11. září 1994 bylo neděle pod hvězdičkou ♍. Byl 253 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 31 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly čtvrtek 11. září 2025 před 284 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou pátek 11. září 2026, za 80 dní. Žili jste 11 607 dní nebo přibližně 278 583 hodin nebo přibližně 16 715 034 minut nebo přibližně 1 002 902 040 sekund.
11th of September 1994 News
Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 11. září 1994
Press Notes
Date: 12 September 1994
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
THE American newspaper industry, humbled by slipping advertising revenue in recent years, is showing strong signs of returning health. Revenue from advertising in newspapers across the country for the first half of this year showed the strongest gains since 1987, according to industry data, and the advertising is projected to remain stable. As a result, the earnings of most big newspaper companies are improving.
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JERSEYANA
Date: 11 September 1994
By Marc Mappen
Marc Mappen
BACK in the 1890's, a New York newspaper discovered a way to add a splash of color to the comics by using yellow ink, and so the "yellow press" was born. But the term came to stand for more than just a printing gimmick; it was used to describe a sensationalistic journalistic style of screaming headlines and slashing articles, in which the press claimed the role of defender of the public against evil.
You could say this for yellow journalism: it sure sold newspapers. The circulation of some big-city papers soared into the hundreds of thousands. So it was inevitable that local papers outside the big cities adopted the same crusading tone of voice, although not the yellow ink.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 11 September 1994
International 3-14 CUBAN EXODUS SURGE The number of people fleeing Cuba surged again as people tried to beat a 72-hour deadline, even though those picked up at sea are not eligible for refugee status. 1 AD-LIBBING ON CUBA News analysis: The victory in talks with Cuba on Friday came about as a result of a policy that was ad-libbed even more than usual for the Clinton Administration. 8
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 12 September 1994
International A3-8 SOUTH AFRICA'S BINDING FORCE Watching Nelson Mandela in action for a day leaves little question that his unique patriarchal authority is the main force binding the diverse country together. A1
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Holly Peterson, Richard A. Kimball Jr.
Date: 11 September 1994
Holly Peterson, the daughter of Peter G. Peterson and Sally H. Peterson, both of New York, was married yesterday to Richard Ayer Kimball Jr., the son of Mr. Kimball and the Rev. Anne Kimball of Darien, Conn. The bridegroom's mother, an Episcopal minister, performed the ceremony at Wave Hill in Riverdale, the Bronx. Ms. Peterson, 29, is keeping her name. She graduated from Brown University and is a producer for the "World News Tonight" program at ABC News in New York. Her father is the chairman of the Blackstone Group, a New York investment bank, and was the Secretary of Commerce in the Nixon Administration. Her mother is a psychologist in New York. The bride's stepmother, Joan Ganz Cooney, is a founder and the chairwoman of the executive committee of the Children's Television Workshop in New York.
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Media Giants Jockey for Position As Fight for Networks Heats Up
Date: 12 September 1994
By Bill Carter
Bill Carter
While Time Warner and General Electric continued to hold what several executives described as mostly exploratory negotiations involving Time Warner's interest in NBC, other media companies scrambled last week to get positions of their own. One senior executive called it "the biggest game of musical chairs ever to hit this business." The only problem with being in the game, added the executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity, is that "nobody is really sure how many chairs there are and how many companies really want to sit in them."
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Top U.S. Officials Appear to Disagree On Haitian Leaders
Date: 12 September 1994
Senior Administration officials appeared today to disagree on Washington's plans for the future of Haiti's military leaders. Secretary of State Warren Christopher seemed to leave open the possibility that the three leaders could lead normal lives in Haiti if they relinquished power voluntarily. Asked on the NBC News program "Meet the Press" whether the leaders could remain in Haiti and even organize politically, Mr. Christopher said that the restored Government would have to decide.
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From Cubans in the U.S., Pact Draws Both Praise and Scorn
Date: 11 September 1994
In South Florida's Cuban neighborhoods, the United States' immigration accord with Havana is being received as both political and personal news, garnering praise and derision from different exile factions while drawing tears from Cuban-Americans who learned that relatives detained at the Guantanamo Bay naval base would not be admitted to the United States. The politics, however, meant little to Blanca Maria Bacallao Barros, 22 years old, who cried when she heard news of the accord on Spanish-language television. Her husband, Jesus Perez Macon, is one of the roughly 25,000 Cubans held at Guantanamo.
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A Repressed World Says, 'Beam Me Up'
Date: 11 September 1994
By Philip Shenon
Philip Shenon
FREEDOM is heaven-sent, or so it would seem to anyone scanning the red-tiled rooftops of this southern Chinese city. The skyline of Guangzhou, one of China's free-market boomtowns, is covered with a forest of satellite dishes that allow television viewers here to enjoy the antics of Bart Simpson and Oprah Winfrey; NFL football and Australian cricket; the scantily clad lifeguards of "Baywatch" and the unclad models of a Japanese pornography channel; CNN and the uncensored local television news from across the border in Hong Kong. And while almost every one of those satellite dishes is illegal under an 11-month-old decree, the Government seems unwilling to force the owners to take them down. Wang Bin, a shopkeeper, said that while his 12-year-old son does not understand a word of English, "he still loves 'The Simpsons,' " the American cartoon show beamed to China by Star TV, a pan-Asian satellite service.
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Political Notes; A Not-So-Warm Meeting of Two Former Opponents
Date: 11 September 1994
By Alison Mitchell
Alison Mitchell
Geraldine A. Ferraro and Elizabeth Holtzman have not precisely seen eye to eye since the slashing Democratic primary race two years ago, when the two politicians failed in their quests to become the first woman elected senator from New York. Ms. Ferraro, who took the brunt of the campaign attacks, lost to Robert Abrams by 1 percentage point. Ms. Holtzman, who did much of the attacking, lost her own re-election bid for City Comptroller one year later in a race in which her Senate campaign tactics came back to haunt her.
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