22 Temmuz 1982, Perşembe yıldız işaretinin altında bir ♋ idi. Yılın 202 günüydü. Amerika Birleşik Devletleri Başkanı Ronald Reagan idi.
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22nd of July 1982 News
Haber New York Times'ın ön sayfasında 22 Temmuz 1982 olarak çıktı
Washington Post Gains
Date: 23 July 1982
 
  The Washington Post Company yesterday reported a 25.8 percent increase in net income and a 6.6 percent gain in sales for the second quarter of 1982. The company said that gains in advertising and circulation, as well as the sale of Inside Sports and The Trenton Times in late 1981, helped push net income to $16.6 million, or $1.17 a share, from $13.2 million, or 94 cents a share, for the similar period a year earlier. Sales rose to $207.2 million from $194.3 million in the corresponding quarter of 1981.
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ABC BACKS OFF CHARGE IT MADE AGAINST MOBIL
Date: 22 July 1982
By Sally Bedell
Sally Bedell
  ABC News has told the Mobil Oil Corporation that it did not intend to include the company in its comments about consumer fraud that were broadcast June 20 in a documentary called ''The Oil Game.''   The documentary examined how oil companies benefited financially from the Federal Government's oil-price controls during the 70's.  Mobil, whose crude-oil purchasing activities were described in the program, protested on the ground that the documentary contained ''prejudicial inaccuracies.'' On Monday, the oil company received a letter from ABC in which the network backed down on some aspects of its portrayal of Mobil.
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Indiana Editor Sues Greeley For Libel in Dispute on Files
Date: 22 July 1982
UPI
Upi 
  A journalist today filed a $3 million libel suit against Andrew Greeley, an author and Roman Catholic priest who had accused the journalist of snooping in his private files.   The journalist, James Winters, 25 years old, managing editor of Notre Dame magazine in South Bend, Ind., filed suit in Cook County Court, seeking $1 million in compensatory damages and $2 million in punitive damages.
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KENYAN EDITOR DISMISSED OVER EDITORIAL
Date: 22 July 1982
By Alan Cowell, Special To the New York Times
Alan Cowell
  The editor in chief of Kenya's secondlargest daily newspaper, The Standard was dismissed from his post today because of an editorial that criticized the Government for detaining people without trial and accused it of intimidating journalists and creating ''fear and insecurity in the body politic.''    The Standard, one of Kenya's three English-language morning newspapers, published a special afternoon edition to announce the dismissal of the editor, George Githii. The front-page article said the shareholders, directors and management of the newspaper considered the editorial provocative and contentious. The Standard is owned by the British conglomerate Lonrho.
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MYSTERY ENGULFS AN ANTI-ISRAELI AD
Date: 22 July 1982
By Robert Lindsey, Special To the New York Times
Robert Lindsey
  Although mystery surrounds many details regarding publication of an anti-Israeli advertisement July 11, it appears to be part of the Arab-Israeli battle to sway public opinion in the United States over the current war in Lebanon.   The advertisement was signed by ''Concerned Americans for Peace,'' an organization of which no trace has been found. Spokesmen for Jewish organizations in this country say that they believe it was placed by Arab interests, possibly the Palestine Liberation Organization, although they acknowledge that so far they have been unable to prove it.   The full-page advertisement, which appeared in The New York Times and several other newspapers, mentioned the names of six relief organizations that have disavowed any connection with it. People who placed the advertisement listed in it a nonexistent post office box here, according to officials of the United States Postal Service. The number has been reserved for use in an unopened addition to a downtown post office.
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News Analysis
Date: 22 July 1982
By Thomas L. Friedman, Special To the New York Times
Thomas Friedman
  Several months ago Yasir Arafat remarked that if the Palestine Liberation Organization could hold out against an Israeli invasion for 10 days it would win the political victory that all wars are ultimately fought for.   With the Israeli invasion of Lebanon now 45 days old and Israeli armored forces encircling the last remaining P.L.O. stronghold in west Beirut, it would be difficult to say that the P.L.O. has won, but it would be equally difficult to say that it has lost.   Pressure from the United States and other Western countries and reluctance to take the heavy casualties an invasion would cause have kept the Israelis out, and Mr. Arafat feels he is in a position to bargain and set conditions for any possible withdrawal from Lebanon.  That is precisely what he has been doing for the last month in his indirect negotiations with Philip C. Habib, the special American envoy, and with Washington itself through Saudi, Egyptian and French intermediaries.
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News Summary; FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1982
Date: 23 July 1982
 
  International France defied Washington's order barring European companies operating under American license from producing equipment for a pipeline that will supply Western Europe with Soviet natural gas. The French order to proceed with the contracts applies mainly to a nationalized French company using American technology to make 40 turbine rotors for the 3,500-mile pipeline. (Page A1, Column 6.) Iran opened a new drive near the strategic Iraqi oil port of Basra, and Iraq said it had hurled back the two Iranian brigades that led the attack. Baghdad said several thousand Iranians had been killed.  (A3:4-6.)
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News Summary; THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1982
Date: 22 July 1982
 
  International The freeing of two-thirds of the Poles interned under martial law was announced by Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, the Polish leader.  Addressing Parliament, he said martial law might be suspended by the end of the year if tension subsided. (Page A1, Col. 1.) Washington reacted cautiously to Warsaw's announcement that 1,227 Poles were being freed. The Reagan Administration reserved public judgment, but several officials said privately that Poland's initiatives appeared to fall far short of what is needed for the West to lift the sanctions it set when martial law was imposed last December. (A13:1-3.)
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NEW YORK DAY BY DAY
Date: 22 July 1982
By Clyde Haberman and Laurie Johnston
Clyde Haberman
  A Cross-Town Winner   A lfredo Boyce of Flushing, Queens, a 33-year-old clerk in The New York Times computer data center, won $50,000 yesterday in The Daily News Zingo contest. Mr. Boyce swears he takes home The Times -it's his wife, Eleanor, a secretary at World Wildlife Fund, who takes home The News.  Clyde Haberman Laurie Johnston
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Job Opportunities - for Children
Date: 22 July 1982
 
  At least the people who put out the child labor news in Washington seemed to recognize it as an embarrassment. They published it on a steamy Friday afternoon in July, when it was likely to receive minimum attention. The news is nonetheless politically baffling. It leaves the Reagan Administration looking callous, relentless and eager to give itself a first-class hotfoot.
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