1983. gada 23. jūnijs bija ceturtdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes ♋. Tā bija 173 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija Ronald Reagan.
Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 42 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija pirmdiena, 2025. gada 23. jūnijs, pirms 86 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir otrdiena, 2026. gada 23. jūnijs pēc 278 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 15 427 dienas jeb aptuveni 370 250 stundas, vai aptuveni 22 215 035 minūtes vai aptuveni 1 332 902 100 sekundes.
23rd of June 1983 News
Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1983. gada 23. jūnijs
CBS IN STRUGGLE OVER NEWS BUDGET
Date: 23 June 1983
By Sally Bedell Smith
Sally Smith
A struggle is under way at CBS between corporate management and officials at CBS News over a proposed budget cut in the operations of the news division, according to sources at CBS News. The controversy is focused on a $12 million cutback requested by CBS management in the news division's current operating budget of more than $200 million. This follows an earlier cutback of $7 million made last April. The issue came to a head in the last week, the CBS News sources said, during coverage of the visit to Poland by Pope John Paul II, when CBS News decided for budgetary reasons to reduce its coverage behind that of NBC and ABC.
Full Article
U.N. PRESS REPORT APPROVED
Date: 23 June 1983
By Bernard D. Nossiter, Special To the New York Times
Bernard
Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar has apparently helped win acceptance of findings regarding Western journalism that he had previously described as ''unfortunate and ill-considered.'' His action became known today when a United Nations report on the press was presented, for formal processing, to a committee.
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2 SLAIN U.S. JOURNALISTS FLOWN TO HONDURAN CAPITAL
Date: 23 June 1983
By Barbara Crossette, Special To the New York Times
Barbara Crossette
The bodies of the two American journalists who were killed on Tuesday on a road near the Nicaraguan border were flown here today en route to the United States. The two men, Dial Torgerson, 55 years old, The Los Angeles Times bureau chief for Mexico and Central America, and Richard Cross, 33, a photographer on assignment for U.S. News & World Report, died when their rented auto was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade that Honduran and United States officials said was fired from Nicaraguan territory. The car was also reportedly hit by machine-gun fire, which seriously wounded a local resident who was walking nearby. The Nicaraguan Government, however, said today that its soldiers did not fire the grenade that hit the journalists' car, and it denounced the Honduran charge as a false statement linked with a Central Intelligence Agency ''scheme whose object is to justify greater aggression against Nicaragua.'' On Tuesday night, officials here had reported mistakenly that the two Americans had employed a Honduran driver who was wounded in the attack. Today Robert Callahan, a spokesman for the United States Embassy in Tegucigalpa, said that the two men were alone in the car at the time of their deaths. He said the grenade had hit the car directly ''at window level.''
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News Summary; FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1983
Date: 24 June 1983
International Washington criticized apartheid as ''morally wrong'' in the Reagan Administration's most comprehensive statement on southern Africa in nearly two years. The Administration said that South Africa's racial separation policies would inevitably be dropped and that it was therefore crucial for the United States to help insure that this occurs peacefully and not violently. (Page A1, Column 1.) Yasir Arafat assailed Syria, accusing Damascus of orchestrating the rebellion against him by dissident Fatah officers to undermine his leadership and bring the Palestine Liberation Organization under direct Syrian control. He told reporters that Syrian forces were choking off all supplies to his supporters in Lebanon. (A9:1-2.)
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News Summary; THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1983
Date: 23 June 1983
INTERNATIONAL The Pope held an unexpected meeting in Cracow with the Polish leader, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski. The Government said the meeting had been requested by Vatican officials. The meeting was the second with General Jaruzelski in John Paul II's eight-day tour of Poland in which he has repeatedly expressed strong support for the outlawed Solidarity union. Later, the official press agency said the conferees had expressed hope that the Pope's visit "will contribute to a peaceful development of social like in Poland." (Page A1, Column1.) An arms control plan was denounced by four former directors of the nation's weapons control agency. In Senate testimony, all four said American negotiating efforts in Geneva would be damaged by the proposal by the by the agency's present director, Kenneth L. Adelman, that Washington would abandon the MX missile if Moscow gave up most of its medium and heavy land-based strategic missiles. (A1:2.)
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Merger Talks Again For Maryland Cup
Date: 24 June 1983
The Maryland Cup Corporation said yesterday that once again it was discussing its acquisition by a major corporation. Unlike several times in the past, however, the Owings Mills, Md., company did not describe the talks as ''preliminary.''
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CHIEF NEGOTIATORS FOR LABOR AND MANAGEMENT IN CONSOLIDATED EDISON STRKE
Date: 23 June 1983
By William G. Blair
William Blair
In 1960, in what would have been his last year at St. John's University Law School, Patrick J. Gallagher dropped out and entered the Democratic primary for a State Assembly seat from Queens. ''I lost, or I probably wouldn't be doing what I'm doing,'' said Mr. Gallagher of his role as the leader of the strike of 16,000 utility workers against the Consolidated Edison Company. The union, Local 1-2 of the Utility Workers of America, has struck Con Edison only three times in the last 57 years - the last time in 1968, the previous time in 1926, the year of the 57-year-old Mr. Gallagher's birth. Mr. Gallagher, who is a second-generation Irish American with family roots in County Donegal, has held the top elected full-time post in the union, that of business manager, only since April 8. But his association with the union leadership goes back to 1960, when he joined its executive board on a part-time basis. He was elected secretary-treasurer in 1962 and president in 1971, both also full-time positions.
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A.M.A. PLANS DRIVE TO COUNTER REPORTS OF DIOXIN AS HAZARD
Date: 23 June 1983
By Bayard Webster
Bayard Webster
The American Medical Association, charging that some news reports of the dangers of the toxic chemical dioxin have been overblown, voted yesterday to conduct a publicity campaign to alleviate public fears concerning the chemical compound. The association's 351-member House of Delegates, meeting in Chicago to take up a number of medical issues, adopted a resolution on the dioxin issue that said such a campaign was designed ''to get accurate information before the public to prevent irrational reaction and unjustified public fright.''
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2 Surrender in Murder Case
Date: 23 June 1983
UPI
Upi
Two Philadelphia men wanted in the robbery and slaying of a Bucks County pharmacist last week have surrendered to a newspaper columnist.
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Fate of Blues Still Undecided
Date: 23 June 1983
AP
The National Hockey League Board of Governors ended their first day of meetings today with the fate of the St. Louis Blues franchise still undecided. But the board banned the wearing of long pants in games next season.
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