1986年4月20日日曜日 の再生

1986年4月20日は、%sの星印の下の日曜日でした。 それはその年の**♈日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は109**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402026年4月20日月曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は692027年4月20日火曜日日です。 あなたは295日、または約14,679時間、または約352,308分、または約21,138,488秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

20th of April 1986 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1986年4月20日 で掲載されたニュース

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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NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1986

Date: 20 April 1986

International Restrictions on European exports will be put into place next month by the Reagan Administration in retaliation for lost American food sales to Portugal and Spain, senior European and American trade officials said. They made the announcement after admitting failure in their latest attempt to resolve trans-Atlantic trade disputes caused by the Spanish and Portuguese entry into the European Common Market at the start of the year. [ Page 1, Column 6. ]

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Village for Sale

Date: 20 April 1986

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

FOR the fourth time in 27 years, Shadyside Village, Pa., a community with 21 houses, 12 garages and a chapel on 32.9 acres, was for sale. The owner, Jesse Buzzard, operator of a trucking business in Rimersburg, Pa., was asking $300,000 last summer.

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Lagging Memorial For Roosevelt

Date: 20 April 1986

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

THIRTY-ONE years ago, Congress authorized the building of a memorial to Franklin D. Roosevelt, who died 41 years ago this month in his fourth term as President. A Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Commission was set up to oversee the work.

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Seeking Perfection At Science Hall

Date: 20 April 1986

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

THE New York Hall of Science, undergoing a $10 million renovation since it closed in 1981, took a scientific approach to creating exhibits as it prepared to reopen. The city museum in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens invited a sampling of children and adults to evaluate potential exhibits last year, so it could remedy any flaws before reopening. The museum reported receiving a mixture of criticism and praise.

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'Front Page' to 'J.O.A.' in Detroit

Date: 20 April 1986

By Katherine Roberts

Katherine Roberts

Such are the economics of journalism that while fewer and fewer two-newspaper towns remain, there are more two-newspaper newspapers. So last week's announcement that The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News had agreed to merge all but their news operations did not surprise financial analysts.

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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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IN THE HOUSE, MANEUVERING OVER NICARAGUA

Date: 20 April 1986

MOST Americans are not sure what, if anything, they want the United States to do about Nicaragua, a New York Times/CBS News Poll disclosed last week. Sixty-two percent of the respondents said they opposed aid for the rebels fighting the Sandinista Government.

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'STAR WARS' PACT DISCLOSURE UPSETS BONN

Date: 20 April 1986

By James M. Markham, Special To the New York Times

James

Chancellor Helmut Kohl's Government has been embarrassed by the disclosure to the press of a secret accord governing West Germany's industrial role in the Reagan Administration's research program on antimissile defenses. On Friday, the Cologne tabloid Express published the text of the accord, which was signed in Washington on March 27 by West Germany's Economics Minister, Martin Bangemann, and Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger. The newspaper and an energy newsletter also plan to publish copies of accompanying letters to the agreements on research on the program commonly known as ''Star Wars.'' As with a similar memorandum of understanding reached with Britain in December, the Pentagon had requested that the text be kept secret. Well-placed American officials said this was because the Pentagon will be negotiating such understandings with several countries and did not want to weaken its bargaining leverage by disclosures of what had been conceded to other countries.

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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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