Le 21 mars 1982 était un dimanche sous le signe astral du ♓. C'était le 79ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était Ronald Reagan.
Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 43 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le vendredi 21 mars 2025, il y a 181 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le samedi 21 mars 2026, dans 183 jours. Vous avez vécu 15 887 jours, soit environ 381 304 heures, ou environ 22 878 277 minutes, ou environ 1 372 696 620 secondes.
21st of March 1982 News
Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 21 mars 1982
Ideas and Trends; No More Soho News
Date: 21 March 1982
By, Eva Hoffman and Margot Slade
Another decision in the British publishing world last week meant one less newspaper in New York City. The Associated Newspaper Group, a British organization with interests in The American Lawyer and Esquire magazine, announced the closing of its other American enterprise, The Soho News in New York.
Full Article
Major News; A Harbinger Discounted
Date: 21 March 1982
Not long ago, news that the nation's industrial output had risen at last might have been taken as a sign of good times ahead. But last week's Federal Reserve Board report of a 1.6 increase - the first since July, when the recession began - was greeted by more reminders of the economy's delicate condition.
Full Article
News Analysis
Date: 22 March 1982
By Steven Rattner, Special To the New York Times
Steven Rattner
By agreeing to reduce its output to 17.5 million barrels a day, a lower limit than had been expected, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has taken a step that raises doubts about predictions of further widespread oil price cuts.
Full Article
Follow-Up on the News; Nixon and History
Date: 21 March 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Votaries of history in San Clemente, Calif., where Richard M. Nixon had a villa when he was President, opened a museum in January 1981 dedicated to his Presidency. Within 11 months the museum, called A Bit of History, was out of business.
Full Article
Follow-Up on the News; High Rolling
Date: 21 March 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Next to building housing in Atlantic City - and he was one of the largest developers of subsidized units - 62-year-old David Zarin liked to roll the ivories in one of the city's casinos. It was an example of practice not making perfect, however.
Full Article
Follow-Up on the News; Invention Logjam
Date: 21 March 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
One month after taking office in July 1981, Gerald J. Mossinghoff, the Federal Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, noted that the waiting time to get a patent from his office was nearly two years. To get a trademark took a little more than two years.
Full Article
News Summary; SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1982
Date: 21 March 1982
International OPEC agreed to cut oil production by about 700,000 barrels a day to reduce the worldwide surplus of oil and bolster prices. The decision by the organization's 13 ministers at their meeting in Vienna was their first formal production agreement. The reduction was greater than had been expected and included a 500,000-barrel-a-day reduction by Saudi Arabia. (Page 1, Column 6.)
Full Article
Follow-Up on the News; Bob's Space Ship
Date: 21 March 1982
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
While the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was spending perhaps $100 million to perfect this country's space shuttle, 63-year-old Robert C. Truax in Saratoga, Calif., was quietly building an economical alternative: Bob's ''space shuttle.''
Full Article
Major News; Nicaragua Gives The Diplomacy Buttons a Push
Date: 21 March 1982
Nicaragua showed last week that two can play at carrot and stick. It called for an urgent meeting of the United Nations Security Council to publicize what it said was the danger of an ''imminent'' invasion by the United States. At the same time, it said it was ready to negotiate all differences with Washington.
Full Article
News Summary; MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1982
Date: 22 March 1982
International Salvadoran rebels and a businessman, Conrado Lopez Andreu, who normally are widely apart politically, share a loathing for the Christian Democratic Party, @hich is lead by the President of the military-civilian junta, Jose Napoleon Duarte. Mr. Lopez, president of El Salvador's Chamber of Commerce, was recently given time on the guerrillas' radio station to express his opposition to the Christian Democrats, who the Reagan Administration hopes will win Sunday's elections. Mr. Duarte's party has engendered such hatred that it doubtful that it can win a majority of assembly seats and if it does there is the question of whether it could govern effectively. (A1:2-4.) The French Left suffered a setback when leftist candidates failed to gain control of a majority of provincial councils from conservative forces in regional elections. The elections were run-offs for 1,063 of 2,029 seats in 95 provincial councils that will become powerful political bodies under President Francois Mitterrand's decentralization program. (A6:1-5.)
Full Article