Jujubee (drag queen) Рођендан, Датум рођења

Jujubee (drag queen)

Airline Inthyrath (Lao: ແອລາຍ ອິນທິຣາດ; born June 21, 1984), known by her stage name Jujubee, is an American drag queen, reality television personality, and recording artist from Lowell, Massachusetts. She first rose to prominence in 2010 as a contestant on the second season of RuPaul's Drag Race, and later returned to compete on the first and fifth seasons of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars, and the first series of RuPaul's Drag Race: UK vs. the World (2022). She has the unique distinction of being the only contestant to reach the finale of the competition four times. Additionally, she was a main cast member on the makeover television series RuPaul's Drag U (2010–2012), Dragnificent (2019–2020), and RuPaul's Secret Celebrity Drag Race (2022). In 2021, she competed in the first season of Paramount+ singing competition Queen of the Universe.

Прочитајте више...
 
Рођендан, Датум рођења
четвртак, 21. јун 1984.
Место рођења
Бостон
Старост
42
Знак Звезде

21. јун 1984. је био четвртак под знаком звездице . Био је 172 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 42 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био недеља, 21. јун 2026., пре 3 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је понедељак, 21. јун 2027., за 361 дана. Живели сте 15.343 дана, или око 368.235 сати, или око 22.094.128 минута, или око 1.325.647.680 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

21st of June 1984 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 21. јун 1984.

Date:

Full Article

JUDGE UPHOLDS GRENADA INVASION PRESS BAN

Date: 22 June 1984

AP

A Federal judge ruled today that the Defense Department was within its rights in prohibiting news coverage of the initial stages of the United States-led invasion of Grenada in October. The judge, Oliver Gasch of the United States District Court here, also refused a request by the publisher of Hustler magazine, Larry Flynt, that he bar the Pentagon from preventing reporters from accompanying initial invasion forces in the future. In a 10-page opinion, Judge Gasch said: ''The decision whether or not to impose a press ban during military operations and the nature and extent of such a ban if imposed are matters that necessarily must be left to the discretion of the commander in the field.

Full Article

Turkish Press Agency Aides Withdraw Their Resignations

Date: 21 June 1984

AP

The directors of the semiofficial Anatolia press agency withdrew their resignations today after being told the Government would reverse a decision to put the agency under control of a state directorate.

Full Article

INFORMATION BILL HELD IN DOUBT

Date: 21 June 1984

The chairman of the House subcommittee reviewing a Senate proposal to modify the Freedom of Information Act predicted today that it would not reach the House floor this year. Representative Glenn English, Democrat of Oklahoma, chairman of the Subcommittee on Government Information, Justice and Agriculture, said in an interview that the proposal was ''too controversial'' to be reported out of the subcommittee.

Full Article

Senate Votes to Form U.S. Peace Academy

Date: 22 June 1984

(AP)

The Senate voted today to establish a United States Academy of Peace to train American and foreign leaders in the nonviolent resolution of conflicts.

Full Article

PRESS ABROAD MAKES U.N. A KEY TOPIC

Date: 21 June 1984

By Richard Bernstein

Richard Bernstein

Every day here in a narrow office on the second floor of the Secretariat building, several staff members spend hours sorting through hundreds of press reports on United Nations activities sent in by the organization's 64 information centers around the world. In all, officials here say, the office receives some 1,500 articles, excluding news agency reports, that have appeared in local newspapers throughout the world. The volume of material illustrates a point often overloooked in this country: decisions and activities undertaken at the United Nations are often widely reported around the world. One result, diplomats say, is that what happens here affects world public opinion more than may be generally recognized in the United States.

Full Article

Weinberger Defends Reagan's Missile Plan

Date: 21 June 1984

AP

Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger today accused critics of the Reagan Administration's work on an advanced plan for defensive missiles of putting out ''a wealth of misinformation.'' Mr. Weinberger revised a speech prepared for delivery in Boston to criticize a new group opposed to the Administation's efforts, which includes former President Jimmy Carter and onetime senior Government officials in the defense, diplomatic and intelligence branches.

Full Article

NATO CUTS SOVIET-BLOC ESTIMATE

Date: 22 June 1984

Reuters

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization today published a revised comparison of its troop strength and that of the Soviet-bloc Warsaw Pact, and tacitly acknowledged that it had been exaggerating the numerical superiority of Soviet-bloc armies available for combat in Europe. Joseph M. A. H. Luns, Secretary General of NATO, presented the study at a news conference, his last before stepping down. He said procedures to estimate the number of troops available for any East-West war had been changed to give ''a more complete picture of those land forces which could actually be brought to bear.''

Full Article

Japanese Fighters Sent Aloft As 7 Soviet Planes Approach

Date: 21 June 1984

Reuters

Japanese fighters scrambled today when Soviet planes, including at least three Backfire bombers, appeared off the west coast of Hokkaido.

Full Article

NASA Picks 3 Astronomers To Train for Shuttle Flights

Date: 21 June 1984

UPI

Upi

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration today named three astronomers to train for 1986 and 1987 space shuttle missions devoted to studying stars and galaxies with an array of delicate instruments, including cameras to look at Halley's Comet.

Full Article

SAN DIEGO MAYOR IS BATTLING 2 PAPERS

Date: 21 June 1984

By Robert Lindsey

Robert Lindsey

A siege mentality appears to have taken over the 11th floor of San Diego's City Hall these days. Mayor Roger Hedgecock contends that the city's two major newspapers, The Union and The Tribune, are out to destroy him politically. On June 5, Mr. Hedgecock narrowly missed getting a majority in his bid for a second term in the nonpartisan municipal election and has been forced into a November runoff against a relative newcomer to local politics, Richard Carlson. The Mayor attributes the setback largely to antipathy by the newspapers that he says ''goes beyond the ordinary standards of journalism.''

Full Article