El 8 de noviembre de 1992 fue un domingo bajo el signo estelar de ♏. Era el día 312 del año. El presidente de los Estados Unidos fue George Bush.
Si naciste en este día, tienes 32 años. Su último cumpleaños fue el viernes, 8 de noviembre de 2024, hace 364 días. Su próximo cumpleaños es el sábado, 8 de noviembre de 2025, en 0 días. Ha vivido durante 12.052 días, o aproximadamente 289.259 horas, o aproximadamente 17.355.579 minutos, o aproximadamente 1.041.334.740 segundos
8th of November 1992 News
Noticias tal como aparecieron en la portada del New York Times el 8 de noviembre de 1992
CHRONICLE
Date: 09 November 1992
By Nadine Brozan
Nadine Brozan
IN 1952, DON HEWITT was in charge of political convention coverage for CBS and wondering who to put on the air as a commentator. "There was this guy who worked in Washington who didn't have all that much broadcasting experience, and I went to Sig Mickelson, president of CBS News and said, 'Listen, what do you think about Walter Cronkite?' " Mr. Hewitt recalled the other day. At that time Mr. Cronkite was known mainly as a war correspondent for United Press International. "So we hired him and then were talking about how we would operate," Mr. Hewitt continued. "I said, 'He ought to be the principal of four broadcasters, like the anchorman on the relay team. Nobody had ever used that term before, but it certainly did stick, and Walter Cronkite and anchorman became household words."
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THE TRANSITION: The President-Elect; AFTER 13 MONTHS, CLINTON RELAXES
Date: 08 November 1992
By Michael Kelly
Michael Kelly
Nursing his chronically sore vocal chords, President-elect Bill Clinton indulged in the first full day of relaxation since the end of his 13-month campaign, emerging from the Governor's Mansion here only to golf. With his campaign headquarters all but shut down, and with most of his senior advisers out of town for the weekend, Mr. Clinton met with no officials of either his campaign or his transition team, said a spokeswoman, Max Parker.
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Chicago Papers Fight for, and in, Ads
Date: 09 November 1992
By Barnaby J. Feder
Barnaby Feder
Six weeks ago, when The Chicago Tribune raised its prices from 35 cents to 40 cents for home delivery and 50 cents at newsstands, its bitter rival, The Chicago Sun-Times, faced a tough decision. Its obvious option was to match the increases and lift revenue, at least temporarily. Instead, The Sun-Times held the line and, in a blistering ad campaign, decided to use the price gap as a weapon to try to reverse its long losing streak in the battle for readers.
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Bypassing the Press Helps Candidates; Does It Also Serve the Public Interest?
Date: 08 November 1992
By Elizabeth Kolbert
Elizabeth Kolbert
MARISSA HALL, the young woman from Richmond, Va., who stood up at the second Presidential debate and asked "How has the national debt personally affected each of your lives?" probably wasn't expecting to become a major campaign figure. But as William Figueroa, the student Dan Quayle coached to spell "potatoe," can attest, celebrity sometimes comes in unexpected ways. After the second debate was over, many Americans hailed Ms. Hall's question as one of the campaign's most illuminating, calling it proof that the political process functions best when the role of the news media is minimized. Others argued that the question itself was wrong-headed -- Ms. Hall seemed not to understand the difference between the recession and the national debt -- and called it one of the best arguments that could be made for the importance of the press.
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THE TRANSITION: Political Memo; Clinton, After Raising Hopes, Tries to Lower Expectations
Date: 09 November 1992
By Michael Kelly
Michael Kelly
As President-elect Bill Clinton begins the transition from campaigning to governing, his overarching concern is to cope with the emotion he has stirred: hope. A volatile expectation colors everything about the beginning of the Clinton years. Against accepted political wisdom and the currents of an angry year, Mr. Clinton's Presidential campaign seemed to revive at least a limited belief that Washington can actually do something good for people.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 09 November 1992
International A3-9 RIOT DISRUPTS RALLY FOR PEACE Leaders calling for Germany to unite to combat neo-Nazi violence against foreigners became the victims at a Berlin rally attended by 350,000 people when hundreds of anarchists flung eggs and tomatoes at the speakers. A1 JAPAN'S CARGO OF WHISPERS The largest shipment of plutonium ever, en route from France to Japan, has inspired whispers and protests, although Tokyo asserts the nuclear material will be used exclusively for peaceful purposes. A6
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 08 November 1992
International 3-21 RUSSIA'S RISKY REACTORS
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Ohio State's Cooper Tunes Out Some Static
Date: 09 November 1992
JOHN COOPER is tired of what he calls irresponsible journalism concerning his future as the Ohio State football coach. "I want to say one thing and then I'm out of here," Cooper said angrily as he closed a news conference on Saturday after the nationally ranked Buckeyes beat Minnesota, 17-0. "I am not resigning next week."
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Tokyo Stocks Down 2.7%
Date: 09 November 1992
By Bloomberg Business News
Bloomberg News
The Nikkei index of 225 issues ended trading today down 452.76 points, or 2.7%, at 16,417.05. "It's the same old story," Paul Muller, deputy general manager of international sales at Schroder Securities, said. "Earnings numbers are coming through. Politics are still a cause for concern. And nobody is in the mood for buying."
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Uncertainty for Albany Court
Date: 09 November 1992
As his colleagues on the New York Court of Appeals grapple with the arrest of their Chief Judge, far more than Sol Wachtler's personal fate is at stake. News analysis, page B6.
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