生日,出生日期

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生日,出生日期
1986年10月15日星期三
出生地
Grand Rapids
年龄
38
星号

1986年10月15日星期三 星号下的 。 这是一年中的 287 日。 美国总统是 Ronald Reagan

如果你出生在这一天,你已经 38 岁了。 您的最后一个生日是 2024年10月15日星期二336 天前。 2025年10月15日星期三 天后,您的下一个生日是 28。 你已经活了 14,216 天,或者大约 341,191 小时,或者大约 20,471,494 分钟,或者大约 1,228,289,640 秒。

分享这个生日的一些人:

15th of October 1986 News

1986年10月15日 出现在《纽约时报》头版的新闻

NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1986

Date: 15 October 1986

THE WORLD The Kremlin accused the President of lacking the courage and will to take a historic step forward at the Reykjavik summit meeting. But Mikhail S. Gorbachev, on Soviet television, said he was not ending the search for arms control. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] The arms control talks collapsed after Mikhail S. Gorbachev toughened his bargaining position in response to a new American demand, according to a high Pentagon official. The official, Richard N. Perle, said the new demand called for the elimination of all offensive missiles within 10 years. [ A14:4. ]

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NEWS SUMMARY: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1986

Date: 16 October 1986

The World 3 microscope design pioneers won the 1986 Nobel Prize in physics for greatly expanding humans' ability to peer deep into the smallest facts of nature. The honor went to three Europeans - Dr. Ernst Ruska, Dr. Gerd Binnin and Dr. Heinrich Rohrer. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] The 1986 Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded to two Americans and a Canadian. The recipients are Dudley R. Herschbach of Harvard, Yuan T. Lee of the University of California at Berkeley and John C. Polanyi of the University of Toronto. [ B19:1. ]

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A Spokesman Departs

Date: 15 October 1986

By Wayne King and Warren Weaver Jr

Wayne King

Charles E. Redman, who has been serving as spokesman for the State Department since the resignation of Bernard Kalb last week, is leaving Washington to join the staff of the Secretary General of NATO, further intensifying Secretary of State George P. Shultz's search for a new Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs. Mr. Redman, a career Foreign Service officer, was Mr. Kalb's deputy and has become a familiar figure on television presiding over State Department news briefings.

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Journalists Honored By Cabot Prize Panel

Date: 15 October 1986

Correspondents of The Miami Herald and of Time magazine, along with newspapers and editors in Argentina and Colombia, will be awarded the 1986 Maria Moors Cabot Prizes tomorrow at Columbia University. The award is given to Western Hemisphere journalists for distinguished contributions to the advancement of inter-American understanding and freedom of information.

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U.S. Acts to Enhance Image After Talks

Date: 15 October 1986

By Bernard Weinraub, Special To the New York Times

Bernard Weinraub

White House officials, expressing unhappiness over news accounts of President Reagan's stance in his meeting with Mikhail S. Gorbachev, have begun one of the most extensive public relations efforts of the Reagan Presidency. The officials say their goal is to reverse the emphasis of newspaper and television reports that, in their view, portrayed President Reagan's adherence to the Strategic Defense Initiative as the major reason for the leaders' failure to agree on a major arms control accord in the meeting last weekend in Iceland. President Reagan and his key advisers today began a series of interviews and speeches that, according to White House aides, are aimed at placing the blame for the outcome on the Soviet leader. As part of the effort to get domestic support and counter potential criticism abroad, Larry Speakes, the White House spokesman, said today that all officials would speak on the record.

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Man Charged In Bilking Plan

Date: 15 October 1986

An 18-year-old North Brunswick man has been arrested and charged with using newspaper advertisements to bilk potential borrowers of more than $50,000, the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced yesterday. The man, Ronald K. Garnett, is charged with placing advertisements in the Business Opportunities section of The New York Times offering unsecured business loans of up to $1 billion.

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FIRST REACTION: POLL SHOWS ARMS-CONTROL OPTIMISM AND SUPPORT FOR REAGAN How the Poll Was Taken

Date: 16 October 1986

By Adam Clymer

Adam Clymer

The American public's initial reaction to the Reykjavik summit meeting is quite supportive of President Reagan and very optimistic about the future of arms control, a New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. But there was no indication in the survey that this support had translated into advantages for Republicans in the November elections. Voting preferences among the 767 Americans interviewed by telephone Tuesday and on Wednesday morning were unchanged from the views of those same respondents two weeks earlier. Public reactions may deepen or swerve as the issue is debated, but the survey suggested that Mr. Reagan had, at the least, put his stamp on the first impressions in the mind of an American public that rarely focuses intently on foreign-policy issues. The poll was conducted as Administration officials, after President Reagan's nationally broadcast speech Monday night, have been offering their view of events through dozens of newspaper and television interviews in what they describe as one of their most intense public-relations campaigns.

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SPLINTERING OF ONCE-SOLID SOUTH POSES NEW PROBLEMS FOR DEMOCRATIC PARTY

Date: 16 October 1986

By Robin Toner, Special To the New York Times

Robin Toner

The shifting allegiance of Southern whites, once solidly Democratic but now increasingly independent or Republican, has dramatically altered the political landscape throughout this region, according to political analysts. Even in an off-year election, without a popular Republican President on the ballot, Democrats in some key races around the South are finding it difficult to assemble the biracial coalition so long essential for their success, these analysts say. Just how fragile those coalitions can be is apparent here in Alabama, which could elect its first Republican governor in more than a century after a bruising battle for the Democratic nomination. Not long ago, many Southern Democrats dismissed Republican victories as historical anomalies, the byproduct of President Reagan's popularity or the vulnerabilities of a particular Democratic opponent. Indeed, Alabama's gubernatorial election has followed a distinctive course as Democrats splintered over the choice of a successor to Gov. George C. Wallace.

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LATIN REPORTER, HERE TO ATTEND AWARDS, IS HELD

Date: 15 October 1986

By Dennis Hevesi

Dennis Hevesi

A journalist from Colombia, invited to the United States by Columbia University to attend ceremonies honoring Latin American journalists, was being detained yesterday by the Immigration and Naturalization Service after her name appeared in the service's ''Lookout Book.'' Immigration officials declined to specify why the journalist - Patricia Lara, 35 years old, a reporter for El Tiempo, the leading newspaper in Colombia - had been denied admission to the United States after her arrival in New York on Sunday night. A State Department official, who did not want to be identified, said Miss Lara had been placed on the list, ''based on classified information,'' but would provide no details.

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Baxter Travenol

Date: 16 October 1986

Reuters

Baxter Travenol Laboratories said that it had begun a restructuring that results from its acquisition of the American Hospital Supply Corporation last year. The company said it had reduced its operations to five groups from 10 to reduce overhead and management levels. A spokesman said that it was too early to assess the impact of the steps, which affect mostly the company's hospital and medical specialty businesses, both of which will be streamlined into one group from three.

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