1983년 8월 24일은(는) 수요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♍**입니다. 올해의 235일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 Ronald Reagan입니다.
이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 42살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 8월 24일 일요일, 270일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 8월 24일 월요일일 후 94입니다. 당신은 15,611일, 약 374,687시간, 약 22,481,248분 또는 약 1,348,874,880초 동안 살았습니다.
24th of August 1983 News
1983년 8월 24일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스
THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1983 International
Date: 25 August 1983
Policy toward the Philippines was outlined by Reagan Administration officials. They said the Administration was prepared to dissociate itself from the Government of President Ferdinand E. Marcos in the event that he or his top associates were found responsible for the assassination of the opposition leader, Benigno S. Aquino Jr. But they stressed that American-Philippines ties go beyond the Marcos regime and have strategic importance. (Page A1, Column 6.) The drug dispute at the Pan Am Games prompted the United States Olympic Committee to order mandatory random tests for prohibited drugs at all events where athletes qualify to represent the United States internationally. (B11:3-6.) National
Full Article
Scott Paper to Sell Unit to General Felt
Date: 24 August 1983
The Scott Paper Company said yesterday that it had agreed in principle to sell its foam division to General Felt Industries. In addition, it will put up for sale its Brown Jordan division and 240,000 acres of timberland in Washington.
Full Article
A.M.C. Sales
Date: 24 August 1983
Reuters
The American Motors Corporation said it expects its domestic sales to rise to 350,000 units next year, from an estimated 250,000 in 1983. Dale Dawkins, a vice president at A.M.C., said at a news conference held to introduce the company's 1984 models: ''We see a healthier industry next year and we expect to increase our penetration.''
Full Article
Egypt Lifts New Blackout On Joint Maneuvers with U.S.
Date: 25 August 1983
The Egyptian Government lifted its news blackout today on the joint Egyptian-American maneuvers code-named Bright Star '83 to allow reporters to watch a final phase of the exercises in the desert north of Cairo.
Full Article
A RADIO STATION MAY BE UP FOR GRABS
Date: 24 August 1983
By Irvin Molotsky
Irvin Molotsky
In addition to the contest among six contenders for the Democratic Presidential nomination, there is another scramble under way in Washington this summer involving high stakes and prominent people, and it has the added dimension of classical music. The other scramble is for ownership of radio station WGMS, a Washington institution that has been broadcasting Beethoven, Verdi and others for 37 years. There are 23 applicants for the station's license, now held by RKO General, whose ownership of WGMS and a dozen other stations is threatened by a possible license revocation by the Federal Communications Commission. But the Washington area station is valued at $20 million to $25 million, and RKO is not ready to give it up without a fight.
Full Article
South Korean President Says He Will Serve Only One Term
Date: 24 August 1983
AP
President Chun Doo Hwan said today that he would step down in February 1988, as required by law, but he does not plan to call direct presidential elections or abolish a political blacklist for the time being. ''Now is not the time for demanding democratic reforms,'' he told a news conference, rejecting the idea of a popular election to name the president.
Full Article
U.S. Is Said to Thwart Plot Against Embassy
Date: 25 August 1983
UPI
Upi
Within weeks of the bombing of the United States Embassy in Beirut last April 18, intelligence agents uncovered a similar plan to blow up the American Embassy in Kuwait, CBS News reported tonight. The network quoted Government sources as saying their intelligence had shown that a plot against the embassy in Kuwait was being run from Teheran by the Iranian Foreign Ministry.
Full Article
ORIGIN OF PAPERS IN REAGAN CASE ELUDING PANEL
Date: 25 August 1983
By Phil Gailey, Special To the New York Times
Phil Gailey
The special counsel to a House subcommittee said today that the panel had yet to decide how to resolve conflicting accounts by two senior Administration officials over how Ronald Reagan's campaign obtained President Carter's political strategy papers in 1980. James Hamilton, a Washington lawyer who is special counsel to the House Subcommittee on Human Resources, voiced doubt about the effectiveness of using polygraph tests to clear up discrepancies in the accounts of James A. Baker 3d, the White House chief of staff, and William J. Casey, Director of Central Intelligence. Although the Federal Bureau of Investigation has not ruled out the use of the lie-detector tests later in its investigation, Mr. Hamilton said his experience with the device in other Congressional investigations had raised questions in his mind about its usefulness. 'Need a Lot of Spadework' At a breakfast meeting with reporters, Mr. Hamilton said the subcommittee had not interviewed either Mr. Baker or Mr. Casey. ''We need to do a lot of spadework before doing that,'' he said.
Full Article
VOLUME OFF
Date: 24 August 1983
By Alexander R. Hammer
Alexander Hammer
Stock prices dropped sharply yesterday on news that inflation increased in July. Trading was slower. The Dow Jones industrial average, which was in the minus column throughout the session, ended with a loss of 10.26 points, at 1,192.89. In the overall market, declining issues on the New York Stock Exchange outscored stocks that rose by more than 2 to 1.
Full Article
A $100,000 AWARD IS CREATED TO HONOR THOSE AIDING JEWS
Date: 24 August 1983
By Kathleen Teltsch
Kathleen Teltsch
An annual international prize of $100,000 has been created to honor the man or woman, Jew or non-Jew, who is judged to have done the most in the previous two years ''for the defense of the rights of the Jewish people.'' ''My dream and hope is that this will become like the Nobel Prize for the Jewish world,'' Eryk Spektor, a New York businessman, said in announcing the establishment of the award at a news conference here. It will be known as the Jabotinsky Prize: Shield of Jerusalem.
Full Article