16 września 1986 roku była wtorek pod znakiem zodiaku ♍. Był to 258 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Ronald Reagan.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 39 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły wtorek, 16 września 2025 roku, 255 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień środa, 16 września 2026 roku, w 109 dni. Żyłeś przez 14 500 dni lub około 348 022 godzin lub około 20 881 352 minut lub około 1 252 881 120 sekund.
16th of September 1986 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 16 września 1986 roku
U.S. News to Publish Edition in Chinese
Date: 17 September 1986
By Richard W. Stevenson
Richard Stevenson
U.S. News & World Report said yesterday that it would publish a Chinese-language version of the newsweekly in conjunction with United Daily News in Taiwan, which will translate the magazine's contents and print the Chinese edition.
Full Article
AT CBS NEWS, RUMORS AND CAMPAIGN EFFORTS
Date: 16 September 1986
By Peter J. Boyer
Peter Boyer
The vacancy in one of the most visible and volatile jobs in network television, the presidency of CBS News, has prompted intense speculation and some campaigning within the news division on behalf of individuals forming the list of candidates for the job. The activity began last Wednesday, when William S. Paley, the founder of CBS, and the company's largest shareholder, Laurence A. Tisch, took control of CBS, prompting the resignation the following day of Van Gordon Sauter as CBS News president. Mr. Sauter had been the object of much disagreement at the news division, and the turmoil there played a role in the corporate change. Howard Stringer, a CBS News vice president who was Mr. Sauter's chief deputy, was asked last week to manage the news operation while a permanent president was sought. According to many at the network, Mr. Stringer has seized the moment to try to win the position for himself.
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1986
Date: 17 September 1986
International A fire in a South African gold mine killed at least 44 miners with toxic gas and left 154 men missing underground, according to the mine owners. More than 180 people were reported under treatment after escaping or being rescued from the gas fumes. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] A Soviet offer on war prevention will be explored by the United States at a 35-country East-West conference in Stockholm. President Reagan has decided to take up the Soviet proposal on monitoring troop movements from the air by observers using planes of the host country. [ A1:3. ]
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1986
Date: 16 September 1986
International Terrorists struck again in Paris in the fourth explosion in eight days. The police said a blast apparently caused by a bomb ripped through the highly guarded main headquarters of the Paris police 100 yards from Notre Dame Cathedral, killing one person and wounding 51, two of them gravely. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] There were 150 bomb alerts in Paris through the day, the authorities said. Almost overnight, the City of Light seemed to become a city under siege. The streets of the French capital were filled uncharacteristically with teams of police officers conducting spot checks on identity cards and searching public buildings. [ A10:3. ]
Full Article
Chile Lifts Its Ban On Reports by Reuters
Date: 17 September 1986
Reuters
The military Government lifted an order today preventing Reuters from filing news and information from its Santiago bureau. The order allowing the news agency to renew its operations with immediate effect was signed by Brig. Gen. Carlos Ojeda Vargas, head of the state of siege zone covering the capital. Reuters operations were suspended on Sept. 8, hours after the Government imposed a state of siege after an unsuccessful attempt on the life of President Augusto Pinochet.
Full Article
MANY JOURNALISTS ACCEPTING 'NO-STRINGS' OFFER BY DISNEY
Date: 16 September 1986
By Alex Jones
Alex Jones
Walt Disney World is giving a multi-million-dollar party for the nation's news organizations, and about 2,500 representatives of newspapers, magazines and radio and television stations have accepted the invitation to attend, with all expenses paid by Disney. ''There are absolutely no strings attached,'' said Bob Mervine, manager of press and publicity for Walt Disney World, the mammoth entertainment complex outside Orlando. Its 15th anniversary is the occasion for the celebration. But some journalists have been strongly critical of the ready acceptance of the Disney invitation, which includes expenses for a guest, as a breach of journalistic ethics.
Full Article
Daniloff T-Shirts
Date: 17 September 1986
By Irvin Molotsky and Warren Weaver Jr
Irvin Molotsky
Colleagues and allies of Nicholas S. Daniloff, the reporter charged with espionage in Moscow, are expressing their support for him with T-shirts. A group of editors and writers at U.S. News & World Report ordered several hundred shirts, white with a blue logo of the magazine and blue letters reading ''Free Nick Daniloff.'' They are being sold for $8 each at the magazine's offices at 2400 N Street N.W. and a sales outpost in the office of Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Democrat of New York, in the Russell Senate Office Building.
Full Article
DISPUTE OVER THE DANILOFF AFFAIR ERUPTS AT THE RIGA TOWN MEETING
Date: 16 September 1986
By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times
Philip Taubman
Soviet and American officials, meeting in public for the first time since an American correspondent was detained in Moscow, got into an argument about the case today at this Baltic beach resort outside Riga. President Reagan's adviser on Soviet affairs, Jack F. Matlock Jr., said at the opening session of a Soviet-American discussion forum that ''Nick Daniloff's arrest seems to us nothing other than seizure of a hostage.'' Nicholas S. Daniloff of the magazine U.S. News & World Report was released from a prison on Friday pending a trial on espionage charges. The Americans have dismissed the case as a setup, saying that the Russians seized Mr. Daniloff to trade him for Gennadi F. Zakharov, a Soviet employee of the United Nations arrested in New York, also on spy charges.
Full Article
Spaniard Turns Reporter
Date: 17 September 1986
Reuters
A former Spanish Communist Party leader, Santiago Carrillo, who lost his seat in Parliament last June, was accredited to Parliament today as a journalist for the popular magazine Interviu. A spokesman for the party said Mr. Carrillo, 71 years old, would also write for the Communist Party magazine Ahora. Mr. Carrillo was expelled from the party he led for 22 years after its election setback in 1982.
Full Article
U.S. CONTINUES POLITICAL DISCUSSION WITH MOSCOW
Date: 16 September 1986
Special to the New York Times
The White House sought today to maintain a political discussion with the Soviet Union even as pressures mounted to cease conducting business until an American journalist under indictment in Moscow was allowed to return. With the fate of Nicholas S. Daniloff of the magazine U.S. News & World Report now the focus of Soviet-American relations, there were signs of contentiousness within the Government on how tough a line to take. When President Reagan was asked today by reporters whether he had given in by agreeing to a Soviet proposal to turn over both Mr. Daniloff and a Soviet spy suspect in New York to their respective embassies pending trial, Mr. Reagan said, ''No one on our side has blinked and I didn't blink.''
Full Article