채드 르클로 생일, 생년월일

채드 르클로

채드 가이 버트런드 르클로(영어: Chad Guy Bertrand le Clos, 1992년 4월 12일 ~ )는 남아프리카 공화국의 수영 선수이며 자유형, 접영, 개인혼영을 전문적으로 활약하였다.

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생일, 생년월일
1992년 4월 12일 일요일
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1992년 4월 12일은(는) 일요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♈**입니다. 올해의 102일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 George Bush입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 33살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 4월 12일 토요일, 155일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 4월 12일 일요일일 후 209입니다. 당신은 12,208일, 약 293,007시간, 약 17,580,435분 또는 약 1,054,826,100초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

12th of April 1992 News

1992년 4월 12일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 13 April 1992

International A2-13 IRAN'S MODERATES LEAD VOTE Early voting returns suggested that supporters of Iran's President were headed for a big victory over their anti-Western rivals in national elections. The vote seemed to signal disenchantment with the radical goals of the Islamic revolution. A1 KURDS TRIP PAST LAND MINES Ranging from small ones that maim to spike-topped ones that kill, countless land mines threaten Kurds in Iraqi border areas. A8 HANGING ON IN YUGOSLAVIA Whatever shape Yugoslavia finally assumes, its immediate economic prospects are certain to be worse than those of the nation born in 1918 as an amalgam of "South Slav" peoples and religions. A1 Alarmed by clashes, the U.N. plans to send observers to Bosnia. A6 WINNIE MANDELA UNDER FIRE A co-defendant told a South African newspaper that he lied last year to protect Winnie Mandela, wife of the African National Congress leader. He said she indeed ordered four young men kidnapped, helped beat them and told him to dump the body of the youngest victim. A3 COOLING TO AID FOR RUSSIA The Russian Government's moves to slacken its tough economic reforms and hints by free-market advocates that they might resign could delay the flow of Western aid to Russia, economists say. A12 Russian politicians haggle over reforms and power sharing. A12 U.S. splits with Europe again over aid to former Soviet states. A12 MEXICO'S SUPPLICANT CANDIDATES Halfway into the incumbent's term, Mexico's silent presidential race has begun. No one with ambitions to succeed President Salinas dares acknowledge them publicly. A3 JAPAN WARNED ON NUCLEAR PLAN The International Atomic Energy Agency has told Japan that its plans to import and store huge quantities of plutonium for its civilian nuclear program could pose "political and security problems" in Asia. A2 EURO DISNEYLAND OPENS Unruffled by muttering about cultural colonialism, Walt Disney opened its first European theme park 20 miles east of Paris. Thousands of families flocked to the park despite warnings that their children's imaginations would be crushed. A1 Prague Journal: From dissident to accused informant. A4 Taiwan's leaders plan to relax curbs on political freedom. A7 National A14-17, B8 FRAYED PENSION SAFETY NET The share of America's work force covered by company pensions is shrinking, reversing a decades-old trend of steady growth. Last year, an estimated 43 percent of workers participated in company pension plans, down from a peak of 49 percent in 1979. The drop was steepest among younger, blue-collar men. A1 EXAMINING THE INCUMBENT . . . Aides to President Bush braced for a searching new inspection of his record, character, finances and conflict-of-interest issues as aides to Governor Clinton urge the news media to play fair. A1 . . . AND THE ICONOCLAST The penchant of H. Ross Perot for riding to the rescue has taken him to the brink of a Presidential candidacy. But the Texas billionaire shows vagueness when pressed on the issues, and closer examination of his business exploits suggest that not all were complete successes. A1 AN ILLUSION OF AMITY SHATTERED When whispers of mistrust erupted into a brawl between blacks and whites, a small Michigan college founded as a bastion of racial tolerance instead became an example of the tinderbox race can still be. A14 CATERPILLAR CHIEF SPEAKS OUT As chairman of Caterpillar Inc., Donald Fites is presiding over what many experts say is the most important labor battle in years. It is an unusual position for Mr. Fites, a marketing man who has been widely recognized for his ability to forge harmonious relations with colleagues and workers alike. B8 BANK PRESIDENT GIVES UP A Rhode Island bank president charged with embezzling $13 million from his bank and blamed for setting off the state bank crisis surrendered to the authorities after 17 months in hiding. A15 CENSUS BUREAU BACKS OFF The Census Bureau dropped its attempt to dismiss a demographer who made public her unclassified estimates on Iraqi civilian deaths during the Persian Gulf war. A14 The Pope said he would visit Denver next year. A14 Metropolitan Digest, B1 THE JOBLESS EX-MIDDLE CLASS For tens of thousands of formerly solidly middle-class men and women thrown out of work by the weak economy, the recession has gone on too long. The effort to maintain a sense of control over their lives has become a daily challenge. A1 Business Digest, D1 Sports C1-10 Baseball: Yanks stretch streak to 5. C1 Up, up and away goes Saberhagen e.r.a. C1 Bonds and Smith lead Pirates to victory. C6 Boston's Young pitches no-hitter . . . and loses. C7 Basketball: Knicks reach a new low point. C2 Nets' playoff hopes look cloudy. C2 Boxing: Foreman escapes as a winner. C9 Columns: Anderson on Couples and Floyd.C1 Football: Knights lose more than just the game. C7 Golf: Couples wins Masters. C1 Hockey: Devils lose to Capitals. C4 Islanders eliminate the Leafs. C4 Horse Racing: All eyes are on the Derby. C9 Tennis: Sabatini keeps zooming along. C3 Courier wins the Japan Open. C3 Obituaries B9 Eve Merriam, writer Arts/Entertainment C11-18 Hollywood titans clash. C11 A Broadway dancer's life. C11 Theater: "A Streetcar Named Desire."C11 Dance: In Review. C12 Music: Continuum in works of Stefan Wolpe. C11 Fugazi at the Ritz. C12 Karen Akers sings. C15 Word and Image: Literary salons are attempting a comeback. C15 "Poethics," by Richard Weisberg. C15 Editorials/Op-Ed A18-19 Editorials A18 Inspecting North Korea. Get tougher with Peru. Pornography and crime. Diane Camper: Teens. Letters A18 Leslie H. Gelb: Peru -- ideals in hell. A19 William Safire: The stingers stung. A19 William J. Taylor and Michael Mazarr: Defusing North Korea. A19 John Hockenberry: Limited seating on Broadway. A19

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 12 April 1992

International 3-23 UNDERGROUND PRIESTS REJECTED

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Drivers Union Has Tentative Agreement With The Times

Date: 13 April 1992

By Robert D. McFadden

Robert

The New York Times and a major independent newspaper delivery company reached separate tentative agreements with the drivers union on Saturday that could insure labor peace in the wholesale distribution of New York's newspapers until the year 2000 and speed the opening of The Times's new printing plant in Edison, N.J. The pacts cover 1,000 drivers for four wholesale distribution companies that deliver The Times, The Daily News, The New York Post, The Wall Street Journal and other publications to newsstands and other outlets in the city and suburbs. The pending sale of the wholesale companies -- two to The Times and two to the independent company, Imperial Delivery Service -- made new agreements for their drivers necessary.

Full Article

Deliverer's Union Nears Pact With The Times

Date: 12 April 1992

By Robert D. McFadden

Robert

The New York Times and a major independent newspaper delivery company reached separate tentative agreements with the drivers union yesterday that could insure labor peace in the wholesale distribution of New York's newspapers until the year 2000 and speed the opening of The Times's new printing plant in Edison, N.J. The pacts cover 1,000 drivers for four wholesale distribution companies that deliver The Times, The Daily News, The New York Post, The Wall Street Journal and other publications to newsstands and other outlets in the city and suburbs. The pending sale of the wholesale companies -- two to The Times and two to the independent company, Imperial Delivery Service -- made new agreements for their drivers necessary.

Full Article

Mets' Silence Was Blessing

Date: 12 April 1992

To the Sports Editor: In "The Silence of the Mets" (The Times, March 31), Dave Anderson writes that we, the fans, are the "real victims" of the Mets' silence. Actually, the silence was quite wonderful. Nobody really wants to hear, see, or read what the players say on a daily basis. The point is not that players are dumb or inarticulate. Today's news media coverage of sports has proven beyond a doubt that the game cannot be improved by a player's remarks, but it can be trivialized and demeaned. JONATHAN KANTOR Westport, Conn.

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As Many British Readers Relax on Saturdays, Their Newspapers Thrive

Date: 13 April 1992

By Suzanne Cassidy

Suzanne Cassidy

With its circulation and advertising shrinking, the British press has found one surprising success story: Saturday newspapers. Once unpopular afterthoughts, Saturday newspapers are now selling more copies than their weekday counterparts and are challenging the weekend pre-eminence of the country's Sunday papers. Over the last six years or so, Britain's five serious national dailies have expanded their Saturday papers, adding magazines and leisure and review sections that have won both readers and advertisers.

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THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: Political Memo; Bush May Get More Scrutiny After What Clinton Endured

Date: 13 April 1992

By Andrew Rosenthal

Andrew Rosenthal

As a battered Gov. Bill Clinton nears the Democratic Presidential nomination, political analysts and politicians in both parties are debating whether President Bush will face a searching new inspection of his record, character, finances and conflict-of-interest issues involving his relatives, aides and associates. Bush campaign aides said last week that they were braced for a renewed critique of the President because of the rough tone of the early primaries, the controversies about Mr. Clinton's past and the Arkansas Governor's contention that he has been unfairly singled out.

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Public & Private; Journalism 2001

Date: 12 April 1992

By Anna Quindlen

Anna Quindlen

I feel like one of those cartoon characters who has a little angel on one shoulder and a little devil on the other. The reporter -- the one some people would say is carrying the pitchfork -- says one thing, the human being another. There's a lot of this going around. The subject is Arthur Ashe; the news is AIDS. This week the gentleman tennis player became a reluctant symbol. He had known since 1988 that he'd been infected by a transfusion, but he and his wife and a few close friends kept the secret for an obvious reason: they feared the shunning. Then someone tipped USA Today, and USA Today called and asked. Confirm or deny. That's how we do these things. Mr. Ashe called a press conference and went public.

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Or Was Silence Overblown?

Date: 12 April 1992

To the Sports Editor: As a former journalist, I believe the media reaction to the silence of the Mets was predictably overblown. The Mets are hardly a group of wide-eyed innocents wronged by dastardly deeds of pen and camera. But neither will their period of silence damage baseball, democracy or the American Way. It may just put a dent on the daily scoop machine. DONA STEVENS YASSER Ocean, N.J.

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One More Time: Magazine Is Reborn

Date: 13 April 1992

By Deirdre Carmody

Deirdre Carmody

After more than a year of intense analysis over its mission and the role of news magazines in general, Time will introduce today its most radical redesign since it began publication 69 years ago. But relax, readers. It is still unmistakably Time.

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