Rejouer samedi 12 septembre 1992

Le 12 septembre 1992 était un samedi sous le signe astral du . C'était le 255ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était George Bush.

Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 33 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le vendredi 12 septembre 2025, il y a 286 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le samedi 12 septembre 2026, dans 78 jours. Vous avez vécu 12 339 jours, soit environ 296 158 heures, ou environ 17 769 520 minutes, ou environ 1 066 171 200 secondes.

Quelques personnes qui partagent cet anniversaire:

  • Paul Walker (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, biologiste marin, pilote automobile, producteur de cinéma, scénariste, né le 12 septembre 1973)
  • Hans Zimmer (compositeur, compositeur de musique de film, guitariste, musicien, pianiste, réalisateur artistique, né le 12 septembre 1957)
  • Kim Nam-joon (artiste d'enregistrement, auteur-compositeur, rappeur, réalisateur artistique, né le 12 septembre 1994)
  • Emmy Rossum (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, artiste lyrique, chanteur, né le 12 septembre 1986)
  • Jesse Owens (athlète, sprinteur, né le 12 septembre 1913)
  • Yao Ming (autobiographe, basketteur, entrepreneur, né le 12 septembre 1980)
  • Jennifer Hudson (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, artiste, auteur-compositeur-interprète, musicien, porte-parole, né le 12 septembre 1981)
  • Louis C.K. (chanteur, né le 12 septembre 1967)
  • Sydney Sweeney (acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1997)
  • Irène Joliot-Curie (chimiste, personnalité politique, physicien, physicien nucléaire, professeur, scientifique, né le 12 septembre 1897)
  • Marika Matsumoto (acteur, seiyū, né le 12 septembre 1984)
  • Leslie Cheung (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, auteur-compositeur, chanteur, compositeur, réalisateur, né le 12 septembre 1956)
  • Yang Mi (acteur, chanteur, producteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1986)
  • Ian Holm (acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1931)
  • Benjamin McKenzie (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, producteur de cinéma, scénariste, économiste, né le 12 septembre 1978)
  • Barry White (acteur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, chef d'orchestre, chef de fanfare, compositeur, réalisateur artistique, né le 12 septembre 1944)
  • Joe Pantoliano (acteur, producteur de cinéma, scénariste, né le 12 septembre 1951)
  • Mylène Farmer (acteur, artiste d'enregistrement, auteur de littérature pour la jeunesse, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, musicien, poète, réalisateur artistique, écrivain, né le 12 septembre 1961)
  • Elina Svitolina (joueur de tennis, né le 12 septembre 1994)
  • Feroze Gandhi (journaliste, personnalité politique, né le 12 septembre 1912)
  • Alfie Allen (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1986)
  • Neil Peart (auteur-compositeur, batteur, compositeur, musicien de jazz, parolier, réalisateur artistique, écrivain, né le 12 septembre 1952)
  • Freddie Freeman (joueur de baseball, né le 12 septembre 1989)
  • Stanisław Lem (chercheur, dramaturge, essayiste, futurologue, médecin, philosophe, poète, satiriste, scénariste, écrivain, écrivain de science-fiction, né le 12 septembre 1921)
  • Ken'ichi Suzumura (acteur, animateur de radio, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, seiyū, voix-off, né le 12 septembre 1974)
  • Yūto Nagatomo (joueur de football, né le 12 septembre 1986)
  • Amala Akkineni (acteur, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1968)
  • Greg Gutfeld (animateur de télévision, journaliste, né le 12 septembre 1964)
  • Peter Scolari (acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de théâtre, producteur de cinéma, réalisateur, né le 12 septembre 1955)
  • Andrew Luck (joueur de football américain, né le 12 septembre 1989)
  • Silvia Pinal (acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, personnalité politique, producteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1931)
  • Hiroyuki Sawano (arrangeur musical, compositeur, compositeur de musique de film, parolier, pianiste, réalisateur artistique, né le 12 septembre 1980)
  • Kelsea Ballerini (artiste d'enregistrement, auteur-compositeur, chanteur, né le 12 septembre 1993)
  • Amy Yasbeck (acteur, né le 12 septembre 1962)
  • Michel Drucker (animateur de radio, animateur de télévision, journaliste, pilote d'hélicoptère, producteur de télévision, écrivain, né le 12 septembre 1942)
  • Jessica Seinfeld (écrivain, né le 12 septembre 1971)
  • Rachel Ward (acteur, acteur de cinéma, mannequin, réalisateur, scénariste, né le 12 septembre 1957)
  • Desmond Llewelyn (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1914)
  • Keiko Toda (acteur, chanteur, enfant acteur, narrateur, seiyū, tarento, né le 12 septembre 1957)
  • Linda Gray (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, mannequin, producteur de cinéma, né le 12 septembre 1940)
  • James McCartney (auteur-compositeur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, guitariste, multi-instrumentiste, musicien, sculpteur, né le 12 septembre 1977)
  • 2 Chainz (auteur-compositeur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, basketteur, compositeur, producteur, rappeur, réalisateur, réalisateur artistique, né le 12 septembre 1977)
  • Barham Salih (personnalité politique, né le 12 septembre 1960)
  • Thomas Meunier (joueur de football, né le 12 septembre 1991)
  • George Jones (artiste d'enregistrement, auteur-compositeur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, guitariste, né le 12 septembre 1931)
  • Elisabetta Canalis (acteur, acteur de cinéma, animateur de télévision, mannequin, modèle, showgirl, né le 12 septembre 1978)
  • Vadivelu (acteur, acteur de cinéma, né le 12 septembre 1960)
  • Joe Laurinaitis (catcheur, né le 12 septembre 1960)
  • Ryan Potter (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de télévision, né le 12 septembre 1995)
  • Jennifer Nettles (acteur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, guitariste, pianiste, né le 12 septembre 1974)

12th of September 1992 News

Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 12 septembre 1992

Judge Gives Daily News An Extension

Date: 12 September 1992

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

A bankruptcy judge yesterday set a new deadline of next Thursday for resolving who is to own The Daily News. Otherwise, she said she would almost certainly approve an across-the-board wage cut of at least 10 percent at the bankrupt paper. Effectively, the ruling gives Mortimer B. Zuckerman, who is trying to buy the paper, until Thursday to reach agreements with the Newspaper Guild and the paper's creditors, both of whom yesterday expressed strong opposition to Mr. Zuckerman's current offer to them.

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Woman in the News; A Determined Breaker of Boundaries -- Mae Carol Jemison

Date: 13 September 1992

By Warren E. Leary

Warren Leary

As a young girl growing up on the South Side of Chicago, Mae C. Jemison watched telecasts of the Gemini and Apollo spaceflights and knew that that was her destiny. No matter that all the astronauts were male and white and that she was female and black. She simply knew she would be a space traveler. Now a 35-year-old doctor and engineer, Dr. Jemison has realized her dream, launching into orbit yesterday as one of the shuttle Endeavor's seven-member crew. In the process she has become the first African-American woman to go into space.

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It's the Christie Brinkley Show

Date: 13 September 1992

By Degen Pener

Degen Pener

Christie Brinkley, the supermodel whose interests range from designing dresses to herding cattle, is joining the Cable News Network this week. At 10:30 A.M. E.D.T. tommorrow, "Living in the 90's With Christie Brinkley," a daily half-hour show, will premiere on the nuts-and-bolts news channel. Ms. Brinkley has worked as a reporter only once before -- she did a four-part series on beauty tips for "Good Morning America" in 1983 -- so being in CNN's newsroom is still fresh for her.

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Beliefs

Date: 12 September 1992

By Peter Steinfels

Peter Steinfels

Politically, homosexual rights will be in the 1990's what abortion rights were in the 1980's. People on all points of the political spectrum are making that observation these days, a few with relish, most with dread. They know that the abortion conflict inflamed public life without even moving society very far toward a point of resolution. It need not have been that way. Not that reaching a workable political consensus about a moral issue like abortion is easy under the best of circumstances: the political process is attuned to splitting the difference, not examining basic principles. But the task certainly became harder once the debate managed to eliminate a broad middle range of opinion that favors neither abortion on demand nor a ban on abortion in nearly all circumstances.

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Accountants Sue Phar-Mor

Date: 12 September 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The accounting firm Coopers & Lybrand has filed a countersuit against Phar-Mor Inc., the discount drugstore chain, charging that for years it was riddled with fraud that forced it to seek bankruptcy protection last month. Coopers & Lybrand said Thursday that it wanted protection from any actions relating to Phar-Mor and wants to be reimbursed for legal costs and damages.

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GEORGIA BONDED FIBERS IN SHOE-CUSHION DEAL

Date: 12 September 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Georgia Bonded Fibers Inc. said yesterday that it had reached a manufacturing and marketing agreement with E-A-R Specialty Composites, Indianapolis, to sell shoe-cushion products to footwear manufacturers worldwide. Georgia Bonded said the two companies would market the products under the trade name Maxxon LS and combine aspects of Georgia Bonded's Bontex products and E-A-R's high-density Isoloss urethane foams. E-A-R is a unit of the Cabot Corporation, Boston, which has operations in specialty chemicals and materials, and energy.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 12 September 1992

International 2-4 IRAQI ASSETS SOUGHT FOR KURDS The United States, Britain and France are planning new Security Council resolutions to seize blocked Iraqi funds to buy food and medicine for needy Kurds and to start compensating victims of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. 3 BELGRADE AND ZAGREB IN ACCORD Cyrus R. Vance, the U.N. envoy to the former Yugoslavia, announced that Croatia and federal Yugoslavia had agreed to reopen a major road between their capitals and to establish a demilitarized zone on a fiercely disputed peninsula in the west. 3 A GAULLIST SAYS NO ON EUROPE If French voters reject a treaty on European union in a referendum on Sept. 20, a 49-year-old Gaullist legislator will undoubtedly take his place in French history as the force who took on the establishment in the campaign to defeat the treaty. 2 ISRAELI EQUANIMITY ON GOLAN News analysis: Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the reaction to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's assertions of Israel's willingness to withdraw from parts of the Golan Heights has been the equanimity with which his proposals have been received by Israelis. 4 TROUBLE FOR ITALY'S PREMIER With unusual speed, the fortunes of Italy's Prime Minister, Giuliano Amato, have been upended, leaving him to face an autumn of discontent after a summer in which his fragile Government could do no wrong. 2 President Yeltsin warned of dangers to his economic program. 3 Ireland's Premier is coming to the U.S. to look for jobs. 4 Maceio Journal: The coastal haven of a top Brazilian aide. 4 National 5-9 BUSH APPROVES JET SALE TO SAUDIS Once again demonstrating the advantages of incumbency in an election year, the President authorized the sale of F-15 fighter aircraft to Saudi Arabia. The deal, unlikely to be blocked by Congress, would help secure thousands of jobs. 1 In a new ad, Bush turns hawker, replete with 800 number. 6 Two Truman aides recall how it really was. 6 CLINTON SPEAKS OF VALUES Extemporaneously defending himself against repeated heckling by anti-abortion protesters, Governor Clinton told an audience at the University of Notre Dame that the Republicans were promoting intolerance that threatened to divide the nation along religious lines. 1 THE ROCK-BOTTOM BOTTOM LINE The low fares of this summer succeeded in putting record numbers of passengers into airplanes, but executives and analysts say the sale was disastrous to the industry. 1 HARD TIMES IN HOMESTEAD The first signs of normalcy had barely begun reappearing in the hurricane-battered town of Homestead, Fla., when word came that a Senate committee had declined to provide money to rebuild the Air Force base there. Yesterday there was more bad news: the Cleveland Indians put off plans to go to Homestead for spring training. 1 HURRICANE BEARS DOWN ON HAWAII Thousands of people fled beachfront homes and hotels as the leading edge of a powerful hurricane began pummeling the Hawaiian islands. 8 UNCLE SAM STILL WANTS YOU The military is having trouble signing up recruits, in part because, given the fact that the Pentagon is actually paying many troops to leave, there is a perception that new ones are not needed or wanted. 5 NEW CUT IN ATOM ARMS COMPLEX Proceeding with its program to shrink the nuclear arms industry, the Energy Department said it would immediately scrap its effort to build a new reactor to produce tritium, a radioactive gas used in atomic bombs. 5 BLACK BAPTISTS MEET IN ATLANTA Delegates to the 112th annual gathering of the National Baptist Convention U.S.A. talked of being buffeted by a host of secular concerns. 9 Beliefs: Gay rights as the issue of conflict for the 90's. 9 The Times announced appointments to three major editing posts. 9 Preparations proceeded for a shuttle launching today. 5 Metro Digest 23 TOUGH ANTI-SMOKING CAMPAIGN The New York City Council is poised to adopt a law that would make the city the first in the country to force the tobacco and advertising industries to pay for anti-smoking advertisements. 1 FINANCING A WOULD-BE SENATOR Money is coming into the Democratic Senate campaigns of Geraldine A. Ferraro, Elizabeth Holtzman and Robert Abrams from different places. Ms. Ferraro has received nearly a third of her money from contributors who do not live in New York. Ms. Holtzman has relied heavily on investment firms that seek bond underwriting business from her office. Mr. Abrams has received hundreds of thousands of dollars from lawyers. 1 BIAGGI'S BACK Mario Biaggi, the former Bronx Democratic Congressman who was too sick to serve his full prison term, is feeling better. So much better that he is running for Congress again. 1 Business Digest 33 Consumer's World 11 Orwellian dream come true: a badge that pinpoints you. More range, less static in new cordless phones. A dress shoe proud to be a lightweight. Pricetag: Getting a haircut. Guidepost Arts/Entertainment 13-16 New sound in a San Francisco concert hall. 13 Theater in Review 15 Film: "Hellraiser III." 14 Music: Music Notes 13 Joe Cocker at Radio City. 15 Dance: The Yard in New York. 13 Sports 28-32 Baseball: Saberhagen loses in relief. 31 Yanks beat Royals, 2-1. 31 Pirates' lead shrinks. 30 Column: Rhoden on the N.F.L. 29 Football: Will players be free? 29 McNeil discusses the free-agency verdict. 32 Collins profits from verdict. 32 Golf: Bad seniors start for Floyd. 32 SportsPeople 28 Track: Athletics Congress leader under pressure. 32 Tennis: Seles vs. Sanchez Vicario in final. 29 Edberg prevails over Lendl. 29 Obituaries 10 Dr. George Crile Jr., foe of unneeded surgery. Dr. Evelyn B. Man, a biochemist. Harold Louis Humes, a novelist and a Paris Review co-founder. Harriet W. Sheridan, professor and dean at Brown University. Editorials/Op-Ed 20-21 Editorials The Syrian peace shock. Family values from family leave. A wise labor pact. For Civil Court. Letters Russell Baker: Money's best friend. Robert R. Macdonald: Bad blood at a burial ground. Flora Lewis: Civil society, the police and abortion. Katrina vanden Heuvel: Women of Russia, unite! Jonathan M. Tisch: Mugging the tourists.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 13 September 1992

International 3-23 TO FRANCE, EUROPE COMES 2d

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The New Season, Strictly by the Numbers

Date: 13 September 1992

DATAILS, DETAILS, IT TAKES time, money and a lot of other ingredients to make the new season happen. You need picture wire. Piano tuners. Wigs. Bees (for the horror flick). Never let it be said, however, that there are too many details to count. Here are 50 selected sums that may add up to a winning year. *Estimated pairs of toe shoes worn out by American Ballet Theater members during the company's eight-week spring season at the Metropolitan Opera House: 3,500

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Honda Cutting Ties to Auto Racing

Date: 12 September 1992

By Andrew Pollack

Andrew Pollack

The Honda Motor Company said today that it would end its participation in Formula One auto racing at the end of this season -- a sign of changing priorities and tough times for the automobile industry. Honda, which supplies engines to Formula One teams, said it wanted to turn its attention to making low-polluting engines, not superfast ones. By suspending its development of racing car engines, Honda will free 100 engineers to work on emissions control, alternative-fuel technology and other projects the company would not specify.

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