1993년 2월 6일 토요일 재생 중

1993년 2월 6일은(는) 토요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♒**입니다. 올해의 36일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 William J. (Bill) Clinton입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 33살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2026년 2월 6일 금요일, 126일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2027년 2월 6일 토요일일 후 238입니다. 당신은 12,179일, 약 292,309시간, 약 17,538,584분 또는 약 1,052,315,040초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

6th of February 1993 News

1993년 2월 6일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

JAN. 31-FEB. 6: Tabloid City; News Raids Post! Post Is Shocked! And So On!

Date: 07 February 1993

By Ralph Blumenthal

Ralph Blumenthal

"It's War!" So thundered The New York Post last week in outrage over the body-snatching of its top editorial team by The Daily News, its archrival in the New York City tabloid punch-out. When the Post's editor and headline whiz, Lou Colasuonno, along with its managing editor and metropolitan editor and the columnist Mike McAlary bolted for The News, the Post's new buyer, Steven Hoffenberg, branded the new owner of The News, Mortimer B. Zuckerman, "a vulture" bent on "gunning down" the competition. Mr. Zuckerman, a real estate developer and magazine publisher, denied any malign intent and portrayed his recruiting as a tribute to The Post. To stem The Post's talent hemorrhage -- which by later in the week included a second columnist and a gossip writer -- Mr. Hoffenberg fired back with a lawsuit that disclosed that Mr. McAlary was already being paid $275,000 a year by The Post with a $25,000 raise in store, hardly a reason to quit.

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On Sunday; Goodbye Line May Be Next For Serby

Date: 07 February 1993

By Michael Winerip

Michael Winerip

AFTER two weeks away covering the Super Bowl, the veteran sportswriter Steve Serby walked into The New York Post on Thursday and was kissed by the phone operator, hugged by a printer, slapped on the back by a guy in the men's room and asked the same question by all: "You leaving Serby?" "Everyone's asking," says Serby. And Serby isn't saying.

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French TV Anchorman Is Indicted

Date: 07 February 1993

By Alan Riding

Alan Riding

France's best-known television anchorman, Patrick Poivre d'Arvor, was indicted on Friday on a charge related to his acceptance of expense-paid trips from a Lyons businessman who is currently in jail awaiting trial for misuse of public funds. Mr. Poivre d'Arvor, who presents the evening news on France's most popular channel, TF1, and is host of several cultural programs, has acknowledged he took trips to the Caribbean, the French Riviera and Switzerland as a guest of the businessman, Pierre Botton. But Mr. Poivre d'Arvor has denied any wrongdoing.

Full Article

Attacks Make Journalism Perilous Work in Haiti

Date: 07 February 1993

By Howard W. French

Howard French

For Colson Dorme, a 26-year-old tape archivist at a local radio station here, a brief stint at street reporting may have proved the abortive ending to his dream of a career as a journalist, and perhaps to his life. Pressed into service on Monday to cover the arrival of a special United Nations envoy sent to Haiti to arrange the deployment of hundreds of foreign human rights monitors here, Mr. Dorme was last heard giving a distress call on the air as he was set upon by a crowd of Government supporters demonstrating against international efforts to restore democracy to this country.

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Looking for an Attorney General: White House Memo; Setting Up Direct Line To Country

Date: 07 February 1993

By Gwen Ifill

Gwen Ifill

Guided by polls, focus groups and a keen sense of pop culture, President Clinton is executing a plan to put a distinctive stamp on his Presidency instead of allowing others to define it for him. Rather than mount White House news conferences or rely solely on sober televised speeches, Mr. Clinton is attempting to forge a direct path -- by satellite and by jet aircraft -- into the minds of the Americans who are willing to give their President more time to prove himself.

Full Article

Are Fallen Barons Victims of Their Press Clippings?

Date: 07 February 1993

By Allen R. Myerson

Allen Myerson

THE fall of one after another corporate chief -- Robert C. Stempel at General Motors, John F. Akers at I.B.M. and, a week ago, James D. Robinson 3d at American Express -- has prompted many writers to muster a royal procession of metaphors. These men were monarchs or kings, we are told, holding sway over vast domains at imperial salaries, until they were beheaded or toppled by coups. But who crowned them in the first place? Their boards and their corporate predecessors, true. But also the chummy publicists and the business press, whetting and then feeding the public's appetite for celebrity.

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A ROLLER COASTER RIDE FOR EAGLE-PICHER SHARES

Date: 06 February 1993

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The price of Eagle-Picher Industries's shares plunged 31.3 percent yesterday -- the single worst drop on the New York Stock Exchange for the day -- on concerns about Chapter 11 reorganization and settlement of asbestos litigation. The stock closed at $2.75, down $1.25, as nearly 1.3 million shares were traded. Earlier in the day, shares had reached $5.50, a 52-week high.

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Corrections

Date: 07 February 1993

An article last Sunday about television commentary on President Clinton's first 10 days in office referred incorrectly to "The McLaughlin Group." The program appears on some NBC and some PBS stations, not on CNN.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 06 February 1993

International 2-5 INVESTING IN APPRENTICES A major reason for Germany's long economic boom is its career training system, in which the state invests heavily to turn out highly productive workers. Some say the system rewards training over talent, but few dispute that the country profits from the quality of its workers. 1

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 07 February 1993

International 3-19 ETHNIC WARS MULTIPLYING

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