O dia 15 de novembro de 1981 foi um domingo sob o signo de ♏. Foi o dia 318 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi Ronald Reagan.
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15th of November 1981 News
Notícias como apareceu na primeira página do New York Times em 15 de novembro de 1981
News Analysis
Date: 16 November 1981
By David K. Shipler, Special To the New York Times
David Shipler
The guessing game surrounding the peace plan of Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Fahd -would he or would he not recognize Israel? - has been generating considerable impatience here, mainly because Israelis think they know the answer very well. Optimism comes hard to a country besieged, vilified and repeatedly attacked by hostile neighbors over the decades. The impulse is to hear the Arab voices of extremism and to dismiss those of moderation, to see radicalism as reality and conciliation as duplicity. Arab affairs experts in Israel, fluent in Arabic and skilled at sifting through nuances in published and broadcast material from Middle Eastern capitals, develop a sixth sense like that of the veteran Kremlinologist who spends a lifetime dissecting Pravda. The Israelis know - they simply know - that they understand the Arab world more completely than do Americans and Western Europeans.
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A DURABLE WINNER
Date: 16 November 1981
By Gordon S. White Jr
Gordon White
On the first series of plays against Penn State Saturday, Alabama had a fourth down and less than a yard to go at its 45-yard line. It never considered punting. After a timeout for consultation with Coach Bear Bryant, the quarterback Alan Gray set the team in a tight wishbone. It seemed apparent to Penn State that Alabama would try a dive play for the first down. Suddenly Gray backpedaled before the snap from center, and the three running backs took a step toward the line. It was a legal shift, and it drew the entire Penn State defensive front offside, resulting in a 5-yard penalty and a first down. The cunning tactic had been used many times by Bryant. It was clear then that the coach had come prepared for anything, and that Penn State had not. Alabama won, 31-16, and Bryant, who is 68 years old, had his 314th victory in 37 years as a head coach, tying the record set in 1946 by Amos Alonzo Stagg in 57 years of coaching.
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WEST SHORE LINE: GOOD NEWS
Date: 15 November 1981
By Gene Rondinaro
Gene Rondinaro
DUMONT ALMOST since the last northbound passenger train left this Bergen County town 22 years ago, commuters, public officials and railroad enthusiasts here and in other populous communities along the West Shore Railroad have sought a resumption of passenger service. Several weeks ago, they got their first encouraging news in years. The Metropolitan Transit Authority, the New York agency responsible for most rail and bus service in that state's New York suburban area, adopted a resolution calling for resumption of the railroad's commuter service. The line, which runs through the eastern sections of Orange and Rockland Counties in New York, as well as through Bergen and Hudson Counties, has carried only freight since 1959.
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News Analysis
Date: 16 November 1981
By Ari L. Goldman
Ari Goldman
When Mayor Koch talks these days of improving mass transit, he stops short of the ultimate weapon - a city takeover of the troubled subway and bus system that each day carries 3.5 million passengers. He doesn't foreclose that option - open to the city under a little known state law - but he says he first wants to see if his other ideas for upgrading the transit system will bear fruit. Since his re-election victory this month, the Mayor has taken a new, more aggressive approach toward transit. After years of saying it was a state responsibility, he is insisting on a greater voice in running the system -including more seats on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority board.
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States News Service
Date: 15 November 1981
WASHINGTON, D.C. NEW ENGLAND Congressmen are becoming more optimistic that they can save energy tax credits from the Federal budget ax. The Reagan Administration insists it still may try to cut or eliminate the credits, which are available to individuals and businesses to help defray the costs of installing insulation or alternative energy sources. But some members of the New England Congressional Caucus are beginning to doubt the cuts will be made. The Administration may be stalling, they say, or it may even have dropped its plans to impose the cuts.
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Follow-Up on the News; Swept Away
Date: 15 November 1981
By Charles Strum
Charles Strum
As leaves piled up around City Hall last November, Mayor Koch introduced an innovation discovered on his tour of China: Shanghai sweepers. Resembling supermarket delivery bicycles with low-slung baskets in front, the gasoline-powered devices were fitted with revolving wire brushes to sweep debris into the bins.
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Follow-Up on the News; Threat to Liberty
Date: 15 November 1981
By Charles Strum
Charles Strum
Soon after political protesters scaled the Statue of Liberty in May 1980, a team of specialists inspected the monument, fearing serious damage to its copper skin. But a detailed report that followed said that, while maintenance was necessary, neither the climbers nor years of weathering had done irreparable damage to the exterior.
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Follow-Up on the News; Urban Renewal
Date: 15 November 1981
By Charles Strum
Charles Strum
On Aug. 25, 1980, the Henry Rincker house, the second oldest house in Chicago, was demolished in 10 minutes by a bulldozer. The wooden landmark structure, built about 1852 and incorporating details of the Gothic revival style, was on a tract intended for condominiums.
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Follow-Up on the News; Purloined Papers
Date: 15 November 1981
By Charles Strum
Charles Strum
Documents signed by Lafayette, Brahms and Lincoln, among others, were stolen two years ago from the Sheraton Centre hotel in Manhattan, where the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America was holding its annual spring fair. A nationwide search for the papers, valued then at $15,000, has turned up nothing, according to past and present officers of the association.
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News Summary; SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1981
Date: 15 November 1981
International Relations With Peking may sour over the issue of possible American military sales to Taiwan, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. told an audience in Palm Beach, Fla. The Chinese Communists have warned that relations with the United States may deteriorate if it upgrades the fighter plane arsenal of the Chinese Nationalists in Taiwan. Peking has delayed sending a military mission of its own to Washington pending resolution of the arms sales issue. (Page 1, Col. 3.) Richard V. Allen was involved in arranging an interview with Nancy Reagan by a Japanese magazine, the magazine Shufu-no-tomo said in the article written about the interview. Mr. Allen, President Reagan's national security adviser, said that he had not set up the interview and that he was present while it took place only because he acted frequently as liaison with foreign journalists. The White House said Friday that the Justice Department was investigating a $1,000 cash payment received by Mr. Allen from the magazine. (1:2.)
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News Summary; MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1981
Date: 16 November 1981
International A vote on Spain's joining NATO is sought by the Socialist Workers Party, which organized one of the biggest demonstrations since the death of Franco to support its demand for the vote. Tens of thousands of people marched in Madrid. The party leader, in a keynote speech, said, ''What will the allied countries of NATO say when they see that half a million people have gathered in Madrid to say that they do not want to go into NATO without a referendum?'' (Page A3:4-6.) Mobilization of the P.L.O.'s troops in Lebanon was ordered by Yasir Arafat, the Palestinian guerrilla leader, in anticipation of what he said was an imminent attack Israeli attack. He made the announcement in a speech to Palestinian students, who form part of the military ranks of the Palestine Liberation Organization. He said he had told the Arab League that the P.L.O. would accept no curbs on guerrilla armament and that he had informed the United Nations that he had rejected a proposal for an increase in the United Nations peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon. (A3:1-3.)
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