1996년 9월 15일은(는) 일요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♍**입니다. 올해의 258일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 William J. (Bill) Clinton입니다.
이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 29살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 9월 15일 월요일, 259일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 9월 15일 화요일일 후 105입니다. 당신은 10,851일, 약 260,445시간, 약 15,626,706분 또는 약 937,602,360초 동안 살았습니다.
15th of September 1996 News
1996년 9월 15일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스
TV Executive's 'Real People' View
Date: 15 September 1996
By Cynthia Magriel Wetzler
Cynthia Wetzler
Paula Walker, vice president and news director for WNBC-TV in New York, discusses how she approaches the news and determines what stories her station should carry; calls herself an old-fashioned journalist, looking for exclusive, enterprise stories developed by her own reporters; photo (M)
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Can't Sleep? Check Out the Polka
Date: 15 September 1996
By Aaron Barnhart
Aaron Barnhart
Success of overnight television program ABC World News Now discussed; photos (M)C
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Africa Outgrows A Magazine From Paris
Date: 15 September 1996
By Howard W. French
Howard French
Jeune Afrique, newsmagazine devoted to African affairs, is seen losing its influence after three decades of serving, for many, only independent source of printed news about continent; Paris-based magazine had grown accustomed to being only source of revealing accounts of political events in France's former African colonies; but since advent of democracy in much of region beginning in 1990, Jeune Afrique has been hard pressed to compete with aggressive new African newspapers that dig for their own news and pull few punches; circulation and advertising are down in Jeune Afrique (M)
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Westinghouse Offers Big Buyout at Unit
Date: 16 September 1996
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Westinghouse Electric Corp offers voluntary buyouts to 4,600 of the 6,600 workers at its nuclear energy systems unit in Monroeville, Pa, where profits have fallen for more than two years because of weaker demand by utilities for equipment and services (S)
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PROF TALK
Date: 15 September 1996
Letter from Elaine Hoffman Baruch on Aug 25 On Language discussion of journalistic writing (S)
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 15 September 1996
International 3-19 ELECTION DAY IN BOSNIA Bosnia's elections, billed by Washington as a step toward a democratic and integrated country, took place with minor incidents as Serbs, Croats and Muslims cast their ballots with different expectations. 1 A DIFFICULT ROAD TO THE POLLS The election-day journey of Muslim and Serb refugees trying to vote illustrates the utter failure of the Bosnia peace accord to guarantee freedom of travel. 14 CLINTON DEFENDS ACTIONS ON IRAQ In an attempt to answer his critics, President Clinton said U.S. air strikes against Iraq 10 days ago ''advanced America's fundamental interests in the region.'' 1 PULLOUT TROUBLES AID WORKERS As employees of U.S. military and aid agencies prepared to leave northern Iraq, aid workers who will remain warned that the exodus would hurt their efforts. 18 CHINA'S DEVASTATING FLOODS Two months after parts of central China suffered some of the worst flooding in two centuries, a sober reckoning is under way among flood-control engineers. 1 CAPITALISM IN NORTH KOREA Capitalism has burst out in North Korea, at least for the weekend, as the North set up a conference aimed at luring foreign companies to invest in a free trade zone. 3 ''School refusers'' are the underside of Japan's educational system.4 The Pope is suffering from appendicitis and will undergo surgery.6 The Kremlin warned that Chechnya must remain part of Russia.10 National 24-44 STAFF PROBLEMS FOR DOLE The recent dismissal of two top Dole campaign strategists was the most public manifestation of longstanding internal turmoil in Mr. Dole's latest campaign for President. 1 MIDWEST LEANS TOWARD CLINTON The importance of the Middle Western states remains a constant in Presidential races. In the 1996 contest, President Clinton appears to be the favored candidate. 1 WELFARE PRESENTS OPPORTUNITY The new welfare law is still a matter of confusion in statehouses and city streets. But to some companies, it already looks like the business opportunity of a lifetime. 1 MADE FOR THE LOS ANGELES SHADE In Los Angeles, where the cars and screenplays are essential, sunglasses are the quintessential form of expression. 24 AIDS PROGRAM STRAINED A Federal program that provides AIDS drugs to patients is being strained by an increasing number of applicants and the soaring costs of therapies. 24 EVANGELICALS PRESS THEIR CAUSE Frustrated by what they consider inaction in Washington, evangelical Christians are redoubling their efforts to support persecuted Christians around the world. 26 KEEPING A LIGHTHOUSE GOING Charlotte Johnson has found a creative way to keep the Rose Island, R.I., lighthouse going: vactioners willing to pay to do the job. 28 MEDICAL RECORDS POLITICIZED Release of President Clinton's medical statements may have had as much to do with politics as with a desire to offer any new insights about his health. 36 TEXAS BAR STINGS LAWYERS The Texas Bar Association sends a message to overeager lawyers with a sting operation involving an air crash victim. 42 Metropolitan 45-51 MANY WARNINGS ON J.F.K. SECURITY For a decade, officials at Kennedy International Airport have been repeatedly told of security problems that made aircraft vulnerable to terrorist attack. The warnings began even before the country was jolted into a greater awareness of terrorism by the bomb that brought down Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. But after the crash of Trans World Airlines Flight 800, law-enforcement investigators say it is still far too easy to breach security at Kennedy. 45 STARS OF HARD-KNOCKS ERA Nick and Pete Spanakos still draw stares when they walk down the old streets in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Identical twins who are now 58, they won boxing championships in New York City on the same night in 1955. They became instant legends in a ragged waterfront neighborhood addicted to boxing. 45 CROWDING SAID TO BE OVERSTATED Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani said there were misconceptions about school overcrowding in New York City, suggesting that the Board of Education had not addressed the problem properly and had provided confusing information about the situation to the public. While acknowledging that overcrowding exists, he said the number of children without desks was not nearly as substantial as had been reported. 45 Obituaries 51-52
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 16 September 1996
International A2-9 IRAQ MAY FACE MORE U.S. ATTACKS Secretary of Defense William J. Perry went to Kuwait to repair cracks in the coalition against Baghdad and said further attacks on Iraq were possible. A1 U.S. AWAITS ULTIMATUM TO IRAQ Clinton Administration officials said Iraq still had not met all the terms of an ultimatum delivered to Baghdad this month. A6 Iraqi Kurds who worked for the U.S. made an exodus from Iraq. A6 BALKAN ANTAGONISTS TO MEET In order to bring Bosnia's factions together after a nationwide vote, President Alija Izetbegovic will meet President Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia in Paris in about three weeks, a U.S. diplomat said. A1 SECESSION IN NORTHERN ITALY Italy's small but flamboyant secessionist movement stepped up its improbable challenge to Italian unity with a mix of pageantry and political bombast. A3 HAITIAN PRESIDENT PURGES GUARD President Rene Preval of Haiti, under U.S. pressure, is purging his personal security detail, including bodyguards suspected in the recent killings of two opponents. A9 A study of the world's deaths finds new causes as others fade. A7 Two wind-swept islets are the center of a growing Asian rivalry. A8 A top anti-narcotics official was gunned down in Mexico City. A9 New Delhi Journal: Bitter aftermath of a crackdown on Sikhs. A4 National A10-13, B6-8 A NEW DEFENSIVE ROLE Once the aggressive insurgent, the Christian Coalition is now playing a more defensive game as it works to keep in power a Congress that is sympathetic to its agenda. A1 A CHRISTIAN ALTERNATIVE The 18-month-old group, Call to Renewal, has begun showing some heft in its mission of organizing an alternative to the Christian Coalition and other political pressure groups of the religious right. A1 THE LIFE OF AND DEATH OF SHAKUR For a few years before Tupac Shakur discovered fame, fortune and infamy, he lived in a stair-stepping climb of barracks-like town houses and terrace apartments in Marin City, Calif., that many residents call ''the jungle.'' A1 PROTEST OVER NAVAL BASE A decision by Long Beach, Calif., officials to raze buildings on the 130-year-old naval base that is being abandoned by the military has been greeted by civic protest. A10 A LESSON IN COOPERATION The superintendents of Chicago's public and parochial schools have broken new ground in cooperation between public and private school systems. A10 OPTIMISM ON CONTRACT Exhausted negotiators for the United Automobile Workers and the Ford Motor Company were optimistic about reaching a new national labor contract but they broke off talks for the night. A12 SHUTTING OUT THE HOMELESS Once considered somewhat a haven for the homeless, Santa Monica, Calif., has begun changing its image by passing and enforcing laws to make the city less hospitable to homeless people. A13 PEROT'S CONTROVERSIAL CAMPAIGN Ross Perot has embarked on a 1996 Presidential campaign that, like his 1992 run, relies on spare public appearances, scripted infomercials and his usual litany of Texas homilies. Another holdover from his 1992 campaign is controversy. B6 CLINTON EXPLAINS STRATEGY President Clinton made one of his more pointed defenses of his strategy of modest tax breaks for education and families with children in the face of Bob Dole's proposal for a 15 percent income tax cut. B8 Metro Report B1-5 LANGUISHING IN THE NURSERY It has been 10 years since the crack epidemic first flooded hospital nurseries around the country with infants who lingered there because they had been exposed to drugs or the AIDS virus. After a public outcry, most states and major cities moved quickly to address the problem of ''boarder babies.'' But not New Jersey. A1 Business Digest D1 Arts/Entertainment C11-16 Suit brings countersuit on Lloyd Webber music. C11 Theater: ''900 Oneonta.'' C13 Music: David Bowie at Roseland. C11 Man or Astroman? at Irving Plaza. C12 Dance: ''Gypsy Passion.'' C12 Vignettes in club land. C12 Books: ''Great Books,'' by David Denby. C14 Television: Rhea Perlman in ''Pearl.'' C16 Bill Cosby's new show. C11 ''Ellen'' may get a gay title character. C14 Sports C1-9 BASEBALL FEVER IN THE CITY The Yankees, whose lead in the American League East is down to two and a half games, will face the second-place Baltimore Orioles in a three-game series starting tomorrow at Yankee Stadium. A1 Baseball: Jays beat Yankees. C1 Braves beat Mets. C8 Columns: Vecsey on Yankees C7 On Pro Football C3 Football: Dolphins beat Jets. C1 Redskins beat Giants. C1 Hockey: Canada is abuzz after U.S. championship in World Cup. C8 Obituaries B9 Editorials/Op-Ed A14-15 Editorials Bosnia votes. The browser duel. Doing better by abused children. Letters Anthony Lewis: How it happened. William Safire: Brush off the ''pollbearers.'' Peter Rekai: Canada's upscale influx. Louis Grumet: Writing off the public schools. Chronicle B2 Bridge C14 Crossword C12
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The Changing Voice of Local Radio
Date: 15 September 1996
By Jack Cavanaugh
Jack Cavanaugh
Comment on changing voice of local radio in Stamford-Norwalk, Conn, area; WSTC in Stamford and WNLK in Norwalk have experienced major personnel and programming changes since Commodore Media Inc took over; there is speculation that WSTC may move out of Stamford altogether, to Norwalk; photos (M)
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AMERICAN TOPICS
Date: 16 September 1996
, International Herald Tribune
Despite, or perhaps precisely because of, growing societal pressure not to smoke, cigar sales have continued to rise — so much so that longtime smokers are having a hard time finding their favorite brands. "Some of the old smokers are really u
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ALSO INSIDE
Date: 15 September 1996
MAKING IT WORK 3 A writer's tales of Dominican life have earned him unexpected fame and fortune. But his charmed life is pocked with perils. NEW YORKERS & CO. 4 For talk, news and advice on everything from cooking to culture, listeners turn to the Oprah Winfrey of Korean radio. MOVIE CLOCK 11 What's showing at the local movie houses, today through Thursday. PLAYING IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD 14 Puppets for grown-ups in the East Village; Irish poetry in Queens; honoring two Bronx artists; dance in SoHo. GOOD EATING 14 In the East Village; seafood with flair at Pisces; regional Greek at Agrotikon; pan-Latin dishes at Boca Chica. SOAPBOX 15 Revenge of an insecure club-goer. And letters.
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