27. října 1996 bylo neděle pod hvězdičkou ♏. Byl 300 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 29 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly pondělí 27. října 2025 před 233 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou úterý 27. října 2026, za 131 dní. Žili jste 10 825 dní nebo přibližně 259 803 hodin nebo přibližně 15 588 212 minut nebo přibližně 935 292 720 sekund.
27th of October 1996 News
Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 27. října 1996
Cable TV News Competition Spills Onto the Web
Date: 28 October 1996
By Mike Allen
Mike Allen
Cable news war has spawned companion Web sites crammed with scripts, wire stories and market tables; Web site for MSNBC, venture of NBC and Microsoft Corp, is programmed in Redmond, Wash; users can request daily E-mail delivery of customized news page, or sign up for News Alert service that flashes icon when stories break; on CNN Interactive, a 'pager' lets users scroll through news, market, weather and Hollywood headlines; chart listing news sites on Web (M)
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A Story Where the Telling Itself Has Raised Many Questions
Date: 28 October 1996
By Peter Applebome
Peter Applebome
Numerous questions surround decision by Atlanta Journal to identify Richard A Jewell as main suspect in bombing at Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park during 1996 Summer Olympic Games; Jewell is reportedly planning to file suit against newspaper, its parent company Cox Communications, five reporters and columnists; Hewell is also planning to sue NBC News and its anchor Tom Brokaw because of their coverage (M)
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A Man's Life Turned Inside Out By Government and the Media
Date: 28 October 1996
By Kevin Sack
Kevin Sack
Saga of Richard A Jewell, security guard who has just been eliminated as a suspect in the July 27 bombing of Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta, provides fresh object lesson about immense power of Federal Government to disrupt lives of those it only suspects of misdeeds; raises questions about tactics used by state and Federal agents who investigated bombing, and speaks volumes about capacity of highly competitive news media to cause irreparable damage; Jewell, who dreamed of entering law enforcement, handled duties in hapless career as security guard and sheriff's deputy with such zeal that he often alienated superiors; while qualities may have helped him find bomb in Centennial Olympic Park, they also formed foundation of suspicions that quickly enveloped him as investigators tried to take advantage of his eagerness to please agents he so admired; photo (L)
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Who Asked Them? Who Didn't?
Date: 27 October 1996
By Janny Scott
Janny Scott
News media's drive to provide expert opinions on many issues has given rise to new breed of widely quoted pundits; pundits often articulate views of reporters, who are barred by journalistic conventions from delivering own opinions; drawing (M)
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DOLE IS CONTINUING ATTACKS ON PRESS AND THE PRESIDENT
Date: 27 October 1996
By Katharine Q. Seelye
Katharine Seelye
Bob Dole, campaigning for President in California's Central Valley with Gov Pete Wilson and actress Bo Derek, continues attacks on Clinton Administration, offers rare mention of Hillary Rodham Clinton and scores Clinton's lack of military service; continues bid to appeal to families; complains of media bias against Republicans, again singling out New York Times (M)
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Stocks Higher in Japan
Date: 28 October 1996
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Stocks trade higher in Tokyo on Oct 28; Nikkei index of 225 issues closes up 145.44, at 20,885.41 (S)
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Kansas Utility Extends Bid
Date: 28 October 1996
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Western Resources Inc extends its $1.9 billion tender offer for Kansas City Power and Light Co, move that may lead to first hostile takeover of an electric company in at least 36 years (S)
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 28 October 1996
International A3-9 VATICAN VISIT TO CUBA A Vatican envoy is visiting Cuba in what church officials and diplomats describe as a prelude to a possible meeting between Pope John Paul II and President Fidel Castro. A3 LEBED SUCCESSOR MEETS REBELS Russia's security chief met with Chechen rebels for the first time and said he would hold to the peace agreement signed by his predecessor, Aleksandr I. Lebed. A4 ACCORD ON ECONOMY IN MEXICO The Mexican Government has reached an accord with labor and business intended to keep wages in check and insure that austerity policies continue for another year. A3 DELAYS CLEARING BOSNIA MINES International efforts to clear land mines are stalled in Bosnia, with some Government officials attempting to siphon off money and others resisting the program in case of another war. A8 Comic books are used to alert children to mine dangers. A8 BLEAK VOTE IN BULGARIA Bulgarians voted in a presidential election that Western diplomats said was unlikely to change the country's bleak image as the worst-managed in Eastern Europe. A6 AFRICA'S BREWING CALAMITY News analysis: A series of long-simmering ethnic conflicts along the border of Zaire, Rwanda and Burundi now threaten to engulf the three in a regional war. A8 JAPAN'S CRIMINAL MYSTERY The police in Japan appeared to make some progress in solving the attempted murder of the national police chief, one of the country's great criminal mysteries. A7 DEADLOCK IN TALKS OVER HEBRON An American mediator shuttled between Arabs and Israelis struggling to end talks over Hebron before the Palestinian leader, Yasir Arafat, leaves on a European tour. A9 FIGHTING WORSENS IN AFGHANISTAN Two allied factions struck at the Taliban militia from the air and on the ground, widening the fighting in Afghanistan and seemingly ending hopes for a cease-fire. A9 Paris Journal: A winemaking comeback for the City of Light. A4 National A10-17, B7 CLINTON SPEAKS ON CANCER Speaking in Virginia, President Clinton made a special appeal to women by highlighting Government efforts to fight breast cancer. A1 THE PRESIDENT'S MILITARY RECORD The Clinton Record: Bill Clinton can rightly claim to have used military force to save lives in Bosnia and Haiti. But he and his national security team had a lot to learn when they took power. A1 IGNORING PENNSYLVANIA For strategic reasons, Bob Dole and Bill Clinton stopped visiting Pennsylvania and pulled television advertising off the air, leaving the state with mere glimpses of the campaign. A1 Bob Dole called the Clinton Administration a ''group of elitists. A15 In Canton, Mr. Clinton is winning the Battle of the Lesser Evils. A14 A Republican ad campaign implicitly concedes a Dole defeat. A17 Voters seem to be resisting character attacks. A14 A MAN UNDER THE MICROSCOPE The story of Richard Jewell, the one-time suspect in the Olympic bombing, provides a lesson about the power of the Federal Government to disrupt the lives and speaks volumes about the capacity of the news media to cause damage. A1 The papers that broke the Jewell news were quieter yesterday. B7 HOMETOWN'S LAMENT In Russell, Kan., Bob Dole's hometown, more than a few are distraught over the troubles that have befallen the man celebrated in a banner over Main Street. A10 EFFORT TO CUT TEEN-AGE BIRTHS In Gem County, Idaho, teen-age girls, and their boyfriends, have been charged with fornication after the prosecutor was told by teachers, family members or social workers that the girls were pregnant. A10 BUMPER APPLE CROP Washington is harvesting what is likely to be the state's largest apple crop, using advanced technology and economies of scale that may make the family-run orchard a thing of the past. A13 Metro Report B1-6 WINNERS AGAIN, AT LAST They called it historic, majestic, sublime. They compared it to Christmas morning as a kid or the best birthday ever. New Yorkers were gleefully lost among the metaphors yesterday, but any way you looked at it, the New York Yankees were the toast of the town. A1 Business Digest D1 Arts/Entertainment C15-20 How public art turns political. C15 A woman producer's new book about Hollywood. C15 Music: Montreal Symphony. C15 Sports C1-14 CALL THEM CHAMPIONS Yankees Manager Joe Torre was exhilarated and emotionally drained yesterday, a day after his team won the World Series. His players were moved by the fans' reaction to their victory Saturday night at Yankee Stadium. A1 Obituaries D11 Editorials/Op-Ed A18-19 Editorials Robert Torricelli for the Senate. An effective global court. A team for New York in the 90's. Letters Anthony Lewis: Winking at Karadzic. Bob Herbert: More than winners. William Safire: Lippo suction. Philip Gourevitch: Zaire's killer camps. Chronicle B12 Bridge B10 Crossword C16
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 27 October 1996
International 3-14 AFGHANISTAN'S LATEST SCOURGE At least 10,000 villages have been turned to rubble in the 18 years that Afghanistan has been at war, but now the ruin comes from the Taliban, strict Muslims who had once promised to end the fighting. 12 MEXICAN MYSTERY DEEPENS In the more than two weeks since they unearthed a body on a ranch belonging to the brother of a former president, investigators have made no progress in learning who the dead man is or how he got there. 3 FUROR OVER VENEZUELA PRISONS The death in a Caracas prison of 25 inmates, burned alive in their cell by National Guardsmen last week, has become a focus for the rivalries that lie behind the misery of Venezuela's prison system. 4 BOSNIA'S WEAK ECONOMIC ENGINE Although some diplomats had counted on industrial renewal to help restore the links between Bosnia's Muslims, Serbs and Croats, economic growth has turned out to be much slower than expected. 13 THE STRUGGLE FOR JERUSALEM It is a city with not much industry, little strategic significance and too little water, yet of all the issues separating Jews and Palestinians, none approaches the passions fired by Jerusalem. 14 U.N. EVACUATION IN ZAIRE Eastern Zaire descended further into chaos as fighting spread and intensified, forcing the United Nations to pull out its 98 relief workers and leaving half a million refugees to fend for themselves. 14 National 16-34 A FOCUS ON TURNOUT The final 10 days of the 1996 campaign are shaping up as a furious struggle by the two parties and their allies to get their supporters to the polls, in the face of widespread indications that sagging voter interest may well diminish turnout. 1 A HARSH ATTACK BY DOLE Bob Dole continued trying to stir up ''outrage'' at the Clinton Administration, offered a rare mention of Hillary Rodham Clinton and criticized the President's lack of military service. 1 ATLANTA BOMB CASE The Justice Department declared that Richard A. Jewell is no longer considered a suspect in the July 27 bombing at the Olympics. 1 STEPPING DOWN, AND ONWARD Among the 14 Senators who are retiring this year, there is a mixture of excitement and angst over the future. 22 WORRY OVER WETLANDS As small wetlands in Panama City, Fla., give way to Wal-Marts, with the approval of the Army Corps of Engineers, other agencies are becoming concerned. 22 PEROT, FOUR YEARS LATER An American Place: In Canton, Ohio, which gave strong support to Ross Perot four years ago, there are some defections this time around, but a longing for Perot-like change persists. 26 Metropolitan 35-40 GIULIANI BACKING KEMP (AND DOLE) With a little more than 200 hours left before the Presidential election, Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani ended months of hand-wringing yesterday and endorsed the Republican presidential ticket of Jack Kemp and Bob Dole, virtually in that order. 1 CITY PAYS FOR PRIVATE EDUCATION Hundreds of parents of learning-disabled children are getting New York City's public school system to pay for educating their children in private schools, at an annual cost of $20,000 to $60,000 a child. 35 CUBAN ARTISTS: JUST VISITING They dance on New York's most famed stages and organize the latest downtown art exhibitions. They perform in respected tiny theaters and play their music in big outdoor spaces. They are young and talented and they are Cuban. But unlike earlier generations who renounced Cuba to settle in the United States, this group returns home when the show is over. 35 Obituaries 41-42
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So, Smoking Causes Cancer: This Is News?
Date: 27 October 1996
By Denise Grady
Denise Grady
Discovery that chemical in cigarette smoke causes genetic mutations in lung cells identical to those found in many lung cancer patients seems to be more important to ordinary people than to doctors and scientists, who already believe that smoking causes cancer (M)
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