Дедрик Боята Рожден ден, дата на раждане

Дедрик Боята

Дедрик Боята (Anga Dedryck Boyata) е роден на 28 ноември 1990 г. в Юкел, Белгия. Той започва своята кариера в младежкия отбор на Брюксел през 2006 г., а през 2007 се премества в младежкия отбор на Манчестър Сити. През 2009 г. той прави дебюта си за първия състав на Манчестър Сити.

Дедрик Боята е играл в младежкия национален отбор до 19 и до 21 години. От 2010 г. той играе в мъжкия отбор.

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Рожден ден, дата на раждане
сряда, 28 ноември 1990 г.
Място на раждане
イクル
Възраст
34
Зодия

28 ноември 1990 г. беше сряда под звездния знак на . Беше 331 ден от годината. Президент на Съединените щати беше George Bush.

Ако сте родени на този ден, вие сте на 34 години. Последният ви рожден ден беше на четвъртък, 28 ноември 2024 г., преди 291 дни. Следващият ви рожден ден е на петък, 28 ноември 2025 г., след 73 дни. Живял си за 12 710 дни, или около 305 047 часа, или около 18 302 825 минути, или около 1 098 169 500 секунди.

Някои хора, които споделят този рожден ден:

28th of November 1990 News

Новини, както се появиха на първа страница на New York Times на 28 ноември 1990 г.

Owner Strangles Daily News

Date: 28 November 1990

By James G. Wieghart

James Wieghart

To understand the real issue behind The Daily News strike, New Yorkers must realize that the bitter struggle being waged in the streets, in news columns and on the airwaves is not primarily between union employees and management. At bottom, it is a greedy struggle by the Tribune Company, a mass-communications conglomerate, for unrealistic profits from its largest but most unmanageable and unprofitable property, The Daily News. To this day, I think the Chicago-based Tribune Company does not really appreciate New York's strong union climate and intense media competition.

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Options Seem to Be Growing Grimmer for Daily News

Date: 29 November 1990

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

After a week in which The Daily News lost many of its major advertisers, the options available to the newspaper's management appear to be shifting in ways that bode ill for the paper's future. As has been the case since the strike began five weeks ago, the paper's management apparently has four options.

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Nairobi Journal; On KTN, Mr. Big Man Is Often Not in the Picture

Date: 28 November 1990

By Jane Perlez, Special To the New York Times

Jane Perlez

For television viewers in sub-Saharan Africa, the diet of nightly news is predictable: the head of state, often referred to in common parlance as the Big Man, is always featured as subject of the first, often endless and always adoring news item. No matter how trivial the occasion, "Mr. Big Man (fill in leader's name) said today" is the common opening. In Kenya, this has changed in the last eight months as a commercial television station established by the British publisher Robert Maxwell and, surprisingly, the ruling political party in this one-party nation, offers competition to the Government-run television operation.

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The Humor of Gorbachev

Date: 29 November 1990

AP

President Mikhail S. Gorbachev told reporters a joke about the faltering Soviet economy on Tuesday, after an all-day session of the Parliament of the Russian republic. "I can't really tell it with ladies present," Mr. Gorbachev teased journalists in a Kremlin lobby after a meeting of the Russian Parliament. "Oh, go ahead," said women who are reporters and lawmakers. Mr. Gorbachev grinned and proceeded with a joke about himself, President Francois Mitterrand and President Bush. "They say that Mitterrand has 100 lovers. One has AIDS, but he doesn't know which one," Mr. Gorbachev said. "Bush has 100 bodyguards. One is a terrorist, but he doesn't know which one. "Gorbachev has 100 economic advisers. One is smart, but he doesn't know which one." The joke was warmly received by the members of the Russian Parliament who were listening.

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Judge Lifts Ban on Noriega Tapes; CNN Doesn't Plan to Play Them

Date: 29 November 1990

By David Johnston, Special To the New York Times

David Johnston

A Federal district judge today lifted his ban that had prohibited Cable News Network from playing copies of tape-recorded conversations between Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega and his legal team. It appeared that the tapes at issue included little significant information jeopardizing General Noriega's right to a fair trial. After reading a transcript of the contents of the tapes, the deposed Panamanian leader's chief defense lawyer, Frank A. Rubino, pronounced it "boring stuff." And CNN itself said that despite its court victory, it had no immediate plans to transmit tapes other than the ones it has already played.

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Corrections

Date: 28 November 1990

An article yesterday about a New York State legislative hearing on the Daily News strike referred incorrectly to Jeremy Travis. He is Deputy Police Commissioner for legal matters.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 28 November 1990

INTERNATIONAL A3-15 John Major became Prime Minister of Britain after his two rivals in the Conservative Party leadership contest withdrew, conceding that he could best unite their divided ranks before the next election. Page A1 Man in the news: John Major, like Margaret Thatcher, springs from the lower middle class. He did poorly in school, worked as a laborer, and never went to college. A1 News analysis: On Europe, same song, softer voice A12 The Soviet military would use force, if necessary, to defend military installations, monuments and servicemen in rebellious republics, the Soviet Defense Minister said. A1 Game 14 of chess match ends in a draw B5 The deposed leader of Bulgaria, Todor Zhivkov, who is under house arrest, said he now realizes that his career-long commitment to Communism was a mistake. A6 Civil war in Yugoslavia is very likely in the next 18 months, as nationalism grows and ethnic relations worsen, United States intelligence officials say. A7 Germany's Social Democratic Party has faltered. The party, led by Oskar Lafontaine, miscalculated the impact of German unity and now has little chance of defeating Chancellor Kohl's center-right coalition. A3 Poland's economic plan is now uncertain A6 Senate Democrats called for a delay in military action against Iraq. At hearings of the Senate Armed Services Committee, they urged the Bush Administration to give economic sanctions more time to work. A1 China's Foreign Minister will visit Washington for talks on Friday. The Administration's invitation appears to be compensation to Beijing for its support of the U.N. resolution authorizing force against Iraq. A15 The Security Council will set a Jan. 15 deadline for Iraq A15 Official says Iraq "will never succumb to pressure" A14 Neutral Arab nations assume an enhanced diplomatic role A14 Group says Iraq's uranium has not been used for bombs A14 Five Israeli soldiers were killed along with two Palestinians during a firefight in southern Lebanon. Later, the Israeli Air Force bombed the headquarters of two Palestinian groups in Lebanon, wounding five. A8 Mandela and de Klerk meet to revive negotiations A10 African leaders press Liberian rebel to agree to truce A11 Nairobi Journal: Mr. Big Man is often not in the picture A4 NATIONAL A16-19, B6-8 Safety zones around chemical plants are being created, as companies, prodded by lawsuits, buy up the homes of their neighbors at a cost of millions of dollars. A1 A $1.3 billion nuclear waste plant in South Carolina was dedicated by the Department of Energy. The plant will handle millions of gallons of the nation's most hazardous wastes. B6 Chevron to begin producing oil from field off California D1 About 85 percent of spoiled Alaskan shoreline has been cleaned A19 Abuses in the garment industry are increasing. Shops are closing without paying employees, then reopening under new names, and workers, mostly immigrant women, are too frightened to complain. A16 A former savings and loan regulator recounted how he had been summoned to Senator Dennis DeConcini'soffice and had found himself surrounded by four Senators seeking help for Charles Keating. A18 The prosecution of Oliver L. North was dealt another setback when a Federal appeals court refused to reconsider a decision setting aside his three felony convictions. A17 Washington Talk: President Bush and these "tough times" A16 A.C.L.U. files suit against F.B.I. over files on foundation A16 The defect in the Hubble telescope went undetected because of flawed management procedures of the space agency and the contractor that improperly made the main mirror, a Federal study concluded. B7 Study links estrogen after menopause to risk of cancer A18 Mother faces trial for relying on faith to heal her son B8 REGIONAL B1-5 Rents are falling in New York City in many areas for the first time since the Depression. Apartments rents have dropped at least 5 to 10 percent in a variety of neighborhoods. A1 Court overturns zoning law affecting Trump City and others B3 The State Senate minority leader, Manfred Ohrenstein, cannot be prosecuted for assigning legislative employees purely political tasks, New York's highest court ruled. A1 Suit faults exemptions for Catholic AIDS nursing homes B3 A test used in paternity cases has created problems in criminal assault trials. Now, the State Supreme Court in New Jersey has promised to rule on the admissibility of such genetics tests in sexual assault cases. B1 Closing arguments expected soon in second jogger trial B3 Witness in Bensonhurst trial contradicts her own testimony B3 A man who hunted down a mugger he believed had robbed his mother and then stabbed him to death during a struggle will not be indicted, a grand jury decided. B1 Has the mob gone green? Garbage haulers and processors with links to organized crime are recasting themselves as recycling outfits, more attuned to the environment. B1 A strike by New York City's private sanitation workers looms B3 A struggle over Orthodox Judaism has divided traditionalists who want to forbid things like dancing and those who draw distinctions between their religious and social lives. B1 Neediest Cases B5 BUSINESS DIGEST D1 The Living Section Food The new nutrition: protein on the side C1 With sandwiches, anything goes C1 Living Shop? Many say, only if I must C1 Arts/Entertainment Hollywood after the MCA sale C13 Peter Falk on his career strategy C13 MTV bars Madonna video C13 National Book Award winners C13 Theater: "Major Barbara" C17 Word and Image: Book Notes C18 "Too Loud a Solitude" C19 Education Page B9 Panel calls for major changes at Howard Airlift to Gulf: homework and pencils Obituaries D22 Louis C. Jones, a writer Bulent Arel, a composer Sports Baseball: Darling ponders future B11 Basketball: Knicks stumble again B11 Another victory for Nets B11 Column: Vecsey on the Patriot incident B11 Football: Fines levied in Patriot locker-room incident B11 49ers wary of Simms B12 Hockey: Flyers defeat Islanders B13 Editorials/Letters/Op-Ed Editorials A20 New "S," old "U" in U.S.S.R. Mrs. Thatcher's shadow The line forms Topics: World vs. Slorc Letters A20 Flora Lewis: The bane of nations A21 Tom Wicker: The horse before the cart A21 Adam Wolman: We're feeling the draft A21 James G. Wieghart: Owner strangles Daily News A21 Rose Gottemoeller: The Start treaty -- a new urgency A21

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News Summary

Date: 29 November 1990

International A3-21 Two former U.S. military chiefs, Adm. William Crowe and Gen. David Jones, urged the Bush Administration to postpone an attack on Iraq and to give economic sanctions a year or more to work. Page A1 Congress might be reconvened by President Bush within the next 10 days to consider the use of force in the Persian Gulf, two senior Senate Republicans said. A14 13 of 15 Security Council members favor resolution on force A15 Iraq says it will ignore any deadline set in resolution A14 King of Saudi Arabia issues strong warning to Iraq A14 The manufacture of nuclear weapons was formally renounced by the Presidents of Brazil and Argentina, who promised that their nuclear potential would be used for "exclusively peaceful ends." A1 A food aid plan for the Soviet Union has been mounted by the German Government and businesses. Officials say Germans will contribute hundreds of millions of dollars. A20 The disarray in the Soviet Union has baffled Administration officials, who say they they are worried that President Gorbachev will have to use military force to maintain control. A20 Bulgaria's tottering government appears ready to resign A20 Kasparov and Karpov agree to eighth straight draw B12 John Major became Prime Minister of Britain, rearranging Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet but pledging to build on her achievements. His Cabinet includes his two rivals, Michael Heseltine and Douglas Hurd. A12 Britain and Syria restore diplomatic relations A5 Ambassador reopens American embassy in Lebanon A6 Israel raises taxes to pay for resettlement of Soviet Jews A8 Singapore has a new Prime Minister. In a brief, solemn ceremony, Goh Chok Tong took over from Lee Kuan Yew, who served as Prime Minister for 31 years. A9 Indian Army troops moved against rebels in Assam A3 Leaders of Liberia's factions agree to a cease-fire A3 Donor squabbling imperils food aid to Sudan A16 National A22-27, B14-16 The nation's economy is shrinking, Alan Greenspan said. Mr. Greenspan, the Government's most influential economic policy maker, is the first top official to say so publicly. A1 Gross national product rises just 1.7 percent in 3d quarter D1 Like large chains, small retailers are struggling D1 The AIDS virus' doorway to the body has been identified by scientists, who have created a model of the receptor molecule on white blood cells that allows the virus to gain entry. A1 A proposal to require vaccinations for all children is being developed by the Bush Administration. The plan would require children to be fully immunized as a condition of receiving welfare or Medicaid. A1 F.D.A. is ordered to release data on safety of breast implants B14 Hospital agrees to set policy on pregnant patients' rights B14 Absenteeism and accidents at work are linked to drugs B15 Waves of foreign graduate students have flooded American universities, as the number of Americans earning advanced degrees has declined. The influx has changed the face of higher education. A1 Accreditation of university is at risk because of trustees A23 A gang-related murder in Boston on Halloween night has forced residents and local officials to face, once again, the city's rising problem with gang violence. A22 A Federal judge lifted a ban on CNN that had prohibited the network from broadcasting copies of tape-recorded conversations between Gen. Manuel Noriega and his legal team. A22 Lawyers for Senators assail their leading accuser A26 Washington Talk: Can Bennett fill the void Atwater left? A22 Papal official regrets "wound" to Milwaukee's archbishop A27 Regional B1-12 A Teaneck police officer was indicted by a New Jersey grand jury for manslaughter in the fatal shooting of a 16-year-old last April. The indictment comes almost four months after a first grand jury absolved him. A1 Sheriff raids 11 Bronx stores to collect littering fines B2 After agreement, Howard Beach attack case comes to an end B3 Defense calls the jogger case a racist witch hunt B3 The zebra mussel is in the Hudson. The mussel, an aquatic pest that can clog the intake pipes of power plants, has steadily spread eastward from the Great Lakes. B1 News analysis: The Daily News has few options left now that it has lost its major advertisers. Industry experts say shutting the paper has become more likely than ever before. B1 Legislators are relieved after ruling on Ohrenstein B2 Cuomo will have a private, quiet inauguration this time B3 Albany considers rise in SUNY tuition -- carefully B9 New York City will lose $185 million in its current fiscal year under the state's proposed budget cuts, twice what Governor Cuomo estimated, according to Mayor Dinkins. B1 Cost of picking up commercial garbage may be reduced B5 "The World Genius Convention," at the New York Penta Hotel this week, offered geniuses and would-be geniuses a chance to rub minds with their counterparts. B1 Neediest Cases B6 Business Digest D1 The Home Section Learning to retire creatively C1 Thatcher's new status: collectible C1 Garden rarities, free C1 Windfall furniture in England C5 Tableware from architects C6 Parent & Child C8 A meeting house becomes a home C10 Arts/Entertainment Dinosaur displays closing during museum renovation C17 Theater for New City starts renovations C19 Theater: Shawn's "Fever" C17 Dance: Susan Marshall and Company C17 Word and Image: Christmas-gift books C20 MacNeil and Lehrer: 15 years C22 From BBC, a lesbian comes of age C22 Health Page B17 Life expectancy for black people in the United States has dropped substantially, further widening the gap between life expectancy between whites and blacks, officials said. A1 Personal Health B17 Sports Baseball: Mets unveil plans B20 Basketball: Knicks beaten by Pistons B19 Nets lose to Heat B21 Column: Anderson on the Giants B19 Football: Giants' problems B19 O'Brien to start B23 Craig faces criticism B23 Hockey: N.H.L. Notebook B20 Rangers' streak ends B19 Devils play to a 5-5 tie B20 Olympics: More drug reports B24 Obituaries D25 Feng Youlan, a Chinese philosopher Lord Pearce, head of British inquiry in Rhodesian crisis Editorials/Letters/Op-Ed Editorials A28 Once again: What's the rush? How to judge the Keating Five Topics: Balanced judgment Letters A28 Anna Quindlen: The front writer A29 William Safire: The Saddam bomb A29 Peter Tarnoff: U.S. pain, allies' gain A29 William J. Rochelle: What recession? It's a depression A29

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Maxwell House

Date: 29 November 1990

AP

Despite a sluggish economy, Maxwell House plans to begin work on a $30 million expansion of its plant here by February, the plant's manager, James Reese, said. The expansion will allow the company to hire 40 new workers next summer, Mr. Reese said. Maxwell House now has about 360 employees. Maxwell House's parent company, General Foods U.S.A., has said it will keep the Jacksonville plant open and close its operation in Hoboken, N.J.

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MAN IN THE NEWS: John Major; A Tory of Humble Origins

Date: 28 November 1990

By Craig R. Whitney, Special To the New York Times

Craig Whitney

One measure of the depth of class division in Britain may be the fixation on the "classless society" that John Major, the son of a onetime circus performer and the man who will become Prime Minister on Wednesday, wants to bring about. Like his patron, Margaret Thatcher, Mr. Major springs from the lower middle class. But unlike her, he does not try to imitate the speech and mannerisms of earlier upper-class Conservative Party leaders with a private school background, people like Winston Churchill, Anthony Eden and Harold Macmillan.

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