23 maart 1993 was een dinsdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♈. Het was de 81e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 32 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op zondag 23 maart 2025, 180 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op maandag 23 maart 2026, in 184 dagen. Je hebt 11.868 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 284.854 uur, of ongeveer 17.091.278 minuten, of ongeveer 1.025.476.680 seconden.
23rd of March 1993 News
Nieuws zoals het verscheen op de voorpagina van de New York Times op 23 maart 1993
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 24 March 1993
National A11-19 CLINTON WAVERS ON GAY PLEDGE Facing resistance over his pledge to allow homosexuals to serve in the armed forces, President Clinton said for the first time that he would consider proposals to segregate troops by sexual orientation. A1 RENO CLEARS OUT PROSECUTORS Attorney General Janet Reno demanded the resignation of all United States Attorneys, leading a top Federal prosecutor to suggest that the order could be tied to his investigation of Representative Dan Rostenkowski, a crucial Clinton ally. A1
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Transcript of Clinton's First News Conference at White House
Date: 24 March 1993
Following is a transcript of the question-and-answer portion of President Clinton's first official news conference, held in the East Room of the White House today, as recorded by The New York Times: Q. Mr. President, would you be willing to hold the summit meeting in Moscow if it would be best for President Yeltsin's political health? Have you spoken to President Yeltsin? And don't you think that if you did go through Moscow it would engage the U.S. too closely in the power struggle in the capital?
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Murdoch Explores Buying Post Again
Date: 24 March 1993
Rupert Murdoch, who made The New York Post the nation's most flamboyant daily before selling it five years ago, has called Gov. Mario M. Cuomo and at least two United States Senators to learn whether he would have the political support to buy back the teetering newspaper.
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INSIDE
Date: 24 March 1993
What Price Cleanup? When Columbus, Ohio, fought a $2 million cleanup of a parking lot project, it set off a national revolt on environmental policy. Page A16. Harriman Named Envoy Pamela Harriman, 73, a longtime Democratic insider, has been chosen as Ambassador to France. Page A7. Indians Mourn 2 Pitchers "The team's taking it hard," a Cleveland player said after two teammates died in a boating accident. Page B9. New School Battleground Issues that led to the downfall of the New York City schools chief are now the crux of board elections. Page B1.
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INSIDE
Date: 23 March 1993
New Pilot Rule Proposed Citing deadly crashes in Denver and New York, the Government proposed a rule to prevent pairing inexperienced pilots and co-pilots. Page A14. Senate Test for Democrats A Senate vote on taxing Social Security benefits will test Democrats' willingness to cast unpopular votes to support President Clinton. Page A20. Old Language Deciphered Scholars have decoded an early American language known as epi-Olmec. Science Times, page C1. The Splintering of Top 40 Pop music's most important promotion medium is falling victim to fragmented radio audiences. Page C13.
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Next Time, Prime Time
Date: 24 March 1993
Leaving his windbreaker in the closet, Bill Clinton wore a crisp suit, striped tie and polished shoes yesterday to the first news conference of his Presidency. He not only "survived" the encounter, in the words of one TV anchor, but did so without serious damage. This suggests that he might face the press again someday, assuming he can overcome his advisers' preference for tightly controlled settings far from the dreaded Washington press corps and their habit of asking tougher questions than adoring 9-year-olds do. Until now, one of the glibbest occupants of the Oval Office since John Kennedy has stiffed the press in favor of one-way radio addresses and the electronic town hall, which has to be a media planner's gift from Heaven. Both enable him to serve the high democratic ideal of talking directly to the people, including well-rehearsed children, while avoiding questions from the resident press.
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Camera Ban In Courtroom For Child Case
Date: 23 March 1993
By John T. McQuiston
John McQuiston
After a plea last week by Katie Beers to "keep her private life private," a Family Court judge today barred cameras from the courtroom while her mother, Marilyn Beers, tries to regain custody of her. But the judge said reporters could continue to cover the proceedings, except when Katie appears in court or during other sensitive testimony about Katie, 10, who gained national attention when she was kidnapped in December and held captive in an underground bunker for 16 days.
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Cuomo Called By Murdoch On The Post
Date: 24 March 1993
By Martin Gottlieb
Martin Gottlieb
Rupert Murdoch, who transformed The New York Post into the nation's most flamboyant daily before selling it five years ago, has called Gov. Mario M. Cuomo and at least two United States Senators in recent days to determine whether he would have the political support to buy back the teetering newspaper. While the Governor yesterday did little more than acknowledge receiving a call from Mr. Murdoch, the Senators, Alfonse M. D'Amato, Republican of New York, and Ernest F. Hollings, Democrat of South Carolina, said they would provide crucial support to Mr. Murdoch if he was deemed the only viable buyer for the paper.
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Perot's TV Ratings Decline From Marks He Got in November
Date: 23 March 1993
Citizen Perot doesn't draw quite so many viewers as Candidate Perot did in his prime. Ross Perot's first television program since the November election, shown Sunday at 8 P.M. on NBC, received a 7.9 rating in 28 major media markets, down from his average 9.1 rating for his broadcasts during the Presidential campaign. In those 28 cities, 12 percent of people watching television turned to Mr. Perot's program. Nationwide, each rating point equals 931,000 households, but since the preliminary results represent only 28 cities there was no way to count the total households watching the program.
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In a Protest, Post's Editor Moves His Desk to a Diner
Date: 23 March 1993
By Robert D. McFadden
Robert
Pete Hamill, the embattled editor of The New York Post, moved his desk to a diner next door to the newspaper's South Street offices yesterday after four top news and editorial employees who were laid off by Abraham Hirschfeld last week tried to return to work but were barred by security guards. Amid the sizzle of hamburgers and puffs of steam from the coffee urns, Mr. Hamill set up shop in a pink-and-white corner booth at the South Street Diner, conferring by cellular phone with reporters and editors in the newsroom and pecking at a laptop computer between cigarettes and greasy french fries.
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