30 października 1994 roku była niedziela pod znakiem zodiaku ♏. Był to 302 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 31 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły czwartek, 30 października 2025 roku, 234 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień piątek, 30 października 2026 roku, w 130 dni. Żyłeś przez 11 557 dni lub około 277 384 godzin lub około 16 643 074 minut lub około 998 584 440 sekund.
30th of October 1994 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 30 października 1994 roku
Neighborhood Stirring to Life
Date: 30 October 1994
By Bruce Lambert
Bruce Lambert
The neighborhood The Daily News will move into next year is best known for, well, being the future home of The News. Planners and neighbors say the newspaper's arrival at the Hancock building at 450 West 33d Street will bring new identity to an area that is only beginning to show signs of commercial life. "Getting The Daily News is a real coup for them," said Robert E. Flahive, the Manhattan director of the City Department of Planning. "I was surprised to see The News going that far west." Plans to extend the commercial expansion of the 80's into the area, he said, never materialized "because the market fell apart."
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Mediology
Date: 30 October 1994
By Max Frankel
Max Frankel
Sketch of The Voter, 1994, as currently rendered by The Media: Mad as hell. Hates the Ins. Doubts the Outs. Weary of the world and joyless on the job. Aggrieved by government. Nostalgic for family. Resentful of welfare, immigrants and taxes. Terrorized by crime, at least the news of it. Turned off by integration, even the dream of it. Amused, abashed, misjudged and misled by media -- if you can believe the media. This depressing portrait is offered a mere three years after America's cold war triumph. The nation is wealthier, freer and more secure than ever; its values -- democracy, individualism and cheap oil -- are captivating the world. And still the media make Americans out to be miserable. No, say many, the media make us miserable; they wallow in violence, rake up muck, stir up strife. They've made the news itself the enemy of hope. Grains of truth, buckets of hogwash. As the media's own polls should have taught, there's no such animal as Typical Voter. And there's no one beast called Media either. Many media are indiscriminate about voters, overlooking instructive studies of them. Voters, in turn, speak indiscriminately about the media when in fact they pick and choose from a huge and varied information menu.
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Walking the Walk
Date: 30 October 1994
By John Tierney
John Tierney
For too long now, the perp walk has been a misunderstood phenomenon. It is a standard scene on the evening news, captured every day in the city's papers, the brief moment when the alleged perpetrator of New York's latest atrocity is walked by police out the door of a station house. You watch as an accused murderer or mobster, helplessly handcuffed, is dragged through a horde of screaming reporters and jostling photographers, and you naturally assume you're seeing a barbaric mob wreaking random havoc. But that's not the case. It's actually a barbaric mob wreaking exquisitely planned havoc.
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POLL FINDS CUOMO HAS EDGED AHEAD OF PATAKI IN RACE
Date: 31 October 1994
By Kevin Sack
Kevin Sack
With a combination of patient strategy and unforeseen events, Gov. Mario M. Cuomo has edged ahead of State Senator George E. Pataki as New York's gubernatorial race enters its final week, according to a New York Times/WCBS-TV News Poll. The new poll, which was conducted from Wednesday through Saturday, shows that Mr. Cuomo's lead -- between 6 and 10 percentage points, depending on how it is measured -- has little to do with any new-found affection by New Yorkers for the 12-year incumbent. Instead, Mr. Pataki, the Republican nominee, has fallen behind because of the impact of B. Thomas Golisano's third-party candidacy and because Mr. Cuomo's campaign strategy of attack has convinced some voters that Mr. Pataki is an unacceptable alternative to the Governor.
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Sports Strikes Give Editors More Room to Play
Date: 31 October 1994
By Thomas H. Matthews
Thomas Matthews
For many sports fans, the last month has been a particularly trying time. Labor shutdowns have wiped out the Major League Baseball playoffs and World Series and postponed the start of the National Hockey League season. But for sports editors at many newspapers across the country, the disappearance of two leading sports has led to brainstorming that many feel has benefited readers. "Sometimes sportswriting can fall into a rut, but the absence of certain sports has forced us to be more creative," Bob Sales, sports editor of The Boston Herald, said. "I break sports readers into three categories: the gambler, the sports nut and the reader who is looking for a good story. I think we're serving the third-category readers better."
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THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Press; A Connecticut newspaper waxes Dickensian by offering readers a quirky serialized novel.
Date: 31 October 1994
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
A COMELY Connecticut woman is having a steamy affair with a handsome war hero who has been dead for 218 years, according to The Hartford Courant. Now if that stretches your definition of newspaper fare, the editors of The Courant have accomplished their goal. The deceased lucky fellow is Caleb Quine, a fictional Nathan Hale-type who may have been done in by the British during the American Revolution and who is currently starring in his own novel in the pages of The Courant.
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Corrections
Date: 31 October 1994
Because of a transmission error, an article on Friday about a reporter whose articles resulted in manslaughter charges in an assisted suicide case misspelled part of the name of a law firm that represents news organizations. It is Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, not Dunne.
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WHERE THERE'S WAR, THERE'S AMANPOUR
Date: 30 October 1994
As a former foreign correspondent who covered the Spanish Civil War, the Russo-Finnish conflict, the evacuation of the British at Dunkirk, the Narvik and North African campaigns, I thought Stephen Kinzer's article on Christiane Amanpour was a well-deserved accolade to a woman who goes from one dangerous news assignment to another. What a reporter! ("Where There's War, There's Amanpour," Oct. 9).
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When Others' Suffering Serves as Entertainment
Date: 30 October 1994
To the Editor: The Oct. 16 article, "Through a Lens Darkly," shocked me. It is appalling that St. Vincent's Hospital in Greenwich Village would allow a camera crew into its emergency room to tape a live trauma for a TV show. Whatever happened to privacy and sensitivity to people in pain? Today private citizens use hand-held cameras to tape a crime in progress or a horrendous accident. The networks buy these videos and broadcast them on the news.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 31 October 1994
International A3-11 HAITIAN 'SECTION CHIEF' RULES Despite the President's return, authoritarian and often abusive rural magistrates still control much of rural Haiti, but the peasants have been emboldened and are beginning to fight back. A1
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