1982年3月8日月曜日 の再生

1982年3月8日は、%sの星印の下の月曜日でした。 それはその年の**♓日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は66**でした。

この日に生まれた場合、あなたはRonald Reagan歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は442026年3月8日日曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は1102027年3月8日月曜日日です。 あなたは254日、または約16,181時間、または約388,345分、または約23,300,706秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

8th of March 1982 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1982年3月8日 で掲載されたニュース

Bid to Limit Coverage Of Raider Trial Denied

Date: 09 March 1982

AP

A Federal judge today rejected a motion by the National Football League to restrict news coverage at a retrial of the Oakland Raiders' antitrust suit against the league.

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News Analysis

Date: 09 March 1982

By Dena Kleiman

Dena Kleiman

Last week, Mayor Koch announced the formation of an 18-member Task Force on Youth - the second task force created by the Mayor in recent months to link the city's schools with other city agencies that come up against juvenile crime. While the two task forces may be a start, there is still no citywide strategy to coordinate the functions of the police, Family Court, probation agencies, schools, youth detention facilities or other offices that touch delinquents' lives. A six-part series by The New York Times last week painted a grim portrait of the system's inability to cope with violent youngsters and the isolation of these various agencies. It showed how the current system actually fosters juvenile crime rather than deterring it and how such problems as truancy, illiteracy, child abuse and delinquency continued to elude the system, in large part because its various components did not communicate with one another.

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News Analysis

Date: 09 March 1982

By John Corry

John Corry

The battle to preserve the Helen Hayes and Morosco Theaters has raised an extraordinary number of legal issues. Some have been argued in Federal courts and others in state courts; between the two jurisdictions there has been a good deal of overlapping. The next move will take place on March 22, when the New York Court of Appeals, the state's highest court, will decide whether to take up the case. Meanwhile, the forces fighting for the preservation of the two theaters say they will appeal to the United States Supreme Court. On Thursday, the preservationists will also resume their street demonstrations outside the Morosco Theater on West 45th Street, reading plays as they did last week and even doing musicals. The producer Joseph Papp said that the demonstrators would operate under the slogan ''Build over -it can be done.''

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News Analysis

Date: 09 March 1982

By Robert Pear, Special To the New York Times

Robert Pear

Congressional resistance to President Reagan's proposal to cut student aid demonstrates one of the fundamental truths of American politics: Programs with a broad constituency including the middle class are much harder to cut than programs for poor people. In cutting expenditures for Federal benefit programs, Mr. Reagan has repeatedly said that he wants to ''target'' scarce resources to those most in need. He also says he wants to reduce Government subsidies for ''middle- to upper-income'' families. That means cutting back or eliminating assistance for many families that receive guaranteed student loans, grants for college students and lunch subsidies for elementary and secondary school children.

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News Analysis

Date: 09 March 1982

By Leslie H. Gelb, Special To the New York Times

Leslie Gelb

Since the 19th century Russia and Britain, and since World War II the Soviet Union and the United States, have maneuvered for the dominant role in an Iran that was either caught up in revolution or on the brink of it. Their methods have included military occupation, bribery, encouragement of separatist movements, trade and coups. It was a game of power politics in the grand tradition. No one ever won with any permanence, and the game has never stopped. Now, according to Western intelligence sources, Washington and Moscow are again preparing themselves in secret with agents, arms, exiles and propaganda. As in so many recent instances, the Soviet Union is in a better position to influence events in Iran than the United States is.

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News Summary; MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1982

Date: 08 March 1982

International Guatemalans voted in what are widely being referred to as the country's ''last chance'' elections. Guatemalans say that if the elections for President and Vice President, for the national Congress and for municipal officials are not tainted by massive fraud, and if the army allows the people's choice to assume the presidency, then there is a possibility of a peaceful solution to the civil war. (Page A1, Column 1.) Iran is receiving military equipment and arms worth millions of dollars from Israel, North Korea, Syria, Libya, the Soviet Union and Western Europe to wage war against Iraq, Western intelligence sources said. These countries, along with the United States, are struggling openly and covertly for influence on Iran's future and over the balance of power in the Middle East. (A1:2-3.)

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News Summary; TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1982

Date: 09 March 1982

International Soviet forces killed 3,000 Afghans with poison gas and other chemical weapons in violation of a treaty signed by Moscow, according to the Reagan Administration. Deputy Secretary of State Walter J. Stoessel Jr. told a Senate committee that the information came from Afghan defectors who had been trained by Soviet experts in chemical warfare and from refugees in Pakistan who were victims of the attacks. (Page A1, Column 1.) Salvadoran rebels attacked two provincial capitals. The assaults paralyzed both towns for much of the day, and Government forces said that the fighting was widespread. (A4:3-4.)

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Joseph Lang, 83, Ex-President Of Distributor of Newspapers

Date: 09 March 1982

Joseph Lang, former president of the Lang News Company, a newspaper distributing company in Queens, died of a heart attack Sunday at the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. He was 83 years old and lived in Manhattan.

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N.C.A.A. at Work On Clemson Case

Date: 08 March 1982

AP

Clemson, which won the national collegiate football championship, could be charged with recruiting violations by the end of next month, according to a published report. The report, in Sunday's issue of The Greenville News and Greenville Piedmont, said that investigators from the National Collegiate Athletic Association were back on the Clemson campus the last week in February and indicated to school officials that formal charges could be made by the end of April.

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RATE DECLINE SEEN DURING RECESSION

Date: 08 March 1982

By Michael Quint

Michael Quint

The good news in the credit markets is that interest rates are expected to decline in the near future. The bad news is that the declines are expected to last only as long as the economy is in a recession. Short- and long-term rates have dropped sharply in the last month. Three-month Treasury bills dropped to about 11.8 percent last Friday, compared with 14.74 percent on Feb. 16, while the yield on 30-year Treasury bonds fell to 13.17 percent late Friday from 14.77 percent on Feb. 9.

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