22 marca 1986 roku była sobota pod znakiem zodiaku ♈. Był to 80 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Ronald Reagan.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 39 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły sobota, 22 marca 2025 roku, 181 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień niedziela, 22 marca 2026 roku, w 183 dni. Żyłeś przez 14 426 dni lub około 346 240 godzin lub około 20 774 431 minut lub około 1 246 465 860 sekund.
22nd of March 1986 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 22 marca 1986 roku
Keeping Ahead Of the News
Date: 23 March 1986
By Russell Baker
Russell Baker
A NEWSPAPER HEADLINE caught my eye. It said: ''Famed Psychic's Head Explodes.'' I didn't buy the paper. Afterward, I worried. What was wrong with me? In the old days, if there had been an exploding-head story in the news, I would have bought every sheet on the newsstand. Now I passed by as though exploding heads were as ordinary as kidnappings in Beirut.
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'CBN News Tonight' Canceled by Network
Date: 22 March 1986
AP
''CBN News Tonight,'' a half-hour nightly newscast started on the Christian Broadcasting Network two months ago, is being canceled because of a lack of advertising, CBN announced today. The final program will be broadcast March 28 at 10 P.M. The time slot will be filled by the third half-hour segment of the Rev. Pat Robertson's ''700 Club,'' an interview show that had occupied the slot before the weekly night news program began Jan. 27.
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NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 1986
Date: 23 March 1986
International President Reagan denounced critics of his proposed aid to Nicaraguan rebels, and said they engaged in ''scurrilous'' attacks and outright falsehoods in suggesting that his policy was leading the United States toward a war in Latin America. In an interview with The New York Times, he displayed rare public anger and his voice shook with emotion as he commented on the House debate before his request for aid was rejected on Thursday. [ Page 1, Column 6. ]
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NEWS SUMMARY: SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1986
Date: 22 March 1986
International A shakeup in Haiti brought the ouster of three top officials with links to former President Jean-Claude Duvalier. The move by the leader of the ruling council, Lieut. Gen. Henri Namphy, followed by a day the angry resignation of Gerard Gourgue, the Justice Minister and most popular member of the six-member council that took over when Mr. Duvalier fled Feb. 7. The changes were announced as violence was reported around the capital. [ Page 1, Column 6. ] Michele Sindona had a cynanide dose before he fell into an irreversible coma Thursday in a prison, the Minister of Justice said. The official, Mino Martinazzoli, told Parliament that it was not clear whether the poisoning of Mr. Sindona, who was one of Italy's leading financiers, was a murder or suicide attempt. [ 3:4. ]
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EYE ON MARCOS BILLIONS: JOVITO REYES SALONGA
Date: 23 March 1986
By Jane Perlez
Jane Perlez
Almost 20 years ago, just as Ferdinand E. Marcos began amassing his enormous wealth, one of the most popular politicians in the Philippines publicly accused the President of manipulating the nation's Securities and Exchange Commission for his own end. The politician, Senator Jovito R. Salonga, kept watching the accretion of the Marcos billions. And so, as a new Manila Government formed last month, it came as no surprise that the self-effacing lawyer and politician, described by his colleagues as possessing impeccable integrity, was appointed to head the commission investigating Mr. Marcos's billions. ''It was almost inevitable that he would be chosen,'' said a close colleague, Rafael Fernando, a Filipino businessman in Los Angeles. ''People were looking for leadership by moral principles.''
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Uganda Starts New Paper
Date: 23 March 1986
Reuters
The Ugandan Government started publishing a weekly newspaper, New Vision, today as the voice for President Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Movement.
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REPORT ON TEXAS
Date: 23 March 1986
University of Texas football players are selling their complimentary tickets to boosters at prices up to $600 per ticket in violation of collegiate rules, according to a report published today by The Dallas Morning News. The newspaper quoted former players as saying that Fred Akers, the coach, not only knew about the practice but also routinely cautioned players to be careful not to get the school in trouble with the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
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ANSWERS TO QUIZ
Date: 22 March 1986
1. The engagement of Prince Andrew of Britain to Sarah Ferguson ended speculation about whom he would marry. 2. Because conservatives won a majority in legislative elections, President Francois Mitterrand, a Socialist, appointed a Prime Minister with an opposing political philosophy. 3.
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Linda Amster
Date: 22 March 1986
Questions are based on news reports in The Times this week. Answers appear on page 50. 1. This has ended speculation. Explain. 2. An arrangement the French refer to as ''cohabitation'' is a result of a situation France has not faced since the advent of the Fifth Republic in 1959. What is the situation and what is the arrangement? 3. A flower identified as ''Zwart 0-8-35-79-1,'' the progeny of a mother named Queen of the Night and a father named Wienerwald, is causing a horticultural sensation. Why? 4. Tiny letters around a portrait is one of two subtle modifications of something that has remained substantially unchanged since 1929. What is it and why is it being altered? 5. ''A dark day for freedom,'' said President Reagan after a political defeat. To what was he referring? 6. Some results of the Democratic statewide primary voting in Illinois left the party's gubernatorial nominee in shock. Identify him and explain. 7. An event that occurs four days each year has a large and sometimes disruptive impact on stock prices, according to a recent report. What event is it? 8. ''In the spirit of Christ I must love my homosexual brothers and sisters, even though I don't understand them,'' said City Councilman Wendell Foster of the Bronx as some observers cheered. What were the circumstances? 9. The greatest numbers of schizophrenics now live (in hospitals/in jails/in the streets/with their families). 10. ''It's old hat,'' an observer said about an event that generated less excitement on Wall Street this time than ever before.
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ARKANSAS PAPERS BATTLE OVER MORE THAN MONEY
Date: 23 March 1986
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
Nearly 30 years ago, The Arkansas Gazette's coverage and support of school desegregation won two Pulitzer Prizes but so outraged the citizens of Little Rock that the newspaper was almost ruined by a boycott while its conservative rival, The Arkansas Democrat, prospered. Even though the 1957 boycott was supported by Gov. Orval E. Faubus, The Gazette fought back for several years to regain its dominance in circulation and advertising, and The Democrat slipped into a decline. Now a newspaper war between The Gazette and The Democrat is being waged in Federal District Court in Little Rock, pitting two proud and determined newspaper families with very different political perspectives against each other in what some experts describe as a struggle to the death of one of the papers. ''However the jury decides, it's going to end one newspaper or the other,'' said John Morton, a newspaper analyst who testified on behalf of The Gazette.
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