16. června 1982 bylo středa pod hvězdičkou ♊. Byl 166 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl Ronald Reagan.
Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 43 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly pondělí 16. června 2025 před 341 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou úterý 16. června 2026, za 23 dní. Žili jste 16 047 dní nebo přibližně 385 144 hodin nebo přibližně 23 108 666 minut nebo přibližně 1 386 519 960 sekund.
16th of June 1982 News
Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 16. června 1982
Indian Givers
Date: 17 June 1982
India contends that Time magazine profits from the news it gathers in the world's largest democracy and wants to tax the gain. It figures the profit must be about 25 percent of expenses, so it would tax a fourth of whatever correspondents spend to gather news.
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Soviet Accuses British Of Jingoism in Victory
Date: 16 June 1982
Special to the New York Times
Soviet reports today on the British victory in the Falkland Islands said a ''new flare-up of jingoism'' in Britain obscured the fact that the problem was far from solved. Press reports reflected Moscow's support for Argentina throughout the conflict, but in comparison to earlier commentaries, the dispatches were generally subdued and restrained.
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THE JUBILANT BRITONS ACCLAIM THEIR PRIME MINISTER
Date: 16 June 1982
By William Borders
William Borders
Coming back to 10 Downing Street Monday night, after making her victorious statement in Parliament, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher found a crowd of jubilant supporters standing behind police barricades singing ''Rule, Britannia'' and ''For She's a Jolly Good Fellow.'' In a startlingly uncharacteristic gesture, she plunged enthusiastically into the crowd with a broad smile, shaking hands and squeezing arms in the style of Lyndon Johnson as the singing and cheering continued. In response to the people's congratulations, she told them that she had ''never had any doubts'' that the British would be able to retake the Falkland Islands. For a politician - especially one who a mere three months ago was badly trailing in the public opinion polls - it was a heady and triumphant moment. But in the weeks ahead, Prime Minister Thatcher will have new problems and more crucial decisions to make.
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CORRECTIONS
Date: 17 June 1982
An article June 3 about the history of United Press International incompletely described its policy on rates. Although the news agency says it offered some newspapers and radio stations cut-rate prices in the past, it adds that its rates have been uniform since 1979 and that 25 newspapers have become subscribers this year.
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News Analysis
Date: 17 June 1982
By Thomas L. Friedman, Special To the New York Times
Thomas Friedman
With the Israeli Army now 50 miles inside Lebanon, it cannot be denied that Israel has scored another stunning military success against an Arab foe. But the Israelis may still be a long way from achieving the political objectives they have set for themselves in Lebanon. Israeli leaders have been reiterating the objectives since the beginning of the invasion: the destruction of the Palestine Liberation Organization as a political and military force, the creation of a 25-mile demilitarized zone and the removal from Lebanon of all Palestinian and Syrian armed forces. During the first week of the invasion, the Israelis tried to achieve these objectives through military means. They were partly successful, but the cost in lives - to soldiers and to civilians - proved too high to complete the task.
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News Analysis
Date: 17 June 1982
By Tamar Lewin
Tamar Lewin
The merger guidelines that the Justice Department issued this week provide little actual guidance on which mergers will pass legal muster, many antitrust experts say. Despite the adoption of the Herfindahl index, a mathematical standard to measure market concentration, they say the guidelines neither address the practical problems of merger law nor change the department's enforcement policy to any significant degree. In fact, several former heads of the department's antitrust division agree that the 44-page guide put out on Monday by their successor, William F. Baxter, are more a reflection of his background as an economics professor than an aid to those who must counsel corporate clients on the lawfulness of proposed acquisitions. ''It is largely an economic treatise on standards that aren't very dissimilar from what went before,'' said Sanford Litvack, a former antitrust chief who now practices law in New York. ''The guidelines give you the illusion of telling you something that in reality is going to have to be fought out in court.''
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News Analysis
Date: 17 June 1982
By Frank Lynn
Frank Lynn
The lack of the usual political ''bosses'' and the diffusion of power in the New York State Republican Party was on public display yesterday in its efforts to reconcile competing power groups and put together a state ticket. The confusion and diffusion was such that the party might not have been able to come up with a majority designee for governor. But after considerable negotiation, Lewis E. Lehrman, a wealthy businessman, last night won the party's designation as its gubernatorial candidate. The disarray was symbolized earlier in the day by the Queens Republican delegation at the meeting of the Republican State Committee in Manhattan.
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News Analysis
Date: 17 June 1982
By Linda Greenhouse, Special To the New York Times
Linda Greenhouse
In ruling Tuesday that the Constitution entitles illegal alien children to a free public education, the Supreme Court inevitably invited further tests of aliens' rights to other government services. Illegal aliens are now ineligible for most of the basic Federal benefit programs and their state counterparts, including Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Supplemental Security Income and unemployment compensation. They are excluded from some Federal higher education programs and from some state colleges. The Court's declaration that the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the laws ''extends to anyone, citizen or stranger,'' regardless of immigration status, at least suggested that these inequalities are about to be swept away by the Justices' newly expansive reading of the 14th Amendment.
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FRIEND OF THE FALKLANDERS
Date: 17 June 1982
By William Borders, Special To the New York Times
William Borders
When Rex Masterman Hunt, the British Governor of the Falkland Islands, surrendered them to the invading Argentines last April, he made this defiant declaration, as he and his wife boarded the plane at the Stanley Airport: ''We'll be back.'' Now, triumphantly, Mr. Hunt is making good on his promise, going back - probably within days - to an island territory that is once again in British hands, and he is ''absolutely delighted.'' A 55-year-old career diplomat who has spent most of his time in British embassies and consulates in Asia, Mr. Hunt has received a good deal of praise for his conduct during the Falkland crisis. People here were very pleased to read, for example, that after his surrender, to an overwhelming force, Mr. Hunt refused to shake hands with the Argentine commanding general.
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News Summary; WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1982
Date: 16 June 1982
International Over 13,000 Argentines surrendered to British forces in the Falklands during the night, bringing the total number of prisoners to 15,000 in the three-week war, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher announced. The final capitulation came after heavily outnumbered British troops fought to within rifleshot of the defenders of Stanley, the last major Argentine stronghold in the islands. (Page A1, Column 6.) Peace will not be possible if Britain restores ''colonial rule'' in the Falklands, President Leopoldo F. Galtieri asserted in an angry televised speech to Argentines. A senior official said that Argentina would continue to fight in the air and at sea. (A22:1-2.)
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