22 lutego 1983 roku była wtorek pod znakiem zodiaku ♓. Był to 52 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Ronald Reagan.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 43 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły niedziela, 22 lutego 2026 roku, 90 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień poniedziałek, 22 lutego 2027 roku, w 274 dni. Żyłeś przez 15 796 dni lub około 379 118 godzin lub około 22 747 120 minut lub około 1 364 827 200 sekund.
22nd of February 1983 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 22 lutego 1983 roku
TV: 'CRIME IN AMERICA' AS SEEN BY ABC
Date: 23 February 1983
By John Corry
John Corry
CRIME has always occupied a large part of television news, mostly as a subject for local stations. Now, however, the network news programs on ABC are examining what may be our most abiding social concern in a series called ''Crime in America.'' Since Feb. 13, the series logo - the crown of the Statue of Liberty, the sound of prison doors slamming shut - has been seen and heard throughout America. ABC has blanketed the land.
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Salvador Rebels Report 3 Journalists Are Safe
Date: 22 February 1983
Special to the New York Times
Three journalists, including an American, who have been missing for the last week were purportedly interviewed Sunday night on a new rebel radio station. In a broadcast on Guazapa radio, three men identified as the missing journalists said they were safe and wanted a Red Cross escort out of guerrilla territory.
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JERSEY COURT WEIGHS WHEN TO CLOSE PRETRIAL HEARINGS
Date: 23 February 1983
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
The New Jersey Supreme Court will hear arguments today on when pretrial court proceedings should be closed to the public to minimize news coverage that might hurt a murder defendant's chances for a fair trial. Although 36 states have reinstated capital punishment in the last decade, New Jersey is one of the first to deal directly with the question of the need for special pretrial procedures when a defendant could be facing execution. Both of the cases the court picked as vehicles for considering the free press-fair trial issue involve well-publicized killings in which the prosecution has said it would seek the death penalty. One case involves the killing Dec. 5 of a Morris County waitress, and the other, the death of a receptionist in a Trenton nursing home Dec. 30.
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SECRECY VS. SECURITY
Date: 23 February 1983
By Sissela Bok
Sissela Bok
Never, except in wartime, has America experienced such a rapid, extensive buildup of Government secrecy as in the last few years. The increase has come about through changes so disparate, often inconspicuous and at times so sudden as to elude adequate public debate. Together, these changes signal a sharp reversal of the last two decades' movement toward greater public access to Government information. It is time to assess their cumulative impact and to decide whether they truly serve the nation's best interests.
In the name of national security, Federal officials have moved to bring about not only sweeping increases of secrecy about Government activities but also new forms of control over the private sector. They have sought to curtail access to information in several ways: by limiting the scope of the Freedom of Information Act, by giving administrators greater power to classify documents as secret and by expanding covert activities by the Central Intelligence Agency and Federal Bureau of Investigation both at home and abroad.
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WRITER ASSERTS PRAVDA ALTERED HIS LETTER
Date: 23 February 1983
By Joseph B. Treaster
Joseph
Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper, yesterday used what it said was a letter from a man in West Hartford, Conn., in an attempt to revive indirectly the idea of a summit meeting between Yuri V. Andropov, the Soviet leader, and President Reagan. But the author of the letter, Joseph Dubitsky, an 82-year-old retired pharmacist, said the material attributed to him by Pravda was ''distorted completely from A to Z.'' Pravda reported that Mr. Dubitsky had written to Yuri V. Andropov asking, ''Don't you think that a meeting between you and our President would be a reasonable step?'' But in a telephone interview, Mr. Dubitsky said, ''I never requested such a thing.'' ''In your first speech, sir,'' Pravda continued with its purported quotation of Mr. Dubitsky, ''you mentioned that you'd like to see a revival of detente and a restoration of good relations between our countries. Let's press for it, let's live in peace.''
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MARKETS ROILED BY OIL NEWS
Date: 23 February 1983
By Alexander R. Hammer
Alexander Hammer
As the price news from the oil world flowed through the financial markets yesterday, stocks sagged in accelerated trading with energy and bank issues the main casualties. To the credit markets, the oil trend suggested lower inflation and prices scored impressive gains. In the futures markets, the expectation of lower inflation produced the opposite effect. With traders counting on a strengthening dollar, precious metals plunged their limits. Gold for current delivery sank $25.70, to $480 an ounce, on the Commodity Exchange.
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News Analysis
Date: 22 February 1983
By William Serrin
William Serrin
That the Toyota Motor Corporation and General Motors Corporation say they may bypass the United Automobile Workers in the California plant they plan to operate demonstrates the difficulties foreign companies face as they enter the United States. Not only did the companies suggest that they might attempt to thwart union activity in their plant in Fremont, Calif., which was a G.M. plant until it was closed last year, but Nissan Motor Manufacturing Corporation, U.S.A., is trying to do the same at the new plant it is building at Smyrna, Tenn., south of Nashville. Another foreign auto maker, the Honda Motor Company, which builds cars and motorcycles at Marysville, Ohio, has said it will not block the U.A.W. effort to organize its workers, but the union has been forced to engage in energetic organizing efforts, and representation has yet to be achieved. Remarks in Fremont Thursday by Roger B. Smith, chairman of General Motors, and Eiji Toyoda, Toyota's chairman, touched off confusion among union leaders. The two executives suggested that the new company being formed to operate the Fremont plant was not bound by the contract that G.M. had with the union at Fremont.
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News Summary; TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1983
Date: 22 February 1983
International The Middle East peace plan proposed by President Reagan is an unacceptable basis for solving the Palestinian problem, the Palestine Liberation Organization has decided. A P.L.O. spokesman also said the organization would not give Jordan a mandate to negotiate with Washington on its behalf. (Page A1, Column 6.) Features of distant galaxies have been revealed in infrared images received from a new United States telescope that has begun orbiting the Earth. The telescope has also revealed cosmic ''maternity wards'' where clouds of interstellar gas and dust appear to be in various stages of giving birth to stars. (A1:2-4.)
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News Summary; WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1983
Date: 23 February 1983
International Flexibility on arms controls in Europe was suggested by President Reagan in a wide-ranging foreign policy address. He said he was ready to explore alternatives to his proposed ban on all American and Soviet medium-range missiles on the Continent if the principle of equality between the United States and the Soviet Union was respected. (Page A1, Column 1.) A guarantee of Israel's border with Lebanon once Israeli forces have withdrawn from Lebanese soil was offered by President Reagan. He apparently made the offer as an inducement to Israel to agree without further delay to a total pullback of its forces from Lebanon. (A1:4.)
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Second Group Sets Floppy Disk Plans
Date: 23 February 1983
Reuters
Seventeen American and Japanese companies will form a group to make a new three-inch micro floppy disk and drive to compete with a Sony-led group making a 3.5-inch floppy disk and drive, Hitachi Ltd. said today. The 17 companies, including Hitachi, Hitachi Maxwell Ltd. and the Matsushita Electric Industrial Company, have agreed to back the three-inch compact floppy disk format jointly developed by the companies in 1981, Hitachi said.
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