Il 29 luglio 1993 era una giovedì sotto il segno zodiacale del ♌. Era il 209 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era William J. (Bill) Clinton.
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29th of July 1993 News
Notizie come è apparso sulla prima pagina del New York Times il 29 luglio 1993
Daily News Selects Ally & Gargano
Date: 30 July 1993
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
The Daily News said yesterday that it had named Ally & Gargano in New York to develop a campaign, to begin after Labor Day, to raise the newspaper's citywide circulation as well as promote the sections for Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens. The newspaper's account, recently inactive, was last handled by Messner Vetere Berger McNamee Schmetterer Euro RSCG after that agency absorbed Della Femina, McNamee Inc. Billings were not disclosed.
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CHRONICLE
Date: 29 July 1993
By Nadine Brozan
Nadine Brozan
What's a co-anchor, if not someone with whom to share happy occasions (in addition to delivering the news)? CORA-ANN MIHALIK will give a party for JOHN ROLAND, her WNYW-TV co-anchor on "The 10 O'Clock News," on Sunday evening at Nino's Restaurant on the Upper East Side. The party will mark Mr. Roland's 25th anniversary at Channel 5. The two are on the air together every weeknight for an hour on the Fox Broadcasting station.
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A Detroit Judge as Attention-Getting as His Case
Date: 30 July 1993
By Jack Lessenberry
Jack Lessenberry
Even at celebrated trials, judges often stay in the background, taking the spotlight only when it is time to charge the jury. But in the beating trial that has consumed Detroit for two months, Judge George W. Crockett 3d has been very much at center stage -- a figure as complicated as the case itself.
He has spent much of his 54 years doing battle -- with mental illness, with McCarthyism, with The Detroit News. Last month he stunned the courtroom and the press by sentencing a 23-year-old summer intern at The News to five days in jail for telephoning a juror in the case.
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Private Meetings, Public Apologies
Date: 29 July 1993
By Jennifer Frey
Jennifer Frey
The Mets held two closed-door meetings before last night's game against the Florida Marlins in an attempt to address their plummeting public image and their increasingly volatile relationship with the New York-area news media. Reporters were not allowed in the clubhouse before the game as the players met first with Manager Dallas Green and the assistant vice president, Gerry Hunsicker, then with Donald Fehr, the president of the Players Association. Fehr had called an emergency meeting to discuss what he termed "an adversarial relationship between some members of the club and members of the media."
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Crown Heights: An Overestimated Mayoral Issue?
Date: 29 July 1993
By Alan Finder
Alan Finder
Campaigns are long, voters unpredictable and the conventional political wisdom can sometimes be as meaningful as a candidate's latest press release. Just last week, New York City politicians were virtually unanimous in concluding that Mayor David N. Dinkins would suffer significant political damage from the release of a voluminous state report that criticized sharply his administration's handling of the Crown Heights disturbances two years ago.
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Editorial Notebook: Not an Anchorman in Sight; War Correspondents Remember Korea
Date: 29 July 1993
By James L. Greenfield
James Greenfield
Last weekend, vaguely inspired to commemorate the Korean armistice signed 40 years ago this week, some 100 correspondents who had covered the Korean War traveled to Washington D.C. to reminisce together. War stories were out. Blue blazers were in. Most, it turned out, had retired since the group's last reunion 10 years ago. That made this gathering feel more like a country club weekend than a convention of old barracks mates. No one took a formal poll, but former CBS correspondent Lou Cioffi, at a reported 67, was considered the youngest. His white ponytail seemed to clinch the title.
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COMPANY NEWS: Study in Milken's Name; Overpaid Executives? Takes One to Know
Date: 29 July 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Milken Institute for Job and Capital Formation said yesterday that Americans cited "corporate executives being paid too much" as a leading cause of job losses. The institute, a private, nonprofit research group, may seem an unlikely source for assertions that executives are being paid too much money. It is named for its chairman, Michael R. Milken, who in 1987 alone was paid $550 million in salary and bonuses by his former firm, Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc.
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GENENTECH GRANTED INJUNCTION AGAINST WELLCOME
Date: 30 July 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Genentech Inc. said yesterday that it was granted a permanent injunction prohibiting Wellcome P.L.C. from making the clot-dissolving drug T.P.A. until 2005. Genentech has battled the British drug giant over the patent rights since 1988. Genentech, which sells the drug under the brand name Activase, derived 33 percent of its $169.8 million in second-quarter sales from Activase. A Genentech spokesman said Wellcome had tried to develop a similar drug that infringed Genentech's patents. Wellcome declined to comment.
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COMPAQ TO SUPPLY MOSCOW TELEPHONE WITH COMPUTERS
Date: 29 July 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Compaq Computer Corporation said yesterday that it had signed an agreement to supply personal computers to the Moscow General Telephone Services to automate its telephone operations. The improvements should take a substantial burden off Muscovites who make one or two brief telephone calls. Moscow General Telephone, which provides phone services to 15 million customers, charges customers a monthly flat fee, regardless of the number or length of telephone calls.
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MCI FORMS CONSORTIUM FOR NEW WIRELESS SERVICES
Date: 30 July 1993
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The MCI Communications Corporation said yesterday that it had formed a consortium of more than 150 companies to offer personal communications services, known as PCS, a new wireless technology that will allow users to receive voice, data and paging information anywhere in the country using one phone number. The Federal Communications Commission is expected to raise $7.2 billion by auctioning PCS licenses over the next five years. The consortium includes the Alltel Corporation, Teleport Denver, Landmark, GCI and Times Mirror Cable Television.
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