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วันเกิด วันเดือนปีเกิด
วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 19 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 1982
สถานที่เกิด
Lyndhurst
อายุ
43
ป้ายดาว

19 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 1982 เป็น วันพฤหัสบดี ใต้เครื่องหมายดาวของ เป็นวันที่ 230 ของปี ประธานาธิบดีแห่งสหรัฐอเมริกาคือ Ronald Reagan

ถ้าคุณเกิดในวันนี้ แสดงว่าคุณอายุ 43 ปี วันเกิดล่าสุดของคุณคือเมื่อ วันอังคารที่ 19 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 2025, 78 วันที่ผ่านมา วันเกิดครั้งต่อไปของคุณคือวันที่ วันพุธที่ 19 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 2026 ในอีก 286 วัน คุณมีชีวิตอยู่ได้ 15,784 วัน หรือประมาณ 378,830 ชั่วโมง หรือประมาณ 22,729,811 นาที หรือประมาณ 1,363,788,660 วินาที

บางคนที่แบ่งปันวันเกิดนี้:

19th of August 1982 News

ข่าวที่ปรากฏบนหน้าแรกของ New York Times เมื่อ 19 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 1982

REAGAN COMPLAINT CALL IS A 'FIRST' AT CBS NEWS

Date: 19 August 1982

By Sally Bedell

Sally Bedell

''You hang around this business long enough and you begin to think that you have seen and heard everything twice. But this was the first time a President has called up while we were on the air,'' said Dan Rather, anchor of the ''CBS Evening News.'' Mr. Rather was referring to the telephone call he received Tuesday night from President Reagan, complaining that CBS News had incorrectly characterized as a reversal of policy his decision to gradually reduce arms sales to Taiwan. After the call, Mr. Rather reported Mr. Reagan's remarks on the air.

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No Headline

Date: 20 August 1982

Chief of U.P.I. Retiring After 10 Years in Post (By United Press International) - Roderick W. Beaton, the president of United Press International since 1972, will retire Sept. 1, the news agency's chairman, Len R. Small, announced yesterday. Mr. Beaton, who spent more than 34 years with the worldwide news service in assignments ranging from reporter to chief executive officer, said he was retiring as planned to pursue personal interests.

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No Headline

Date: 20 August 1982

AROUND THE WORLD; British Cameraman Hurt In Salvador Ambush SAN SALVADOR, Aug. 19 (AP) - A British cameraman was shot and seriously wounded today when he and three other news photographers were caught in a guerrilla ambush of an army patrol 38 miles east of the capital. The cameraman, Julian Harrison, 32 years old, who works for United Press International Television News, was shot in his left arm and was undergoing surgery, Dr. Lisandro Vasquez said at a hospital in San Vicente.

Full Article

MAGAZINE SUES U.S. LABOR PARTY OVER IMPERSONATION OF A REPORTER

Date: 20 August 1982

AP

A $1.5 million damage suit has been filed by U.S. News & World Report against the U.S. Labor Party, charging that affiliates of the party impersonated the magazine's White House reporter in interviews with news sources. The suit said the chairman of the First National Bank of Boston and officials of the National Association of Home Builders had received telephone calls from a woman representing herself as Sara Fritz, a White House correspondent for the weekly magazine. In a third instance, a man posing as a reporter for the magazine questioned a staff member of the Senate Select Committee on Ethics about two of its investigators, the complaint said.

Full Article

Garnett D. Horner Dies; White House Reporter

Date: 20 August 1982

UPI

Upi

Garnett D. Horner, who reported on seven presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Gerald R. Ford as a White House correspondent, died Thursday at a nursing home in Jupiter, Fla. He was 73 years old.

Full Article

BRIEFING

Date: 19 August 1982

By Phil Gailey and Warren Weaver Jr

Phil Gailey

What He Didn't Say S ome of the reporters who heard President Reagan's Monday night television address on the tax bill felt like saying, ''Now there he goes again.'' The President told his national audience to ignore ''a steady drumbeat of 'reports' on what we're supposed to be doing'' in the press, as well as a variety of statements attributed to various ''authoritative Government sources who prefer not to have their names used.'' What Mr. Reagan did not say was that most of those reports and statements had been fed to reporters by White House officials and Cabinet officers, presumably speaking with his approval but insisting on the cover of anonymity in return for the authoritative insights they were purporting to offer. When the President was opposing a major tax increase earlier this year, his aides explained his position in anonymous briefings, a frequently used method of putting out White House information. Then, having changed course and come out in favor of a tax increase, the President appeared to be trying Monday night to dispose of the inconsistency by questioning the accuracy of news articles that grew out of the earlier ''background'' briefings.

Full Article

Link to Shooting of Pope Called Absurd by Soviet

Date: 19 August 1982

AP

The Soviet Union has denounced an American magazine article that said the Soviet Union and its allies might have assisted the Turk who shot Pope John Paul II last year. The article, written by Claire Sterling and published in the September issue of Reader's Digest, said the shooting by the Turk, Mehmet Ali Agca, appeared to have been organized by Bulgarian intelligence agents on directions from the Soviet Union. The Moscow radio said, ''The absurdity and unfoundedness of this claim are obvious.''

Full Article

TV NETWORKS FACE A FRONT LAWN BAN AT THE WHITE HOUSE

Date: 20 August 1982

Reuters

The Reagan Administration is considering a crackdown on what it feels are disorderly and unkempt groups of television technicians who assist network correspondents broadcasting from the White House front lawn. Larry Speakes, deputy White House press secretary, called network bureau chiefs to his office Wednesday and announced a tentative plan to move the crews and reporters to a narrow strip of lawn across the driveway from their current position.

Full Article

NEW PRESS LAW STIRS CONCERN IN INDIA

Date: 19 August 1982

By William K. Stevens, Special To the New York Times

William Stevens

In what is viewed by its opponents as a serious threat to India's free press, the government of Bihar, the nation's second most populous state, has passed a law making it a criminal offense to publish, sell or possess any printed matter whose content is ''grossly indecent'' or ''scurrilous.'' Government officials, contending that it is within their right under the Indian Constitution to place ''reasonable restrictions'' on free expression, say that the law is intended to curb the irresponsibility of ''yellow'' journalists. These journalists, it is charged, engage in character assassination, foster social discord through untruth and damage the morale of government officials. But opponents of the measure, includngf members of the press and opposition politicians, say that the government of Bihar, whose leaders belong to the Congress Party of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, is merely trying to protect itself against exposure of corruption and mismanagement.

Full Article

A TALE OF 2 LA PRENSAS

Date: 19 August 1982

To the Editor: The Reagan Administration has remained silent while the Panamanian National Guard throws out a President, closes the newspapers for a week, installs censors in each newspaper office and allows its troops and other goons to destroy the office of La Prensa, the Panamanian daily that has been exposing corruption in the National Guard and the Government. Such silence is in marked contrast to its loud protestations when the Sandinista Government shuts down La Prensa in Nicaragua.

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