6. januar 1992 var en mandag under stjernetegnet for ♑. Det var 5 dag på året. Præsident for USA var George Bush.
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6th of January 1992 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 6. januar 1992
Industry's Turmoil Is Shaking Out Other Fields
Date: 06 January 1992
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
SINCE newspaper advertising began a steep decline about 18 months ago, many peripheral businesses and organizations that are nourished by the newspaper industry have gone on short rations. For instance, as budgets have been tightened, newspapers have been cutting back sharply on sending employees to weeklong bouts of training. In December, The Philadelphia Inquirer eliminated all conventions, seminars, group meetings and outside training, except those related to the opening of a new printing plant.
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Big Sports, Big Names, Big Money
Date: 07 January 1992
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
DECADES ago, the sportswriter Grantland Rice declared that it was is not whether you win or lose, but how you play the game. Today, it seems, it is not whether you play the game, but whether you sponsor one. Eight executives from consumer-marketing giants and advertising agencies have been named to the annual list of the 100 most powerful people in sports, as compiled by The Sporting News, the weekly newspaper. They outnumbered the players by 4 to 1; the two active athletes on the list -- both, by no coincidence, busy product endorsers -- were the basketball superstar Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls and the golfer Jack Nicklaus.
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Judge Postpones Sterling Hearing
Date: 07 January 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
United States Bankruptcy Judge James Garrity postponed until next week hearings on interim financing for the Sterling Optical Corporation after attorneys for the organization said there was no emergency financing need.
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Fund Venture Begun in Chicago
Date: 07 January 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The First Chicago Corporation said today that executives from its venture capital unit would leave the company in September to form a new company.
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Alias Buys Software
Date: 07 January 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Alias Research Inc. said today that it had completed its acquisition of the Sonata line of design software from T2 Solutions Ltd. Sonata is three-dimensional software for architects and builders that runs on Silicon Graphics Inc. work stations. Alias, which is based in Toronto, paid $5.5 million in cash and common stock.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 07 January 1992
International A2-9 U.N. VOTE CONDEMNS ISRAEL With American support, the United Nations Security Council unanimously condemned Israel's decision to deport 12 Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip. A1 ISRAELIS IN WASHINGTON FOR TALKS An Israeli delegation arrived in Washington to resume Middle East peace talks, but Syrian, Lebanese, Jordanian and Palestinian negotiators stayed away in protest. A9 Cardinal O'Connor said the Vatican had reconsidered on Jerusalem. A9 GEORGIAN PRESIDENT FLEES The President of the former Soviet republic of Georgia slipped away from the capital as rebel forces stormed the government building where he and members of his family had been holed up. A1 Russia reluctantly accepted an aid shipment of beef from Britain. A6 U.S. AND JAPAN AT ODDS OVER TRADE As President Bush visits Japan, negotiators for the United States and Japan are at odds over an American demand for higher Japanese targets for buying American automobiles and parts. A1 President Bush's trade talks in Japan are politically freighted. A8 The Treasury Secretary will accompany the President in Tokyo. A8 SEOUL WAR GAMES CANCELED South Korea announced it would cancel it's annual military exercises with the United States after North Korea indicated that it would allow inspections of its nuclear sites. A8 GERMAN ASSERTIVENESS PONDERED United States policy makers say they have become disturbed during the last six months by what they regard as Germany's new willingness to flex its muscles in international relations. A2 A Senate panel on Vietnam War missing is to go to Indochina. A5 Surprising records of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis were released. A5 After plea, Imelda Marcos tosses her shoe in the presidential ring. A8 Algeria's fundamentalist Muslims say Islamic rule is imminent. A3 There is a crisis affecting black education in South Africa. A3 Blacks are boycotting white businesses in a South African town. A3 Fort St. John Journal: A Canada-Alaska road will be celebrated. A4 National A10-13 FOR BUSH, A LESSON FROM BRITAIN Measures that President Bush has prescribed to improve education in the United States are now the law in Britain, but the results there so far serve as a warning to him that success is far from guaranteed. A1 CHANGE IN BOSTON SCHOOLS In Boston, where public schools have long had financial and racial troubles, a school board appointed by the Mayor formally replaced the elected board. A12 A NEW WAY OF WORKING If planners have their way, long drives to work and worsening traffic will be a thing of the past thanks to development of regional work centers where employees can do their jobs by computer, telephone and fax machines. A10 THE POST-COLD WAR PENTAGON Responding to the death of the Soviet Union, the head of the House Armed Services Committee outlined a broad framework for restructuring the Pentagon. A13 MILITARY CUTBACK IS PROPOSED Senator Gramm, a Texas conservative, proposed a cut in military spending and an increase in the personal income tax deduction. A13 NEW WOMAN IN CABINET? Carol Boyd Hallett, a woman with strong political credentials who Administration officials say would be an asset to President Bush in an election year, is the leading candidate to become Transportation Secretary. A10 FIFTH BOMBING IN INDIANA A bomb that shattered windows in an apartment complex was the fifth detonated in two weeks in the Hammond, Ind., area. A10 A power failure darkens part of Washington. A13 Metropolitan Digest, B1 NEW YORK CREDIT DOWNGRADED Moody's Investors Service downgraded the rating on most of New York State's debt, citing Albany's inability to solve the state's budget problems. The downgrading could mean that the state will have to pay higher interest rates to borrow money. A1 PCB'S CLOSE SUNY CAMPUS Officials of the State University of New York at New Paltz have delayed the spring semester by two weeks because an explosion in an electrical transformer has left at least five buildings contaminated with PCB's, which are known to cause cancer in animals. Twenty-two people were exposed to polychlorinated biphenyl particles. A1 Neediest Cases B3 Business Digest D1 Science Times C1-10 BREAST IMPLANT HALT The Food and Drug Administration urged doctors to stop using silicone-filled breast implants until a full study of whether they are safe can be completed. A1 What are dreams made of? A chemical mechanism is suggested. C1 Major effort is mounted to measure impact of the ozone hole. C1 A machine to capture plagiarists raises hopes and doubts. C1 Running may not be a man's world a few years down the pike. C3 Arts/Entertainment C11-22 Dizzy Gillespie in New York for a month for his jubilee. C11 Top price of $50 announced for two Broadway plays. C11 A festival for mid-career choreographers. C11 Word and Image: A new Michael Frayn novel. C15 Fashion Page B9 Four newcomers' best sellers. Obituaries B7-8 Dr. Robert Gordis, author and rabbi. B8 Pedro Manuel Valls, interior designer. B8 Sports B10-15 Baseball: 'More things coming,' say Yanks. B11 Steinbrenner's role discussed. B11 Basketball: Nets defeat Clippers. B12 New Knicks breaking old habits. B12 Column: Anderson on Tartabull. B11 On Pro Football. B14 Football: Lions will do their talking on the field. B14 Hockey: Rangers recapture share of first. B11 Editorials/Op-Ed A14-15 Editorials A14 Tax credit? Health discredit? The perils of "lustration." North Korea opens up. Mr. Gingrich's prison math. Letters A14 Russell Baker: Boat and Bridge People. A15 A. M. Rosenthal: Presenting Hypocrisy Inc. A15 James Bovard: Don't brake for Detroit. A15 Whitney North Seymour Jr.: Cheaper, faster civil justice. A15 Aram Bakshian Jr.: America first, Buchanan last. A15
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 06 January 1992
International A2-12 BUSH CAUTIONS SOUTH KOREANS President Bush arrived in South Korea and quietly warned its leaders against moving too fast in dealing with the Communist North before there is evidence that the North is not producing nuclear weapons. A1 JAPANESE TRADE AND U.S. CARS News Analysis: The trade concessions that Japan is expected to offer President Bush may add up to Government orders to buy more American cars and parts -- not exactly what Washington says it wants. A1 IS DETROIT TO BLAME? The Big Three auto makers complain about being shut out of the Japanese car market, but the Japanese say the American companies do not make concessions to their tastes, habits or the width of their roads. A12 U.N. TO DISCUSS YUGOSLAV TRUCE Secretary General Boutros Ghali will ask the United Nations Security Council to send about 50 military observers to Yugoslavia as quickly as possible to encourage adherence to the current cease-fire. A1 BATTLE OVER A JERUSALEM DISTRICT The legal battle for the neighborhood called Silwan is a microcosm of antagonisms over Jerusalem's present and its future, with delicate religious, ethnic and political considerations hanging in the balance. A1 NEW FOCUS ON VIETNAM P.O.W.'S Expectations that the United States and Vietnam will soon establish diplomatic ties may be set back by a resurgence of interest in the fate of missing Americans. A3 ISRAELIS TO ARRIVE FOR TALKS Israeli negotiators headed for another round of Middle East peace talks in Washington as Arab delegations decide whether to join in. A8 John Cardinal O'Connor visited two of Israel's top leaders. A8 LONDON STATUE DISTURBS GERMANS Plans for a statue in London of the commander who led air raids on German cities in World War II have disturbed some German officials, and they have begun a quiet but fervent campaign of protest. A6 GEORGIAN CALLS FOR REFERENDUM The President of Georgia, besieged by rebels, proposed a United Nations-supervised referendum on their demands that he resign. A6 Diplomats from Eritrea are trying to end fighting in Somalia. A2 A panel said to urge a 50 percent cut in the U.S. atomic arms. A6 Cairo Journal: Egypt's Islamic fundamentalist movement is weak. A4 National A14, B8-9 LAWS CREATE BIGGER DUMPS New Federal rules meant to protect the environment are forcing thousands of community garbage dumps to close and giving rise to immense regional landfills owned by just a few companies. A1 VOLUNTEERISM ON THE RISE Moved and alarmed by persistent social problems, Americans young and old are volunteering in greater numbers to work with the poor and the sick, charity groups report. A1 FIRE IN AN UNDERGROUND WORLD A stubborn fire burned underneath a hill outside Kansas City, in one of the converted limestone mines that make up a subterranean world right out of a Batman movie. A14 FAREWELL TO THE REVOLUTION German Pompa Gonzalez said he felt tremendously calm as he and 33 others made a daring helicopter escape from Cuba, because "one way or another, it would soon be over." Now he is wondering how to begin life in America, a wanted man back in his homeland but a hero to thousands of Cuban exiles here. A1 HOLY MAN OR TERRORIST? Yahweh ben Yahweh once presided over a multimillion-dollar business and thriving religious sect, but a Federal jury prepared to hear accusations that his reign was one of murder, arson, extortion, racist rhetoric and sexual exploitation. A14 KEEPING HOME PLATE IN SEATTLE After towering as losers, the Seattle Mariners baseball team finally earned a winning season and the loyalty of two million fans. But unless those fans come up with $10 million, the Mariners may call somewhere else home. A14 Clinton and Kerrey criticize Bush's health-care proposals. B9 Metropolitan Digest, B1 Business Digest, D1 Arts/Entertainment C11-18 Rap returns to the Garden. C11 Creating the Pasha of "The Ghosts of Versailles." C11 Music: Opera from Shanghai. C12 New Bolcom concerto. C16 Dance: Dance in Review C13 Word and Image: "The Edmund Perry Story." C11 "Fugitive Spring," a memoir. C16 "Education on Trial." C16 Editorials/Op-Ed A16-17 Editorials A16 Don't seek jobs in Japan. A16 Frightening consumers. A16 Topics: Passing Go. A16 Letters A16 Leslie H. Gelb: Kennedy and Vietnam. A17 William Safire: Redskins' revenge. A17 John R. MacArthur: Remember Nayirah, witness for Kuwait? A17 Charles Brecher, Raymond D. Horton: New York needs 3 heroes. A17 Obituaries B10 Muhammad Kenyatta, professor and civil rights leader John Elliott, reporter who saw the rise of Hitler Sports C1-9 Baseball: Tartabull agrees to terms with Yanks. C1 Basketball: Knicks edge Suns C3 Coleman hurt again. C3 UMass stuns Oklahoma. C3 Colleges: Focus on classroom for N.C.A.A. C4 Column: Berkow on Lions' quarterback. C5 Anderson on Bills' pledge. C6 Features: Sidelines. C2 Question Box C9 Football: Bills defeat Chiefs. C1 Lions top Cowboys. C1 No gimmicks for Redskins. C6 Marveling at Elway's heroics. C6 49er aide a top candidate for Packer post. C6 Satisfaction for Norwood. C7 Golf: Outlook for '92. C9 Hockey: Devils' midseason report. C2 Devils savor victory over Rangers. C2 Yachting: Russian crews still feuding. C4 New Zealand yacht looks strong C4 Neediest Cases B9
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Once Again, Bad News Nets
Date: 06 January 1992
By Harvey Araton
Harvey Araton
Just as the Nets began to generate some momentum, they stumbled at home Friday night against the Washington Bullets and collapsed on the road Saturday night in Chicago against the Bulls. A winning streak of four games suddenly seemed like ancient history and the coming week, because of one misstep by Derrick Coleman, became more of a daunting future. Coleman turned his troublesome left ankle late in the first quarter of a 140-96 pounding by the Bulls at Chicago Stadium. After taking a shot, he landed on Stacey King's foot and hobbled off to the locker room to have the ankle iced. Results of X-rays taken late yesterday afternoon upon Coleman's return to New Jersey were pending, but Coleman's status for tonight's game against the Los Angeles Clippers at Byrne Meadowlands Arena is at best questionable.
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BRIEFS
Date: 07 January 1992
* Berry Petroleum Co., Taft, Calif., acquired interests in certain ARCO oil and gas assets in California. * Computer Products Inc., Boca Raton, Fla., completed the previously announced acquisition of the assets and business of Heurikon Corp., Madison, Wis.
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Broncos' Heroics Already Are Old News
Date: 06 January 1992
By Michael Martinez
Michael Martinez
There was little time to marvel again at John Elway's incredible Saturday afternoon. Denver Broncos Coach Dan Reeves spent most of the day observing game film and listening to the radio, his eyes dissecting videotape and his ears catching the roar from Buffalo. Fans were still gleefully replaying Elway's closing drive that shook the Houston Oilers, 26-24, but Reeves had already begun to ponder the Buffalo Bills and the American Football Conference championship game on Sunday.
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