Christian TV Network Begins News Program
Date: 28 January 1986
AP
''CBN News Tonight,'' a half-hour television news program from a Christian perspective, begins tonight on the Christian Broadcasting Network.
1986年1月27日は、%sの星印の下の月曜日でした。 それはその年の**♒日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は26**でした。
この日に生まれた場合、あなたはRonald Reagan歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は40、2026年1月27日火曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は150、2027年1月27日水曜日日です。 あなたは214日、または約14,760時間、または約354,258分、または約21,255,515秒生きてきました。
Date: 28 January 1986
AP
''CBN News Tonight,'' a half-hour television news program from a Christian perspective, begins tonight on the Christian Broadcasting Network.
Date: 28 January 1986
International A report on Ethiopian resettlement has divided the Ethiopian Government and a private relief organization. A report by a Paris-based organization known as Doctors Without Borders says more Ethiopians are dying as a result of a resettlement program than as a result of famine. Ethiopia denied the charge, which appears in a report titled ''Mass Deportations in Ethiopia,'' a study of the Marxist Government's efforts to resettle 1.5 million famine victims. [ Page A1, Column 1. ] A crowd greeted Corazon C. Aquino with adulation as she campaigned for the presidency of the Philippines. A crowd of 50,000 or more choked Manila's main intersection in the city's business center where the candidate addressed them. Mrs. Aquino now seems to have a coherent position to offer on such issues as the presence of two large American bases, on the growing Communist insurgency, and on economic reform. [ A1:2. ]
Date: 27 January 1986
International Victory for Ugandan rebels was claimed by the rebels' leaders. They announced that they had overthrown the Government after seizing Kampala, the capital. Maj. Gen. Tito Okello, who became Uganda's head of state after leading a military coup last July, was reported by a Kenyan newspaper to have said that he would fight on. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] Plummeting oil prices suggest that petroleum's worldwide dominance may be declining. In the last few months, prices have fallen by one-third to less than $20 for a 42-gallon barrel. Current prices are about half of what they were at their peak five years ago. Some analysts are talking about $15 oil. [ A1:2. ]
Date: 28 January 1986
By James Lemoyne, Special To the New York Times
James Lemoyne
He has a reputation among his countrymen as an unusually hardheaded politician who resigned from the Government three years ago rather than bend to the political dictates of the Honduran President. But today Jose Azcona Hoyo returned in style to be sworn in as President of Honduras himself, a position that most political commentators here say will require not only hardheadedness but also a goodly measure of political savvy and compromise if he is to manage the country's severe economic and political problems. Merely by becoming President Mr. Azcona, who is 59 years old, set a record of sorts. In a country where power has normally changed hands by military coup, he became the first elected civilian leader to succeed another elected civilian as President in more than 50 years.
Date: 28 January 1986
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
The Financial News Network, frustrated thus far in its effort to acquire United Press International, could get another chance at U.P.I. because a September bankruptcy court order omitted what may prove to be critical language. ''I think they made a boo-boo,'' said Joel Lewittes, a former bankruptcy judge and now a bankruptcy lawyer, referring to the attorneys for U.P.I. and its employees' union, the Wire Service Guild. The court order, entered by Federal Bankruptcy Judge George Bason Sept. 26, extended until March 31, 1986, the period in which a plan of reorganization could be submitted to the court exclusively by U.P.I. management, the Guild, and the committee representing the news agency's creditors. But while the order explicitly extended the right to submit a plan, it did not mention any extension of the exclusive right to seek creditor approval of a reorganization plan, the second stage of the bankruptcy sale process.
Date: 28 January 1986
By Steve Lohr, Special To the New York Times
Steve Lohr
For nearly two centuries, Fleet Street has been not only the London district where this nation's newspapers are printed, but also a bastion of union strength in resisting new printing technology. But Rupert Murdoch, the Australian-born publisher, has directly challenged the unions by introducing computer technology at four newspapers despite a strike by 6,000 of his company's printers and other production workers. Derek Terrington, a publishing analyst at Grieveson Grant & Company, a London brokerage house, said Mr. Murdoch's action spelled ''the death of Fleet Street, as a way of doing things and as a way of life.'' Mr. Murdoch's modernization drive is also becoming a test of union solidarity, especially since he appears to have won the first round in publishing his papers on Sunday and Monday without the striking workers. The Trades Union Congress, the British labor federation, is trying to close ranks among its member organizations to prevent distribution of the Murdoch papers. The congress tonight termed Mr. Murdoch's actions ''industrial dictatorship'' and called on all unions to support the striking workers.
Date: 28 January 1986
Black Americans are much more likely to approve of how President Reagan is handling his job than they were three and four years ago, but they are far more critical than are whites, the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. The latest survey, conducted from Jan. 19 through 23, shows that 37 percent of blacks approve and 49 percent disapprove. In all of 1982, in contrast, 10 percent of blacks approved and 76 percent disapproved. Among whites in the latest poll, 68 percent approved and 21 percent disapproved.
Date: 27 January 1986
UPI
Upi
The Pentagon has continued to ship toxic waste to a California dump that was cited for violating environmental regulations, according to a Federal report. The report said military installations sent 6,442 tons of toxic waste to Chemical Waste Management Inc.'s Kettleman Hills disposal facility for seven months after the Environmental Protection Agency banned the site in November 1984 as a depository for materials collected through the Federal toxic waste cleanup program.
Date: 28 January 1986
By R. W. Apple Jr
R. Apple
President Reagan continues to be extremely popular with the American public, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll, but there is no clear evidence that he has yet achieved the ideological realignment he has long sought. Sixty-five percent, or about two-thirds, of the 1,581 people interviewed said that they approved of the way Mr. Reagan was handling his job five full years after he took office. No President in the last half-century has demonstrated quite that much staying power; at comparable stages of their incumbencies, Dwight D. Eisenhower had 60 percent of the public with him and Franklin D. Roosevelt had about the same. On the eve of his State of the Union Message, which is to be delivered today, 39 percent of the public think most Americans are politically more conservative than they were five years ago, but 23 percent think they are more liberal. But on a range of ideological questions first asked about five years ago, no clear swing to the right has been discerned.
Date: 28 January 1986
By David Bird and David W. Dunlap
David Bird
Because newspaper ink runs in George Frederick Evans's blood, it should have come as no surprise to his parents that he already has problems with deadlines. ''He was not due until the Ides of March, which he thought was a lousy birthday,'' said his father, Harold Evans, former editor of The Times of London and The Sunday Times.