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생일, 생년월일
1981년 9월 15일 화요일
출생지
브롱크스
나이
44
스타 사인

1981년 9월 15일은(는) 화요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♍**입니다. 올해의 257일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 Ronald Reagan입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 44살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 9월 15일 월요일, 1일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 9월 15일 화요일일 후 363입니다. 당신은 16,072일, 약 385,728시간, 약 23,143,683분 또는 약 1,388,620,980초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

15th of September 1981 News

1981년 9월 15일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

PAPERS INCREASE CAPITAL COVERAGE

Date: 16 September 1981

AP

In a town of people who are compulsive about knowing the news, the demise of The Washington Star last month left addicts gasping. Now, others are moving in to meet their need. The New York Times, which sells 25,000 copies in Washington on weekdays and more on Sundays, started publishing an added daily page of Washington news yesterday.

Full Article

NBC IN A RARE TV-RATINGS VICTORY

Date: 16 September 1981

By the Associated Pres S

TV, its performance bolstered by the Miss America Pageant and a television movie, won the networks' ratings race for the first time since the World Series 47 weeks ago. NBC's ''Nightly News'' also finished ahead of the competition in the week ending Sunday for the first time in three years.

Full Article

MacNeil and Lehrer Will Share Journalism Award

Date: 16 September 1981

By Albin Krebs and Robert Mcg. Thomas

Albin Krebs

For the first time in its 33 years, the William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit will be shared. The award is to be presented to Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer, co-anchormen of the Public Broadcasting Service program ''The MacNeil/Lehrer Report,'' on Feb. 10 at the University of Kansas, in Lawrence.

Full Article

CONGRESSMAN PLANS AMENDMENT TO CURB PAYMENTS TO UNESCO

Date: 16 September 1981

By Barbara Crossette, Spec Ial To the New York Times

Barbara Crossette

A Republican Congressman, running contrary to Reagan Administration policy, intends to introduce on Thursday a measure that would cut off United States funds to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization if the organization takes steps to restrict the world's press. Representative Robin L. Beard Jr. of Tennessee plans to offer an amendment to a bill authorizing funds for the State Department that would mandate a yearly accounting of actions by Unesco affecting international communications.

Full Article

FILIPINOS OPEN CAMPAIGN FOR PRESS FREEDOM

Date: 16 September 1981

Special to the New York Times

A movement for freedom of the press has been started here to honor a woman who resigned her editorial job two months ago because of Government pressure. About 100 leading citizens, including figures in the opposition, attended a ceremony today to open the campaign, called ''Concerned Filipinos for Press Freedom,'' which is the first serious effort to revive the free press since its curtailment in 1972. At the ceremony, an award of merit was granted to Letty Jimenez-Magsanoc, a University of Missouri journalism graduate who was editor of the Manila weekly, Panorama, until she was forced out last July.

Full Article

Piersall's Season Over

Date: 16 September 1981

Jimmy Piersall, the Chicago White Sox broadcaster who was suspended indefinitely last week for a flippant remark about players' wives, will not be reinstated for the rest of the season.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 16 September 1981

By Charles Austin

Charles Austin

The encyclical letter that Pope John Paul II issued yesterday on the subject of work and human dignity is the Pope's third major statement relating Roman Catholic doctrine to modern problems. Like the earlier two encyclicals - one on the ''moral disorder'' of the arms race and another on the dangers of materialism - ''Laborem Exercens'' (''On Human Work'') is a nuanced document that reveals both the Pope's scholarly background and his pastoral concern for the way the modern world affects the life of the Christian. The Polish-born Pope's diplomatic tact is also evident in the balanced critique of both capitalism and Marxism. By stressing the theological aspect of work as humanity's ''specific dignity,'' he gives a spiritual dimension to labor at a time when economic and technological developments tend to downgrade the worker, making him merely a unit of production or operator of machinery.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 15 September 1981

By Steven V. Roberts, Special To the New York Times

Steven Roberts

At the White House this morning, a group of Southern Democrats told President Reagan that they would go along with his plans for a modest slowdown in military spending, leaving domestic programs to bear the brunt of the new budget cuts to be proposed by the Administration. But on Capitol Hill, the House Appropriations Committee rejected the notion of new cuts in any area as it approved a bill to finance Government activities until Nov. 1. These conflicting signals illustrate the knotty problem facing Mr. Reagan and his Congressional allies as they prepare for the next round of the battle of the budget. The White House wants to cut about $15 billion, on top of the $35 billion already trimmed out of the budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. And after the President's masterly political performances last spring and summer, Capitol Hill oddsmakers still predict a Reagan victory.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 15 September 1981

By Frank Lynn

Frank Lynn

Judicial intervention in New York City primary elections is more of a tradition than a rarity. The Democratic and Republican regular party organizations often use the state courts to, in effect, call off local district primaries by eliminating the opposition. What makes last week's decision postponing the primary unusual is th at it was made by a Federal court and that it represented a turn of the legal tables. ''The outs'' - minorities, insurgents an d civic groups - successfully used the Federal court against the p olitical establishment - the city's Board of Elections, the Corporati on Counsel, the City Council and, ultimately, the two major politic al parties.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 16 September 1981

By Warren Weaver Jr., Special To the New York Times

Warren Weaver

For a time, it seeme d that Social Security legislation had become the political equivale nt of the weather: everyone in Washington was talking about it, but no one seemed bold enough to do something about it by stepping f orward and exercising leadership. The House Democratic leadership has reportedly signaled a slowdown on a bill that a subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee has been drafting intermittently since last spring, eager to have the Republicans carry the burden of changes in the retirement law. The White House, stung by widespread criticism of the Social Security program that President Reagan proposed last May, has refused to redefine its position while offering to negotiate over a wide range of issues. So it came as something of a surprise today when Senator Bob Dole, Republican of Kansas, announced that the Senate Finance Committee would begin drafting a Social Security bill next week, basing its work on a series of proposals he would make as chairman of the committee.

Full Article