Der 19. März 1994 war ein Samstag unter dem Sternzeichen ♓. Es war der 77. Tag des Jahres. Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten war William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Wenn Sie an diesem Tag geboren wurden, sind Sie 32 Jahre alt. Ihr letzter Geburtstag war am Donnerstag, 19. März 2026, vor 90 Tagen. Ihr nächster Geburtstag ist am Freitag, 19. März 2027 in 274 Tagen. Sie haben 11.778 Tage gelebt oder ungefähr 282.693 Stunden oder ungefähr 16.961.637 Minuten oder ungefähr 1.017.698.220 Sekunden.
19th of March 1994 News
Nachrichten, wie sie auf der Titelseite der New York Times am 19. März 1994 erschienen
British Paper Deal Appears Set
Date: 19 March 1994
By Richard W. Stevenson
Richard Stevenson
The battle for control of The Independent newspaper effectively came to an end today when the British Government said it would not hold antitrust hearings on a deal that would give a majority stake in the ailing publication to a group including the owner of the tabloid Daily Mirror. Michael Heseltine, the Trade and Industry Minister, said he had approved the group's request to allow the deal to go through immediately because the survival of the paper was in jeopardy. In making his decision, Mr. Heseltine rejected a request from a rival bidder, Anthony F. J. O'Reilly, the chairman of H. J. Heinz & Company of Pittsburgh and the owner of Ireland's largest newspaper publisher, that the deal be subjected to an inquiry by the Monopolies and Mergers Commission. A Case of 'Urgency' "I am satisfied that The Independent and The Independent on Sunday titles are not economic as going concerns and as separate newspapers and that if the papers are to continue, the case is one of urgency," Mr. Heseltine said.
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Tabloids Holler 'Rewrite!' at Each Other
Date: 20 March 1994
By Tom Kuntz
Tom Kuntz
Who needs movies about the tabloid business like "The Paper" when real life is even wilder and woolier? Last week the archrivals of New York journalism -- The Daily News and The New York Post -- were at it again. This time the issue was not the supposed high-handedness of one another's ownership nor even the papers' raids on one another's staffs, but the Whitewater scandal -- suggesting that the venue of the tab slugfest matters little so long as the fight goes on. The Post for weeks has been cranking out stories challenging official assertions that the death of Vincent Foster, the White House official who was found, revolver in hand, in a Virginia park last July, was a case of simple suicide. It has questioned the United States Park Police's investigative procedures and whether the physical evidence -- the body's position, the amount of blood, etc. -- was consistent with a suicide at the site.
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CLOSING OF DISPOSABLE-RAZOR PLANT IN SPAIN SET
Date: 19 March 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Gillette Company is closing its disposable-razor factory near Seville in southern Spain, eliminating 246 jobs. Executives of Gillette Espanola S.A. gave union leaders the news yesterday at a meeting in Seville. They said closing the plant at Alcala de Guadaira was part of the United States-based parent company's plan to eliminate 2,000 jobs worldwide during the next two years. Gillette will limit European production of razor blades and disposable razors to its plants at Isleworth in Britain and Germany. A Gillette spokeswoman, Yolanda Navarro, said she could not say when the plant would stop production or what type of severance pay workers would receive. Candido Mendez, local secretary general of the General Workers Union, said plant closings by multinational companies are turning Andalusia into "an industrial desert and an economic disaster."
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VIRGINIA POWER IS OFFERING EARLY RETIREMENT TO 1,200
Date: 19 March 1994
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
As part of its efforts to reduce costs and hold down electric rates, Virginia Power said yesterday that it would offer early retirement to 1,200 salaried employees. The company, the main operating unit of Dominion Resources Inc., which is based in Richmond, also said it would offer voluntary separation packages to all full-time salaried employees and would conduct a study of ways to reduce costs and meet increasing competition. Since 1989, the utility has cut more than 2,000 jobs, primarily through attrition. Virginia Power currently has about 12,000 employees. The packages must be accepted by April 29.
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Right in Your Own Backyard
Date: 20 March 1994
To the Editor: When Walter Goodman wrote in his essay "Can a Trial Be Too Hot for TV?" [ March 6 ] : "If television has a problem in this rancorously multicultural era, it is not insensitivity but oversensitivity to those who feel victimized," he came close, but no cigar. Had he written, "If The New York Times has a problem in this rancorously multicultural era, it is not insensitivity but oversensitivity to those who feel victimized," he would have been right on the money.
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 20 March 1994
International 3-21 NORTH KOREA SANCTIONS CLOSER The United States has decided to ask the United Nations to lay the groundwork for economic sanctions against North Korea, having failed to persuade the country to accept monitoring of its nuclear facilities. 1 THE PERILS OF NATASHA Foreign soap operas have captured the imagination of many Russians. While the trend is deplored by intellectuals, many fans find the drama a welcome distraction from the bleakness of their lives. 1
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 19 March 1994
International 3-7 STEPS TO AID MIDEAST TALKS The United States announced steps that will help bring about a resumption of talks between Israel and the P.L.O. and said that Syria, Lebanon and Jordan will return to the broader Mideast peace talks. 1
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Newmont Companies Forge Closer Links in Swap Deal
Date: 19 March 1994
By Andrea Adelson
Andrea Adelson
Shareholders of the Newmont Gold Company approved a complex stock and asset-shifting plan with the Newmont Mining Corporation yesterday that would in effect create the world's sixth-largest gold producer. Because each company's common stock will continue to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the combination of Newmont Gold and Newmont Mining stops short of a full merger. Officials of both companies said such a merger would have resulted in a $400 million charge against future earnings related to the tax implications of the companies' good will.
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Chairman of Bankers Trust Was Paid $10 Million in 1993
Date: 19 March 1994
By Saul Hansell
Saul Hansell
Some of the biggest rewards on Wall Street can actually be found at a bank. The highly profitable Bankers Trust New York Corporation, the banking company that most resembles a securities trading firm, paid its chairman $10 million last year, an amount equal to about 1 percent of its profits.
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Viewpoints;
New Angles From the Spin Doctors
Date: 20 March 1994
By Joel Bleifuss
Joel Bleifuss
COMMUNICATIONS professionals, as the flacks of yesteryear are now known, earn their living by sticking Happy Faces over unpleasant realities. "It is easier and less costly to change the way people think about reality than it is to change reality," says Morris Wolfe, a press critic.
But in our savvy culture, people soon see through cosmetic makeovers. This spurs the public relations folk to develop yet more sophisticated -- shall we say deceptive? -- techniques. So, on the theory that forewarned is forearmed, here are some of the field's recent refinements:
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