Kyle Dake Рођендан, Датум рођења

Kyle Dake

Kyle Douglas Dake (born February 25, 1991) is an American freestyle wrestler and graduated folkstyle wrestler who competes at 74 kilograms. He currently competes in the Cruiserweight division of Real American Freestyle (RAF), where he is the current RAF Cruiserweight Champion.

Dake is a four-time World Champion, winning back-to-back titles twice, at 79 kilos in 2018 and 2019 and 74 kilos in 2021 and 2022. He earned bronze medals at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and 2024 Paris Olympics.

In college, he became the third four-time NCAA Division I National Champion in history, and the only one to ever do so in four different weight classes, and without a redshirt season. He was named the Dan Hodge Trophy winner and Schalles Award winner as a senior and he also claimed three EIWA titles, competing out of Cornell University.

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Рођендан, Датум рођења
понедељак, 25. фебруар 1991.
Место рођења
Итака
Старост
35
Знак Звезде

25. фебруар 1991. је био понедељак под знаком звездице . Био је 55 дан у години. Председник Сједињених Држава је био George Bush.

Ако сте рођени на данашњи дан, имате 35 година. Ваш последњи рођендан је био среда, 25. фебруар 2026., пре 87 дана. Ваш следећи рођендан је четвртак, 25. фебруар 2027., за 277 дана. Живели сте 12.871 дана, или око 308.925 сати, или око 18.535.558 минута, или око 1.112.133.480 секунди.

Неки људи који деле овај рођендан:

25th of February 1991 News

Вести како су се појавиле на насловној страни Њујорк тајмса на 25. фебруар 1991.

With News Lacking, the Maps Shine

Date: 25 February 1991

By Walter Goodman

Walter Goodman

In other circumstances, the line might have brought a laugh. "Up to now," Defense Secretary Dick Cheney told reporters at the Pentagon two hours after the start of the land offensive in the Persian Gulf, "we've been as forthcoming as possible about military operations." Now, he announced, regular briefings would be suspended. Yesterday morning, Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, head of the allied forces in the gulf, confirmed the new rule even as he violated it by giving a very brief briefing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he swept through the reporters like a tank.

Full Article

Unions See Little Chance of News Settlement

Date: 26 February 1991

By Alan Finder

Alan Finder

Some leaders of the nine unions striking The Daily News, along with the unions' chief adviser, said yesterday that after seven days of marathon negotiations, they had little hope of a settlement in their four-month strike. The talks were recessed on Sunday by Bill Usery Jr., a private mediator, and are to reconvene tomorrow. The sides remain far apart, union officials said.

Full Article

News from Gulf Is Good, and Cheney's Press Curbs Are Loosened

Date: 25 February 1991

By Richard L. Berke, Special To the New York Times

Richard Berke

The Pentagon's highly restrictive news policy announced by the Secretary of Defense last night was loosened today when allied field commanders came forward with glowing reports of early success in the war zone. But many American news executives contended that the curbs were the latest, and possibly most troubling, example of Defense Secretary Dick Cheney's efforts to control the flow of information from Washington.

Full Article

Reporter's Notebook; News Mediator Tight-Lipped, but Keeps Sides Talking

Date: 25 February 1991

By Alan Finder

Alan Finder

Bill Usery Jr., the private mediator trying to bridge the gap between The Daily News and its nine striking unions, is a tall man of regal bearing, with flowing white hair and a disarmingly folksy manner. He is also a poet of the noncommittal. As he strides from one private meeting to another, he is often asked for an update on the negotiations. "It's a lot of things going on that are very difficult," he said at one point.

Full Article

CBS Claims a Comeback In Reporting on the War

Date: 25 February 1991

By Bill Carter

Bill Carter

Saturday night's coverage of the start of the ground war in the Persian Gulf was a "major comeback" for the broadcast networks in general and for CBS in particular, Howard Stringer, the president of the CBS Broadcast Group, said yesterday. The Cable News Network so dominated the coverage of the start of the air war on the night of Jan. 16 that Mr. Stringer had described the night as a "watershed moment" in broadcast journalism.

Full Article

Censors Screen Pooled Reports

Date: 26 February 1991

The American-led military command in Saudi Arabia has put into effect press restrictions under which journalists are assembled in groups and given access to military sources. The pool reporters obtain information while under military escort, and their accounts are subject to scrutiny by military censors before being distributed. Some of the information appearing today on American military operations was obtained under such circumstances.

Full Article

WAR IN THE GULF: Poll; Public Shows Support for Land War

Date: 26 February 1991

By Michael R. Kagay

Michael Kagay

The initial reaction of the American public to the start of the ground war against Iraq is strongly supportive, according to the latest New York Times/ CBS News Poll. Seventy-five percent of 687 adults interviewed Sunday evening said "the United States did the right thing in starting the ground war against Iraq," while 19 percent said the United States should have "waited longer to see if the bombing from the air worked," and 6 percent expressed no opinion.

Full Article

Censors Screen Pooled Reports

Date: 25 February 1991

The American-led military command in Saudi Arabia has put into effect press restrictions under which journalists are assembled in groups and given access to military sources. The pool reporters obtain information while under military escort, and their accounts are subject to scrutiny by military censors before being distributed. Some of the information appearing today on American military operations was obtained under such circumstances.

Full Article

Los Angeles Times to Drop Some Readers

Date: 25 February 1991

Special to The New York Times

The Los Angeles Times, which became the nation's largest metropolitan daily last year through its aggressive expansion efforts, plans to stop selling papers in a large part of central California and in neighboring states. Executives of The Los Angeles Times, which has a weekday circulation of 1.2 million, said they decided to eliminate home-delivery and newsstand sales in the mostly rural area between Bakersfield and Fresno because of the weakened California economy.

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Correction

Date: 25 February 1991

A news analysis article on Friday about negotiations between The Daily News and its striking unions misidentified the mediator in the negotiations. He is Bill Usery Jr.

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Date:

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