Репродукција уторак, 26. фебруар 1985.

26. фебруар 1985. је био уторак под знаком звездице . Био је 56 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 41 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био четвртак, 26. фебруар 2026., пре 124 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је петак, 26. фебруар 2027., за 240 дана. Живели сте 15.099 дана, или око 362.381 сати, или око 21.742.914 минута, или око 1.304.574.840 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

26th of February 1985 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 26. фебруар 1985.

Head of Detroit News Hints at Going Public

Date: 27 February 1985

By Kenneth N. Gilpin and Todd S. Purdum

Kenneth Gilpin

As president of the 112-year-old Evening News Association, corporate parent of The Detroit News, Peter B. Clark has his hands full.

Full Article

JERSEY'S WATCHDOG OVER CASINOS: THOMAS ROGERS O'BRIEN

Date: 26 February 1985

By Donald Janson

Donald Janson

When the Casino Control Commission decides Tuesday whether to renew the license of Resorts International, it will be acting on the recommendation of the Attorney General's division of gaming enforcement. And the foundation of the division's recommendation that the license be revoked was built by the director of the division, 46-year-old Thomas R. O'Brien, according to Attorney General Irwin I. Kimmelman.

Full Article

News Summary; WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1985

Date: 27 February 1985

International

Full Article

ISRAEL BARS BEIRUT-BASED JOURNALISTS FROM ENTERING SOUTH LEBANON

Date: 27 February 1985

By John Kifner

John Kifner

The Israeli Army today banned Western journalists based in Beirut from entering territory it controls in southern Lebanon.

Full Article

EX-DEFENSE CHIEFS BACK MILITARY REVAMPING

Date: 26 February 1985

Six former Defense Secretaries today called for increased joint control of the nation's military to restrain rivalries among the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines.

Full Article

DANIEL SCHORR WEIGHS MERITS OF CABLE TV

Date: 27 February 1985

By Peter W. Kaplan

Peter Kaplan

Nine years ago this week, Daniel Schorr, one of the best-known network correspondents in America, was relieved of his duties as a CBS reporter after he passed a House intelligence report to a newspaper. Almost 60 years old, a newsman with a reputation for tough reporting and personal abrasiveness, he was, many said, finished in the broadcast world.

Full Article

AIDE BIDS U.S. END 'DOUBLE STANDARD' ON ARMS ACCORDS

Date: 26 February 1985

By Bernard Gwertzman , Special To the New York Times

Bernard Gwertzman

The Defense Department's top arms control official said today that it was ''a great mistake'' for the United States to continue honoring past accords with the Soviet Union while Moscow was violating ''quite important provisions'' of those agreements.

Full Article

New Zealand's Leader Arrives on Visit to U.S.

Date: 26 February 1985

UPI

Upi

Prime Minister David Lange of New Zealand arrived here today to defend his nation's ban on port calls by nuclear warships. The policy has strained relations with Washington and shaken the Anzus military alliance.

Full Article

Pakistan Calls Atom Program Peaceful, a U.S. Official Says

Date: 26 February 1985

AP

The State Department, responding to reports that Pakistan tried to get timing devices whose main function is to trigger nuclear bombs, said today that the Pakistani Government has given assurances its nuclear program is ''peaceful in intent.''

Full Article

ARMS NEGOTIATOR URGES PERSISTENCE

Date: 27 February 1985

The Reagan Administration's new chief arms control negotiator said today that the United States and the Soviet Union ''must try to find a formula under which we can live together in dignity'' even though the negotiations were likely to be difficult.

Full Article

FRANCE IS WARMING TO 'STAR WARS' IDEA

Date: 27 February 1985

Foreign Minister Roland Dumas of France described the space-based defense plan of the United States today as having ''seductive elements'' for public opinion because, he said, it replaces an offensive nuclear strategy with a defensive one.

Full Article