Le 25 septembre 1984 était un mardi sous le signe astral du ♎. C'était le 268ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était Ronald Reagan.
Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 41 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le jeudi 25 septembre 2025, il y a 247 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le vendredi 25 septembre 2026, dans 117 jours. Vous avez vécu 15 222 jours, soit environ 365 344 heures, ou environ 21 920 699 minutes, ou environ 1 315 241 940 secondes.
25th of September 1984 News
Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 25 septembre 1984
CRIME AND SPECTACLE
Date: 25 September 1984
By Sydney H. Schanberg
Sydney Schanberg
In our criminal justice tradition, when a suspect is arrested there is an accepted disclosure process through which the public is told several things, including the name of the accused and the nature of the alleged crime. But when this process of informing the public escalates into a garish media spectacle, as it did recently in the child-abuse arrests in the Bronx, the system gets wounded. In this particular case, though three of the accused - all employees at the city-financed day-care center where the sexual abuses were said to have taken place - have subsequently been indicted by the grand jury, the fourth, a 62-year-old assistant teacher at the center, has been cleared of the charges brought against her by the Bronx District Attorney. She says her life has been ruined by the charges and by the spectacle. On the night of her arrest, Aug. 2, she was led, in manacles, past a group of neighborhood people who were understandably incensed about the child- abuse charges. They tried to attack this woman and another suspect who was with her.
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BEIRUT PAPER REPORTS ANTI-U.S. THREAT
Date: 25 September 1984
By Richard Bernstein
Richard Bernstein
As American security officials continued to sift through debris at the the bombed United States Embassy building near East Beirut, a local newspaper reported a new threat today against American installations here. The leftist daily As Safir said an anonymous caller, identifying himself as a representative of the Islamic Holy War group, which took responsibility for the embassy attack Thursday, warned of ''a big operation'' against Americans. There was some question, however, whether the call was genuine, since previous calls from Islamic Holy War were made to a Western news agency and never to a local Arabic newspaper.
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'MINELIKE OBJECT' OFF EGYPT IS LINKED TO RUSSIANS
Date: 25 September 1984
By Judith Miller
Judith Miller
A mysterious cylindrical ''minelike object'' found in the Gulf of Suez almost two weeks ago is probably a tube-launched mine of Soviet manufacture, according to Egyptian military sources and others close to the investigation. The sources stressed today that a positive identification had not been made. But British and Egyptian mine experts who have been inspecting the device were ''90 percent sure,'' as one source put it, that the mine had been made for export by the Soviet Union. ''It's got all the characteristics of a Russian mine,'' the source said.
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A SEASONED ECUMENIST
Date: 26 September 1984
By Kenneth A. Briggs
Kenneth Briggs
The Rev. Arie R. Brouwer, nominated Monday to become the next general secretary of the National Council of Churches, is a seasoned ecumenist who wins acclaim from other church leaders for his piety and devotion to social justice. Many within the 31 Protestant, Anglican and Eastern Orthodox groups that belong to the nation's largest ecumenical organization hope that those qualities will allow Mr. Brouwer to usher the council out of its recent travails and into a period of renewed vitality. Mr. Brouwer was chosen unanimously from a field of 75 candidates by a 28-member search committee, and his nomination is expected to be ratified with ease by the council's general board in November. Claire Randall, general secretary since 1973, announced earlier this year that she would step down from the post.
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MOSCOW GOSSIP: EMBASSY JOGGING AND NEWS OF CRIME
Date: 25 September 1984
By Serge Schmemann
Serge Schmemann
This has been an autumn of political mysteries in Moscow. How sick is Konstantin U. Chernenko? Why is Andrei A. Gromyko meeting with President Reagan? Why was Marshal Nikolai V. Ogarkov dismissed as Chief of Staff? Diplomats whose job it is to explain such events to their governments have played out endless variations on the facts: a weak leadership floundering under an ailing leader . . . A strong leadership relegating its senior member to a ceremonial role . . . A power struggle between the Old Guard and Young Turks . . . A power struggle already concluded, with the baton passing to Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the leadership's youngster at 53 . . . Or to Grigory V. Romanov, 60. The buzz at diplomatic receptions has been: Who is mentioned how often in the press? Who might have gained or lost by the dismissal of Marshal Ogarkov? Whose programs are being promoted or criticized? Award to Chernenko at 73 The focus today was the award of an Order of Lenin to Mr. Chernenko. It appeared keyed to his 73d birthday today, although the occasion was not mentioned. The timing seemed unusual since decorations are generally presented on ''round dates.'' For example, the Moscow city leader, Viktor V. Grishin, who is also a Politburo member, got his Order of Lenin when he became 70 last Tuesday.
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Wife of Australia's Premier Tells of the Family's Ordeal
Date: 25 September 1984
Reuters
The wife of Prime Minister Bob Hawke said tonight that her daughter and son- in-law were heroin addicts and that concern over them had led her husband to burst into tears at a news conference. Mr. Hawke broke down in front of reporters and television cameras Thursday when questioned about his Labor Party Government's handling of organized crime and drug trafficking.
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China-E.E.C. Talks
Date: 25 September 1984
AP
A vice president of the European Economic Community arrived in China for the first ministerial-level talks between China and the Common Market, the official New China News Agency reported today. The vice president, Wilhelm Haferkamp, is expected to initial a five-year economic cooperation agreement to replace a 1978 accord. Trade between the two totaled $1.9 billion last year.
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New York Magazine Gets New Publisher
Date: 26 September 1984
By Philip H. Dougherty
Philip Dougherty
Carolyn Wall has been promoted to publisher of New York magazine replacing Marty Singerman, president of the News Group Magazines, its parent.
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Florida Sanctions Seen
Date: 25 September 1984
The National Collegiate Athletic Association is prepared to hit Florida, which was charged with 107 violations in its football program earlier this month, with a three-year probation that will include the loss of scholarships and restrictions on television and postseason bowl appearances, according to report in The Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel and News. Andy Pollack, an assistant sports information director, said the school had received no information from the N.C.A.A. and had no comment.
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The Editorial Notebook; George Bush's Daily Dilemma
Date: 25 September 1984
JACK ROSENTHAL
Jack ROSENTHAL
Traveling with Vice President Bush is like traveling with a circus tiger in a cage. His mission is not to make national news; that's for the President. His campaign is meant to get on television in far-flung media markets and to flatter small-town reporters with press conferences in this Elks Hall and that Holiday Inn. But there's an obstacle - the planeful of national reporters following his campaign.
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