กำลังเล่นซ้ำ วันอาทิตย์ที่ 27 มีนาคม ค.ศ. 1994

27 มีนาคม ค.ศ. 1994 เป็น วันอาทิตย์ ใต้เครื่องหมายดาวของ เป็นวันที่ 85 ของปี ประธานาธิบดีแห่งสหรัฐอเมริกาคือ William J. (Bill) Clinton

ถ้าคุณเกิดในวันนี้ แสดงว่าคุณอายุ 32 ปี วันเกิดล่าสุดของคุณคือเมื่อ วันศุกร์ที่ 27 มีนาคม ค.ศ. 2026, 83 วันที่ผ่านมา วันเกิดครั้งต่อไปของคุณคือวันที่ วันเสาร์ที่ 27 มีนาคม ค.ศ. 2027 ในอีก 281 วัน คุณมีชีวิตอยู่ได้ 11,771 วัน หรือประมาณ 282,504 ชั่วโมง หรือประมาณ 16,950,273 นาที หรือประมาณ 1,017,016,380 วินาที

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27th of March 1994 News

ข่าวที่ปรากฏบนหน้าแรกของ New York Times เมื่อ 27 มีนาคม ค.ศ. 1994

Former Chief of NBC News Finds New Life at Iowa Daily

Date: 28 March 1994

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

At the Subway sandwich shop near his newspaper office in this small town, Michael G. Gartner, who may have been the least-liked network news chief in years, was talking about his experiences running two news organizations. One was NBC News, with its millions of viewers. He ran that one until he resigned -- or was pushed -- from his job a year ago this month.

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When Did the President Eat?

Date: 27 March 1994

By Michael Wines

Michael Wines

The press was in full cry at Thursday evening's news conference with President Clinton: terriers, every last one, running this Whitewater thing to ground. On national television, and in prime time, too. As this selection from a briefing last week by the White House press secretary proves, it doesn't matter if the cameras are on or off. The topic could be something as trifling as a spur-of-the-moment decision, at the request of Representative Tony Hall of Ohio, to skip a day's meals in recognition of world hunger.

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Revenues on the Rise For Several Media

Date: 28 March 1994

By Michael Janofsky

Michael Janofsky

Advertising revenues are on an upswing, according to reports from several media. Richard Amann, the publisher of Boating magazine, announced that linage was up by 17 percent for the first third of 1994 compared with the same period a year ago. That represents an increase of 98 pages.

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Street Clearing Puts Family In Tight Spot

Date: 27 March 1994

By Marvine Howe

Marvine Howe

For nearly half a century, members of the Stone family have been a fixture outside Grand Central Station, selling newspapers at a portable stand at Lexington Avenue and 43d Street. But now the family is battling to keep its spot in the wake of a City Council decision last July to ban from congested areas all vendors, including those who sell printed material from tables and portable stands. Sheldon Stone, a 64-year-old vendor who runs the business with his brother Bernard, has defiantly remained at the post and is appealing two violation notices from the city's Environmental Control Board. He said he has a constitutional right to sell newspapers. A decision is imminent.

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In Houston, a Monthly Magazine Finds a Home in a Sunday Newspaper

Date: 28 March 1994

By Deirdre Carmody

Deirdre Carmody

The recent marriage of a Houston life style magazine and The Houston Post is being watched closely as a possible new way to shore up regional magazines while increasing newspaper circulation. Houston Life, an independently published, glossy magazine filled with features about the city, is now distributed with The Houston Post on the third Sunday of each month.

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A Vote to Sue At Spain Bank

Date: 28 March 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Shareholders of the Banco Espanol de Credito S.A., known as Banesto, have voted for a civil suit against the bank's former administrators for mismanagement. The shareholders voted overwhelmingly on Saturday to begin civil proceedings against the former board, which was led by Banesto's former president, Mario Conde. Banesto's former management was replaced by the Bank of Spain on Dec. 28 after audits found equity shortfalls.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 27 March 1994

International 3-16 SERBS PRESS ON IN BANJA LUKA The Bosnian Serbs' campaign to drive out Muslims and Croats is growing in the Banja Luka region of northern Bosnia, while attention is focused elsewhere. 1 U.N. TROOPS DESTROY BUNKER United Nations troops destroyed a Bosnian Serb bunker near Maglaj with cannon fire after an exchange of gunfire with Serbian attackers that lasted for hours. 16

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 28 March 1994

International 2-9 AUTO THEFT PLAGUES BRITAIN With drivers in England and Wales almost twice as likely as those in the United States to become victims of car theft, antitheft technology has become a kind of national obsession in Britain as people try to stay one step ahead of the thieves. A1 RUSSIA'S POLLUTED NORTH Once a place of unparalleled beauty, the Kola peninsula, has become one of the most poisoned spots on earth -- relentlessly transformed by Russian industry into a laboratory of ecological destruction. A1 A NEW ERA FOR ITALY? Italians began voting in a two-day national election widely depicted by commentators as a watershed between the old and the new. A3 CHALLENGING MEXICO'S PRESIDENT As President Carlos Salinas de Gortari of Mexico works to build consensus on choosing a replacement for the slain candidate who was to succeed him, he is being challenged by members of his own party. A2 The mystery over the motive behind the assassination is deepening. A2 SOUTH AFRICA'S RISING VIOLENCE Outbreaks of killing have erupted in KwaZulu over the last two weeks since the Zulu nationalists of the Inkatha Freedom Party called on their followers to defy the country's first nonracial vote in April. A6 UGANDA'S CRUCIAL ELECTION On Monday, Ugandans will vote in the first national election in 14 years after decades of civil war. Many see the vote as a critical turning point for the country. A7 HATRED BOILS IN HEBRON Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, criticized both by militant settlers and by Palestinians, has found himself between groups that define their existence in conflict. A6 TURKS VOTE AS FAITH IN CHIEF SAGS Turks cast their ballots in countrywide local elections that took on national significance because of sagging confidence in the Government of Prime Minister Tansu Ciller. A3 FIRST FREE ELECTIONS IN UKRAINE Turnout was high as Ukrainians voted in their first free parliamentary elections as an independent country. But the secessionist President of the Crimea called for a boycott. A8 Port Hope Journal: A naturalist author shuns the United States. A4 Violence flares in Somalia two days after American forces left. A7 National A10-13 DEBT COULD HURT RECOVERY Middle-class families remain stuck with high debt payments as a proportion of their income, and economists worry that the families could cut their spending, hindering the economic recovery. A1 DOZENS KILLED BY TORNADOES Tornadoes struck the Southeast, killing dozens, including 18 worshipers attending services at a church that collapsed. A1 GETTING THE TREATMENT Patients are threatening lawsuits to pressure insurance companies to pay for risky or experiment procedures that are not covered. Critics say the practice is unfair because the rewards go to those with the means to hire a lawyer. A1 DEADLY MISTAKE IN BOSTON A retired minister died of a heart attack after the Boston police mistakenly raided his apartment, raising questions about the department's procedure in drug raids. A1 BIAS AT C.I.A.? Women at the C.I.A.'s Directorate of Operations, the clandestine service that conducts espionage abroad, say they have been blocked from top jobs because of their sex. A10 THREAT TO NUCLEAR PLANTS A nuclear plant in Minnesota may have to close next year because it has no place to store nuclear waste. If the plant closes, opponents of nuclear power will try the same tactic elsewhere, and experts say more closings could result. A10 THE LONELY WHITE HOUSE Few Democrats outside the White House have been willing to speak out strongly on President Clinton's behalf in the Whitewater matter, forcing the White House to to retreat to the garrison mentality of the 1992 Presidential campaign. A12 A NEW MRS. CLINTON At a wedding in Dallas on Saturday, the bride wore white, the groom looked nervous -- and the best man was the President. A12 Republicans offer an unexpected defense of White House aides. A12 REDISTRICTING ON TRIAL A lawsuit that could affect the shape of Congressional districts nationwide is going to trial in North Carolina. A group of white voters there say that an oddly shaped district is unconstitutional because it was drawn to guarantee the election of a black representative. A11 Metro Digest B1 PRISON RELEASES QUESTIONED New York State is increasingly using work-release programs to relieve prison overcrowding. The state Corrections Commissioner says he is taking too many chances with prisoners, and the escape rate is up. A1 Arts/Entertainment C11-16 "Middlemarch" on PBS. C11 Conference on black cinema. C11 Music: Critic's Notebook C11 Cecil Taylor, pianist. C12 Sarah McLachlan. C13 A showcase for bass guitar. C14 New York Virutoso Singers. C14 Dance: The Limon company.C14 Books: "Diplomacy," by Henry Kissinger. C16 Television: Talk shows on abuse. C14 Sports C1-9 Baseball: Yanks' Stanley remembers father. C4 Mets get Orioles' Segui. C4 Basketball: Arkansas turns back Michigan. C1 Florida beats Boston College. C1 Knicks pound Magic. C1 Oakley on edge of suspension. C3 Columns: Vecsey on Florida's victory. C7 Golf: Norman wins Players Championship. C5 Hockey: Red Army team gets Western pizazz. C8 Rangers lose in Winnipeg. C8 Devils win and tie for lead. C8 Soccer: Greece's debut excites Astoria. C2 Business Digest D1 Obituaries B8 Domenick L. Gabrielli, veteran New York jurist. Ed Zern, outdoorsman and humorist. Editorials/Op-Ed A14-15 Editorials Aid for Russia, at last. A rate hike for Empire? Red tape and green hydrants. Libya blinks on Lockerbie. Letters Anthony Lewis: No turning back. William Safire: Reading Hillary's mind. Emile Habibi: Massacre and redemption. Robert A. Berenson: The single-payer trap. Bridge C13 Chronicle B6 Crossword C16

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It's Wretched News Too For Connecticut's Women

Date: 27 March 1994

By Frank Litsky

Frank Litsky

A great American philosopher, Bill Parcells, often said that most people looked at everything in sports as euphoria or disaster. About 13 hours after the Connecticut men's team was knocked out of the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament, the UConn women fell to North Carolina, 81-69, in their East Regional final here at Rutgers University's Louis Brown Athletic Center.

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IN SHORT: NONFICTION

Date: 27 March 1994

By Allen Boyer

Allen Boyer

TRUE CRIME LOST LOVE A True Story of Passion, Murder, and Justice in Old New York. By George Cooper. Pantheon, $23.

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