22 maart 1983 was een dinsdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♈. Het was de 80e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was Ronald Reagan.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 43 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op zondag 22 maart 2026, 62 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op maandag 22 maart 2027, in 302 dagen. Je hebt 15.768 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 378.444 uur, of ongeveer 22.706.668 minuten, of ongeveer 1.362.400.080 seconden.
22nd of March 1983 News
Nieuws zoals het verscheen op de voorpagina van de New York Times op 22 maart 1983
TV: EL SALVADOR COVERAGE ON THE EVENING NEWS
Date: 22 March 1983
By John Corry
John Corry
A MONTH'S viewing of the evening news programs suggests that there are shortcomings in the treatment of El Salvador. Sometimes the programs present the news about El Salvador tardily, sometimes they get it confused and sometimes they focus on the rhetoric rather than the reality. Consider, for example, when the latest crisis started. It may reasonably be supposed that the Administration, although it didn't actually use the word, announced the crisis on Feb. 16. Secretary of State George P. Shultz told Congress then that the insurgents in El Salvador were ''creating hell'' with Soviet-made weapons. Mr. Shultz, however, never appeared on the evening news.
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LIBEL DECISION AGAINST COAST PAPER IS LIFTED
Date: 23 March 1983
UPI
Upi
A judge today reversed a default judgment in a $60 million libel suit against a newspaper and two reporters who had refused to reveal sources in an article that linked a former Iranian hostage to drug trafficking. Superior Court Judge Sara Radin, without explanation, ruled that the reporters, Arnie Friedman and Adam Dawson, of The Daily News, which serves the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles, would not be required to identify confidential sources. The journalists, however, will not be allowed to use information obtained from the sources to defend themselves against the suit brought by Jerry Plotkin, a Los Angeles businessman who was the only one of the 52 Americans held hostage by Iran who was not an employee of the United States Government.
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Newspaper Loses Appeal On Confidential Sources
Date: 22 March 1983
UPI
Upi
In a major defeat for the news media, the Court of Appeals of the State of Washington ruled today that criminal defendants could force reporters to reveal confidential sources if the information was crucial to the case. In a split decision, the court held that newspapers had a qualified privilege under common law to protect their sources but that judges may make ''a balancing test'' with the defendant's right to a fair trial.
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Required Reading; A Pollster's View
Date: 22 March 1983
Patrick H. Caddell, the pollster for President Carter and other Democratic candidates, in discussing Ronald Reagan's tightly regulated contacts with the press during the 1980 Presidential campaign, as quoted in the newly revised book, ''The Permanent Campaign,'' by Sidney Blumenthal: The Reagan campaign has set a model.
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News Analysis
Date: 22 March 1983
By Hedrick Smith, Special To the New York Times
Hedrick Smith
''I'm too old to change'' policies, President Reagan said today. But many other politicians read his choice of William D. Ruckelshaus to head the Environmental Protection Agency as a change of priority and even direction on the environment. Some Republicans, moreover, see this appointment as yet another of several recent steps toward moderation taken by the President, despite his outspoken conservative language on issues such as military spending, El Salvador and Moscow. Publicly, Congressional Republicans are reluctant to challenge the President's claim of environmental consistency. But like Democrats they saw the Ruckelshaus nomination as signaling a shift in emphasis from deregulation and cutting back to more vigorous enforcement and a more detached handling of corporate polluters.
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News Analysis
Date: 22 March 1983
By Paul Lewis, Special To the New York Times
Paul Lewis
Today's European currency realignment marked another milestone in the evolution of the economic policy of France's two-year-old Socialist Government. Although France gave ground again, the negotiations were a lesson for France's European partners, West Germany in particular. They learned that the Socialists, like the right-wing Giscardians and Gaullists before them, will pursue their interests with breathtaking ruthlessness. The threat that France might yet leave the European Monetary System still remains to trouble the seven other nations in the system, even after today's accord.
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News Analysis
Date: 23 March 1983
By Steven R. Weisman, Special To the New York Times
Steven Weisman
President Reagan is aware that his proposed budget for 1984 would be defeated in both the Senate and the House of Representatives, White House officials say. But he has decided to abandon, at least temporarily, the bipartisan tone he has used so far this year in seeking an alternative. Instead, Mr. Reagan is waging an all-out attack on the Democratic budget, charging that it would wreck the chances of economic recovery and delight the Soviet Union. In the last few days, Mr. Reagan has seen successive groups of House Republicans. He has brought in other members of Congress for exclusive evening briefings on classified information about Soviet military strength. And he has scheduled a television address on national security issues for Wednesday evening.
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News Summary; TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1983
Date: 22 March 1983
International An accord to realign currencies was reached by eight West European countries after West Germany accepted French demands and agreed to a set of currency values that avoided the possible collapse of Europe's monetary system. West Germany and four other countries revalued their currencies upward, with the German mark rising 5.5 percent in relation to the seven other currencies, while Paris agreed to a devaluation of only 2.5 percent, less than Bonn had sought. (Page A1, Column 1.) Israel has agreed to share with the United States information on Soviet military equipment and tactics gained from the war in Lebanon without insisting on a new intelligence-gathering agreement, American and Israeli officials said. (A1:2.)
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News Summary; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1983
Date: 23 March 1983
International An interim arms control proposal by President Reagan is likely, according to Administration officials and diplomats. They said that Mr. Reagan had made a preliminary decision to propose to Moscow an agreement limiting but not eliminating medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe. Under the interim plan, they said, each side would be limited to 100 missile launchers with a total of 300 warheads. (Page A1, Column 6.) The MX missile would be based in improved Minuteman missile silos under an interim plan that a Presidential panel is leaning toward, according to Congressional leaders of both parties. They said this would amount to the first phase of a new land-based program to be followed by deployment of a mobile missile. (A1:5-6.)
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EXCERPTS FROM NEWS CONFERENCE ON NOMINATION OF RUCKELSHAUS TO E.P.A.
Date: 22 March 1983
Following are excerpts from a transcript of President Reagan's news conference in Washington yesterday morning to announce the nomination of William D. Ruckelshaus as Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, as recorded by The New York Times: REAGAN STATEMENT Over the past week, it has become crystal clear that there is one man in this country better qualified than anyone else to take charge of the Environmental Protection Agency. And today I'm pleased to announce my intention to nominate that man, William D. Ruckelshaus, to become the next Administrator of the E.P.A. No one could bring more impressive credentials to this important job than Bill Ruckelshaus. He has proven his ability and integrity as Deputy Attorney General and as Acting Director of the F.B.I. As the first Administrator of the E.P.A., he played a critical role in shaping and launching the agency. He is staunchly committed to protecting the nation's air and water and land. And I have given him the broad, flexible mandate that he deserves.
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