Bence Lázár 생일, 생년월일

Bence Lázár

Bence Lázár (21 March 1991 – 22 February 2018) was a Hungarian footballer (striker) who last played for Újpest FC. He retired from professional football in 2014 at the age of 23 after serious back problems. In 2015, he was diagnosed with leukemia.

Lázár died on 22 February 2018, aged 26.

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생일, 생년월일
1991년 3월 21일 목요일
출생지
케치케메트
나이
34
스타 사인

1991년 3월 21일은(는) 목요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♓**입니다. 올해의 79일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 George Bush입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 34살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 3월 21일 금요일, 181일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 3월 21일 토요일일 후 183입니다. 당신은 12,600일, 약 302,416시간, 약 18,144,989분 또는 약 1,088,699,340초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

21st of March 1991 News

1991년 3월 21일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

Roll 'Em,' Says News as Strikers Return to Work

Date: 22 March 1991

By Alan Finder

Alan Finder

With the new owner, Robert Maxwell, pushing the button to roll the presses at the Brooklyn plant, nearly 1,000 union members returned to work last night at The Daily News. Their return ended a 21-week strike that was one of the longest newspaper labor disputes in New York's history and began a new era under Mr. Maxwell, the British publisher.

Full Article

Daily News Strike Ends, and Maxwell Marches In to Take the Reins

Date: 21 March 1991

By Alan Finder

Alan Finder

The ninth and final striking union at The Daily News ratified its contract yesterday, and the British publisher Robert Maxwell then assumed ownership. But the paper, the nation's largest tabloid before the 147-day strike, will not bear Mr. Maxwell's imprint, or even his name on its masthead, until tomorrow, apparently because of a foulup on work scheduling.

Full Article

Envoy No Longer Silent: April Catherine Glaspie

Date: 21 March 1991

By Elaine Sciolino, Special To the New York Times

Elaine Sciolino

For more than seven months, April C. Glaspie kept silent on what she said or did not say to President Saddam Hussein of Iraq in their meeting eight days before his tanks rolled into Kuwait last August. Despite criticism that as the American Ambassador to Iraq she was not tough enough in her remarks and that she somehow encouraged Mr. Hussein to invade Kuwait, Ms. Glaspie rejected the advice of friends and colleagues that she play the game of Washington guerrilla warfare by publicizing her side of the story.

Full Article

Envoy No Longer Silent: April Catherine Glaspie

Date: 21 March 1991

By Elaine Sciolino

Elaine Sciolino

For more than seven months, April C. Glaspie kept silent on what she said or did not say to President Saddam Hussein of Iraq in their meeting eight days before his tanks rolled into Kuwait last August. Despite criticism that as the American Ambassador to Iraq she was not tough enough in her remarks and that she somehow encouraged Mr. Hussein to invade Kuwait, Ms. Glaspie rejected the advice of friends and colleagues that she play the game of Washington guerrilla warfare by publicizing her side of the story.

Full Article

At Newsstands Soon: a Daily Slugfest

Date: 21 March 1991

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

A battle royal among New York City's tabloid newspapers is about to begin. By this weekend, The Daily News should be back on most newsstands, and television commercials urging readers and advertisers to come back to the paper are scheduled to start.

Full Article

The Hawkers Turn Bitter

Date: 21 March 1991

They took to the streets in the first days after the strike began at The Daily News, hawking newspapers with brassy pitches that harkened back to the gritty journalism of manual typewriters and hot type. But the hawkers, one of the most visible symbols of the struggle at The News, will begin disappearing from sidewalks and subways today. The purchase of The News by Robert Maxwell and the end of the labor dispute has led newsstands to begin selling the paper again.

Full Article

Envoy Denounces Soviet TV for Scapegoating U.S.

Date: 22 March 1991

By Serge Schmemann

Serge Schmemann

The United States Ambassador to Moscow today assailed the main Soviet evening television news program for reviving the old practice of blaming foreign interference and connivance for Soviet problems. The Ambassador, Jack F. Matlock Jr., took the program Vremya (Time) to task at a briefing for Soviet reporters, which was reported by the Interfax news agency. The sharpness and openness of the criticism was a departure from the Ambassador's usual background briefings for the press, and appeared to signal his readiness to challenge the revival of anti-American reporting on the evening news show.

Full Article

Offer to Acquire FNN Is Raised to $115 Million

Date: 21 March 1991

By John Holusha

John Holusha

Dow Jones and Westinghouse Broadcasting sweetened their bid to acquire FNN to $115 million yesterday, meeting the minimum price set by a Federal bankruptcy judge earlier this month. The bid exceeds by $10 million the deal that the board of Financial News Network accepted from the National Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of the General Electric Company.

Full Article

Prison in California Bars Reporters From Executions

Date: 22 March 1991

AP

Faced with a Federal trial over allowing television cameras at the state's gas chamber, the warden of San Quentin Prison has banned all reporters from witnessing executions. Previous prison regulations had allowed as many as 14 reporters to watch an execution. The decision, on Wednesday, came days before the start of a Federal trial to consider a lawsuit by a public television station challenging a state policy that forbids recording devices and cameras to cover executions. The trial is to begin Monday.

Full Article

COMPANY NEWS;

Date: 22 March 1991

Special to The New York Times

Go-Video Inc. said two defendants in its antitrust case had settled by paying the company $3.5 million. The two defendants that settled were the Sanyo Electric Company and the NEC Corporation, both of Japan. The trial against the remaining defendants -- the Sony Corporation, the Matsushita Electric Industrial Company and the Victor Company, all also of Japan -- is scheduled to begin on April 2. Go-Video, based in Scottsdale, Ariz., contends the companies conspired to prevent the development and sale of its patented VCR-2. The machine can play one tape while recording another or can tape two programs simultaneously.

Full Article