for an anti-Government rally in India's Punjab state at which religious leaders called for a mass march to liberate their Golden Temple, their holiest shrine, from army occupation. They also shouted their approval for a merger of conflicting Sikh political factions into a unified party known as Akali Dal. The demonstration was also intended to ratify a broad anti- Government program that Indians believe could lead to sharper confrontations with supporters of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. (1:5.)
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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS;
Date: 02 September 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
It was among the largest cash robberies on record in the United States and one of the smoothest. The robber parked his car in the secure garage of the Wells Fargo Armored Service Corporation in West Hartford, Conn.
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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; Bomb Sniffing
Date: 02 September 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
After two terrorist bombings - one in Beirut in October 1983 that killed 241 American servicemen and one the next month that caused damage outside the United States Senate chamber - dogs trained to sniff out explosives were moved into the White House compound in November. Officials said the dogs would screen every entering vehicle, including the limousines of Cabinet members.
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Federal 'Pyramid'
Date: 02 September 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
''Pharaoh Wanted. Pyramid for Sale.'' That was the Federal Government's invitation to buyers of its surplus property in the fall of 1983, but nobody was offering enough for the pyramid-like structure - the Chet Holifield Federal Building in Laguna Niguel, Calif.
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Poverty Shuttle
Date: 02 September 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
After New York City began putting some of its homeless families in hotels in New Jersey, that state's Governor objected, and one of its counties, Essex, sued the city in July 1983. Governor Kean called the city's action ''the height of irresponsibility,'' while Essex asked Superior Court to bar the practice.
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FERRARO'S CROWD APPEAL SEEMS TO SURVIVE STORM
Date: 02 September 1984
By Dudley Clendinen
Dudley Clendinen
As Geraldine A. Ferraro's motorcade swung around a curve and into the center of Hartford on Thursday, the driver of the last bus, a silent man of stern mustache, lost his composure. ''Holy Christmas!'' he exclaimed as the bus rolled into the arms of the massed crowd of 7,000 people awaiting her. ''I brought Gary Hart's campaign into here, and there wasn't anything like this.'' Nor, in the long months of Walter F. Mondale's determined stumping, have there been crowds to equal the size and spirit of those that continued to turn out for Mrs. Ferraro this last week. In an age when televised appearances have replaced large public rallies, political crowds, with the exception of the Rev. Jesse Jackson's campaign, have become a feature of the past. But by the time she hit Connecticut's capital, almost two weeks after the three major networks interrupted their schedule of soap operas to telecast her news conference on her family's financial affairs, Mrs. Ferraro seemed to have run the gantlet with her crowd appeal intact.
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