Paul-José M'Poku Anniversaire, Date de Naissance

Paul-José M'Poku

Paul-José Polo M'Poku, né le à Kinshasa au Zaïre (aujourd'hui la république démocratique du Congo), est un footballeur international congolais qui joue au poste de milieu de terrain à UTA Arad.

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Anniversaire, Date de Naissance
dimanche 19 avril 1992
Lieu de naissance
Kinshasa
Âge
33
Signe étoile

Le 19 avril 1992 était un dimanche sous le signe astral du . C'était le 109ème jour de l'année. Le président des États-Unis était George Bush.

Si vous êtes né ce jour-là, vous avez 33 ans. Ton dernier anniversaire était le samedi 19 avril 2025, il y a 148 jours. Votre prochain anniversaire est le dimanche 19 avril 2026, dans 216 jours. Vous avez vécu 12 201 jours, soit environ 292 833 heures, ou environ 17 570 034 minutes, ou environ 1 054 202 040 secondes.

Quelques personnes qui partagent cet anniversaire:

  • James Franco (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, animateur de télévision, dramaturge, enseignant, monteur, poète, producteur de cinéma, réalisateur, scénariste, écrivain, né le 19 avril 1978)
  • Kate Hudson (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de télévision, chanteur, producteur de cinéma, réalisateur, scénariste, né le 19 avril 1979)
  • Luis Miguel (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, artiste d'enregistrement, chanteur, réalisateur artistique, né le 19 avril 1970)
  • Ali Khamenei (chef d'État, faqîh, marja-e taqlid, personnalité politique, poète, traducteur, écrivain, né le 19 avril 1939)
  • Hayden Christensen (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, producteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1981)
  • Suge Knight (compositeur, joueur de football américain, rappeur, réalisateur artistique, né le 19 avril 1965)
  • Tim Curry (acteur, acteur de doublage, acteur de télévision, chanteur, humoriste, producteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1946)
  • Maria Sharapova (diplomate, joueur de tennis, mannequin, né le 19 avril 1987)
  • Jayne Mansfield (acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, chanteur, playmate, né le 19 avril 1933)
  • Mukesh Ambani (entrepreneur, graphiste, personnalité du monde des affaires, né le 19 avril 1957)
  • Ashley Judd (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, chanteur, né le 19 avril 1968)
  • Shannon Lee (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, cascadeur, chanteur, kick-boxeur, producteur de cinéma, producteur de télévision, taekwondoïste, né le 19 avril 1969)
  • Marko Arnautović (joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1989)
  • Rivaldo (joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1972)
  • Candace Parker (acteur, basketteur, né le 19 avril 1986)
  • Joe Hart (joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1987)
  • Jesse G. James (acteur, acteur de télévision, animateur de télévision, ingénieur, personnalité du monde des affaires, producteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1969)
  • Roberto Carlos (acteur, artiste d'enregistrement, auteur-compositeur, auteur-compositeur-interprète, chanteur, compositeur, pianiste, né le 19 avril 1941)
  • Joachim Sauer (chimiste, professeur d'université, né le 19 avril 1949)
  • Gad Elmaleh (acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, artiste de cabaret, compositeur, humoriste, réalisateur, scénariste, né le 19 avril 1971)
  • Getúlio Vargas (avocat, personnalité politique, né le 19 avril 1882)
  • Dudley Moore (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, compositeur, humoriste, musicien de jazz, pianiste, réalisateur, scénariste, né le 19 avril 1935)
  • Erich Hartmann (aviateur, né le 19 avril 1922)
  • Im Soo-hyang (acteur, acteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1990)
  • Mswati III (monarque, personnalité politique, souverain, né le 19 avril 1968)
  • Bryan Spears (producteur de cinéma, producteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1977)
  • Ali Wong (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, humoriste, scénariste, né le 19 avril 1982)
  • Dick Sargent (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1930)
  • Ferdinand Cheval (architecte, artiste, facteur, maitre d'œuvre, sculpteur, né le 19 avril 1836)
  • Ferdinand Ier d'Autriche (personnalité politique, né le 19 avril 1793)
  • Troy Polamalu (dirigeant sportif, joueur de football américain, né le 19 avril 1981)
  • Frank Elstner (animateur de radio, animateur de télévision, producteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1942)
  • Oksana Akinchina (acteur, acteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1987)
  • Dorian Yates (culturiste, né le 19 avril 1962)
  • Nobuteru Ishihara (journaliste, personnalité politique, né le 19 avril 1957)
  • Fernando Botero (artiste, dessinateur, dessinateur en bâtiment, illustrateur, peintre, sculpteur, né le 19 avril 1932)
  • Surekha Sikri (acteur de cinéma, acteur de théâtre, acteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1945)
  • Elinor Donahue (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de doublage, acteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1937)
  • Pamela Mountbatten (aristocrate, dame de compagnie, né le 19 avril 1929)
  • Nicoletta Braschi (acteur, producteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1960)
  • Gabriel Heinze (entraîneur de football, joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1978)
  • Valon Behrami (joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1985)
  • Jennifer Taylor (acteur, acteur de cinéma, acteur de télévision, né le 19 avril 1972)
  • Jirōemon Kimura (agriculteur, facteur, né le 19 avril 1897)
  • Kevin Mbabu (joueur de football, né le 19 avril 1995)
  • Arshad Warsi (acteur, acteur de cinéma, chanteur, producteur de cinéma, né le 19 avril 1968)
  • Gustavo Petro (partisan, personnalité politique, écologiste, économiste, écrivain, né le 19 avril 1960)
  • Paloma Picasso (chorégraphe, créateur de bijoux, designer, entrepreneur, modéliste, peintre, personnalité du monde des affaires, socialite, styliste de mode, né le 19 avril 1949)
  • Joseph Estrada (acteur, personnalité politique, né le 19 avril 1937)
  • Haruna Kojima (acteur, chanteur, idole japonaise, mannequin, né le 19 avril 1988)

19th of April 1992 News

Nouvelles telles qu'elles sont apparues à la une du New York Times le 19 avril 1992

Abroad at Home; Hair on Their Chests

Date: 19 April 1992

By Anthony Lewis

Anthony Lewis

The American press prides itself on its courage, its selflessness, its influence. But in the current political campaign those claims sound like a bad joke. The press is distinguished by its cynicism and its self-regard. Yes, it does have influence -- for the worse. The notable example at hand is the press treatment of Bill Clinton. Even serious newspapers have become parodies of attack-dog journalism, eager to find something -- anything -- nasty to print about Governor Clinton.

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Stricter Disclosure Rules

Date: 20 April 1992

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Tokyo Stock Exchange will soon revise its rules to enforce stricter corporate information disclosure, the Nihon Keizai newspaper said today. The exchange is likely to require swift reporting of significant changes in profit projections that result from lawsuits linked to stock trading, as well as appraisal losses on securities holdings, the paper said. The current disclosure guidelines were drafted in April 1989.

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Tell Us, Governor, Just What You Would Do; Letting Bush Off

Date: 19 April 1992

To the Editor: I was distressed by "Get the Candidates" (editorial, March 31). You do not seem to grasp that your frequently tabloidized treatment of the campaign is helping throw the election to George Bush.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 20 April 1992

International A3-11 DEADLOCK ON AFGHANISTAN With guerrilla forces massed around the capital, rebel leaders meeting in Pakistan were stalemated in their attempts to negotiate Afghanistan's future. A1 A city held by Afghan rebels becomes a new center of power. A8 DID U.S. KNOW OF IRAQI PLANS? Government experts and congressional investigators say that warnings of Iraq's effort to build a nuclear weapon were silenced by the Federal bureaucracy nearly two years before the Persian Gulf war. A1 FIGHTING GOES ON IN BOSNIA Serbian guerrillas seized more territory in Bosnia and Herzegovina as the United States Air Force ended a two-day airlift of humanitarian aid to the capital. A3 PLEA FOR PEACE IN SOUTH AFRICA President de Klerk and the nation's two most powerful black leaders, Nelson Mandela and Mangosuthu Buthelezi, spoke to hundreds of thousands of blacks at an Easter celebration. But they exchanged veiled recriminations and came no closer to agreeing on a solution to end the violence in black townships. A10 A CHALLENGE TO PERU'S LEADER The First Vice President of Peru returned to Lima from Miami and vowed to form a rival government to oppose President Fujimori, who seized near-dictatorial powers two weeks ago. A3 SHEVARDNADZE'S NEW CHALLENGE The former Soviet Foreign Minister is back home in Georgia, trying to lead his country through the aftermath of a civil war. A6 Disagreements hinder financial aid for former Soviet republics. A6 A DISSIDENT'S FAMILY SUFFERS The wife of one of China's most prominent dissidents said the authorities had evicted her and her sick daughter from their home, leaving her nowhere to live. A7 A VOW FROM I.R.A. POLITICIAN Surrounded by cheering Roman Catholic supporters and British soldiers with rifles at the ready, the head of the political wing of the Irish Republican Army said his defeat in the British parliamentary election would not weaken his party's position in Northern Ireland. A11 IN THE LAND OF RAIN, DROUGHT The longest drought in 200 years is drying up ponds and streams throughout England. The prospect is for another summer of wilted gardens and strict water rationing. A7 Santo Domingo Journal: Prostitution a booming export. A4 National A12-15, B11-12 BIG CHECKS, BIG PROBLEMS Some experts on corporate governance think seven-figure executive paychecks are not a real issue but a symptom of deeper ills at companies. More important, they say, is whether directors hire the right people and dismiss them when when they need to. A1 JUSTICES FACE ABORTION, AGAIN A Pennsylvania anti-abortion law goes before the Supreme Court this week, and advocates on both sides of the issue are hoping for an unambiguous ruling that will spur their campaigns in voting booths and legislative chambers. A1 Militants in the abortion debate descended on Buffalo. B11 WAYWARD HEARTS IN WASHINGTON Romeo and Juliet on the Potomac? An epidemic of cross-party dating in the nation's capital is alarming Republicans and Democrats alike. Oddly, 9 times out of 10, it is a Democratic man involved with a Republican woman. A1 ASSESSING THE HOUSE'S INJURIES The House bank scandal is sure to shake some members out of their seats come election time, but political experts do not know whether it will substantially change the House's roster, which is usually determined on local issues. A15 The President spent the weekend relaxing, vigorously. A14 BATTERED MEN SPEAK UP Men who say they have been battered by their wives are challenging the dogma that all violent spouses are male and lobbying for changes in counseling, shelters and, above all, public perceptions. A12 CHOLESTEROL AND THE ELDERLY A study has found that the kinds and amounts of cholesterol in blood remain important to health and longevity even for people in their 70's and 80's, findings that challenge traditional medical treatment of the elderly. B12 THE SMELL OF PROGRESS West Grove Journal: This hamlet in Pennsylvania has evolved from a collection of sleepy farms into malodorous compost factories that operate seven days a week to produce tons of one crop: mushrooms. A12 Chicago plugged its leak and moved on to puzzle of draining. A12 Metropolitan Digest, B1 EVALUATING FOSTER CARE New York City has strict rules to protect the 50,000 children it has placed in foster care. But critics say there is no way to know whether those rules are followed, because the city's Human Resources Administration has cut its system of evaluating foster-care programs. A1 DINKINS RESTORES LIBRARY FUNDS Mayor David N. Dinkins proposed a $23.4 million increase in spending for the city's libraries over the next two years to restore five-day-a-week service at all 205 branches of the New York, Queens Borough and Brooklyn Public Libraries. A1 Business Digest, D1 Sports C1-8 Baseball: Johnson lifts Mets over Expos. C8 Yankees stop Indians. C8 Basketball: Knicks have playoff date with Pistons. C1 Questions, and some answers, about the playoff-bound Nets. C1 Celtics capture Atlantic Division. C3 Columns: Anderson on Messier. C4 Golf: Trevino is a true winner. C5 Hockey: Rangers slip past Devils. C1 Horse Racing: The New-York-to-Kentucky ticket. C2 Track and Field: Kenya runners going the distance. C2 Yachting: America3 outsails Stars & Stripes. C3 Obituaries B13 Arthur C. Stern, pioneer in fight against air pollution Arts/Entertainment C11-18 Exhibition on blacks and Jews. C11 Big contract for Madonna. C11 TV and reality programming. C11 Talk of Hollywood. C11 Music: AIDS benefit concert. C13 The Sugarcubes. C13 Word and Image: "Great First Lines" and "First Paragraphs." C18 Editorials/Op-Ed A16-17 Editorials A16 Roe: Still good law. Japan's better example. Hold the fire on PBS. Letters A16 Leslie H. Gelb: Rebels, be good. A17 William Safire: Bandarbush. A17 Paul H. Nitze: Why is Bush reviving the Soviet threat? A17 Georgette Mosbacher: The backlash myth. A17 Morley Safer: Blood money. A17

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 19 April 1992

International 3-9 SERBS POUND BOSNIAN CAPITAL Serbian guerrillas pounded central Sarajevo with mortar shells as a high-ranking American official arrived on a mission to bring humanitarian aid and to back Bosnia's independence from Yugoslavia. 1 IRAN'S MASTER BUILDER If the late Ayatollah Khomeini was the austere revolutionary determined to smash the old regime, President Rafsanjani is the state builder, just as determined to create institutions that will restore Iran to a position of power in the region. In fact, he would like to be seen as a throughly modern mullah. 1 COURTING A TOP AFGHAN REBEL Surrounded by rebels and weakened by the capture of a western city, Afghanistan's new Government in Kabul agreed to continue talks with one of the most powerful guerrilla military leaders. 3 SIGNS OF REBELLION IN EUROPE Just four months after the European Community signed a treaty on economic and political unity, the organization is being shaken by challenges to the pact and new uncertainty over the region's future. Many Europeans are less enthusiastic over the treaty than are their leaders. 8 President Havel has decided to seek re-election in Czechoslovakia. 8 GORBACHEV'S PITCH TO JAPAN Showing that he retains much of his old stature in Japan, Mikhail Gorbachev has been accorded a welcome approaching that of a head of state since his arrival a week ago. But his appeal for aid for ex-Soviet lands has received a cool response. 9 PANAMA WAVERS OVER PULLOUT With less than eight years to go before the United States ends nearly a century of military presence in Panama, many Panamanians are beginning to doubt the wisdom of letting the 10 remaining bases close and the troops depart. 7 National 10-25 VAST REVIEW OF DIABILITY CASES Reversing one of the most widely criticized policies of the Reagan Administration, Federal officials have agreed to reopen tens of thousands of cases in which the Government denied benefits to people who said they could not work because of mental or physical disabilities. 1 Some whose cases were denied, and who may now gain. 20 NOVEMBER'S WILD CARD Political Memo: The Bush and Clinton campaigns both regard Ross Perot's flirtation with a Presidential race as a danger. But neither of them yet has a strategy for dealing with it. 1 Some of Bush's relatives could prove Democratic targets. 14 Buchanan renewed his attacks on the President. 13 For Clinton, a smooth week's return to the campaign trail. 12 LESSONS OF THE WORKPLACE In Wooster, Ohio, the biggest employer is Rubbermaid, which has not laid off a worker there since 1973. Yet tension prevails. Workers have traded raises for job security, pressured to do so by management, and by neighbors who fear that the company might otherwise pull out. 1 ENTRAPMENT AND VINDICATION Five years after being charged with receiving child pornography, and just days after the Supreme Court ruled that he had been entrapped, Keith Jacobson feels this way: "I knew I wasn't a child pornographer. But when the Government charges you with something like that, what are people going to think?" 10 San Quentin Journal: After 25 years, an execution is at hand. 10 Minnesota is adopting a vast overhaul of health care. 15 Regional 26-32 A QUIET NEW YORK HOLIDAY After a flurry of activity, much of New York City seemed to slip into a quiet, meditative state this weekend, as residents celebrated Passover and Easter. 1 PORT JEFFERSON'S MYSTERY MAN Most residents of the quaint waterfront village never exchanged a word with him or caught more than a quick glance as he strode by in one of his sober business suits. But he was thought of as the very incarnation of success. Now he is charged with a vast fraud scheme, and residents don't know what to think. 26 THE OTHER COP ON THE BEAT They walk the streets in crisp blue uniforms, their faces mirroring those of the people in the neighborhood. They look like New York City police officers, but in fact they are auxiliary police: volunteers who patrol the streets out of a sense of do-goodism, part Kiwanis Club and part would-be detective. 27 Obituaries 30 Joseph B. Williams, an ex-New York State Supreme Court justice. Arts/Reviews 45-46 Fashion 40-41 Weddings 42-44

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Amtrak Expands Virginia Service

Date: 19 April 1992

Amtrak has increased weekend service between New York and Washington and the Virginia Tidewater area. Additional northbound trips operate Friday and Sunday from Newport News, Va., to New York, and one southbound trip runs Friday from Washington to Newport News. Amtrak has introduced bus connections to Norfolk and Virginia Beach for all Tidewater area trains.

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Critic's Notebook; A TV 'Reality' of Dramatizations and Platitudes

Date: 20 April 1992

By John J. O'Connor

John O'Connor

When television programmers talk about reality, prepare for a classic lesson in language debasement. Television approaches "reality" as an infinitely manipulable commodity. Examples range from news coverage of a desert war and endless expert blather about surgically precise strikes, which months later are revealed to be grossly imprecise, to the steady flow of made-for-TV movies based on facts that have been trimmed, rearranged and even renamed for the purposes of entertainment packaging. In the belt-tightening business of television nowadays, reality programming means primarily one thing: cheap, at least cheaper than the average sitcom or drama. The standard ingredients of news documentaries -- an authoritative-sounding narrator, genuine news clips, authentic photographs -- are blended with dramatizations and outright speculation as to what actually may have happened. When it works, that's pay dirt.

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Liza Levine and Edward Zuckerman Engaged

Date: 19 April 1992

Liza Levine, a freelance television producer, and Edward Zuckerman, an author, journalist and television writer, both in Los Angeles, are planning a June wedding. Ms. Levine, 33 years old, graduated from Smith College. She has produced television documentary programs for TBS Productions Inc., a documentary unit of Turner Entertainment Network, and ABC News. She is a daughter of Peter F. and Doris G. Levine of Atlanta.

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Inspiration From Ashe

Date: 19 April 1992

ARTHUR ASHE has AIDS. And when the news reached his friends at the Easter Bowl Junior Tennis Championships, they wanted to do something to help. So they decided to pass the hat to raise money for whatever AIDS organizations he may decide to endorse. Ashe, the honorary chairman in absentia of the 1992 championships in Miami, turned the tournament players and their parents into a brigade in the war against AIDS simply by being himself.

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A July Wedding For Lisa Pope

Date: 19 April 1992

July wedding plans have been announced for Lisa Anne Pope, the daughter of Margery Pope of Indianapolis and Dennis Pope of Columbus, Ohio, and Jeffrey Charles Girion, a son of Barbara and Heywood Jay Girion of Short Hills, N.J. Ms. Pope, 30 years old, is a reporter for The Los Angeles Daily News. She graduated from Northwestern University. Her father, who is retired, was a manager for the Emhart Corporation, a hardware and electronics concern in Indianapolis. Her mother is a medical technologist at Community Hospital North in Indianapolis.

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