Репродукција недеља, 1. јун 1986.

1. јун 1986. је био недеља под знаком звездице . Био је 151 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 40 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био понедељак, 1. јун 2026., пре 24 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је уторак, 1. јун 2027., за 340 дана. Живели сте 14.634 дана, или око 351.236 сати, или око 21.074.184 минута, или око 1.264.451.040 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

1st of June 1986 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 1. јун 1986.

Baltimore Papers Make Some News

Date: 01 June 1986

By Laura Mansnerus and Katherine Roberts

Laura Mansnerus

It was, naturally enough, the lead story in The Sun of Baltimore on Thursday. But the sale of that newspaper, its sister publication, The Evening Sun, two television stations and some small magazines also was big news across the country.

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1986

Date: 01 June 1986

International Moscow offered to begin reductions of strategic nuclear forces if the United States and the Soviet Union both pledge not to withdraw from the 1972 antiballistic missile treaty for an extended period and take steps to strengthen the treaty, Reagan Administration officials said. The Soviet proposal was made at a session of the Geneva arms talks on Thursday, two days after the Administration announced that the United States would no longer be bound by the limits of the 1979 strategic arms treaty, officials said. [ Page 1, Column 6. ] Senate action on an extradition treaty with Britain is being sought by President Reagan, who warned against allowing ''terrorists'' a ''safe haven'' in the United States. In his weekly radio speech, Mr. Reagan linked the treaty to larger efforts at combating international terrorism. The revised 1972 treaty, which was signed last June by the United States and Britain, includes new provisions that end exemption from extradition for crimes that have been justified as politically motivated. [ 1:4. ] The capture of a Solidarity fugitive was announced by Poland. The Interior Ministry said Zbigniew Bujak, the most sought-after fugitive leader of the Solidarity underground, had been arrested. Mr. Bujak, a 31-year-old electrician, went into hiding when martial law was declared on Dec. 13, 1981. [ 1:5. ] Europe halted space launchings after an Ariane rocket was destroyed in midflight Friday night, throwing the West's launching capability into disarray. An independent panel is to investigate the fourth failure of an Ariane in 18 launchings.

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NEWS SUMMARY: MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1986

Date: 02 June 1986

International Revival of Africa's ruined economies will be attempted by African and industrialized nations whose delegates agreed at a meeting at the United Nations to a ''spirit of genuine and equal partnership.'' The program involves policy changes by African countries and increased international support. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] New talks with Salvadoran guerrillas were proposed by President Jose Napoleon Duarte in a speech to the National Assembly marking the second anniversary of his term in office. He proposed that the talks, a third round with the leftist rebels, be held ''without weapons, in national territory at the end of July or during the month of August.'' The previous talks were held in October and November 1984 without results. [ A1:5. ]

Full Article

PRESS WELCOMES COOPERATION PLEA

Date: 01 June 1986

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

Many journalists welcomed Thursday's call by Government officials for ''cooperation'' regarding disclosure of sensitive information by news organizations, which the journalists said was a softening of recent threats to prosecute news organizations under espionage law. But a number of reporters and editors said they were wary of the suggestion made Thursday by William J. Casey, who heads the Central Intelligence Agency, that news organizations should contact the C.I.A. for consultation before publishing information involving intelligence-gathering techniques. ''I think it's fine that they will be available for comment, but if they're talking about clearance, that's a completely different matter and that's totally objectionable,'' said Michael G. Gartner, the general news executive for the Gannett Company, who is president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. And there is concern among some journalists that the Government's recent warnings about security violations by news organizations may lead the public to confuse legitimate coverage of intelligence gathering with the release of damaging secrets. They say that news organizations have demonstrated for many years that they are receptive to legitimate security concerns and extremely unlikely to disclose any material that damages national security.

Full Article

OUTSIDERS SPUR REBIRTH OF BALTIMORE

Date: 01 June 1986

By Lindsey Gruson, Special To the New York Times

Lindsey Gruson

In the years when this city was little more than a decaying traffic stop between New York and Washington, the waiting room at the Mount Royal train station was equipped with rows of hard wooden rockers. In many ways the rockers symbolized what was then an insular, parochial city, the home of what Frank Beirne, the author, called ''The Amiable Baltimorean.'' Baltimore was Nickel City, a gustatory bargain basement, with a lazy Southern pace. The rockers are long gone. The Mount Royal station is now the Maryland Institute of Art, and Baltimore is a prime example of a Cinderella city. Once marked by festering sores of urban decay, it has emerged as a bustling, sophisticated metropolis.

Full Article

QUESTIONS WITHOUT ANSWERS

Date: 02 June 1986

Often an event captures headlines, then fades from view with important questions unanswered - questions that defy news reporting, at least for a while. This column periodically reviews the status of such questions. BURIED TREASURE. Did Captain Kidd bury treasure on Oak Island, Nova Scotia?

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POLICE OFFICERS MEET THE PRESS -- AND GARNER MIXED REVIEWS

Date: 01 June 1986

By Donna Greene

Donna Greene

IT was County Police Sgt. Anthony Cequeria's turn to face the press. He had been told that the body of a public official had just been found and that this appeared to be a suicide. A note had been left at the scene, it was said, that implicated other politicians and some police officers in what might be a major corruption scandal. Not far from where the body lay, reporters, photographers and cameramen were gathered. And when the police officer appeared, they pounced on him.

Full Article

Market Place; Newspaper Issues Favored

Date: 02 June 1986

By Vartanig G. Vartan

Vartanig Vartan

FAVORABLE operating conditions and proposed tax changes - along with recent sales of several prominent properties for record sums - have sent newspaper stocks racing ahead. Despite this surge in equity prices, Wall Street analysts said Friday that they still recommended selected purchases within the group. ''The newspaper industry is looking at its best set of fundamental factors in many years,'' said Edward Atorino of Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Company. ''The pieces are in place for strong earnings performance.''

Full Article

Midlife Switch

Date: 01 June 1986

By Eleanor Blau

Eleanor Blau

AT the age of 38, Douglas Kreeger was a merchant without a store. In March 1984, he had sold Kreeger & Sons, the camping and backpacking chain with the distinctive logotype showing a man with a child in a backpack.

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Slayings At Grocery

Date: 01 June 1986

By Eleanor Blau

Eleanor Blau

THE DISPUTE in the small Brooklyn grocery store last June started over paying for a can of soda and ended with three teen-agers dead, a fourth wounded and the proprietor sought for homicide. The youths all lived in the Fort Greene section.

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