1. marraskuuta 1984 oli torstaina tähtimerkin ♏ alla. Se oli 305 päivä vuodesta. Yhdysvaltain presidentti oli Ronald Reagan.
Jos olet syntynyt tänä päivänä, olet 40 vuotta vanha. Viimeisin syntymäpäiväsi oli perjantaina 1. marraskuuta 2024, 340 päivää sitten. Seuraava syntymäpäiväsi on lauantaina 1. marraskuuta 2025, 24 päivän kuluttua. Olet elänyt 14 950 päivää tai noin 358 815 tuntia tai noin 21 528 900 minuuttia tai noin 1 291 734 000 sekuntia.
1st of November 1984 News
Uutiset sellaisena kuin ne ilmestyivät New York Timesin etusivulle 1. marraskuuta 1984
Newspaper Sold
Date: 02 November 1984
AP
Park Communications Inc. said it had acquired The Evening News of Jeffersonville, Ind., and its companion weekly, The Clark County Journal. The Evening News, a daily newspaper since 1872, has a circulation of more than 18,000.
Full Article
And Now the Nooze
Date: 01 November 1984
By James F. Clarity and Warren Weaver Jr
James Clarity
In its final days the Mondale campaign is showing a looser sense of humor. On Monday and Tuesday the staff published a single-page journal, ''The Plane Truth,'' with the slogan ''All the News That's Fit for Fritz,'' and distributed it on the two campaign planes.
Full Article
Plain Dealer Pact Approved
Date: 02 November 1984
UPI
Upi
Employees of The Plain Dealer, the city's only daily newspaper, approved a 37- month contract Wednesday four hours before a strike. Seven unions representing 1,500 people, including reporters, truck drivers and press operators, accepted a $105 raise over 37 months, covering wages and benefits. The employees had been working without a contract since Sept. 30.
Full Article
Dartmouth Reporter Will Not Face Action
Date: 02 November 1984
Dartmouth College has decided not to pursue disciplinary action against a student reporter who secretly tape-recorded a meeting of a homosexual students' group and published excerpts of it last spring. The reporter, Teresa Polenz, tape-recorded a meeting of the Gay Students Association and published excerpts in The Dartmouth Review, an independent weekly run by students. The dean of the college, Edward J. Shanahan said in a letter to ''the Dartmouth Community'' that ''the college does not now have a clear and precise enough regulation under which to judge conduct of this kind.''
Full Article
U.N. Calls for Renewal Of Talks Over Falklands
Date: 02 November 1984
The General Assembly approved a resolution today calling on Britain and Argentina to resume negotiations over the Falkland Islands.
Full Article
U.S. Navy to Hold Exercises With 5 Nations in Caribbean
Date: 02 November 1984
Reuters
The United States Navy will hold exercises with the coast guards of five eastern Caribbean nations next Tuesday, the United States Embassy in Barbados said today. The maneuvers will be led by the American guided missile destroyer MacDonough, and coast guard units from Barbados, Antigua, St. Lucia, Dominica and St. Vincent will take part, the embassy said.
Full Article
SOVIET PRESS STEPS UP HINTS OF INVOLVEMENT BY THE U.S.
Date: 02 November 1984
By Serge Schmemann
Serge Schmemann
The Soviet press today intensified insinuations that the United States was somehow linked to the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. No such charge was made directly. But accounts of the Indian leader's slaying Wednesday were juxtaposed with strident dispatches from the current anti-American propaganda campaign, in which the United States is accused of sponsoring what the Russians call ''state terrorism'' around the world. In Pravda, the official Communist Party newspaper, a Tass dispatch asserted that Mrs. Gandhi's death was the result of an elaborate conspiracy that included the infiltration of terrorists from abroad. It was printed along with a cluster of articles under the headline ''Terrorism - Washington's Policy.''
Full Article
Lockheed Gets Navy Contract WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (AP)
Date: 02 November 1984
The Navy awarded the Lockheed Missiles and Space Company, a unit of the Lockheed Corporation, a $1 billion contract to develop and produce advanced Trident II submarine-launched missiles, which are due to become combat- ready in 1989. The contract covers production of 52 of the 6,500-mile- range missiles and related equipment.
Full Article
BUSH SAYS EXPOSURE HURT INTELLIGENCE EFFORT
Date: 02 November 1984
By Gerald M. Boyd By Jane Perlez
Gerald
Vice President Bush suggested today that United States intelligence gathering capabilities had suffered in the 1970's because of the exposure of American agents. Mr. Bush made the comments as he defended the Administration's handling of terrorist attacks abroad in response to questions from the public outside the headquarters of PepsiCo Inc. The campaign stop was his last of several over the past two days in New York State. In response to a question about the legislative priorities in a new Reagan term, he said the ''legislative objective'' would be to keep the recovery going, which would mean a continued effort to control the growth of Federal spending. Mr. Bush said the effort would start the ''minute the election is over'' and a budget for the next fiscal year was put together.
Full Article
POLITICS AND PRESS BLAMED IN VIETNAM
Date: 02 November 1984
By M. A. Farber
A trial that is rearguing the Vietnam War heard a former chief of the Defense Intelligence Agency say yesterday that the war was won militarily in 1968 and only lost later because of political decisions and the press. Lieut. Gen. Daniel O. Graham, who directed the intelligence arm of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1974 and 1975, told the jury in Gen. William C. Westmoreland's libel suit against CBS that the enemy in Vietnam was ''whipped'' from the time of its Tet offensive in early 1968. A hushed room of spectators listened as General Graham testified in Federal Court in Manhattan that South Vietnam would have prevailed if the United States had not ''slashed'' military aid to it in 1974 and if the press - in ways that were not specified - had not contributed to ''defeat.'' ''We made political decisions to withdraw just as we were making great headway,'' General Graham said, ''and, even in the end, had the South Vietnamese been supported, they would have survived the assault of the North Vietnamese.''
Full Article