Le 23 octobre 1982 était un samedi sous le signe astral du ♎. C'était le 295ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était Ronald Reagan.
Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 43 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le jeudi 23 octobre 2025, il y a 258 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le vendredi 23 octobre 2026, dans 106 jours. Vous avez vécu 15 964 jours, soit environ 383 147 heures, ou environ 22 988 848 minutes, ou environ 1 379 330 880 secondes.
23rd of October 1982 News
Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 23 octobre 1982
U.S. VOICES REGRET TO FRANCE ON NEWS REPORT
Date: 24 October 1982
By John Vinocur
John Vinocur
The United States Ambassador to France expressed regret today to the French Government over an article that appeared in an American newspaper, and said he would ask the United States Attorney General's Office to determine how the newspaper had come to use classified embassy cablegrams in the article. Ambassador Evan Galbraith made the statement after publication of a report from New York in Friday's issue of The Wall Street Journal. The article reported that cablegrams to the State Department bearing the ambassador's signature told of French Government pressure on American banks to underwrite a $4 billion loan to France. Mr. Galbraith's expression of regret about the article was announced in a communique issued this afternoon by the Ministry of Economy and Finance. The ministry also rejected any allegations that France had placed any constraint on American banks.
Full Article
HOW TV COVERS THE GOVERNOR'S RACE
Date: 23 October 1982
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
Mario Cuomo and Lewis Lehrman were on WABC-TV Tuesday night and Wednesday night. Each explained how he would curb violent crime if elected Governor of New York. What was unusual about their appearances was that they came during the nightly news program, rather than in the commercials with which both men have been bombarding viewers in the four weeks since they won their party's nominations. The candidates and most surveys of voters agree that television is the medium on which most people rely for their political information. But until this week, more than halfway through the general election campaign, voters have been getting very little political coverage in the most watched 6 P.M. and 11 P.M. news programs.and 11 P.M. news programs.
Full Article
Seoul Sentences Critic Over Labor Comments
Date: 23 October 1982
AP
The Seoul District Criminal Court has sentenced the secretary of a Christian youth organization to 18 months in prison on charges of using the foreign press to defame the state. The secretary, Kim Chul Kee, was convicted on the basis of a statement distributed June 23 to foreign reporters in which he criticized the Government's stand on a labor dispute at Control Data Korea, an affiliate of the Minneapolis computer parts producer.
Full Article
BOGUS PAMPHLET DISTRIBUTED TO TIMES NEWSDEALERS
Date: 24 October 1982
Thousands of copies of a pamphlet apparently designed to look like a section of The New York Times were distributed to newsstand dealers last night, and several dealers said they had been asked to insert the pamphlet into the newspaper. The Times said the pamphlet was bogus and confiscated at least 6,000 copies. The pamphlet contained articles attacking Roy M. Cohn, the lawyer, Mayor Koch and Lewis E. Lehrman, the Republican-Conservative candidate for Governor.
Full Article
News Analysis
Date: 23 October 1982
By Clyde H. Farnsworth, Special To the New York Times
Clyde Farnsworth
Back in the 1950's, the American textile industry put pressure on the Government for protection against cheap imports. The Kennedy Administration gave in, setting ''temporary'' quotas that have not only lasted to this day, but have become part of an elaborate international market-sharing arrangement involving 40 countries. Now, many analysts see the new agreement for ''temporary,'' three-year quotas covering European steel exports to the United States as fitting a similar pattern. The agreement, which was announced Thursday, is likely to set off what one Common Market official described as ''a ripple of protectionism around the world.'' The Europeans, in order to sell the steel they can no longer ship to the United States, said they would reduce steel imports from other countries.
Full Article
News Summary; SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1982
Date: 24 October 1982
International Arab recognition of Israel will come only after Israel removes its forces from the territory it has occupied since the 1967 war, King Hassan II of Morocco said at a news conference in Washington. A day after he and a six-nation Arab League delegation discussed differing Arab and American peace plans with President Reagan, the King said the Middle East dispute had entered ''a new phase, not the conflict of war but of law and of rights.'' (Page 1, Column 6.)
Full Article
News Summary; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1982
Date: 23 October 1982
International The U.S. and Arab proposals for peace in the Middle East along with United Nations Security Council resolutions could be the basis for ''peace and coexistence'' in the region, King Hassan II of Morocco said after a meeting in Washington with President Reagan. The King, who is the leader of an Arab League delegation, did not specifically define what he meant by ''coexistence,'' nor did he mention Israel, but a senior State Department official said that his choice of words was important. Mr. Reagan said the meeting with the delegation was ''an important milestone'' toward ''a common objective, a just and lasting peace in the Middle East,'' and emphasized the importance of a negotiating process. (Page 1, Column 6.) Elections in Northern Ireland strengthened the political arm of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. Incomplete returns gave Sinn Fein two more seats, for a total of five, in the 78-member assembly. The gains were widely regarded as a pyschological victory for the party, which entered only 12 candidates, all in urban areas where Roman Catholics are concentrated, which campaigned on a slogan of ''a ballot in one hand and a gun in the other.'' (1:5.)
Full Article
Quality Counts
Date: 24 October 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
''Our horses leave a lot to be desired,'' said the attentiongrabbing ad in the financial pages last May 13. The message, placed by the New York Racing Association, explained: ''Each year our race horses produce over 250,000 cubic yards of high-quality manure.
Full Article
Sheltering Wildlife
Date: 24 October 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Each year New Jersey was spending $6 million to breed and manage some 50 species of birds and animals for hunters. But the state had never spent more than $50,000 a year to preserve its 600 nongame species.
Full Article
Thwarting Graffiti
Date: 24 October 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Locked in a losing battle with subway graffiti vandals, the New York City Transit Authority moved in August 1981 to bolster defenses at its subway yards, where most of the spray-can painting was taking place. At a cost of $1.5 million, it put up two 10-foot-high fences around a major yard in Corona, Queens, and unleashed patrol dogs between the fences.
Full Article