Репродукција субота, 8. јануар 1994.

8. јануар 1994. је био субота под знаком звездице . Био је 7 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 32 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био четвртак, 8. јануар 2026., пре 156 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је петак, 8. јануар 2027., за 208 дана. Живели сте 11.844 дана, или око 284.261 сати, или око 17.055.670 минута, или око 1.023.340.200 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

8th of January 1994 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 8. јануар 1994.

Viewpoints; Women, Jobs and the Press

Date: 09 January 1994

By Dawn-Marie Driscoll and Carol R. Goldberg

Dawn-marie Driscoll

MOST New Year's resolutions are made to be broken. But there is one promise all women should make and keep: To give the phrase "the glass ceiling" a decent burial. Women have clearly emerged in the business world, rendering obsolete this metaphor for limits on their progress. But work still remains. For despite their advances, women executives are still not very visible in the news media. This creates another ceiling that women must overcome.

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Observer; This Mortal Coil

Date: 08 January 1994

By Russell Baker

Russell Baker

Woke up the other morning, turned on the TV, they were doing colon cancer. Turned off the TV. Started the coffee, got the paper off the front steps, Page One was doing blood: not enough being donated. Worried awhile about whether there'd be enough life-saving hospital blood in case some luckless devil got an artery accidentally severed while cutting his breakfast grapefruit.

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BLACKBOARD; Holocaust Ad Leads To Campus Protests

Date: 09 January 1994

By Heather Harlan

Heather Harlan

WHEN an advertisement questioning the existence of the Holocaust appeared in The Observer, the student-run daily newspaper at Notre Dame, Paul Peralez, a junior, decided to take action. He walked into the newspaper office and demanded the resignation of the editor in chief and launched a petition drive in protest of the ad. "This is totally unacceptable at a university that is supposed to be concerned about the moral and intellectual growth of their students," said Mr. Peralez, who is Catholic but said he was outraged by what he regarded as the anti-Semitism behind the ad. "How can any serious scholar even entertain the notion that the Holocaust never happened?"

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NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT: NEIGHBORHOOD MYSTERIES; What's Pink And Sells Papers?

Date: 09 January 1994

By Marvin Howe

Marvin Howe

A fuchsia newsstand, shaped like a miniature house with a peaked roof, has been sitting shuttered outside a Wendy's restaurant on Seventh Avenue off 42d Street for the last three weeks. Six similar structures, in hues of "shell, Maltese and Egyptian," have sprouted along the Avenue of the Americas. They are the city's new designer newsstands, created by Patsy Norvell, an artist, and Frances Halsband, an architect. They won a 1986 newsstand-design competition sponsored by the Public Art Fund of New York. As part of reconstruction of the Avenue of the Americas, the Department of Transportation paid $33,000 each for eight of these stands. (One is still in storage.) While operators must usually buy newsstands from the city, these were given to those who had to move because of construction.

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Giuliani Picks Ex-U.S. Prosecutor for Labor Post

Date: 08 January 1994

By James C. McKinley Jr

James McKinley

Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani named a 38-year-old labor lawyer who was a high-ranking prosecutor in the Reagan Justice Department to be his Labor Commissioner yesterday, a crucial post for the new Mayor given his campaign promise to wring concessions from municipal unions. Union leaders reacted with cautious optimism to the appointment of Randy L. Levine, who has a reputation as a hard-nosed but honest negotiator for professional sports teams and garment companies.

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Gotti Lawyer Is Convicted Of Contempt

Date: 08 January 1994

By Diana Jean Schemo

Diana Schemo

In a case watched closely by defense lawyers, a Federal judge convicted Bruce Cutler, the flamboyant lawyer, of criminal contempt of court today for comments he made to reporters during the trial of John Gotti. Mr. Cutler, whose clients have included Mr. Gotti, Joseph and Thomas Gambino, and other figures in organized crime, was convicted of violating a court order barring lawyers from making statements that had a "reasonable likelihood" of prejudicing the outcome of a case.

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Figure-Skating Drama Far Bigger Than the Rink

Date: 09 January 1994

By Neil Amdur

Neil Amdur

Even as figure skating has moved into the forefront as a prime-time attraction, the sport has maintained a pattern that seems constructed from afternoon soap operas. This week's attack on Nancy Kerrigan, one of America's leading candidates for an Olympic gold medal, is the latest episode in skating's often turbulent world. With Kerrigan out of the United States championships, which concluded last night, the question of whether to grant her an automatic berth and await her ultimate fitness to compete in Lillehammer, Norway, has again given the sport a dramatic subplot that intrigues outsiders.

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Sports of The Times; In the New America, Pirouettes Win Out

Date: 09 January 1994

By George Vecsey

George Vecsey

ONE of the most optimistic facts I have heard about my country of birth in recent months is that more people would rather watch Tonya Harding land a triple axel than watch Bobby Knight kick his son. The encouraging sign of the maturation of America was found in the television ratings of last autumn, when more people watched an 8-month-old tape of the world figure-skating championships from Prague than the live broadcast of Kentucky-Indiana basketball.

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BOEING'S BIGGEST DIVISION SETS REORGANIZATION

Date: 08 January 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Boeing's Commercial Airplane Group, the company's largest division, will eliminate two levels of middle management as part of the new president's efforts to improve sales. The reorganization will reduce the number of management levels between the president, Ronald B. Woodard, and Boeing's customers to two from four but will not include any layoffs, a spokesman said. The company will also reduce the number of geographic sales regions to four from five. Mr. Woodard, a longtime Boeing employee, became president of the Commercial Airplane Group on Dec. 1.

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AMERICAN AIRLINES LAYING OFF 775 GROUND WORKERS

Date: 08 January 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

American Airlines began giving layoff notices today to 775 ground workers at airports around the country. The layoffs, which were announced earlier as part of American's efforts to scale back operations, take effect Feb. 4. Baggage handlers, gate agents, ticket agents, mechanics and other airport personnel will be affected. Some of the positions being cut will be replaced with part-time jobs. The new round of layoffs is separate from management cuts that were announced last year.

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