Il 6 luglio 1985 era una sabato sotto il segno zodiacale del ♋. Era il 186 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era Ronald Reagan.
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6th of July 1985 News
Notizie come è apparso sulla prima pagina del New York Times il 6 luglio 1985
NETWORKS PROMOTE COVERAGE OF HOSTAGE CRISIS
Date: 06 July 1985
By Peter W. Kaplan
Peter Kaplan
Television has had few more turbulent weeks than the one that began with the recent hijacking of a Trans World Airlines jet and the taking of its passengers and crew as hostages. Television news organizations went into high gear, and when it was over, each of the networks made claims about its performance. From the beginning, CBS began reporting on its ''Evening News'' ratings, to make the point that, as a network spokesman said, ''in a crisis, people turn to Dan Rather.'' Television viewers, in fact, did turn to CBS - as its frequent on-the-air promotions for Mr. Rather during the days of the hostage crisis pointed out, and great emphasis was put on Mr. Rather and the other anchors during the coverage.
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POPE TO WRITE WEEKLY COLUMN FOR TWO MURDOCH SYNDICATES
Date: 07 July 1985
By Robert D. McFadden
Robert
The Vatican and two news syndicates of Rupert Murdoch have concluded an agreement under which a weekly column by Pope John Paul II will be made available to hundreds of newspapers in the United States and other countries starting in September. Arthur M. Klebanoff, a New York lawyer and literary agent who helped arrange the syndication, said the column, ''Observations by Pope John Paul II,'' would deal with secular topics ranging from family life and problems of young people to global political affairs and social issues. He said he expected the column to appear in hundreds of newspapers, including The New York Post, Chicago Sun-Times and Boston Herald, which are owned by Mr. Murdoch, and in newspapers in Britain, Australia and other countries.
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China and Japan Initial Pact On the Use of Nuclear Energy
Date: 07 July 1985
Reuters
China and Japan have initialed an agreement on cooperation in the peaceful use of nuclear energy, the official New China News Agency reported today. The agency said the agreement was initialed in Peking on Friday after five rounds of talks.
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Ah, Tax Simplification
Date: 06 July 1985
General Dynamics, the nation's biggest defense contractor, has owed no Federal income taxes since 1972. Unlike some of the other things it's allegedly failed to do, its tax calculations have been perfectly legal. But any fair tax reform certainly ought to close that large a loophole. President Reagan proposes only to narrow it, then wonders why anyone calls his plan unfair.
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PORT AUTHORITY FASHIONS A BRONX INDUSTRIAL SHOWCASE
Date: 07 July 1985
By Alan S. Oser
Alan Oser
THOSE who are working to find productive uses for vacant city-owned land in the Bronx have reason to cheer the results of public effort so far at the Bathgate Industrial Park, the new industrial showcase off the Cross-Bronx Expressway. Five years ago, when the city's Public Development Corporation took a flier on a 70,000-square-foot speculative building at the Bathgate Avenue entrance to the site, the area was 21 acres of rubble. Not 10 years ago, it was covered with abandoned and vandalized five-story apartment buildings. But the city found two tenants for the building - Aircraft Supplies, from Clifton, N.J., and Majestic Shapes, a garment maker, from Manhattan - and then turned to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey as the site-by-site developer of most of the blocks within the park.
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U.S. NUCLEAR FORCES: ARSENAL WILL BE STONGER BUT STRATEGY WON'T CHANGE
Date: 06 July 1985
By Charles Mohr, Special To the New York Times
Charles Mohr
The United States' strategic nuclear forces consist of a bomber first produced 30 years ago, land-based missiles about 20 years of age and submarine missiles of marginal accuracy. Within the next few years, these legs of the ''strategic triad'' will be splinted with powerful new generations of nuclear weapons. The process has been painfully slow, but a strategic modernization program mostly initiated by President Carter and vigorously pursued and expanded by President Reagan is beginning to change the building blocks military planners use to plot the course of a possible nuclear war. Advances in Several Realms Although some parts will come much sooner, within seven years the United States will probably have these things: * A two-bomber strategic air arm designed to be able to penetrate the Soviet Union well into the 21st century, despite expected improvements in Soviet air defenses. * A supposedly invulnerable fleet of missile-launching submarines and a force of land-based intercontinental missiles with better, if imperfect, survivability.
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COULD THE NAVY KEEP 600 SHIPS AFLOAT?A CORRECTION
Date: 07 July 1985
By Wayne Biddle
Wayne Biddle
As the defense-budget debate has demonstrated, Congress is by no means ready to scuttle the Navy's ambitious ship-building plans. But an increasing number of questions are being raised around Capitol Hill and elsewhere about the long-range effects of the service's expansion plans. At the beginning of the Reagan Administration, the Navy's ''battle force'' - that is, ships that can engage in combat or support it - numbered 480. This fleet included 13 aircraft carrier groups, a formidable array of seapower unopposed by any comparable Russian force.
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Mixed Reviews for TV in Hostage Drama
Date: 07 July 1985
To the Editor: Much has been said recently about American media coverage of the T.W.A. skyjacking and of terrorist activities in general. The media have responded with disdain and incredulity to the proposal that they be restricted in their coverage of these activities, and with either horror or condescending amusement to the suggestion of news blackouts.
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Bad News For Thatcher
Date: 07 July 1985
By Milt Freudenheim, Henry Giniger and Richard Levine
Milt Freudenheim
A by-election rarely seals a government's political fate. Nevertheless, the Conservatives who rule Britain had reasons to worry after one such election in Wales last week.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 07 July 1985
SUNDAY, JULY 7, 1985 International Robert G. Mugabe's party gained an overwhelming victory in Zimbabwe's first general election since independence. The Prime Minister's party won 63 of the 80 seats reserved for blacks in the 100-member Parliament. Mr. Mugabe indicated that he saw the victory as a mandate to dismantle Zimbabwe's British-drafted Constitution.[Page 1, Column 5.] A Salvadoran rebel military leader vowed that the guerrillas would carry their attacks to the capital of San Salvador and spread the war to every area of the country. He said the attacks would make El Salvador ungovernable within the next year.[8:1-3.]
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