16 kwietnia 1995 roku była niedziela pod znakiem zodiaku ♈. Był to 105 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 30 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły środa, 16 kwietnia 2025 roku, 201 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień czwartek, 16 kwietnia 2026 roku, w 163 dni. Żyłeś przez 11 159 dni lub około 267 819 godzin lub około 16 069 148 minut lub około 964 148 880 sekund.
16th of April 1995 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 16 kwietnia 1995 roku
1 Killed and 1 Is Injured by Hit-Run Driver
Date: 17 April 1995
A hit-and-run driver killed a New Jersey man and injured another early yesterday outside a Chelsea nightclub, the police said. Daniel Kiehn, 20, of Rockaway, N.J., was pronounced dead at 3:50 A.M. at St. Vincent's Hospital, about an hour after the incident, said Doran Tamari, a police spokesman.
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With Affluent Chinese Moving In, A Press War Begins to Heat Up
Date: 16 April 1995
By David W. Chen
David Chen
It has been a very, very good year for Li Yung and his New Jersey China Times. On Jan. 1, the Chinese-language weekly published its first issue, with a press run of 5,000 copies. On April 1, that figure hit 20,000, distributed free at 56 restaurants, banks and supermarkets throughout New Jersey.
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Indonesia Cleansing Its Press Of Writers Who 'Insult' Rulers
Date: 17 April 1995
By Philip Shenon
Philip Shenon
The Indonesian Government is purging the nation's newspapers and magazines of reporters who write critically about the Government, destroying the careers of some of the nation's best-known journalists and drawing protests from the United States and other foreign Governments. Last month, the Government arrested several members of the Alliance of Independent Journalists, a group formed last August to challenge the censorship policies of President Suharto. At least two of the reporters are still in detention on charges of "insulting the Government," a crime that can carry a prison sentence of up to seven years.
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TELEVISION VIEW;
Peering Through the Tube Darkly . . .
Date: 16 April 1995
By Larry Gelbart
Larry Gelbart
THE LAST THING THIS COUNTRY NEEDS IS one more victim, but I'm afraid the victims will have to move over and make room for me. Nothing sordid, not a scintilla of titillation. I carry no childhood scars. My welts, all relatively new, have been acquired in my professional, not my personal, life.
I love to write. I would write in the shower if someone ever came out with a laptop on a rope. But what to write about in these times? What is there in my imagination to rival the theatrics of reality? Would I dare contrive a story wherein Kobe, Japan, is all but wiped out exactly one year to the day after the quake that devastated Los Angeles? Could I dream up a scenario that depicted the ongoing destruction of the jungles of Brazil? One that showed people using the Amazon forest for kindling? Just to make room for cattle to graze? Torching and decimating one of the wonders of the planet so that we can have our uninterrupted supply of Big Macs? Could I conceive of a religious cult that accumulates enough toxic material to kill 100 million people, after getting high on a sip of their leader's bath water? Can I compete with that kind of drama -- drama that so finely mixes tragedy and absurdity?
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 17 April 1995
International A2-9 LONG ARM OF THE LAW American law enforcement agencies are rapidly expanding overseas, in response to international terrorism, narcotics trafficking and arms smuggling. A1 NUCLEAR TREATY ON THE AGENDA As representatives from 174 nations gather to begin a four-week conference to review and renew the Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons, there are sharp differences about its future. A1 MEKONG'S SOURCE FOUND High on the Central Asian plateau, a group of explorers said they discovered the source of the Mekong River, which has eluded similar expeditions for a century. A1 SAFEGUARDING FISH STOCKS The agreement reached by Canada and the European Union over a disputed fishing ground in the North Atlantic could serve as a model for preserving endangered fish stocks throughout the world. A2 WAR-WEARY SARAJEVO News analysis: Three years after the Bosnian war began and Serbian forces encircled Sarajevo, despair has set in over whether the bloodshed will ever end. A3 POPE SPEAKS ON PEACE Pope John Paul, in a passionate Easter message, denounced war and armed political struggle, and urged the Kurds and Palestinians to relinquish force. A7 SINN FEIN CRITIQUE Gerry Adams, the political leader of the Irish Republican Army, criticized both the Irish and British Governments as many of his supporters celebrated the anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising. A7 Three Hamas members killed in an Israeli ambush. A3 Indonesia is purging the news media of critical journalists. A9 Ma Tin Journal: Hong Kong community's ways under assault. A4 National A12-15, B7-8 WELFARE AND TEEN MOTHERHOOD The experts and the politicians cannot agree on whether cutting off welfare payments to teen-age mothers will change the girls' thinking and behavior. A1 BIG GAP IN U.S. WEALTH New studies about the concentration of American wealth and income are showing that the United States is the most economically stratified of industrial nations. A1 RELIGIOUS RIGHT SNUBBING G.O.P. Leaders of religious conservative groups are not lining up behind any of the Republican candidates for President in the early stages of the 1996 campaign. A1 CANDIDATES NUDGE EACH OTHER The fight for conservative voters heated up between two Republican candidates for President, Bob Dole and Phil Gramm. A13 A REBELLION AGAINST A REVOLUTION Environmentalists are talking about a rebellion against the efforts to roll back environmental regulation by Republicans in Congress who often describe themselves as revolutionaries. A12 LOUISIANA BRAWLS OVER RODENTS Louisiana officials are trying to find a way to control a growing population of large rat-like animals called nutria that are tearing up canals and roads, but they are fighting with animal-rights groups. A12 A CRY OF PAIN ON TELEVISION A Los Angeles woman who lost two sons in episodes of urban violence has built a large audience for a weekly talk show on community-access television. A12 NEW YORKER AIDS SIMPSON The lawyer on O. J. Simpson's defense team who was hired to handle the highly technical DNA evidence won rave reviews for his cross-examination of the police department's evidence collector. A14 A STUDY OF WASTE IN GOVERNMENT The Mayor of Los Angeles who ran on a promise to make the city more efficient has produced a voluminous report on the subject that should give him some ammunition in political fights to come. A15 Metro Digest B1 COURT PILES UP BACKLOG The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which includes New York, Connecticut and Vermont, has the worst backlog of long-pending civil cases among the nation's 11 circuit courts. A1 Business Digest D1 Arts/Entertainment C9-16 What public television can mean away from the big cities. C9 Mannes school says thank you. C9 Tadeo Ando wins Pritzker. C13 Music: Domingo as Parsifal. C9 Cop Shoot Cop at Tramps. C14 Dance: "Igor and Vera." C12 Beverly Blossom. C12 Doug Elkins company. C12 Books: "Men in Black." C13 Sports C1-8 Baseball: O'Neill, Key ready. C2 Basketball: Bulls best Knicks. C1 Column: Araton on Knicks. C5 Football: Giants looking for runner? C7 Hockey: Rangers edge Isles. C1 Devils beat Whalers. C4 Racing: Larry the Legend out of the Derby. C7 Obituaries B9 Spencer Truman Olin, former executive of the Olin Corporation. Editorials/Op-Ed A16-17 Editorials A good nuclear example. Faster relief for Newark schools. Tax facts and fictions. Maureen Dowd: The buzz. Letters William Safire: "But not so fast." Anthony Lewis: Too late the phalarope. Francisco Goldman: In a terrorized country. Jon McMillan: The all-American fire trap. Bridge C16 Chronicle B8 Crossword C13
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 16 April 1995
International 3-11 COOL RESPONSE TO JAPANESE Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin dismissed Japan's emergency financial package as too vague to reverse the fall of the dollar against the yen. The Secretary pressed for more action before the currency gyrations threaten the economic stability of the world's biggest trading region. 1 IRAQ DEFIES UNITED NATIONS Iraq responded to a United Nations resolution allowing limited sales of Iraqi oil by denouncing the proposal and organizing anti-American demonstrations in Baghdad. 1
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NEWS ABOUT THE MAGAZINE
Date: 16 April 1995
Starting today, the Magazine welcomes two new columnists, James Gleick and Michael Lewis, each to appear monthly. Fast Forward, Jim Gleick's commentary on technology and the future, appears on page 20. Next Sunday, in the same space, Michael Lewis will begin The Capitalist, a column on money and American life. For Jim Gleick, the new column renews a regular relationship with The Times, where he was a highly regarded reporter and editor for 10 years before leaving to write books. He quickly made a name for himself as an author. "Chaos: Making a New Science," published in 1987, has been translated into more than 20 languages. It, and his 1992 book, "Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman," were nominated for the National Book Award. Nearly two years ago, he started the Pipeline, an Internet access service and software company and was its president until the company's sale in February.
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NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT: KINGSBRIDGE
Date: 16 April 1995
SHOWTIME A divided Community Board 4 has approved the use of DeWitt Clinton Park for a dinner theater. The show, Pomp, Duck & Circumstance, will occupy part of the park for seven months starting next fall . . . LOSING THE NEWS Publishers of three newspapers -- the Upper West Side Resident, the Manhattan Pennysaver and Manhattan Spirit -- say about 30 of their news boxes have disappeared from the Upper West Side, amid complaints about clutter. . . TRY AGAIN Housing Works, a support group for people with AIDS, hopes to open a day treatment program at 320 West 13th Street after losing sites in SoHo and the East Village to local opposition. "There was a lot of misinformation," said Deputy Director George McNeely. "There will be no needle exchange program; this will not be a drop-in center."
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TELEVISION VIEW;
. . . Into a Reality That's Resounding
Date: 16 April 1995
By Christa Worthington
Christa Worthington
"PRODUCTION MUSIC," ALWAYS IN the background of television and radio, rarely grabs attention. But the stormy motif that frames the O. J. Simpson trial coverage on CNN has, like Kato Kaelin and Kato the Akita, stepped out of anonymity into stardom.
So many viewers have inquired about the track that CNN refers them to Atmosphere, the London music library whence it came. Called "World Conflict," the 10- to 15-second theme was conceived by a British composer, Paul Foss, for a British news program -- and rejected. Before selling O. J., the music was used to sell cars at trade shows.
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Public Radio, a Lifeline In Alaska, Facing Cuts
Date: 16 April 1995
Corey Flintoff's voice reaches the remote corners of the nation's largest and most sparsely populated state every weekday, delivering the world's news from his desk in the nation's capital. As a newscaster for National Public Radio, Mr. Flintoff is heard in many out-of-the-way places, but none so isolated as the Yupik Eskimo villages of southwest Alaska. In these tiny communities, where children still learn their native language before English and families subsist on fish, game and berries gathered near their homes, public radio is a lifeline, not just to the nation's capital but to family and neighbors.
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