Přehrávání neděle 5. prosince 1993

5. prosince 1993 bylo neděle pod hvězdičkou . Byl 338 den v roce. Prezidentem Spojených států byl William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Pokud jste se narodili v tento den, je vám 32 let. Vaše poslední narozeniny byly pátek 5. prosince 2025 před 193 dny. Vaše další narozeniny jsou sobota 5. prosince 2026, za 171 dní. Žili jste 11 881 dní nebo přibližně 285 165 hodin nebo přibližně 17 109 942 minut nebo přibližně 1 026 596 520 sekund.

Někteří lidé, kteří sdílejí tyto narozeniny:

  • Walt Disney (animátor, filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, hlasový herec, ilustrátor, karikaturista, malíř, producent, režisér, scenárista, spisovatel, televizní moderátor, vynálezce, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1901)
  • Dev Patel (filmový herec, herec, taekwondista, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1990)
  • Pchúmipchon Adunjadét (důstojník, fotograf, hudební skladatel, inženýr, jachtař, jazzový hudebník, malíř, ochránce životního prostředí, panovník, politik, saxofonista, sociální pracovník, spisovatel, státník, učitel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1927)
  • Werner Heisenberg (akademik, fyzik, horolezec, jaderný fyzik, matematik, spisovatel literatury faktu, teoretický fyzik, vysokoškolský učitel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1901)
  • Paula Pattonová (filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1975)
  • Ronnie O'Sullivan (hráč poolu, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1975)
  • Anthony Martial (fotbalista, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1995)
  • Little Richard (autor písní, hudebník, klavírista, kněz, nahrávající umělec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1932)
  • Joan Didionová (esejista, novinář, romanopisec, scenárista, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1934)
  • Wladyslaw Szpilman (autor písní, hudební skladatel, hudebník, klavírista, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1911)
  • Eddie Edwards (skokan na lyžích, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1963)
  • André-Pierre Gignac (fotbalista, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1985)
  • George Armstrong Custer (důstojník, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1839)
  • Józef Piłsudski (politik, voják, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1867)
  • Sajid Javid (bankéř, ekonom, politik, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1969)
  • Martin Van Buren (advokát, diplomat, otrokář, politik, spisovatel, státník, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1782)
  • Lin Piao (politik, voják, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1907)
  • José Carreras (nahrávající umělec, operní pěvec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1946)
  • Strom Thurmond (advokát, politik, soudce, učitel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1902)
  • Fritz Lang (filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, scenárista, střihač, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1890)
  • Ross Barkley (fotbalista, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1993)
  • Amy Acker (filmový herec, herec, hlasový herec, model, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1976)
  • Paddy Kelly (hudební skladatel, hudebník, kytarista, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1977)
  • David Taylor (zápasník, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1990)
  • Lope de Vega (básník, dramatik, překladatel, spisovatel, Narozen dne 25. listopadu 1562)
  • Carlos Marighella (básník, politik, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1911)
  • Patricia Kaas (herec, nahrávající umělec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1966)
  • Lisa Marie (filmový herec, model, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1968)
  • Nick Stahl (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1979)
  • Wendi Dengová (filmový producent, podnikatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1968)
  • Stefano Bollani (hudební skladatel, klavírista, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1972)
  • JJ Cale (hudební skladatel, hudebník, kytarista, nahrávající umělec, písničkář, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1938)
  • Shakin' Stevens (bavič, písničkář, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1948)
  • Alexander Sørloth (fotbalista, rychlobruslař, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1995)
  • Jessica Paré (filmový herec, herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1980)
  • Fjodor Ivanovič Ťutčev (básník, diplomat, filozof, politik, překladatel, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1803)
  • Keri Hilson (autor písní, filmový herec, herec, hudební skladatel, hudebník, nahrávající umělec, písničkář, tanečník, umělec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1982)
  • Anastasio Somoza Debayle (politik, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1925)
  • Gabriel Luna (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1982)
  • Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg (politik, právník, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1971)
  • Otto Preminger (charakterní herec, filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1905)
  • Camarón de la Isla (zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1950)
  • Samantha Lewthwaitová (hudebník, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1983)
  • Jeroen Krabbé (filmový herec, filmový producent, filmový režisér, herec, hlasový herec, malíř, televizní herec, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1944)
  • Rose Wilder Lane (autor dětské literatury, novinář, romanopisec, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1886)
  • Carrie Hamilton (divadelní herec, dramatik, filmový herec, scenárista, spisovatel, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1963)
  • Afanasij Fet (autor autobiografie, básník, překladatel, spisovatel, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1820)
  • Amanda Lepore (herec, hudebník, model, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1967)
  • Timothy Castagne (fotbalista, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1995)
  • Johannes Heesters (divadelní herec, filmový herec, herec, televizní herec, zpěvák, Narozen dne 5. prosince 1903)

5th of December 1993 News

Zprávy, jak se objevily na titulní stránce New York Times dne 5. prosince 1993

TRIAL IN SINGAPORE TESTS PRESS CURBS

Date: 05 December 1993

By Philip Shenon

Philip Shenon

There was unexpected bad news for Singapore investors in the summer of 1992, when Government figures showed that economic growth was sluggish, at least by the standards of this booming Southeast Asian city-state. A year later, the news may be far worse for the newspaper editors who dared to run an exclusive article citing the Government's numbers. Their exclusive may send them, and their sources, to prison.

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ELECTION COVERAGE IS VARIED IN RUSSIA

Date: 05 December 1993

By Serge Schmemann

Serge Schmemann

It's been two weeks since Pravda disappeared from print, this time for failing to pay its bills, but even declared Communists are not bemoaning its absence too loudly. True, the venerable daily founded by Lenin himself in 1912 was probably the only major Russian newspaper to openly support the Communist Party in the campaign for a new Parliament, but then there was never any doubt how its readers would vote, anyway.

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Reporter Disciplined for Reading His Co-workers' Electronic Mail

Date: 06 December 1993

By Calvin Sims

Calvin Sims

In a stunning example of growing concern over technology and privacy in the workplace, The Los Angeles Times has recalled a foreign correspondent from its Moscow bureau for snooping into the electronic mail of his colleagues. The correspondent, Michael Hiltzik, a well-regarded journalist who joined The Times's Moscow bureau in August, is being reassigned to an undetermined position in Los Angeles as a disciplinary action, editors and reporters at the newspaper said.

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Tokyo Stocks Fall Sharply

Date: 06 December 1993

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Stocks tumbled here today, as weekend reports that the Government would delay a economic stimulus plan had traders concerned about the state of Japan's fragile economy. The Nikkei index of 225 issues closed down 618.97 points, or 3.55 percent, at 16,840.38. The Nikkei had managed to stay above the 17,000 mark since Wednesday.

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Gardening News

Date: 05 December 1993

Cuttings, the weekly gardening column, has moved to this section. Today, page 63.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 05 December 1993

International 3-29 MULTICULTURE? FRANCE SAYS NO In a dispute over head coverings worn by Muslim schoolgirls in France, the eight-month-old Government signaled that it would no longer tolerate multiculturalism. 1 The French may know more about the Holocaust than others do. 14

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 06 December 1993

International A3-10 PLAN TO AVERT U.S. MISSILES The Pentagon has drafted a plan to aim United States nuclear missiles at the open seas and is talking with Russian generals about a possible joint move to turn missiles away from their cold war targets. A1

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Television

Date: 06 December 1993

By Elizabeth Kolbert

Elizabeth Kolbert

IT is said that winning isn't everything. But try telling that to a television network. Last week, when the November sweep came to an end, the broadcast networks practically tripped over one another in their rush to proclaim victory. In news conferences Thursday, each offered a set of select statistics intended to show how it had triumphed while its rivals had stumbled. Together, they offered more spin than a Tilt-a-Whirl.

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Times Mirrors Family Ties Fade

Date: 06 December 1993

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

Management changes announced last week at the Times Mirror Company accelerated an evolution that is changing one of the largest family-dominated media empires in the country. The company's president, David Laventhol, said he was stepping down and two senior vice presidents were given new responsibilities and titles in what was widely seen as the start of a competition over who will succeed the company's chairman, Robert F. Erburu, who is 63 and is expected to retire in two years.

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Business Diary: November 26 - December 3

Date: 05 December 1993

By Hubert B. Herring

Hubert

THE ECONOMY If the Numbers Don't Lie, America's Going Back to Work Is it as good news as it seems that the nation's unemployment rate plunged from 6.8 percent to 6.4 percent in November? Skeptics were quick to say that for complicated statistical reasons, the progress reported by the Labor Department last week was almost surely overstated, and financial markets shrugged it off. But with any kind of faith, what you see is a stunning number -- the biggest improvement in a decade, and a compelling sign that this on-again, off-again economy is at last performing its most basic function: creating jobs. Employers added jobs from California to Florida to New York, and most places in between -- and they were more likely to be full-time jobs, too. As those of you with jobs well know, companies have been putting off hiring and leaning on existing workers, uncertain about things like medical costs, but this news may show that they just couldn't hold out any longer. An Economy on a Spree It's more than jobs. The economic engine keeps gaining speed as it barrels toward that year-end blowout -- which long ago, rumor has it, was some sort of religious celebration. But once Christmas is past, will the vigor survive? Economists are cautious. Last week, though, the numbers were strong: income, construction spending, and factory orders all up, the purchasing managers' index showing the fastest growth since last winter. There were some blips: new-home sales were off, but that followed a surge the month before, so housing still looks good. And retail sales rose just slightly -- but of course any shoppers worth their credit cards would not dream of going wild till it's almost Christmas. Tired of Waiting for S.& L. Job It's clearly liberating to be nominated for a Government job and then decide it isn't worth jumping through all the hoops. Stanley Tate, named in July to head the Resolution Trust Corporation, but still awaiting a confirmation hearing, didn't mince words last week when he called it quits. "Washington," he said, "is a vicious city, with all kinds of hidden agendas. It is a city full of rumors, allegations and accusations." And why did his nomination die? Because he's a Republican? Because Bill Clinton didn't back him fully? Or because there was something to the "serious questions" that Donald Riegle, Senate Banking chairman, had about Mr. Tate? Mr. Tate's version: bureaucrats were afraid he'd root out mismanagement. Whatever the reason, Mr. Tate, a Florida developer, said he felt "disposable and dispensable." And the bailout agency just keeps on drifting. Mending Hubble, Mending NASA If NASA were a corporation, it would long since have become an obscure Wal-Mart subsidiary. It's made one cosmic gaffe after another: the Challenger disaster, the flawed Hubble Space Telescope, the apparent kidnapping of the Mars Observer by little green spacepersons. It's no understatement to say, as one space expert did last week, "NASA can't afford another highly visible failure." So the pressure's on the astronauts on the shuttle Endeavour, which lifted off on Thursday. The astronauts' mission: to fix Hubble in mid-space, essentially by putting a pair of eyeglasses on it. If they succeed, secrets of the universe could snap into focus; if they fail, the focus will be on NASA's jugular. But as one Hubble scientist put it, "This is not like going to Grandma's to fix a leaky faucet." OPEC, Where Is Thy Sting? Twenty years ago, OPEC seemed sure to strangle America with ever-higher oil prices. But last week it was clear just how times had changed. After slipping all year, oil prices plunged to a five-year low after OPEC failed to agree to cut output. So gasoline, steadily cheaper in 1973 dollars, seems likely to get cheaper still, which would help the economy. But everything has a cost, and cheaper gas means auto makers are less likely to put their efforts into making more efficient cars. Victor Posner Is Out of Play It was an unusual penalty, but the judge said the scope of the violations justified it. Saying they "have had a long and notorious history of engaging in self-dealing and corporate waste," a Federal judge last week banned Victor Posner and his son, Steven, from serving as officers or directors of any public company. The order came in a civil suit brought by the S.E.C. as part of a broader case against Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky, and it involved charges that the Posners made secret stock deals with Mr. Boesky. In light of past abuses, the judge said, another warning "would serve little purpose." COMPANIES Paying a Price for Family Values Family values. So simple a term, yet so laden with subtext. On the surface, it means apple pie, caring, a cozy hearth; but it can also be a code phrase for excluding, condemning, even denying the existence of anything but cookie-cutter Americans. Normally, to cry "family values" is just free speech, but in Texas last week, the price was high. Apple Computer planned to build an $80 million office complex north of Austin, creating 1,500 jobs. But county officials rejected a $750,000 tax abatement, citing Apple's policy of granting health benefits to employees' unmarried partners, and Apple took its blueprints and hit the road. Sony's Pain, And the World's In 1946, in a bombed-out Tokyo department store, a young man named Akio Morita helped found the Sony Corporation. Since then, as both Sony and Japan grew mighty, Mr. Morita became, in one American's words, the world's "leading Japanese business statesman." So it is symbolic that as Japan's phenomenal half-century shows distinct wear and tear, Sony's chairman falters. Last week Mr. Morita, 72, underwent brain surgery, and he may have to retire. That would be bad news for Sony, where, even removed from day-to-day operations, he remained the "psychological backbone." And it would be bad news abroad, for Mr. Morita has played a leading role in smoothing trade tensions with America. Volvo Vants to Be Alone The planned Volvo-Renault merger created serious friction at Volvo. Many executives wanted to back out, loath to let Sweden lose one of its corporate stars. But the chairman, Pehr Gyllenhammar, stuck to the plan, seeing strength in having a European partner. Last week Mr. Gyllenhammar lost his fight: The merger was called off, and he quickly resigned, saying that Volvo's managers had "turned their backs on Europe." Job Cuts: A Weekly Ritual It almost stops being news, squarely in a class with "Dog Bites Man." Another week, and more corporate giants cut thousands of jobs. Last week was no exception. A. T.& T. may cut as many as 4,500 jobs as the long-distance wars take their toll. And airline woes continue to seep through to Boeing, which will cut production, meaning a loss of up to 3,000 jobs. Even the beer industry is pulling in its belly, as Miller said it would close a plant in upstate New York, eliminating 900 jobs. G.M. Downsizes Its Data Saturated with economic numbers? Good news: Detroit is going to spare you some. Much as eager-beaver pundits crave the latest word, General Motors decided last week that 10-day sales reports were overkill and would scrap them in January; Ford will probably follow suit. Chrysler went to monthly figures a couple of years ago, but then some helpful souls started estimating 10-day sales. While some analysts found the figures useful, most were relieved. "About time," said one. INTERNATIONAL Again, Hope for World Trade Your eyes glaze over at the words "Uruguay Round"? You're forgiven: these trade talks have long since taken on a Dickensian dimension. Begun seven years ago to lower tariffs worldwide, the talks have hit more snags than "Bleak House" has characters. But yet again last week the tireless negotiators, including Mickey Kantor of the United States, cried, "Breakthrough!" One snag has been French objections to cutting farm subsidies, but a resolution may be at hand. If there is an accord, it could do much for the world economy. But that's still a big "if." Trade progress is possible, though: last week Canada's new Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, dropped his opposition to Nafta. The pact now goes into effect on Jan. 1, and the vigil will begin to see which side was right about jobs. Tokyo Sweet-Talks the Market All the Japanese stock market was waiting for, it seems, were some rosy words from the Government; last week it got them. Stock prices had been sliding for weeks. But after the Government finally promised to do what it could, the Nikkei index surged more than 4 percent in a day, then 2 percent the next. Prices are still depressed, though, and they are likely to stay that way until Government actions follow words. "Jawboning," one analyst said, "won't work for too long."

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