Der 8. Juli 1984 war ein Sonntag unter dem Sternzeichen ♋. Es war der 189. Tag des Jahres. Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten war Ronald Reagan.
Wenn Sie an diesem Tag geboren wurden, sind Sie 41 Jahre alt. Ihr letzter Geburtstag war am Dienstag, 8. Juli 2025, vor 328 Tagen. Ihr nächster Geburtstag ist am Mittwoch, 8. Juli 2026 in 36 Tagen. Sie haben 15.303 Tage gelebt oder ungefähr 367.277 Stunden oder ungefähr 22.036.636 Minuten oder ungefähr 1.322.198.160 Sekunden.
8th of July 1984 News
Nachrichten, wie sie auf der Titelseite der New York Times am 8. Juli 1984 erschienen
FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; Curfew for Youth
Date: 08 July 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
With crime rising in Detroit and some youths contributing to it with violence after attending outdoor public events, Mayor Coleman A. Young ordered a summer curfew last year for everyone under 18 years of age. The curfew, from 10 P.M. to 6 A.M., put the Mayor at odds with the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union, which sued to have it lifted as discriminatory against young people.
Full Article
Coping With All That Good News
Date: 08 July 1984
The economic news is remarkably good: Unemployment has fallen to 7 percent, the lowest rate in four years, while inflation holds steady at a modest 4.6 percent. Naturally, President Reagan hastens to take credit. His Administration, he says, ''is the first in two decades that has reduced unemployment and inflation at the same time.''
Full Article
FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; Depression Dregs
Date: 08 July 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Every time a bank failed in the United States in the Great Depression of the 1930's, the Comptroller of the Currency took over the assets for safekeeping. A half century later, the Federal office found itself still storing the contents of thousands of safe-deposit boxes and other property unclaimed by 22,000 bank customers.
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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; 'War Tax' Battle
Date: 08 July 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
When Alice Drefchinski, a nurse in Franklin, La., filed her 1982 Federal income taxes, she took a $5,082 ''war tax deduction,'' citing religious convictions against supporting the military. The Internal Revenue Service cited the 1982 Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act.
Full Article
Pro-Israel Group Loses NBC News-Bias Case
Date: 08 July 1984
UPI
Upi
The Federal Communications Commission today dismissed a pro-Israel group's complaint that NBC distorted the news and violated the Fairness Doctrine with its television coverage of Lebanon in 1982. The group, Americans for a Safe Israel, had asked the commission to deny license renewals of the network's New England affiliates because of news reports that, it said, contained ''bias and misrepresentations.''
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SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS ; ; Matz, on Last Promise, Triumphs in Jumpoff
Date: 08 July 1984
AP
Michael Matz of Plymouth Meeting, Pa., won today's intermediate jumpoff on Last Promise at the seventh annual I Love New York horse show. The 7-year-old bay gelding was timed in 33.415 seconds, beating the 35.058 turned in by Henri Prudent of Nancy, France, on Kim du Soultrait.
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NORTHPORT RESIDENTS EXPRESS DISBELIEF AT NEWS OF SLAYING
Date: 08 July 1984
By Sara Rimer
Sara Rimer
Up and down Main Street, residents of this village expressed stunned disbelief today at the report that local youths had been involved in the slaying and mutilation of a 17-year-old boy as part of a satanic ritual. ''It's unbelievable that this could happen in this community,'' said Bob Leonardo, a past president of the Northport Chamber of Commerce and the owner of Northport Cleaners. ''There are exotic things that happen in Manhattan, but they don't happen in Northport.''
Full Article
Korean Jet Sequel
Date: 08 July 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
After a Soviet fighter pilot shot down Korean Air Lines Flight 007 last September with the loss of 269 lives, the United States demanded in a diplomatic note that the Soviet Union pay compensation to the families of the 61 Americans who died. But the Soviet Embassy refused to accept the note, contending that the jetliner had been on a spying mission off Siberia and that the United States had been responsible for sending it.
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FORSYTHE'S STAFF CLOSING UP SHOP By States News Service
Date: 08 July 1984
WASHINGTON EMPTY boxes and stacks of folders line the hallway outside the new office of New Jersey's 13th Congressional District, thus announcing the relocation of Representative Edwin B. Forsythe's staff since his death from cancer at his Moorestown home on March 29. Mr. Forsythe, a Republican, was 68 years old and had served in the House for 14 years. Although the district's new office is permanent, the sight of other boxes, unpacked and stacked in corners of the office, show that the staff is also changing.
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MONDAY, JULY 9, 1984 International
Date: 09 July 1984
Greece's request for surplus aircraft will probably be turned down by the Reagan Administration, according to State Department and Pentagon officials. They said the Administration was near a decision to reject the request, largely in reaction to Athens's recent handling of incidents involving terrorist activity. Greece has been seeking to obtain 16 F-5 interceptors from Norway, which received them free of charge from the United States a decade ago. Norway has declared the aircraft to be surplus, but the United States retains control over further transfers. (Page A1, Column 6.) Illegal immigration in West Europe has reached the point where the Governments are trying to turn the immigrants back, but they have not been particularly successful, with the possible exception of Britain. Tamil tea pickers from Sri Lanka, Kurds from Beirut, Ashantis from Ghana, teen- agers from Iran seeking to avoid the draft and Pakistani drug pushers are seeking refuge. (A1:3.)
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