Edurne Рођендан, Датум рођења

Edurne

Edurne García Almagro (Spanish pronunciation: [eˈðuɾne ɣaɾˈθia alˈmaɣɾo]; born 22 December 1985), known mononymously as Edurne, is a Spanish singer, actress, and television presenter. She rose to fame in late 2005 when she took part in the Spanish casting show Operación Triunfo on Telecinco and finished in sixth place in 2006. She represented Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015 with the song "Amanecer" where she finished in 21st place.

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Рођендан, Датум рођења
недеља, 22. децембар 1985.
Место рођења
Кољадо Виљалба
Старост
40
Знак Звезде

22. децембар 1985. је био недеља под знаком звездице . Био је 355 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 40 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био понедељак, 22. децембар 2025., пре 153 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је уторак, 22. децембар 2026., за 211 дана. Живели сте 14.763 дана, или око 354.316 сати, или око 21.259.000 минута, или око 1.275.540.000 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

22nd of December 1985 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 22. децембар 1985.

NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1985

Date: 22 December 1985

International A Presidential report makes charges against Moscow concerning Soviet compliance with arms-control treaties, and modifies some earlier allegations in the light of recently acquired evidence. The report to Congress generally reaffirms earlier Administration charges that there ''is a pattern of Soviet noncompliance'' with arms-control agreements. [Page 1, Column 6.]

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NEWS SUMMARY: MONDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1985

Date: 23 December 1985

International Winnie Mandela was arrested by the South African police after she defied a ban imposed Saturday forbidding her to enter Soweto, the huge segregated black township near Johannesburg. The order for her exclusion from Soweto relaxed previous restrictions on her activities in force since 1977, which exiled her to the remote town of Brandfort. Her lawyers said he had been taken to detention in Krugersdorp, which is southwest of Johannesburg. [Page A1, Column 6.] Moscow's proposal for a moratorium on nuclear testing is a potentially positive development, some Reagan Administration officials said despite the public rejection by the Administration. Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the Soviet leader, proposed in a letter dated Dec. 5 that the United States join a moratorium on the underground nuclear testing. [A1:1.]

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IT'S GOOD NEWS YOU WATN? TRY THE ELMER TIMES

Date: 22 December 1985

Special to the New York Times

On Sunday afternoons, Helen Richards, correspondent for The Elmer Times, starts phoning for news in Daretown and Aldine. She has 70 names, and by the time she is done at 9 P.M. - she would never call past 9 - she has phoned half the homes in the area and knows the news. ''They get talking, they tell you all their troubles,'' Mrs. Richards said. Most of it will not go in the paper. ''Oh, no,'' she said, ''they wouldn't want it in.'' If she hears that someone had an operation, she will wait until the person is home to print it, so burglars don't get ideas. ''I'll not put it in until it's stale news,'' she said. She puts in vacations when they are over, too.

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HOW ONE CORRESPONDENT ENDED RULE ON CREDENTIALS

Date: 23 December 1985

Special to the New York Times

All that Norma Greenaway, a Washington correspondent for Canadian Press, Canada's major news service, wanted were White House press credentials. But she was unwilling to pay the price.

Full Article

Advertising; A Switch by Publisher

Date: 23 December 1985

By Philip H. Dougherty

Philip Dougherty

Margaret Byrne Heimbold is leaving her position as publisher of American Film magazine to assume a similar role at Historic Preservation and Preservation News, the former a six-a-year magazine and the latter a monthly tabloid. The headquarters are in Washington.

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Britain Urges Release Of Journalist in Lebanon

Date: 23 December 1985

AP

Britain appealed today for kidnappers to release Alec Collett, a British journalist held in Lebanon, but said it would not make a deal for his freedom. Timothy Renton, a minister of state at the Foreign Office, said the release of Mr. Collett, who has been held since March 25, would do more to advance the Palestinian cause ''than anything else.''

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A STATE-OF-THE-ART CHALLENGER ALARMS FLEET STREET

Date: 23 December 1985

By Joseph Lelyveld, Special To the New York Times

Joseph Lelyveld

Eddie Shah works from an office that is about three miles away from Fleet Street, the natural habitat of English newspapers. He has never set foot in a Fleet Street newspaper, he says, and has never laid eyes on a Linotype machine - the outmoded hot-metal printing machine still in use on every national newspaper in Britain as a result of the inflexible resistance of a plethora of labor unions to the introduction of new technology. Yet, in a period of upheaval on Fleet Street, Mr. Shah's name comes up quickly in any conversation on the future of the newspaper industry in a nation that retains a ravenous appetite, despite television, for printed news and opinion, printed gossip and - in the popular tabloids - printed photos of bare-breasted women. Mr. Shah, 41 years old, broke into the business in the provinces as the publisher of a string of giveaway papers. He may not be of the Fleet Street world, but he is the vanguard of the technological revolution that is finally looming.

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U.S. AIDES FIND HOPE AS SOVIET URGES TEST BAN

Date: 23 December 1985

By Michael R. Gordon, Special To the New York Times

Michael Gordon

Although the Reagan Administration has publicly rejected the Soviet Union's proposal for a moratorium on nuclear testing, some Administration officials say they still see the Soviet move as a potentially positive development. In a Dec. 5 letter to President Reagan, Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the Soviet leader, proposed that the United States join Moscow's current unilateral moratorium on the underground testing of nuclear weapons, the only tests now permitted. He said that under the moratorium, observers could visit each side's territory to investigate ''ambiguous phenomena'' and resolve ''possible doubts'' about compliance. Mr. Gorbachev also proposed resuming talks with the United States and Britain on a comprehensive ban on underground nuclear tests. Negotiations on such an agreement were carried out during the Carter Administration, but the Reagan Administration has not sought to resume them.

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SOVIET HAS SUPPLIED A DANGEROUS MISSILE TO LIBYA, U.S. SAYS

Date: 22 December 1985

By Susan F. Rasky, Special To the New York Times

Susan Rasky

The Soviet Union has provided SA-5 long-range ground-to-air missiles to Libya that would pose a threat to aircraft in disputed areas of the Mediterranean, according to the State Department. A longstanding dispute between the United States and Libya over Libyan territorial claims in the Mediterranean has led to serious clashes in recent years. The SA-5 is one of the largest surface-to-air missiles ever built and is the Soviet Union's principal high-altitude air defense missile. It has a range of 150 miles and has been a part of Syria's Soviet-supplied arsenal since 1982.

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NICARAGUAN WON'T END CURBS AS ASKED BY 80 IN CONGRESS

Date: 22 December 1985

By Stephen Kinzer, Special To the New York Times

Stephen Kinzer

President Daniel Ortega Saavedra said today that he would not lift Nicaragua's state of emergency despite an appeal that he said he recently received from more than 80 members of the United States Congress. The state of emergency, which limits many public liberties, has been in effect for two months. In an address to the National Assembly and members of the diplomatic corps, Mr. Ortega warned Congress against approving military aid for rebels fighting his Government.

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