1990년 11월 14일 수요일 재생 중

1990년 11월 14일은(는) 수요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♏**입니다. 올해의 317일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 George Bush입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 35살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 11월 14일 금요일, 226일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 11월 14일 토요일일 후 138입니다. 당신은 13,010일, 약 312,240시간, 약 18,734,415분 또는 약 1,124,064,900초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

  • 웨일스 공 찰스 (기업가, 아동 문학가, 작가, 정치인, 환경 운동, 출생 1948년 11월 14일)
  • 트래비스 바커 (드럼 연주자, 배우, 음악가, 작곡가, 작곡가 겸 작사가, 출생 1975년 11월 14일)
  • 자와할랄 네루 (노동운동가, 법정 변호사, 자서전 작가, 작가, 정치인, 출생 1889년 11월 14일)
  • 올가 쿠릴렌코 (모델, 배우, 성우, 영화 배우, 출생 1979년 11월 14일)
  • 아우구스티누스 (시인, 신부, 신학자, 역사가, 자서전 작가, 작가, 철학자, 출생 354년 11월 13일)
  • 클로드 모네 (그래픽 예술가, 화가, 출생 1840년 11월 14일)
  • 조시 더멜 (모델, 배우, 성우, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 요식업자, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1972년 11월 14일)
  • 티베리우스 (병사, 정치인, 출생 42년 11월 16일)
  • 후세인 1세 (군주, 출생 1935년 11월 14일)
  • 윌리엄 3세 (정치인, 출생 1650년 11월 14일)
  • 콘돌리자 라이스 (교육자, 대학 교수, 외교관, 자서전 작가, 작가, 정치인, 정치학자, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1954년 11월 14일)
  • 아스트리드 린드그렌 (각본가, 소설가, 아동 문학가, 작가, 출생 1907년 11월 14일)
  • 페터르 R. 더프리스 (TV 사회자, 배우, 저널리스트, 칼럼니스트, 텔레비전 프로듀서, 출생 1956년 11월 14일)
  • 박정희 (군인, 정치인, 출생 1917년 11월 14일)
  • 조지프 매카시 (농부, 변호사, 장교, 정치인, 판사, 출생 1908년 11월 14일)
  • 패트릭 워버턴 (배우, 성우, 영화 배우, 코미디언, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1964년 11월 14일)
  • 토마스 페르마엘런 (축구 선수, 출생 1985년 11월 14일)
  • 우구데이 칸 (칸, 출생 1186년 11월 7일)
  • 사뮈엘 윔티티 (축구 선수, 출생 1993년 11월 14일)
  • Gary Vaynerchuk (기업가, 웅변가, 작가, 컴퓨터 과학자, 테크 에반젤리스트, 팟케스터, 출생 1975년 11월 14일)
  • 로라 샌 자코모 (배우, 성우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1962년 11월 14일)
  • 브라이언 키스 (배우, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1921년 11월 14일)
  • 파니 멘델스존 (작곡가, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1805년 11월 14일)
  • 러셀 토비 (극작가, 배우, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1981년 11월 14일)
  • 야니 (작곡가, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1954년 11월 14일)
  • 장이머우 (각본가, 배우, 영화 감독, 영화 프로듀서, 출생 1951년 11월 14일)
  • 메이미 아이젠하워 (댄서, 작가, 정치인, 출생 1896년 11월 14일)
  • 릴 부시 (가수, 래퍼, 사업가, 음악가, 출생 1982년 11월 14일)
  • 브리언 글리슨 (배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1987년 11월 14일)
  • 베로니카 레이크 (모델, 배우, 비행사, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1919년 11월 14일)
  • 버네사 베이어 (성우, 코미디언, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1981년 11월 14일)
  • 역도산 (리키시, 배우, 프로 레슬링 선수, 출생 1924년 11월 14일)
  • 폴 맥갠 (배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1959년 11월 14일)
  • 타나카 아츠코 (배우, 일본의 성우, 출생 1962년 11월 14일)
  • 맘타 모한다스 (가수, 배우, 출생 1984년 11월 14일)
  • 브라이언 스티븐슨 (변호사, 출생 1959년 11월 14일)
  • 매클레인 스티븐슨 (각본가, 광대, 대변인, 배우, 영화 배우, 저자, 텔레비전 배우, 판매원, 출생 1927년 11월 14일)
  • 타하 후세인 (대학 교수, 문학 평론가, 언어학자, 역사가, 역자, 작가, 정치인, 출생 1889년 11월 14일)
  • 올리비에 마르샬 (각본가, 배우, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 텔레비전 배우, 텔레비전 프로듀서, 출생 1958년 11월 14일)
  • 부트로스 부트로스갈리 (외교관, 작가, 정치인, 출생 1922년 11월 14일)
  • 프란시스코 린도어 (야구 선수, 출생 1993년 11월 14일)
  • 벳시 브랜트 (배우, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1976년 11월 14일)
  • 로리타 밀리 스카 야 (TV 사회자, 가수, 감독, 무대 연출가, 배우, 진행자, 출생 1963년 11월 14일)
  • 프란체스코 판노피노 (연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1958년 11월 14일)
  • 루이즈 브룩스 (댄서, 모델, 배우, 영화 배우, 자서전 작가, 출생 1906년 11월 14일)
  • D. B. 스위니 (각본가, 배우, 성우, 연극 배우, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1961년 11월 14일)
  • 로만 뷔어키 (축구 선수, 출생 1990년 11월 14일)
  • 에토 아이 (아나운서, 출생 1985년 11월 14일)
  • 에런 코플런드 (안무가, 음악 교육자, 음악 평론, 음악학자, 작곡가, 지휘자, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1900년 11월 14일)
  • 커트 실링 (발행자, 야구 선수, 출생 1966년 11월 14일)

14th of November 1990 News

1990년 11월 14일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

Labor Leaders Rally to Support The News Strike

Date: 15 November 1990

By Bruce Lambert

Bruce Lambert

In a show of solidarity with Daily News strikers, the country's top union officials led a rally of demonstrators yesterday and pledged almost $300,000 in aid. One of the officials, Lane Kirkland, president of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, told the cheering crowd, "You have the support of the entire labor movement behind you."

Full Article

Guards Say Daily News Hired Them as 'Bait'

Date: 15 November 1990

By John Kifner

John Kifner

The Daily News has hired unemployed veterans and other jobless men through a Kentucky security company to drive delivery trucks and collect money from news dealers. But two men who say they quit the job in disgust say the real object was to videotape them and other security personnel being beaten by strikers as evidence to use in court against the drivers' union. "We were bait," said Jim McCully of Clarksville, Tenn. "The bottom line was that we were supposed to be cheese for the rats."

Full Article

News Strikers Ask Abrams to Step In

Date: 14 November 1990

By David E. Pitt

David Pitt

The leaders of striking Daily News unions said yesterday that they would ask the New York State Attorney General to look into a series of actions by the newspaper that they claim may be violations of state law. The leaders said they would ask Attorney General Robert Abrams to look into whether The News had encouraged its out-of-state security guards to attack strikers, and whether The News had violated laws governing the licensing of security guards, state antitrust laws or organized-crime statutes.

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 14 November 1990

INTERNATIONAL A3-15 A special session of Congress on the Persian Gulf crisis was proposed by lawmakers. Some said the meeting would focus on their concerns about war in the Middle East, while others said it give the President support. Page A1 News analysis: Presidential power, recently hamstrung by the budget process, is facing limits in foreign policy, too. The call for a special session of Congress is one example of these new limits. A1 The tattered Kuwaiti army regroups, learning how to fight against Iraqi invaders from a team of American special warfare advisers. A15 U.S. jobs at stake in Gulf, Baker says A14 Suit challenges President's buildup in the Gulf A14 Morocco's call for Arab meeting has diplomats astir A14 Two Arab leaders jailed by Israel A5 Eastern Europe's gas tank runs low. A region-wide energy crisis, felt particularly in Bulgaria, is one painful aspect of the economic jolt that has accompanied the breakup of the Soviet-led alliance. A12 Anti-Soviet guerilla network found in West Europe A11 The Rev. Moon's Unification Church, a ubiquitous proselytizer in the United States, has begun paying for hundreds of Soviet students to visit America and study the ways of the church. A1 Yeltsin proposes coalition with Gorbachev A13 A split among British Conservatives became more likely after Sir Geoffrey Howe, once Prime Minister Thatcher's deputy, sharply spoke against her in Parliament. A3 As Paris mends, students plan more protests A6 U.S., dispite dispute, will go to trade talks D1 A South African judicial commission investigating special units of the army and police about charges of terrorism against opponents of apartheid said it could not prove those claims. A3 India's toppled Prime Minister, V. P Singh, said he is ready to lead a social revolution to dismantle the country's caste system. Yet, it was his moves to weaken the caste system that lost him vital support in Parliament. A7 Singapore to allow greater U.S. military presence A9 A ban on mining in Antarctica will be proposed by the United States at a meeting with other nations about the continent's future, Adminstration officials said, and the moratorium is expected to be approved. A10 U.N. chief's choice for refugee commissioner withdraws A8 Gros Islet Journal: The chips are down in casino battle A4 NATIONAL A16-23, A30, B6-7 Hopes of private investors' help in the savings and loan rescue are fading, because only a trickle of the $2 billion in private money that was pledged for savings deals has actually been invested. A1 Cranston to miss session on ethics A19 News of a gain against AIDS was delayed for five months after a special panel first recognized it. The treatment was found to prevent death from a pneumonia that is the leading killer of people with AIDS. A1 A sugar caning town in Florida, Belle Glade, was once branded AIDS Capital of the World. Today it is still fighting the disease, which is unusually concentrated there, but also the stigma. A16 Aspirin and liquor can be a bad mix, study says A18 F.D.A. approves radical gene therapy for cancer A23 Type of Vitamin A found to cut heart disease B6 An important free speech battle has emerged from CNN's decision to televise tapes of Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega. A question thought settled has resurfaced: Can the Government, in advance, stop the media from broadcasting? A1 With his millions frozen, Noriega may be tried as pauper B6 New hearing on forced medication for inmate A30 Senate Democrats vote Ford new majority whip A20 Man in the news: Wendell Hampton Ford A20 REGIONAL B1-4 The crime plan of Mayor Dinkins is unlikely to be passed this year because, state leaders say, the Mayor has been slow to devise an acceptable way to finance the $1.8 billion program. A1 The 8-year-old Brooklyn boy whose mother is accused of killing him had aroused concern among his teachers, who suspected he was being abused. The school alerted the city at least three times, the principal said. B1 An insolvent Harlem savings bank, the Freedom National, remained insolvent as a group of business, political and religious leaders could not raise the money needed to keep the bank in business. B1 New Jersey's disenchanted voters have encouraged four Democratic legislators to talk openly about repealing parts of Gov. Jim Florio's $2.8 billion tax package. B1 Putting out the trash in Long Island is no longer a simple act. Residents are confronting the fact that waste disposal is increasingly one of their municipalities' top expenses. B1 A Federal investigation of John Gotti is close to producing an indictment aginst the man the F.B.I. has described as the nation's premier Mafia boss, Federal officials say. B3 Unions at the Daily News asked Attorney General Robert Abrams to look into charges that the paper's management has hired security guards to threaten strikers. B3 28 New Yorkers held in faking of auto thefts B4 Fan dies after fight at Meadowlands concertB2 Credit unit warns Dinkins to prepare more budget cuts B4 Messinger urges cutting jobs from central education staff B4 BUSINESS DIGEST D1 THE LIVING SECTION Food Modern Pilgrims who tote their own trimmingsC1 Vidalia onions to sweeten winter C1 Wine Talk C12 Living An ancient skill, sewing, is revived C1 Little need for warm socks, but a bear might be welcome C4 ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT An impish coloratura in "Ballo" C19 A new recording of "Girl Crazy" C19 Theater: "The March on Russia" C24 Music: The Pop Life C21 Word and Image: "WIOU" spoofs TV news programs C19 "Soviet Civilization" C25 Book Notes C26 EDUCATION PAGE B8 Drop-outs are starting younger, education experts have found. With even elementary school students failing to attend classes for long periods of time, truant officers are being pushed to their limit and beyond. A1 State plan for choice of schools is voided B8 Sports Baseball: McReynolds plans to stay A27 Basketball: Knicks win in overtime A25 Boxing: Notebook A26 Column: Moran on Virginia's bowl game A25 Football: Giants' Landeta is top punter A25 N.F.L. NotebookA26 Hockey: Devils end slump A27 Flyers tie Rangers A25 Tennis: Graf defeats Capriati A25 OBITUARIES B9 Yannis Ritsos, a poet Richard Lewis, a singer Balcomb Greene, a painter EDITORIALS/LETTERS/OP-ED Editorials A28 Desert Sword: Answers? Democracy fails in Guatemala A welcome defeat for death Brent Staples: New South? Letters A28 Flora Lewis: Running scared A29 Tom Wicker: The wrong strategy A29 Germaine Greer: Our allies, the slaveholders A29 Ken Jacobson: Editors wanted; English helpful A29

Full Article

Journal to Close Philadelphia News Bureau

Date: 14 November 1990

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

The Wall Street Journal announced yesterday that it would close its bureau in Philadelphia at the end of the year as an economy move and that some of the 10 reporters and editors there would be dismissed. Roger B. May, a Journal spokesman, said that to his knowledge it was the first time The Journal had laid off news personnel, and certainly the first time in many years.

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 15 November 1990

International A3-20 President Bush responded to critics who have called for a special session of Congress on the Persian Gulf crisis by saying he would consult with Congress before using force, except in the face of sudden provocation. Page A1 The President's ability to wage war, a 200-year-old national debate, is being questioned with new intensity because of the deployment of U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf. A18 America's policy in the Persian Gulf is being debated by an increasingly wary public. Interviews around the country show that even those who say they support sending troops to the area are not sure why they do. A1 A ban on driving by Saudi women was reinforced today by the Government, which said there would be punishments for those who disobeyed. The Government was reacting to a protest earlier this month. A19 Aboard a Saudi Awacs, a sense of omniscience A19 Leave Kuwait first, Saudis say of Iraq talks A18 Turkey wary of becoming a "second front" in a war A18 U.N. will send envoy to Israel as a test A3 Alarm over the Soviet economy caused the Parliament to bolt from its prescribed agenda and demand an emergency address on the state of the union by President Gorbachev. A1 Soviets shift tanks to Siberia A3 The changes in Eastern Europe have upset the European balance. Eastern Europeans had been the West's poor relatives, but fortunately beyond help's reach. Suddenly these relatives are at the West's doorstep.A1 Germany and Poland signed a treaty guaranteeing their borders. The pact ended months of anxiety among Poles about the intentions of their neighbors to the west. A16 Berlin is rocked by a squatters war A17 Bucharest Journal: hurdles are many, but reward is a Child A4 A challenger to Margaret Thatcher emerged from her Conservative Party. Michael Heseltine, a pro-European member of Parliament, announced that he would oppose Mrs. Thatcher for party leader and Prime Minister. A1 British to prosecute three detectives in I.R.A. case A10 Jet crash near Zurich may have killed scores A12 Emperor Hirohito's role in wartime, a subject he avoided during his life, is discussed in a newly discovered memoir. Hirohito said he would have been deposed had he tried to stop Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. A7 Visiting U.S. Congressmen preach human rights in China A6 One clear result from Mexican vote: fraud charges A9 Costa Rican urges Cuba to liberalize A8 Rwanda's President to permit a multiparty political system A5 National A22-24, B14-16 The United States population count will fall about two million people short of the Census Bureau's earlier estimate of 250.2 million, the chairman of the House committee that oversees the census predicted. A22 The ethics case against five Senators will focus primarily on the Senate's authority to discipline, rather than on the work the Senators did for a large campaign contributor tied to the savings and loan crisis. A24 Washington at Work: Bob Bennett, the lawyer investigating five powerful Senators for the Ethics Committee, prides himself on being a nonpolitical person, putting him in sharp contrast to his affirmedly conservative younger brother Bill. A24 California's savings and loans have largely been spared crippling lossesbecause the state's housing market has remained strong. But now real-estate prices are dropping and analysts are worried about the health of these institutions. D1 Dissent over a ban on contraception was voiced publicly for the first time at a meeting of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. A22 Woman is guilty in friend's death B16 NASA is optimistic about the launching of Atlantis B16 Four from Greenpeace are seized in Nevada before blast B15 Panel says White House delayed curb on food health claims B14 University to establish center on black-Jewish relations B16 Advanced TV testing is set amid tumult on technology D1 Houston Journal: Death at the crossings and ending it A22 Regional B1-13 Security guards for The Daily News are being hired to provoke violence by strikers and then surreptitiously record the incidents on tape for a court trial, said two men hired by the paper who have since quit. A1 Labor leaders rally to support the News strike B12 A big deficit in Connecticut's budget was predicted by retiring Gov. William A. O'Neill, amounting to almost a third of this year's budget. A recent estimate of a $1.5 billion shortfall was revised to $2.1 billion. A1 A United States-Canada gas pipeline that eventually could provide the Northeast with enough gas to replace 100,000 barrels of oil a day won approval from the Government. Construction of the pipeline is expected to begin next spring. B1 A family-run barge company that has carried sludge in New York Harbor is in danger of going out of business after successful prosecutions for pollution. The family's matriarch,Evelyn Berman Frank, could serve time in prison for the abuses. B1 A challenge to legislators was issued by Mayor Dinkins who said if they oppose his payroll tax to pay for extra police they should offer their own method for raising the money. B1 A woman accused of child abuse that led to the death of her 8-year-old son was removed from probation last March even though the city's welfare agency was investigating new abuse complaints against her. B1 Greenwich Village's "Pope of Pot" was arrested on charges that he netted about $40,000 a day by running a service that delivered marijuana to customers who called the number, 1-800-WANT-POT. B3 Recanting blocked in Bensonhurst case, lawyer says B3 Fernandez asserts he will resist state cuts B3 14 are charged in seven burglaries by skilled ringB2 Business Digest D1 The Home Section Laser-guided furniture-making C1 In New Orleans, noble rot C1 What telescopes are really for C1 Broken spindles in Windsor chairs C5 Parent & Child C8 Holiday gifts for gardeners C10 Arts/Entertainment Corcoran Gallery awaits new director C19 "Shogun" opening postponed C19 Theater: Spalding Gray C19 Dance: Garth Fagan C26 O Vertigo Danse from Montreal C19 Word and Image: A new Michael Crichton thriller C24 Obituaries Malcolm Muggeridge, a social critic, was famous for his impeccable prose style and caustic views with which he would outrage the Establishment and impale the pompous. He was 87. B19 Louis Yagoda, ex-arbitrator B19 Leonard Bernstein is remembered with music and laughter B20 Sports Baseball: Mets' plans in doubts D23 Basketball: Nets stun Bucks D23 Column: Berkow on Nuggets D23 Football: Lions undecided on starting quarterback D24 Tennis: Sabatini struggles to top Novotna D23 Sabatini sheds demons D23 Health Pages B17-18 Depression hidden in deadly disease B17 Study of brain abnormality may help to explain hyperactivity B18 Editorials/Letters/Op-Ed Editorials A26 Right response to recession Help for a terminal's homeless Fit to kill? Topics: Congress cavorts Letters A26 Anna Quindlen: New world at war A27 William Safire: Needed now -- Radio Free Iraq A27 Bill Bradley: Bush has the cards, so why bluff? A27 Henry F. Graff: The woolly pulpit A27

Full Article

Japanese Banks Plan Merger

Date: 14 November 1990

Under pressure from rising interest rates and the prospect of more deregulation, two of Japan's mid-size banks, the Kyowa Bank and the Saitama Bank, said tonight that they would merge next year. The merger is the first since Mitsui Bank and Taiyo Kobe Bank announced a combination last year that created the world's second-largest banking institution. Today's merger, while not as large, seems likely to spur further consolidation among the "city" banks that make up the core of Japan's commercial banking business. The new bank will be Japan's eighth largest. At a news conference tonight, officials from both Kyowa and Saitama said they planned a 50-50 merger, probably by April 1, 1991. At the end of last March, Kyowa Bank ranked 10th in Japan with 11.9 trillion yen in deposits, or more than $93.7 billion. Saitama Bank ranked 11th, with 11.2 trillion yen, or $88.18 billion, on deposit. Both banks have seen their profits decline dramatically in recent months, largely because of lower returns in fund management. The Kyowa Bank has been particularly aggressive in shifting its emphasis away from large companies to small ones. It has also been trying to attract individual accounts, which are usually highly profitable in Japan.

Full Article

McDonald's Tries Seaweed

Date: 15 November 1990

Reuters

The McDonald's Corporation said today that it had started testing a low-fat hamburger that contains a seaweed derivitive. The new quarter-pound hamburger is 91 percent fat-free and weighs in with 310 calories and 10 grams of fat, including the bun, ketchup, mustard, pickle, onion, lettuce and tomato. The sandwich, called the Lean Deluxe, is being tested in Harrisburg, Pa. The low-fat beef was developed at Auburn University in Auburn, Ala., in research sponsored by the Beef Industry Council of the National Livestock and Meat Board. It consists of a mixture of lean meat and carrageenin,a seaweed derivitive. The carrageenin is added to put back the moisture normally provided by fat. "Our hamburgers are already classified 'lean' by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, but when it comes to our sandwiches, we're never satisfied," said Ed Rensi, president of McDonald's U.S.A. Bonnie Liebman, a nutritionist with the Washington-based Center for Science in the Public Interest, said McDonald's current quarter-pound hamburger has 410 calories and 20.7 grams of fat, including bun and dressings. "My guess is that this patty has about half as much fat as the previous one," she said. "If that's true, this is a major breakthrough because people will still be able to get their hamburger but cut down on the fat." McDonald's, the world's biggest fast-food chain, operates 11,400 restaurants in 53 countries.

Full Article

Rockwell Picks An Italian Partner

Date: 15 November 1990

AP

The Rockwell International Corporation and an Italian military electronics concern, Fabbrica Italiana Apparecchiature Radioelettriche of Milan, are teaming up to pursue work in the field of upgrading airplane control systems. Rockwell said the international market for upgrading aircraft avionics -- a plane's communications, navigation, flight controls and displays -- was potentially a multibillion-dollar business. Rockwell has been making a transition from military contractor to an industrial conglomerate in recent years. Its Italian partner's activities include military systems, space systems, information technology, environmental systems, security systems and industrial automation.

Full Article

Alexander's Store To Close in 1991

Date: 14 November 1990

Alexander's Inc. said yesterday that it would close its two-level, 260,000-square-foot store in the Roosevelt Field Shopping Center in Garden City, L.I., after selling the lease to Corporate Property Investors, owner of the mall, for $25 million in cash. Corporate Property said that it had been in talks with Nordstrom Inc., the Seattle-based fashion retailer, as a possible tenant for the Alexander's store. But it was unlikely that Nordstrom would make a decision on the site until sometime in 1991, Corporate Property said. Alexander's will close the Roosevelt Field store in February 1991, according to Robin Farkas, its chairman and chief executive.

Full Article