O dia 12 de julho de 1986 foi um sábado sob o signo de ♋. Foi o dia 192 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi Ronald Reagan.
Se você nasceu neste dia, você tem 39 anos de idade. Seu último aniversário foi no dia sábado, 12 de julho de 2025, 349 dias atrás. Seu próximo aniversário é no dia domingo, 12 de julho de 2026, em 15 dias. Você viveu 14.594 dias, ou cerca de 350.273 horas, ou cerca de 21.016.417 minutos, ou cerca de 1.260.985.020 segundos.
12th of July 1986 News
Notícias como apareceu na primeira página do New York Times em 12 de julho de 1986
NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1986
Date: 13 July 1986
International The U.S. is prepared to maintain a continuing military presence in Honduras for years to come if necessary, according to military officials and diplomats there. Although official United States policy is that the American military role is temporary despite three and a half years of intense military buildup, some officials speak of Honduras gradually becoming like South Korea, developing into a permanent United States military staging area, manned and armed to contain any perceived Communist threat. [ Page 1, Column 6. ]
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY: SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1986
Date: 12 July 1986
International The C.I.A. will take responsibility for managing day-to-day military operations against the Nicaraguan Government under instructions from the Reagan Administration, Administration officials said. The officials said that the State Department would have overall policy direction of the operations, and that William J. Casey, the Director of Central Intelligence, had promised Secretary of State George P. Shultz that any actions that might prove potentially embarrassing if exposed would be cleared with the State Department first. [ Page 1, Column 6. ] Chile continued to be pressed by the Reagan Administration for what it called an honest investigation into the death of a young Chilean-born Washington resident who was reportedly set on fire by Chilean soldiers. The call came as a high-ranking State Department official was to fly to Chile on Saturday. [ 1:4. ]
Full Article
OPINION NARROWS OVER HIGH COURT
Date: 13 July 1986
By Adam Clymer
Adam Clymer
The American public is now about evenly split on whether the Supreme Court is too liberal or too conservative in its decisions, the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. The public is also closely divided on whether the Court is doing a good job, a view it clearly rejected in the late 1960's and early 1970's. Moreover, in two key areas, abortion and the rights of people accused of crime, the public sided with the High Court and against its critics. The survey of 1,618 adults was taken last month just after Chief Justice Warren E. Burger announced his retirement and President Reagan announced plans to solidify the conservative forces on the Court with the nominations of Associate Justice William H. Rehnquist to be Chief Justice and Judge Antonin Scalia of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
Full Article
SATURDAY NEWS QUIZ
Date: 12 July 1986
By Donna Anderson
Donna Anderson
Questions are based on news reports in The Times this week. Answers appear on page 50. 1. This man is not wearing his usual working clothes. Who is he and what is he doing? 2. ''We are tough and unapologetic about what we are doing,'' said Musa Hitam, Malaysia's former Deputy Prime Minister. To what was he referring? 3. The Supreme Court struck down the central provision of the new law designed to curb Federal budget deficits. What cardinal constitutional provision did it say was violated, and how? 4. According to a New York Times poll of major league baseball players, who is the best player in the game? 5. The United States Steel Corporation is changing its name, a move acknowledging that steel plays a reduced role at the company. What is the new name and what percent of the company's sales does steel now account for? 6. Magid al-Molqi was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Who is he? 7. After a monthlong trial run, project Hot Dry Rock succeeded in producing energy on a potentially commercial scale. What is hot dry rock technology? 8. Experts say a weakening of ties between employees and employers is developing, reversing a 50-year trend of job stability and protection. Why? 9. New Zealand will release two French secret agents imprisoned for their role in the sinking of an environmentalist group's ship, provided they spend the next three years on a remote Pacific island.
Full Article
No Smoking On or Off the Job
Date: 13 July 1986
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
UNDER a new labor contract, the Police Department of Holden, Mass., banned smoking last September, both on and off the job, by any of its newly hired full-time officers. Officials of the town, near Worcester, believed it to be the first contract like that in the nation.
Full Article
Charges Against Goetz Reinstated
Date: 13 July 1986
For nearly 19 months after Bernhard Goetz shot four youths he thought intended to rob him on a Manhattan subway train, the criminal justice system wrestled not with the question of his guilt or innocence, but with the question of whether he should stand trial at all. Last week that phase of the widely publicized case ended when New York's highest court decided unanitempted murder charges against Mr. Goetz.
Full Article
Cocaine Draws New Attention
Date: 13 July 1986
Cocaine was news last week: Government reports attested to its popularity, politicians went to upper Manhattan to buy it and Pete Rozelle announced a plan to curb its use in the National Football League. Citing the recent deaths of two athletes, Len Bias and Don Rogers, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reported a sharp increase in cocaine-related deaths and emergency-room admissions in the last few years. The officials said, nonetheless, that they had no evidence of a recent rise in cocaine use. ''What we are seeing in 1986 are the consequences of drug use which began years ago,'' said Donald I. Macdonald, head of the Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration.
Full Article
When Is an Onion A Vidalia Onion?
Date: 13 July 1986
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
VIDALIA onions are sweet and so popular in the market that consumers pay extra for them. But the question before Superior Court in Statesboro, Ga., was: What constitutes a Vidalia onion?
Full Article
College as Part Of Prison Term?
Date: 13 July 1986
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
IT was an unusual issue before the New Hampshire Supreme Court: Must the state, as ordered by a lower court, pay for the college education of a prisoner serving 18 years to life for second-degree murder? The prisoner, 21-year-old Vernon W. Evans, argued last year that getting a college degree was the only way he could comply with a ruling of the trial court.
Full Article
Thatcher Rejects As 'Repugnant' Curbs on Pretoria
Date: 13 July 1986
Politics continued to produce violence in South Africa last week, and while the authorities moved to calm the unrest, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain emphatically reiterated that she opposed economic sanctions as a way of forcing South Africa to abandon apartheid. More than three dozen blacks were killed in factional fighting around the country, some of it related to strikes at diamond and gold mines, the authorities reported.
Full Article