10 вересня 1986 р. був середа під знаком зірки ♍. Це був 252 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був Ronald Reagan.
Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 39 років. Ваш останній день народження був середа, 10 вересня 2025 р., 263 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження четвер, 10 вересня 2026 р. через 101 днів. Ви прожили 14 508 днів, або приблизно 348 215 годин, або приблизно 20 892 919 хвилин, або приблизно 1 253 575 140 секунд.
10th of September 1986 News
Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 10 вересня 1986 р.
NEWS SUMMARY: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1986
Date: 11 September 1986
International Egyptians and Israelis agreed on a formula for settling a border dispute and salvaged a meeting today between President Hosni Mubarak and Prime Minister Shimon Peres. After more than 12 hours of talks, most of them with an American special envoy, Richard W. Murphy, taking part, the negotiators agreed that a longstanding border dispute over a 700-yard Sinai beachfront strip known as Taba would be sent to arbitration. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] Israeli Air Force planes struck at suspected Palestinian bases in southern Lebanon one hour after the Israel Navy said it had foiled an attempt by the guerrillas to infiltrate into northern Israel by sea. [ A3:4-6. ]
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CHILE CLOSES A SECOND NEWS AGENCY IN CRACKDOWN
Date: 11 September 1986
By Shirley Christian, Special To the New York Times
Shirley Christian
The Government continued its crackdown on the press today by closing an Italian news agency. Human rights officials, meanwhile, defended themselves against what they said were attempts by President Augusto Pinochet to link them to terrorist actions. Jaime Castillo Valasco, a prominent Christian Democratic politician who is president of the Chilean Human Rights Commission, said General Pinochet's oral attacks on human rights workers the day after he survived an assassination attempt were based on ''an erroneous concept of political doctrine.'' [ Three French Roman Catholic priests who were detained after the assassination attempt were ordered expelled by the Government, The Associated Press reported. The three were seized by soldiers Monday in a raid on La Victoria, the Santiago slum where they worked. ] Under the third military edict issued since a state of siege was imposed late Sunday, the Italian news agency ANSA was ordered to stop sending news reports from Chile or distributing news from abroad here.
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NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1986
Date: 10 September 1986
International A panel indicted a Soviet employee of the United Nations for espionage in a case that has become intwined with the Kremlin's detention of an American journalist in Moscow. The Soviet suspect, Gennadi F. Zakharov, was accused of three counts of spying by a Federal grand jury in Brooklyn. Government officials say Mr. Zakharov was about to give $1,000 to an employee of an American military concern in exchange for three classified documents. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] Nicholas S. Daniloff said he believed that Soviet authorities were seeking to assemble an espionage case against him dating back five years. The detained correspondent told his wife that investigators were questioning him in detail about his work in Moscow since he arrived there for U.S. News & World Report. [ A8:4-6. ]
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COMBATIVE UNDERDOG AND ORATOR
Date: 11 September 1986
By Jeffrey Schmalz
Jeffrey Schmalz
On the morning after the Democratic primary election for United States Senator, Mark Green stood at an IRT subway stop on East 86th Street yesterday, shaking hands and just plain basking in the victory of what he calls his underfinanced ''march of dimes'' campaign. But already he was looking toward November, when voters will choose among him; Alfonse M. D'Amato, the Republican incumbent, and John S. Dyson, the Liberal Party candidate. And his performance yesterday was typical Green - on the one hand, the underdog, seeking voter sympathy by belittling his finances in comparison to those of his opponents; on the other hand, the combatant, pulling no verbal punches. ''I'm not worried about a general election this fall, where I'll be outspent two to one,'' he declared. ''I don't need $5 million or $10 million. I need enough to expose D'Amato's record of votes against New York.''
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PHILADELPHIA PAPERS RETOOL IN FACE OF CITY-SUBURBAN FLIP-FLOP
Date: 11 September 1986
By William K. Stevens, Special To the New York Times
William Stevens
To some employees of The Philadelphia Daily News, especially those who came over from The Bulletin when it died in 1982, the news that their paper had lost $30 million in the last six years was unsettling to say the least. To the management of Philadelphia Newspapers Inc., which owns and operates The Daily News and The Philadelphia Inquirer as part of the Knight-Ridder chain, this was an inevitable but correctable result of the population shifts and economic transformations that have reshaped metropolitan Philadelphia in the 1970's and 1980's. The News concentrates on coverage of Philadelphia proper, the shrinking, least affluent part of the metropolitan area of more than four million people, and thus the least attractive target for advertisers. On Tuesday employees of The News learned about the losses when a package of editorial changes for their paper, wrapped in a new overall strategy for both papers, was unveiled. If the strategy works, the employees were told, The News, an afternoon tabloid that depends entirely on newsstand sales, will continue as the aggressive pursuer of local developments that its 255,000 buyers have come to know.
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U.S. GROUP FOR LATVIA PARLEY IS PUT ON HOLD
Date: 11 September 1986
By Barbara Gamarekian, Special To the New York Times
Barbara Gamarekian
One of several events that has been put in jeopardy as a result of the Soviet detention of an American journalist is a five-day ''town meeting'' in Latvia involving prominent Russians and Americans. The forum is scheduled to begin next Monday before an audience of several thousand Soviet citizens, and plans call for exchanges on such subjects as nuclear arms, regional tensions and the role of the press. Each evening, after the daily round of what was expected to be heated debate, American and Soviet artists are scheduled to take part in a programs of music, poetry and dance.
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REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: MEETING MISHA
Date: 11 September 1986
By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times
Philip Taubman
Four years ago, Nicholas S. Daniloff, the correspondent of U.S. News & World Report, wandered into a restaurant in Frunze, the capital of Kirghizia, That evening in the Ala-Too restaurant Mr. Daniloff met a Russian who has been identified only as Misha. They began a friendship that ended 12 days ago when Mr. Daniloff was arrested in a Moscow park moments after Misha handed him a package that he said contained newspaper clippings. It was actually stuffed with what the Soviet authorities described as secret materials. Mr. Daniloff, who has been charged with espionage, has not seen Misha since he handed over the package and hurriedly walked away. On Monday, the Government newspaper Izvestia said Misha had viewed Mr. Daniloff as a suspicious character not long after they met.
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MOSCOW BUILDS CASE AGAINST DANILOFF
Date: 10 September 1986
By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times
Philip Taubman
Nicholas S. Daniloff, the indicted American correspondent, said today that he believed the Soviet authorities were trying to assemble an espionage case against him dating back five years. Mr. Daniloff, who is a correspondent of the magazine U.S. News & World Report, told his wife that investigators had been questioning him about his work since he took up his assignment in the Soviet Union in 1981. The Government newspaper Izvestia, in a detailed account of the case against Mr. Daniloff, indicated Monday that the authorities intended to link Mr. Daniloff to Paul M. Stombaugh, an American diplomat who was expelled last year on espionage charges. Mr. Daniloff's wife, Ruth, said her husband told her during a 90-minute meeting at Lefortovo prison, ''They are going back over all my journalistic activities and building up a case.''
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Give Us More Talk
Date: 10 September 1986
By Russell Baker
Russell Baker
Ladies and gentlemen, the famous radio talk-show authority known as ''Lipp of the Airwaves, King of the Ether and Other Gases'' is here to answer your questions about the Daniloff affair. Question: Why is everybody so sure Nicholas Daniloff really isn't a spy, as the KGB claims he is? Answer: Use your head, stupid. If you were hiring spies to work in Moscow, would you waste good money on a news reporter who's got Commie gumshoes tailing him day and night? And I'll ask you another question, airhead: Even if his entire life wasn't tailed, bugged, tapped and wired, he would still be a reporter, wouldn't he? Or are you one of those dupes who think the press can be trusted to get the facts right? Next caller.
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U.S. DELAYS MOVES IN DANILOFF CASE
Date: 10 September 1986
By Bernard Gwertzman, Special To the New York Times
Bernard Gwertzman
State Department officials said today that in order to allow high-level diplomatic efforts to continue, the United States held off on taking measures against the Soviet Union for the detention of an American correspondent. Although there was no sign of a breakthrough in the case of Nicholas S. Daniloff, correspondent for the magazine U.S. News & World Report, State Department officials said they hoped something might develop soon to make retaliation unnecessary. White House officials said they favored pressure on Moscow to release Mr. Daniloff without completely freezing Soviet-American relations, and to make it impossible to have a summit meeting if Mr. Daniloff is not freed. Reagan Ready to Take Steps President Reagan, who returned to Washington on Monday, was described by aides as ready to order measures against the Soviet Union in response to the detention of Mr. Daniloff, who has been charged with espionage in apparent retaliation for the arrest of Gennadi F. Zakharov, a Soviet employee of the United Nations, in New York. Mr. Zakharov was formally indicted today on espionage charges.
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