1983. gada 6. janvāris bija ceturtdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes ♑. Tā bija 5 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija Ronald Reagan.
Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 43 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija otrdiena, 2026. gada 6. janvāris, pirms 136 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir trešdiena, 2027. gada 6. janvāris pēc 228 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 15 842 dienas jeb aptuveni 380 213 stundas, vai aptuveni 22 812 811 minūtes vai aptuveni 1 368 768 660 sekundes.
6th of January 1983 News
Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1983. gada 6. janvāris
U.S. Attorney Needn't Testify On News Report, Judge Rules
Date: 07 January 1983
Special to the New York Times
A Federal district judge ruled Tuesday that United States Attorney William Weld would not have to testify about an alleged unauthorized disclosure of information to Fox Butterfield, a reporter for The New York Times. Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. quashed a subpoena that would have required Mr. Weld to testify and also denied a motion filed by the attorney for George Collatos, a former city official who is serving a Federal prison term for extortion, to dismiss perjury indictments pending against him.
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MOYERS AND KURALT PROGRAMS PLANNED BY CBS
Date: 07 January 1983
By Sally Bedell
Sally Bedell
CBS News announced yesterday that two of its best-known correspondents, Bill Moyers and Charles Kuralt, would each be featured in his own weekly public affairs series in prime time over 10 weeks next summer, possibly beginning as early as May. The separate half-hour programs will air back to back at an hour and day still to be determined. ''We welcome a prime-time window for two of the most distinguished correspondents at CBS News, both of whom will be looking at America, its people, and its issues from different perspectives and in different styles,'' said Van Gordon Sauter, president of CBS News. ''We have been talking to the network for some time about prime-time vehicles for the news division, and we made a sale.''
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TV Summit
Date: 06 January 1983
By Neil Amdur
Neil Amdur
What does NBC really think of John Madden, the CBS football analyst? ''He's a lovable teddy bear,'' said Geoffrey Mason, the executive vice president of NBC Sports. ''I think he's brought a freshness to color commentary on football.
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News Analysis
Date: 07 January 1983
By Jonathan Fuerbringer, Special To the New York Times
Jonathan Fuerbringer
The sustained economic recovery that President Reagan has pledged but has not produced is being threatened by record budget deficits that would not disappear even if the economy began to grow strongly. As the President nears final decisions for the budget for the fiscal year 1984, which he will submit at the end of January, his economic advisers say he faces deficits of $200 billion a year through 1988, even with spending cuts he is now considering and even with the resumption of good economic growth. Although the President once promised to balance the budget by 1984, these huge deficits result, in part, from his own policies. The Structural Deficit The President's program - the tax cuts approved by Congress and his proposed buildup in military spending -have aggravated a condition that economists, and now the President himself, call structural budget deficits. These deficits are a product of a legislated mismatch between spending and income.
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News Analysis
Date: 06 January 1983
By Michael Oreskes, Special To the New York Times
Michael Oreskes
Governor Cuomo has used these first five days of his administration to lay out the difficult course he hopes to follow between his campaign promises to help people and the fact that in the next three months he must close what he described today as the biggest budget gap in the state's history. Mr. Cuomo in effect described to the Legislature in his State of the State Message today where he would like his administration to go, but not how he planned to get past the one serious obstacle in his way. ''He had said that his inaugural address presented the soul of his administration,'' Warren M. Anderson, leader of Republicans in the State Senate, said after hearing today's State of the State message. ''Now he has set forth its parameters - what he would like to do. Apparently we will have to wait until Feb. 1 to find out what he can afford to do.''
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News Summary; THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1983
Date: 06 January 1983
International A nuclear-powered Soviet satellite is apparently in trouble and will probably crash to earth this month, the Pentagon announced. It said the reconnaissance satellite was believed to contain about 100 pounds of enriched uranium and was similar to a Cosmos satellite that crashed in an uninhabited area of northern Canada in 1978, causing minor radiation contamination. (Page A1, Columns 3-4.) A nonaggression pact would be signed by the Warsaw Pact members if the NATO countries pledged not to use force against the Soviet bloc nations, they announced at the end of a meeting in Prague. Western diplomats said they believed the proposal had no more chance of being accepted than a similar offer that NATO rejected in 1958 as meaningless. (A3:1-3.)
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News Summary; FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1983
Date: 07 January 1983
International Soviet officials denied that a nuclear-powered reconnaissance satellite was out of control and in danger of crashing to earth, but United States officials said that the satellite was continuing to behave erratically and to lose altitude. The American officials warned they would be unable to give more than a few hours' warning of where or when the satellite was likely to crash. (Page A1, Columns 3-4.) Indira Gandhi suffered a major rebuff as her Congress Party lost control of two southern states that it had dominated since India became independent in 1947. Opposition parties swept to stunning victories in legislative elections in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, the only states where the Prime Minister's party had not previously been defeated. (A1:1.)
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PRESIDENT'S NEWS CONFERENCE ON FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC MATTERS
Date: 06 January 1983
Following is a transcript of President Reagan's news conference in Washington yesterday, as recorded by The New York Times: DOLE ANNOUNCEMENT President Reagan: Sit down. I have an announcement and also an opening statement, but the announcement first, and that's most important. I have, this afternoon, nominated Elizabeth Dole, who has been performing magnificently as my Assistant for Public Liaison in the White House, have nominated her to be Secretary of Transportation. And she will be replaced in her present position by our present Ambassador to Switzerland, Faith Ryan Whittlesey. And so welcome to the Cabinet -can't say welcome to the family, you've been part of it for so long. MRS. DOLE. Thank you very much. REAGAN. Well, thank you. And now the opening statement:
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TRANSIT POST NOMINEE
Date: 06 January 1983
By Phil Gailey, Special To the New York Times
Phil Gailey
Elizabeth Dole's nomination to be Secretary of Transportation is expected to alleviate what some White House officials have conceded privately to be an awkward situation. Mrs. Dole now works in the White House as a special assistant for public liaison, reaching out to constituency groups to build support for the President's programs. She has found herself defending the Administration's economic policies while her husband, Senator Bob Dole was on the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue publicly criticizing the same policies and offering alternatives.
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New Chinese Truck
Date: 06 January 1983
AP
A Chinese plant is making a five-ton truck that uses 27 percent less fuel than old models, the official New China News Agency reported today. The agency said the Changchun No.1 motor vehicle plant in northeast China is making a truck with a 115-horsepower engine that can carry one ton for 62 miles on 1.4 gallons of oil.
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