Atkārtoti atskaņo svētdiena, 1996. gada 23. jūnijs

1996. gada 23. jūnijs bija svētdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes . Tā bija 174 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 30 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija otrdiena, 2026. gada 23. jūnijs, pirms 2 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir trešdiena, 2027. gada 23. jūnijs pēc 362 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 10 959 dienas jeb aptuveni 263 022 stundas, vai aptuveni 15 781 332 minūtes vai aptuveni 946 879 920 sekundes.

Daži cilvēki, kuri dalās šajā dzimšanas dienā:

23rd of June 1996 News

Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1996. gada 23. jūnijs

TELEVISION;Young Hands Take Young America's Political Pulse

Date: 23 June 1996

By Edward Lewine

Edward Lewine

JONATHAN KARL, Cable News Network's newest and, at 28, youngest political reporter, leaned back in his chair and blamed his elders for turning young people off television news. "How many Woodstock nostalgia stories do we have to live through?" said Mr. Karl, who believes that the sheer size of the baby-boom generation is crowding Generation X off the nightly news. "People are just now starting to think about my generation." Mr. Karl was sitting in CNN's Manhattan studio late on a hot May afternoon waiting for his producer to finish his latest piece. On the editing machine's small screen, his image looked calm, professional, handsome and very young to be on CNN.

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TELEVISION;On the Trail for the MTV Generation

Date: 23 June 1996

By Edward Lewine

Edward Lewine

IN 1992, WHEN MTV COVERED A PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY for the first time by sending the young reporter Tabitha Soren to New Hampshire, the candidates didn't know how to react. Paul Tsongas asked for a T-shirt, Jerry Brown changed out of his suit, and Pat Buchanan professed his love for rock-and-roll. Simply by showing up, MTV changed Presidential politics. "It didn't have to do with MTV's style or me as a 24-year-old," Ms. Soren said recently. "It had to do with politicians answering questions that had anything to do with young people."

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25 Years Later;Lessons From the Pentagon Papers

Date: 23 June 1996

By R. W. Apple Jr

R. Apple

TWENTY-FIVE years ago this month, The New York Times began publishing the Pentagon Papers, a documentary history tracing the ultimately doomed involvement of the United States in a grinding war in the jungles and rice paddies of Southeast Asia. They demonstrated, among other things, that the Johnson Administration had systematically lied, not only to the public but also to Congress, about a subject of transcendent national interest and significance.

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A Dissident In Myanmar Now a Writer

Date: 24 June 1996

By Iver Peterson

Iver Peterson

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of the Burmese democracy movement, has taken up the journalist's pen to write a syndicated column about her life under her country's military rule. But anyone looking for fiery political messages in Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi's column, "Letter From Burma," which is being distributed by Universal Press Syndicate, will find instead mostly tranquil and reflective musings about her Rangoon childhood and the problems of keeping up an old house. Only at the close of some columns does she take a gentle jab at the junta that rules her country.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 24 June 1996

International A3-9

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 23 June 1996

International 3-12

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All News, Almost All Profit, All the Time

Date: 24 June 1996

By Robin D. Schatz

Robin

Every morning, Edmond Garesche awakens in his Manhattan apartment to WCBS-AM, one of the city's three all-news radio stations, and listens for about two hours, as he lies in bed half-awake and then as he gets dressed for his job producing World Wide Web sites. Mr. Garesche, 29, could surf the Internet to get the news he needs. He could turn to local news cable stations like New York 1 or national services like the Cable News Network and Headline News. Or, he could read a newspaper.

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World News Briefs;Many Tributes as Tutu Leaves Archbishop Post

Date: 24 June 1996

AP

Kings, presidents and clergy celebrated Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu and his struggle against apartheid at a service today that marked his retirement as head of the Anglican Church in South Africa. After a decade as Anglican Primate of South Africa, he will now devote himself to leading a commission formed by the country's first black-led Government to investigate apartheid-era crimes.

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World News Briefs;Figure Linked to Scandal Is Found Dead in Brazil

Date: 24 June 1996

Reuters

A central figure in the downfall of the former Brazilian President, Fernando Collor de Mello, was found killed this morning in northeastern Brazil, the police said. A police spokesman said the victim, Paulo Cesar Farias, 50, who was believed to have organized the influence-peddling scheme that undermined Mr. Collor, was found shot to death alongside a 28-year-old female friend in a beach house just outside Maceio, the capital of Alagoas state.

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World News Briefs;Founder's Heir Sworn In As New Bangladesh Chief

Date: 24 June 1996

AP

Two decades after the army assassinated Bangladesh's founding father, his daughter, who helped end the military rule that followed him, was sworn in today as Prime Minister. "My first job will be to restore peace and political stability for rapid economic development," Sheik Hasina Wazed, the new Prime Minister, said after taking the oath of office.

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