كان ٢٦ نوفمبر ١٩٨٣ السبت تحت علامة النجمة ♐. كان هذا هو يوم 329 من السنة. كان رئيس الولايات المتحدة Ronald Reagan.
إذا كنت قد ولدت في هذا اليوم ، فأنت تبلغ٪ s سنة. كان عيد ميلادك الأخير في 42 ، الأربعاء، ٢٦ نوفمبر ٢٠٢٥ يوم مضى. عيد ميلادك القادم في 224 ، بعد الخميس، ٢٦ نوفمبر ٢٠٢٦ يوم. لقد عشت لمدة 140 يوم ، أو حوالي ١٥٬٥٦٥ ساعة ، أو حوالي ٣٧٣٬٥٨١ دقيقة ، أو حوالي ٢٢٬٤١٤٬٨٨١ ثانية.
26th of November 1983 News
الأخبار كما ظهرت في الصفحة الأولى لصحيفة نيويورك تايمز في ٢٦ نوفمبر ١٩٨٣
CUTS IN DAILY NEWS LAID TO PRINTING PROBLEMS
Date: 27 November 1983
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
The Daily News has reduced the space it gives to general news, sports, business and feature coverage by 10 percent because of problems with printing the paper that have also contributed to a 10 percent drop in circulation, according to its editor, James G. Wieghart. Mr. Wieghart said in an interview last week that the reduction in the news columns was not caused by economic difficulties, but rather by limitations related to moving the paper's presses out of Manhattan. He said the difficulty was compounded by the need to accommodate a heavy volume of Thanksgiving and Christmas advertising. The cut of four pages a day in news space has upset some of Mr. Wieghart's subordinate editors, who said it reflected a willingness to cut back on news to increase profits. Mr. Wieghart said that he shared some of their unhappiness, particularly since he had won an increase in news space earlier in the year, but that the cuts were solely due to production problems.
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UNESCO APPROVES A COMPROMISE ON WORLD COMMUNICATIONS PLAN
Date: 26 November 1983
AP
A 161-nation Unesco conference approved a compromise program on world communications today. It sidesteps the third-world demands that the Western nations have argued could have led to an international code for journalists. The compromise program consists of a two-year study by a United Nations agency to determine the impact of news organizations on international relations and on developing countries. Third-world delegates had demanded a panel to study an international code for journalists.
Full Article
DESPITE FANS' APPEALS, NBC'S 'OVERNIGHT' TO GO
Date: 26 November 1983
By Peter Kerr
Peter Kerr
It started two weeks ago, the night the NBC switchboard lit up, just minutes after the network had announced over the air that ''NBC News Overnight,'' the critically acclaimed late-night news program, was being canceled. Then came the letters. More than 1,500 protests and condolences poured into NBC's Rockefeller Center headquarters over the next two weeks, some including contributions of $5, $10 and $100 to make up for the program's shortfall in advertising revenues. Others came with poems and tape-recorded songs.
Full Article
MOSCOW ENVOY TO U.N. SAYS MISSILES INCREASE RISK OF WAR
Date: 26 November 1983
The Soviet Union's deputy chief delegate to the United Nations said today that the decision to proceed with the deployment of new American missiles in Western Europe had greatly increased the risk of nuclear war. The envoy, Richard S. Ovinnikov, said at a news conference that the imminent deployment of the missiles meant that ''irresponsibility and recklessness had prevailed over common sense.'' ''Detente,'' he said, ''has been deliberately murdered by the United States.''
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THE INTRICACIES OF INITIATING DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
Date: 27 November 1983
By Alan S. Oser
Alan Oser
THE DAILY NEWS made it. Joshua Muss didn't. Two recent tales of economic development efforts in the city are especially interesting in the light of an announcement by Mayor Koch earlier this month. He said he would propose legislation to increase significantly the real estate-tax benefits available for new commercial and industrial development in Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and Staten Island, and sections of Manhattan as well.
Full Article
BRITISH NEWSPAPER OWNERS TO SUE PRINTERS' UNION OVER STRIKE
Date: 27 November 1983
By Barnaby Feder
Barnaby Feder
As a printers' strike against Britain's national newspapers went into a second day today, the publishers announced that they would each sue the strikers' union for damages. Continuation of the action affected all seven of Fleet Street's Sunday papers. The owners' announcement today clouded prospects that the walkout would end in time to publish Monday's papers, and increased the chances that other unions would join the strike.
Full Article
PROSECUTORS INCREASE EFFORTS TO MAKE PRESS NAME SOURCES
Date: 26 November 1983
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
Prosecutors and criminal defendants are increasingly demanding the names of confidential informants who lead journalists to news stories. Lawyers who represent the press say trial court judges have acceded to those demands despite state laws enacted specifically over the last decade to shield reporters and their confidential sources. Newspapers and television stations have been fined and reporters have received jail sentences for defying the court orders. Decisions against the press in recent months include these: - A New York State appellate court ordered a Schenectady television reporter to tell a grand jury who had disclosed to him that a grand jury had recommended ousting a sheriff. A second grand jury is investigating whether the disclosure to the reporter was itself a crime.
Full Article
GERMANY, UBER ALLES
Date: 27 November 1983
The news is about new American missiles in Europe, threats of new Soviet deployments and the Soviet walkout from negotiations to regulate this phase of the arms race. The underlying realities are these: It will take five years for all the new NATO missiles to be put in place. . . . Any limit on Euromissiles will have to be part of a global arms compact. . . . No such pact seems possible until after America's 1984 election. Then why all the Soviet fury? Because the Kremlin, countering a President it took to be stalling all negotiations until he could acquire more missiles, has found profit in a political counterattack against the NATO alliance. The true contest concerns not Western Europe's weapons but its adherence to the United States. Above all, the struggle is about the future of Germany.
Full Article
NEWSPAPER IN NICARAGUA TO HALT PUBLICATION
Date: 26 November 1983
AP
The newspaper La Prensa, an important voice of opposition to Nicaragua's Sandinista Government, will suspend publication indefinitely Dec. 7 for lack of paper, its publisher said today. ''Our paper reserves are running out and the shipments of paper that friendly businesses in the United States and Canada have promised us cannot arrive before Dec. 7,'' the publisher, Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, said at a meeting with the newspaper's more than 200 employees. ''Therefore we are obliged to close the paper indefinitely.''
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PRINTERS AT BRITISH NEWSPAPERS STRIKE
Date: 26 November 1983
Printers at Britain's national newspapers walked off the job tonight in a labor dispute, forcing the cancellation of the Saturday editions. The dispute, in which the union involved, the National Graphical Association, has ignored court orders to end picketing and to pay fines, marks the first direct refusal to comply with labor laws passed by the Government of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to restrict the power of British labor unions. The dispute began five months ago when a regional publisher hired nonunion labor for a print shop. The union began picketing and he fired six of his employees from another shop and has since refused to rehire them. The plants produce newspapers that are distributed free of charge.
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