6. oktober 1993 var en onsdag under stjernetegnet for ♎. Det var 278 dag på året. Præsident for USA var William J. (Bill) Clinton.
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6th of October 1993 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 6. oktober 1993
THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Advertising; Turner officials pull back from allowing CNN to run commercials that imitate news interviews.
Date: 06 October 1993
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
THE Turner Broadcasting System considered, but rejected, plans to run commercials that resemble segments of news interview programs on its CNN and Headline News cable television networks. Since CNN began operations in 1980, followed by Headline News a year later, Turner's policies have prohibited carrying sales pitches that imitate programming. The rationale was that viewers might be confused because such paid messages could blur the line between news content and advertising.
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Safety Concerns Limit the Ability Of Reporters to Work in Somalia
Date: 07 October 1993
By Donatella Lorch
Donatella Lorch
Delays and confusion over information on the major battle between United Nations forces and Somali militiamen over the weekend has underscored the difficulties for journalists operating in Mogadishu. Most major news organizations have withdrawn from the Somali capital for safety reasons in the last month and only a handful of reporters are left in the capital. United States news organizations, including The New York Times, have withdrawn American citizens from the city. In recent weeks there have been increasing threats by supporters of Gen. Mohammed Farah Aidid to take American citizens hostage.
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Review/Television; The Effect of Images on Governmental Policy
Date: 07 October 1993
By Walter Goodman
Walter Goodman
So now we must add to the nightmarish images of our century the corpse of an American soldier being dragged through dusty streets by an exulting band. The picture would be painful under any circumstances, but there is a twist of the knife: the young man was in Somalia as part of an effort to feed people. In reflections written after the Marine landing in December and published on the Op-Ed page of The New York Times last Thursday, George F. Kennan blamed television for the surge of support for what was insistently described at the time as a humanitarian mission. "The reaction was an emotional one," he wrote, "occasioned by the sight of the suffering of the starving people in question." Now the emotions aroused by a new picture and the deaths it represents are putting pressure on the Administration to end the mission that began with such acclaim less than a year ago.
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Yeltsin Uses Decrees to Curb Dissenters
Date: 06 October 1993
By Serge Schmemann
Serge Schmemann
With the Parliament building still smoldering and ringed with armor, President Boris N. Yeltsin moved today to concentrate power in his office and to shatter any possible opposition. Two weeks after he first opened his all-out campaign against what he called his "irreconcilable opposition," Mr. Yeltsin and his lieutenants seemed determined not to repeat what they perceived as their major faults in the past two years -- their failure to cash in on political triumphs and their agreeing to illusory compromises with the opposition.
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Allies of Salinas Accused of Muzzling Critics
Date: 07 October 1993
By Tim Golden
Tim Golden
As President Carlos Salinas de Gortari has moved to raise workers' wages and help poor farmers before crucial elections next year, his aides and supporters are being accused of trying to silence critics of the Government and humiliate its most powerful opponent. Salinas Administration officials have denied any role in recent incidents that included the parading of transvestite cabaret performers at a campaign event for the leftist leader Cuauhtemoc Cardenas and the resignation of a leading political commentator.
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LAIDLAW'S CHIEF EXECUTIVE WILL RESIGN
Date: 07 October 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Laidlaw Inc. said yesterday that Donald K. Jackson will resign on Oct. 13 as president and chief executive of the waste management and transportation company. Mr. Jackson, 49, is resigning because of "differences of opinion concerning Laidlaw's strategic direction," the company said. Mr. Jackson became president and chief executive in 1990. The announcement came after the stock market had closed. Earlier, class A shares in Laidlaw gained .125 cents, to $6.125. Laidlaw posted a loss of $33.6 million in its third quarter ended May 31, compared with a profit of $38.8 million a year earlier.
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QUAKER OATS ACQUIRES BAKERY COMPANY
Date: 06 October 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Quaker Oats Company of Chicago, said yesterday that it had bought Petrofsky's Bakery Products of suburban St. Louis for undisclosed terms. Petrofsky's, which is privately held, makes frozen bagels and other frozen breads that are sold mostly to supermarket bakeries. It will become part of Quaker's Food Services unit, which posted sales of $470 million in the 1993 fiscal year.
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GOODYEAR EXPECTS JUMP IN THIRD-QUARTER EARNINGS
Date: 07 October 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company said yesterday that it expects third-quarter earnings to climb 43 percent to 48 percent because of better productivity and lower costs. The tire manufacturer said it expects earnings to rise to between $130 million and $135 million, including a $5 million gain from the sale of Reneer Films. In the period a year earlier, Goodyear earned $91 million. Goodyear shares rose to a new high for the year of $46.75 before closing at $46.50, up $1.125 on the New York Stock Exchange. Goodyear said it expects sales from operations to be about $3 billion, about the same as the third quarter of 1992.
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NATIONAL GYPSUM TO CUT 12% OF ITS WORK FORCE
Date: 06 October 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The National Gypsum Company, which emerged from bankruptcy protection in July, said yesterday that it would lay off 360 workers as it continues to reign in costs. National Gypsum, the nation's second-largest wallboard manufacturer, said the 12 percent cut in its work force would yield annual pretax savings of about $30 million.
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CHEMICAL BANKING SEES RECORD THIRD-QUARTER EARNINGS
Date: 07 October 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
John F. McGillicuddy, the chairman and chief executive of the Chemical Banking Corporation, said strong trading revenues would fuel record earnings in the third quarter. Mr. McGillicuddy said third-quarter earnings would exceed analysts' estimates, which ranged from 95 cents to $1.37 a share. Chemical, of New York City, with $145.5 billion in assets, is the third-largest bank holding company in the United States. Chemical's shares hit $46.125, a new high for the year, before closing at $45.375, up 25 cents, on the New York Stock Exchange.
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