Репродукција понедељак, 24. јул 1995.

24. јул 1995. је био понедељак под знаком звездице . Био је 204 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 четвртак, 24. јул 2025., пре 325 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је петак, 24. јул 2026., за 39 дана. Живели сте 11.283 дана, или око 270.802 сати, или око 16.248.161 минута, или око 974.889.660 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

24th of July 1995 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 24. јул 1995.

Cable With a Local Twist

Date: 24 July 1995

By Mark Landler

Mark Landler

Executives at Time Warner figured they had made Charles F. Dolan an offer he couldn't refuse: $2 billion for his company, the Cablevision Systems Corporation. It was the autumn of 1993, and Mr. Dolan was at an age most businessmen would consider the autumn of their careers. As the company's majority shareholder, he would have netted $1.4 billion -- enough to settle into a retirement worthy of a cable tycoon. Chuck Dolan turned them down flat.

Full Article

Taking In the Sites; From the Detroit Picket Line to On Line

Date: 24 July 1995

By Walter R. Baranger

Walter Baranger

Labor disputes, which for many years played out on picket lines and in smoke-filled rooms, are moving onto the World Wide Web. The Woodie Guthries of today write hypertext documents, not ballads, and the Henry Fords can take their cases to a nationwide audience within minutes of a walkout. The response to a strike by six unions against Detroit's two largest newspapers, The Detroit News and The Detroit Free Press, and their operating company, the Detroit Newspaper Agency, makes it appear as if management, more than the unions, set up an electronic picket line.

Full Article

The Voice of Apartheid Goes Multicultural

Date: 25 July 1995

By Kimberly J. McLarin

Kimberly McLarin

It is 6 A.M. on Nelson Mandela's birthday, and "Good Morning South Africa" is on the air. The hosts -- two men, one black, one white -- wear ties bearing the President's smiling face, and take turns greeting the audience in English and Afrikaans. Over on the news desk, a black woman and a white man deliver the day's top story, again switching in and out of the two languages. Taped interviews take place in a variety of languages. Later two more news anchors reintroduce the same stories, this time in Sotho and Zulu.

Full Article

Horror and Despair in the Balkans

Date: 25 July 1995

By Walter Goodman

Walter Goodman

From the takeover of Srebrenica to the assault on Zepa, television anchors and correspondents, by now masters of Serbo-Croat consonants, have been shelling the safe havens of America's living rooms with images of Serb aggression, Muslim despair and Western waffling. Night after night has brought fierce contrasts from the ferocious war: *Frightened, exhausted women and children, the sweepings of ethnic cleansing, set against polished emissaries exchanging phrases in the polished chambers of the United Nations.

Full Article

First Lady Takes a Page From Eleanor Roosevelt

Date: 24 July 1995

By Todd S. Purdum

Todd Purdum

The first First Lady to become a major media figure was Eleanor Roosevelt, whose syndicated column, "My Day" began in 1936 and continued, in one form or another, for more than two decades, at its peak reaching hundreds of newspapers and making news with Mrs. Roosevelt's stands on major issues like civil rights and labor relations. Mrs. Roosevelt filed the column six days a week from all over the world, lugging a typewriter on her tour of South Pacific bases in 1943 and even composing aboard a destroyer. When Franklin D. Roosevelt once complained about Washington columnists, a reporter reminded him that his wife was one, but he replied, "She simply writes a daily diary."

Full Article

The First Lady's Newest Role: Newspaper Columnist

Date: 24 July 1995

By Todd S. Purdum

Todd Purdum

One of the most scrutinized women in America made her debut in a new role today, musing lightly as a weekly syndicated columnist in more than 100 newspapers and magazines worldwide about the pleasures of driving her own car or of being mistaken for a mere look-alike of her well-known self. But even as Hillary Rodham Clinton embarked on her latest effort to explain herself as something other than someone else's cardboard conception, she found herself back in another spotlight as well: in front-page headlines as the uncalled witness and unspoken target of the latest round of Congressional investigations into the lingering soap opera of Whitewater.

Full Article

SEARS CHAIRMAN TO RETIRE IN AUGUST

Date: 25 July 1995

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Sears, Roebuck & Company said yesterday that Edward A. Brennan, chairman and chief executive, would retire Aug. 9 and be succeeded by Arthur Martinez, head of Sears's retailing unit. James Denny, vice chairman, will also retire Aug. 9, after a Sears board meeting. The retirements were first announced in November when the retailer said it would spin off its 80 percent stake in the Allstate Corporation to shareholders. It said then the two executives would retire after the spinoff, which Sears completed in June.

Full Article

WELLPOINT AND HEALTH SYSTEMS MERGER QUESTIONED

Date: 25 July 1995

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

An important California regulator has raised questions about a proposed merger between Wellpoint Health Networks Inc. and Health Systems International Inc. The two companies said on April 3 that they had agreed to merge in a stock swap that was valued at the time at $1.9 billion. The state's authority in the merger stems from its regulatory power over nonprofit Blue Cross of California , which owns 80 percent of Wellpoint. In a letter sent to the directors of Blue Cross, Gary S. Mendoza, the state's Commissioner of Corporations, said the state had "serious concerns" that Blue Cross was ceding its "controlling interest" in Wellpoint stock without any extra compensation. In the letter, Mr. Mendoza did not set a deadline for the changes and information the state wants, and said the issues could be "addressed and resolved" in a way that would not delay the proposed merger.

Full Article

BOEING EXPECTS MAJOR JET ORDER FROM LEASING GROUP

Date: 25 July 1995

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Boeing Company is expected to announce it has won a major order for jet planes from the International Lease Finance Corporation, a Boeing official familiar with the order said yesterday. International Lease, a unit of American International Group Inc. and the jet-leasing market leader, has been in negotiations with Boeing since last fall. Industry analysts expect the company to order 40 to 50 jets, mostly newer versions of the narrow-body 737's.

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K-tel International Spinoff

Date: 25 July 1995

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

K-tel International Inc. said today that its board had approved the company's proposed sale, for $25 million, of 13 units to a group of investors led by its chief executive, Mickey Elfenbein. The company, a wholesaler of recorded music, based in Plymouth, Minn., expects to complete the sale by year-end. It will sell three United States businesses and 10 foreign ones and will retain two United States units.

Full Article