Replay do domingo, 19 de fevereiro de 1995

O dia 19 de fevereiro de 1995 foi um domingo sob o signo de . Foi o dia 49 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Se você nasceu neste dia, você tem 31 anos de idade. Seu último aniversário foi no dia quinta-feira, 19 de fevereiro de 2026, 115 dias atrás. Seu próximo aniversário é no dia sexta-feira, 19 de fevereiro de 2027, em 249 dias. Você viveu 11.438 dias, ou cerca de 274.524 horas, ou cerca de 16.471.458 minutos, ou cerca de 988.287.480 segundos.

Algumas pessoas que compartilham este aniversário:

  • André, Duque de Iorque (aristocrata, oficial de marinha, piloto de helicóptero, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1960)
  • Millie Bobby Brown (ator, ator de cinema, modelo, produtor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 2004)
  • Kiefer Sutherland (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, ator/atriz de voz, autor-compositor, produtor cinematográfico, produtor de televisão, realizador de cinema, realizador de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1970)
  • Benicio Del Toro (argumentista, ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, produtor cinematográfico, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1967)
  • Mauro Icardi (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1993)
  • Seal (artista discográfico(a), cantautor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1963)
  • Nikola Jokić (jogador de basquetebol, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1995)
  • Victoria Justice (ator, ator/atriz de voz, cantautor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1993)
  • Jeff Daniels (ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, ator/atriz de voz, dramaturgo, músico(a), realizador, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1955)
  • Falco (cantor, compositor(a), músico(a), pianista, rapper, soldado, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1957)
  • Lee Marvin (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, soldado, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1924)
  • Justine Bateman (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1966)
  • Ray Winstone (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de voz, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1957)
  • Cristina Kirchner (advogado, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1953)
  • Arielle Kebbel (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, competidor de concurso de beleza, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1985)
  • Mika Nakashima (ator, cantor, letrista, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1983)
  • Sócrates (futebolista, médico, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1954)
  • Tony Iommi (autor-compositor, compositor(a), guitarrista, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1948)
  • Smokey Robinson (artista discográfico(a), ator de televisão, autor-compositor, cantautor(a), cantor, músico(a), produtor(a) musical, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1940)
  • Marta Vieira da Silva (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Miyu Irino (ator, cantor, seiyū, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1988)
  • Joey Diaz (ator, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1963)
  • Saparmyrat Nyýazow (autobiógrafo, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1940)
  • Massimo Troisi (argumentista, ator, ator de cinema, poeta, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1953)
  • Merle Oberon (argumentista, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1911)
  • Bellamy Young (ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, produtor cinematográfico, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1970)
  • Hiroshi Fujioka (ator, ator de televisão, cantor, explorador, seiyū, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1946)
  • Neil Siegel (cientista de computação, engenheiro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1954)
  • Christoph Kramer (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1991)
  • Gianluca Zambrotta (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1977)
  • Haylie Duff (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, ator/atriz de voz, autor-compositor, cantor, designer de moda, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1985)
  • Jennifer Doudna (bioquímico, biólogo molecular, cristalógrafo, investigador(a), professor(a) universitário(a), químico, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1964)
  • André Breton (desenhista, ensaísta, escritor(a), fotógrafo, poeta, romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1896)
  • Vitas (ator, autor-compositor, cantautor(a), cantor, compositor(a), músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1979)
  • Guilherme III dos Países Baixos (juiz, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1817)
  • Álvaro Obregón (militar, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1880)
  • Roger Goodell (empresário(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1959)
  • Ophelia Lovibond (ator, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Pim Fortuyn (colunista, escritor(a), político, professor, professor(a) universitário(a), sociólogo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1948)
  • Luke Pasqualino (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1989)
  • Leslie David Baker (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1958)
  • David Mazouz (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 2001)
  • Jeff Kinney (Designer de jogos, autor, caricaturista, escritor de literatura infantil, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1971)
  • Constantin Brâncuși (desenhista, escultor, fotógrafo, pintor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1876)
  • Hovhannes Tumanyan (escritor(a), figura pública, poeta, prosista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1869)
  • Amy Tan (argumentista, ensaísta, escritor de literatura infantil, escritor(a), romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1952)
  • Reiner Haseloff (físico, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1954)
  • Justin Fashanu (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1961)
  • Juri Michailowitsch Antonow (acordeonista, ator, cantor, compositor de bandas sonoras, compositor(a), guitarrista, poeta, tecladista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1945)
  • Nao Omori (ator, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1972)
  • Ryu Murakami (argumentista, ensaísta, escritor de ficção científica, escritor(a), realizador de cinema, romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1952)
  • Bill Bowerman (atleta, empreendedor(a), treinador de atletismo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1911)
  • Steven Furtick (pastor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1980)
  • John Frankenheimer (argumentista, produtor cinematográfico, produtor de televisão, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1930)
  • David Gandy (supermodelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1980)
  • Svante Arrhenius (astrónomo, físico, professor(a) universitário(a), químico, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1859)
  • Michael Nader (ator de cinema, ator de televisão, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1945)
  • Lisa Faulkner (apresentador de televisão, ator, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1972)
  • Paulina Gaitán (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1992)
  • Eric Lange (ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1973)
  • Homer Hickam (argumentista, autobiógrafo, engenheiro, engenheiro aeroespacial, escritor de ficção científica, escritor(a), romancista, soldado, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1943)
  • Big John Studd (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, lutador profissional, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1948)
  • Dani Martín (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, autor-compositor, cantor, compositor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1977)
  • Ronnie Arniell (lutador profissional, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1981)
  • Maxime Chattam (escritor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1976)
  • Immortal Technique (cantor, músico(a), rapper, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1978)
  • Dan Fogelman (argumentista, ator, produtor cinematográfico, produtor de televisão, realizador de cinema, showrunner, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1976)
  • Jaime Bayly (apresentador de televisão, escritor(a), jornalista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1965)
  • Kasinathuni Viswanath (argumentista, ator, ator de televisão, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1930)
  • Ma Lin (mesa-tenista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1980)
  • Leslie Ash (ator, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1960)
  • Andrew Ross Sorkin (argumentista, autor, escritor(a), jornalista, produtor de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1977)
  • Amber Kuo (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, cantor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Beth Ditto (autor-compositor, cantor, modelo, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1981)
  • Andrew Buchan (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1979)
  • Sam Reid (ator, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1987)
  • Henrique Stuart (aristocrata, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1594)
  • Enzo Scifo (futebolista, treinador de futebol, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1966)
  • Carson McCullers (argumentista, dramaturgo, escritor(a), poeta, prosista, romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1917)
  • Francesco Redi (biólogo, cientista, entomologista, médico, naturalista, parasitologista, pintor, poeta, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1626)
  • Luigi Boccherini (compositor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1743)
  • Josh Trank (argumentista, montador, produtor cinematográfico, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1984)
  • Steve James (argumentista, ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, dublê, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1952)
  • Gwen Taylor (ator, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1939)
  • Liz Carmouche (carateca, lutador de artes marciais mistas, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1984)
  • Rick Dufay (guitarrista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1952)
  • Karen Silkwood (ativista, químico, sindicalista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1946)
  • Elsa Iwanowna Leschdei (ator, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1933)
  • Caitlin Hale (ator, ator de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1991)
  • Matt Bettinelli-Olpin (ator, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1978)
  • Veronica Pivetti (apresentador de televisão, ator, ator/atriz de teatro, ator/atriz de voz, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1965)
  • Emiliano Salinas (analista financeiro, economista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1976)
  • Lucio Fontana (ceramista, designer, escultor, pintor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1899)
  • Gabriele Münter (desenhista, gravador, pintor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1877)
  • Cedric Hardwicke (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, produtor cinematográfico, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1893)
  • Sonia Ben Ammar (ator, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1999)
  • Boris Pugo (político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1937)
  • Siri Hustvedt (autor, ensaísta, escritor(a), poeta, romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1955)
  • Carolyn Maloney (escritor(a), político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1946)
  • Gregory D. Gadson (ator, oficial militar, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1966)
  • Prince Markie Dee (DJ, autor-compositor, músico(a), produtor de música, produtor(a) musical, radialista, rapper, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1960)
  • Mike Miller (jogador de basquetebol, treinador de basquetebol, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1980)
  • Sven Hedin (cientista político, desenhista, escritor de não ficção, escritor(a), explorador, explorador cientifíco, fotógrafo, geógrafo(a), geólogo(a), naturalista, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1865)
  • Hana Mandlíková (tenista, treinador de ténis, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1962)
  • Helen Fielding (argumentista, escritor(a), jornalista, romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1958)
  • Dick Emery (ator, ator de televisão, comediante, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1915)
  • Doug Aldrich (autor-compositor, guitarrista, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1964)
  • Sam Kim (autor-compositor, cantor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1998)
  • Zygmunt Krasiński (dramaturgo, escritor(a), filósofo, poeta, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1812)
  • Griffin Newman (ator, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1989)
  • Sławomir Peszko (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1985)
  • Kyle Martino (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1981)
  • Sascha Grammel (marioneteiro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1974)
  • Galina Dzhugashvili (linguista, tradutor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1938)
  • Augusto B. Leguía y Salcedo (economista, empresário(a), político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1863)
  • Katja Schuurman (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, cantor, jornalista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1975)
  • Geneviève Waïte (ator de cinema, cantor, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1948)
  • Alma Deutscher (artista mirim, compositor(a), pianista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 2005)
  • Bassnectar (DJ, compositor(a), produtor cinematográfico, produtor de música, produtor(a) musical, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1978)
  • Kujō Yoritsune (samurai, nascido em 12 de fevereiro de 1218)
  • Sunset Thomas (ator, ator de cinema, ator/atriz pornográfico(a), modelo, prostituto(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1972)
  • Reon Kadena (ator, modelo, modelo de fotografia erótica, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Björn Gustafsson (ator, ator de televisão, comediante, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Vivi Lee (ator, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1976)
  • Rika Zaraï (ator/atriz de teatro, cantor, compositor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1938)
  • Meinoud Rost van Tonningen (banqueiro, diplomata, jornalista, político, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1894)
  • Louis Calhern (ator, ator de cinema, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1895)
  • Burton C. Bell (cantor, compositor(a), guitarrista, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1969)
  • Ryad Boudebouz (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1990)
  • Carol McCain (modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1938)
  • Minh-Khai Phan-Thi (apresentador de televisão, argumentista, ator de cinema, realizador de cinema, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1974)
  • Michael Gira (cantor, compositor(a), escritor(a), guitarrista, músico(a), poeta, produtor(a) musical, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1954)
  • Jessica Tuck (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1963)
  • Oleg Grigorjewitsch Mitjajew (ator, autor-compositor, cantautor(a), compositor(a), guitarrista, letrista, poeta, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1956)
  • Maria Mena (ator/atriz de voz, cantautor(a), cantor, músico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1986)
  • Tom Mikulla (ator de cinema, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1969)
  • Kathleen Beller (ator, ator de cinema, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1956)
  • Mary Anderson (inventor, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1866)
  • Jeff Immelt (empreendedor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1956)
  • Lezley Zen (ator, ator de cinema, ator/atriz pornográfico(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1974)
  • Elizabeth Sackler (ativista, historiador(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1948)
  • Dwight Freeney (jogador de futebol americano, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1980)
  • Malky Mackay (futebolista, treinador de futebol, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1972)
  • Gareth Pierce (ator, ator de televisão, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1981)
  • Sonu Walia (ator, competidor de concurso de beleza, modelo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1964)
  • Nicolas Hayek (empreendedor(a), nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1928)
  • Fernando Marçal Oliveira (futebolista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1989)
  • Florence Green (comissário de bordo, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1901)
  • David Margulies (ator de cinema, ator de televisão, ator/atriz de teatro, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1937)
  • Jonathan Lethem (autor, ensaísta, escritor de ficção científica, escritor(a), romancista, nascido em 19 de fevereiro de 1964)

19th of February 1995 News

Notícias como apareceu na primeira página do New York Times em 19 de fevereiro de 1995

Tempering Troubled Waters

Date: 20 February 1995

By Catherine S. Manegold

Catherine Manegold

At a noisy time in an organization never known for its quiet understatement, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has turned to a leader who has shown that her silences can be as powerful as any oratory. When Myrlie Evers-Williams took her place before a restless crowd of supporters on Saturday night after a raucous day of chants, shouts and loud complaint, the packed ballroom fell quiet. The newly elected board chairwoman of the rights organization calmly adjusted her wire-rimmed glasses and smiled. Without a word, she raised her hands to her lips. Then she blew the room a kiss.

Full Article

Simpson Case Gives Cable An Edge on the Networks

Date: 20 February 1995

By Lawrie Mifflin

Lawrie Mifflin

While jurors and trial watchers ponder the DNA factor in the O. J. Simpson trial, it's the CNN factor that is worrying people inside the news divisions of the three major television networks. A news story as big and juicy as Mr. Simpson's murder trial would once have attracted huge audiences to the networks' evening news programs. But in the age of CNN, which is available in about two-thirds of the nation's households, the Simpson trial has done the opposite: it has taken viewers away from the newscasts, reducing their weeknight audiences as much as 10 percent. While specifics are hard to come by, those audience losses, if sustained for a few months, could cost the networks hundreds of thousands of dollars a week. When a big story breaks -- or unfolds, as with the Simpson trial -- Americans need not wait to get home and hear a brief account of it from Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings or Dan Rather and Connie Chung. Instead, they can flip to CNN at their convenience for the latest -- often live -- coverage. And they can do so from offices, hotels or airport lounges. The Simpson case is the most dramatic, and melodramatic, example of this phenomenon to date. Because the trial is taking place in Los Angeles, live coverage on CNN and Court TV continues well into the evening in the East and Midwest -- often as late as 8 P.M., but certainly through the network news time slots. And the fact that a trial is a continuing defined event makes it easy to know when to tune in. With other kinds of dominant news events -- a foreign war, an earthquake or other disaster -- viewers might be better served by the summing-up coverage offered in a scheduled newscast. "You just have to look at CNN's ratings and Court TV's ratings," said Andrew Lack, president of NBC News, "especially in the 5 to 7 P.M. Eastern time period, and the correlation is so strikingly clear: O. J. is the only explanation." CNN's afternoon ratings for the first three weeks of the Simpson trial coverage were 5.1, 5.6 and 6.3 -- far above its 0.7 average for that time period. And the ratings for Court TV were even higher -- as much as double those of CNN in the 20 million homes that receive both CNN and Court TV. At the same time, the evening news ratings for ABC, CBS and NBC have declined, collectively, nearly two ratings points from the period in 1994, to an average of 9.4 from 11.3 last year. CNN's ratings do not directly compare with the networks' because CNN is available in about 64 million homes, while all three main networks reach about 95 million homes. A CNN rating point represents 658,000 households, while a Court TV rating point equals 200,000 households. A network rating point represents 954,000 households. The Simpson trial has aggravated an overall decline in the network nightly news ratings. The collective audience for network news has shrunk from a 77 share in 1979-80 -- that is, network news was on 77 percent of all sets that were tuned to something -- to a 58 share last season and a 54 so far this season. That shrinkage is costly. In the last year, the three networks have each added a minute of commercial time to their nightly newscasts to make up some revenue. But it is too early to tell how costly the Simpson-related defections will be. Generally, advertisers buy commercial time in news packages that include the evening news and morning shows like "Today" or "Good Morning America" and prime-time news programs like "Dateline" or "20/20." So as the year progresses, the ratings for these packages may recover enough so that the networks meet their minimum-ratings guarantees to advertisers. "Still," Mr. Lack of NBC said, "if this trial goes on for four or five months and the audience for it remains undiminished, we'll take a significant economic hit." A media buyer with many clients who advertise on news programs, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "I think people will get tired of this trial as it drags on. But if audiences stay down or erode further, and the trial lasts until mid-May or June 1, it could cost a network $1 million or more per week." David F. Poltrack, executive vice president for planning and research at CBS, said, "Even after accounting for the normal pattern of erosion we've been seeing, the network news audiences are down about 10 percent since the O. J. Simpson trial began" on Jan. 24. The trial also provides daily fodder for tabloid television, talk shows and local newscasts, as well as radio programs -- all potential competition for the network newscasts. "It's a relatively recent phenomenon of our business that people have so many choices at any given time," said Mr. Brokaw, the anchor and managing editor for the NBC Nightly News. "I sometimes say, in not entirely mock frustration, that when I started out in the 1960's, there were effectively two network news programs, and at 6:30 P.M. people turned on either Huntley-Brinkley or Walter Cronkite and got their news for the day. And I'd like to have that back again." The networks will never regain such a near-monopoly. But not all agree that the Simpson trial will accelerate the long-term erosion of the network news audience. "The O. J. trial is unique in terms of the huge interest in it and the availability of live coverage on a regular schedule," said Lane Venardos, a vice president for news and special events at CBS. "Those two streams converged to make this a larger-than-life event, and I don't think we'll see that again soon." Mr. Lack seems to agree. "Last year, when we had the L.A. earthquake, for example, CNN's ratings didn't spike up the way they have for O. J.," he said. "Most people still tuned in to us at night to get the major news coverage." This time last year, intense interest was focused on the assault on the Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan by men said to have been commissioned by her rival Tonya Harding. "With the Nancy-Tonya story, people couldn't get any better or more coverage from CNN than they could get on the network news," Mr. Poltrack said. "But a lot of people would rather watch O. J. itself live, instead of the network news account of it later." Indeed, figures from CNN show that Simpson-related events have been the highest-rated programs on cable television in the last 14 months excluding National Football League games. Mr. Venardos of CBS said the network news divisions had offered extended live coverage of the 1989 and 1994 California earthquakes and of the Persian Gulf war. They also covered the opening statements in the Simpson trial live and will presumably televise the closing statements and the verdict. "Any time there's a big enough event, we can break in and go live," Mr. Venardos said. "CNN does not have the franchise on live coverage of news events." But CNN, which will celebrate its 15th birthday in June, does not have to worry about pre-empting lucrative entertainment programming. A broadcast network loses money whenever it bumps afternoon soap operas or prime-time shows to cover news live. The same big news story can earn extra money for CNN because its ratings go up. Mr. Brokaw cautioned those who would conclude that the cable ratings for the Simpson trial were an omen of future decline for network news audiences, because of this story's "soap opera quality." "In most instances," he said, "a big story will take away from us for 24 hours or so, and then the country gets back to normal."

Full Article

Press Protests 'Gag' Bills In Argentina

Date: 19 February 1995

By Calvin Sims

Calvin Sims

The administration of President Carlos Sal Menem sent three bills to Congress last month that could muzzle the press in this an election year if they are approved, advocates of free speech say. The bills, which have a good chance of passing the Menem-controlled legislature, would greatly increase the penalties for libel and slander, make it a crime to offend the memory of the dead, and force news outlets to take out costly libel insurance.

Full Article

Book Links Former British Labor Party Chief to K.G.B.

Date: 20 February 1995

By Richard W. Stevenson

Richard Stevenson

A British newspaper reported today that Michael Foot, the leader of the opposition Labor Party in the early 1980's, had met with Soviet K.G.B. agents during the 1960's and accepted a series of cash payments for a left-wing newspaper he ran. The report in The Sunday Times said that at the time the Soviet intelligence service considered Mr. Foot, who is now 81 and retired from active politics, to be one its "agents of influence" in Britain.

Full Article

By Any Name, Is It Garbage?

Date: 20 February 1995

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

It is true that newspapers have been insulted forever. Birdcage liner. Fish wrap. That kind of thing. But Judge Don Gladstone of the Municipal Court in Sparks, Nev., could earn a place in the antimedia hall of fame with a recent ruling. He made a formal determination that the local paper in Sparks qualified as "garbage, rubbish or waste" under the law. It seems that a Mr. Donald Glock, a resident of Sparks, which is on the outskirts of Reno, had made it clear that he did not want The Daily Sparks Tribune left on his driveway, either by the neighborhood 12-year-old newspaper carrier or anyone else. The 7,000-circulation paper, like many other publications, sometimes gives out free copies to attract subscribers. This promotional tactic definitely did not work with Mr. Glock. He filed a criminal complaint. According to legal documents, "Mr. Glock received three (3) unsolicited newspapers on his driveway between May 2, 1994 and Nov. 17, 1994." The City Attorney pursued the case under section 7.08.040 of the Sparks municipal code, which declares it unlawful to "deposit, or cause to be deposited, any garbage, rubbish or waste" within the city limits. After a trial, Judge Gladstone found the paper guilty and fined it $1,000 plus $100 in costs. Randy C. Frisch, president of the Sparks Tribune Publishing Company, the newspaper's parent, filed an appeal in January arguing First Amendment protection to distribute newspapers. The Nevada Press Association has filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of Sparks Tribune. Publishers in several states have resisted littering laws that aimed to free homeowners from the annoyance of unwanted newspaper deliveries. But in the Sparks case, the constitutional battle seems to be quite personal. Mr. Frisch said Judge Gladstone was biased. Why? "Because I have spent six years writing editorials about how incompetent the judge is," Mr. Frisch explained. Judge Gladstone said he decided each case on its legal merits and would not respond to Mr. Frisch. But he hinted that the publisher simply resented his independence. "I work for the City of Sparks," Judge Gladstone said. "I do not work for a newspaper or any other group." Despite the heat of the dispute, however, Mr. Frisch insisted that he was not insulted by the legal interpretation that his newspaper could be described as garbage. "You have to have respect for the interpreter before you can be insulted," he said.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 20 February 1995

International A2-7 PRICE OF A BAILOUT The U.S. is preparing to announce details of its plan to help rescue Mexico from its currency crisis, including toughened restrictions that will most likely send interest rates in Mexico soaring. A1 RESPITE IN AFGHANISTAN WAR A 13-month siege of Kabul has ended with the city in ruins and much of Afghanistan in the hands of a new and mysterious force led by Muslim clerics known as the Taliban. A1 WEDDING OF SERBIAN NATIONALIST The paramilitary commander known as Arkan married Serbia's best-loved folk singer in a wedding that fused Serbia's nationalist harkening for a folkloric past and its embrace of the spoils of war. A3 EGYPT CRITICIZES ISRAEL Egypt's Foreign Minister says serious difficulties have emerged in his country's relations with Israel over its nuclear weapons program and the state of peace talks. A3 CORRUPTION CASE HITS CHINA A prominent steel company chairman and close friend of Deng Xiaoping has resigned and his son has been arrested for "certain commercial crimes," Chinese officials said. A2 BRITON IS LINKED TO K.G.B. A British newspaper reported that Michael Foot, the leader of the opposition Labor Party in the early 1980's, accepted payments from Soviet agents during the 1960's for a left-wing newspaper he ran. A6 SOUTH AFRICA DEATH SQUAD TRIAL In the new South Africa's first hard look at its recent past, a court is scheduled to begin the trial of the colonel who presided over a notorious police unit that fought the opponents of apartheid. A7 New evidence is offered against a former Italian leader. A6 Corofin Journal: Harsh memories of Ireland's potato famine. A4 National A8-13 REPORT FAILS SCHOOLS A national study says employers are rapidly losing confidence in the ability of the nation's schools to adequately prepare young people for the workplace. A1 AND NOW, THE NEXT . . . With the primary just a year away, contenders for the 1996 Republican Presidential nomination made early pitches to challenge President Clinton. A1 'A RELUCTANT REBEL' Woman in the News: Being "very vocal" is a familiar role for Myrlie Evers-Williams, but it was not always that way. She was, in fact, a reluctant rebel at first. A1 NEW FOCUS FOR N.A.A.C.P. The N.A.A.C.P.'s new chairwoman, Myrlie Evers-Williams, struck a conciliatory note, hoping to take the focus away from the organization's internal problems and toward a new era of renewed relevance. A10 RESEARCH FUNDS MAY BE REDUCED After decades of strong support, the National Institutes of Health and its annual research budget of $11.3 billion are now being scrutinized by House Republicans looking to cut the Federal budget deficit. A8 THE CONNOISSEURS OF COLD Scientists who live and work at an observatory 6,288 feet above sea level call themselves weather junkies. They crave extremes. And when it comes to extreme winter, Mount Washington is the place to be. A8 MORE TANGLING OVER NOMINEE The Senate majority leader, Robert Dole, said the White House ought to withdraw the nomination of Dr. Henry W. Foster Jr. as Surgeon General, but the President gave no indication that he would. A11 GINGRICH COURSE QUESTIONED The House ethics committee is looking into a course being taught by Speaker Newt Gingrich after critics questioned the use of his House office and political contributions to set it up. A12 GAY BLACKS PLEDGE FIGHT Organizers of a weekend gathering of the National Black Lesbian and Gay Leadership Summit said they needed to work harder to counter the efforts of religious conservatives and the new Congress. A13 Metro Digest B1 PEQUOTS ADJUST TO JACKPOT The cash-raking phenomenon of Foxwoods Casino has given the Mashantucket Pequot tribe of Connecticut a rocket ride to a new world. But it has its stresses, like cultural shock and racial tension. A1 FULL SERVICE, BUT NOT ABORTION Slowly, quietly, over the last 10 years, almost all New York City's full-service hospitals have backed out of the abortion business, driven away in part by economics and in part by fear. A1 Sports C1-8 Auto Racing: Marlin holds off Earnhardt. C1 Baseball: Jays spare Gaston. C1 Managers work, and hope. C4 Basketball: Knicks and Ewing top Rockets. C1 Loss to cost Tar Heels No.1. C2 UMass makes a statement. C2 Columns: Vecsey on the tax. C4 Araton on Riley. C8 Skating: Another controversy. C3 Sports People C8 Business Digest D1 Neediest Cases B2 Obituaries B8 Massimo Pallottino, an Italian archeologist. Arts/Entertainment C9-16 "King Arthur" in France. C9 Lawrence L. Langer's view of the Holocaust. C9 Theater: "A Dybbuk." C9 Music: Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg and Neeme Jarvi. C14 Slayer at Roseland. C14 Books: A goal for Amerian education. C15 Television: "Dance in America." B6 Editorials/Op-Ed A14-15 Editorials Microsoft back in the dock. An investment worth saving. Strengthening public housing. Letters William Safire: Cover-up triumphs. Anthony Lewis: Crime and politics. Harvey Ginsberg: Everyone owned a Lincoln. John F. Heimerdinger: Help the blind? Change the dollar. Bridge B6 Chronicle B6 Crossword C16

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 19 February 1995

International 3-18 RUSSIA'S DECLINING HEALTH Russia is caught in a health crisis. Curable diseases have reached epidemic levels, and cancer and heart disease are higher than in any other industrialized country. 1 TURNING POINT IN AFGHANISTAN A U.N. effort to bring peace to Afghanistan reached a critical point as an envoy launched an effort to bring the main warring groups into a new coalition Government. 3

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World News Briefs; Iran Urges Revisions In Nuclear Treaty

Date: 19 February 1995

Iran said today that it would oppose an unlimited extension of the treaty against the spread of nuclear weapons, which expires in April, and called for a revision in the accord binding signatories to a deadline for the destruction of nuclear weapons. Iran's delegate to the United Nations, Kamal Kharrazi, told the official Iranian press agency that although Teheran agreed with the treaty, it would oppose any agreement extending it indefinitely.

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World News Briefs; Bosnian Forces Battle Rebel Muslims

Date: 19 February 1995

SARAJEVO, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Feb. 18

Sarajevo

Government troops and the forces of a renegade Muslim leader fought today for control of Bosnia's northwestern Bihac enclave, ignoring a United Nations call for an immediate cease-fire. The fighting began at dawn when the rebels apparently launched an offensive to reclaim territory the Government forces had recently captured.

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SUNDAY, February 19, 1995: CLICHE WATCH; Call It Infectious

Date: 19 February 1995

When a snappy first sentence is needed, there's one that's very much in favor now. "Call it Rickigate." On a fur protest by Ricki Lake, talk show host. New York Post, Nov. 16, 1994.

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