Der 14. November 1993 war ein Sonntag unter dem Sternzeichen ♏. Es war der 317. Tag des Jahres. Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten war William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Wenn Sie an diesem Tag geboren wurden, sind Sie 31 Jahre alt. Ihr letzter Geburtstag war am Donnerstag, 14. November 2024, vor 305 Tagen. Ihr nächster Geburtstag ist am Freitag, 14. November 2025 in 59 Tagen. Sie haben 11.628 Tage gelebt oder ungefähr 279.080 Stunden oder ungefähr 16.744.802 Minuten oder ungefähr 1.004.688.120 Sekunden.
14th of November 1993 News
Nachrichten, wie sie auf der Titelseite der New York Times am 14. November 1993 erschienen
Press
Date: 15 November 1993
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
THE strategies of the three New York City tabloid newspapers have begun to emerge. Forever, it seems, the preoccupying questions were whether The Daily News or The New York Post would survive. With that resolved, at least for now, the next question is this: How will The Post, The Daily News, and New York Newsday try to distinguish themselves from one another?
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Waiting for The Post to Call
Date: 14 November 1993
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
They are still waiting. They are reporters, photographers, advertising and circulation workers, formerly of The New York Post. Usually their days were full of ringing telephones and deadlines.
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Macmillan's Chief Leaving
Date: 15 November 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
McGraw-Hill Inc. has named David Shaffer president of the company's new educational and professional publishing group, effective on Jan. 3. Mr. Shaffer is president and chief executive of Macmillan Inc., the United States arm of the late Robert Maxwell's publishing empire that was awarded to Paramount Communications Inc. at an auction last week for $553 million.
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Stocks Fall Sharply in Japan
Date: 15 November 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Stock prices plunged in afternoon trading here. Traders attributed the selloff to concerns over disappointing earnings reports. After the midday recess in trading today, the closely watched Nikkei index of 225 issues fell sharply, dropping below 18,000. The Nikkei recovered a bit in late trading, closing at 18,074.61, down 418.94 points, or 2.27 percent.
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Fed's Tapes Are Sought
Date: 15 November 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The chairman of the House Banking Committee, Henry B. Gonzalez, announced Friday that he had ordered the Federal Reserve to supply the committee transcripts and tape recordings of the Fed's monetary policy meetings for the last 17 years. In a letter sent last week to the Federal Reserve chairman, Alan Greenspan, Mr. Gonzalez demanded a copy of every transcript and tape of meetings and conference calls of the Federal Open Market Committee since 1976. The committee sets short-term monetary policy for the Fed, the nation's central bank.
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Fair Is Only Fair
Date: 14 November 1993
To the Editor: For the moment I'll smile and be silent about most of Walter Goodman's mean-spirited, cynical essay -- the one on my recent speech in Miami and other recent work [ "What Parson Rather Left Out of His Sermon," Oct. 17 ] .
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 14 November 1993
International 3-16 A CHILD OF THE C.I.A. IN HAITI The C.I.A. created an intelligence unit in Haiti in the 1980's to fight drugs, but it is now a tool of political terror whose officers engaged in drug trafficking, officials say. 1 CLINTON GOALS FOR PACIFIC TRADE President Clinton hopes a summit meeting of Asian leaders will create jobs for America by linking it to their economies. 1 REALITY OF A 'GREATER SERBIA' Serbian nationalists in Bosnia have created a wasteland where most people are longing for the past and fearing the future. 1 Hundreds of patients are stranded in two Muslim front-line hospitals. 8 ARAFAT CONDEMNS KILLING OF JEW Yasir Arafat condemned the killing of an Israeli by allies in the P.L.O. and urged an end to violence "to safeguard the peace process." 7 SRI LANKA REPORTS GAINS IN SIEGE Sri Lanka said hundreds of troops had broken a rebel siege at a base where more than 250 others have died in fighting with rebels. 11 SQUATTERS TESTING APARTHEID Disputes with black squatters in Durban threaten to revive explosive memories of the brutal past in South Africa, and endanger the fragile trust on which its future is based. 3 A major blow against the Mafia in Italy raised more questions. 12 National 14-34 CLINTON SEES SPIRITUAL CRISIS From the pulpit of the Memphis church where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his last sermon, President Clinton warned black ministers that civil rights victories were being sullied by a "great crisis of the spirit that is gripping America today." 1 TRADE PACT: CHICAGO'S VIEW With its Fortune 500 giants, graveyards of shuttered factories, Nobel laureates and graduates of the school of hard knocks, Chicago is a microcosm of the economic currents swirling around the North American Free Trade Agreement. 1 The trade pact has something to offend almost anyone. 14 The President sought trade pact support from small business. 14 CONTRA COSTA'S MOST WANTED A public access television show that began playing this month on 11 cable systems in California's Contra Costa County seeks help finding parents who are grossly delinquent on child support payments. 20 SHORTAGE OF HYPERACTIVITY DRUG Because of a bureaucratic lapse at the Justice Department, thousands of parents are struggling to find supplies of the drug Ritalin for their hyperactive children. 20 SUPER-JOBLESS IN TEXAS Stunned by the decision last month to kill the Superconducting Supercollider, hundreds of scientists are casting about for new jobs in high-energy physics, hoping not only to pursue their profession but simply to support their families. 22 Metro 37-47 CONTRADICTIONS OF A PRIEST The Rev. Patrick Moloney has cultivated the reputation of a humble defender of the poor. But yesterday, as he stood accused of helping to steal $7.4 million, a more complex question of identity arose: Is he a saint, a robber, or even both? 1 N.A.A.C.P. URGES WHITMAN DELAY The New Jersey chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. urged Gov.-elect Christine Todd Whitman not to take office until investigations clear her of allegations that the Republican Party spent $500,000 to suppress the urban black vote. 37 MARIJUANA OFFERED FOR HEALING Every two weeks, Rabbi Isaac P. Fried visits a businessman in Brooklyn who is dying of cancer. They talk for a while, and the rabbi hands over a small bag of marijuana with a hopeful blessing. 37 MANY TACTICS IN POLLUTION WAR Officials in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut have put together plans to cut smog-causing chemicals by at least 15 percent by 1996. 37 FROM POLITICS TO GOLF The next Mayor of New York City, Rudolph W. Giuliani, found himself yesterday in a tough spot, but for a golfer, not a politician. 39 Obituaries 46 Bill Dickey, baseball player.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 15 November 1993
International A3-11 DESPAIR IS WINNER IN BOSNIA In all the Muslim enclaves, including Sarajevo, the deprivations have been aggravated by a plague of lawlessness, of Muslims preying on Muslims for the means of survival. A1
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Poland Exercises the Right to Channel Surf
Date: 14 November 1993
By Jane Perlez
Jane Perlez
CONSIDER a Polish family settling into the Friday night TV lineup with remote control in hand, a cable box atop the color set and a satellite dish outside the window. They can flick between lowbrow and high, new American or classic, MTV or the Simpsons. They can tune in CNN or European or Polish stations for news or political discussion. There is the wildly popular satire, "Polish Zoo." At midnight the N.H.L. championships come in via the Eurosport channel, while the teen-agers hang in for the 1 A.M. live performance of the pop star Sting in Oslo via Polish state television.
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Foreign Horizons Lure U.S. Broadcast Networks
Date: 15 November 1993
By Richard W. Stevenson
Richard Stevenson
Before it was acquired by NBC in early October, Super Channel, a pan-European broadcaster, struck Patrick Cox as a bewildering mishmash of paid religious programming, rock videos, news and home shopping. But Mr. Cox, the managing director of NBC's operations in Europe, also saw a great opportunity. So, along with NBC programming executives from the United States, he tossed much of the junk from the broadcaster's schedule. He began improving the more promising of the existing shows, especially those that focused on European culture, business and news. He is stirring in liberal quantities of NBC programming from the United States, including "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," the "NBC Nightly News" and the "Today" show.
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