27. november 1994 var en søndag under stjernetegnet for ♐. Det var 330 dag på året. Præsident for USA var William J. (Bill) Clinton.
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27th of November 1994 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 27. november 1994
The Shroud
Date: 27 November 1994
By Max Frankel
Max Frankel
A GREAT SHROUD has been drawn across the mind of America to make it forget that there is a world beyond its borders. Except when showing "Star Trek" or some imitation, the three main television networks obsessively focus their cameras on domestic tales and dramas, as if the end of the cold war rendered the rest of the planet irrelevant. Their news staffs occasionally visit some massacre, famine or shipwreck and their star anchors may parachute into Haiti or Kuwait for a photo op, but these spasms of interest only emphasize the networks' apparent belief that on most evenings the five billion folks out there don't matter one whit. Midst all the agitation about immigrants in California and Texas, have you seen even one good report on the 23 million refugees roaming the globe? Or the response to immigrants in Germany or, if it could be found, Canada? After all the hype given to Charles Murray's portentous I.Q. alarm, did you catch even a single network asking what other societies think about intelligence tests? Or what they've learned about the relationship between talent and economic growth?
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SOAPBOX;
Taking Back the Streets
Date: 27 November 1994
By Edward Costikyan
Edward Costikyan
STREET trees wither in their cramped beds. Wretched clumps of news boxes sit shackled to lampposts. A phone booth juts out here, a bus shelter there, not to mention growing numbers of recycling bins, bike racks and, any day now, public toilets. One of America's most walkable cities has ceded its sidewalks to an obstacle course of poorly designed and poorly maintained objects.
In the architectural community, these objects -- which also include newsstands, street lamps and signs -- are commonly known as "street furniture." By allowing them to proliferate haphazardly, we send the message to residents and visitors alike that they are in a city that doesn't care.
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What's Bad for Politics Is Great for Television
Date: 27 November 1994
By Walter Goodman
Walter Goodman
WITH REPUBLICAN hopefuls already showing up in Iowa and New Hampshire, and with Democrats scrambling to position themselves for 1996, television gives signs of becoming the toxic-waste dump of politics. Most of the criticism of the wretched campaign that the nation just endured has been directed at the candidates and their hirelings who turned out those noisome 30-second spots. They deserve it, but negative advertising is only the tip of the sludge heap. Television, as it has developed in the United States, is not merely a passive instrument of the cheap-shot gang. The media manipulators are themselves controlled by the medium's conventions, and the audience is an accomplice to its own exploitation.
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THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Press Notes; Newspapers Opt for Teamwork in a Campaign to Offer Advertisers One-stop Shopping
Date: 28 November 1994
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
LAST week, as you may have noticed from those full-page ads in your local paper, was a big week for the American newspaper industry. After talking about it for nearly a generation, the industry now has a single advertising sales force that can represent virtually every newspaper in the country in an effort to win national advertising from makers of such products as automobiles, cosmetics and household goods. The ads last week, which ran in big papers like The Chicago Tribune and small ones like The Foothills Sentinel in Cave Creek, Ariz., announced that something newspaper executives call the N.N.N. was open for business.
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The Cry Was 'Workers, Unite!' (And Artists Too)
Date: 27 November 1994
By Rita Reif
Rita Reif
RUSSIAN POSTERS OF THE 1920's evoke in bold lettering and imagery the tumultuous period following the 1917 Revolution. Among the most compelling are the news and propaganda posters -- intense, even witty bulletins that were printed daily on the cheapest paper and hung for all to see in the shop windows of Moscow. While the political events pictured are as difficult to decipher as the Russian words describing them, the graphic power is unquestionable. The broad appeal of this work can be seen in "Rosta, Bolshevik Placards: 1919-1921," an exhibition at the Sander Gallery, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, through Jan. 7. (Wall labels provide rough translations.)
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German Cars To Be Recycled
Date: 28 November 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The German auto makers Volkswagen A.G. and Audi A.G. and the steel company Preussag A.G. have opened the first of at least 80 joint auto recycling centers planned across Germany, Volkswagen said Friday. The Erwin Meyer G.m.b.H. & Company recycling center in the northern port city of Bremen will initially dismantle and recover metal, glass and plastic from 5,000 VW's and Audis each year.
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Unit Spinoff At Lufthansa
Date: 28 November 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Deutsche Lufthansa A.G. plans to spin off its computer systems unit, selling 25 percent to the Electronic Data Systems Corporation, a unit of General Motors. The carrier said Thursday that the unit, Lufthansa Systems G.m.b.H., would continue to provide data-information management for Lufthansa after it was spun off.
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Greyhound Pact on Bonds
Date: 28 November 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Greyhound Lines Inc. said today that holders of more than 63 percent of its bonds have agreed to swap them for stock as part of a plan to revamp debt and avoid bankruptcy. Under the plan, investors holding at least 90 percent of certain Greyhound bonds must agree to exchange their notes for about 256 shares for each $1,000 in bonds.
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Clients Sue Paine Webber
Date: 28 November 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Paine Webber Group Inc. has been sued by clients who accuse it of duping them into buying risky limited partnerships. The lawsuits, which seek class-action status, follow the disclosure early last week that the Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating Paine Webber as part of a broad review of Wall Street's sales of limited partnerships.
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More Glitz Than Substance
Date: 27 November 1994
To the Editor: Bill Carter's article on "generic" news reports supplied to local television stations was informative but failed to note the negative aspects of this growing network service [ "Now, a Live Report From Somebody or Other," Nov. 13 ] .
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