Straight Shooters
Date: 22 January 1995
Trying to understand, Texas style. From letters to the editors of The Dallas Morning News and The Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "Let's see if we have this straight." -- On abortion, The Morning News, June 6, 1994.
El 21 de gener de 1995 era un dissabte sota el signe estrella de ♒. Era el 20 dia de l'any. El president dels Estats Units era William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Si vas néixer aquest dia, tens 31 anys. El teu darrer aniversari va ser el dimecres, 21 de gener de 2026, fa 123 dies. El teu proper aniversari és el dijous, 21 de gener de 2027, d'aquí a 241 dies. Heu viscut durant 11.446 dies, o unes 274.719 hores, o uns 16.483.165 minuts, o uns 988.989.900 segons.
Date: 22 January 1995
Trying to understand, Texas style. From letters to the editors of The Dallas Morning News and The Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "Let's see if we have this straight." -- On abortion, The Morning News, June 6, 1994.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Ellen Mickiewicz and Dee Reid
Ellen Mickiewicz
If there is one redeeming feature in President Boris Yeltsin's blunder in Chechnya, it is the nearly miraculous coming of age of an independent, aggressive and professional Russian journalism -- especially in television, the prime news medium. In a visit to Moscow early this month, we found that a highly motivated news corps is winning the battle over freedom of the press, and it took the tragedy of Chechnya to make it so.
Date: 22 January 1995
By Max Frankel
Max Frankel
THOSE UNUSUAL NOISES IN medialand are the cries of serious journalists flagellating serious journalists about their loss of "objectivity" and "values." Adam Gopnik in The New Yorker pines for the good old days when reporters were, he thinks, rewarded for their access to power instead of aggressions against it and when they abetted governance by hiding the warts of the mighty instead of wallowing in their deceptions and blemishes. Harvard's Nieman Reports features alarms that serious news organizations are embracing "the values of entertainment -- urgency, brevity, celebrity, action and conflict" and "if needed for extra spice," making the news "opinionated." With so many vulgarians dancing on public stages in the garb of journalism, you'd think that editors and reporters in the truth-seeking minority would hang together and defend themselves and their honest strivings. But they've been shaken, I think, by the loss of distinctions, particularly in television, where the vulgar and the sublime appear in quick rotation inside the same picture frame. One moment, Tom Brokaw is dutifully presenting the legislative ambitions of Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich. Next moment, John McLaughlin is shouting about the politicians' sincerity on a scale of 1 to 10 and Jay Leno is inserting their names in his sex jokes.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
In yet another move to forge cost savings, Federated Department Stores Inc. will consolidate its Cincinnati-based Lazarus department store operations with those of its Rich's/Goldsmith's stores in Atlanta. The move will result in a charge of $50 million. The company said 700 jobs at the Lazarus central office in Cincinnati will be eliminated in the first half of this year, mainly from the merchandise, buying, advertising-marketing, human resources and finance departments. About 150 positions will be added in the Atlanta division absorbing Lazarus. The company said the Lazarus and Rich's/Goldsmith's names would remain and the move was not expected to have an impact on any of their stores.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The stock of the Oryx Energy Company sank to a record low as investors and Wall Street soured on the company's latest plan to return it to profitability. The plan, outlined late on Thursday, calls for the Dallas-based oil and natural gas producer to slash a quarter of its $1.7 billion debt this year and refocus its global search for oil in the United States. Oryx shares fell as low as $10.125, before closing at $10.25, down $1.875, on trading of almost 1.4 million shares. Oryx was spun off from the Philadelphia-based Sun Company in 1988.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The shares of Sybase Inc. fell 9 percent yesterday after the company, which produces data base software, said on Thursday that fourth-quarter revenue grew more slowly than most analysts had expected. Sybase, based in Emeryville, Calif., the sixth-largest United States software company, said fourth-quarter earnings surged 60 percent -- exceeding what analysts had expected. Revenue, however, rose 56 percent, less than what investors have come to expect from one of the fastest-growing software companies. In the last four years, Sybase's revenue grew an annual average of 61 percent. Sybase shares were down $4.75 at $47.50 in Nasdaq volume of almost 7.2 million shares.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Nabisco Holdings Corporation, the food unit of the RJR Nabisco Holdings Corporation, was the most heavily traded stock yesterday in its first day of trading as a separate company. Nabisco, which sold $1.1 billion of stock in an initial public offering on Thursday, closed at $26.875. The company sold 45 million shares at $24.50. Investors snapped up the stock because they think they can profit from Nabisco, which makes Oreos, Ritz Crackers and Life Savers, without the threat of RJR's tobacco liabilities. Almost 16.7 million shares changed hands. RJR Nabisco Holdings Inc. is the nation's No. 2 cigarette maker.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
French industrial production rose in November after four months of stable or declining output, providing more evidence that the recovery is in place. Industrial production, excluding the construction industry, rose four-tenths of 1 percent in November, compared with October, giving a year-on-year rise of 4.5 percent, according to figures from the National Statistics Institute. The rise in industrial production gained even taking into account a 7.9 percent decline in energy production as a result of mild weather.
Date: 21 January 1995
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Dow Chemical Company and Corning Inc. will split a fourth-quarter charge of $152 million taken by their joint venture, the Dow Corning Corporation, to cover the costs of breast-implant litigation, the companies announced yesterday. The charge, $241 million before taxes, represents Dow Corning's estimate of the cost to resolve the lawsuits and claims outside of a $4.25 billion settlement approved by a Federal judge in September. Another company that pledged to the settlement fund, the Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, said on Thursday that it had set aside an additional $750 million to settle injury claims.
Date: 21 January 1995
International 3-6 WORLD TRADE DISRUPTED The closing of the port of Kobe after the earthquake this week has disrupted world trade in a domino effect, with some American companies worried about keeping their assembly lines going. 1