Відтворення неділя, 22 червня 1997 р.

22 червня 1997 р. був неділя під знаком зірки . Це був 172 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 28 років. Ваш останній день народження був неділя, 22 червня 2025 р., 355 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження понеділок, 22 червня 2026 р. через 9 днів. Ви прожили 10 582 днів, або приблизно 253 976 годин, або приблизно 15 238 613 хвилин, або приблизно 914 316 780 секунд.

Деякі люди, які поділяють цей день народження:

22nd of June 1997 News

Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 22 червня 1997 р.

The Logic of Losing at All-News TV

Date: 22 June 1997

By Mark Landler

Mark Landler

Cable news channels get far lower ratings than other channels, but viewership may not be as important to networks as other factors; MSNBC, Fox News, CNBC and CNN perform multiple roles for their owners; they are brand extensions, promotional vehicles, farm teams for mother network, and laboratories for high-tech news gathering techniques; photo (M)

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The Perilous Life of a Show on the Bubble

Date: 22 June 1997

By Warren Berger

Warren Berger

Article on how television networks can sometimes miraculously revive ailing programs by tinkering with prime-time scheduling focuses on quirky NBC comedy series News Radio; photo (M)

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Poll Finds Women Are the Health-Savvier Sex, and the Warier

Date: 22 June 1997

By Janet Elder

Janet Elder

New York Times/CBS News poll finds that women are the better informed health consumers, yet have a complicated, uneasy relationships with their physicians; majority of women polled say that doctors talk down to them and take men's health complaints more seriously; chart (Special section, Women's Health) (M)

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On Breast Cancer, the Vote Favors Aggressive Screening

Date: 22 June 1997

By Marjorie Connelly

Marjorie Connelly

New York Times/CBS News poll finds that women are more afraid of cancer than any other disease and are most anxious about breast cancer; women are also more aggressive than the medical establishment when it comes to screening, with 44 percent favoring regular mammograms from age 40 and another 40 percent favoring the test at even earlier ages; researchers are sharply divided over whether mammograms are worthwile for women under age 50; photos; charts (Special section, Women's Health) (M)

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More Research, More Profits, More Conflict

Date: 22 June 1997

By Laura Mansnerus

Laura Mansnerus

Women are the health care system's biggest customers, and they have in recent years become the focus both of more responsive medicine and more aggressive marketing; whether women's needs are being met remains matter of intense debate; chart of New York Times/CBS News poll results; photo (Special section, Women's Health) (M)

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Dependable Partisans Celebrate 15 Years of Sparring

Date: 23 June 1997

By Walter Goodman

Walter Goodman

Article discusses CNN television program Crossfire as it celebrates irs 15th anniversary (M)

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Stocks Higher in Japan

Date: 23 June 1997

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Nikkei index of 225 Japanese stock issues rises 50.60 points, to 20,436.14 (Mon, 6/23) (S)

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 22 June 1997

INTERNATIONAL 3-9 Leaders Trying to Redefine Roles in Global Economy President Clinton and the leaders of Russia, Japan and Western Europe plunged into the messy business of redefining their roles in the global economy, with Russia pressing for quick entry into the World Trade Organization and Europe struggling to save its drive toward a single currency. Mr. Clinton exuded optimism at the summit meeting in Denver, but his aides were skeptical that Russia and Europe were willing to make substantial economic reforms. 1 Pol Pot Reported Captured Appearing together, Cambodia's two Prime Ministers said the Khmer Rouge leader, Pol Pot, had been captured. They said they would ask the United Nations to help put him on trial for the bloodletting that took a million Cambodian lives. The news carried more credibility than murky reports last week. 8 China Dissidents Lose Outlet A modern version of the underground railway, one that has spirited upwards of 500 dissidents out of China, is shutting down with the close of British rule in Hong Kong. The colony had tolerated the escape route. 8 Somalia Regroups Somalians, without a government since 1991, are trying to rebuild their lives. They might succeed if the Red Sea port of Bossaso is a harbinger. Once a sleepy town of 10,000, it now has 80,000 residents, a stable government and a growing economy. 3 Leftist Acclaimed in Mexico Two weeks before Mexico City's first mayoral election in 70 years, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas Solorzano, a leftist candidate, is so far ahead that he is being seen not just like the mayor-elect but like a potential president. 4 NATIONAL 10-17 Major Decisions Came At End of Tobacco Talks Many contentious issues were settled near the end of the tobacco talks as negotiators struggled to meet a self-imposed deadline for an agreement. The final hours and days involved a frenzy of activity as state officials, public-health advocates, plaintiffs' lawyers and industry representatives raced to resolve issues like punitive damages, payments, protection of whistle-blowers and disclosure of industry documents. The White House apparently played an important role. 1 Gore Disappoints Allies Environmental groups, the core of Vice President Al Gore's political base, have expressed anger and frustration with Mr. Gore on two important issues: toughening air pollution standards and negotiating deep reductions in the emissions of greenhouse gases. The groups are warning Mr. Gore in extraordinarily blunt language that ''green'' voters might abandon him in the Democratic primaries in 2000 unless he comes through now on these issues. 1 High Court Rulings Awaited Nearly all of the Supreme Court's most important cases will be decided in the term's last few days. With its goal of concluding on Thursday, the Court plans to hand down decisions in all 16 of its remaining undecided cases; perhaps 10 cases that could produce landmark decisions. 15 Army Hearing Is Postponed The military's highest court ordered the Army to explain why it had closed to the public a hearing that had been scheduled tomorrow to determine if there is enough evidence to order Gene McKinney, the Sergeant Major of the Army, to be tried on charges of sexual misconduct. 16 NEW YORK 19-24 A Mental Patient's Quest For a Normal Life The effort to get a mentally disabled 20-year-old a home of his own is a two-and-a-half-year odyssey through the largely unexplored borderlands of social policy, and a test case of the limits, and the limitations, of one of the great transformations of recent history: the emptying out of public institutions for the developmentally disabled. 1 Unseen Voices in Megan Trial The fight over whether Jesse K. Timmendequas should die for the murder of Megan Kanka was a battle of opposing caricatures drawn by the prosecution and the defense. But in their decision on Friday to impose the death penalty, the jurors rejected both, finding his childhood was not as horrific as the defense said and not as benign as the prosecution said. 19 OBITUARIES 26 Weather 34 Weddings 30

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 23 June 1997

INTERNATIONAL A3-9 Political Wish List Issued at Denver Summit The leaders of the eight countries that represent half the world's economic activity ended a summit meeting with a call for democratic elections in Hong Kong, new energy to break the Middle East stalemate, a commitment to peace in Bosnia and new aid for Africa. A1 Mexican Labor Leader Mourned Mexican Government officials and labor leaders turned out to pay their last respects to Fidel Velazquez Sanchez, a 97-year-old labor patriarch. Notably absent, however, was any outpouring of grief from rank-and-file workers. Many have criticized the legacy of low wages left by Mr. Velazquez and predicted a new struggle to break the bonds between unions and the Government. A3

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Hot News: Latin Lives. Rock Rules.

Date: 22 June 1997

By Bernard Holland

Bernard Holland

Bernard Holland article compares tonality in music to the fate of Latin language in the modern world; says tonality may be 'universal,' but music is now a splintered tongue (M)

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