10. јануар 1996. је био среда под знаком звездице ♑. Био је 9 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 30 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био субота, 10. јануар 2026., пре 158 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је недеља, 10. јануар 2027., за 206 дана. Живели сте 11.116 дана, или око 266.804 сати, или око 16.008.275 минута, или око 960.496.500 секунди.
10th of January 1996 News
Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 10. јануар 1996.
THE MEDIA BUSINESS;News Corporation Seeks European Broadcast Rights for Olympics
Date: 11 January 1996
By Bloomberg Business News
Bloomberg News
Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is negotiating to buy the European rights to broadcast the Olympic Games from 2000 to 2008 for a reported $2 billion. The Sydney Olympic Games Organizing Committee said its president was in talks with a group that included the News Corporation and with the European Broadcast Union, which bargains on behalf of European public service broadcasters like the BBC.
Full Article
AT BREAKFAST WITH: Godfrey (Budge) Sperling Jr.;Politicians and the Press, Once Over
Date: 10 January 1996
By Francis X. Clines
Francis Clines
PASS the jampacked evasions and refried platitudes. It's time for another Sperling Breakfast, the symbiotic feast of question and answer shared for decades here by politicians on the make and political reporters on the make-and-break. "Of course it's self-serving," said the breakfast host, Godfrey (Budge) Sperling Jr., a genteel Beltway legend impervious to suggestions that any one of the 2,800 breakfast interviews recorded thus far with politicians is as likely to find the attending columnists, bureau chiefs and reporters being had for breakfast on the half shell by the visiting politician as vice versa.
Full Article
A Threat to Journalism
Date: 11 January 1996
Journalism will not thrive robustly if reporters are made to disclose confidential sources and the byproducts of newsgathering, like their notes or unused footage of videotaped interviews. That is the reason for the protection such material enjoys under the First Amendment and the New York State Shield Law. It is also why an impending Federal court showdown in a case involving NBC's "Dateline" program bears close watching. In a broadcast last May, "Dateline" reported on lawsuits brought by the parents of infants who died in a combination cradle and baby swing made by a leading manufacturer of baby products, Graco Children Products Inc. Graco is now seeking to obtain outtakes of "Dateline's" interviews with the parents and their attorneys, which the company says may be helpful to its defense against the parents' charge that defects in the cradle caused the babies' death.
Full Article
New York City Newsstand Proposal Won't Fly
Date: 10 January 1996
To the Editor: Deputy Mayor Fran Reiter (letter, Jan. 5) writes that New York City, under its proposed Coordinated Street Furniture Franchise, will receive more than $30,000 a year in rent from an average newsstand.
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 11 January 1996
International A2-15
Full Article
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 10 January 1996
International A2-9
Full Article
Court Backs a City on News-Box Removal
Date: 10 January 1996
By The New York Times
An architectural commission has the right under state law to ban newspaper vending machines from the historic Beacon Hill neighborhood, the state's highest court has ruled. A Federal appeals court must now decide whether the rule banning "street furniture," which includes the street-corner vending machines known as "news racks," violates the First Amendment rights of newspaper publishing companies.
Full Article
COMPANY NEWS;FIRSTAR TO ACQUIRE AMERICAN BANCORPORATION
Date: 11 January 1996
Reuters
The Firstar Corporation of Milwaukee said that it had reached a definitive agreement yesterday to acquire the privately held American Bancorporation of St. Paul and its parent, the Jacob Schmidt Company, for $220 million in stock and cash. Of the total price of $220 million, Firstar agreed to pay 80 percent in stock and 20 percent in cash -- if the stock is trading between $36 and $44 at the time of closing. If Firstar is trading higher than $44 a share, the stock portion will gradually increase to 100 percent, and the transaction value will gradually increase to a maximum of $225 million. If Firstar is trading lower than $36, the transaction value will gradually decrease to a minimum of $215 million. Firstar was unchanged yesterday at $37.50.
Full Article
COMPANY NEWS;EARNINGS RESULT IN A SPECIAL DIVIDEND AT ALCOA
Date: 10 January 1996
Bloomberg Business News
Bloomberg News
The Aluminum Company of America said yesterday that it would pay shareholders a special cash dividend of 43 cents a share because 1995 earnings exceeded $3 a share. The company, the world's largest aluminum maker, pays a special dividend of 30 percent of the amount exceeding annual per-share earnings of $3, said Al Posti, a company spokesman. On Monday, Pittsburgh-based Alcoa posted net income for the year of $790.5 million, or $4.43 a share, the company's best results since 1989. The bonus dividend is in addition to Alcoa's regular quarterly dividend of 22.5 cents a share.
Full Article
COMPANY NEWS;BAUSCH & LOMB LAYOFFS AND EARNINGS CHARGE
Date: 11 January 1996
AP
Bausch & Lomb Inc. said yesterday that it would consolidate its sunglasses business, closing a plant in Oakland, Md., and eliminating about 800 jobs by the end of the year as part of a three-year reorganization plan. The maker of optics and health products, based in Rochester said that plant's 600 jobs would be eliminated and 200 jobs would be cut this year at a Rochester frame-making plant. The company plans to take a $27 million charge for the reorganization, which is expected to reduce fourth-quarter and 1995 earnings by about 30 cents a share. The company's chief executive, Daniel E. Gill, retired last month amid investor discontent and investigations into company sales and marketing practices.
Full Article