Der 25. Februar 1984 war ein Samstag unter dem Sternzeichen ♓. Es war der 55. Tag des Jahres. Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten war Ronald Reagan.
Wenn Sie an diesem Tag geboren wurden, sind Sie 42 Jahre alt. Ihr letzter Geburtstag war am Mittwoch, 25. Februar 2026, vor 130 Tagen. Ihr nächster Geburtstag ist am Donnerstag, 25. Februar 2027 in 234 Tagen. Sie haben 15.471 Tage gelebt oder ungefähr 371.322 Stunden oder ungefähr 22.279.348 Minuten oder ungefähr 1.336.760.880 Sekunden.
25th of February 1984 News
Nachrichten, wie sie auf der Titelseite der New York Times am 25. Februar 1984 erschienen
President to Name Admiral As Head of Aviation Agency
Date: 25 February 1984
UPI
Upi
President Reagan said today he would nominate Vice Adm. Donald Engen, retired, a staunch safety advocate who is a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, as the new head of the Federal Aviation Administration.
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PENTAGON TIGHTENS CONTROL ON AIDES' CENTRAL AMERICA STATEMENTS
Date: 25 February 1984
By Philip Taubman
Philip Taubman
A senior Defense Department official has directed Pentagon officials to clear in advance with his office any communication with Congress about American military activities in Central America. Pentagon officials said the order reflected concern in the Reagan Administration about increasingly assertive efforts by Congress, particularly Democratic lawmakers, to examine whether the Pentagon has established a permanent military presence in Honduras without Congressional authorization. Administration officials, including Secretary of Defense Caspar W. Weinberger, have denied that the United States intends to establish a long-term military presence in Honduras.
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ALLIES IN EUROPE SEEK BIGGER ROLE
Date: 26 February 1984
By John Vinocur
John Vinocur
The United States' allies in Europe have begun to try to bring a greater measure of European identity and decision-making to their military policies. Seven of the countries, led by France, West Germany and Britain, are planning a defense ministers' meeting in the fall to discuss what some of the group refer to as Europeanization - an idea roughly defined as Western Europe taking greater control of its own defense while maintaining its military links to the United States. The meeting, according to French Government sources, will be the first wide-ranging discussion by West European defense ministers, including France's, to take place outside of the Atlantic alliance and without Americans. In describing the initiative, European officials stress their need for continued military cooperation with the United States. But they acknowledge that the experience of starting to deploy new American medium-range missiles last year and differences between American and European policy assessments had accelerated thinking about Europeanization.
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PREPARING SOVIET TALKS
Date: 26 February 1984
By Flora Lewis
Flora Lewis
It isn't yet possible to know what direction the Russians will take under the transitional regime of Konstantin Chernenko, or what secret agreements have been made for the next succession. The 52-year-old agricultural expert, Mikhail S. Gorbachev, a lad by Kremlin standards, does appear to have advanced to No. 2 in the Politburo, and may already have been promised the top job after Chernenko. Knowledgeable East Europeans say definite signs should emerge within the next couple of months. Most important, however, is the indication that for the first time in six months or more, the Kremlin is again capable of new decisions. This comes from a Yugoslav who said flatly early in January that Yuri Andropov was on his deathbed and hadn't been capable of active leadership since last fall.
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COMPANY NEWS
Date: 25 February 1984
Murdoch Seeks List Of Warner Holders By The Associated Press Rupert Murdoch asked Warner Communications Inc. for a list of its shareholders to help him decide whether to pursue a proxy contest for control of Warner, one of Mr. Murdoch's companies disclosed yesterday. Mr. Murdoch, the Australian publisher, already owns about 7 percent of Warner's voting stock and has threatened to start a proxy battle for control of the entertainment and consumer electronics concern.
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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS
Date: 26 February 1984
By Richard Haitch
Richard Haitch
Reactor, Anyone? Left with a 697-ton reactor vessel after abandoning a nuclear power project in Salem County, N.J., the Public Service Electric and Gas Company put a for-sale ad in a small weekly newspaper in early 1983. State law required it to try first to sell the reactor locally.
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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS
Date: 26 February 1984
By Richard Haitch Pets On Welfare
Richard Pets
While soup kitchens were feeding people in want in Youngstown, Ohio, a private organization called Animal Charity opened a bread line for needy pets in late 1982. Within two months Edward Goist, executive director of Animal Charity, reported that 3,000 pounds of dog and cat food had been handed out, much of it donated.
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FOLLOW-UP-ON THE NEWS
Date: 26 February 1984
By Richard Haitch Marital Caution
Richard Marital
Seeking to stem a rise in broken marriages, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, R.I., announced in February 1983 that it would require couples under its jurisdiction to spend at least 45 hours in formal prenuptial instruction and to wait a minimum of a half year before marrying.
''To my utter amazement and pleasure,'' says the Rev. Joseph Protano, ''the program has taken on very normally in most parishes.''
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S.E.C. INQUIRY AT CBS NEWS
Date: 25 February 1984
By Sally Bedell Smith
Sally Smith
CBS Inc. expects the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue subpoenas next week naming as many as three CBS News employees as targets of an investigation, network officials said yesterday. The officials, who asked not to be identified, said the investigation involves unusual activity in the trading of G. D. Searle & Company stock options before a mid-January series on the ''CBS Evening News'' raised questions about the safety of Nutrasweet, the company's low-calorie artificial sweetener. John M. Fedders, director of the division of enforcement at the S.E.C., declined to confirm or deny that an investigation was under way.
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TASTY TIDBITS LURK IN THE MET'S NEWS OF NEXT SEASON
Date: 26 February 1984
By Donal Henahan
Donal Henahan
T he genuine, deep-dyed opera fan is insatiable, a creature who greedily consumes every scrap of information about the art and the craft of lyric theater, true or false, real or rumored. No detail of a beloved soprano's precocious infancy is too trivial to overlook. No tenor's recipe for Chicken Appoggiatura is too gummy-sounding to be clipped and filed. No superannuated diva's ghost-written memoirs are too fatuous and self-serving to be bought, lent to friends and heatedly discussed in lobbies. The addict needs his fix of opera dope, especially in the dreary depths of February. There is no such thing as too much opera news, or a wrong time to shoot it up. And so, even though the Metropolitan Opera's centennial season is still in high gear, no true fan feels the least bit sheepish about showing intense interest in the company's repertory for next season. When the Metropolitan disclosed its repertory plans for 1984-85 the other day, along with tentative casting, the community of opera followers pored over the details like Kremlinologists studying the medical reports of doddering Soviet leaders.
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