23 stycznia 1983 roku była niedziela pod znakiem zodiaku ♒. Był to 22 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Ronald Reagan.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 42 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły czwartek, 23 stycznia 2025 roku, 261 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień piątek, 23 stycznia 2026 roku, w 103 dni. Żyłeś przez 15 602 dni lub około 374 470 godzin lub około 22 468 230 minut lub około 1 348 093 800 sekund.
23rd of January 1983 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 23 stycznia 1983 roku
AT SKI AREAS, SNOW NEWS IS GOOD NEWS
Date: 23 January 1983
By Patricia Turner
Patricia Turner
NEW JERSEY homeowners may have been pleased with the relatively mild winter - and low fuel bills - that lingered until mid-January, but the state's ski-resort operators saw the unseasonable weather in terms of layoffs and low returns.
They are hoping that the recent snowstorm and drop in temperature, together with Ski Fest '83, which opened yesterday and runs through next Sunday, will give them a chance to recoup.
Four areas make up the New Jersey Ski Areas Association - Vernon Valley/Great Gorge in McAfee, Craigmeur in Newfoundland, Hidden Valley in Vernon and Ski Mountain in Pine Hill.
Peggy Kurlander, president of the association, said that the poor ski weather, especially the washout during Christmas week, had been disastrous.
Full Article
A LITTLE GOOD NEWS
Date: 23 January 1983
By James Reston
James Reston
There is some good news in the capital of the United States, after all. Recently, when it appeared that the American economy was getting out of hand, and even that its Social Security system was going bankrupt, some longing for unity began to intrude on the clamor of the front pages. For example, when the executive and legislative branches of the Government could not agree on how to resolve the Social Security crisis, President Reagan appointed a non-partisan commission of politicians and economists from outside the Government to study the problem. Under the leadership of Alan Greenspan they came up with a compromise. They recommended it as the best they could do in the national interest. It was accepted within a few days by the President and the leaders of Congress.
Full Article
Charity at Odds
Date: 23 January 1983
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
When Robert Brinkley Smithers of Mill Neck, L.I., a recovered alcoholic, said in 1971 that he intended to give $10 million to Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan to set up an alcoholic treatment center, he was about to set a record. It was destined to be the largest single grant to fight alcoholism ever made by anyone, including the Federal Government.
Full Article
SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 24 January 1983
Arrows Beaten, By Spirit, 3 To 2, Ap
Arrows Beaten
Steve Buttle's goal gave the Pittsburgh Spirit a 3-2 victory over the New York Arrows today in a Major Indoor Soccer League game.
Full Article
SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 24 January 1983
Skating Mark Set, By Andrea Schone, Upi
Skating Set
Andrea Schone of East Germany set a women's world record of 7 minutes 40.97 seconds in the 5,000 meters today and won the European speed skating championship at the end of a two-day meet.
Full Article
News Analysis
Date: 24 January 1983
By John Vinocur, Special To the New York Times
John Vinocur
President Francois Mitterrand's address to the West German Parliament, warning about the dangers of splitting the United States from the defense of Europe, has opened up a new area of the missile debate that American speechmakers have carefully avoided. In a direct, forceful presentation Thursday, Mr. Mitterrand said in substance that the debate on deploying American medium-range missiles in Europe was less one of numbers than of political will, with the essential test for the Atlantic alliance being its ability to stop an attempt to ''decouple'' the United States and Western Europe. Criticism by Mitterrand Although he never used the word neutralism, Mr. Mitterrand attacked ''all those who would bet on a decoupling'' and said they were the people who risked creating an imbalance of forces that would threaten peace. The speech served as a warning about the consequences of the rise of neutralism in West Germany, and as an attack on those Bonn politicians who do not fully support Mr. Mitterrand's thesis that Europe ''must not be deprived of a means to answer the nuclear weapons specifically directed against her.''
Full Article
Musings on Muse
Date: 23 January 1983
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Britain has its poet laureate; the United States has its Consultant in Poetry in English to the Library of Congress. When Anthony Hecht, the Pulitzer Prize poet and professor of poetry at the University of Rochester, took over last October as the 20th Consultant, it became almost obligatory for him to write a poem about the city of Washington.
Full Article
Doria Treasure
Date: 23 January 1983
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
So when will that safe recovered from the sunken liner Andrea Doria be opened? In March 1982 it was at rest in a special cold-water tank in the New York Aquarium, and Peter Gimbel, who led the expedition that recovered the reputed treasure, said he hoped to open it live on television that fall at the end of a film about the expedition. ''Well, everything takes longer than one thinks,'' Mr. Gimbel observes.
Full Article
Mount Laurel Revisited
Date: 23 January 1983
In the years since the New Jersey Supreme Court struck down exclusionary zoning in Mount Laurel Township, and by extension communities like it throughout the state, it has become apparent that landmark rulings do not always change the lay of the land. So last week the state's highest court handed down Mount Laurel II.
Full Article
Budget or No, Reagan Keeps The Show Going
Date: 23 January 1983
As White House budget hands scurried about backstage last week trying to find the right numbers, their principal was front and center, looking to set the right tone. To mollify party moderates, President Reagan journeyed to Chicago for a fundraiser for Republican Senator Charles H. Percy, where he promised new proposals for job training for the unemployed. On the way, he dropped in on a nearby all-black parochial high school where, as if to reassure traditionalists, he emphasized the link between education and employment. At a cheerful news conference he celebrated the second anniversary of his inauguration with a review of ''the accumulated damage'' in economic and international affairs he had inherited and the progress he had made. Yesterday, he covered his social agenda, promising in his weekly radio address to press for Congressional action on tuition tax credits for private schools, school prayer and abortion.
Full Article
Army Job Bias
Date: 23 January 1983
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
As an employer, the Army concedes that it discriminates. Because of the nature of its work, it says, it cannot hire homosexuals.
Full Article