1986년 3월 5일 수요일 재생 중

1986년 3월 5일은(는) 수요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♓**입니다. 올해의 63일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 Ronald Reagan입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 40살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2026년 3월 5일 목요일, 106일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2027년 3월 5일 금요일일 후 258입니다. 당신은 14,716일, 약 353,188시간, 약 21,191,281분 또는 약 1,271,476,860초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

5th of March 1986 News

1986년 3월 5일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

NEWS SUMMARY: THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1986

Date: 06 March 1986

International Four key Filipino Communists were released by the new Government despite objections from the military. The four include the founder of the Philippine Communist Party, Jose Maria Sison. Mr. Sison said he was ready to support the ''positive aspects'' of the Government of President Corazon C. Aquino, but he declined to renounce the possibility of using armed force in a Communist revolution. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] The U.S. may submit to a court the issue of what to do with the Philippine currency and other possessions that were taken to Hawaii last week by Ferdinand E. Marcos and his associates, according to Reagan Adminstration officials. They said this legal strategy would distance the Administration from the growing dispute over the ownership of the cargo carried by two Air Force planes. [ A1:5. ]

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NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1986

Date: 05 March 1986

International Ferdinand E. Marcos's holdings overseas could be worth billions of dollars, according to documents cited by the new Philippine Government. One set of documents appears to tie holdings of the Marcos family to two New York real estate investors, Ralph and Joseph Bernstein, who have been cited for contempt of Congress. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] Filipinos are enjoying a free press for the first time in years. On television, the elaborate Marcos propaganda operation has collapsed. [ A1:5-6. ]

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Ex-Reagan Aide Named As Editor of U.S. News

Date: 06 March 1986

UPI

Upi

David R. Gergen, a former assistant to President Reagan and now senior managing editor of U.S. News & World Report, was named today as editor of the weekly newsmagazine.

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Newspapers and Others Face Rise in Postal Rates

Date: 05 March 1986

AP

Postal rates for newspapers delivered in the county where thay are published, as well as for charities, schools and libraries, will increase Sunday for the second time this year under a new rate approved today by the governors of the United States Postal Service. The increases, designed to make up a $72 million difference between the subsidy the Postal Service expected and what Congress appropriated, range from 2 percent to 20 percent for nonprofit and newspaper mail.

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RUSH TO A FILIPINO FREE PRESS REPLACING REVOLUTION FERVOR

Date: 05 March 1986

By Francis X. Clines, Special To the New York Times

Francis Clines

John Peter Zenger never mentioned a chicken farm as the alternative to the fourth estate, but that is how Luis D. Beltran, one of the premier newspaper columnists here, survived during the decade when he was banned from Filipino journalism. Now, while the rest of the nation descends from the euphoria of a revolution, Mr. Beltran is where he wants to be, ahead of his readers, settling into an artfully cranky groove in the pages of The Philippine Daily Inquirer. Only this morning, he was criticizing President Corazon C. Aquino as easily as he had rooted for her in her challenge to Ferdinand E. Marcos. The impishness of a free press is to be seen and believed in Manila these days. It is best visualized in the sidewalk hawkers, those ragamuffins and older entrepreneurs who scatter like roaches across the human flow, confronting pedestrians and walking against traffic as they wave and shout about their great handfuls of newspapers, inky with free flowing words, unfettered curiosity and bombast, at two pesos, or 10 cents, an issue.

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Letters Depict Grim Deaths Of Dead Couple and Children

Date: 06 March 1986

AP

Letters apparently written by a couple who died in a fire with three children describe how they drugged and shot the children, set their home ablaze and then killed themselves in frustration over the treatment of disabled veterans.

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REAGAN STEPS UP HIS DRIVE TO GIVE $100 MILLION TO NICARAGUA REBELS

Date: 06 March 1986

By Bernard Weinraub, Special To the New York Times

Bernard Weinraub

President Reagan appealed again to Congress today to endorse his request for $100 million in aid to Nicaraguan rebels, saying it was needed so that the United States would not have to send American troops there. ''American troops have not been asked for and are not needed,'' Mr. Reagan said in a speech to an umbrella group of leading Jewish organizations. ''We must make sure they never are needed. We send money and material now so we'll never have to send our own American boys.''

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U.S. INQUIRY ON CANADIAN SUPPLIER

Date: 06 March 1986

By Richard Halloran, Special To the New York Times

Richard Halloran

The Defense Department has opened an inquiry into allegations that a Canadian company, Fleet Aerospace, has sold defective components to large military contractors in the United States, a spokesman for the Pentagon said today. The allegations have been made to members of Parliament in Ottawa and to the Defense Department here by Robert Norburn, a former employee of Fleet Aerospace. The Defense Department, in response to a question from The New York Times, which had also been approached by Mr. Norburn, confirmed that an investigation was under way.

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Security Puzzle

Date: 06 March 1986

Representative Les Aspin, Democrat of Wisconsin, speaking to the World Affairs Council on President Reagan's opposition to a mobile single warhead missile dubbed Midgetman, Feb. 12: Why this reluctance to embrace Midgetman with enthusiasm? Maybe it's the missile's name and diminuitive status. It lacks the macho of the B-1.

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HEAD OF MISSILE SHIELD URGES RESEARCH GROUP

Date: 05 March 1986

By Charles Mohr, Special To the New York Times

Charles Mohr

The director of the program for a shield against attacking missiles said today that he had asked permission to create a Government-financed intensive research group to provide ''squeaky clean'' advice on the design and operation of the space-based defense. The director, Lieut. Gen. James A. Abrahamson, who heads the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, testified that he had recommended the creation of such an office to Secretary of Defense Caspar W. Weinberger as a means of obtaining advice that would be free of any commercial taint. He said he had received formal approval. Federally financed research organizations are common. A notable example is the Rand Corporation, which has conducted analytical studies for the Air Force for many years.

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