1985年3月27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85**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40、2025年3月27日木曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は174、2026年3月27日金曜日日です。 あなたは190日、または約14,784時間、または約354,823分、または約21,289,397秒生きてきました。
27th of March 1985 News
ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1985年3月27日 で掲載されたニュース
CBS NEWS CLARIFIES STAND ON CANCELING OF BROADCASTS FROM ISRAEL
Date: 28 March 1985
By Peter W. Kaplan
Peter Kaplan
CBS News confirmed yesterday that, in the wake of the killing of two of its news crew members by Israeli tank fire in southern Lebanon last Thursday, the network was canceling a week of ''CBS Morning News'' broadcasts from Israel just before Passover and Easter. ''CBS Morning News'' had planned a week of broadcasts from Israel by its correspondent Bill Kurtis beginning next Monday. A CBS News spokesman, Ann Morfogen, said yesterday that the broadcasts were canceled because they were ''celebratory in tone, and no one was in a mood to celebrate.''
Full Article
C.I.A. MOVE TO BAN DISCLOSURE OF SECRETS DROPPED
Date: 28 March 1985
By Stuart Taylor Jr
Stuart Taylor
The Reagan Administration today decided to drop a proposal by the Central Intelligence Agency to make it a crime for Government employees to disclose national secrets without authorization, officials said. But they said the Administration remained concerned about unauthorized disclosures of national security secrets to reporters and others and had not ruled out proposing similar legislation in the future. The officials said the C.I.A. had joined in a ''consensus'' decision not to proceed with a proposal put forth earlier this month by William J. Casey, the Director of Central Intelligence, to send the criminal provision to Congress as part of the proposed Intelligence Authorization Act for the fiscal year 1986. ''If you're going to do something like this, you don't do it as an obscure provision in a C.I.A. authorization bill,'' one official said in explaining today's decision.
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PERU CLEARS INDIANS IN KILLING OF 8 JOURNALISTS
Date: 28 March 1985
AP
The attorney general's office said today that it had dropped charges against 17 peasants accused of killing 8 Peruvian journalists two years ago in the Andean guerrilla zone. A prosecutor, Oscar Guerrero, ordered the charges dropped for lack of evidence, the office said. Three peasants had attended a six-month trial and 14 were tried in absentia.
Full Article
2 CHILE SOLDIERS SEEKING REBEL RADIO DIE IN BLAST
Date: 27 March 1985
By Lydia Chavez
Lydia Chavez
The Chilean Government said today that two sergeants were killed when a bomb went off as they were searching for a leftist radio transmitter late Monday in a hotel room in Concepcion. Later today, a car bomb exploded directly across the plaza from the Presidential palace in front of La Nacion, a daily newspaper. There appeared to be no injuries, but one woman, who could not be located, ran from the explosion site screaming. The bomb damaged the facade of the newspaper's offices, and shattered the windows of adjacent buildings. Armed security agents prohibited photographers from taking pictures.
Full Article
2 PLAYWRIGHTS DEPLORE TURKISH RIGHTS RECORD
Date: 28 March 1985
By Henry Kamm
Henry Kamm
Arthur Miller and Harold Pinter, the playwrights, held a well-attended news conference on human rights in Istanbul recently, but not a word about it appeared in the Turkish press. Mr. Miller said that the Government of Prime Minister Turgut Ozal allowed the meeting at the headquarters of the Journalists Association to take place Friday, but immediately afterward forbade the press to report it. Mr. Miller, spoke Tuesday in a telephone interview from his home in Connecticut. The authors went to Turkey for five days last week to show solidarity with Turkish writers in difficulty with their Government. They were acting on behalf of PEN, the international association of writers, and will report to PEN on the state of intellectual freedom. Mr. Miller, a former president of the group, is a vice president of the American section, Mr. Pinter a vice president of the British branch. The Turkish branch has been outlawed.
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No Headline
Date: 28 March 1985
By Walter H. Waggoner
Walter Waggoner
Frank H. Bartholomew, chairman emeritus of the news agency United Press International, died of cancer Tuesday at his home in Sonoma, Calif. He was 86 years old and also lived in Glenbrook, Nev. Mr. Bartholomew joined the former United Press as a reporter in Portland, Ore., in 1921 and retired in 1972 as chairman of the board of what had become United Press International after a merger with the International News Service. He was an award-winning war correspondent as well as a news executive at the agency.
Full Article
CBS EASES ITS TONE ON CREW DEATHS
Date: 27 March 1985
A CBS News vice president said today that he now believed that an Israeli tank had not deliberately shelled a television crew in southern Lebanon. Two crew members were killed and a third was seriously wounded in the incident last week. The official, Ernest Leiser, told reporters in Jerusalem, ''I now believe that even without complete information that it was certainly not a deliberate attempt to fire guns against our camera people.''
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Free? Did You Say Free?
Date: 27 March 1985
By Marjorie Hunter and Warren Weaver Jr
Marjorie Hunter
The journalistic breakfast, despite early-morning grumbling, has become an established part of the Washington scene, with reporters interviewing a news figure shortly after dawn over soggy scrambled eggs and cool bacon. Two local groups looking for exposure - the brand-new Sheraton Grand Hotel on Capitol Hill and Capital Speakers Inc., a private speakers' bureau - are entering the field with a new version of that institution.
Full Article
BUSINESS PEOPLE ; Suspended Official Has Departed ITT
Date: 28 March 1985
By Kenneth N. Gilpin and Todd S. Purdum
Kenneth Gilpin
Edward J. Gerrity Jr., who was suspended last December from his position as the ITT Corporation's senior public relations official, has left the corporation, the company acknowledged yesterday. James P. Gallagher, director of public relations for ITT, said that as of Jan. 31 Mr. Gerrity ''entered into a termination of employment agreement which replaces his employment agreement.'' Mr. Gerrity, who is 60 years old, was placed on suspension with pay in mid-December after news reports arose that disgruntled ITT shareholders and board members were seeking to liquidate the company.
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Statement from Casey
Date: 28 March 1985
William J. Casey, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, said today that his stock holdings in Capital Cities Communications Inc. were not included in a trust he set up in 1983 because they were too large to meet requirements for such a trust. The C.I.A. issued a statement about the trust arrangement in response to news reports that Mr. Casey, a former director of Capital Cities, holds some 34,000 shares in the company, which last week agreed to acquire the American Broadcasting Companies.
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