7 czerwca 1992 roku była niedziela pod znakiem zodiaku ♊. Był to 158 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był George Bush.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 34 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły niedziela, 7 czerwca 2026 roku, 11 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień poniedziałek, 7 czerwca 2027 roku, w 353 dni. Żyłeś przez 12 429 dni lub około 298 319 godzin lub około 17 899 161 minut lub około 1 073 949 660 sekund.
7th of June 1992 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 7 czerwca 1992 roku
Don't Blink at Court Cameras
Date: 08 June 1992
New York, which produces some of the nation's most important trials, is now debating whether to rejoin the many states that allow courtroom photography. Regrettably, members of the State Senate are rallying opposition to a compromise measure approved by the Assembly. The bill would renew, for 30 months, experiments with cameras that lapsed a year ago. Despite several flaws, including its temporary nature, the bill merits passage.
Full Article
THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: Undeclared Candidate; In Rent Dispute, Paper Says, Perot Got Court to Allow Daily Searches
Date: 07 June 1992
By Steven A. Holmes
Steven Holmes
Two years ago during a dispute with a tenant renting a home from Ross Perot, lawyers for Mr. Perot persuaded a judge here to permit searches of property without warrants, The Dallas Morning News reported today. The newspaper said Mr. Perot hired off-duty police officers to conduct searches of the house three times a day after the tenant, H. Waynes Hayes Jr., fell nine days behind in his monthly rent of $7,500. The searches continued for 10 days until lawyers for Mr. Hayes and Mr. Perot worked out a settlement, the newspaper said.
Full Article
Freer Politics Free Up Big Kenya Newspaper
Date: 07 June 1992
By Jane Perlez
Jane Perlez
When Western nations halted aid to Kenya six months ago, forcing the Government to start opening the political system, it was not clear what would happen to the press. Would newspapers and magazines, stifled by years of attempted and often successful suppression, take up the challenge? The answer may be here in the city room of the The Nation, Kenya's largest paper, where cigarette smoke is thick and editors bark orders into phones.
Full Article
Perot Tells It His Way - Take It Or Leave It
Date: 07 June 1992
By Michael Kelly
Michael Kelly
In dealing with the slings and arrows of an outrageous press corps, Ross Perot is, as he is in so many political ways, unconventional. Faced with questions about impolitic things they may have said or done in the past, most presidential candidates build careful constructs of caveats and explanations and not-quite-denials. Hemmed by cameras and microphones, they run from one end of the country to the other, answering the same impolite questions, offering the same tired rationales and weak apologies, as if by the wash of verbiage to make everything clean again.
Full Article
Good News, Then Bad News, but Good Spin
Date: 07 June 1992
By Sylvia Nasar
Sylvia Nasar
A wave of upbeat numbers early last week depicting a broad, if hardly booming, recovery ended on a decidedly downbeat note with Friday's report that unemployment had risen in May. Early in the week, the Dow Jones industrial average broke 3,400 for the first time, corporate purchasing reached a level not seen since 1988, consumer spending rose and the Federal Reserve Board's chairman said inflation was not likely to threaten the economy in the next couple of years. But on Friday, the Labor Department said the unemployment rate had jumped to 7.5 percent, its highest in almost eight years. While the jobless report was widely taken as rotten news -- both for the economy and, at the White House, for George Bush's re-election prospects -- it actually contained more than a little evidence that the modest recovery remains alive and well.
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 08 June 1992
International A3-10 DEBATE OVER ARMS TALKS Although the United States and Russia have narrowed their differences over how to make more cuts in nuclear arms, critics say a cold-war mentality is preventing the Administration from closing the gap. A1 JAPAN ON TRADE OFFENSIVE In a new strategy for confronting the United States on trade issues, an advisory Government council in Japan has turned the tables and accused the Americans of breaking a series of international rules. A1 SARAJEVO, SORROWFUL WASTELAND What is happening in Sarajevo, a European city that survived two world wars with only minor damage, is hard to grasp for many of the residents enduring it. After two months of civil war, the Bosnian capital is a skeleton of the thriving, accomplished place it was. A1 Russian rightists accuse their Government of betraying the Serbs. A6 ISRAEL REFLECTS ON 25 YEARS A historian, a writer, a lawmaker, a physicist, an Arab teacher and a citizen who braved mob violence offer thoughts as Israel marks the anniversary of the 1967 war. A10 CZECHS RIGHT, SLOVAKS LEFT News Analysis: Czechoslovakia's voters have demonstrated one of the hard truths reshaping Eastern Europe's politics. Just as the impulse for democracy once brought people together, the democratic process is now helping to split them apart. A7 NO ENVIRONMENTAL LOBBYISTS Fearing demonstrations against President Bush, the United Nations has drawn up plans to close the Earth Summit conference center to representatives of private environmental groups. A5 Mr. Bush wants to know who leaked an environmental memo. A5 CORAZON AQUINO'S LEGACY When Corazon Aquino yields the Philippine presidency, many in Manila's slums will be content to see her go. Six years after the "people power" revolution, the country is mired in poverty and corruption. A3 POWER STRUGGLE IN PORTUGAL Rivalry between President Soares and Prime Minister Cavaco Silva is assuming the dimension of a constitutional crisis in Portugal. A9 BLOW TO BRITISH ROYAL FAMILY In one of the most serious blows to the prestige of the royal family, the marriage of Prince Charles and his wife, Diana, was portrayed credibly as being on the rocks. A10 National A11-13, A16, B6 POLITICAL HIGH NOON IN TEXAS When President Bush and Ross Perot square off in Texas for the Presidency, it could take on elements of a barroom brawl. As one Texan predicted, "It will make the Alamo seem like a love-in." A1 SHIPMATES REMEMBER PEROT As a midshipman and as a Navy officer, Mr. Perot showed not only traits like a can-do attitude but also an intolerance for anyone that played too loose with the rules, his classmates and shipmates said. A12 DEMOCRATS DEVISE A PLAN Democratic leaders have put together a plan to help convince voters that the party's likely Presidential candidate is politically relevant. A13 SCHOOL OF LAST RESORT A private program for helping unemployed youth escape the streets of Boston through job training has been so successful that it has spread to seven other cities and is planned in six others. A1 PHILADELPHIA TO DEATH ROW Philadelphia courts have sent more people to death row than any city but Houston, and some experts fault the system of state financing of the defense in capital cases involving poor defendants. A11 CHALLENGE FOR A CHURCH Leaders of the Christian Science Church will try to convince members at its annual meeting this week in Boston that it is responding to accusations of financial and religious impropriety. A16 CHIEF UPSETS CITY HALL, AGAIN A threat by Chief Daryl F. Gates of Los Angeles to postpone his retirement has produced hand wringing among his critics in City Hall and a call for a special lawyer to help decide what to do. A11 A Chicago police officer shot and killed a 12-year-old boy. A11 Metropolitan Digest, B1 NEW EQUALITY IN QUEENS An analysis of the latest census has generated a finding that some demographers say is nothing short of astounding: the median household income for blacks in Queens has virtually matched that of whites. Demographers say that while national comparisons are still incomplete, they believe that Queens is the largest political subdivision where blacks and whites share a common median income. A1 HEALTH PLAN IN ALBANY Legislative leaders and Governor Cuomo have tentatively agreed to an overhaul of New York State's health insurance system, including a provision that would compel commercial insurers to accept all applicants, no matter how sick. The plan would also forbid insurers from charging higher rates for individuals and small groups based on factors like age and sex. A1 Business Digest, D1 Arts/Entertainment C11-16 Italian movie outruns star-laden American imports. C11 Endowment's new leadership. C11 Musical AIDS benefit. C16 Film: "Lost Prophet." C16 Music: Lionel Richie. C11 Pops Staples. C13 A "Butterfly" in St. Louis. C14 Los Lobos. C16 Sports C1-10 Auto Racing: Crash study begins. C9 Baseball: Mets outclassed by Pirates. C7 Yankees beat Tigers, 6-5. C7 Basketball: Bulls take 2-1 lead. C1 Uphill now for Blazers. C4 Cycling: CoreStates event to Bowen. C3 Frenchwoman's road to Olympics. C3 Golf: Edwards wins Memorial playoff. C3 Soccer: U.S. searches world for help. C4 Tennis: Courier takes French Open. C1 Obituaries B10 John Charles Doerfer, former F.C.C. head Editorials/Op-Ed A14-15 Editorials A14 Blood tide rising. Commerce and dumping. End the free ride. Courtroom cameras. Letters A14 Leslie H. Gelb: Missile defense traps. A15 William Safire: Eyeless in Gaza. A15 Letty Cottin Pogrebin: Give Hillary a break. A15 Edward Kahn: The house that George built. A15
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 07 June 1992
International 3-21 RUSSIAN BACKLASH STALLS AID
Full Article
Critic's Notebook; Unannounced Candidate And TV Journalism
Date: 08 June 1992
By Walter Goodman
Walter Goodman
At the same time that Ross Perot has been roiling the Washington political establishment, he has also been cocking a snook at the network journalism establishment. In pursuing ever more direct means of making his case to millions, the unannounced candidate has taken the scene of action away from the evening news. NBC's Tom Brokaw, ABC's Peter Jennings and CBS's Dan Rather, personifications of the medium at its most respected, responsible and influential, find themselves bumped from the limelight by CNN's Larry King, monarch of the call-ins. Mr. Perot has tried a variety of talk shows since letting it be known in March, on "Larry King Live" of course, that if admirers worked hard enough in his behalf he might condescend to run for President. (He has not yet tooted his horn for Arsenio Hall.) It has not taken him long to learn that his interests are not best advanced by tightly controlled traditional news programs, where professionals ask the questions. What he seeks are opportunities to reach viewers without journalistic interference, as he tried to do last month in his campaign rally by satellite and as he promises to do if he is President via an electronic town hall.
Full Article
President Is Urged to Renew His Ties to Core G.O.P.
Date: 07 June 1992
By Robin Toner
Robin Toner
The first broad outline of the Bush Strategy, Post-Perot, is emerging, and its hallmark is caution: Let the President be President, and let surrogates take the shots at Ross Perot. (Gov. Bill Clinton is struggling quite nicely on his own, and requires no attacks at the moment.)
Full Article
Liane C. Manshel and Richard E. Weintraub
Date: 07 June 1992
Liane Catherine Manshel, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Warren D. Manshel of New York, was married last night to Richard Edward Weintraub, the son of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Weintraub of Los Angeles. Rabbi Richard Chapin officiated at the Metropolitan Club in New York.
Full Article