1984年6月28日 是 星期四 星号下的 ♋。 这是一年中的 179 日。 美国总统是 Ronald Reagan。
如果你出生在这一天,你已经 41 岁了。 您的最后一个生日是 2025年6月28日星期六,78 天前。 2026年6月28日星期日 天后,您的下一个生日是 286。 你已经活了 15,053 天,或者大约 361,279 小时,或者大约 21,676,793 分钟,或者大约 1,300,607,580 秒。
28th of June 1984 News
1984年6月28日 出现在《纽约时报》头版的新闻
THE PRESS:HOW TO USE IT OR LOSE IT
Date: 28 June 1984
By Charles Mohr
Charles Mohr
Journalism, which is accustomed to dishing it out, was a serious preoccupation here this week at two conferences that seemed to underline a love-hate relationship between the news business and conservative groups. In each case, it seemed, the group felt wronged by journalists but admitted it would dearly like to use them as an educational tool. At one conference, ''The Conservative Movement and the Media,'' sponsored today by the National Conservative Foundation, conflicting advice was given out on how to deal with the ''liberal news media.'' Some recommended a friendly approach and others suggested scaling journalism's walls to wage war.
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Knight Is Offering $1 Million For Campus Press Program
Date: 28 June 1984
AP
The Journalists in Residence program at the University of Michigan will get a $1 million donation from Knight-Ridder Newspapers Inc. and the Knight Foundation if the school can match the gift, the company said Tuesday. The three-year grant would help replace National Endowment for the Humanities financing that ends this year, according to a statement from James L. Knight, chairman of the foundation, based in Akron, Ohio, and Alvah H. Chapman Jr., chairman of Knight-Ridder.
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SOVIET DERIDES REAGAN SPEECH AS ELECTION ORATORY
Date: 29 June 1984
By Seth Mydans
Seth Mydans
The Soviet press today derided President Reagan's call for improved economic, cultural, scientific and consular ties as a campaign gimmick. It said he was trying to shirk responsibility for a serious deterioration in relations between Moscow and Washington. Tass, the official press agency, said Mr. Reagan's speech Wednesday to specialists in United States-Soviet relations was just ''another election maneuver.''
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ADVERTISING ; Magazine Is Offering A Discount
Date: 29 June 1984
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
IN an effort to attract regular magazine advertising and not just the kind that carries coupons, CBS Publications' Family Weekly newspaper supplement has worked up an advertising discount program with its sister publication Woman's Day that will give advertisers in that magazine at least 25 percent off in the supplement. It is the latest ploy developed by Patrick M. Linskey, Family Weekly's publisher for the last couple of years, to offset some adverse marketplace developments. Not only his publication but Parade, the dominant Sunday supplement, are down in advertising pages and revenues for the first quarter. When put in a ranking of magazines, Parade is the country's largest in circulation and Family Weekly is fourth.
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8 DIED IN GULF RAID, SHIPOWNER SAYS
Date: 29 June 1984
By Paul Lewis
Paul Lewis
Eight crewmen were killed and three seriously hurt in the Iraqi missile attack on a Swiss-owned supertanker Wednesday, the ship's owners said today. It was second such fatal incident in the Persian Gulf war. The only previous reported loss of life occurred June 3 when Turkey said three Turkish seamen were killed in an Iraqi missile attack on a Turkish tanker, the Buyuk Hun. Iraq and Iran first extended their ground war, which began in September 1980, to attacks on gulf shipping earlier this year, beginning attacks on tankers taking on oil there.
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BISHOP AND LAWMAKER DEBATE NUCLEAR ARMS
Date: 28 June 1984
By Richard Halloran
Richard Halloran
In a spirited exchange over the morality of nuclear arms, the churchman and the Congressman narrowed the issues this week but never came to an agreement. Archbishop John J. O'Connor of New York said that in the most remote and carefully defined circumstances, it might be ''conceivable'' that firing a nuclear weapon would be morally acceptable. But he said he doubted the conditions he described could ever be met. Representative Henry J. Hyde, Republican of Illinois, asserted that the teachings of the nation's Roman Catholic bishops, as expressed in their pastoral letter on nuclear war, would make it impossible ever to fire a nuclear weapon and thus might leave the nation defenseless.
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AMID CONGRESS DEBATE, NAVY GETS CRUISE MISSILES
Date: 28 June 1984
By Wayne Biddle
Wayne Biddle
The Defense Department announced today that the first long-range nuclear cruise missiles had been deployed on Navy ships in recent days. The deployment comes at a time when the missiles, known as the Tomahawks, are a subject of debate in Congress. A Senate-House conference is trying to reconcile differences on deployment as part of the 1985 military budget authorization bill. Two Republican Senators who led the campaign against deployment, Charles McC. Mathias Jr. of Maryland and David Durenberger of Minnesota, said the Administration had shown ''bad judgment, if not a breach of faith,'' in deploying while Congress was still deliberating the issue.
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AIR FORCE SEEKING A SHUTTLE BACKUP
Date: 28 June 1984
By Philip M. Boffey
Philip
The space shuttle Discovery will probably be grounded for at least three more weeks. Page A18. WASHINGTON, June 27 - The Air Force, which had been gradually eliminating its own space booster rockets and relying on the space shuttle to place military satellites in orbit, has now begun to backtrack because of disappointment in the shuttle's performance. The Air Force began campaigning in Congress several months ago for funds to begin developing a fleet of 10 new expendable rockets as a supplement to the space shuttle. The new rockets would be used to carry large military satellites into orbits as high as 23,000 miles above the earth, a feat that lies beyond the Air Force rockets being phased out.
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SOVIET LINKS:REAGAN SHIFT
Date: 28 June 1984
By Bernard Gwertzman
Bernard Gwertzman
Although President Reagan said today that the United States had not forgotten Afghanistan, his speech signaled his inclination to end most of the sanctions imposed by Washington after the Soviet Union sent 100,000 troops into Afghanistan in December 1979. ''This kicks off a new era, considering where this Administration was,'' a State Department official said. ''They've come around 180 degrees.'' Another official said it was ironic that President Carter, who came to office without any anti-Soviet bias, ran for re- election in 1980 after having virtually cut off all high-level contacts with Moscow. Mr. Reagan, known for his strong anti-Soviet views, will now be campaigning for re-election offering to put new life into most of the accords worked out by President Nixon and Henry A. Kissinger during the period of detente. But some White House and State Department officials, who were instrumental in bringing about the shift in Mr. Reagan's approach, said that they were concerned that the sharp, almost obligatory anti-Soviet remarks that Mr. Reagan included in the speech might limit receptivity for the concessions in Moscow.
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REAGAN OUTLINES STEPS TO IMPROVE TIES WITH MOSCOW
Date: 28 June 1984
By Steven R. Weisman
Steven Weisman
Excerpts from remarks, page A12. WASHINGTON, June 27 - President Reagan said today that the United States was working to strengthen economic, cultural, scientific, consular and other contacts with the Soviet Union while reserving the right to denounce any Soviet actions that ''threaten the peace.'' In a speech to specialists on Soviet-United States exchanges, Mr. Reagan reviewed a long list of subjects that he said were under discussion with Moscow, despite the suspension of nuclear weapons talks in Geneva. ''I don't think there is anything we're encouraging the Soviet leaders to do that is not as much in their interest as it is in ours,'' he said. ''If they're as committed to peace as they say, they should join us and work with us.
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