26 stycznia 1984 roku była czwartek pod znakiem zodiaku ♒. Był to 25 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Ronald Reagan.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 42 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły poniedziałek, 26 stycznia 2026 roku, 142 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień wtorek, 26 stycznia 2027 roku, w 222 dni. Żyłeś przez 15 483 dni lub około 371 594 godzin lub około 22 295 674 minut lub około 1 337 740 440 sekund.
26th of January 1984 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 26 stycznia 1984 roku
Hallway in the Capitol Off Limits to Reporters
Date: 27 January 1984
UPI
Upi
Reporters were kept from interviewing senators near the Senate chamber today under the stricter security rules put in place after a recent bombing in the Capitol, and journalists said they planned to protest. Roberta Hornig, Capitol Hill news editor for NBC News, and Helen Dewar, a Washington Post Congressional reporter, were told they could not wait in a hallway for Democratic senators emerging from a caucus.
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PRESIDENT BACKS U.S. SPACE STATION AS NEXT KEY GOAL
Date: 26 January 1984
By Philip M. Boffey, Special To the New York Times
Philip
President Reagan tonight endorsed the development of America's first permanently manned space station, which could eventually serve as a base from which to colonize the Moon or Mars. The space station would cost at least $8 billion over the next eight years and could cost $20 billion to $30 billion by the end of the century, just 16 years away. The President's announcement in his State of the Union Message is a major victory for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which has been advocating a permanently manned station as the nation's next major goal in space. With development of the space shuttle essentially complete, the space agency must either dismantle much of its engineering talent and laboratories or redirect them to another major project.
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STATION IN SPACE SEEN PROVIDING USE FOR INDUSTRY
Date: 27 January 1984
By John Noble Wilford
John Wilford
President Reagan's commitment to develop a permanent manned space station will enable private industry to open the orbital frontier to a wide range of promising commercial ventures, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said today. The space agency said it planned to offer industry research assistance, tax incentives, bargain freight rates and other inducements to exploit the space station as a factory in the sky. Projected benefits could include medicines, crystals for electronics and superstrength metals that could only be produced in weightlessness, as well as new jobs and an improvement in the nation's position in international trade. Leaders of the space agency, elaborating on Mr. Reagan's new initiative, said the proposed $8 billion program would assure American leadership in space well into the next century. The first components of the station could probably be assembled in earth orbit by 1992.
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JAPANESE OFFICIAL IN U.S. FOR TALKS WITH BUSH
Date: 27 January 1984
By Richard S. Halloran
Richard Halloran
Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe arrived here today for meetings with Vice President Bush and other Cabinet officers as part of a continuing effort to resolve differences in military and economic policies between Japan and the United States. A senior State Department official, in a briefing for reporters, outlined topics for discussion but indicated that no new agreements were expected except for a renewed accord intended to increase American companies' access to Japan's telecommunications market. The other issues were expected to fall into a negotiating pattern that has evolved over the last 25 years, in which Washington puts pressure on the Japanese to make concessions and Japan concedes enough to resolve the issue with the least political cost at home.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1984 International
Date: 27 January 1984
-Jordanian military plan will be renewed, according to Reagan Administration officials. They said the Administration had told Israel that it plans to revive efforts to supply Jordan with equipment for an 8,000-man strike force for use in emergencies in the Persian Gulf. (Page A1, Col. 6.) A resolution urging a withdrawal of the Americn marines from Lebanon will be approved by the House, Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted. He made the statement as Senate Democrats reaffirmed their opposition to the 18-month deployment of the force in Beirut. (A8:1-4.)
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U.S. HAILS GRENADA TOURISM
Date: 26 January 1984
UPI
Upi
The White House called a news conference today for a commercial announcement - the resumption of Cunard vacation cruises with stops at Grenada. Reporters from news agencies and television networks were summoned to the office of a deputy press secretary, Peter Roussel, for an announcement, which appeared to promote the service by the Cunard Steam-Ship Company to the Caribbean island invaded by Americans last October.
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PULITIZER'S PAPER AT TURNING POINT
Date: 27 January 1984
By Jonathan Friendly
Jonathan Friendly
The article at the top of the front page of The St. Louis Post-Dispatch today reported that the Missouri State Auditor had found that the St. Louis County special school district was operating ''out of control.'' In effect, the state official confirmed an array of improper financial practices that the newspaper had discovered and reported months earlier. So while today's article was not necessarily startling to readers, it affirmed that the newspaper that Joseph Pulitzer founded 105 years ago had not lost its investigative touch or its enthusiasm for disturbing institutions of power and privilege. But now, at a turning point in its history, The Post-Dispatch finds itself uncomfortably in the news, with its motives and commitment to journalism being questioned on several fronts.
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Rebels in Mozambique Free 12 Soviet Captives
Date: 26 January 1984
UPI
Upi
South African-backed Mozambican guerrillas today freed 12 Soviet mining technicians held captive for five months, fulfilling ''a direct accord with Moscow,'' a rebel spokesman said.
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ANDERSON VIEW ANTICONSUMER, NADER CHARGES
Date: 27 January 1984
By Michael Oreskes
Michael Oreskes
Ralph Nader, the consumer activist, came to Albany today, and with Governor Cuomo standing at his side, denounced the Republican leader of the State Senate as the leading obstacle to consumer legislation in the state. Mr. Nader's remarks created a politically uncomfortable moment for Mr. Cuomo, who has sought to maintain harmony with the Senate leader, Warren M. Anderson of Binghamton, even when the Senator has blocked bills Mr. Cuomo has strongly backed. These have included measures that the Governor promised Mr. Nader and his allies that he would actively support.
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MEDICAL ADVANCE SAVES A NEARLY DROWNED BOY
Date: 26 January 1984
By E. R. Shipp
E. Shipp
If it had happened seven years ago, Jimmy Tontlewicz would be dead. Instead, the 4-year-old, whose limp body was hauled from beneath the ice floes of Lake Michigan 10 days ago, is on the road to recovery. In the last few years, medical researchers have discovered that after total submersion in cold water for even an hour one is not necessarily dead. In addition, new methods of treating such victims once they have been revived have sometimes left them with little or no brain damage.
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