Nadja Bobyleva 생일, 생년월일

Nadja Bobyleva

Nadja Bobyleva (* 7. Mai 1983 in Moskau) ist eine russisch-deutsche Schauspielerin.

더 알아보기...
 
생일, 생년월일
1983년 5월 7일 토요일
출생지
모스크바
나이
42
스타 사인

1983년 5월 7일은(는) 토요일의 별 기호 아래에 있는 **♉**입니다. 올해의 126일이었습니다. 미국 대통령은 Ronald Reagan입니다.

이 날에 태어났다면 당신은 42살입니다. 마지막 생일은 2025년 5월 7일 수요일, 131일 전이었습니다. 다음 생일은 2026년 5월 7일 목요일일 후 233입니다. 당신은 15,472일, 약 371,338시간, 약 22,280,333분 또는 약 1,336,819,980초 동안 살았습니다.

이 생일을 공유하는 사람들:

7th of May 1983 News

1983년 5월 7일 의 New York Times 1면에 실린 뉴스

Bad News on Booze

Date: 07 May 1983

By James Clarity and Judith Miller

James Clarity

For the reporters, photographers, commentators, camera operators, sound and light technicians, producers, assistant producers, unit managers and others who are assigned to cover national political candidates, no booze is bad news. So when a group of news people realized recently that they were in a bus in Ohio following a candidate to a dry town, they began to grumble and gripe, recalling the alcohol-free days of bivouac in Plains, Ga., the home of Jimmy Carter.

Full Article

Human Torch

Date: 08 May 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Cecil Andrews of Jacksonville, Ala., called a nearby television station last March 4 and said he had some real news. He was tired of being unemployed, he said; he planned to set himself on fire in the town square. When two cameramen arrived, the 37-year-old roofer doused himself with lighter fluid and struck a match.

Full Article

MAJOR NEWS IN SUMMARY

Date: 08 May 1983

An Ultimatum For Indian Point The Nuclear Regulatory Commission didn't quite pull the plug on the two nuclear power plants at Indian Point last week, but it certainly gave their operators a jolt. It unanimously ordered Consolidated Edison and the New York State Power Authority to improve emergency evacuation plans by June 9 or shut the Westchester County reactors. Whether acceptable plans could be developed given the formidable local opposition to the plants was not at all clear, despite assurances from Nunzio Palladino, the N.R.C. chairman, that ''a workable solution is possible.'' About 288,000 people live within 10 miles of the reactors, more than around any other nuclear plant in the nation. Some officials contend hilly terrain, narrow roads and congestion make evacuation impossible. (Indeed, a Federal agency declared a March evacuation drill a failure.)

Full Article

Grand Deception

Date: 08 May 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

William Cohn of Miami flew Pan American World Airways to faraway places for two years - London, Honolulu, Johannesburg, Hong Kong - and saved at least $40,000 in air fares. The 31-year-old operator of a novelty shop masqueraded as a flight attendant.

Full Article

Sour U.S. Loans

Date: 08 May 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

The United States Attorney's office in Philadelphia tried a new tack last September in the Government's drive to collect from former collegians who have defaulted on student loans: It began to seize their automobiles. Among the cars impounded were a Lincoln and a Porsche.

Full Article

Presidential Candor on Aid To Nicaraguans

Date: 08 May 1983

President Reagan came close last week to advocating the overthrow of the Sandinist Government in Nicaragua. As 1,500 American-assisted Nicaraguan rebels reportedly launched a new drive across the Honduran border, the President condemned a fresh Congressional move to bar covert aid to what he called ''freedom fighters'' and questioned the right to exist of ''a Government out of a barrel of a gun.'' ''What makes them any more a legitimate government than the people of Nicaragua who are asking for a chance to vote for the kind of government they want?'' he asked.

Full Article

SUNDAY, MAY 8, 1983

Date: 08 May 1983

International Syria's President appeared to rebuff efforts by Secretary of State George P. Shultz to win Syria's consent for an early withdrawal of its troops from Lebanon. After a four-hour meeting in Damascus with President Hafez al-Assad, Mr. Shultz said that the Syrians ''are hardly enthusiastic about the agreement'' that Israel accepted in principle on Friday. (Page 1, Column 6.)

Full Article

News Summary; SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1983

Date: 07 May 1983

International Israel's Cabinet voted to accept in principle a draft agreement with Lebanon on border security and mutual relations. The vote was 17 to 2. The accord is intended as a basis for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon provided the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Syrian Army also leave. It would also provide for close Israeli involvement in security operations in southern Lebanon. (Page 1, Column 6.) Syria informed top Lebanon officials that it had objected to virtually every major clause of the agreement between Lebanon and Israel on the withdrawal of Israeli forces. (1:4.)

Full Article

2 WIN TOP PRESS CLUB AWARDS

Date: 08 May 1983

Coverage of events in the Middle East dominated the 44th annual awards given last week by the Overseas Press Club. Two reporters won top awards for coverage of the Beirut massacre and two news organizations won for their coverage of the Middle East.

Full Article

TV: THE PRESIDENT'S IMPRESSIVE USE OF THE CAMERA

Date: 07 May 1983

By John Corry

John Corry

There is nothing a media consultant can do for President Reagan. Media consultants are the stage managers, voice coaches and lighting directors of American politics, taking in a pleat here, a tuck there, making their candidates presentable for television. Mr. Reagan, however, does it all himself. He is awesome in his use of the tube. Consider, for example, Mr. Reagan's televised speech to Congress on El Salvador last week. After the speech, ABC-TV asked viewers to call a number, indicating whether they agreed or disagreed with Mr. Reagan when he said the situation in Latin America threatened the United States. Of the 336,462 who called, 258,943 said they agreed. It is possible that they would have agreed with the President even if he had not spoken on television; it is likely, however, that some of the viewers were persuaded by what they saw and heard. Mr. Reagan may have been addressing Congress, but he was speaking directly to viewers.

Full Article