1991. gada 12. decembris bija ceturtdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes ♐. Tā bija 345 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija George Bush.
Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 33 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija ceturtdiena, 2024. gada 12. decembris, pirms 304 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir piektdiena, 2025. gada 12. decembris pēc 60 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 12 358 dienas jeb aptuveni 296 598 stundas, vai aptuveni 17 795 889 minūtes vai aptuveni 1 067 753 340 sekundes.
12th of December 1991 News
Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1991. gada 12. decembris
Daily News and Its Unions Start Committee on How to Cut Costs
Date: 12 December 1991
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
Representatives of The Daily News management and unions met yesterday to begin work on a reorganization that they hoped would cut the bankrupt newspaper's costs and let it keep operating. The two-hour meeting left both sides expressing confidence that the paper could be saved. "I am satisfied there is enough cash on hand or receivable to give us enough time to work out a solution to save The News," said Theodore W. Kheel, a union representative on the committee. The committee is scheduled to meet next Thursday, after an analysis of financial documents.
Full Article
Robert Maxwell's Shell Game
Date: 12 December 1991
Robert Maxwell was hailed as a philanthropic savior when he bought New York's strike-torn, dispirited Daily News in March, just as he was when he revived London's languishing Daily Mirror in 1984. Now, sadly, both The News and The Mirror seem little more than pawns in a vast and duplicitous game that Mr. Maxwell was playing with other people's money. Mr. Maxwell deserves the blame for his financial shenanigans. But lax British regulation contributed; it's unlikely that he would have succeeded in a country with tough financial disclosure laws, like the U.S. And he almost certainly would not have succeeded without the complicity or inattentiveness of others, including the lenders who happily ignored his reputation as a financial rogue. All of them loved the color of Mr. Maxwell's money as long as he seemed to have plenty of it, and any fair and final reckoning will hold them to task as well.
Full Article
The Art Market
Date: 13 December 1991
By Carol Vogel
Carol Vogel
Suspended: Journal of Art There seems to be a lot more activity in art publishing right now than in the art market itself. The biggest news is Rizzoli's announcement that it has suspended publication of The Journal of Art. It was not a gradual slowdown: At 4 P.M. the day before Thanksgiving, the entire staff was dismissed with a week's severance pay. "They told us they didn't need to give us the two weeks' pay we were entitled to because the journal had just suspended publication, not folded," said the circulation director, Helen Ryan. "Then, in the same breath, they told us to file for unemployment and to look for another job."
Full Article
Reporter Averts Ceding Interview Tapes
Date: 12 December 1991
By Andrew L. Yarrow
Andrew Yarrow
A Puerto Rican journalist has reached an agreement with Government prosecutors that allows her to stay out of prison and avoid surrendering the original videotapes of her interviews with two fugitives who are suspects in a robbery in Connecticut. The reporter, Daisy Sanchez, signed an affidavit yesterday affirming the veracity of the tapes after a judge had ruled that she did not have to surrender them. She had been subpoenaed and ordered to turn over tapes of four hours of interviews with two men linked to a militant Puerto Rican independence group who are suspects in the robbery of $7.1 million in 1983 from a Wells Fargo depot in West Hartford.
Full Article
Times and Drivers Reach 9-Year No-Strike Accord
Date: 13 December 1991
By Alex S. Jones
Alex Jones
The New York Times yesterday reached a settlement extending to the year 2000 with the union for its drivers. The paper's publisher expressed hope that the agreement would set a pattern for other union contracts and speed the opening of The Times's new printing plant in Edison, N.J., early next year. In the agreement, the Newspaper Mail and Deliverers' Union of New York and Vicinity effectively won job security and various financial incentives in exchange for concessions intended to reduce The Times's costs significantly, and for a pledge not to strike.
Full Article
In Perpetual Candidacy, Duke Raises the Stakes
Date: 13 December 1991
By Peter Applebome
Peter Applebome
Like a traveling road show that folds its tent in one town and opens it in the next, the David Duke campaign is back, this time as an aside to Presidential politics. The question is whether Mr. Duke, whose disaffected blue-collar base is made up more of traditional Democrats than Republicans, can make much of an impact in primaries where the constituency and the rules may work against him.
Full Article
4 at Newspaper Charged After Publishing Recorded Remarks
Date: 13 December 1991
By Michael Decourcy Hinds
Michael Hinds
The publisher, two top editors and a columnist from a local newspaper here were charged today with publishing the contents of an illegally taped telephone conversation. The columnist was also charged with violating a state law that prohibits the taping of a phone conversation without the consent of both parties. Pennsylvania is one of 10 states with such a law. An unusual aspect of the Pennsylvania law prohibits publishing material gathered through such taping.
Full Article
Mesa Partnership
Date: 13 December 1991
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
By a narrow margin, common and preferred holders of Mesa L.P. voted to issue publicly traded shares of the limited partnership, which was founded more than a decade ago by the oilman T. Boone Pickens, who remains the general partner. The new company will be valued at more than $250 million, based on the approved stock conversion formula.
Full Article
United Air Lines
Date: 13 December 1991
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
United Air Lines became the first carrier to match a $20 excursion fare increase instituted earlier this week by Continental Airlines. United's new fares take effect Dec. 19. United declined, however, to follow Continental's lead in eliminating a fare class popular with business travelers that required a seven-day advance purchase and offered discounts of up to 20 percent on coach rates.
Full Article
Asset Sales By Marriott
Date: 12 December 1991
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Marriott Corporation, which built a reputation on quality hotels and airline catering, plans to reduce its debt by as much as $1 billion over three years, from $3.5 billion. The company's board today approved the sale of $220 million in assets for cash, including 14 Courtyard by Marriott hotels for $140 million, within 60 days. Marriott is selling the Courtyards to a group of institutional investors.
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