1993年1月18日は、%sの星印の下の月曜日でした。 それはその年の**♑日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は17**でした。
この日に生まれた場合、あなたはGeorge Bush歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は32、2025年1月18日土曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は239、2026年1月18日日曜日日です。 あなたは125日、または約11,927時間、または約286,263分、または約17,175,807秒生きてきました。
18th of January 1993 News
ニューヨークタイムズのトップページに 1993年1月18日 で掲載されたニュース
Nation Is Optimistic About Clinton Years
Date: 19 January 1993
Americans are waiting for Bill Clinton's Presidency with revived optimism about the nation and the economy, a new New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. Three-fourths of those polled said they thought the President-elect cared "about the needs and problems" of people like them. And the survey suggests much indifference to campaign promises, with the exception of health care.
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Pittsburgh Journal; 'Mouse' That Inherited Pittsburgh
Date: 19 January 1993
By Michael Decourcy Hinds
Michael Hinds
Saying they were starved for local news, sports columns, comic strips, job advertisements, movie listings and obituary notices, Pittsburgh residents lined up in the bitter cold outside news vendors this morning to buy the first copies of The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette to roll off the presses in eight months. "This is exciting," Laverne Dober, 40, a clerk in a downtown finance company, said as she waited to buy a copy of the city's only major newspaper to survive a long strike by employees. "We haven't had a hometown paper for so long, it's ridiculous."
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Times's Machinists Approve Contract
Date: 18 January 1993
The membership of the machinists union yesterday ratified a new agreement with The New York Times that will help stabilize the daily operation and labor relations of the company's new printing plant in Edison, N.J., the newspaper said. District 15 of the International Association of Machinists, whose members maintain and repair the newspaper's production equipment, became the sixth of the seven production unions involved in the $450 million color printing plant to ratify agreements with The Times, said Nancy Nielsen, a spokeswoman for the newspaper. The seventh union, the paperhandlers, has reached a tentative accord with The Times, she said.
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INSIDE
Date: 19 January 1993
New Hopes for Protection Domestic industries are lining up for Government protection against foreign rivals, encouraged by Clinton campaign promises. Page D1. G.O.P. Hires Passport Aide A Federal official who was demoted for his role in the search of Bill Clinton's passport files has been hired by Senate Republicans. Page A18. Indiana Train Crash Kills 7 Seven people were killed and dozens more were injured in Gary when two commuter trains sideswiped each other near a bridge. Page A16. Big Plunge in a Drug Stock Centocor's stock lost two-thirds of its value after the company said it was stopping American clinical trials on its leading new drug. Page D1. Teaching by the Book Because of bureaucracy and union seniority rules, a veteran Manhattan teacher is being forced to leave her class of gifted pupils. Page B1.
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To Bolster Olympic Bid, China Eases Its Surveillance of Reporters
Date: 19 January 1993
By Nicholas D. Kristof
Nicholas
The Chinese authorities appear to have stopped following foreign reporters, as part of an effort to spruce up their image and help their bid to become host of the Olympic Games in the year 2000. The State Security Ministry and Foreign Ministry jointly issued an internal Government circular this month announcing an end to the following of foreign journalists, Chinese familiar with the document say. The circular said the step was necessary to improve Beijing's human rights image and therefore its chances of being awarded the Olympic Games.
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Americans Have High Hopes for Clinton, Poll Finds
Date: 19 January 1993
By Adam Clymer
Adam Clymer
Americans await Bill Clinton's Presidency with revived optimism about the nation and its economy and a pre-inaugural burst of confidence in him as an effective leader who cares about them, the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll shows. The public's high hopes for Mr. Clinton's term include one critical and difficult expectation: that he keep his campaign promise to change the nation's health-care system. While the poll suggests much indifference to campaign promises health care is the exception.
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An Inauguration Designed to Play to the Cameras
Date: 18 January 1993
By Richard L. Berke
Richard Berke
This time, the buses wore American flags. The politician in blue jeans and a sport shirt had vanished, replaced by a statesman in a dark suit. Long before the sun rose on inauguration week, the enduring images of Bill Clinton's ascension to power had been ordained: the historical backdrops to today's bus ride from Monticello; tonight's candlelight march across Memorial Bridge; the politically canny guest list for lunch with common folk on Monday; the gait and pace of his walk with his wife, Hillary, (hand-in-hand, no question) down Pennsylvania Avenue on Wednesday.
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THE INAUGURATION: Static on the Coverage; Viewers Are Upset Over HBO's Rights To Inaugural Event
Date: 19 January 1993
By Irvin Molotsky
Irvin Molotsky
In the middle of one of the most glittering events of the inaugural week, the Sunday concert at the Lincoln Memorial, people watching on CNN and C-Span found themselves cut off from the songs of stars like Diana Ross, Bob Dylan and Kenny Rogers. Many viewers called the two cable networks to complain, wondering how exclusive rights to an event in so public a place as the Lincoln Memorial could be bought. They were told that HBO had paid about $1.5 million to the Presidential Inaugural Committee for exclusive rights to tape the performances for transmission Sunday night.
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Insurer Files Recovery Plan
Date: 19 January 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company filed a recovery plan last week that incorporates agreements in principle reached in December with state regulators across the country. The plan, filed in New Jersey Superior Court, details the interest rates and withdrawal terms for policies and annuities held by customers.
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CHEVRON BUDGET STRESSES FOREIGN PROJECTS
Date: 19 January 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Chevron Corporation, the nation's third-largest oil company, said yesterday that its 1993 capital budget would increase by 5 percent, to $4.9 billion, primarily reflecting a continuing emphasis on overseas projects. Chevron said it intended to spend 75 percent of its $2.6 billion exploration and production budget outside the United States, about 10 percent more than estimated exploration and production expenditures last year. The company also said it would reduce spending for domestic exploration and production by 20 percent from last year, to $700 million. The overseas budget includes the planned start-up of a joint venture in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan.
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