O dia 16 de março de 1993 foi um terça-feira sob o signo de ♓. Foi o dia 74 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi William J. (Bill) Clinton.
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16th of March 1993 News
Notícias como apareceu na primeira página do New York Times em 16 de março de 1993
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 17 March 1993
International A3-13 CLINTON MEETS WITH ARISTIDE President Clinton told the Rev. Jean-Bertrand Aristide that the United States would step up its efforts to negotiate a plan to restore democracy to Haiti, but he refused to set a deadline for Father Aristide's return as President. A1 A VASTLY CHANGED POLAND For a correspondent who left Warsaw 11 years ago with the smell of tear gas still in the air, returning to Poland means visiting a country that is in some ways unrecognizable. Signs of prosperity are pervasive, but there is open poverty, too, as the benefits of pervasive socialism fade away. A1
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'Today' Producer Called Ready to Drop News Job
Date: 16 March 1993
By Elizabeth Kolbert
Elizabeth Kolbert
Jeff Zucker, the 27-year-old producer of both NBC's "Today" program and the "NBC Nightly News," plans to give up the nightly news broadcast, NBC News officials said yesterday. "It's kind of impossible even for Jeff Zucker to have two full-time jobs," one NBC News executive said yesterday, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Since Mr. Zucker added "NBC Nightly News" to his portfolio less than a month ago, his workdays have frequently stretched to 15 hours or more.
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The Post Bites Back
Date: 17 March 1993
"Rage, rage against the dying of the light," Dylan Thomas advised, and reporters and editors of The New York Post have taken the poet at his word. Hemorrhaging red ink and on the brink of extinction, The Post hit the streets yesterday with a pungent, brassy issue that illustrated just what the city would lose if the paper shuts down. The front page bore the likeness of The Post's founder, Alexander Hamilton, in tears. Within were a dozen pages of scalding stories on the paper's newest stewards, the real estate magnate Abraham Hirschfeld and his co-publisher, Wilbert A. Tatum, who controls Harlem's Amsterdam News.
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A Newsroom Wrestles for Its Soul
Date: 16 March 1993
By Peter Marks
Peter Marks
The staff of The New York Post took an unusual tack last night in making their case against the stewardship of the paper by two men they clearly dislike. They put it in writing. All over The Post.
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Fight for New York Post Heats Up In Court, in Newsroom and in Print
Date: 16 March 1993
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
The New York Post, which has survived the New York newspaper wars since 1801, sought bankruptcy protection yesterday under its current owner, Peter S. Kalikow, after failing to publish yesterday's issue. The missed issue came amid a battle between The Post's staff and the man who is taking over the newspaper from Mr. Kalikow, Abraham Hirschfeld.
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INSIDE
Date: 16 March 1993
Hard Line on Airlines Washington approved a $300 million British stake in USAir but tied further investment to access for American carriers in Britain. Page D1. Clinton Assures Israel of Aid Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was met at the White House with a pledge that aid would not be cut. Page A8. Lobbying for Insurance Empire Blue Cross and Blue Shield spent the second highest amount last year on lobbying in Albany. Page B1.
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INSIDE
Date: 17 March 1993
45 Killed in Calcutta Blast A week after a series of bombs tore through Bombay, a huge explosion went off 1,000 miles away in Calcutta, killing at least 45. Page A3. Aspin Enters Hospital Defense Secretary Les Aspin was hospitalized with a bronchial infection and will receive a pacemaker, the Pentagon said. Page A16. Cholesterol Tests at Issue A group of medical experts says there is no justification for routine cholesterol tests before age 35 in men and age 45 in women. Page B8. Plucked From the Snow Campers from an exclusive Michigan school, stranded in the Smoky Mountains by the weekend blizzard, were rescued by helicopter. Page B8. Chicago Hotel Fire Kills 15 A fire swept through a Chicago transient hotel, killing at least 15 residents and injuring a score of others. A dozen or more are missing. Page A14.
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Publicly Vilified by Intended, Post Suitor Still Pledges Love
Date: 17 March 1993
By Deborah Sontag
Deborah Sontag
In a perfect marriage of style and content, the first issue of The New York Post published by Abe Hirschfeld lambasted its would-be owner with the kind of rank insults and denigrating vitriol that are usually his stock in trade. And, with the offending newspapers selling well yesterday, Mr. Hirschfeld professed to love it, just as he has always claimed to savor other notoriety that he perceives as good for business. (When it's bad for business, he often sues.)
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Price of The Times Will Rise Outside the New York Area
Date: 16 March 1993
The New York Times announced yesterday that its suggested newsstand price on weekdays in the Northeast -- but outside the New York region -- would increase on April 5 to 75 cents, from 50 cents. Charles E. Shelton, The Times's vice president for circulation, said the increase would apply Monday through Saturday in the Northeast corridor from Maine to Virginia. Within 75 miles of New York City, and on all of Long Island, the suggested price will remain 50 cents.
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In Newsroom Putsch, Employees Grab Reins at Post
Date: 17 March 1993
By William Glaberson
William Glaberson
The employees of The New York Post essentially took over the newspaper yesterday, ignoring the would-be publisher, Abraham Hirschfeld, as virtually all of the managers he laid off on Monday returned to work without any authorization from him. After yesterday's extraordinary issue of The Post, which called Mr. Hirschfeld a "nut" and a "screwball," Pete Hamill, the editor in chief he dismissed on Friday, returned and took control of the newsroom, where reporters and editors worked on a more usual issue today.
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