Přehrávání středa 1. července 1992

1. července 1992 bylo středa pod hvězdičkou . Byl 182 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl George Bush.

Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 33 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly úterý 1. července 2025 před 353 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou středa 1. července 2026, za 11 dní. Žili jste 12 406 dní nebo přibližně 297 749 hodin nebo přibližně 17 864 955 minut nebo přibližně 1 071 897 300 sekund.

Někteří lidé, kteří sdílejí tyto narozeniny:

  • Princezna Diana (aristokrat, filantrop, humanitární pracovník, ochránce životního prostředí, společenská celebrita, Narozen dne 1. července 1961)
  • Julius Caesar (autor memoárů, básník, politik, spisovatel, starořímský historik, starořímský politik, starořímský voják, vládce, vojevůdce, řečník, Narozen dne 3. července 100)
  • Léa Seydouxová (filmový herec, herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1985)
  • Liv Tyler (filmový herec, fotomodel, herec, model, Narozen dne 1. července 1977)
  • Pamela Anderson (Playmate, filmový herec, filmový producent, fitness instruktor, glamour model, herec, hlasový herec, model, moderátor, producent, televizní herec, televizní moderátor, Narozen dne 1. července 1967)
  • Daniel Ricciardo (automobilový závodník, Narozen dne 1. července 1989)
  • František z Assisi (básník, katolický jáhen, spisovatel, Narozen dne 24. června 1182)
  • Dan Aykroyd (filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, hlasový herec, komik, scenárista, televizní herec, televizní producent, ufolog, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1952)
  • Claire Forlani (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1972)
  • Olivia de Havilland (divadelní herec, scenárista, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1916)
  • Hilarie Burtonová (filmový herec, filmový producent, herec, televizní herec, televizní producent, Narozen dne 1. července 1982)
  • Debbie Harry (dabér, divadelní herec, filmový herec, filmový producent, hlasový herec, hudební skladatel, hudebník, model, nahrávající umělec, písničkář, skladatel filmové hudby, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1945)
  • Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (archivář, biolog, básník, diplomat, diplomatik, filozof, fyzik, geolog, historik, hudební teoretik, inženýr, knihovník, matematik, muzikolog, politický poradce, právník, překladatel, spisovatel, zoolog, Narozen dne 1. července 1646)
  • Ruud van Nistelrooy (fotbalista, fotbalový trenér, Narozen dne 1. července 1976)
  • Carl Lewis (atlet, básník, skokan do dálky, sprinter, Narozen dne 1. července 1961)
  • Mia Malkova (AV idol, glamour model, pornoherec, Narozen dne 1. července 1992)
  • Julianne Nicholson (filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1971)
  • George Sandová (autor deníků, dramatik, feminista, libretista, novinář, romanopisec, saloniér, spisovatel, Narozen dne 1. července 1804)
  • Alan Ruck (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, spisovatel, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1956)
  • Li Kche-čchiang (ekonom, hlavní představitel exekutivní moci, politik, Narozen dne 1. července 1955)
  • Patrick Kluivert (fotbalista, fotbalový trenér, Narozen dne 1. července 1976)
  • David Duke (historik, novinář, politik, spisovatel, Narozen dne 1. července 1950)
  • Filip I. Kastilský (vládce, Narozen dne 22. června 1478)
  • Andre K. Braugher (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1962)
  • Missy Elliott (filmový herec, herec, hudební producent, hudební skladatel, nahrávající umělec, písničkář, rapper, tanečník, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1971)
  • Bábek (voják, Narozen dne 27. června 798)
  • Thomas Sadoski (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1976)
  • Sydney Pollack (charakterní herec, filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, pilot, televizní herec, televizní režisér, Narozen dne 1. července 1934)
  • Čaka (panovník, Narozen dne 1. července 1787)
  • Ignác Filip Semmelweis (botanik, gynekolog, hygienik, lékař, porodník, vysokoškolský učitel, Narozen dne 1. července 1818)
  • Sufjan Stevens (banjista, hobojista, hudební producent, hudební skladatel, hudebník, klavírista, kytarista, písničkář, saxofonista, Narozen dne 1. července 1975)
  • Wang Čchi-šan (politik, Narozen dne 1. července 1948)
  • Leslie Caronová (baletní tanečník, filmový herec, herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1931)
  • Lucas Vázquez (fotbalista, Narozen dne 1. července 1991)
  • Taejong (autor písní, model, rapper, tanečník, vůdce, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1995)
  • Karen Black (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, hudební skladatel, písničkář, scenárista, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1939)
  • Solomon Northup (spisovatel, Narozen dne 1. července 1808)
  • Hannah Murrayová (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1989)
  • Charles Laughton (divadelní herec, divadelní režisér, filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, režisér, scenárista, spisovatel, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1899)
  • Verónica Sánchez (divadelní herec, filmový herec, model, televizní moderátor, Narozen dne 1. července 1977)
  • Jamie Farr (divadelní herec, filmový herec, komik, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1934)
  • David Gulpilil (filmový herec, scenárista, tanečník, Narozen dne 1. července 1953)
  • Seretse Khama (advokát, politik, Narozen dne 1. července 1921)
  • Che-šen (básník, politik, Narozen dne 1. července 1750)
  • William Wyler (filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, scenárista, Narozen dne 1. července 1902)
  • Melissa Peterman (divadelní herec, filmový herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 1. července 1971)
  • Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr (politik, voják, Narozen dne 1. července 1914)
  • Raini Rodriguez (filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 1. července 1993)
  • Keith Whitley (autor písní, hudebník, nahrávající umělec, Narozen dne 1. července 1955)
  • Fallon Sherrocková (hráč šipek, Narozen dne 1. července 1994)

1st of July 1992 News

Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 1. července 1992

THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: Political Memo; Taking Heat at Every Turn, Bush Shows a Boiling Point

Date: 01 July 1992

By Andrew Rosenthal

Andrew Rosenthal

President Bush's temper seemed to get the better of him in Detroit on Monday night. Speaking to a group of Republican contributors, he said he was tired of hearing that the economy is not getting better when he is sure that it is, and he thinks Americans have just not gotten the word. Waving his arms in the air and nearly shouting, he said he is sick of not getting credit for the Persian Gulf war, the fall of communism and arms-control breakthroughs.

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BOEING RECEIVES $320 MILLION ORDER FROM SINGAPORE

Date: 01 July 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Boeing Company said it had received a $320 million order, including spare parts and support, from Singapore Airlines for two Boeing 747-400's, pushing Boeing's confirmed 1992 orders to 111 aircraft worth $9.4 billion.

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Drugs Bill Advances

Date: 02 July 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Senate Labor Committee approved a bill today that would give manufacturers of "orphan drugs" exclusive rights to sell the drugs for nine years or until they take in $200 million in sales. Orphan drugs treat rare diseases with so few patients that companies often cannot make money on them in a competitive market. The bill is an amendment to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, which currently guarantees orphan drugs seven years market exclusivity regardless of sales.

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Local TV News

Date: 02 July 1992

To the Editor: "The News at Six: TV's Grim Vision" (news article, June 14) addresses only one distortion of local television news, that it paints New York City as a place where terror lurks around every corner. Worse is its grotesque concept of news. Anyone watching the 10 o'clock news, no matter the channel, would be hard put to know there had been an Earth Summit attended by more than 100 heads of government, that a Presidential election was coming or that New York and New Jersey were involved in redistricting. What is purveyed are tragedies affecting no one except the people involved, but contain violence, sex or vivid scenes of destruction.

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COMPANY NEWS

Date: 02 July 1992

INTEGRA FINANCIAL CORP., Pittsburgh, completed the acquisition of Landmark Savings Association, Pittsburgh, in a stock conversion transaction. MARKS & SPENCER P.L.C., the British retailer, will open its fifth store in Hong Kong in early October.

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COMPANY NEWS

Date: 01 July 1992

BURROUGHS WELLCOME CO., Research Triangle Park, N.C., a unit of the Wellcome Foundation Ltd., said it would donate $1 million for AIDS research aimed at providing experimental treatment to a broad array of people. KMART CORP., Troy, Mich., said its Officemax Inc. unit had completed its acquisition of OW Office Warehouse Inc., Virginia Beach, Va., under which Office Warehouse shareholders would receive $11 a share in cash.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 02 July 1992

International A3-10 BUSH STRIKES BACK In sharp comments, the President defended his policy toward Iraq before the invasion of Kuwait. He said the White House had no evidence in 1989 that Saddam Hussein was misusing federally guaranteed loans to buy nuclear-arms technology. A1 RUSSIA'S RUST BELT Like dinosaur steelworks in the United States that were forced to close a decade ago, the Magnitogorsk steelworks in Russia, the world's largest, is threatened with bankruptcy and extinction. But it is one of many giant state enterprises that have emerged as powerful political forces because they keep workers housed and fed. A1 The ruble floats, but is the budget deficit sinking the economy? A8 QUESTIONS ON IRANIAN AIRLINER The official United States account of the downing of an Iranian airliner by a Navy ship in 1988 was challenged by a news report saying that American forces provoked the incident, in which 290 people were killed. A7 A PROMISE FROM JAPAN Prime Minister Miyazawa told President Bush that his country would use "every possible means" to increase domestic growth and expand markets for American exports. A3 PRESSURE ON DE KLERK The largest labor federation in South Africa called for a nationwide general strike to bring the economy to a standstill until President de Klerk yields power. A3 U.S. PLEDGE ON ABDUCTIONS In a commitment that fell far short of Mexican demands, President Bush promised that his Administration would not support any kidnappings of criminal suspects from Mexico in the future. A5 HAITIAN EXODUS WINDS DOWN With the Coast Guard refusing to take refugees to a safe haven at the American naval base in Cuba, the exodus has virtually stopped, Administration officials said. A9 SOME RELIEF FOR SARAJEVO Emergency food aid brought in by air earlier in the week was distributed to people in Sarajevo, but major problems continued to hinder plans for a full-scale airlift. A10 PARIS-WASHINGTON TENSIONS While tensions between France and the United States have long existed, it appears that the end of the cold war has brought a new level of mistrust. A10 GERMANY SAYS NO TO WARPLANE The Government has decided to drop out of a four-nation project to build a new European jet fighter. It is unclear whether Britain, Italy and Spain will proceed. A10 National A12-17 BREAKFAST WITH BUSH News analysis: President Bush's first foray into television politics at the breakfast hour underscored both the potency of a Presidential image and the narrowness of the domestic policy agenda on which Mr. Bush is running. A1 Bush's appearance: between news conference and lawn party. A14 Clinton dodged questions about his hunt for a running mate. A14 On the Trail: A spurt in Clinton's fund raising. A14 CALIFORNIA ISSUES I.O.U.'S Its economy wracked by recession, its political leadership paralyzed by stalemate, the State of California ran out of cash and began to pay its bills with I.O.U.'s for the first time since the Depression. A1 BIG VICTORY FOR WINERIES In a milestone decision for the wine industry, a California judge has ruled that a winemaking process constitutes a trade secret belonging to a winery and may not be disclosed by a maker to subsequent employers or consulting clients. A1 INQUIRY CLEARS BUSH A bipartian House panel found that George Bush did not travel to Paris in 1980 to take part in any discussions aimed at asking Iran to delay the release of more than 50 American hostages. A16 REBUKE FOR THE ADMINISTRATION The House voted to cut off all the financing for the Council on Competitiveness, the regulatory review board headed by Vice President Dan Quayle. A16 TEST OF ABORTION-PILL BAN Customs officials seized one dose of the abortion drug RU-486 from a pregnant woman as she was bringing it into the United States in defiance of the Administration's import ban. A12 ANOTHER COURTHOUSE SHOOTING A gunman opened fire inside a courthouse in Fort Worth, killing a prosecutor and another lawyer and wounding three people, including two judges. A12 CLEANUP IN DULUTH The investigation and cleanup of the derailment that turned Duluth, Minn., into a virtual ghost town for several hours on Tuesday was hampered by heavy rains, winds and the potential for an explosion. A12 The recipient of a baboon liver was reported doing well. A17 Metropolitan Digest, B1 HEALTH INSURANCE BILL A sweeping measure that would make it easier for some older and sicker people to get and keep health insurance was assured of passage in the New York State Legislature today. A1 NEW YORK'S MUSLIM INMATES Muslim inmates in many of the 68 prisons of New York State are practicing their religion, in revolutionary epilogue to the darkest days of prison Islam, the 1971 uprising at Attica prison. A1 Business Digest, D1 The Home Section C1-10 Homemade oases soften harshness of mean streets. C1 Star-spangled symbolism. C1 At rehearsal with Kris Kross. C1 Arts/Entertainment C11-18 Brian De Palma's hopes for his new film. C13 National Endowment for the Arts Approves 1,167 Grants. C13 A birthday celebration for John Cage. C13 Tina Brown looks ahead. C13 Sports B8-15 Baseball: Yankees rally over Royals. B9 Commissioner summons Showalter and Michael. B9 Mets top Cubs in 12 innings. B11 Basketball: Knicks out to get Bullets' Grant. B14 Colleges: Brooklyn College drops sports. B13 Columns: Chass on the Steve Howe situation. B11 Bondy on hockey. B14 Horse Racing: Leg injury forces Pine Bluff to retire. B15 Tennis: Sampras and Ivanisevic gain. B9 Sabatini ousts Capriati and completes semifinal field. B13 Obituaries D19 Editorials/Op-Ed A18-19 Editorials A18 Women with undue burdens. Bush's X percent solution. Not-so-mean streets. Topics: Lesson for meddlers. Letters A18 William Safire: Latest from Olympus. A19 Leslie H. Gelb: A Hamilton era? A19 Rebecca Roiphe, Daniel Cooper: Batman and the Jewish question. A19

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 01 July 1992

International A3-8 NEW U.S. TACTICS AGAINST IRAQ The Administration is considering increasing pressure on Saddam Hussein by blocking shipments that violate the United Nations trade embargo after they arrive in Iraq. A1 GUNS PUNCTUATE RELIEF EFFORT Relief efforts began in Sarajevo, but the city remained volatile and the newly opened airport vulnerable as sporadic fighting continued. A8 U.N. ISSUES WARNING TO CROATIA The Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution telling Croatia to remove troops from Serbian areas of the country and accept more peacekeeping forces. A8 MILITARY CLARIFIES BALKAN PLAN The United States would use combat planes to protect international relief efforts in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but would not use American ground forces for combat. A8 ANOTHER ECONOMIC ERA IN RUSSIA Russia rings in the second stage of its economic reforms without having achieved the goal of the first phase -- stabilizing the economy. A7 MONGOLIAN PARTIES FIGHT BACK Mongolian opposition parties who were resoundingly beaten by former Communists in elections Sunday are considering boycotting Parliament or suing the Government. A4 ISRAELI LABORITES ALTER STANCE Israel's Labor Party today dropped its calls for a one-year freeze on settlement activity in the occupied territories while Middle East peace talks continue. A6 NO RERUN FOR MIYAZAWA AND BUSH With elections looming in the U.S. and Japan, the latest meeting between the leaders of the two nations is expected to be far less eventful than the last. A3 PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT SWORN IN Acknowledging that his country is mired in trouble, Fidel V. Ramos was inaugurated as President of the Philippines. A3 Beijing Journal: Dynasties are still being built in China. A4 Leaders of Ireland and Northern Ireland met in London. A6 National A10-18 'THE PROMISE OF CONSTANCY' News analysis: Its decision reaffirming Roe v. Wade said as much about the Supreme Court as about abortion. In particular, it spoke volumes about the importance that three conservative Justices see in resisting pressure to overturn Court precedent. A1 Abortion clinics braced for more legal battling. A12 A House panel approved an abortion rights bill. A12 A court rejected a RICO suit against anti-abortion protesters. A12 BUSH'S TEMPER FLARES Political Memo: Speaking to a group of Republican contributors, the President declared that he was tired of being on the "receiving end of criticism day in and day out." If the show of anger reflected Mr. Bush's frustration with the way his re-election campaign has been going, there was every reason for it. A1 A lasting Reagan-Bush legacy: a conservative judiciary. A13 Many in the nation's heartland like "none of the above." A14 The Perot campaign is set for a new, more sophisticated phase. A15 Clinton was buoyed by polls showing him on the rise. A15 SEX ABUSE IN THE MILITARY Female veterans told a Senate panel that they had been sexually abused by other soldiers, that their complaints to superiors had been ignored or dismissed as untrue and that they had found veterans hospitals to which they turned for help to be similarly unresponsive. A1 THOUSANDS FLEE TOXIC CLOUD At least 50,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes and businesses along the Wisconsin-Minnesota border after a derailment caused a railroad car carrying benzene to spew a cloud of toxic vapor. A10 BATTLE OVER AIDS ADS Proposed Government-sponsored ads that suggested using condoms to prevent the spread of AIDS have been dropped, and a dispute has broken out over whether the action was taken for political reasons. A10 NEW FINDING ON CHLORINATION Researchers at Harvard and the Medical College of Wisconsin linked chlorinated drinking water to small increases in the rates of rectal and bladder cancer. A18 AGREEMENT NEAR ON URBAN AID Congressional and White House negotiators said tonight that they are nearing an agreement on a $5 billion urban aid package. A18 Scientists gained in their study of prostate cancer's spread. A18 The patient with a baboon liver was reported improving. A18 Education Page A19 A North Carolina public boarding school has inspired imitators. Metropolitan Digest, B1 HOUSING BIAS ADMITTED New York City acknowledges that it has steered black and Hispanic applicants away from some public housing projects and has agreed to place more of them in its largely white projects. A1 MAJOR KIDNAPPING INQUIRY The largest kidnapping investigation in recent history began on April 29 with a car standing empty at the end of a secluded suburban driveway, its motor idling, its driver, Sidney J. Reso, gone. A1 Business Digest, D1 Arts/Entertainment C13-22 NEW YORKER'S NEW EDITOR The venerable magazine stunned the publishing industry with the announcement that Tina Brown, editor in chief of Vanity Fair, will replace Robert A. Gottlieb, who has resigned. A1. Squeezing into the corset of history. C13 Film: "A League of Their Own." C13 Music: Billy Ray Cyrus. C13 The Living Section C1-10 So contemporary: In search of the low-fat hot dog. C1 On the Book-Tour Circuit With Terry McMillan. C1 Ready-to-hear music for ready-to-fix meals. C1 Health Page C12 Obituaries A20-21 Sports B6-11 Baseball: Mets lose to Cubs again. B9 Yanks blank Royals. B9 Hockey: Lindros awarded to Flyers. B7 Rangers look to future without Lindros. B11 U.S. must decide on point guard. B10 Tennis: Capriati not quite out yet. B7 Becker finally advances. B9 Editorials/Op-Ed A22-23 Editorials A22 Symbols can't save Bosnia. Neutral's not enough. Long Island's fiscal stability. Karl E. Meyer: Oswald. Letters A22 Anna Quindlen: One vote. A23 Rian Malan: Will hope die in South Africa, too? A23 Allan Gerson: Compensate Libya's victims. A23

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Executive Changes

Date: 01 July 1992

AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL RELATED SERVICES, New York, a unit of American Express Co., named Randy Christofferson to the new post of senior vice president of quality and re-engineering. BEL FUSE INC., Jersey City, which makes electronic parts, appointed Daniel Bernstein president.

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2,100 Jobs To Be Cut By Alcoa

Date: 01 July 1992

By Jonathan P. Hicks

Jonathan Hicks

The Aluminum Company of America said yesterday that it was eliminating 2,100 jobs to trim operations and increase efficiency at 21 of its worldwide business divisions. The nation's largest aluminum producer will take a second-quarter after-tax charge of $40.6 million for severance payments. In the year-earlier second period, Alcoa earned $81.2 million, or 95 cents a share, on sales of $2.57 billion.

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