1983年12月25日日曜日 の再生

1983年12月25日は、%sの星印の下の日曜日でした。 それはその年の**♑日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は358**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12月25日木曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は1932026年12月25日金曜日日です。 あなたは171日、または約15,534時間、または約372,824分、または約22,369,458秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

25th of December 1983 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1983年12月25日 で掲載されたニュース

Oklahoma Town Loses Right to Finance Paper

Date: 25 December 1983

AP

The state Supreme Court has ruled that the town of Forest Park, with a population of 1,140, violated the First Amendment by using public money to publish its newspaper, The Forest Park News. ''If First Amendment press freedom is to have full and complete meaning, it has to be that not only may the government not control the press directly, but it may not do so indirectly by using tax dollars,'' the court's opinion said.

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BRITISH SHOWN HITCHCOCK FILM ON HOLOCAUST

Date: 25 December 1983

AP

An Alfred Hitchcock documentary on the Nazi Holocaust - a film the British Government deemed too grisly for release after World War II - has received its public debut on British television. Fifteen minutes of the black-and- white film, which was shot by the armed forces after the war, were televised Tuesday night by the Independent Television News.

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FOREIGN POLICY EMERGING AS A BIGGER DOMESTIC PROBLEM

Date: 25 December 1983

By Hedrick Smith

Hedrick Smith

WASHINGTON IN the 1980 Presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan posed a crucial question for the American electorate to use in sizing up the Carter Administration: ''Are you better off than you were four years ago?'' Some Democrats are saying that the central question their nominee should put in the 1984 debate is, ''Do you feel more secure than you did four years ago?'' Already, there is political debate over the power diplomacy that Mr. Reagan has made a hallmark of his third year in office, historically a time of significant definition for most modern Presidencies. In this telltale period, Richard Nixon embarked on the path of detente diplomacy and Jimmy Carter became ensnarled in the fateful Iranian hostage crisis. This fall, Mr. Reagan has marked himself as the man who ordered the invasion of Grenada, risked American marines for a fragile Government in Lebanon, raised the military stakes in Central America and chanced a deep chill with Moscow over the downed Korean airliner and American missile deployment in Western Europe.

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SPECIALISTS DETAIL 'NUCLEAR WINTER'

Date: 26 December 1983

By Walter Sullivan

Walter Sullivan

Detailed arguments for the hypothesis that a catastrophic ''nuclear winter'' might result from concerted missile attacks on major cities and be followed by the annihilation of much, if not all, of the human species have been presented for the first time in a scientific journal. Two articles on the subject written by teams of authors representing many specialties appear in the Dec. 23 issue of Science. They elaborate on arguments presented at a conference held in Washington on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1. An article on biological effects states: ''In any large-scale nuclear exchange between the superpowers, global environmental changes sufficient to cause the extinction of a major fraction of the plant and animal species on the earth are likely. In that event, the possibility of the extinction of Homo sapiens cannot be excluded.''

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4 YEARS OF AFGHAN BATTLE: NO VIETNAM FOR MOSCOW

Date: 26 December 1983

By Drew Middleton

Drew Middleton

MilitaryAnalysis Four years ago this week two Soviet motorized rifle divisions crossed from Soviet Central Asia into northern Afghanistan. Kabul, the capital, had already been seized by an airborne division. The Soviet intervention in Afghanistan had begun. Western correspondents are barred from Afghanistan. A balance sheet at the end of four years must rely on the reports of European and other intelligence services, the claims of the rebels fighting the Soviet-backed Government and occasional admissions in Soviet military publications. The most significant conclusion that can be drawn from these sources is that, whatever else it is, Afghanistan is not the Russians' Vietnam. The Soviet Union faces many military and political problems in the country, but none are of a magnitude to suggest that the Russians face military defeat or political turbulence.

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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS

Date: 25 December 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Bartering Energy It was a convenient arrangement waiting to be consummated. New York City was operating a sewage-treatment plant in Brooklyn and each day was burning off 600,000 cubic feet of methane gas and discarding millions of gallons of treated water.

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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS

Date: 25 December 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Ear to Economy In a random survey of Santa Clauses at its stores last year, the nation's largest retailer, Sears, Roebuck & Company, reported that many youngsters were asking for jobs for their parents or help in meeting family bills. This year the economy appears to have picked up.

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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS

Date: 25 December 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Gift of Learning After four years of college, where he majored mainly in basketball, 24- year-old Kevin Ross became a national figure in May by graduating from the eighth grade of Chicago's Westside Preparatory School. The 6-foot-9-inch Mr. Ross had enrolled at the elementary school after recognizing that despite his years at Creighton University in Omaha, he lacked the most basic educational skills.

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MAJOR NEWS IN SUMMARY

Date: 25 December 1983

A ComeuppanceFor Nakasone Japanese voters last week confirmed the worst fears of Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone and the Reagan Administration. His Liberal Democratic Party suffered one of its biggest losses of seats in the House of Representatives since it began ruling in 1955 and will need the help of nine independent conservatives to form a majority.

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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS

Date: 25 December 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Yuletide 'Right' He turned up in Helena, Mont., at Christmastime in 1980: an anonymous benefactor who called himself Secret Santa. He arranged with Friendship Center, a local charity, to give away $35,000 so every poor child in town would be guaranteed a present.

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