Those Cameras Helped Elian
Date: 29 April 2000
By Roger Ailes
Roger Ailes
those cameras helped
29 เมษายน ค.ศ. 2000 เป็น วันเสาร์ ใต้เครื่องหมายดาวของ ♉ เป็นวันที่ 119 ของปี ประธานาธิบดีแห่งสหรัฐอเมริกาคือ William J. (Bill) Clinton
ถ้าคุณเกิดในวันนี้ แสดงว่าคุณอายุ 26 ปี วันเกิดล่าสุดของคุณคือเมื่อ วันพุธที่ 29 เมษายน ค.ศ. 2026, 41 วันที่ผ่านมา วันเกิดครั้งต่อไปของคุณคือวันที่ วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 29 เมษายน ค.ศ. 2027 ในอีก 323 วัน คุณมีชีวิตอยู่ได้ 9,537 วัน หรือประมาณ 228,906 ชั่วโมง หรือประมาณ 13,734,373 นาที หรือประมาณ 824,062,380 วินาที
Date: 29 April 2000
By Roger Ailes
Roger Ailes
those cameras helped
Date: 29 April 2000
By Susan Sachs
Susan Sachs
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, former president who is still behind-the-scenes power in Iran, defends closing of 16 pro-reform publications and accuses them of trying to undermine country's religious underpinning; televised speech cites secular-religious violence after 1979 Islamic revolution, but steers clear of direct attack on Pres Mohammad Khatami (M)
Date: 29 April 2000
By Elaine Sciolino
Elaine Sciolino
Iran's long tradition of open-ended conversations and surprisingly lively debate is set by by recent closiong of 11 reformist newspapers and five magazines for allegedly disparaging Islam; photo; crackdown follows reformist wins in parliamentary elections, as conservatives protect strict interpretation of Islamic rule; Shiite Islam itself thrives on discussion in particularly egalitarian way, welcoming arguments among clerical scholars and shunning rigid hierarchy; ups and downs of free speech recounted (M)
Date: 29 April 2000
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Tribune Company, which is buying Times Mirror Company, considers selling Times Mirror's Jeppesen unit, world's leading provider of flight-information services to airlines (S)
Date: 29 April 2000
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
NCR Corp will add about 1,000 employees, mostly to run large databases and maintain ATMs (S)
Date: 30 April 2000
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
UN Security Council delegation winds up visit to Kosovo, with reactions somewhat muted by complexities of situation on ground; photo of members on tour of ethnically divided Mitrovica (M)
Date: 29 April 2000
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Commerce Department reports personal incomes rose 0.7 percent in March, faster than spending rate for first time in five months; graph (S)
Date: 29 April 2000
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Nasdaq index rises 86.63 points to close at 3,860.66, ending its worst month since 1998; graph (M)
Date: 30 April 2000
INTERNATIONAL 3-12 South Asia Called Major Terrorism Hub The State Department has for the first time identified South Asia as a major hub of international terrorism, accusing Pakistan, a traditional American ally, and especially Afghanistan of providing support to international terrorist groups. 1
Date: 29 April 2000
INTERNATIONAL A3-7 Shipwreck Survivors Recall Flight From Haiti Violence Some of the more than 250 Haitians found on a barren island in the Bahamas said they had fled Haiti aboard a stolen boat in a desperate attempt to escape the mounting violence that has swept through their homeland in advance of elections. A1 Nazi Victims Fund Planned A group of American companies plan to establish a humanitarian fund that would aid victims of Hitler's rule. The fund is at least partly intended to head off class-action lawsuits against American companies that had subsidiaries in Germany during the war or later bought companies that had operations there. A1 Russian Visit to U.S. 'Tank' Senior Pentagon officials, eager to sway Russia to approve a new missile defense system for the United States, took the Russian foreign minister into a secure conference room known as ''the tank'' this week to explain in detail how Russia's nuclear arsenal could overwhelm new radars central to an American system. A4 Iran Cleric Defends Crackdown Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a leading Iranian cleric and former president, defended the recent closing of 16 pro-reform publications and accused them of trying to destroy the country's religious underpinnings. He drew explicit parallels between the current political tension and the civil strife between secular nationalists and Islamic militants following the Iranian revolution in 1979. A3 Italy Approves Prime Minister Parliament approved Giuliano Amato, a Socialist, as prime minister by a margin of just 21 votes, reflecting the new government's fragility, as well as disarray in the center-left majority, which has had power since 1996. The vote gave Mr. Amato a year to put into effect reforms that his center-left predecessors had championed but failed to pass. A7 Harsh Exchange in Vietnam Vietnamese and American officials, in the run-up to the 25th anniversary tomorrow of the end of the war, traded bitter gibes over whose side had behaved worse during and after the conflict. Senator John McCain delivered a harsh attack on Vietnam's Communist government while there on a private visit. A3 World Briefing A4 NATIONAL A8-11, 14 Miami Police Chief Quits In Dispute Over Elian Raid William O'Brien tearfully resigned, saying he could no longer work for a divisive mayor in a city that needed to heal. The resignation came a day after the city manager refused to fire him and was himself fired by Mayor Joe Carollo, who was angered by Chief O'Brien's decision not to notify him of the federal raid to take Elian Gonzalez from his relatives. A9 5 Slain in Mall Attacks The police said a white immigration lawyer opened fire at immigrants in two shopping centers on the outskirts of Pittsburgh, killing five people -- a Jewish woman, two Asian men, one Indian and one black man -- and wounding a sixth. Officials said the lawyer, Richard Baumhammers, 34, was in custody. A8 Gore Education Proposals Vice President Al Gore, campaigning in Texas, called for using the power of the federal government's purse strings to press failing schools to raise test scores and to reduce dropout rates with an array of threats and incentives. With his speech at a national conference of black mayors, Mr. Gore sought to answer critics who have said his proposals simply pour more money into failing school systems. A10 Bush Picks Campaign Chief Donald L. Evans, a Texas oil and gas businessman who presided over the record fund-raising drive for Gov. George W. Bush in the Republican primaries, was named chairman of the presidential campaign. Mr. Evans, 53, has had little conventional political involvement, but he has known Governor Bush well for 25 years. A11 Beliefs A11 EDUCATION Overture to Apparel Makers Representatives of universities belonging to a new group set up by students to monitor apparel factories led a call to give companies a greater say in the group's work. The move came as Nike, the footwear giant, moved once again against a university that had joined the monitoring group. Nike broke off negotiations with the University of Michigan to renew a six-year, multimillion-dollar licensing agreement. A9 NEW YORK/REGION B1-8 Mayor Hopeful on Senate And for a 'Complete Cure' Mayor Giuliani said although he was ''absorbing'' the news of his prostate cancer, he still hoped to run for the Senate. But he will cut his immediate campaign schedule in half to accommodate meetings with doctors and medical tests. He also said the cancer had not spread beyond the prostate gland and he was confident of a ''complete cure.'' A1 New Livery Cab Killing A 43-year-old Brooklyn man became the ninth livery-cab driver slain this year. The police added more officers to a special livery task force. B1 Rebirth of a Crime Family Experts say the Bonanno organized-crime family, which was once thought headed for extinction, has recently revived to become one of the most dangerous in the region. B1 Psychiatric Hospital Closing Gov. Christine Todd Whitman ordered the closing of Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital in Parsippany. The hospital, the largest such center run by the state, has been plagued by escapes and assaults on patients. B1 ARTS & IDEAS B11-20 Strike at Manhattan Museum The union representing 250 archivists, assistant curators, librarians, bookshop workers and other employees at the Museum of Modern Art went on strike over pay. B3 Beijing Presses Auction Houses China asked Sotheby's and Christie's to withdraw four relics -- which Beijing says were stolen 140 years ago -- from auctions in Hong Kong. B11 SPORTS D1-8 N.C.A.A. Ultimatum on Flag The N.C.A.A. will sponsor no events in South Carolina unless the Confederate flag is removed from the Capitol by Aug. 11. School and conference schedules are exempt. D5 OBITUARIES C20 Elmer Gertz A Chicago lawyer whose clients included the convicted ''thrill killer'' Nathan Leopold; the author Henry Miller; and Jack Ruby, who killed Lee Harvey Oswald, he was 93. C20 BUSINESS DAY C1-18 Microsoft Breakup Sought The Justice Department and 17 states asked a federal judge to break Microsoft into two parts and seriously restrain its conduct while the breakup is carried out. A1 William H. Gates said Microsoft would fight both any breakup and the earlier antitrust finding. C1 Several industry executives said competition would increase. C5 Fund Magnate Remaking Empire George Soros, who recently took big losses in bets on technology and the euro, said he would abandon many of the high-risk techniques that had proved so successful for him and his investors, whom he warned should expect smaller returns. A1 Stanley Druckenmiller, manager of the $8.2 billion Quantum Fund, which is down 22 percent this year, quit Soros Fund Management. C1 Conseco Chief Is Ousted Stephen C. Hilbert, who founded the insurance giant 21 years ago, was forced to resign. C1 Victory for Music Industry A federal judge ruled that MP3.com had violated copyright law by compiling a vast online music database for commercial use. C1 Stocks Take Different Paths The Nasdaq rose 2.3 percent, but the Dow and the S.& P. 500 slipped. C3 Business Digest C1 EDITORIAL A12-13 Editorials: Stumbling efforts in East Timor; a broad ban on snowmobiles; the casino land shuffle; decline of the euro. Columns: Anthony Lewis. Bridge B19 TV Listings B20 Crossword B18 Weather B8 Public Lives A8