10. kesäkuuta 1981 oli keskiviikkona tähtimerkin ♊ alla. Se oli 160 päivä vuodesta. Yhdysvaltain presidentti oli Ronald Reagan.
Jos olet syntynyt tänä päivänä, olet 44 vuotta vanha. Viimeisin syntymäpäiväsi oli tiistaina 10. kesäkuuta 2025, 354 päivää sitten. Seuraava syntymäpäiväsi on keskiviikkona 10. kesäkuuta 2026, 10 päivän kuluttua. Olet elänyt 16 425 päivää tai noin 394 223 tuntia tai noin 23 653 392 minuuttia tai noin 1 419 203 520 sekuntia.
10th of June 1981 News
Uutiset sellaisena kuin ne ilmestyivät New York Timesin etusivulle 10. kesäkuuta 1981
TV Executives Oppose Curb on Vote Projections
Date: 11 June 1981
UPI
Upi
News executives of the three major television networks today strongly opposed any attempt by Congress to limit their right to project election winners before all polls in the country have closed. The heads of ABC News, CBS News and NBC News agreed that there was no strong evidence that projections of Presidential election winners, based on returns from the eastern half of the nation, affected the outcome of Congressional and local elections or reduced voter turnout in the West.
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JERSEY WILL ADMIT CAMERAS AND TV TO COURTROOMS
Date: 11 June 1981
Special to the New York Times
After a two-year experiment, the New Jersey Supreme Court today made permanent an order allowing news organizations to use cameras and tape recorders in all state courts. New Jersey thus becomes the 30th state to permit such coverage. Other states allow cameras and recorders to be used in covering courts above the trial level. New York State permits news agencies to use cameras and recording equipment in criminal courts above the trial level with the approval of the particular court, while Connecticut bans such equipment altogether.
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Senate Gets Resolution to Resist Unesco Efforts to Regulate Press
Date: 10 June 1981
UPI
Upi
Senator Dan Quayle, Republican of Indiana, introduced a resolution today that would oppose efforts by Unesco to regulate the operation of the world press. ''No matter how they try to disguise it, what Unesco is trying to do is to codify and legitimize worldwide censorship,'' Senator Quayle said. He was referring to the desire by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization to establish a ''New World Information Order.''
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Advertising; McCann-Erickson Sage Revises His Ad Estimates
Date: 11 June 1981
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
Things - ad-wise - are looking up, according to Robert J. Coen, senior vice president and popular pundit at McCann-Erickson Worldwide, who updated his 1981 forecast yesterday in the pleasant precincts of the Princeton Club. In December, Mr. Coen estimated a 10.8 percent increase in the nation's advertising spending this year.
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U.N. SAYS ITS AGENCIES SUBSIDIZE THE PRESS
Date: 11 June 1981
By Bernard D. Nossiter, Special To the New York Times
Bernard
The United Nations said today, despite earlier denials, that at least eight of its agencies had contributed to subsidies for foreign newspapers that published articles reflecting United Nations views on economic aid. The agencies, according to confidential United Nations documents, have given $60,000 in cash and services to the project, a fraction of the $1.25 million donated by a Japanese businessman, Ryoichi Sasakawa. Yasushi Akashi, the United Nations Under Secretary General for Public Information, said, ''I have to admit I did not know of these small contributions'' until he was asked about them. In press briefings, published letters and interviews, Mr. Akashi had asserted that all the funds had come from the Japanese donor. Today he said, ''I have to defer to the facts.''
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News Analysis
Date: 11 June 1981
By Clyde Haberman
Clyde Haberman
On a slate-gray New Year's morning in 1978, Edward Irving Koch took the oath of office as New York's 105th Mayor and embarked on what he called in his inaugural address ''the important work of saving the city.'' Whether the city has indeed been saved in the last three and a half years is open to a debate that is likely to be sharpened by Mr. Koch's formal declaration yesterday that he is running for reelection. Less arguable, even his critics acknowledge, is that by dint of personality, Mr. Koch rescued the mayoralty from the partial eclipse that had descended upon it during the fiscal crisis of the mid-1970's. During much of Abraham D. Beame's years at City Hall, crucial decisions often were made by outside monitors who were not accountable to voters or their elected representatives. Mr. Koch returned the mayoralty to center stage. Lean on Promises But the theater had changed from the days of John V. Lindsay, another Mayor of style and authority, who sought to expand government's involvement in the lives of its people. Instead, until now, Mr. Koch has practiced the ''politics of less,'' warning New Yorkers not to expect too much because he could not guarantee that life in the city would get better.
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Rosemary Breslin, Wife Of The News Columnist
Date: 10 June 1981
Rosemary Breslin, the wife of Jimmy Breslin, the columnist, died yesterday at Lenox Hill Hospital after a long illness. She was 50 years old.
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Reagan's News Parley To Use an Old Format
Date: 11 June 1981
UPI
Upi
President Reagan will hold a news conference late this week or early next week, the White House said yesterday, and reporters will be back to vying for his attention with raised hands, but not shouts.
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News Summary; WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981
Date: 10 June 1981
International Israel defended its bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor, with Prime Minister Menachem Begin saying that ''Israel will use all of the possibilities at its disposal'' to halt other attempts by its enemies to make weapons of mass destruction. ''There won't be another holocaust in history,'' he said at a news conference. ''Never again, never again.'' (Page A1, Column 6.) The White House is working to decide what to do about Israel if it finds and reports to Congress within 48 hours that the Israelis violated their aid agreement by using American-made warplanes in its attack on Sunday against Iraq's nuclear reactor. An arms embargo, one of the available options, could threaten Israel's security. But to do nothing might cause the Administration to lose credibility with the Arabs, a senior official said. (A12:1-2.)
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News Summary; THURSDAY, JUNE, 11, 1981
Date: 11 June 1981
International ''A substantial violation'' by Israel of its arms agreements with the United States may have been committed when Israel bombed an Iraqi nuclear reactor, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig said in a letter to key leaders in the Senate and House on behalf of the President. Mr. Haig said the delivery of four F-16 fighter-bombers to the Israelis was being held up pending a review. (Page A1, Column 6.) Abolhassan Bani-Sadr was dismissed as commander in chief of Iran's armed forces by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The action appeared to suggest that Mr. Bani-Sadr's removal from the Presidency might also be near after a day in which he suffered several other blows in his fight to remain in office. (A1:6.)
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