22. јул 1985. је био понедељак под знаком звездице ♋. Био је 202 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.
Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 40 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био уторак, 22. јул 2025., пре 105 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је среда, 22. јул 2026., за 259 дана. Живели сте 14.715 дана, или око 353.168 сати, или око 21.190.122 минута, или око 1.271.407.320 секунди.
22nd of July 1985 News
Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 22. јул 1985.
WOMAN IN THE NEWS;NEW HEAD OF NOW PREFERS ACTIVISM
Date: 22 July 1985
By Judy Klemesrud
Judy Klemesrud
Eleanor Smeal won an upset victory over Judy Goldsmith as president of the National Organization for Women today, and the first thing she did when she met  the press was to put her arms around her husband and two children.         ''Feminists aren't supposed to do this sort of thing,'' she said, smiling, ''but why not?''   
Full Article
Gergen, Former Reagan Aide, Takes Job at News Magazine
Date: 23 July 1985
AP
 
  David Gergen, a former White House communications director, will become managing editor for news at U.S. News & World Report, the magazine announced today.
Full Article
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK;TERRORISM ON TELEVISION: NETWORKS HAVE JOURNALISTIC RESPONSIBILITIES
Date: 22 July 1985
By John Corry
John Corry
TERRORISM is unlikely to go away; neither is the argument over how it is reported.         Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said last week that news organizations should be urged to restrain their coverage of terrorism. Then Attorney General Edwin Meese 3d took her proposal a step further. He said the White House might ask news organizations to adopt a voluntary code of restraint. This is a terrible idea.   
Full Article
NAVY SPY CASE JUDGE REFUSES TO DISMISS CASE ON COVERAGE
Date: 23 July 1985
By Philip Shenon, Special To the New York Times
Philip Shenon
  Federal prosecutors said today that two Navy men accused of spying for the Soviet Union could get a fair trial despite extensive news coverage.   Publicity about the defendants, John A. Walker Jr. and his son, Michael, ''has been neither inflammatory nor unduly prejudicial,'' prosecutors said in response to a defense motion seeking to dismiss the espionage charges.   The arguments were made in court papers filed in Federal District Court in Baltimore, where the two men are being prosecuted.
Full Article
Still Missing in Lebanon
Date: 22 July 1985
 
What is the difference between 39 and 7? Fickle media and an indifferent public.         With no more Shiites clamoring for television interviews and President Reagan engaged in another kind of struggle, the seven Americans kidnapped and imprisoned in Lebanon for weeks and months have disappeared again from the nation's consciousness.   
Full Article
SCORES ARRESTED IN NIGHT RAIDS IN SOUTH AFRICA
Date: 23 July 1985
By Alan Cowell, Special To the New York Times
Alan Cowell
  The South African police, acting under a newly imposed state of emergency, were reported to have detained scores more people in predawn raids today.   Civil rights monitoring groups said about 200 people were seized in the last 24 hours and put the number arrested since the emergency declaration took effect midnight Saturday at more than 300.   Priests, lawyers, teachers and political activists were said to be among those detained last night and today. They joined 113 people seized Sunday by the police, who now have near-absolute powers in 36 cities and towns covered by the emergency decree issued by President P. W. Botha. The police made no immediate comment on the reports.
Full Article
Don't Toast Reactors for China
Date: 23 July 1985
 
  The Administration knows how to deal with its friends and with its enemies. But it's prone to confusion with the puzzling category of those who are neither, like China. Despite the need to toast this week's visit of China's President, Li Xiannian, the long-proposed nuclear pact with China should not be rushed to consummation.
Full Article
SOUTH AFRICA SAYS POLICE DETAIN 113 UNDER EMERGENCY
Date: 22 July 1985
Special to the New York Times
 
The South African police, acting with near-absolute powers under a state of emergency, said today that they had detained 113 people since midnight, when the emergency came into force.         Reflecting newly imposed limits on the access of reporters to information about such actions, a police spokesman declined to identify those detained or say where they had been seized.   
Full Article
7TH SUSPECT HELD IN PLOT TO SELL F-14 PARTS TO IRAN
Date: 23 July 1985
By Jeff Gerth, Special To the New York Times
Jeff Gerth
  The Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested a seventh suspect late Sunday night in a purported scheme to smuggle spare parts for the Navy's F-14 jet fighter to Iran.   The widening case, which is still under investigation, represents the first time a hostile country has penetrated the Pentagon's supply system, according to Federal officials.   The seventh suspect, Antonio G. Rodriguez, arrested in Seattle, is an aviation storekeeper on the helicopter landing ship Belleau Wood, based near Seattle. Two other Navy employees, a civilian warehouse worker and an aviation storekeeper on the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, were arrested last week in the case. In addition, three civilians and an Iranian based in London have been arrested in connection with the case.
Full Article
WAR LAW PACT FACES OBJECTION OF JOINT CHIEFS
Date: 22 July 1985
By Leslie H. Gelb
Leslie Gelb
The Joint Chiefs of Staff have recommended against United States ratification of internationally agreed revisions of the 1949 Geneva Conventions on treatment  of combatants and war victims, according to Administration officials.         The intent of the revisions is to enhance humane treatment of combatants and  civilians during war. But the main concern of the Joint Chiefs is that the revisions, or protocols, as they are known, would have the effect of legitimizing national liberation movements and terrorists, granting them combatant and prisoner-of-war status.   
Full Article