1983年11月1日火曜日 の再生

1983年11月1日は、%sの星印の下の火曜日でした。 それはその年の**♏日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は304**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422025年11月1日土曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は2372026年11月1日日曜日日です。 あなたは127日、または約15,578時間、または約373,876分、または約22,432,597秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

1st of November 1983 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1983年11月1日 で掲載されたニュース

Steelworkers Reach Accord With Shipbuilder in Virginia

Date: 01 November 1983

UPI

Upi

The United Steelworkers of America has reached a tentative agreement with the nation's largest shipyard that calls for an almost 25 percent wage increase for the company's 18,000 workers. The agreement, reached Saturday between Steelworkers Local 8888 and Newport News Shipbuilding, provides across-the-board wage increases over a 43-month period, including raises of 9 percent Nov. 1, 7 percent March 4, 1985, and 7 percent May 5, 1986.

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A REAGAN PRESS OFFICIAL RESIGNS OVER GRENADA

Date: 01 November 1983

By Francis X. Clines

Francis Clines

The White House announced today that President Reagan's deputy press secretary for foreign affairs had resigned, citing damage to his credibility resulting from the Administration's handling of the Grenada invasion. The President's chief spokesman, Larry Speakes, denied that the Administration had a credibility problem, saying that in combat situations it was difficult to have the facts in hand in timely fashion. He said various earlier erroneous assertions - that the Grenada airport was tightly closed Monday to evacuation traffic, and that there were no civilian casualties in the invasion - were based on the best information available at the time. Mr. Speakes again referred most reporters' questions to the Pentagon, but acknowledged: ''I'm not sure what the Pentagon has. I just don't know their procedure on finding out what happened.''

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Article 013210 -- No Title

Date: 02 November 1983

By Andrew H. Malcolm

Andrew Malcolm

Last April when Field Enterprises Inc. announced it was putting The Chicago Sun-Times up for sale, James Hoge, the publisher, said that only certain buyers would be ''qualified.'' He specifically ruled out one: Rupert Murdoch, the Australian publisher with a reputation for sensational journalism. Today, Field Enterprises accepted a $90 million cash offer from Mr. Murdoch, turning down a $63 million bid from Mr. Hoge, a former Sun- Times reporter and city editor who headed a group of local investors. At an announcement of the sale in the newspaper's fourth floor newsroom overlooking the Chicago River downtown, Mr. Hoge appeared drawn and tired. Popular and widely respected here, he was received with loud applause. He said Mr. Murdoch had won the bidding ''fair and square'' and ''I have no complaints.''

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Editors Protest to Pentagon Over Press Curbs in Grenada

Date: 01 November 1983

AP

The American Society of Newspaper Editors protested to the Defense Department today over its refusal to permit reporters to cover the first stages of the invasion of Grenada. A telegram to Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger read in part: ''We object to the Defense Department's failure to honor the long tradition of on-the-scene coverage of American military operations.

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GRENADA NEIGHBOR IS SEARCHED BY U.S.

Date: 02 November 1983

By James Feron

James Feron

Three hundred United States marines looking for Cubans landed today on a tiny island 20 miles north of Grenada, but they returned to their ships several hours later without having found any, United States military officials said. The marines reportedly detained 17 men believed to be members of the Grenadian People's Revolutionary Army and uncovered a cache of weapons and ammunition. The Cuban Government said tonight that American troops had surrounded its embassy in Grenada. Havana also said its diplomatic personnel had been ordered out of the island. (Page A18.)

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A ROUT OF SCRIBES

Date: 02 November 1983

By Russell Baker

Russell Baker

It had been a long time since the United States had won a big one. You had to go all the way back to May of 1945, when the nation celebrated V-E Day, and to August of that year for V-J Day to remember a really big one. The briefer at the Pentagon studied the tense faces confronting him. ''Gentlemen,'' he said, ''it's been a long time since we won a big one. Some of you weren't even born then. You probably don't know what winning a big one feels like.''

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Military Air Shuttle Begun for Reporters

Date: 02 November 1983

Defense Department officials said today that the military had started to provide three round-trip flights each day for reporters wanting to visit Grenada but had no plans to provide them with communication facilities on the island. The flights, by C-130 military transports, leave Barbados every four hours, beginning at 8 A.M. They return as soon as they can reload.

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Four Soviet Diplomats Expelled by Jamaicans

Date: 02 November 1983

Reuters

Jamaica is expelling four Soviet diplomats and a Cuban journalist for purportedly spying and conspiring to kill a Foreign Ministry official, Prime Minister Edward P. G. Seaga said tonight. In a statement to Parliament, Mr. Seaga also said that the Kingston bureau of the Cuban press agency Prensa Latina would be closed and that a Jamaican Foreign Ministry protocol officer, Joseph Bewry, had been dismissed. The Foreign Ministry's Protocol Division will be restructured ''to strengthen intelligence capabilities,'' Mr. Seaga said.

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THE REASON FOR INVADING

Date: 01 November 1983

By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times

Philip Taubman

Reagan Administration officials acknowledge that, in their effort to rally public support for the invasion of Grenada, they may have damaged the Government's credibility by making sweeping charges about Soviet and Cuban influence on the island without so far providing detailed evidence. Because the Administration has not made available documents, a catalogue of Soviet weapons found in Grenada or other intelligence information that officials say supports their charges, questions have arisen about the Administration statement that the invasion was necessary to prevent a Cuban occupation of Grenada. Similar doubts have been raised about the Government's statement that the invasion was required to prevent leftist forces from holding United States citizens hostage. Acknowledging such questions, Administration officials said today that they were urging the Defense Department and Central Intelligence Agency to make public documents and other information that would show the extent of the Soviet and Cuban role in Grenada.

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PENTAGON ACCOUNT OF ATTACK

Date: 01 November 1983

Following is a statement issued by the Defense Department today on the bombing of a hospital in Grenada: On the 25th, U.S. forces occupying the Governor General's residence, took fire from the Fort Frederick area. They called in an air strike to suppress this fire, not knowing that there was a hospital in the complex. The air strike silenced the fire; however, these forces did not occupy the position. On October 26th, U.S. Marines occupied Fort Frederick.

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