10 grudnia 1992 roku była czwartek pod znakiem zodiaku ♐. Był to 344 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był George Bush.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 33 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły środa, 10 grudnia 2025 roku, 173 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień czwartek, 10 grudnia 2026 roku, w 191 dni. Żyłeś przez 12 226 dni lub około 293 440 godzin lub około 17 606 452 minut lub około 1 056 387 120 sekund.
10th of December 1992 News
Wiadomości, które pojawiły się na pierwszej stronie New York Times 10 grudnia 1992 roku
Sides at Daily News Set Legal Schedule
Date: 10 December 1992
Mortimer B. Zuckerman and the union representing Daily News typographers have agreed on a schedule for what could be an 11th-hour legal battle to determine whether Mr. Zuckerman will buy the bankrupt newspaper. Mr. Zuckerman and the New York Typographical Union No. 6 are to resume negotiations this week over whether Mr. Zuckerman is required to honor lifetime job guarantees the union won in 1974.
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THE TRANSITION: Man in the News -- Lloyd Millard Bentsen Jr.; Insider for the Treasury
Date: 11 December 1992
By Adam Clymer
Adam Clymer
Lloyd Bentsen is almost everything Bill Clinton is not. He is a multimillionaire, languid and almost aloof, calm and not intensely driven. He got his political start proclaiming his record as a decorated bomber pilot. Even their respective morning running routines reflect the basic symbolic difference between them. The President-elect jogs on the streets. The Secretary of the Treasury-designate stays indoors, on a treadmill.
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San Antonio Journal; Ancient Ritual for a Modern Casualty
Date: 11 December 1992
By Roberto Suro
Roberto Suro
Other businesses just go bankrupt or close down, but journalists like to say that newspapers die when they cease publication. At The San Antonio Light, which executives have said will either be closed or sold this month, all the anger and sadness of mourning have found expression in a custom as old as the Aztecs. Amid the drab cubicles and computer terminals of The Light's newsroom there is something that looks at first glance like a pile of litter. Wilted flowers, photographs, scraps of paper and odd trinkets, like a tiny football helmet, are heaped on two desks. Blinking Christmas lights have been strung haphazardly along with some garish plastic garlands.
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TV Army on the Beach Took U.S. by Surprise
Date: 10 December 1992
By Michael R. Gordon
Michael Gordon
For a military establishment acutely conscious of its vulnerability to post-cold-war budget cutters, the landing at Mogadishu was the ultimate photo opportunity. But having finally secured an elusive spotlight, the marines discovered that they had too much of a good thing. As Navy Seals and Marine reconnaissance teams came shore under the glare of television lights, the spotlights and flash attachments gave away their positions, interfered with their sophisticated night-vision equipment and gave night blindness to commandos who wanted to have their eyes fully adjusted to darkness in case they were attacked from the dunes and scrub.
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French Fault 'Circus' Coverage of the Arrival of U.S. Troops
Date: 10 December 1992
By Alan Riding
Alan Riding
As the first French troops arrived in Somalia to join the United States-led relief mission there, French politicians sharply criticized the televised landing of American marines near Mogadishu early today as a media event and "charity show." French newspapers also said the decision to send 2,100 French troops to Somalia had divided the French Cabinet, with the Defense Minister, Pierre Joxe, opposing the move and President Francois Mitterrand finally coming down on the side of Bernard Kouchner, the Health and Humanitarian Affairs Minister.
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Times and a Union Have Tentative Pact
Date: 11 December 1992
The New York Times and District 15 of the International Association of Machinists, whose members maintain and repair the newspaper's production equipment, reached a tentative contract agreement yesterday. A spokeswoman for The Times, Nancy Nielsen, said the agreement, which is subject to ratification by the union's membership, is similar to those already approved by five other production unions at the paper. Details of the pact were not disclosed.
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Britons Doubt Charles and Diana Will Ever Rule
Date: 11 December 1992
By William E. Schmidt
William Schmidt
Conservative members of Parliament, newspaper editorialists and even avid royalists voiced skepticism today that the Prince and Princess of Wales would be able to fulfill their intended future roles as King and Queen now that they have separated as husband and wife. One day after Britain was stunned by the announcement that the royal couple intended to break up but not to divorce, the Government's insistence that the arrangement would not impair the monarchy or the succession to the throne appeared to do little to quiet doubters.
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Pirelli Replaces Division Head
Date: 10 December 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Pirelli S.p.A., the Italian tire and cable manufacturer, announced a series of management changes in its Dutch tire division, Pirelli Tire Holding N.V. Luciano Mattioli will be replaced as chairman by Giuseppe Bencini, now the chairman of Montefibre, a synthetic fiber maker that is part of the state-owned energy and chemical holding company Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi.
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COMPTRONIX SHARE PRICE JUMPS 20%
Date: 10 December 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Comptronix Corporation's stock continued its roller-coaster ride yesterday, rising $1.25 a share, or 20 percent, to $7.375 in over-the-counter trading. More than 1.2 million shares of the Guntersville, Ala., electronics concern changed hands. On Tuesday the stock fell as much as 15 percent before rebounding and closing at $6.125.
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TWO BIDS SUBMITTED FOR QANTAS AIRWAYS
Date: 10 December 1992
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Australian Government said that it received formal offers from British Airways and Singapore Airlines yesterday as the deadline for commercial bids for a stake in its flagship carrier Qantas Airways closed. A consortium of Air New Zealand and Brierley Investments Ltd., which earlier expressed interest in taking a stake, dropped out of the bidding, Finance Minister Ralph Willis said. No reason was given.
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