NO. 1 STEELMAKER IS CONSIDERING ITS GROWTH OPTIONS
Date: 05 April 1997
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
USX-US Steel Group, largest United States steelmaker, is considering growth options, including acquisitions, joint ventures or alliances (S)
Dominik Óscar Gutiérrez (born April 5, 1997) is an American professional wrestler. He is signed to WWE, where he performs on the Raw brand under the ring name Dominik Mysterio, and he is a member of The Judgment Day stable. He is the current WWE Intercontinental Champion in his first reign, and also appears in WWE's sister promotion Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (AAA), where he is in his first reign as AAA Mega Champion. Mysterio is also a two-time NXT North American Champion.
Gutiérrez is a third-generation professional wrestler, after his father Rey Mysterio and great-uncle Rey Misterio Sr. He has been around wrestling for the majority of his life, thanks to attending WWE events as a child to see his father. He had his first direct involvement when he was 8 years old in 2005, which was a storyline in which his father battled Eddie Guerrero over his legal custody. He then began training in 2017 and later started appearing with his father on WWE television in 2019. The following year, he began a feud with Seth Rollins, which culminated in his debut match at that year's SummerSlam in a losing effort. He then formed a tag team with his father in which they won the SmackDown Tag Team Championship once, making them the first father and son team to win a tag team championship in WWE. He later turned on his father in 2022 to join the villainous stable, The Judgment Day, and battled his father in losing efforts at WrestleMania 39 and XL. Mysterio defeated Finn Balor, Penta, and Bron Breakker, the incumbent champion, for the Intercontinental Championship at WrestleMania 41 by pinning Balor. Mysterio defeated El Hijo del Vikingo for the AAA Mega Championship at Worlds Collide: Las Vegas, becoming the first wrestler to hold championships in WWE and AAA simultaneously.
Lees meer...5 april 1997 was een zaterdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♈. Het was de 94e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 28 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op zaterdag 5 april 2025, 189 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op zondag 5 april 2026, in 175 dagen. Je hebt 10.416 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 249.984 uur, of ongeveer 14.999.094 minuten, of ongeveer 899.945.640 seconden.
Date: 05 April 1997
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
USX-US Steel Group, largest United States steelmaker, is considering growth options, including acquisitions, joint ventures or alliances (S)
Date: 05 April 1997
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
US Diagnostic rejects Medical Resources Inc's stock takeover offer of $6.25 a share (S)
Date: 05 April 1997
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Sunbeam Corp is interviewing investment bankers to explore options, ranging from making hostile takeovers as big as $5 billion to selling company (S)
Date: 05 April 1997
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
France rejects General Electric Company PLC of Britain as prime bidder for state's 58 percent stake in Thomson-CSF, citing national security interests (S)
Date: 06 April 1997
INTERNATIONAL 3-16 A Most-Wanted Serb Lives Free and Prospers Radovan Karadzic, an indicted former leader of the Bosnian Serbs, is making millions overseeing a monopoly that deprives his Government of tax revenues. 3 Power Clash in Zaire Despite the opening of peace talks, the three leading powers in Zaire are locked in a titanic struggle to win control of the country. 1
Date: 05 April 1997
INTERNATIONAL 3-7 Clinton Holds Rally For Chemical Weapons Ban President Clinton made a late push to win Senate ratification of the Chemical Weapons Convention. At a bipartisan rally, he shared the stage with James Baker, who negotiated the treaty as Secretary of State under President Bush, and other Republicans and military leaders. The pact, already ratified by 70 nations, will take effect on April 29, with or without the United States' participation. 1 Death Stalks Hutu Refugees Hundreds of Hutu refugees from Rwanda have died from weakness and disease in makeshift camps in eastern Zaire, where about 80,000 of them are languishing. A United Nations plan to airlift them to Rwanda from the Kisangani airfield has been stymied by Zairian rebels, who have barred their way. The rebels, mostly ethnic Tutsi from Zaire, said they feared epidemics and the presence of armed Hutu militia leaders. 1 Few Clues on Saudi Bombing The Pentagon lacks adequate evidence about the bombers who killed 19 American airmen in Saudi Arabia last year to warrant retaliation against foreign nations that may have helped them, said Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A senior Pentagon official said the investigation into the bombing was likely to continue for months and might never yield proof of the involvement of a foreign government. 3 Turkey Lashes Out at Germany Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan of Turkey angrily described recent attacks on Turks in Germany as the result of an ''anti-Muslim campaign'' there. A Turkish woman and her two children were killed in an arson attack in Krefeld, which the Turkish Government listed as the 17th such attack in 1997. German officials rejected the accusation and charged the husband and father of the arson victims with setting the fire. More than two million Turks live in Germany. 3 Strikes Proliferate in France Strikes and the threat of more have swept across France. Pilots, hospital interns and bank employees have stopped work, and truck drivers have threatened to repeat their strike of last November. Unemployment, at 12.8 percent, is higher than ever, and the popularity of President Jacques Chirac has plummeted, according to polls. The strikers object to cuts in wages and state-mandated benefits they have won over the years. 4 Inmates Seize Colombia Jail Inmates angry about prison conditions in Valledupar in northern Colombia released 2 of at least 10 hostages seized in a violent takeover but demanded bulletproof vests and helicopters before they freed the rest. Four guards were killed when about 10 inmates seized control of the prison on Thursday. The two released were a female guard and a teen-age girl who had been delivering a birthday greeting. (AP) NATIONAL 8-12 Space Shuttle Lifts Off For Study of Gravity The space shuttle Columbia was launched on a 16-day mission to study the subtleties of what happens in the absence of gravity. The shuttle, with a crew of seven, lifted off about 20 minutes later than scheduled and was watched by large crowds. 10 An American astronaut and two Russian compatriots on the Mir space station began relying on a backup air-purification system after the main device to remove carbon dioxide overheated. 10 Changes Reshaping F.A.A. Under a new policy that has been in effect for only a few weeks, the Federal Aviation Administration is announcing major violations by airlines and the fines levied in those cases. But the agency will still not say how serious some of the violations may be or compare the violations at one airline with those at another. 11 Pilots' Contract Advances A tentative contract between American Airlines and its pilots' union won the endorsement of the group's leaders and will be sent to the union's 9,300 members for a ratification vote early next month. 11 Blood Tests Tell Expected Tale Most of the 39 Heaven's Gate cult members who committed suicide at a California house had taken a lethal combination of drugs and alcohol before dying, the results of blood tests showed. 12 Gallo Wineries Win in Court A Federal jury in San Francisco ruled that the E.& J. Gallo Winery had not tried to deceive consumers by using a bottle that one of California's most successful premium vintners said shared some characteristics of its bottles. 10 Cocaine Found Among Bananas The Alabama State Police found more than 1,100 pounds of cocaine hidden in a truckload of bananas. The police released the driver of the tractor-trailer after concluding he did not know he was carrying the drugs. State troopers made the find while conducting safety inspections on Interstate 65. (AP) NEW YORK/REGION 23-27 Getting Concert Tickets Was Wrong, Rowland Says Gov. John G. Rowland, the first baby boomer to hold Connecticut's highest office, today admitted to violating state ethics laws and blamed a culprit that has swayed so many in his generation: rock and roll. Mr. Rowland has agreed to pay a $2,000 fine for accepting discounted tickets to six concerts from a lobbyist and other third parties. He also said he would donate the value of the tickets -- $1,919 -- to charity. 26 Messinger Criticizes Sharpton The peace that had enveloped the Democratic mayoral contest appears to have been shattered. Ruth W. Messinger condemned the Rev. Al Sharpton for saying he did not consider Louis Farrakhan an anti-Semite, saying such words would ''only serve to tear us apart.'' 23 Insurance Overhaul Less Likely Prospects that Governor Whitman's plan for a major overhaul of car insurance in New Jersey will be approved by Election Day have dimmed. Twice in recent days, she has been quoted as saying she is uncertain about chances of winning legislative approval of her reform plan by November. 24 Arrest in Dominican Republic Francisco Medina, whose handiwork on the behalf of drug gangs in the early 1990's, officials say, soaked the streets of the South Bronx and upper Manhattan with blood, has been arrested in the Dominican Republic. 25 SPORTS 29-33 ARTS 13-19, 22 BUSINESS DAY 34-47 Unemployment Rate Drops The unemployment rate edged down to 5.2 percent last month -- matching its lowest level in eight years -- as the reinvigorated economy continued to improve the labor market. That may prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates again. 1 Stock Market Rebounds Despite the threat of higher interest rates, the stock market showed new signs of life, rallying late in the day to put a temporary cap on what had become the market's biggest downturn in two years. The Dow industrials gained 48.72 points. For the week, the Dow lost 215 points. 36 Office-Supply Merger Blocked The Federal Trade Commission rejected the proposed $4 billion merger of two office supply discounters, Staples and Office Depot, setting the stage for a possible court battle. The action reflects a growing aggressiveness in antitrust enforcement. 1 Plan Would Raise Phone Bills AT&T, Bell Atlantic and Nynex made a proposal to eliminate $2.5 billion in subsidies from the telephone industry while increasing local phone bills by 75 cents a month. The proposal is an attempt to settle a debate about how much the Government should reduce the access charges that long-distance carriers pay to local phone companies. 35 Knight-Ridder to Buy 4 Papers The Knight-Ridder newspaper chain said that it was buying the Kansas City Star, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and two smaller newspapers from Disney for $1.65 billion. 35 Business Digest 35 OBITUARIES 28 EDITORIAL 20-21 Editorials: Guns in school, Haiti's democratic troubles, thwarting the drug trade, protecting farm labor. Columns: Russell Baker, Maureen Dowd. Bridge 19 Crossword 18 Weather 27
Date: 05 April 1997
Joseph F Sullivan, former New Jersey bureau chief for New York Times and political reporter who covered administrations of seven New Jersey governors, dies at 66; photo (M)
Date: 06 April 1997
By Roberta Hershenson
Roberta Hershenson
Interview with Seymour Topping, distinguished former New York Times foreign correspondent and managing editor, who is administrator of Pulitzer Prizes; photo (M)
Date: 06 April 1997
By Diana B. Henriques
Diana
Donald E Maude, economist known as inflation policy expert, dies at age 55; photo (S)
Date: 05 April 1997
By Robert D. McFadden
Robert
State University Hospital in Stony Brook, New York, is under media siege after news leaks out about birth of sextuplets; Queens parents insist no information be released for now; four girls and two boys were delivered 11 weeks premature and are reported doing well, each weighing at least two pounds; they are third known set of sextuplets to survive in US and tenth in world; two sets of quadruplets have also been born in New York in last two weeks (S)