A 1982. január 18. egy hétfő volt a ♑ csillagjegy alatt. Ez volt az év 17 napja. Az Egyesült Államok elnöke Ronald Reagan volt.
Ha ezen a napon születtél, akkor 43 éves vagy. Az utolsó születésnapod 2025. január 18., szombat, 239 napja volt. A következő születésnapod 2026. január 18., vasárnap napon lesz, 125 nap múlva. 15 945 napot élt, vagy körülbelül 382 703 órát, vagy körülbelül 22 962 191 percet vagy körülbelül 1 377 731 460 másodpercet.
18th of January 1982 News
A New York Times címlapján megjelent hírek 1982. január 18.
Reagan News Session
Date: 19 January 1982
Scheduled for Today President Reagan will hold his first news conference of the year at 2 P.M. today, Larry Speakes, the deputy White House press secretary, announced yesterday in Washington. Live coverage will be carried on the three major television networks - CBS, NBC and ABC - as well as on CNN, the Cable News Network. In New York City, the news conference will also be broadcast on radio stations WCBS-AM, WMCA and WOR.
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NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO DELAYS ACTION ON TAKEOVER OF U.P.I.
Date: 18 January 1982
The board of directors of National Public Radio Friday postponed action on a proposal to take over the financially troubled United Press International. Frank F. Mankiewicz, president of the radio operation, had suggested that the E.W. Scripps Company of Cincinnati, the owner of U.P.I., give it the news service and receive a tax credit for a charitable donation. Mr. Mankiewicz said his organization would try to raise $50 million from various foundations to support U.P.I. until it could be made profitable.
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UNESCO PARLEY ON THE PRESS OPENS WITH U.S. OPPOSING MANY PLANS
Date: 19 January 1982
By Alan Riding, Special To the New York Times
Alan Riding
An internationa l conference aimed at finding practical ways to strengthen journali sm and communications indeveloping countries began here today, with t he United States strongly opposed to a series of proposals tha t would increase government control of news. The conference, the second session of a Unesco-backed International Program for Development of Communications, is the result of an American effort to channel a protracted and often bitter debate over a ''new world information order'' toward specific projects that would help the free flow of news. The Reagan Administration is unwilling to provide any direct financing for a program controlled by third world governments and is instead proposing projects supported by the American private sector.
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POLL INVOLVED QUERIES TO 1,540
Date: 19 January 1982
The latest New York Times/CBS News Poll is based on telephone intervie ws co nducted from Jan. 11 through Jan. 15 with 1,540 adults around the Un ited States. The sample of telephone exchanges called was selected by a computer from a complete list of exchanges in the country.
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REPORTERS' SHIELD LAW OVERRULED
Date: 19 January 1982
By Wallace Turner, Special To the New York Times
Wallace Turner
A law permitting reporters to withhold their sources, adopted by California voters in 1980, was declared unconstitutional today by a Superior Court judge on the ground that it created unsupportable conflict with the constitutional right to a fair trial. The issue concerns ''outtakes,'' or unused film, from an interview conducted for the CBS News program ''60 Minutes'' by Mike Wallace. Judge Stanley Golde of Alameda County directed an attorney for CBS, Edwin Heafey Jr. of Oakland, to bring the deleted material to court Jan. 25.
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Demographic Battle Continues to Rage
Date: 18 January 1982
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
In the hard-fought battle for corporate advertising dollars, C. John Kirby is pressing his efforts to undermine advertiser confidence in his major competition, the demographic editions of the newsweeklies. His latest tactic, announced to the press last week, is to arrange to have the entire circulation of his own publication audited by Business Press Audit.
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TIMES AND REPORTER GRANTED BYRNE PARDON IN 'DR. X' CASE
Date: 19 January 1982
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
Governor Byrne of New Jersey yesterday pardoned The New York Times and one of its reporters, M. A. Farber, for criminal contempt in their refusal to surrender the reporter's notes in the widely publicized 1978 ''Dr. X'' murder trial. Mr. Farber spent 40 days in jail and the newspaper paid a $286,000 fine for refusing a judge's directive to disclose the sources of their articles about the defendant, Dr. Mario E. Jascalevich. The Bergen County surgeon was acquitted of charges he had murdered five hospital patients by injecting them with curare. In issuing the pardon, which had been sought by the newspaper and the reporter, Governor Byrne noted court decisions and changes in the New Jersey ''shield law'' that, he said, gave credence to their arguments. He also said: ''Mr. Farber and the Times Company were attempting to uphold a principle they believed in. They should not be burdened by a record of criminal contempt any longer.''
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CLARK IS STAKING OUT HIS TURF AS SECURITY ADVISER
Date: 19 January 1982
By Steven R. Weisman, Special To the New York Times
Steven Weisman
For months, President Reagan had been complaining about unauthorized ''leaks.'' But his abrupt decision last week to limit reporters' access to national security information came so fast that it was said to have created some tension around the role of William P. Clark, the new national security adviser. According to several officials, Mr. Clark insisted that Mr. Reagan's toughly worded directive on classified information, providing, among other things, that any official involved in national security policy obtain approval before talking to a reporter, be made public after it was signed late Tuesday afternoon. Officials in the White House press office argued that if this were done, the announcement would be too late for inclusion on television news shows and many newspapers. James A. Baker 3d, the White House chief of staff, reportedly sided with them.
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News Analysis
Date: 19 January 1982
By Clyde Haberman
Clyde Haberman
Mayor Koch's preliminary plans to balance his budget for the next fiscal year rest in good part on dozens of proposed efficiencies and changes in the way certain segments of local government go about their daily business. They range from eliminating watchmen in some public buildings between midnight and 8 A.M. (saving $420,000) to requiring all city prisoners to leave their cells during recreation periods so that guards are not needed for those who might wish to remain behind (saving $463,000). No single proposal is worth a great deal of money, not to a city that expects to spend $15.7 billion in fiscal 1983. But altogether they produce a potential saving of $158 million. That goal is not only unusually ambitious, but also four times the scale that the Koch administration was talking about only a few months ago.
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News Summary; News Summary; TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1982
Date: 19 January 1982
International A U.S. military attache was slain outside his home in Paris by a solitary gunman who escaped. The murder of Lieut. Col. Charles Robert Ray came two months after the attempted shooting of Christian A. Chapman, charge d'affaires at the American Embassy. The police called the two attacks very similar. (Page A1, Column 3.) Thousands of Indians were arrested in advance of a one-day national strike called for today to protest the economic policies of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Most of those seized are union activists. (A1:1.)
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