5. juli 1984 var en torsdag under stjernetegnet for ♋. Det var 186 dag på året. Præsident for USA var Ronald Reagan.
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5th of July 1984 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 5. juli 1984
News Service Is Started By the Aga Khan
Date: 06 July 1984
The Aga Khan, spiritual leader of 20 million Ismailian Moslems in the Middle East, has started a news service to report on events and trends in developing countries for clients in those countries and in the United States, Europe and Japan. The start of the service, Compass News Features, was announced yesterday in Luxembourg, where it has its headquarters.
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SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 05 July 1984
Petranoff of U.S. Beaten in Javelin HELSINKI, Finland, July 4 (AP) - Tom Petranoff of the United States, the world record-holder in the javelin throw, was beaten today by Klaus Tafelmeir of West Germany in the World Games at Olympic Stadium. Tafelmeier's best throw measured 295 feet 3 inches, as Petranoff finished second with 278-11 on a chilly, 59-degree evening.
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SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 05 July 1984
Bayi Triumphs In Atlanta Race ATLANTA, July 4 (UPI) - Filbert Bayi of Tanzania, who is doing his Olympic training at Emory University here, set a brisk pace and won the 10-kilometer Peachtree Road Race today in 28 minutes 35 seconds. Bayi's time for the 6.2 miles was seven seconds faster than that of the second-place finisher, Ashley Johnson, a 22-year-old student at Western Kentucky.
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SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 05 July 1984
Belgian Captures 6th Stage of Tour ALENCON, France, July 4 (UPI) - Franck Hoste of Belgium led a tight pack across the finish line today and won the sixth stage of the Tour de France bicycle race. Inches behind, in second place, was Sean Kelly of Ireland, but he was disqualified for having deliberately impeded Gilbert Glaus of Switzerland.
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SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS
Date: 05 July 1984
Chile Withdraws Its Soccer Team SANTIAGO, Chile, July 4 (AP) - Lack of money has forced the Chilean Olympic Committee to withdraw the national soccer team that was to have participated in the summer Games.
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FINDING FEMINIST POWER
Date: 05 July 1984
By James Brooke
James Brooke
A year ago this week, Judy Goldsmith led a lonely band of feminists demonstrating outside the White House to back the failing proposal for an equal rights amendment. Yesterday, riding a wave of popular support, Judy Goldsmith met with Walter F. Mondale to negotiate her threat of a floor fight at the Democratic National Convention. In the last year, Mrs. Goldsmith, an understated former professor of English literature, has rallied the 250,000-member National Organization for Women back from a demoralizing defeat, propelling it to center stage with her unbending demand that the Democrats' Vice-Presidential candidate this year be a woman. ''Over the years, she has evolved from being a bright young activist from a small town with no knowledge of politics into a very solid and sophisticated political operator,'' says Mary Jean Collins, a NOW vice president who has been a friend since Mrs. Goldsmith joined the chapter in Manitowoc, Wis., in 1974.
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HONDURANS ASSERT THEY SEEK CHANGE IN MILITARY PACT
Date: 05 July 1984
By Lydia Chavez, Special To the New York Times
Lydia Chavez
The Honduran Government plans to ask for revisions in a 1954 military agreement with the United States in an attempt to win more economic and military benefits, according to Honduran military officials. A Honduran commission is analyzing the Bilateral Assistance Military Agreement of 1954 and will ask the United States for changes, including preferential trade arrangements and greater Honduran control over United States military personnel, the officials said, but they did not say when they expected to present their recommendations. ''We need to revise existing agreements,'' said Col. Omar Antonio Zelaya Reyes, who heads a military school and is on the military's 42-member Supreme Council. ''One of the reasons to revise these policies is to define them to reflect the times in which we live.''
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TO AGREE ON ARMS
Date: 05 July 1984
By David Linebaugh
David Linebaugh
Washington and Moscow have now exchanged several much-publicized offers to resume arms control negotiations - and in each case the other side dismissed the offer as propaganda almost as soon as it was put forward. President Reagan has repeatedly declared his readiness for talks and for a real reduction of nuclear arms. But his policies have not matched his rhetoric. Mr. Reagan has yet to put forward the first essential to a serious negotiation - a specific, concrete proposal that takes account of both countries' interests. As a result, American interests suffer. The possibility of lessening tension and improving relations with Moscow remains untested.
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NETWORKS CUT CONVENTION COVERAGE
Date: 05 July 1984
By Peter W. Kaplan
Peter Kaplan
At the 1948 Republican National Convention, which was not the first televised convention - 1940 was the landmark year - a very hot Edward R. Murrow sat with two colleagues, looked through the camera lens and said: ''It must be the heat. Here are three reporters. We've been here 10 minutes and all we've said is that nothing much happened today, or, if it did, we don't know about it.'' In the next 36 years, it has sometimes seemed that, on television at least, those 10-minute periods were what the national conventions were made of, as they have sprawled and challenged television newsmen who have had as little to say about the nonaction as Mr. Murrow did. This year, at both the Democratic National Convention, July 16-19 in San Francisco, and at the Republican convention, Aug. 20-23 in Dallas, television will have, if not revenge, then relief. For the first time, none of the three major networks will be broadcasting gavel-to-gavel coverage of the events, but instead will be giving them blocks from their prime-time schedules.
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IRANIAN JETS DAMAGE JAPANESE TANKER
Date: 06 July 1984
By Douglas Martin
Douglas Martin
Iranian planes attacked and damaged a Japanese-owned supertanker today in evident retaliation for Iraqi attacks, shipping sources reported. Diplomats here presumed that the attack on the Liberian-registry Primrose was in reprisal for Iraqi raids against vessels bound to or from Iran and, in particular, a June 24 raid against the Kharg Island oil terminal. Iranians confirmed today that Kharg Island facilities were damaged in the June 24 raid. The Primrose was said to have been hit twice but remained sufficiently seaworthy to proceed at full speed toward the Strait of Hormuz.
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