1992년 11월 5일 목요일 재생 중

1992년 11월 5일은(는) 목요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♏**입니다. 올해의 309일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 George Bush입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 33살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 11월 5일 수요일, 225일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 11월 5일 목요일일 후 139입니다. 당신은 12,278일, 약 294,690시간, 약 17,681,410분 또는 약 1,060,884,600초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

  • 크리스 제너 (TV 사회자, 배우, 사교계 명사, 스타, 저자, 텔레비전 프로듀서, 항공 승무원, 출생 1955년 11월 5일)
  • 틸다 스윈턴 (배우, 성우, 연극 배우, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 행위 예술가, 출생 1960년 11월 5일)
  • 카스페르 슈마이켈 (축구 선수, 출생 1986년 11월 5일)
  • 비비언 리 (배우, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 출생 1913년 11월 5일)
  • 샘 록웰 (연극 배우, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 제작자, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1968년 11월 5일)
  • 마르코 베라티 (축구 선수, 출생 1992년 11월 5일)
  • 팜케 얀센 (각본가, 모델, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1964년 11월 5일)
  • 샘 셰퍼드 (각본가, 극작가, 무대 연출가, 배우, 연극 배우, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 자서전 작가, 저자, 출생 1943년 11월 5일)
  • 루크 헴스워스 (모델, 배우, 스타, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1980년 11월 5일)
  • 아이크 터너 (가수, 기타 연주자, 배우, 밴드리더, 싱어 송 라이터, 음악 프로듀서, 지휘자, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1931년 11월 5일)
  • 로버트 패트릭 (배우, 성우, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 제작자, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1958년 11월 5일)
  • 브라이언 애덤스 (가수, 기타 연주자, 록 음악가, 배우, 베이시스트, 사진가, 음악 프로듀서, 인권운동가, 작곡가, 출생 1959년 11월 5일)
  • 엘리우드 킵초게 (마라톤 선수, 육상 선수, 장거리달리기 선수, 출생 1984년 11월 5일)
  • 아트 가펑클 (가수, 거리 예술가, 교사, 배우, 시인, 싱어 송 라이터, 작곡가 겸 작사가, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1941년 11월 5일)
  • 존 폴 게티 3세 (기업가, 배우, 출생 1956년 11월 5일)
  • 테이텀 오닐 (배우, 영화 배우, 작가, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1963년 11월 5일)
  • 케빈 조너스 (가수, 기타 연주자, 만돌린 연주가, 배우, 성우, 싱어 송 라이터, 영화 배우, 음악가, 작곡가, 텔레비전 배우, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1987년 11월 5일)
  • 한지민 (배우, 영화 배우, 출생 1982년 11월 5일)
  • 야이르 라피드 (TV 사회자, 배우, 시사 평론가, 영화 배우, 작가, 저널리스트, 정치인, 출생 1963년 11월 5일)
  • 조 다신 (가수, 기타 연주자, 싱어 송 라이터, 음악가, 출생 1938년 11월 5일)
  • 보아 (가수, 배우, 싱어 송 라이터, 영화 배우, 출생 1986년 11월 5일)
  • 라이언 애덤스 (가수, 기타 연주자, 싱어 송 라이터, 음악가, 작곡가 겸 작사가, 출생 1974년 11월 5일)
  • 발루아의 캐서린 (작가, 출생 1401년 10월 27일)
  • 존 에릭 핵섬 (모델, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1957년 11월 5일)
  • 우마르 2세 (정치인, 출생 681년 11월 2일)
  • 다나카 고키 (가수, 배우, 출생 1985년 11월 5일)
  • 장피에르 파팽 (축구 감독, 축구 선수, 출생 1963년 11월 5일)
  • 크리스토프 메첼더 (축구 선수, 출생 1980년 11월 5일)
  • 크세니야 솝차크 (TV 사회자, 공인, 라디오 DJ, 모델, 배우, 사교계 명사, 작가, 저널리스트, 정치인, 출생 1981년 11월 5일)
  • 새뮤얼 페이지 (배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1976년 11월 5일)
  • 베르나르 앙리 레비 (각본가, 발행자, 배우, 사업가, 소설가, 영화 감독, 영화 프로듀서, 작가, 저널리스트, 철학자, 출생 1948년 11월 5일)
  • 아티야 셰티 (배우, 영화 배우, 출생 1992년 11월 5일)
  • 그램 파슨스 (가수, 기타 연주자, 싱어 송 라이터, 음악가, 작곡가 겸 작사가, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1946년 11월 5일)
  • 빌 월턴 (농구 선수, 출생 1952년 11월 5일)
  • 토미노 요시유키 (각본가, 소설가, 애니메이터, 영화 감독, 음악가, 출생 1941년 11월 5일)
  • 조니 그린우드 (기타 연주자, 멀티플레이어, 배우, 작곡가, 작곡가 겸 작사가, 피아노 연주자, 출생 1971년 11월 5일)
  • 얼렉서 청 (TV 사회자, 기업가, 모델, 저널리스트, 출생 1983년 11월 5일)
  • 아베디 펠레 (축구 선수, 출생 1964년 11월 5일)
  • 올레흐 블로힌 (정치인, 축구 감독, 축구 선수, 출생 1952년 11월 5일)
  • 주디 레예스 (배우, 영화 배우, 영화 프로듀서, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1967년 11월 5일)
  • 앨케 조머 (가수, 모델, 영화 배우, 음악가, 화가, 출생 1940년 11월 5일)
  • 우베 젤러 (사업가, 축구 선수, 출생 1936년 11월 5일)
  • 자니 데이먼 (야구 선수, 출생 1973년 11월 5일)
  • 버바 왓슨 (골프 선수, 출생 1978년 11월 5일)
  • 세스 길리엄 (배우, 연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1968년 11월 5일)
  • 조엘 맥크리어 (배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1905년 11월 5일)
  • 해리스 율린 (연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1937년 11월 5일)
  • 이셀라 베가 (모델, 배우, 싱어 송 라이터, 영화 감독, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1939년 11월 5일)
  • 아이타나 산체스히혼 (연극 배우, 영화 배우, 텔레비전 배우, 출생 1968년 11월 5일)
  • 유진 데브스 (노동운동가, 정치인, 출생 1855년 11월 5일)

5th of November 1992 News

1992년 11월 5일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

Two Panels to Discuss Role of TV in Election

Date: 06 November 1992

The role television news coverage and advertising played in the election of President-elect Bill Clinton will be the subject of two panel discussions this weekend at the American Museum of the Moving Image, 35th Avenue at 36th Street, Astoria, Queens. The museum's current exhibition is "The Living Room Candidate: A History of Presidential Campaigns on Television, 1952-1992."

Full Article

Times Plans to Build a Plant in Queens

Date: 06 November 1992

By Alan Finder

Alan Finder

The New York Times, which had considered moving all of its printing operations out of New York City, has decided instead to build a $280 million printing plant on city-owned land in College Point, Queens, company executives said yesterday. Under an agreement announced yesterday at a City Hall news conference with Mayor David N. Dinkins, The Times will lease 31 acres in a city-owned industrial park just west of the Whitestone Expressway. The city and state will grant tax incentives, low-cost energy and other benefits worth a total of $29 million over the course of a 35-year lease. The Times currently employs about 1,000 people in press and delivery operations for the daily newspaper at its corporate headquarters, at 229 West 43d Street in Manhattan. When the new plant is completed -- which company officials said would probably not be until late in the decade, at the earliest -- the printing and distribution operations now in Manhattan will be shifted entirely to College Point. Company officials said they did not know exactly how many people would work at the new plant, which they said was needed to accommodate high-speed color presses. Another Plant in New Jersey The business and news operations of The Times, which employ about 2,000 people, will remain on 43d Street, just west of Times Square. The Times recently completed a $450 million printing plant in Edison, N.J., where advance sections of the Sunday paper are now printed. When that plant is in full operation early next year, the newspaper will begin shutting down an older plant in Carlstadt, N.J. The Sunday sections and some copies of the daily paper have been printed in Carlstadt. The incentives offered by the city and state to The Times are larger, in proportion to the number of jobs involved, than comparable incentive packages offered recently to other major New York corporations. But city officials contended that the expense was reasonable because of the large capital investment that The Times will make in the new plant and because manufacturing jobs are particularly hard to attract and keep. The incentives also cover a much longer period than other agreements. The Times searched for more than 10 years for a large site in the city for a new printing plant for the daily paper, said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the publisher of The Times. Company officials said they had also considered sites in Westchester County and had contemplated rebuilding the Carlstadt plant and equipping it with high-speed color presses. 'Host of Reasons' That option, which Mr. Sulzberger said would have been less expensive than relocating within New York City, even with the financial incentives, was ultimately dropped in favor of the Queens site. "For a host of reasons, among them better distribution and a fundamental commitment to this great city, we believe this decision is in the best long-term interest of The Times," Mr. Sulzberger said in a letter to the staff yesterday. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, the chairman and chief executive of The New York Times Company, described the land in College Point -- now the site of a Police Department automobile pound -- as "the perfect size and shape" for a modern printing print. "We had long hoped to keep some manufacturing operations in New York City," he said at the news conference. Initially, he said, it appeared that retaining the printing operation of the daily paper in New York would be far more expensive than shifting all production and distribution to New Jersey. The incentives helped close the gap, he said. "The New York Times and the city go back a long way -- to 1851, in fact," he said. "So it's extra fun to stand here and talk about a project that will take us well into the next century. As you must see, we have faith in the city's future and its long-term vitality." 'Take Great Pride' The Mayor noted that The Times's announcement followed decisions in recent months by other major corporations, including the Morgan Stanley Group, Prudential Securities and four of the five commodities exchanges, to remain in New York. "We take great pride in serving as the world's communications capital," Mr. Dinkins said. "Today I am especially proud to reaffirm that status in announcing that all the news that's fit to print in The New York Times is going to be fitted and printed in the borough of Queens." Of the $29 million in incentives, slightly less than $9 million is incentives that the city would offer automatically to any business that would lease the site, said Carl Weisbrod, president of the city's Economic Development Corporation. The remaining $20 million in incentives are discretionary. About $11.3 million will come from the state, in the form of low-cost electricity from a state-owned nuclear power plant and exemptions from state sales taxes on construction materials, Mr. Weisbrod said. Poor Soil Conditions The city will provide an additional $8.7 million in incentives, including a $4.7 million grant to help build a foundation for the building. Soil conditions on the marshy site are very poor, Mr. Weisbrod said. The city will also provide relief from some city sales taxes and payments in lieu of taxes, he said. The cost of the agreement to the city and state is relatively high, compared with incentives to other corporations. Morgan Stanley agreed last month to a $39.6 million package of incentives to keep 4,100 jobs in Manhattan for 10 years -- or slightly less than $10,000 per job. Prudential Securities is to receive $106 million in tax incentives and energy savings over 20 years to retain 5,000 jobs, or about $21,000 per job. The incentives offered to The Times would come to about $29,000 per job over 35 years if all 1,000 production and distribution jobs now at 43d Street were transferred to Queens. But Mr. Weisbrod contended that retaining manufacturing jobs was much harder in New York City than retaining white-collar jobs at financial-services companies like Morgan Stanley and Prudential Securities. He also said he could not recall a similarly large investment in a manufacturing plant in the city. "These jobs are awfully important to keep in the city," he said. "They are hard to keep in the city."

Full Article

Why Bush Failed

Date: 05 November 1992

By Peggy Noonan

Peggy Noonan

Having rebuffed a fine man whose Presidency failed, about half the country, I suspect, will have the rueful blues this weekend. George Bush was our last President from the great generation that held fast through a bitter depression and fought gallantly in war for a country they never doubted for a second deserved their love. Their stewardship, begun when John F. Kennedy brought the junior officers of World War II to power (Theodore White's phrase), somehow deserves better than this sodden end.

Full Article

Car of Choice For Sarajevo? It's Armored

Date: 05 November 1992

By Paul Lewis

Paul Lewis

"The Mad Max is coming," a French soldier in a dark green flak jacket whispered to his companion. They stiffened to attention as a jaunty little white armored car pulled up in front of the shell-pocked building that houses what remains of the Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Air vents swept back on each side like reptile fins gave the two-seat Panhard scout car a rakish, daredevil look that reminds the French peacekeepers here of the Australian desperadoes and their weird vehicles in the "Mad Max" film series.

Full Article

Clinton, Savoring Victory, Starts Sizing Up Job Ahead

Date: 05 November 1992

By R. W. Apple Jr

R. Apple

After an election whose results rang with a cry for change but offered no specific mandate, President-elect Bill Clinton set to work shaping his new Administration yesterday, huddling with his transition team, issuing a scarcely veiled warning to Iraq and promising that over the next six months, he would "focus like a laser beam on this economy." The 46-year-old Mr. Clinton committed his Administration not only to ending the lingering recession, but also to lifting the nation to a higher level of economic productivity for years to come.

Full Article

Kidder Hires Economist

Date: 05 November 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Kidder, Peabody & Company said yesterday that it had named Arturo Porzecanski its chief emerging markets economist. Kidder, a unit of the General Electric Company, hired Mr. Porzecanski from the Republic National Bank of New York, where he was chief economist.

Full Article

WESTINGHOUSE AWARDED $94 MILLION CONTRACT

Date: 05 November 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Westinghouse Electric Corporation said yesterday that it had been awarded a $94 million contract by a Mission Energy Company unit to build a co-generation plant in Florida. The plant, which is expected to begin operating inthe Auburndale, Fla., area between Orlando and Tampa in the summer of 1994, will supply power to the Florida Power Corporation, a utility subsidiary of the Florida Progress Corporation, and steam to local industries.

Full Article

PRIMERICA PLANS TO OFFER A MASTERCARD WITH A REBATE

Date: 06 November 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Primerica Corporation plans to offer Mastercards with a 1 percent rebate on purchases to policyowners of its life insurance unit. Primerica Financial Services will initially offer the Mastercard to 187,000 pre-approved Primerica Life Insurance customers, as part of a marketing effort, the company said yesterday. By the end of 1993, the program will expand to about 750,000 policyowners. The card will be issued through Primerica Bank.

Full Article

ALEXANDER'S SALE OF WORLD TRADE CENTER LEASE

Date: 05 November 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Alexander's Inc. has reached an agreement to sell its lease at the World Trade Center mall to the retailer Daffy Dan's for up to $6 million, an Alexander's lawyer told Federal Bankruptcy Judge Cornelius Blackshear yesterday. The store, the largest tenant there, is now closed. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the mall, had been pressing Alexander's to decide whether it wanted to assume or reject its lease. On Tuesday, the Caldor Corporation, a discount retailer, bid $92 million for six Alexander's properties, topping the $82 million that Bradlees Inc. had offered.

Full Article

KEMPER PLANS SALE OF TWO INSURANCE UNITS

Date: 05 November 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Kemper Corporation said yesterday that it planned to sell its two primary property and casualty insurance subsidiaries to focus on its core life insurance and asset management businesses.

Full Article