23 กุมภาพันธ์ ค.ศ. 1992 เป็น วันอาทิตย์ ใต้เครื่องหมายดาวของ ♓ เป็นวันที่ 53 ของปี ประธานาธิบดีแห่งสหรัฐอเมริกาคือ George Bush
ถ้าคุณเกิดในวันนี้ แสดงว่าคุณอายุ 34 ปี วันเกิดล่าสุดของคุณคือเมื่อ วันจันทร์ที่ 23 กุมภาพันธ์ ค.ศ. 2026, 89 วันที่ผ่านมา วันเกิดครั้งต่อไปของคุณคือวันที่ วันอังคารที่ 23 กุมภาพันธ์ ค.ศ. 2027 ในอีก 275 วัน คุณมีชีวิตอยู่ได้ 12,508 วัน หรือประมาณ 300,212 ชั่วโมง หรือประมาณ 18,012,755 นาที หรือประมาณ 1,080,765,300 วินาที
23rd of February 1992 News
ข่าวที่ปรากฏบนหน้าแรกของ New York Times เมื่อ 23 กุมภาพันธ์ ค.ศ. 1992
In Sporting News, the Box Scores Lose
Date: 24 February 1992
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
The Sporting News is making a change that might be considered the media equivalent of installing lights in Wrigley Field. The sports weekly, which began running baseball box scores in 1886, its first year of publication, will eliminate them in favor of additional coverage of baseball, football, basketball and hockey.
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European Channel Takes a Stab at CNN
Date: 24 February 1992
By Alan Riding
Alan Riding
Spawning the latest of CNN's international clones, a dozen state-backed European television stations have decided to create an all-news satellite channel that should begin broadcasting in five languages early next year. Euronews, as it is to be called, has been under discussion for more than a year, but the final approval came last week when its Geneva-based directors chose Lyons, France, as the station's headquarters.
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Essay; Welcome, Gorby!
Date: 24 February 1992
By William Safire
William Safire
Warner's Man of the Decade, Mikhail Gorbachev, has begun a monthly column in Italy's La Stampa that is being distributed outside Europe by New York Times Syndication Sales. On behalf of Russ, Flora, Scotty, Abe, Anna, Tony, Les and all the Op-Ed gang: Welcome, Gorby!
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In His Various Defining Moments, Has Bush Clearly Defined Himself?
Date: 23 February 1992
By R. W. Apple Jr
R. Apple
GEORGE BUSH has been in public life since the 1960's, and he has been President of the United States, scrutinized every day in every way, for more than three years. Yet as he labored last week to recover from a Republican primary in New Hampshire in which he was able to attract only 53 per cent of the vote, his managers were still struggling to find some way to present a clearer impression of the man and his policies. A New York Times/CBS News poll conducted last week dramatized the depth of the President's problem: the poll showed that more than half of registered voters find it hard to say what Mr. Bush hopes to accomplish in a second term -- although, of course, Mr. Bush still has several months in which to refine his message to the nation.
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No-Win Situation
Date: 23 February 1992
To the Editor: Walter Goodman's essay "Beauty and the Broadcast" [ Jan. 26 ] shows that he just doesn't get it.
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Women in the News
Date: 23 February 1992
By Arlie Russell Hochschild
Arlie Hochschild
THE GIRLS IN THE BALCONY Women, Men, and The New York Times. By Nan Robertson. Illustrated. 274 pp. New York: Random House. $22.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 23 February 1992
International 3-15 U.S. HOLDS UP AID TO RUSSIA A delay by the United States in approving a big financing increase for the International Monetary Fund is threatening to upset the West's efforts to provide billions of dollars in aid to former Soviet republics, fund officials report. They say that the delay is motivated in part by election-year politics. 1 TARGET ERRORS IN GULF WAR A failure to communicate target restrictions in the Persian Gulf air war inflicted heavier damage than was intended to Iraq's civilian infrastructure, including electrical plants, a new report by the Defense Department says. 1 HEAVILY ARMED IN RIO With smugglers funneling high-powered rifles from Miami to Rio de Janeiro's hillside slums, the Brazilian police say they are losing an arms race with drug gangs. 3 DOUBTS ON YUGOSLAV PEACE FORCE As the United Nations prepares to deploy a 14,400-member peacekeeping force to Yugoslavia, many fear that the effort could bog down or fail in a quagmire of ethnic hatreds. 12 U.S. NAVY PATROLS RUSSIAN SHORES Americans may no longer consider Russia an enemy, but the United States Navy remains reluctant to pull back from the Arctic waters that have long been a home to the former Soviet Fleet. 14 GERMAN TONGUE REASSERTS ITSELF When German diplomats appear at international conferences these days, they can no longer be counted on to deliver speeches in English or French. A new Government-directed campaign seeks to return German to its former world prominence. 7 Calm returns to southern Lebanon as Shiite gunmen pull back. 6 National 16-26 ASPIN TAKES AIM AT PENTAGON The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee wants to cut $50 billion to $120 billion more from the Pentagon's budget over the next five years than the President has already proposed. 1 THE CAMPAIGN ROAD AHEAD Strategists in both political parties are surveying the two dozen states that hold primaries in the next three weeks to pick out the critical battlegrounds: the richest opportunities to accumulate delegates, demonstrate strength and embarrass an opponent. 1 For Senators Kerrey and Harkin, Tuesday is do-or-die day. 20 Mr. Tsongas got a blessing, of sorts, from Jimmy Carter. 22 The Tsongas fund-raising effort has suddenly gained strength. 22 THIS FLIGHT WAS NOT ON TIME After a month of setbacks, the crew of the Earthwinds balloon abandoned any attempt at a round-the-world flight until November. 16 COURT FIGHT OVER CREDIT CARDS Half the states have laws that either bar or limit credit-card fees for late payments, for annual renewals and for exceeding credit limits. But many banks set such fees outside those limits, arguing that they are governed only by laws of states where their credit-card operations are based, not where customers live. Now that argument is under legal challenge. 1 THE NEW LOOK OF THE KLAN Inspired by David Duke's example, the Ku Klux Klan has begun to cultivate savvy, clean-cut-looking disciples who convey a sanitized message. 16 Regional 28-36 SAINT OR UNCLE TOM? The campaign to canonize a slave who died in 1853 has prompted a heated debate among American Catholics that reveals much about the modern-day church's complicated and sometimes awkward relations with its black parishioners. 1 CAMPAIGN RECORDS SOUGHT The Manhattan District Attorney has requested extensive records of Mayor Dinkins's 1989 campaign, law enforcement officials and campaign workers said, a sign that the investigation into thefts by his former campaign treasurer has become a broader inquiry of the Mayor's campaign finances. 30 2 STANDS ON SHELTER MONEY Gov. Cuomo, who has said that the state's shelter allowance for welfare recipients is "shamefully inadequate," has proposed legislation that could undermine efforts to raise the grant. 28 Two Mafia trials with little in common. 33 Long legal battle on Attica grows longer. 36 Neediest Cases 32 Obituaries 34 Lawrence Hilford, a pioneer in the marketing of videocassettes. Arts/Reviews 51 Theater: "St. Joan." Campus Life 39-43 Fashion 46-47 Weddings 48-50
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 24 February 1992
International A3-10 BEATING SWORDS INTO SWORDS Guns have always been the business of the Russian city of Izhevsk. But with military orders disappearing, economic collapse loomed. Now, a plan to turn the military-industrial complex into a money-making operation offers hope. A1 Government opponents clash with the Moscow police. A10 A U.S. Air Force jet delivers food to a formerly closed Russian city. A10 WINDS OF CHANGE BLOW IN CHINA After espousing hard-line attitudes for the last two years, China's official press is emphasizing economic growth and the need to adopt some elements of capitalism. A front-page essay in People's Daily is the latest signal that leaders who favor change may be gaining the upper hand over ideologues. A1 ETHIOPIA LOOKS INSIDE AND OUT The hungry country still needs much outside aid. But if peace holds and peasants are given proper encouragement, officials say, Ethiopia could feed itself in 10 years. A8 GUERRILLAS WITHDRAW IN LEBANON A day after they agreed to end attacks against Israel, Shiite Muslim fighters began pulling out of villages in southern Lebanon. The move signaled an end to a week of intense artillery and rocket exchanges that began with Israel's assassination of a Party of God leader. A8 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip feel removed from peace talks. A8 A BREAKTHROUGH ON HAITI After five months of political stagnation, leaders of Haiti's Parliament and exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide reached an unexpected agreement paving the way for a return to democratic government. A3 WHEN HEROES BECOME VILLAINS The pursuit of former Communists in Czechoslovakia has led to charges against some men who were seen as heroes of the 1968 reforms. A9 FOR MUSSOLINIS, IT'S IN THE BLOOD The granddaughter of Il Duce is running for a seat in Italy's Parliament on the neo-Fascist ticket. A4 GUN SELL-OFF IN PAKISTAN As the Afghanistan war winds down, guerrillas are selling guns, not buying them. A6 Canada moves towards a constitutional inclusion of Quebec. A3 Croatian leader says he will cooperate with U.N. force. A3 National A12-17 CRACKDOWN ON MEDICAL DEVICES The head of the Food and Drug Administration told makers of more than 100 untested medical devices already in use that they must present data from rigorous safety tests or have restrictions placed on their products. A1 PRIESTS, MINORS AND SEX ABUSE Amid evidence that the church's safeguards are insufficient, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago ordered the nation's most extensive inquiry into the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests. A1 BROWN SURPRISES IN MAINE Former Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. of California made a surprisingly strong showing in the Maine caucus, running about even with the expected winner, Paul Tsongas. Gov. Bill Clinton was well behind in third. A1 CLINTON STILL A FAVORITE SON Heading for the Southern primaries of Super Tuesday, Bill Clinton the son of the South seemed to count more than Bill Clinton the tabloid target. A16 VAGUENESS IN THE FINE PRINT Paul Tsongas, who won over New Hampshire voters by emphasizing personal sacrifice to revive the economy, has given few details about the bitter medicine he would prescribe. A17 HIS CHECKS ARE IN THE MAIL Unlike candidates who drew heavily on large fund-raisers or telephone campaigns, Pat Buchanan raised about 80 percent of his campaign money from mail solicitation. A16 UNITED WAY CHIEF UNDER FIRE The United Way of America began an internal investigation as several publications accused the charity's president of lavish spending and free-wheeling management practices. A12 AFTER RAIN, IT'S PARADISE LOST Heavy rain turned five San Franciscans' enchanted aerie into a shifting structure that could come tumbling down the face of Telegraph Hill. A12 KILLING CROPS ALONG WITH WEEDS Florida farmers said that a Du Pont fungicide that for decades gave them unblemished produce has caused their fields to become wastelands. A1 A KILLER'S BREAKING POINT Lawyers and psychologists sought to figure out what made "an ordinary man living an ordinary life in an ordinary town" gun down four people in December. A14 The C.I.A. discovers pork barreling close to home. A13 A Massachusetts college offers free classes to the jobless. A12 Metropolitan Digest, B1 Business Digest, D1 Sports C1-12 Baseball: Dazzling prospect for Mets. C4 Basketball: Tarkanian rescinds his planned resignation. C2 Georgetown tops Syracuse. C3 Wake Forest upsets Duke. C3 Column: Claire Smith on Baseball. C4 Anderson on Albertville and Alps. C9 Features: Sidelines. C2 Golf: Pate wins Buick Invitational. Hockey: Rangers edge Flyers, 2-1 C4 Horse Racing: Cordero mends and ponders future. C1 Dance Floor emerges. C12 Olympics: Finishing with a flourish. C1 Unified Team wins hockey gold. C1 Norwegians smiling. C7 Heroes of the Games. C7 Sense of isolation in Alpine skiing. C8 U.S. followed LeBlanc's fortunes. C9 Obituaries B10 Jane Pickens Hoving, singer who led Pickens Sisters Trio Arts/Entertainment C15-20 Reactions to the endowment chairman's dismissal. C15 Reza Abdoh, speaking on his new theater piece. C15 Brooklyn businesses back the Academy of Music. C15 Music: "Pelleas et Melisande" at the Welsh National Opera. C15 "The James P. Johnson Jubilee" at Avery Fisher Hall. C17 Word and Image: Celebrating 100 telecasts, "Live From Lincoln Center." C18 "Grass Roots." C18 "The Covenant of the Wild." C20 Editorials/Op-Ed A18-19 Editorials A18 For the homeless. Implants: Not for all. Pyongyang's nukes. A human peace dividend. Letters A18 Leslie H. Gelb: Treeing Mr. Shamir. A19 William Safire: Welcome, Gorby! A19 Mikhail S. Gorbachev: No time for stereotypes. A19 Christopher Lasch: How television deflates politics. A19 Arthur T. Hadley: Coming to terms with "friendly fire. A19
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San Diego Newspaper Adjusts To Merger
Date: 24 February 1992
After the walls separating the news rooms of the competing San Diego Union and Tribune recently came down, literally, the staffs of the papers stared across the expanse at one another. "It was as if we were afraid of moving to the other side, like a border guard might shoot us," said Elizabeth Douglass, a Tribune financial writer.
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Eunice Johnson To Wed in May
Date: 23 February 1992
Mr. and Mrs. F. Coit Johnson 2d of New York have announced the engagement of their niece, Eunice Clapp Johnson, to Vincent J. Panetta Jr., the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Panetta. A May wedding is planned. Miss Johnson, 25 years old, is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Stuart H. Johnson Jr. She graduated from Harvard University and is a news producer for the Monitor Channel, a cable station operated by the Christian Science Monitor Publishing Society in Boston.
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