5 червня 1985 р. був середа під знаком зірки ♊. Це був 155 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був Ronald Reagan.
Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 41 років. Ваш останній день народження був пʼятниця, 5 червня 2026 р., 19 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження субота, 5 червня 2027 р. через 345 днів. Ви прожили 14 994 днів, або приблизно 359 875 годин, або приблизно 21 592 516 хвилин, або приблизно 1 295 550 960 секунд.
5th of June 1985 News
Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 5 червня 1985 р.
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 05 June 1985
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1985 International The White House assailed Nicaragua for what it called ''increased aggressive behavior'' against neighboring Honduras and Costa Rica. [Page A1, Column 1.] Possible intervention in Nicaragua by American combat troops at some future date if other policies fail is being openly discussed by officials of the Reagan Administration for the first time, according to nearly 50 military, diplomatic and foreign government experts who were interviewed in Washington, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras. [A1:2-3.]
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 06 June 1985
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1985 International Arms aid for Jordan is being weighed by the Reagan Administration, according to State and Defense Department officials. They said the Administration was nearing a decision to ask Congress to provide Amman with $300 million in additional military credits that would allow it to order F-20 fighter planes and two advanced antiaircraft defense systems. [Page A1, Column 6.] The Senate compromised on arms by adopting, 90 to 5, a resolution calling on President Reagan to continue to adhere to the 1979 strategic arms limitation treaty with the Soviet Union. But the resolution also seemed to support a measured effort by the Administration to respond to any Soviet violations of the pact. [A1:3.]
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FOR WINE BUFFS WITH A NEED FOR NEWS, THE INDUSTRY OBLIGES
Date: 05 June 1985
By Howard G. Goldberg
Howard Goldberg
GOOD news for wine lovers who like to stay tuned to the grapevine: newsletters are available free. In states where grapes are grown and wine is made - among them California, New York, Washington, Oregon, Ohio, Idaho, Virginia, Connecticut and Pennsylvania - vineyards mail informative, entertaining newsletters for the asking. A sampling suggests that marketing may not be the sole motive, and that education ranks high. For example, you can learn how to decipher wine labels; why some wines bear a single-vineyard appellation, others a broader one; how soil, drainage and climate are related to grape yield and flavor.
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DEMOCRATIC VICTOR IN JERSEY PREPARES: PETER SHAPIRO TO BATTLE A POPULAR INCUMBENT: POLITICAL SUCCESS FROM EARLY AGE
Date: 06 June 1985
By Jane Perlez, Special To the New York Times
Jane Perlez
When Peter Shapiro graduated from Harvard, with honors, in 1974, he shunned the career paths pursued by many of his friends and headed home to New Jersey. His aim, his friends said, was to pursue a driving political ambition he did little to hide, to someday become a national political leader. And so, at the age of 23, he successfully ran for the State Assembly from a working-class district. On Tuesday, the 33-year-old Mr. Shapiro, who has held a political office ever since, went some distance in achieving his long-term goal when he defeated more seasoned politicians to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination and the right to challenge Governor Kean in November.
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Commerce Publishing
Date: 05 June 1985
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
An agreement has been reached by Commerce Publishing of Dallas to acquire all of the assets of California Business News, the Los Angeles company that publishes California Business magazine, a monthly that started as a tabloid in 1965 and now has a circulation of 70,000. Commerce Publishing's magazine is nine-year-old Texas Business, a monthly with a circulation of 48,500.
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TV Reporter Gets Stay On a 3-Month Jail Term
Date: 05 June 1985
AP
A television news reporter was sentenced today to three months in jail for refusing to identify a source who, with his back turned to a camera, said he saw police officers looting a drugstore. But the sentence was stayed for at least one night by Justice Neil Lynch of the State Supreme Court, who said he would decide by Wednesday morning whether the reporter, Susan Wornick, would be imprisoned or be heard before the Supreme Court. At the sentencing, Judge James Donohue of the Suffolk Superior Court told the reporter that she was obstructing justice and ''undermining our system of law and order.''
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OAKLAND PUBLISHER IN UPHILL STRUGGLE
Date: 05 June 1985
By Alex S. Jones, Special To the New York Times
Alex Jones
In 1983 a black journalist with a national reputation and no money purchased The Tribune, the unprofitable newspaper based in this ethnically diverse city. Although the new owner, Robert C. Maynard, was able to buy entirely on credit and with favorable terms, many people associated with the business gave him little chance of reversing The Tribune's steady decline in advertising and circulation. On his first day, Mr. Maynard, who had been the newspaper's editor and publisher, greeted employees with a promise that a new newspaper had been born that would surprise, even confound, the doubters. After two years of bruising competition and work, even skeptics say that The Tribune is vastly improved.
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HOW THE POLL WAS CONDUCTED
Date: 05 June 1985
The latest New York Times/CBS News Poll is based on telephone interviews conducted May 29 through June 2 with 1,509 adults around the United States, excluding Alaska and Hawaii. The sample of telephone exchanges called was selected by a computer from a complete list of exchanges in the country.
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MOST AMERICANS IN SURVEY OPPOSE AID FOR OVERTHROW OF SANDINISTAS
Date: 05 June 1985
By Adam Clymer
Adam Clymer
A majority of Americans still oppose help for efforts to overthrow the Nicaraguan Government, but support for that Reagan Administration policy is increasing, especially among the growing number who know which side the United States backs, a New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. Fifty-three percent of the 1,509 adults interviewed by telephone from May 29 through June 2 said the United States should not help the Nicaraguan rebels, while 32 percent said it should. This represents a modest change since April 1984, when 27 percent favored support for the rebels and 55 percent opposed it. Both polls have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.
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'INTERCOM' ASKS QUESTION: CAN PEOPLE TRUST THE MEDIA
Date: 06 June 1985
By John Corry
John Corry
THE most equivocal thing about ''Can the People Trust the Media?'' is the title. Robert MacNeil does not tell us whether the people can or not. Forgive him for that. Mr. MacNeil, the co-anchor of the ''MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour,'' has something to say about journalism, and none of it is self-serving. He will be seen on Channel 13 at 10:30 tonight.
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