13. marts 1991 var en onsdag under stjernetegnet for ♓. Det var 71 dag på året. Præsident for USA var George Bush.
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13th of March 1991 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 13. marts 1991
Maxwell to News: Stay Alive
Date: 13 March 1991
There's finally good news about The Daily News of New York. The British media baron Robert Maxwell and the paper's nine striking unions have reached a tentative agreement that clears the way for Mr. Maxwell to buy the paper from The Tribune Company of Chicago. If ratified by the unions' rank and file, the agreement means a new lease on life for an institution that, for 71 years, has been a vital part of the city's life.
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Agreement Reached to Save Daily News
Date: 13 March 1991
By Alan Finder
Alan Finder
Robert Maxwell, the British publisher, and the unions of The Daily News reached tentative agreements yesterday on new labor contracts, clearing a major obstacle to the purchase of what was once the largest daily newspaper in the country. Mr. Maxwell will now try to complete the purchase of The News from its owner, the Tribune Company of Chicago. He indicated yesterday that he might ask the Tribune Company for more money in negotiations today and tomorrow than the $60 million the company had already promised. But he also suggested in countless ways that he expected to be the owner and publisher of The News within a few days.
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Tight Deadline Called Problem At Daily News
Date: 14 March 1991
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
The leader of the striking unions at The Daily News said yesterday that the unions could not approve new contracts in time to return to work until after the deadline set for tomorrow by The News for completing its sale. And a spokesman for the Tribune Company, which owns The Daily News, said yesterday that there had been no change in the company's letter of intent with Robert Maxwell, the British publisher who is negotiating to buy the paper, which requires that a sale be completed by tomorrow or the paper would be closed.
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Metro Matters; Hail The News! Impish Upstart, Twister of Arms
Date: 14 March 1991
By Sam Roberts
Sam Roberts
When the drug dealing and the devastation became almost unbearable, it seemed as if only one thing kept the Casuso family from abandoning Bushwick: embarrassment. Soon after the blackout of 1977, the Brooklyn family was adopted by The Daily News as the embodiment of survival in a "dying neighborhood." To some white working-class readers, the decline was synonymous with Bushwick's changing racial complexion. But the periodic stories on the Casusos and their neighbors gave voice to people of divergent racial and ethnic backgrounds who shared common problems and aspirations.
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The Battles to Come; A Revival of The News Will Prompt Fierce Fighting for Readers and Ads
Date: 13 March 1991
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
The likely salvation of The Daily News by Robert Maxwell will raise the curtain on a fierce newspaper war as the paper tries to win back its lost circulation and advertising. "It's how much comes back how soon," said John S. Reidy, a newspaper investment analyst for Smith Barney, who estimated that it would be clear in about four months whether The News can make a successful comeback.
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Rescuing The Daily News: A Struggle Down to the Wire; In Final Hour, a Long List of Problems to Settle
Date: 14 March 1991
By Alan Finder
Alan Finder
It was a few minutes after 2 P.M. on Tuesday and less than an hour remained until the final deadline set by Robert Maxwell for the conclusion of his bargaining with the unions of The Daily News. Eight of the 10 unions had settled with Mr. Maxwell, the British publisher trying to buy The News, and he was threatening to leave the country if the other two unions did not reach agreements by the end of the hour. But Barry F. Lipton, president of the Newspaper Guild, had a list of seven items that his members found unacceptable in the contract offered by Mr. Maxwell. Time was short, the pressure was intense and the guild, the largest of the unions at The News, was not inclined to make the concessions on matters like job security, sick leave and other benefits that Mr. Maxwell was seeking.
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Cutting Jobs: After Handshake, Buyouts and Confusion
Date: 14 March 1991
By James Barron
James Barron
Eliminating more than 800 jobs at The Daily News, which the nine striking unions agreed to do in marathon bargaining with the British publisher Robert Maxwell, is easier said than done, union leaders said yesterday. The unionized work force, which numbered 2,600 before the unions went on strike on Oct. 25, will be reduced, by and large, with cash incentives of $40,000 for each worker who leaves. Unions whose members had lifetime job guarantees -- the printers, along with some but not all of the stereotypers and photoengravers -- will be offered $50,000.
Full Article
Kuwaiti Broadcasts Resume After Pillaging
Date: 13 March 1991
By Donatella Lorch, Special To the New York Times
Donatella Lorch
Television is returning feebly to Kuwait City, with about an hour or air time a day. And the Kuwaiti radio, which began broadcasting again on Feb. 27, the day the city was freed, is now on the air more than 12 hours a day with news and public announcements. But the two broadcast services are ghosts of what they once were. The television studio has little more than a microphone, three chairs and an empty metal shell that once housed television monitors.
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Rushing From Yacht to Jet, Maxwell Relishes New Role
Date: 13 March 1991
By Alessandra Stanley
Alessandra Stanley
His first, jaunty words as he stepped off his yacht into a waiting Cadillac to complete negotiations with the unions at The Daily News were "I love New York," but the bold lettering on his white baseball cap spoke of another favorite cause: "Maxwell." Yesterday, Robert Maxwell was able to serve both. His flamboyant last-minute effort to rescue New York City's largest tabloid newspaper did not merely provide the British publisher with yet another newspaper. Mr. Maxwell has also acquired a heady celebrity status in New York that had mostly eluded him in previous visits. And that pleased him.
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SERBIANS GIVE IN TO 3-DAY PROTEST
Date: 13 March 1991
By Stephen Engelberg, Special To the New York Times
Stephen Engelberg
The Yugoslav republic of Serbia bowed tonight to major demands of anti-Communist protesters who have blocked the capital's downtown area for three days. As masses of demonstrators shouted their approval, the government announced that it was dismissing the directors of the television station who the protesters had held responsible for what they denounced as propagandistic news programs.
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