2004年2月16日月曜日 の再生

2004年2月16日は、%sの星印の下の月曜日でした。 それはその年の**♒日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は46**でした。

この日に生まれた場合、あなたはGeorge W. Bush歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は222026年2月16日月曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は1102027年2月16日火曜日日です。 あなたは254日、または約8,146時間、または約195,525分、または約11,731,531秒生きてきました。

この誕生日を共有する一部の人々:

16th of February 2004 News

ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 2004年2月16日 で掲載されたニュース

World Business Briefing | Asia: Japan: Cosmetics Merger Dropped

Date: 17 February 2004

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

World Business Briefing: Japan: Cosmetics Merger

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El Paso to Sell Most Of Its Canada Unit

Date: 17 February 2004

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

BG Group PLC agrees to buy most of El Paso Corp's busie

Full Article

World Business Briefing | Australia: Bank Executive Resigns

Date: 17 February 2004

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

National Australia Bank chairman Charles Allen resigns, joining chief executive Frank Cicutto in taking responsibility for foreign-currency trading losses of 252 million Australian dollars ($199 million); Graham Kraehe will become chairman; John Stewart succeeded Cicutto, who resigned two weeks ago; photo (S)

Full Article

NCR to Buy a Competitor

Date: 17 February 2004

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

NCR plans to buy Optimal Robotics Corp's self-checkout business for $30 million, adding competitor's machines in growing retail-sales area (S)

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 17 February 2004

INTERNATIONAL A3-9 Haiti's Leader Defiant In Face of Protests President Jean-Bertrand Aristide of Haiti, defiant in the face of an increasingly violent movement aimed at removing him from office, denounced that movement as an attempt to overthrow the country's elected government by force and declared that only he can save Haiti from a civil war. A3 Kremlin's Media Power More than a dozen years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, what Russians see on the news remains subject to the only rating system that counts: the Kremlin's. The result has been flattering portrayals of President Vladimir V. Putin that are drawing comparisons to Soviet broadcasts and prompting warnings that the state's control over the airwaves has become one of the most significant obstacles to a democratic society. A1

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 16 February 2004

INTERNATIONAL A3-8 Elections in Afghanistan May Be Postponed The Bush administration has begun suggesting that Afghanistan's elections may have to be postponed because of security problems and the failure to register enough voters. A1

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Good News: Cold Will End. By June. July at the Latest.

Date: 16 February 2004

By Patrick Healy

Patrick Healy

Cold persists in New York, but scientist promises relief as tilt of Earth's axis tilts causes Northern Hemisphere to lean toward Sun; photo (M)

Full Article

MSNBC Is Said to Have a New Chief

Date: 17 February 2004

By Jacques Steinberg

Jacques Steinberg

NBC decides to replace Erik Sorenson, who has been president and general manager of its MSNBC cable channel since 2001, with Richard N Kaplan, senior vice president of ABC News and former CNN's United States operations (M)

Full Article

On Russian TV, Whatever Putin Wants, He Gets

Date: 17 February 2004

By Steven Lee Myers

Steven Myers

Russian state television remains subject, more than dozen years after end of Soviet era, to only rating system that counts, that of Kremlin and Pres Vladimir Putin, who is featured with abundant, invariably flattering, portrayals; there is no overt censorship but on two largest channels, both government owned, there is uncritical deference to Putin that would be unthinkable in Europe or US; photos; media official Vladimir V Grigorev says state role reflects chaotic political transition and that government plans to privatize one channel, probably Rossiya, which, along with First Channel, effectively serves as information agency for Kremlin, at whose pleasure directors serve; Putin's campaign rivals struggle for air time and raise alarms about biased election reporting (M)

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Journalists Who Braved Iraq and African Wars Are Among 14 Polk Award Winners

Date: 17 February 2004

By Robert D. McFadden

Robert

George Polk Awards for 2003 are awarded in 14 categories, honoring jounalists who faced personal danger to cover wars in Iraq and Africa and others who exposed perilous working conditions, predatory lending practices and sexual exploitation of homeless children; Somini Sengupta of New York Times wins for foreign correspondence for articles on war-torn West Africa; David Barstow, Lowell Bergman and David Rummel of The Times and Neil Docherty and Linden MacIntyre of Canadian Broadcasting Corp win for labor reporting for joint print-television co-production exposing safety violations at foundaries of McWane Inc (M)

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