9. ledna 1995 bylo pondělí pod hvězdičkou ♑. Byl 8 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 pátek 9. ledna 2026 před 156 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou sobota 9. ledna 2027, za 208 dní. Žili jste 11 479 dní nebo přibližně 275 518 hodin nebo přibližně 16 531 134 minut nebo přibližně 991 868 040 sekund.
9th of January 1995 News
Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 9. ledna 1995
Promises of Miracles: News Releases Go Where Journals Fear to Tread
Date: 10 January 1995
By Lawrence K. Altman, M.d
Lawrence Altman
SCIENTISTS rarely make exaggerated claims when reporting their results in the scientific literature because it is poor etiquette and likely to provoke the scorn of their peers. But news releases are a different matter. When speaking to the public, some scientists, in conjunction with their institution's press office, are willing to make much bolder claims for their work. A recent announcement from a respected scientific institute in California seemed to promise a cure for cancer: a single injection of either of two proteins had been found to cut off the blood supply to many kinds of tumors, causing them to shrink away while leaving normal tissue to thrive.
Full Article
English-Language Daily in Eastern Europe Shuts Down
Date: 09 January 1995
By Jane Perlez
Jane Perlez
The first English-language daily newspaper in Eastern Europe since the collapse of Communism has ceased publication after only six weeks, with the publisher conceding that the paper had failed to find enough readers in Prague. The Bohemia Daily Standard, introduced in November with high hopes of appealing to English-speaking business executives, diplomats and travelers, closed on Dec. 21.
Full Article
France's Elite Newspaper Is Changing, Discreetly
Date: 10 January 1995
By Alan Riding
Alan Riding
It is a measure of Le Monde's established place in France's political and intellectual world that as soon as the daily newspaper said it would change its design to make its pages more readable, it felt the need to reassure readers that it would not change that much. It has kept its word. Just two weeks after the 50th anniversary of its founding, the new Le Monde appeared on the stands today with the same logo and size as before, carrying its customary cartoon on the front page as well as inside pages of news and analysis uninterrupted by any photographs.
Full Article
Press
Date: 09 January 1995
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
TWO journalists remembered war and the courage of colleagues in separate conversations recently. They were describing the men and women who risked their lives and drew international attention during the siege of Sarajevo by publishing a newspaper every day. Their recollections were shaped by whether they were inside looking out or outside looking in. Tom Gjelten sat down here in the studios of National Public Radio, which sent him to Sarajevo as a correspondent. While there he came to know and eventually to chronicle the story of the Muslim, Serb and Croat journalists who worked at Oslobodjenje, the city's main newspaper.
Full Article
'Secrets' Land A Reporter In Chinese Jail
Date: 10 January 1995
By Patrick E. Tyler
Patrick Tyler
A Chinese journalist who was tried in secret and sentenced in November to six years in prison is being punished for reporting a sensitive but open secret about who rules China, court documents show. The 50-year-old journalist, Gao Yu, was arrested on Oct. 2, 1993, as she prepared to leave China for an academic year at Columbia University. She had written a series of articles earlier that year reporting that President Jiang Zemin, General Secretary of the Communist Party and Commander in Chief of China's armed forces, does not have ultimate power as long as other "senior comrades" like Deng Xiaoping are alive and that China's Parliament remains a rubber stamp for decisions made by the Communist Party's governing Central Committee.
Full Article
Intel, A.M.D. Holding Talks
Date: 10 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Advanced Micro Devices and Intel are working to settle lawsuits that have cost both computer-chip manufacturers millions. "The intention of the talks would be to settle all cases," said John Greenagel, an Advanced Micro spokesman.
Full Article
SIEMENS IS IN TALKS TO BUY PYRAMID TECHNOLOGY
Date: 10 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Siemens A.G. is in discussions to buy the Pyramid Technology Corporation, a struggling mainframe computer maker, for about $202 million, the companies said yesterday. Pyramid, based in San Jose, Calif., said it was talking with Siemens but had not agreed to its offer. Shares of Pyramid jumped $2, to $14.25, on Nasdaq volume of more than 1.6 million shares. Under the offer, Pyramid would become part of Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme A.G., the computer-making unit of the German electronics giant. The unit was offering $15 a share for Pyramid, the companies said. S.N.I. already owns more than 17 percent of Pyramid and has a warrant to acquire as much as 7 percent more.
Full Article
KIMBERLY-CLARK TAKES A CHARGE ON PESO DEVALUATION
Date: 10 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Kimberly-Clark Corporation said yesterday that it would take a $39 million fourth-quarter charge for losses related to the Mexican peso devaluation. The one-time charge equaling 24 cents a share is based on the year-end currency exchange rate. It covers the company's share of losses incurred by Kimberly-Clark de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., on the translation of United States dollar-denominated liabilities into pesos. Kimberly-Clark owns 43 percent of the Mexican company. The maker of Huggies diapers and Kleenex tissues said it would release its fourth-quarter results on Jan. 19.
Full Article
ZENECA TO INVEST MORE IN SUGEN TO FIGHT CANCER
Date: 10 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Zeneca Group P.L.C said yesterday that it would invest $12.5 million in Sugen Inc., increasing its stake in to 19.99 percent, as part of an agreement to jointly develop anti-cancer drugs. Sugen, of Redwood City, Calif., is one of a number of biotechnology companies that seek to produce drugs by identifying receptors on cells that are implicated in specific diseases like cancer and diabetes. The purchase is part of a pact between Zeneca and Sugen to jointly research, develop and commercialize anti-cancer drugs. Zeneca, a British pharmaceutical and chemical company, will also pay Sugen $5 million when the agreement is completed, and will make periodic payments tied to the progress of the compounds being researched, and royalties on sales of collaborative products.
Full Article
Gambling Plan For Air Flights
Date: 10 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Harrah's casino unit of the Promus Companies and Creator Capital Inc. said today that they had formed a joint venture to offer gambling on long-distance international air flights outside the United States. A Creator Capital unit, the Sky Games International Corporation, is to own 80 percent of the joint venture, called Interactive Entertainment Ltd.
Full Article