O dia 14 de setembro de 1992 foi um segunda-feira sob o signo de ♍. Foi o dia 257 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi George Bush.
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14th of September 1992 News
Notícias como apareceu na primeira página do New York Times em 14 de setembro de 1992
THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Press Notes; Post Owner Still Hopes to Buy Daily News
Date: 14 September 1992
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
PETER S. KALIKOW, the owner of The New York Post, still considers himself a very serious prospective buyer for the bankrupt Daily News, even though he is in bankruptcy himself. Mr. Kalikow, a New York real estate developer, said late last week that he fully expected the paper's unions and creditors to come to him eventually. "They know I'm ready to buy it," he said.
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THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: The Democrats
Date: 14 September 1992
By Steven A. Holmes
Steven Holmes
The airplane had just taken off from Raleigh-Durham airport on its way back to Washington. As the aircraft climbed at a steep angle, Senator Al Gore, the Democratic Vice-Presidential candidate with the reputation of a button-down stick in the mud, jumped from his seat, stood in a small rubber tub and whooshed down the middle of the plane in what is known on the campaign trail as "aisle surfing." The night before the plane ride, Mr. Gore was startled on the "Larry King Live" show when a woman caller from Asheville, N.C., told the Tennessee Senator, "I know I probably shouldn't say this, but I think you're a very handsome man."
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The 1992 Campaign; Senate Race Ends in Whirl Of Appeals
Date: 15 September 1992
By Todd S. Purdum
Todd Purdum
The campaign for the Democratic Senate nomination from New York ground to a bitter end yesterday in a whirlwind round of street-corner rallies, appeals for upstate support and an emotional paid-television plea by Geraldine A. Ferraro, asking voters to reject what she called her rivals' efforts to exploit "the poisoned well of fear and stereotype." With no reliable statewide statistical picture available from public polls, aides to both Ms. Ferraro and State Attorney General Robert Abrams described a tight contest between them in the Senate race, in which turnout is expected to be crucial to the outcome. Both candidates fought for the one-third of registered Democrats who live upstate, with Mr. Abrams replacing all his existing television commercials in Buffalo with a new one stressing his warm endorsement by The Buffalo News, and with Ms. Ferraro issuing a new position paper pledging her support for farmers.
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MAYTAG AND BOSCH-SIEMENS TO STUDY JOINT EFFORTS
Date: 15 September 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Two big appliance manufacturers, the Maytag Corporation and Bosch-Siemens Hausgerate G.m.b.H., said yesterday that they had formed an alliance to consider joint marketing, distribution and research agreements. The companies will explore opportunities in the United States, Europe and elsewhere, including agreements to market each other's products. They will also consider joint research and development to improve energy efficiency and purchasing strategies. The alliance with Munich-based Bosch-Siemens is a move by Maytag, based in Newton, Iowa, to bolster its business in Europe, said Albert Turner, a Duff & Phelps analyst.
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CARTER HAWLEY REORGANIZATION PLAN APPROVED BY JUDGE
Date: 15 September 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
A Federal bankruptcy judge approved a reorganization plan for Carter Hawley Hale Stores Inc. that gives control of the retailer to the Chicago-based Zell/Chilmark Fund. The plan, approved by creditors and shareholders last week, clears the way for Carter Hawley Hale, which filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors in February 1991, to emerge from bankruptcy next month. "It's going to let us concentrate 100 percent on the business instead of on the bankruptcy," the company's chairman, Philip Hawley, said.
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LESLIE FAY'S STOCK TUMBLES NEARLY 20%
Date: 15 September 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Stock in the Leslie Fay Companies fell 19.6 percent yesterday to a 52-week low after the apparel maker said its third-quarter earnings would be significantly lower than expected. Leslie Fay said third-quarter earnings would be 65 cents a share, compared with 85 cents a share in the year-earlier quarter. The company, based in New York, said earnings for the year would be almost equal to last year's profit of $1.55 a share. Last year's results excluded a gain of 13 cents a share for the sale of the Head sports wear division.
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Bank Rules Approved
Date: 15 September 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Federal Reserve Board approved rules today that require banking regulators to take action against banks that become undercapitalized. The Fed was the first of the four Federal bank and thrift industry regulatory agencies to act on the so-called corrective action rules. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is expected to vote on Tuesday.
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Bankruptcy For Gaylord
Date: 14 September 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Gaylord Container Corporation has filed a prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition after failing to get a minimum number of bondholders to approve an offer to exchange its debt for new securities. Gaylord, which has at least $741.7 million in debt, including $496.7 million in junk bonds, needed approval from 95 percent of its bondholders for the package to pass, but only 89 percent of the subordinated debt was tendered, the company said on Saturday.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 14 September 1992
International A3-8 INTEREST RATES AND LIRA DOWN Just a week before the French referendum on the European union treaty, Germany announced it would lower interest rates and Italy devalued the lira. The reaction was a sigh heard 'round the world. A1 SHADOW ON THE SHINING PATH The godhead of the Shining Path rebels, Abimael Guzman Reynoso, eluded police for 12 years. Now, he and several of his lieutenants are in state custody, and Peru is relishing what the Government considers its greatest victory in the violent struggle with the Marxist guerrillas. A1
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 15 September 1992
International A3-14 RATE CUT RALLIES STOCKS Germany's central bank made a modest cut in its high interest rates but even the small cut was enough to provoke a strong worldwide rally in stock prices. A1 VIOLENCE OUTLASTS REBEL LEADER Although Shining Path has lost its top leaders, others are carrying on. The threat to the Peruvian Government may be lessened, but the violence is continuing. A1 THE TAKING OF PRISONER 1509 Street sweepers, telephone repairmen and ice cream vendors were among the guises adopted by police officers who engineered the capture of Abimael Guzman Reynoso. A14 WAR RETURNS TO SARAJEVO Artillery fire echoed in the hills surrounding Sarajevo, despite the presence of U.N. monitors supervising Serbian gun emplacements. A3 The U.N. approved more than 5,000 peacekeepers for Bosnia. A3 MILITARY AGREEMENT WITH ISRAEL The U.S. and Israel said they were negotiating an accord to provide Israel with more access to high-technology military equipment, just days after the announcement of the sale of fighter jets to Saudi Arabia. A1 SYRIANS SEE DEFICIENCIES IN PLAN Syria was not pleased that an overture by Israel did not mention total withdrawal from the Golan Heights, but the Syrians did not reject the document completely. A14 HELPING RUSSIA, RAISING DOUBTS Washington offered Russia $1.15 billion in loan guarantees and food aid to help it "buy American," raising questions about politics. A6 RUSSIA OPENS LABS TO SCRUTINY Russia has agreed to provide access to its biological research facilities to prove its germ warfare program has been terminated. A6 CENTRAL BANK SABOTAGE CHARGED Russia's Central Bank has been accused of working to discredit the Government, undermine economic reform programs and send monetary policy into disarray. A7 VESTED INTEREST RATES France is offering voters the possibility of lower interest rates in exchange for votes in favor for a treaty on European union. A10 ARMS SHIPMENTS INVESTIGATED The U.S. is investigating reports that military arms have been diverted to South Africa and that shipments of civilian arms have been used on anti-apartheid groups. A12 Armed U.N. troops arrived in Somalia to protect food shipments. A10 A Congressional committee recommended a "Radio Free Asia." A5 Persian Gulf Journal: Aboard U.S.S. Independence, it's too darn hot. A4 National A16-25 MEDICAL GROUP BACKS LIMITS The American College of Physicians unveiled a health-insurance proposal arguing for an overall national limit on health-care spending and restrictions on the amounts charged by doctors and hospitals. The proposal could be a turning point in the debate over the future of the country's health-care system. A1 GIRDING FOR AN ATTACK Gov. Bill Clinton abruptly changed his campaign schedule and prepared to defend himself from an expected attack by President Bush on his draft record. The decision indicates the degree to which the Democratic nominee feels vulnerable on the subject. A1 President Bush vows changes in the Endangered Species Act. A25 Political Week: the strategy behind the debate on the debates. A23 PLEADING FOR CLEMENCY A group of California prisoners convicted of killing their husbands or boyfriends has sent 22 petitions for clemency to the Governor. Each pleads the case of a woman convicted of murder before last year's passage of a state law allowing testimony about battered women's syndrome. A16 KAUAI'S 'COCONUT WIRELESS' Residents of Kauai, devastated by Hurricane Iniki, rely on the 'coconut wireless,' or word of mouth, in surviving without power or telephone service. The military, meanwhile, continued to ferry in relief supplies to the Hawaiian island. A18 SCHOOL BELLS IN FLORIDA Outside the Coral Reef Elementary School in Miami, pupils and parents kissed one another in relief. For many of them, still without electricity and telephones three weeks after Hurricane Andrew swept through South Florida, it was the first sign that friends and neighbors had also survived. A19 Guilty plea by the owner of a plant where 25 people died in a fire. A20 Metro Digest B1 WEISS DIES BEFORE ELECTION Representative Ted Weiss, the unresconstructed liberal who represented the West Side of Manhattan for three decades, died on the eve of the primary, prompting Democratic leaders to plead with voters to support a dead man. Under election laws, Democratic leaders can choose his successor only if Mr. Weiss wins. A1 Business Digest D1 Science Times C1-10 GAPS IN WEATHER COVERAGE Delays in replacing weather satellites has created a serious gap in weather forecasting in some areas, especially in tracing the short-term gyrations of big storms, Federal scientists say. A1 Botanists seek the first flower. C1 Question of biological roots for crime still an issue. C1 Arts/Entertainment C11-16 BBC audience is part of show. C11 Philharmonic's 150th year. C11 Fashion Page B10 Sports B12-17 Basketball: Knicks obtain forward Tony Campbell. B13 Column: Rhoden on losing. B13 Football: Lageman is out. B13 Obituaries D22-23 Ted Weiss, Democratic Representative from Manhattan. D22 Leon J. Davis, labor leader. D23 Editorials/Op-Ed A26-27 Editorials Remember the massacre. Shining Path: cut off at the top. A vote for Mr. Weiss now counts. New York primary choices. Letters A. M. Rosenthal: Dances with wolves. Russell Baker: Two in Pangloss mode. Mark Crispin Miller: Death of a fighter pilot. Larry Rockefeller: Primaries are a protection racket.
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