ヘザー・マタラッツォ 誕生日、生年月日

ヘザー・マタラッツォ

ヘザー・マタラッツォHeather Matarazzo, 1982年11月10日 - )はアメリカ合衆国ニューヨーク州出身の女優。

続きを読む...
 
誕生日、生年月日
1982年11月10日水曜日
出生地
42
星座

1982年11月10日は、%sの星印の下の水曜日でした。 それはその年の**♏日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は313**でした。

この日に生まれた場合、あなたはRonald Reagan歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は422024年11月10日日曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は3342025年11月10日月曜日日です。 あなたは30日、または約15,675時間、または約376,215分、または約22,572,932秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

10th of November 1982 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1982年11月10日 で掲載されたニュース

Missouri Publisher Buys The Saturday Review

Date: 10 November 1982

UPI

Upi

The 29-year-old publisher of a campus newspaper and a regional magazine announced today that he was purchasing The Saturday Review and moving it to Missouri from New York City. Jeff Gluck, owner and publisher of The Campus Digest at the University of Missouri in Columbia and the magazine Missouri Life, said he was waiting for final approval of the purchase by New York courts that are handling The Review's insolvency proceedings. The Review suspended publication in August after losing $3 million in a two-year effort to cure its ailing financial condition. Mr. Gluck, who refused to disclose the purchase price, said he planned no sweeping changes and had already signed Norman Cousins, the longtime editor, to remain as editor emeritus and columnist.

Full Article

PRESUMPTION OF GUILT

Date: 11 November 1982

By Anthony Lewis

Anthony Lewis

The press has had a glorious time with John De Lorean since his arrest on charges of drug trafficking, and no wonder. The story has everything: money, power, sex, cafe society, a silver-haired villain. Of Mr. De Lorean's villainy no reader can be in doubt. Newspapers and magazines have told us in detail not only about what he is supposed to have done in the cocaine affair but about a whole life of lawlessness. It is a Hogarthian tale, with ambition as the spur instead of drink. Guilt drips from every paragraph.

Full Article

SHOULD LIBEL RULE FOR PUBLIC FIGURES BE CHANGED

Date: 10 November 1982

By Jonathan Friendly

Jonathan Friendly

For nearly two decades, the press has operated under a legal rule that shields it from libel suits by people in the public eye. Essentially, the rule says these public figures cannot win unless they can prove not only that the offending article was false but also that the publication acted with ''actual malice'' because it either knew that the story was false or recklessly disregarded the truth. The rule has been a powerful protection for the press and for free speech in general. Several recent incidents, however, have focused attention on the rule and opened a debate on whether it should be modified.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 10 November 1982

By Michael Oreskes

Michael Oreskes

New York City's budget, buffeted by the recession, has drifted so badly out of balance that there is serious talk for the first time since 1975 of renegotiating municipal labor contracts. Everyone agrees this is a drastic step, but at a meeting Monday night at Gracie Mansion, labor leaders, far from ruling out a reopening of their contracts, simply said they wanted to wait a couple of months to see whether the city's fiscal situation got better or worse. ''Nothing dramatic should be done until we see what the December, January and, maybe February projections are,'' said Victor Gotbaum, the head of District Council 37 of the American Federation of State,County and Municipal Employees. ''Then we'll all get together, probably around February, when the figures are a little bit clearer.''

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 11 November 1982

By William E. Farrell, Special To the New York Times

William Farrell

Relations between Egypt and Israel, which were expected to improve dramatically after the return of the last occupied area of Sinai to Egypt in April, are at their lowest point since the peace treaty between the two nations was signed in March 1979. The deterioration was quickened in large measure by the Israeli invasion of Lebanon on June 6. President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt harshly criticized the Israeli action, although his remarks fell far short of the demands by Egyptian opposition parties for a break in relations between Israel and the only Arab nation to recognize it. After Christian Phalangist militiamen killed hundreds of Palestinian civilians in September at the Shatila and Sabra refugee camps in the Israeli-occupied Beirut area, Mr. Mubarak recalled the Egyptian Ambassador, Saad Mortada, from Tel Aviv.

Full Article

Reagan News Session Live on TV Networks

Date: 11 November 1982

President Reagan's news conference will be covered live tonight at 8 P.M., Eastern standard time, on the ABC, CBS and NBC television networks, the Cable News Network and the Satellite News Channel. Some local affiliates of the Public Broadcasting Service will carry the conference, either live or as a taped-delayed broadcast. Channel 13 in New York City, for instance, will broadcast it at 11 P.M. In New York, radio stations WABC, WMCA, WNBC, WCBS-AM and WOR will provide live coverage.

Full Article

News Summary; THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1982

Date: 11 November 1982

International Leonid I. Brezhnev is dead, the Tass news agency reported. The agency said the 75-year-old Soviet leader died ''a sudden death'' at 8:30 A.M. (12:30 A.M. EST) Wednesday. Tass said the announcement was made by the Central Committee of the Communist Party. There was no immediate announcement of a successor. (Page A1, Column 6.) Mexico announced an austerity plan as part of an agreement with the International Monetary Fund designed to revive its troubled economy and avert defaulting on its foreign debt of $78 billion. Under the accord, Mexico could draw up to $3.84 billion from the fund over three years in exchange for curbing spending and imports and raising taxes. (A1:1-2.)

Full Article

News Summary; WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1982

Date: 10 November 1982

International A way toward revoking the sanctions imposed by President Reagan on companies that take part in construction of the Soviet natural gas pipeline has been devised, according to Washington officials. They said the Administration would be able to end the sanctions under a new policy for East-West economic relations virtually agreed upon by the United States and its European allies. (Page A1, Col. 6.) The American envoy to El Salvador has been ordered to refrain from making public criticism of human rights abuses by Salvadoran security forces, according to Reagan Administration officials. The Ambassador, Deane R. Hinton, had assailed the Salvadoran legal system and acts of violence by right-wing extremists. (A1:4-5.)

Full Article

A DETERMINED SEEKER OF CHANGE

Date: 11 November 1982

By William Serrin

William Serrin

Richard L. Trumka, president-elect of the United Mine Workers of America, is a personable, aggressive union man, determined, he says, to change his union. He wants to stabilize finances, to root out staff members he regards as incompetent, to improve organizing and to develop innovative tactics to confront coal operators. Mr. Trumka, who, at the age of 33 stands to be the youngest head of a major American union, ran an aggressive, well-coordinated campaign that ended in his triumph Tuesday over the incumbent, Sam M. Church Jr. He is to begin a five-year term on Dec. 22.

Full Article

Heileman Raises Bid for Pabst

Date: 10 November 1982

The G. Heileman Brewing Company sweetened its bid for control of the Pabst Brewing Company yesterday to $27.50 a share from the $25 announced on Friday. It would total about $151.3 million. The revised offer announced by the two companies said Heileman would seek 5.5 million shares, conditional on its getting at least 3.8 million. The original offer, which Pabst had also backed, called for Heileman to seek 6 million of Pabst's 8.2 million shares, subject to its getting 3.7 million. Heileman said then that it owned 400,000, or just under 5 percent. If it is successful in acquiring the minimum sought, it will own 51 percent.

Full Article

Date:

Full Article