29 жовтня 1995 р. був неділя під знаком зірки ♏. Це був 301 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 30 років. Ваш останній день народження був середа, 29 жовтня 2025 р., 231 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження четвер, 29 жовтня 2026 р. через 133 днів. Ви прожили 11 189 днів, або приблизно 268 554 годин, або приблизно 16 113 290 хвилин, або приблизно 966 797 400 секунд.
29th of October 1995 News
Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 29 жовтня 1995 р.
Poll Finds G.O.P. Primary Voters Are Hardly Monolithic
Date: 30 October 1995
By Richard L. Berke
Richard Berke
While popular political wisdom holds that Republican primaries are dominated by right wing voters, the latest New York Times/CBS News poll shows that these voters are a disparate group, much like the party at large, and are sharply divided on issues like abortion, immigration and Medicare. And more than most Americans, they are fractured over the potent issues of protecting minorities, the role of religious conservatives and Government help for the poor.
Full Article
Machine Tool Orders Rose in September
Date: 30 October 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Orders for industrial tools rose 39.4 percent in September from the previous month, the Association of Manufacturing Technology said today. Compared with September 1994, however, total orders fell 6 percent.
Full Article
Powerwave to Make Debut
Date: 30 October 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Power Computing Corporation, the first company to license Apple Computer Inc.'s Macintosh operating system, said it planned to introduce its newest line of Macintosh clones on Monday. The new Powerwave computers, which feature the fastest Power PC processors, cost between $3,199 and $4,499. The new 604 Power PC processors are manufactured by the International Business Machines Corporation and Motorola Inc. Power Computing, which is based in Austin, is planning to ship 100,000 units by May 1996, Stephen Khang, the founder of the company, said.
Full Article
Mobile Phone Retail Plans
Date: 30 October 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Bell Atlantic Nynex Mobile said it would open nine mobile communications retail stores in New York City next year, creating 150 jobs. It said it would also invest $200 million to upgrade and expand the region's cellular network next year.
Full Article
U.S. Budget Deficit Falls to 6-Year Low
Date: 30 October 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The United States posted a $163.81 billion budget deficit in the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, the smallest shortfall in six years, the Treasury said on Friday. Strong corporate profits helped bolster revenue while program cuts helped slow Federal spending. In September alone, the Government posted a budget surplus of $7.286 billion, reflecting quarterly tax returns. The amount was more than 70 percent higher than the surplus of $4.266 billion in September 1994.
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 30 October 1995
International A3-9
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 30 October 1995
International A3-9 BLOW TO RUSSIAN ELECTION Russia's leading progressive party was barred from taking part in parliamentary elections over a minor infraction, and many considered the ruling a blow to democracy. A1 CAMPAIGNING FOR QUEBEC VOTES Volunteers from both camps are working hard in Quebec, if one town is an example, to claim the undecided votes, in the referendum over separation from Canada. A3 ELUSIVE BOSNIA ARMS PARITY The United States lacks a plan to give Bosnia military strength to match that of the Bosnian Serbs, which is seen as essential to withdrawing peacekeepers eventually. News analysis. A8 SIGNIFICANT CROATIA VOTE Legislative elections in Croatia are likely to reverberate in the Bosnian peace talks in Ohio because of a decision to let Bosnian Croats vote and what that might mean for Croatia's ambitions. A8 A suggestion that Serbs destroyed evidence in Bosnia killings. A8 WARNING FROM ISLAMIC GROUP After the killing of its leader in Malta, widely believed to be the work of Israeli intelligence agents, the Islamic Holy War movement said it would carry out new attacks against Israelis. A9 Leaders gathered to turn Arab-Israeli peace into business deals. A9 OPPOSITION SPOTLIGHT IN MEXICO A former mayor of Mexico City who has figured in the great dramas in the country recently has split from the governing party and has become an opposition leader. A7 A subway fire in Azerbaijan killed some 300 people. A8 Accusations are straining the United States' ties with Colombia. A5 South Africa will arrest former officials for 1987 killings. A6 San Carlos de Bariloche Journal: Nazi ties taint Argentine town. A4 National A10-15 BUDGET NEGOTIATIONS TO BEGIN House and Senate Republican leaders said they would begin ironing out differences on the budget and promised to send a final bill to President Clinton in three weeks. A1 SURPRISINGLY HAPPY DAYS At a time when Democrats should be dispirited, some House and Senate members seemed optimistic as the first phase of the budget debate came to a close last week. A1 CONTROLLING TROUBLED PRISONS Corrections officials across the country said that controlling prisons was becoming more difficult because of spiraling inmate populations, longer sentences and widespread drug trafficking and addiction. A1 LUCRATIVE 'CHRISTIAN THRILLERS' A lucrative literary trend is developing with a genre loosely called "Christian thrillers," in which potboiling adventure is combined with a conservative theology. A1 POLL: A LARGER G.O.P. TENT While political wisdom holds that Republican primaries are dominated by right wing voters, the latest New York Times/CBS News poll showed that these voters are a disparate group. A11 IN ATLANTA, SWEET JUSTICE Ever since Atlanta was burned, the city has been carrying a grudge. But with one swing of a bat by a right-fielder named Justice, the Braves finally knocked the chip off the city's shoulder. A10 HEARTLAND EMBRACES RUSSIANS Kansas residents have greeted the first Russian military exercise on United States soil with sophistication and no public protests. A10 25,000 TO PATROL DETROIT STREETS At least 25,000 residents responded to Detroit's call to rise up against the Halloween ritual known as "Devil's Night" and help the city catch arsonists who try to burn the city down each year. A10 THE MOST POPULAR HMO An independent research group has identified the health-maintenance organization with the highest level of satisfied members in surveys of five regions of the nation. A14 AWARD IN BREAST IMPLANT CASE A jury found the Dow Chemical Company solely liable for health problems caused by the breast implant devices and awarded a Nevada woman more than $3.9 million in compensatory damages. A14 Metro Digest B1 LAUNDERING BILLIONS Frustrated by Government crackdowns, the leaders of the Cali drug cartel in Colombia are processing the billions of dollars they reap in cocaine sales in the United States through a wide variety of American companies. A1 COOPERATIVE, HAH! In recent years, as hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers bought into the co-op market, only to see it collapse, this often-contentious communal living arrangement has become even more so. A1 Arts/Entertainment C11-18 Talking with Patrick Stewart. C11 Theater: "Fool Moon." C11 "Northeast Local." C12 Music: Maazel, composer. C11 Wilco and Son Volt. C16 Dance: Anima Mundi troupe. C14 Annie-B Parson. C14 Books: "The Island of the Day Before," by Umberto Eco. C15 Television: "Drawn From Memory," an animated memoir. C18 Fashion Page B7 In New York, colors to feel young. Obituaries B6 Business Digest D1 Sports C1-10 Baseball: Braves and Blue Jays are cousins. C9 Basketball: Knicks' Nelson faces reality. C2 Columns: Anderson on the World SeriesC1 Football: Jets lose to the Colts. C1 Giants defeat Redskins. C1 Editorials/Op-Ed A16-17 Editorials Drastic remedies in Quebec. Greening of (some) Republicans. Baseball ends with a flourish. Letters Anthony Lewis: Courts on guard. Bob Herbert: Kids pay the price. William Safire: Dole vs. Powell -- California dreamin'. Edward Rogoff: Don't raise the taxi fares. Bridge C18 Chronicle B5 Crossword C15
Full Article
Recording the Good News of the Gilded Age
Date: 29 October 1995
By Mary Gordon
Mary Gordon
THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT gallery is part of the Smithsonian Institution, but it isn't located in the civic-pride-inducing Washington Mall. Across from the gallery, on a treeless and grassless mall, is a beautiful but derelict Victorian building; the abandoned first floor was once the home of Star Wigs, empty now except for a broom and a fading poster. A homeless man sleeps on the gallery staircase below the banners of Lincoln, Grant and George Washington Carver. Inside, two posters announce the current shows: one is a photograph of the leonine Frederick Douglass, the other, the neatly coiffed head and averted eyes of Cecilia Beaux, painted by herself. It would be difficult to imagine a painter whose work seems more distant from the press and stress of contemporary life, and this is part of the appeal of this new exhibition, which runs through Jan. 28. We seem to be hungry for the Gilded Age; Edith Wharton is virtually a cottage industry, and Jane Campion is directing a film of Henry James's "Portrait of a Lady."
Full Article
A Bigger Tent for the G.O.P.
Date: 30 October 1995
The stereotype of Republican primary voters as overwhelmingly right wing and anti-abortion was not supported in a New York Times/CBS News poll. Page A11.
Full Article
Pamela Goldman And Joel Telpner
Date: 29 October 1995
Pamela Grant Goldman, a writer, and Joel Stephan Telpner, a lawyer, are to be married today at the New York Academy of Sciences in New York. Rabbi Steven H. Moskowitz is to perform the ceremony. Ms. Goldman, 34, will keep her name. Until recently she was a news writer for "NBC Nightly News With Tom Brokaw." She was a producer of "Who's Going to Care for These Children?," a documentary film about children with AIDS and the foster parents who care for them.
Full Article