Kell Brook Anniversaire, Date de Naissance

Kell Brook

Kell Brook est un boxeur anglais né le à Sheffield.

Lire la suite...
 
Anniversaire, Date de Naissance
samedi 3 mai 1986
Lieu de naissance
Sheffield
Âge
40
Signe étoile

Le 3 mai 1986 était un samedi sous le signe astral du . C'était le 122ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était Ronald Reagan.

Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 40 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le dimanche 3 mai 2026, il y a 25 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le lundi 3 mai 2027, dans 339 jours. Vous avez vécu 14 635 jours, soit environ 351 254 heures, ou environ 21 075 247 minutes, ou environ 1 264 514 820 secondes.

Quelques personnes qui partagent cet anniversaire:

  • Rebecca Hall (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, réalisateur, né le 3 mai 1982)
  • James Brown (auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, danseur, designer sonore, guitariste, musicien, personnalité politique, pianiste, producteur, réalisateur artistique, né le 3 mai 1933)
  • Bobby Cannavale (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, né le 3 mai 1970)
  • Christina Hendricks (acteur, acteur de doublage, humoriste, né le 3 mai 1975)
  • Bing Crosby (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, animateur de radio, chanteur, musicien de jazz, poète, scénariste, né le 3 mai 1903)
  • Pom Klementieff (acteur, né le 3 mai 1986)
  • Amy Ryan (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, né le 3 mai 1968)
  • Golda Meir (enseignant, personnalité politique, né le 3 mai 1898)
  • Frankie Valli (acteur, acteur de télévision, artiste d'enregistrement, chanteur, né le 3 mai 1934)
  • Haya bint Al Hussein (cavalier de saut d'obstacles, né le 3 mai 1974)
  • Sugar Ray Robinson (acteur de cinéma, boxeur, né le 3 mai 1921)
  • Domantas Sabonis (basketteur, né le 3 mai 1996)
  • Brooks Koepka (golfeur, né le 3 mai 1990)
  • Sandi Toksvig (animateur de radio, animateur de télévision, auteur, humoriste, improvisateur, personnalité politique, écrivain, né le 3 mai 1958)
  • Danila Kozlovski (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, mannequin, producteur de cinéma, réalisateur, scénariste, né le 3 mai 1985)
  • Dulé Hill (acteur, acteur de télévision, danseur, producteur, né le 3 mai 1975)
  • Akio Toyoda (administrateur délégué, entrepreneur, personnalité du monde des affaires, pilote automobile, président-directeur général, né le 3 mai 1956)
  • Damon Dash (acteur, acteur de cinéma, compositeur, impresario, producteur de cinéma, propriétaire de boîte de nuit, réalisateur, réalisateur artistique, né le 3 mai 1971)
  • Ezequiel Lavezzi (joueur de football, né le 3 mai 1985)
  • Hiro Mashima (artiste, mangaka, né le 3 mai 1977)
  • Katrin Göring-Eckardt (personnalité politique, théologien, écologiste, né le 3 mai 1966)
  • Poppy Delevingne (acteur, acteur de cinéma, mannequin, socialite, né le 3 mai 1986)
  • Pete Seeger (artiste d'enregistrement, artiste de rue, auteur-compositeur-interprète, banjoïste, chanteur, guitariste, mandoliniste, militant pour la paix, musicologue, né le 3 mai 1919)
  • Tyronn Lue (basketteur, entraîneur de basket-ball, né le 3 mai 1977)
  • Johnny Ringo (as de la gâchette, né le 3 mai 1850)
  • Noah Munck (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, né le 3 mai 1996)
  • Eric Church (auteur-compositeur-interprète, banjoïste, chanteur, compositeur, guitariste, musicien, né le 3 mai 1977)
  • Christopher Cross (auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, guitariste, réalisateur artistique, né le 3 mai 1951)
  • Mozhan Marnò (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, écrivain, né le 3 mai 1980)
  • Rob Brydon (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de télévision, animateur de télévision, autobiographe, humoriste, producteur de télévision, scénariste, né le 3 mai 1965)
  • Bärbel Bas (personnalité politique, né le 3 mai 1968)
  • Cheryl Burke (chorégraphe, danseur, né le 3 mai 1984)
  • Michael Kiwanuka (artiste d'enregistrement, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, guitariste, musicien, né le 3 mai 1987)
  • Mary Hopkin (auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, né le 3 mai 1950)
  • David H. Koch (chimiste, entrepreneur, ingénieur, marchand, personnalité du monde des affaires, personnalité politique, né le 3 mai 1940)
  • Zach Sobiech (auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, né le 3 mai 1995)
  • Meghana Raj (acteur, acteur de cinéma, mannequin, né le 3 mai 1990)
  • Mikhaïl Prokhorov (entrepreneur, investisseur, personnalité du monde des affaires, personnalité politique, né le 3 mai 1965)
  • Kell Brook (boxeur, né le 3 mai 1986)
  • Souleye (musicien, né le 3 mai 1980)
  • Steven Weinberg (cosmologiste, physicien, physicien théoricien, professeur d'université, écrivain, né le 3 mai 1933)
  • Rea Garvey (auteur-compositeur, chanteur, né le 3 mai 1973)
  • Damla Sönmez (acteur, acteur de cinéma, né le 3 mai 1987)
  • Katinka Hosszú (nageur, né le 3 mai 1989)
  • Jean Lassalle (personnalité politique, né le 3 mai 1955)
  • Robert De Niro, Sr (peintre, poète, sculpteur, né le 3 mai 1922)
  • Mary Astor (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, romancier, écrivain, né le 3 mai 1906)
  • Massimo Ranieri (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, artiste d'enregistrement, chanteur, né le 3 mai 1951)
  • Nona Gaprindachvili (joueur d'échecs, né le 3 mai 1941)
  • Charles XV de Suède (monarque, né le 3 mai 1826)

3rd of May 1986 News

Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 3 mai 1986

PHOTOJOURNALISM THAT COLORS THE NEWS IN MANY WAYS

Date: 04 May 1986

By Grace Glueck

Grace Glueck

Because it reaches millions of people every day, and directly affects their thoughts, photojournalism can be considered one of the liveliest visual achievements of the 20th century. Out of this genre, that records the ''real'' world of small and large events, have come many images now firmly imprinted on our consciousness - among them Robert Capa's photograph of a rifleman stopped in midstride by a bullet during the Spanish Civil War, Dorothea Lange's portraits of Depression-numbed migrants, the starved babies of Biafra as witnessed by Donald McCullin, a street scene involving a small boy and two bottles of wine immortalized by the lens of Henri Cartier-Bresson. But is photojournalism ''art,'' given our traditional concept of art as privileged to escape the burden of ''facts''? Or is it merely reporting? The question, which goes back to the beginnings of the genre in the 1920's and 30's, has often been argued, though as time goes on the need for the argument seems less and less compelling. Yet here it is, raised again, in a provocative exhibition, ''On the Line: The New Color Photojournalism,'' at the Walker Art Center (through June 1, and then on a countrywide museum tour, which bypasses New York). The show presents a dozen photojournalists, ranging in age from the late 20's to the mid-40's, each exhibiting 10 works. The gamut is from grim scenes of bombing in Lebanon by Yan Morvan and Alfred Yaghobzadeh - advocacy photojournalism to be sure - to a folksy series of small-town baseball vignettes by David Burnett.

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY: SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1986

Date: 03 May 1986

International Water reservoirs are contaminated near the crippled Soviet nuclear power plant at Chernobyl and the region remains too radioactive for evacuated residents to return, a Communist Party official said. In the first detailed description of the nuclear disaster and its aftermath, the official, Boris N. Yeltsin, the Moscow party leader, also said it was caused by human error. [ Page 1, Col. 6. ] Potential health hazards in Poland caused by the reactor accident in the Ukraine led the United States Government to advise women of child-bearing age and all children not to travel to Poland. The Canadian, Australian and British Embassies took the children of their diplomats to Western Europe. A State Department official said a message would probably be sent to the United States Embassy in Warsaw allowing women and children to leave at Government expense until it is deemed clearly safe to be in Poland. [ 1:4. ]

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, MAY 4, 1986

Date: 04 May 1986

Special to the New York Times

International About 49,000 people were removed from the area around the Chernobyl power plant and between 20 and 25 people are critically ill as a result of the nuclear accident at the reactor, a member of the Soviet leadership said. The official, Boris N. Yeltsin, a candidate or nonvoting member of the Soviet Politburo who is the Moscow Communist Party leader, said in an interview that perhaps as many as 40 people may have received a serious dose of radiation ''but definitely not hundreds or thousands as reported by the Western press. [ Page 1, Col. 6. ]

Full Article

NEW CHIEFS AT U.S. NEWS STIR ANXIOUS CURIOSITY

Date: 04 May 1986

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

At the glossy Washington headquarters of U.S. News & World Report, new reports on readership and circulation prompted rejoicing as the results were passed from office to office. A report from Mediamark Research, a leading audience research company, showed that for the six months ended last February there was a drop in the median age of the magazine's readers to 41.9 years of age from 42.3, and median household income had jumped to $38,096 from $35,057. And circulation has increased by 250,000 in the three months since the magazine's new design was introduced in January, according to a report filed with the Audit Bureau of Circulations. The magazine's audience is still far smaller and older than that of its chief rivals, Time and Newsweek. But for Mortimer B. Zuckerman, the real estate developer who is owner, chairman and editor in chief, the results were a welcome respite after months of staff turnover, redesigning projects and controversy, much of it focused on him.

Full Article

PRESS PASSES ARE IN DEMAND FOR LIBERTY WEEKEND EVENTS

Date: 04 May 1986

By Deirdre Carmody

Deirdre Carmody

Three news organizations in China have asked for press accreditation. Sri Lanka wants to send reporters. So do newspapers in South Korea, Indonesia and Argentina. According to organizers of Liberty Weekend, the group in charge of press accreditation for the Statue of Liberty centennial over the Fourth of July weekend, an ''overwhelming'' number of requests for press credentials has been received from news organizations around the world.

Full Article

NO 'SILENCE,' SOVIET PRESS AIDES SAY

Date: 03 May 1986

By Sara Rimer

Sara Rimer

The chief spokesman for the Soviet Foreign Ministry denied yesterday that Moscow had imposed a ''premeditated silence'' on information about the nuclear accident in the Ukraine. The official, Vladimir Lomeiko, visiting New York, said information about the accident at the Chernobyl reactor was made public as soon as the authorities became aware of the scope and significance of the accident. Although he did not directly refer to his Government's 48-hour delay in acknowledging the accident, Mr. Lomeiko said he did not know about the incident when he left Moscow on Monday for New York. If he had, he said, his trip would undoubtedly have been canceled.

Full Article

IN A CRISIS, WHO TO TUNE IN? IN THE SOVIET BLOC, PROBABLY WESTERN RADIO

Date: 03 May 1986

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

Since Monday, with little information available from official sources about the nuclear accident in the Soviet Union, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty have been a source of breaking news to their Soviet bloc audience. They have also tailored their programs to contain practical advice on survival that would normally be the function of a local radio station. For instance, the Polish language broadcast of Radio Free Europe was two hours ahead of radio stations in Poland in reporting that high radiation levels had been detected in Scandanavia and in broadcasting the Soviet announcement that a nuclear accident had occurred, according to Jacek Kalabinski, senior program editor for the Polish service in New York. Mr. Kalabinski said the Polish service of Radio Free Europe had repeatedly broadcast an interview with a Polish-speaking hematologist based in New York who gave advice on such things as how to wash vegetables that might be contaminated with radiation.

Full Article

U.S. Considers Prosecution Over Disclosure on Missiles

Date: 03 May 1986

Reuters

The Justice Department will decide whether to charge a former top Defense Department aide with disclosing information about shipments of American missiles to rebels in Afghanistan and Angola, officials said Thursday. The Defense Department, the officials said, referred the case to the Justice Department for possible prosecution of Michael Pillsbury, who is accused of disclosing information to reporters about shipments of antiaircraft missiles to the rebels. Mr. Pillsbury was dismissed after failing a test by polygraph, or lie detector.

Full Article

Comings and Goings

Date: 03 May 1986

Mike Fratello, who guided the Atlanta Hawks to a 50-victory season, the biggest improvement in the league - they won 34 games in 1984-85 - has been named the National Basketball Association Coach of the Year in a vote by 78 members of the news media. The 39-year-old, New Jersey-born Fratello left the Knicks, for whom he had been an assistant coach, to take over the Hawks for the 1983-84 season. Ted Turner, the owner of the Hawks, said Fratello would be offered a multiyear contract after the season. . . . Ivan Lendl, seeded first, was paired against Francesco Cancellotti of Italy in the draw held yesterday for the $500,000 Shearson Lehman Tournament of Champions that opens at the West Side Tennis Club Monday. Lendl, the defending champion and a winner in five of the six tournaments he has played this year, will be returning to competition after sitting out a month with tendinitis in his right knee. Boris Becker of West Germany, who will also be making his debut at Forest Hills, is seeded second. His opening match will be against Juan Aguilera of Spain. The tournament, with a top prize of $80,000, runs through next Sunday. . . . Marvin Webster, the 7-foot-1-inch center who retired from the Knicks in January, has been charged in White Plains with violating a court order that restricts his contact with his estranged wife and family. He was arrested and arraigned, then released without bail until a court appearance May 14. . . . Dr. Bobby Brown, president of the American League, has told the Cleveland Indians that it would be permissible for the team to enter a long-term lease for a proposed domed stadium as long as it contains escape clauses ''that would give them options and a semblance of control over their future.''

Full Article

Bush Calls for Soviet to Give More Data on Atom Accident

Date: 03 May 1986

AP

Vice President Bush today challenged the Soviet Union to share more information about its nuclear accident, calling the secrecy about the disaster ''unconscionable.'' Mr. Bush, leaving Andrews Air Force Base for Chicago after meeting with Cabinet officials to review the Soviet accident, said the Russians had responded to some American requests for information. ''I cannot go into the detail, but it is sparse at best,'' he said.

Full Article

Date:

Full Article