12 grudnia 1992 roku była sobota pod znakiem zodiaku ♐. Był to 346 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był George Bush.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 33 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły piątek, 12 grudnia 2025 roku, 191 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień sobota, 12 grudnia 2026 roku, w 173 dni. Żyłeś przez 12 244 dni lub około 293 863 godzin lub około 17 631 832 minut lub około 1 057 909 920 sekund.
12th of December 1992 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 12 grudnia 1992 roku
THE STORM'S HAVOC: Television; New TV Outlet Wearily Takes A Starring Role
Date: 13 December 1992
By Clifford J. Levy
Clifford Levy
The storm that has pummeled the New York metropolitan region has given New York 1 News, the nascent 24-hour cable station, its first chance to play a role similar to that of CNN during the Persian Gulf War -- albeit on a local scale. In the station's chaotic newsroom at 460 West 42d Street in Manhattan, the mission was clear: churn the information. Give viewers updates about the weather, the traffic and the subways so they can slog their way through the city. Then update them again.
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Seared by Faces of Need, Americans Say, 'How Could We Not Do This?'
Date: 13 December 1992
By Peter Applebome
Peter Applebome
Huddled against the cold outside the Franklin County Agricultural Co-Op, his 18-wheeler loaded with pig innards, Todd Schuppert doesn't consider himself an expert on foreign affairs, but he knows exactly what he thinks about the decision to send American troops to Somalia. "I think it's a pretty doggone good idea," said Mr. Schuppert, a 31-year-old truck driver from Pekin, Ind. "You just have to turn on a television to see that those people need help, and no one else is going to help them but us."
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Cuban Rights Advocate Beaten and Detained
Date: 13 December 1992
By Tim Golden
Tim Golden
One of Cuba's most prominent human rights advocates was being held by the authorities today after being beaten by a mob of Government supporters, his friends and relatives said. The human rights advocate, Elizardo Sanchez, who is the leader of one of Cuba's tiny dissident human rights groups, was said to be recovering in a military hospital after having been dragged from a friend's apartment on Thursday afternoon and beaten nearly unconscious.
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British Press Will Keep Up Royal Chase
Date: 12 December 1992
By Richard W. Stevenson
Richard Stevenson
When he announced in the House of Commons on Wednesday that the Prince and Princess of Wales were separating, Prime Minister John Major said in earnest tones and to roars of approval from his colleagues in Parliament that he hoped the news media would now afford the royal family some privacy. The next morning The Sun, a mass-circulation tabloid, devoted fully half of its 56 pages to the split, including a guide to potential new romantic partners for the estranged couple.
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Juggling Jobs and the Deficit: Executives Doubtful
Date: 13 December 1992
By Louis Uchitelle
Louis Uchitelle
Many of America's senior executives say job creation is the Government's most important immediate task and the budget deficit the nation's most important economic problem. But foreshadowing what is almost certain to be a major economic conflict of Bill Clinton's Presidency, the executives say that the President-elect will not be able to address those two concerns simultaneously. Those views, on the eve of Mr. Clinton's economic summit in Little Rock, Ark., this week, surfaced in a New York Times/CBS News poll of 499 senior executives in early December and in follow-up interviews with a dozen of them. Both the poll results and the interviews revealed some enthusiasm for the new President. While 53 percent of the executives voted for George Bush, a whopping 71 percent said the President had not displayed as much concern for the economy as Clinton had during the campaign. And 81 percent said the Clinton election has increased consumer confidence and spending.
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FLEET BANK ACQUIRES EASTLAND FINANCIAL UNITS
Date: 12 December 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Fleet Bank, lead unit of the Fleet Financial Corporation, yesterday acquired Eastland Bank and Eastland Savings Bank, both based in Woonsocket, R.I. The two banks, owned by the Eastland Financial Corporation, were closed yesterday afternoon by state regulators after the F.D.I.C. held Eastland Bank liable for losses at its parent, Eastland Savings. The F.D.I.C. was named receiver for the banks.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 13 December 1992
International 3-29 U.S. DESTROYS 3 SOMALI VEHICLES
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 12 December 1992
International 3-7 CLINTON FAVORS ACTION IN BOSNIA President-elect Bill Clinton said the United States and its allies should do whatever it takes to enforce the ban on Serbian flights over Bosnia and Herzegovina. His comments implied criticism of President Bush's policy and seemed to nudge the Administration toward a new United Nations resolution on enforcing the ban. 1 The Yugoslav Prime Minister campaigns against Serbia's leader. 7
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THE TRANSITION: Woman in the News; Emphasis On Action: Donna Edna Shalala
Date: 12 December 1992
By Susan Chira
Susan Chira
Dr. Donna E. Shalala, an energetic, exuberant administrator who has never been shy about trumpeting her considerable achievements, is now going to tackle two of the most intractable problems in American society: health care and welfare. Characteristically, she is almost unnervingly confident that she can make a difference as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
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Pacific Telesis Plans to Split in Two
Date: 12 December 1992
By Anthony Ramirez
Anthony Ramirez
The Pacific Telesis Group, whose markets for telephone services are the largest in the country, said yesterday that its board had unanimously voted to split the huge California-based carrier into a $9 billion traditional-telephone company and a nearly $1 billion wireless-phone company. Since the breakup of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in 1984, the resulting seven regional Bell companies have each had two major divisions. One is the slow-growth monopoly business of providing local telephone service, in which profits are largely guaranteed by strict regulation. The other is the lightly regulated high-growth businesses that provide cellular telephone and other services, like electronic paging. Analysts say cellular, only slightly profitable now, will be highly lucrative soon. Raising Company Value A spinoff could raise the total value of Pacific Telesis's shares and free the company of strictures imposed by the A.T.& T. breakup accord, including those that ban "Baby Bells" like Telesis from the lucrative equipment-manufacturing market.
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