El 17 de març de 1992 era un dimarts sota el signe estrella de ♓. Era el 76 dia de l'any. El president dels Estats Units era George Bush.
Si vas néixer aquest dia, tens 34 anys. El teu darrer aniversari va ser el dimarts, 17 de març de 2026, fa 69 dies. El teu proper aniversari és el dimecres, 17 de març de 2027, d'aquí a 295 dies. Heu viscut durant 12.487 dies, o unes 299.708 hores, o uns 17.982.533 minuts, o uns 1.078.951.980 segons.
17th of March 1992 News
Notícies tal com van aparèixer a la portada del New York Times el 17 de març de 1992
Attacker Of Sharpton Is Sentenced
Date: 17 March 1992
By Lee A. Daniels
Lee Daniels
A justice in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn yesterday sentenced the man convicted of stabbing the Rev. Al Sharpton to the maximum of 5 to 15 years in prison, despite a plea for leniency by Mr. Sharpton himself. Rising in the courtroom to speak to Justice Francis X. Egitto before the sentencing, Mr. Sharpton urged a lesser sentence for his assailant, Michael Riccardi, said a spokesman for the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office.
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Stunned by Editor's Death, Paper Draws Threats
Date: 18 March 1992
By Joseph B. Treaster
Joseph
Since the execution-style slaying of their former editor in chief last week, staff members of the city's largest Spanish-language daily newspaper have begun to feel they are on the front lines of a war with an unknown enemy. Death threats began to come into the switchboard at the paper, El Diario-La Prensa, almost immediately after the news of the death of the editor, Manuel de Dios Unanue, hit the streets.
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Senate Counsel Seeks Phone Records of Reporters
Date: 17 March 1992
By Neil A. Lewis
Neil Lewis
The special counsel investigating the disclosures of Prof. Anita F. Hill's complaint of sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas has subpoenaed the home telephone records of two journalists who first reported her accusations and data on thousands of calls made from their news organizations here. Lawyers for the two reporters, Nina Totenberg of National Public Radio and and Timothy Phelps of Newsday, said today that they were notified of the subpoenas issued to the C& P Telephone Company from the special counsel, Peter E. Fleming.
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Counsel Retreats on Thomas Disclosures
Date: 18 March 1992
By Neil A. Lewis
Neil Lewis
The special counsel trying to find out who disclosed accusations of sexual harassment against Judge Clarence Thomas retreated today from his demand for the home telephone records of the two journalists who first reported the allegations. Instead, the counsel, Peter E. Fleming of New York, set up a situation in which the Senate Rules Committee would have to decide whether reporters had the right to withhold their telephone records from Senate investigators.
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Police Issue Sketch of Suspect in Editor's Killing
Date: 17 March 1992
By Joseph B. Treaster
Joseph
New York City police yesterday issued a composite sketch of the suspect in the killing of an editor and writer who specialized in stories about drugs and politics, and Commissioner Lee P. Brown said detectives were working round the clock on the case. A dozen Hispanic journalists had gone to the commissioner to press for more effort in finding the killer of Manuel de Dios Unanue and left saying, as one of them put it, that "a lot more was being done than we realized."
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Stop the Senate's Leak Madness
Date: 18 March 1992
With its subpoenas for phone records, the Senate moved from mischievous hazing of three journalists to invasion of privacy in its fruitless quest for leakers from last year's confirmation of Clarence Thomas as a Supreme Court Justice. Fortunately, the investigator who issued the subpoenas has slowed the search and will consult the Senate Rules Committee before trying to enforce them. That gives the committee a chance to bring this crazy quest to a halt. Unchastened by ridicule over his attempts to question reporters, the investigator, Peter Fleming, issued subpoenas for telephone records of long-distance calls from the reporters' homes and offices. It's part of an inquiry that from the outset has endangered confidential dealings between reporters and sources, and thus the flow of important information to the public.
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THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: Media; On the Campaign Trail: From Apathy to Tedium
Date: 17 March 1992
By Elizabeth Kolbert
Elizabeth Kolbert
Ever since "The Selling of the President" appeared in 1969, it has been a common complaint among voters that they are not getting the real story of the Presidential campaign. In fact, there is some truth to this complaint. But instead of griping, voters probably ought to be grateful for the omission.
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Newsmen in Peril
Date: 17 March 1992
By Guillermo Martinez
Guillermo Martinez
The hotel phone woke me up in the middle of the night. Bernadette Pardo, a reporter, and Carlos Corrales, a cameraman, at television station WLTV, Univision's Miami affiliate, had been the target of an assassination attempt in Medellin, Colombia. They had been covering the war on politicians, judges and journalists in narco-terrorists' desperate effort to prevent the extradition of drug dealers to the United States.
On Sept. 5, 1989, Miss Pardo and Mr. Corrales narrowly escaped becoming two more victims. The image of a blood- and debris-covered Miss Pardo at a demolished restaurant haunts me to this day. She suffered two fractured vertebrae, a broken collar bone, and flying glass slashed the tendons in her right arm. Mr. Corrales suffered a broken ankle.
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On My Mind; The Hard Corps
Date: 17 March 1992
By A. M. Rosenthal
A.
In Washington, the Government of Israel received two pieces of information from the United States on the same day. First the Israelis were told at the State Department that the United States had intelligence reports that Israel had transferred technology about American Patriot missiles to China.
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Observer; Ganga Nostra Days
Date: 17 March 1992
By Russell Baker
Russell Baker
The rich compote of gangster lore filling New York newspapers takes me back to 1935 when I entertained the idea of a career in gangstering. I had seen Paul Muni and George Raft do it and admired the elegant cars, expensive suits and fancy fedoras that were standard gangster equipment. On the negative side, Muni and Raft spent a lot of time listening to Ann Dvorak sing about Casey Jones at the piano. Joan Blondell tickling the ivories at my hideout might have been tolerable, but Ann Dvorak was not my type.
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