Israelis Arrest Journalist
Date: 22 December 1983
UPI
Upi
Israeli forces arrested a Lebanese correspondent for Agence France-Presse in southern Lebanon, a spokesman for the agency said today, and accused him of terrorist activity.
Luke Gallows o Doc Gallows, pseudonimo di Andrew William Hankinson (Cumberland, 22 dicembre 1983), è un wrestler statunitense.
In WWE Gallows ha vinto due volte il Raw Tag Team Championship (con Karl Anderson). Nella New Japan Pro-Wrestling dove ha vinto tre volte l'IWGP Tag Team Championship sempre con Anderson.
Per saperne di più...Il 22 dicembre 1983 era una giovedì sotto il segno zodiacale del ♐. Era il 355 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era Ronald Reagan.
Se sei nato in questo giorno, hai 42 anni. Il tuo ultimo compleanno era il lunedì 22 dicembre 2025, 160 giorni fa. Il tuo prossimo compleanno è il martedì 22 dicembre 2026, in 204 giorni. Hai vissuto per 15.501 giorni, o circa 372.035 ore, o circa 22.322.107 minuti, o circa 1.339.326.420 secondi.
Date: 22 December 1983
UPI
Upi
Israeli forces arrested a Lebanese correspondent for Agence France-Presse in southern Lebanon, a spokesman for the agency said today, and accused him of terrorist activity.
Date: 23 December 1983
By Tom Wicker
Tom Wicker
When Secretary of State Shultz recently observed that American reporters were not ''on our side'' but seemed ''always against us,'' the White House press secretary, Larry Speakes, told reporters: ''I do not think that reflects the attitude of the President.'' Larry, you should have known better. Mr. Reagan, at his latest news conference, not only agreed with Mr. Shultz; he displayed in his usual amiable manner his animosity toward the American press as well as a profound lack of understanding of its function. It's commonplace, nowadays, to say that that only reflects the attitude of the American public. Mr. Reagan, however, is President of the United States. He doesn't have to like reporters any more than the public does; but if he doesn't understand a free press operating in a free society under a Constitution he's sworn to uphold, his high office demands that he learn.
Date: 23 December 1983
By Paul H. Kreisberg
Paul Kreisberg
For the last five years, senior American officials have intermittently explored prospects for a military relationship between the United States and China. The Reagan Administration seems to have concluded that the opportunities are limited and that we should not seek too much. This judgment is almost certainly sound. It is no secret that Peking would like to modernize its armed forces. China has a 1950's arsenal, and, although it has been window shopping for new weapons for a decade, it has bought virtually nothing. Antitank and antiaircraft weapons would almost certainly bolster China's border defense and the United States has offered TOW (wire-guided antitank missiles) and Hawk missiles. The Chinese neither accepted nor declined the offer but asked instead about the next generation of TOW's and for the transfer of the technology to produce them. The United States is not inclined to provide either.
Date: 22 December 1983
By Joel Brinkley, Special To the New York Times
Joel Brinkley
The House subcommittee that investigated the bombing of the Marine compound in Beirut issued the full text of its report today. It disputed several key explanations that Gen. Paul X. Kelley, the Marine Corps Commandant, offered in Congressional testimony last month. A Marine spokesman said today that General Kelley had just received the report, issued by the House Armed Services Committee's Investigations subcommittee, and would have no further comment until he had reviewed it. On Tuesday the Marine Corps issued a statement saying ''all the information provided to Congress by the Marines has been the very best information available at the time it was provided.'' Speed of Truck at Issue The subcommittee's report said the Mercedes truck used in the attack Oct. 23, which killed 241 American servicemen, was moving at an average speed of only 30 miles an hour. General Kelley said in his testimony to the Armed Services Committee Nov. 1 and 2 that it was traveling at 50 or 60 miles an hour. That, he said at the time, was why sentries were unable to load their rifles and shoot the driver.
Date: 22 December 1983
By Jeff Gerth, Special To the New York Times
Jeff Gerth
George A. Sawyer, former Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Shipbuilding and Logistics, said today that while he was in the Government he had removed himself from all contract decisions affecting his former employer, John J. McMullen Associates. Mr. Sawyer said in an interview that he had gone out of his way to avoid the perception of a conflict of interests by telling his deputy to handle matters ''where I had knowledge that McMullen Associates was directly involved or they would be directly affected.'' Mr. Sawyer said that he did not know whether his instructions to his deputy were in writing or given orally but that he also told Navy Secretary John F. Lehman Jr. that he would disqualify himself. The usual practice in the Government is for officials to delegate responsibility to their deputies on matters on which they wish to disqualify themselves. Often, this action is in writing and is widely circulated.
Date: 22 December 1983
Taft Plans to Sell Amusement Parks The Taft Broadcasting Company said yesterday that it plans to sell its domestic amusement parks for $167.5 million to a new company that includes the management of Taft's Attractions Group. Taft's president, Charles S. Mechem Jr., said the transaction ''is a critical step in achieving the company's long-term goal of concentrating its resources on the expansion of its communications operations.''
Date: 23 December 1983
By Flora Lewis
Flora Lewis
Whatever happens to the good news? Isn't there any seasonal cheer to be found thinking back over a year of dismal headlines about violence, death and disaster? As a matter of fact, there is. It comes mostly from things that didn't happen. They seldom make headlines, but mean the world is still bumbling along in its way with chances of coming out right.
Date: 22 December 1983
AP
Obstruction-of-justice charges against four employees of a television station were dropped today. The station, WCSC-TV, had broadcast a picture of a man charged with a series of rapes and murders after the police asked that the photo not be used.
Date: 23 December 1983
''The Christmas message in Harlem, the good news to the poor, is that 'you're not going to be poor anymore.'
Date: 22 December 1983
''Terms of Endearment,'' James Brooks's adaptation of Larry McMurtry's mother-daughter story spanning 30 years, was voted the best film of 1983 by the New York Film Critics Circle yesterday. ''Fanny and Alexander,'' Ingmar Bergman's vision of a turn-of-the-century Swedish childhood, was voted best foreign film, and Mr. Bergman was voted best director.