📄 reut2-021.sgm
字号:
<!DOCTYPE lewis SYSTEM "lewis.dtd">
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20436" NEWID="21001">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:37:46.03</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
F
f2882reute
f f BC-CITYFED-FINANCI 10-19 0013</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT TYPE="BRIEF">
******<TITLE>CITYFED FINANCIAL CORP SAYS IT CUT QTRLY DIVIDEND TO ONE CENT FROM 10 CTS/SHR
</TITLE>Blah blah blah.

</TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="YES" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20435" NEWID="21002">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:35:53.55</DATE>
<TOPICS><D>crude</D><D>ship</D></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>bahrain</D><D>iran</D><D>usa</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
Y
f2873reute
r f AM-GULF-PLATFORM 10-19 0101</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>HUGE OIL PLATFORMS DOT GULF LIKE BEACONS</TITLE>
<AUTHOR> By ASHRAF FOUAD</AUTHOR>
<DATELINE> BAHRAIN, Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>Huge oil platforms dot the Gulf like
beacons -- usually lit up like Christmas trees at night.
One of them, sitting astride the Rostam offshore oilfield,
was all but blown out of the water by U.S. Warships on Monday.
The Iranian platform, an unsightly mass of steel and
concrete, was a three-tier structure rising 200 feet (60
metres) above the warm waters of the Gulf until four U.S.
Destroyers pumped some 1,000 shells into it.
The U.S. Defense Department said just 10 pct of one section
of the structure remained.
U.S. helicopters destroyed three Iranian gunboats after an
American helicopter came under fire earlier this month and U.S.
forces attacked, seized, and sank an Iranian ship they said had
been caught laying mines.
But Iran was not deterred, according to U.S. defense
officials, who said Iranian forces used Chinese-made Silkworm
missiles to hit a U.S.-owned Liberian-flagged ship on Thursday
and the Sea Isle City on Friday.
Both ships were hit in the territorial waters of Kuwait, a
key backer of Iraq in its war with Iran.
Henry Schuler, a former U.S. diplomat in the Middle East
now with CSIS said Washington had agreed to escort Kuwaiti
tankers in order to deter Iranian attacks on shipping.
But he said the deterrence policy had failed and the level
of violence and threats to shipping had increased as a result
of U.S. intervention and Iran's response.
The attack on the oil platform was the latest example of a
U.S. "tit-for-tat" policy that gave Iran the initiative, said
Harlan Ullman, an ex-career naval officer now with CSIS.
He said with this appraoch America would suffer "the death
of one thousand cuts."
But for the United States to grab the initiative
militarily, it must take warlike steps such as mining Iran's
harbors or blockading the mouth of the Gulf through which its
shipping must pass, Schuler said.
He was among those advocating mining as a means of bringing
Iran to the neogtiating table. If vital supplies were cut off,
Tehran could not continue the war with Iraq.
Ullman said Washington should join Moscow in a diplomatic
initiative to end the war and the superpowers should impose an
arms embargo against Tehran if it refused to negotiate.
He said the United States should also threaten to mine and
blockade Iran if it continued fighting and must press Iraq to
acknowledge responsibility for starting the war as part of a
settlement.
Iranian and Western diplomats say Iraq started the war by
invading Iran's territory in 1980. Iraq blames Iran for the
outbreak of hostilities, which have entailed World War I-style
infantry attacks resulting in horrific casualties.
Each side has attacked the others' shipping.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="YES" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20434" NEWID="21003">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:34:40.05</DATE>
<TOPICS><D>acq</D></TOPICS>
<PLACES></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
F
f2863reute
b f BC-CCR-VIDEO-SAYS 10-19 0015</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT TYPE="BRIEF">
******<TITLE>CCR VIDEO SAYST RECEIVED OFFER TO NEGOTIATE A TAKEOVER BY INTERCEP INVESTMENT CORP
</TITLE>Blah blah blah.

</TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20433" NEWID="21004">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:32:25.38</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>canada</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
E F
f2855reute
b f BC-GM-<GM>-CANADA-UNIT-M 10-19 0096</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>GM <GM> CANADA UNIT MAJOR OFFER ACCEPTED BY UNION</TITLE>
<DATELINE> TORONTO, Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>The Canadian Auto Workers' Union said it
accepted an economic offer from the Canadian division of
General Motors Corp <GM> in contract negotiations.
But union president Bob White said many local issues at the
11 plants in Ontario and Quebec still remained unresolved ahead
of Thursday's deadline for a strike by 40,000 workers.
"It minimizes the possibility of a strike," White told
reporters.
However, "if we don't have local agreements settled by
Thursday, there will be a strike," he said.
The local issues still unresolved involved health care,
skilled trades and job classifications, White said.
GM Canada negotiator Rick Curd said he believed a strike
would be avoided.
"Even though there are some tough issues to be resolved
we're on the right schedule to meet the target," Curd said.
"I'm very pleased with the state of the negotiations," he
said.
Union membership meetings have been scheduled for the
weekend in case a tentative settlement, said White.
White said the union has also received assurances that a
job protection pact negotiated with GM workers in the U.S. does
not threaten Canadian jobs.
The economic offer for a three-year pact largely matches
agreements at Ford <F> and Chrysler <C> in Canada, which
include inflation-indexed payments for future retirees and
fixed annual payments for current retirees.
It also gives workers wage increases of three pct
immediately and 1.5 pct in each of the second and third years.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20432" NEWID="21005">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:32:11.59</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>canada</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
E F
f2854reute
u f BC-CANADA-DEVELOPMENT-UN 10-19 0092</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>CANADA DEVELOPMENT UNIT <CDC.TO> REFINANCES</TITLE>
<DATELINE> SARNIA, Ontario, Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>Canada Development Corp said its
<Polysar Ltd> unit completed a refinancing package worth about
830 mln Canadian dlrs.
The company said the financing, which involves 24 banks
and four syndicated loans, consists of a 380 mln Canadian dlr
revolver, a 200 mln Canadian dlr European medium term loan, a
149 mln Canadian dlr revolver and a 100 mln Canadian dlr
operating loan.
The company said the refinancing will reduce borrowing
costs, in addition to having other benefits.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="YES" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20431" NEWID="21006">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:31:35.28</DATE>
<TOPICS><D>crude</D><D>ship</D></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>bahrain</D><D>usa</D><D>iran</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
C
f2849reute
u f BC-/DIPLOMATS-CALL-U.S. 10-19 0110</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>DIPLOMATS CALL U.S. ATTACK ON OIL RIG RESTRAINED</TITLE>
<AUTHOR> By Ian MacKenzie</AUTHOR>
<DATELINE> BAHRAIN, Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>A U.S. attack on an Iranian oil platform
in the Gulf on Monday appeared to be a tit-for-tat raid
carefully orchestrated not to be too provocative or upset Arab
allies, Western diplomats in the region said.
U.S. Defence Secretary Caspar Weinberger said Monday that
U.S. Warships destroyed the oil platform in the southern Gulf
in response to a missile strike on the American-registered
Kuwaiti tanker Sea Isle City in Kuwaiti waters on Friday.
"We consider the matter closed," he said, a signal the U.S.
administration did not want the Gulf crisis to escalate.
Iran had warned the United States earlier in the day
against exacerbating the Gulf crisis, saying military action
would endanger American interests.
Following the raid, a okesman for Tehran's War
Information Headquarters vowed to avenge the attack with a
"crushing blow."
"The United States has entered a swamp from which it can in
no way get out safely," Tehran Radio quoted him as saying.
Diplomats noted, however, Iran was also seeking to avoid
ostracism by Arab states due to meet at a summit in Amman on
November 8 and discuss the Iran-Iraq war.
Iranian Prime Minister Mir-Hossein Mousavi is currently in
Damascus, and diplomats said he would seek Syrian help in
preventing a total Arab breach with Tehran.
Further escalation of the war threatening the Gulf Arab
states could work against Tehran at the Amman gathering, they
said.
"The ball is in Iran's court now. It's up to Tehran to
respond one way or the other," a diplomat said.
President Ronald Reagan warned Iran of stronger American
countermeasures if the military escalation continued.
Western diplomats and military sources in the area said
shelling the platform appeared to be the least provocative act
the United States could have taken once it had decided to
retaliate for the tanker attack, blamed by both the Americans
and Kuwaitis on Iran.
"It's interesting that they chose something in international
waters because it doesn't implicate any other nation," one
diplomat said. "This was better for U.S. Relations with the Gulf
Arab states, particularly Kuwait."
Commented another diplomat: "Kuwait must be happy that the
U.S. Has done something, but relieved that Faw was not attacked
on its doorstep."
One source said of the attack on the oil platform: "They
managed to warn off the crew and hit something that was the
least nuisance to everybody."
A diplomat commented: "They were very clever in the place
they chose. It gets attention, but it hasn't devastated
anything because it wasn't working in the first place."
A senior Arab banker in the area said after the news broke:
"This was a good, measured response without risking a flare-up
... It is a face-saving response (for the Americans)."
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="YES" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20430" NEWID="21007">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:30:22.56</DATE>
<TOPICS><D>acq</D></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>usa</D><D>france</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
F
f2842reute
r f BC-BROWN-DISC-TO-BUY-RHO 10-19 0076</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>BROWN DISC TO BUY RHONE-POULENC <RHON.PA> UNIT</TITLE>
<DATELINE> COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>Brown Disc Products Co
Inc, a unit fo Genevar Enterprises Inc, said it has purchased
the ongoing business, trademarks and certain assets of
Rhone-Poulenc's Brown Disc Manufacturing unit, for undisclosed
terms.
Rhone-Poulenc is a French-based chemical company.
Under the agreement, Rhone-Poulenc will supply magnetic
tape and media products to Brown Disc Products.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20429" NEWID="21008">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:28:27.68</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
V RM
f2834reute
f f BC-DOW-SINKS-TO-LO 10-19 0011</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT TYPE="BRIEF">
******<TITLE>DOW SINKS TO LOWEST LEVEL OF THE YEAR, DOWN 370 POINTS TO 1876
</TITLE>Blah blah blah.

</TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20428" NEWID="21009">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:27:23.12</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>usa</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
F
f2832reute
h f BC-LANE-TELECOMMUNICATIO 10-19 0080</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>LANE TELECOMMUNICATIONS PRESIDENT RESIGNS</TITLE>
<DATELINE> HOUSTON, Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>Lane Telecommunications Inc <LNTL.O> said
Richard Lane, its president and chief operating officer,
resigned effective Oct 23.
Lane founded the company in 1976 and has been its president
since its inception, the company said.
He said he resigned to pursue other business interests.
Kirk Weaver, chairman and chief executive officer, said
Lane's resignation was amicable.
No replacement has been named.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20427" NEWID="21010">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:24:34.02</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>usa</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
<ORGS></ORGS>
<EXCHANGES></EXCHANGES>
<COMPANIES></COMPANIES>
<UNKNOWN>
F
f2824reute
d f BC-PERKIN-ELMER-<PKN>-WI 10-19 0072</UNKNOWN>
<TEXT>
<TITLE>PERKIN-ELMER <PKN> WINS EPA CONTRACT</TITLE>
<DATELINE> NORWALK, Conn., Oct 19 - </DATELINE><BODY>Perkin-Elmer Corp said it won a
contract to provide laboratory information management systems
to the Enviromental Protection Agency's 10 regional
laboratories.
The value and the exact duration of the contract was not
disclosed.
The company said the contract will include hardware,
software, installation, support services, and software analyst
consultations.
Reuter
</BODY></TEXT>
</REUTERS>
<REUTERS TOPICS="NO" LEWISSPLIT="TEST" CGISPLIT="TRAINING-SET" OLDID="20426" NEWID="21011">
<DATE>19-OCT-1987 15:23:44.84</DATE>
<TOPICS></TOPICS>
<PLACES><D>usa</D></PLACES>
<PEOPLE></PEOPLE>
⌨️ 快捷键说明
复制代码
Ctrl + C
搜索代码
Ctrl + F
全屏模式
F11
切换主题
Ctrl + Shift + D
显示快捷键
?
增大字号
Ctrl + =
减小字号
Ctrl + -