1986. gada 21. aprīlis bija pirmdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes ♉. Tā bija 110 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija Ronald Reagan.
Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 39 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija pirmdiena, 2025. gada 21. aprīlis, pirms 151 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir otrdiena, 2026. gada 21. aprīlis pēc 213 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 14 396 dienas jeb aptuveni 345 504 stundas, vai aptuveni 20 730 261 minūtes vai aptuveni 1 243 815 660 sekundes.
21st of April 1986 News
Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1986. gada 21. aprīlis
NEWS SUMMARY: TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1986
Date: 22 April 1986
International U.S. arms will stay within the limits of the unratified 1979 treaty on strategic weapons, according to Reagan Administration officials. As a result, they said, two Poseidon submarines will be dismantled. [ Page A1, Col. 6. ] Washington, in a new justification for underground nuclear testing, said a total test ban might spur other countries to develop nuclear weapons. For more than 20 years, it has been an assumption of those adovocating limits on nuclear arms that a comprehensive ban on nuclear tests would be a first step in persuading other states to halt further development of nuclear weapons. [ A3:4-6. ]
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NEWS SUMMARY: MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1986
Date: 21 April 1986
International A shift in Reagan foreign policy could keep alive the possibility Soviet-American summit meeting, the Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev indicated. He told journalists during a visit to Potsdam in East Germany that if the Reagan Administration altered a foreign policy course that he said was poisoning the international atmosphere, the summit meeting might still be held this year. He responded to questions about whether the American air raids on Libya might kill plans for a second meeting with President Reagan. After the raids, Moscow canceled meetings in Washington that were to lay the groundwork for a summit meeting. [ Page A1, Column 3. ] U.S. bombs hit a commando center in Libya Tuesday and badly damaged an adjacent high school for cadet seamen, according to evidence collected in a visit to the school. Western diplomats said the commando center at Sidi Bilal, near Tripoli, was presumed to have been involved in the mining of the Red Sea in 1984. [ A6:1. ]
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HIGH COURT ADDS PROTECTION FOR NEWS MEDIA IN LIBEL SUITS
Date: 22 April 1986
By Stuart Taylor Jr., Special To the New York Times
Stuart Taylor
The Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 today that a person suing a news organization for libel must prove damaging statements are false, at least ''on matters of public concern.'' The decision held unconstitutional a Pennsylvania statute that presumed damaging statements to be false and put the burden of proof on the news organization to show that the statements were true. The decision also invalidated similar rules in eight other states, including New Jersey. Before today's decision, at least 12 states, including New York and Connecticut, had already shifted the burden of proof to those suing for libel to show that damaging statements were false. The law in some states has been ambiguous.
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Advertising; N.A.B. Election
Date: 21 April 1986
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
In San Francisco, the board of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau elected a new slate of officers. Frank A. Daniels Jr., president and publisher of The Raleigh News & Observer and Times, became chairman; Bob Marbut, president and chief executive of Harte-Hanks Communications, vice chairman, and James Hoge, publisher of The New York Daily News, secretary and assistant treasurer. Richard E. Diamond, publisher of The Staten Island Advance, was re-elected treasurer.
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Dupree's Bad News
Date: 22 April 1986
The erratic but brilliant career of Marcus Dupree appeared to take an upward turn last week when he was made eligible for the National Football League draft. But the running back sounded yesterday as if his career were over.
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'AMERICAN ALMANAC' PLANNED FOR FALL
Date: 21 April 1986
By Peter J. Boyer
Peter Boyer
After more than a year of false starts, NBC has decided to put a reshaped, retitled version of the prime-time news program ''American Almanac'' on its fall schedule, according to network executives. The program, with Roger Mudd and Connie Chung as chief correspondents, has been on and off the NBC schedule since last summer as its Washington-based staff tried to develop a style that network management deemed worthy of broadcast. ''American Almanac'' was aired on a monthly basis through the fall and winter and the network had announced that it would get a permanent place on NBC's prime-time lineup in January. But the program was delayed, partly because news executives said it wasn't ready for airing, and partly because the time slot made available for the show by NBC's entertainment division, Saturday night at 10 o'clock, was deemed an unsuitable time for the debut of a news program.
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Fans' Behavior Penalizes Team
Date: 21 April 1986
AP
Europe's governing soccer body today banned FC Cologne from playing the second leg of its U.E.F.A. Cup final against Real Madrid at its stadium because of unruly fans, the West German sports news agency said. In a dispatch from Zurich, the agency said U.E.F.A. ruled that Cologne must play the May 8 match at a stadium 210 miles away from the city.
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Mexicans Seek Japanese Loan
Date: 21 April 1986
Reuters
The Mexican Finance Minister, Jesus Silva Herzog, has started a four-day trip to Japan for talks expected to center on debt, oil and Japanese investment, the official Notimex news agency said today. Angel Gurria, Mexico's director of public credit and chief debt negotiator, is accompanying him.
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Lisa Feder Wed To Charles Feitel
Date: 21 April 1986
Lisa Simeon Feder and Charles Daniel Feitel were married yesterday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Feder, in Manhattan. Rabbi Barry Green performed the ceremony.
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SOVIET GOES ALL-OUT FOR GOODWILL GAMES
Date: 22 April 1986
By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times
Philip Taubman
The publicity build-up for the Goodwill Games, a mini-Olympics scheduled to take place in Moscow in July, began in earnest in the Soviet Union today with a news conference and free samples of Pepsi Cola. The games, organized by Ted Turner and Soviet sports and television authorities, have received little public attention in the Soviet Union. That will soon change, according to Soviet officials. Nikolai I. Rusak, the first vice chairman of the state committee for physical culture and sports, said Soviet television plans to broadcast 120 hours of competition in the 19 sports included in the games.
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