كان ٢١ يناير ١٩٨٦ الثلاثاء تحت علامة النجمة ♒. كان هذا هو يوم 20 من السنة. كان رئيس الولايات المتحدة Ronald Reagan.
إذا كنت قد ولدت في هذا اليوم ، فأنت تبلغ٪ s سنة. كان عيد ميلادك الأخير في 40 ، الأربعاء، ٢١ يناير ٢٠٢٦ يوم مضى. عيد ميلادك القادم في 124 ، بعد الخميس، ٢١ يناير ٢٠٢٧ يوم. لقد عشت لمدة 240 يوم ، أو حوالي ١٤٬٧٣٤ ساعة ، أو حوالي ٣٥٣٬٦٢٦ دقيقة ، أو حوالي ٢١٬٢١٧٬٥٧١ ثانية.
21st of January 1986 News
الأخبار كما ظهرت في الصفحة الأولى لصحيفة نيويورك تايمز في ٢١ يناير ١٩٨٦
EX-AMSTERDAM NEWS EDITOR
Date: 22 January 1986
By Wolfgang Saxon
Wolfgang Saxon
James L. Hicks, a former editor of The Amsterdam News and a pioneer black American correspondent, died Sunday at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center after suffering a stroke. He was 70 years old and lived in Manhattan. Mr. Hicks served twice as the top editor of The Amsterdam News, from 1955 to 1966 and from 1972 to 1977, and helped to build it into one of the country's largest and most influential weeklies directed toward blacks. In between, he was an assistant commissioner of the New York State Division of Human Rights and a public-relations officer of the National Urban League.
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NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1986
Date: 22 January 1986
International Nicaraguan rebels need more aid, in the view of President Reagan, according to a White House official. He said Mr. Reagan had decided to ask Congress for $90 million to $100 million in military and other aid for the insurgents. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] A bomb killed 22 people in Beirut and wounded more than a hundred, many of them seriously. The explosion occurred in a car on a busy street in the eastern section near a building housing the offices of President Amin Gemayel's party. No one took responsibility for the blast. [ A3:4-6. ]
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NEWS SUMMARY: TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1986
Date: 21 January 1986
International A ''chemical detonation'' possibly caused by a bomb may have ripped through the front cargo hold of an Air-India jetliner last year, according to a team of five Indian scientists. The Boeing 747, flying from Montreal to London, crashed in the Atlantic off Cork, Ireland, killing all 329 people on board. [ Page A1, Column 1. ] One engine of the jet that crashed in Gander, Newfoundland, on Dec. 12, killing 248 American servicemen, was delivering less power than the three other engines at the moment of impact, according to investigators. They said the slower rotation of the right outboard engine could have contributed to the crash. [ A6:1-2. ]
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3 DIE AS COPTER CRASHES
Date: 22 January 1986
UPI
Upi
A helicopter carrying an ABC News crew to a meatpackers' strike crashed today in thick fog, killing the two ABC News employees and the pilot, the authorities said. An ABC News spokesman in New York City identified the two employees as Joe Spencer, a correspondent, and Mark McDonough, a producer, both 31 years old and based in Chicago.
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U.S. Reporter Detained Overnight by Nigeria
Date: 22 January 1986
AP
Security forces Saturday held Charles T. Powers, a correspondent for The Los Angeles Times, overnight at Murtala Muhammed International Airport without explanation and refused to let him call the United States Embassy. Mr. Powers said that after he arrived from Nairobi agents from the National Security Organization seized his passport and held him in their airport offices before taking him to security headquarters the following morning.
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North Korea Ends Talks; War Games Are Cited
Date: 21 January 1986
UPI
Upi
North Korea said today that it would suspend economic and political talks with South Korea to protest joint military maneuvers scheduled next month by the United States and South Korea. The suspension was announced about a week after North Korea offered to halt military exercises in February and called on the United States and South Korea to postpone their annual war games. A statement carried by the North Korean Central News Agency received in Tokyo said talks with the South would resume after the maneuvers ''when a favorable atmosphere is created.''
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The Hash Bashers
Date: 22 January 1986
By Russel Baker
Russel Baker
Eight men met secretly in Washington. They were the Hash-Settling Committee of the National Security Council. Their job: to settle the hash of foreign troublemakers. Since their work was top secret, the press always referred to them as ''the hush-hush Hash-Settling Committee.''
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Required Reading
Date: 21 January 1986
Of Coal and Moses Excerpts from a current National Coal Association brochure in which Carl E. Bagge, president, asserts that coal operators, in their dealings with Washington, find themselves in difficulties similar to those that faced ''the tribe that went up with Moses out of Egypt'': Without question we are enduring hardship. Clearly the faith and strength of many are being tested.
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TV NEWSMAN'S TRANSITION TO NOVELS
Date: 22 January 1986
By Herbert Mitgang, Special To the New York Times
Herbert Mitgang
Gerald Seymour once had it made as a British television journalist: he carried a company air-travel card, appeared on camera in a street-scarred overcoat (''I was against the romantic trenchcoat image'') and did his two minutes of stand-up reporting from many of the magic-carpet datelines of the world. Then, three years after his acclaimed first novel, ''Harry's Game,'' was published in the United States and became a main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club in 1975, he decided to give up the television glamour - the recognizable face on the screen, the chance to have his voice heard at once by millions, the punditry that came with being on the scene when big stories broke - for the aloneness of a novelist. As a seasoned craftsman behind the microphone and the typewriter, whose novels are regularly published in London and New York -a new one is coming from W. W. Norton, his American publisher, this spring - Mr. Seymour has very definite views on the advantages offered by fiction over fact for a onetime journalist.
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AIDS FEARS OF THE UNMARRIED
Date: 22 January 1986
Eighteen percent of people who are single, divorced or separated have changed their sexual behavior for fear of AIDS, according to a nationwide NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll released yesterday, while just 3 percent of married people have changed their practices. Half of those who changed said they relied more heavily on condoms, and more than 90 percent spoke of carefully choosing partners or avoiding promiscuity. Three-quarters of those polled said they believed that acquired immune deficiency syndrome would spread beyond the groups the fatal illness has hit hardest: homosexual men and intravenous drug users. This finding spanned divisions by age, race or sex.
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