Сенди Мелинг Рођендан, Датум рођења

Сенди Мелинг

Санди Мелинг (нем. Sandy Mölling; Вупертал, 27. април 1981) немачка је певачица, писац песама, телевизијска водитељка и глумица, чланица женске поп групе Но ејнџелс, која је представљала Немачку на Песми Евровизије 2008. у Београду.

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Рођендан, Датум рођења
понедељак, 27. април 1981.
Место рођења
Вупертал
Старост
44
Знак Звезде

27. април 1981. је био понедељак под знаком звездице . Био је 116 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 44 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био недеља, 27. април 2025., пре 141 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је понедељак, 27. април 2026., за 223 дана. Живели сте 16.212 дана, или око 389.102 сати, или око 23.346.130 минута, или око 1.400.767.800 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

27th of April 1981 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 27. април 1981.

Viewers Found to Favor A 'Comfortable' Anchor

Date: 28 April 1981

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Viewers of evening television news want it delivered by ''a soothing, comfortable'' person they can trust, according to a study described in the latest edition of TV Guide magazine.

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Reporter Slain in Iran Is Honored

Date: 27 April 1981

UPI

Upi

The Nieman Foundation's award for conscience and integrity in journalism was awarded yesterday posthumously to Joe Alex Morris Jr., a Los Angeles Times reporter, who was shot in the chest and killed while covering the Iranian revolution. Mr. Morris, a longtime Middle East reporter who had worked for United Press, The New York Herald Tribune and Newsweek, died Feb. 10, 1979. The Louis M. Lyons Award was presented to Mr. Morris's widow, Ursula.

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TIME FOR A BREAK

Date: 27 April 1981

To the Editor: The shameful behavior of the press in its treatment of Governor Carey and his new wife is an embarrassment. Even backfence gossips have the decency to whisper. How about it? Give them and the public a break and get back to writing news worth reading. KEVIN COONEY, Montrose, N.Y., April 20, 1981

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News Analysis

Date: 28 April 1981

By Richard Eder

Richard Eder

Two phrases sum up the political battle that will be conducted over the next two weeks between President Valery Giscard d'Estaing and Francois Mitterrand, the candidate of the French Socialist Party. One phrase is the slogan on a Socialist poster: ''Change? Or 14 Years of Giscard?'' The other was heard all over town today; for instance, in a statement by Roger Chinaud, an aide to Mr. Giscard d'Estaing: ''If Mitterrand is elected he will need the presence of Communists in his government.'' The two phrases suggest why the May 10 runoff election between the two largest vote-getters yesterday offers a crucial test of the French Fifth Republic. The institution erected by Charles de Gaulle - a presidency with a seven-year term and powers unequaled in any other democratic Western nation - was designed to give strong government to a France weakened by continual political crisis.

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News Analysis

Date: 28 April 1981

By Martin Tolchin, Special To the New York Times

Martin Tolchin

The politics of the budget will dominate Congress in the next two weeks as the House and Senate choose from myriad politically tinged economic assumptions that have been translated into three budget proposals in an effort to effect a fundamental change in the nation's fiscal policy. Almost lost in the debate surrounding the three and a fourth, President Reagan's original budget, is the virtual certainty that with whichever plan is enacted Mr. Reagan will obtain at least 75 percent of the reductions he wants in budget proposals for the fiscal year 1982, which begins in October. One of the three Congressional budget proposals, the plan of Representatives Delbert L. Latta, Republican of Ohio, and Phil Gramm, Democrat of Texas, totally accepts the President's economic assumptions and hews closely to his budget. The second, by the Senate Budget Committee, accepts most, but not all, of the President's economic assumptions and his budget priorities.

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News Summary; TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1981

Date: 28 April 1981

International A foreign-policy difference between President Reagan and Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. was disclosed by White House officials. They said that Mr. Haig did not reflect the President's views when he said Saturday that Washington would impose a total trade embargo against the Soviet Union if it invaded Poland. A spokesman called an embargo ''one of many options'' that the President could choose. (Page A1, Column 1.) The Administration was rebuffed in an attempt to end Congressional restrictions on American military aid to insurgents in Angola. By a 7-to-0 vote, a House subcommittee backed retention of the restrictions. (A3:3-6.)

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News Summary; MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1981

Date: 27 April 1981

International In the French election's first round, President Valery Giscard dEstaing took a slight lead over Francois Mitterrand, the Socialist leader. Jacques Chirac, the Gaullist candidate, and Georges Marchais, the Communist candidate, lagged far behind. The preliminary vote that eliminated eight other contenders from the May 10 runoff was so close that it was impossible to give either the President or Mr. Mitterrand a decisive lead. (Page A1, Column 6.) Israeli planes raided suspected Palestinian bases in southern Lebanon, while Syrian forces heavily shelled Christian villages and military positions in the strategic Bekaa Valley and around Jebel Sannin, a mountain east of Beirut. Lebanese authorities reported that 15 people were killed and 30 wounded in the Israeli attack. A Syrian military spokesman said that Syrian planes shot down two Israeli craft and that a Syrian plane was hit. Israel denied that there had been an air fight. (A1:5.)

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Ferragamo Signing Expected Today

Date: 27 April 1981

UPI

Upi

Vince Ferragamo, the quarterback who led the Los Angeles Rams to the 1979 Super Bowl, is expected to sign with the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League tomorrow. The club has called a news conference at 5 P.M. tomorrow.

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3 MORE UNIONS SETTLE WITH PAPERS BUT GUILD TALKS ARE STILL SNAGGED

Date: 28 April 1981

By Damon Steton

Damon Steton

The Daily News and The New York Times reached full agreements yesterday with the photoengravers union and two machinist unions, but talks with the Newspaper Guild were snagged on a critical issue of dual pay rates. The guild, which represents news, advertising and clerical employees, has threatened to strike at 12:01 A. M. tomorrow if there is no agreement. At The New York Post, with which the guild is bargaining separately, there were reports of some progress in talks that ended in the late afternoon. Negotiations with The News and The Times continued last night at the Doral Inn. The guild has not as yet designated the newspaper or newspapers that it would strike.

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CYNTHIA GREEN AND ELIOT JAY KAPLAN, EDITORS, MARRIED

Date: 27 April 1981

Cynthia Elaine Green, regional editor of The Courier-News, a Gannett newspaper in Bridgewater, N.J., was married in Princeton, N.J., yesterday to Eliot Jay Kaplan, associate editor of Family Weekly magazine, the CBS-owned Sunday supplement. Superior Court Judge J. Wilson Noden performed the ceremony in the Prospect Gardens on the Princeton University campus.

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