Tarun (Telugu actor) Рожден ден, дата на раждане

Tarun (Telugu actor)

Tarun Kumar (born 8 January 1981) is an Indian actor known for his works predominantly in Telugu cinema, with appearances in a few Tamil and Malayalam films.

Tarun began his career as a child actor and received the National Film Award for Best Child Artist for his performance in Anjali (1990), directed by Mani Ratnam. He has also won the Nandi Award for Best Child Actor three times.

He made his debut as a lead actor with Nuvve Kavali (2000) and starred in successful films like Priyamaina Neeku (2001), Nuvvu Leka Nenu Lenu (2002), Punnagai Desam (2002), Nuvve Nuvve (2002), Ninne Ishtapaddanu (2003), and Nava Vasantham (2007).

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Рожден ден, дата на раждане
събота, 8 януари 1983 г.
Място на раждане
Andhra Pradesh
Възраст
43
Зодия

8 януари 1983 г. беше събота под звездния знак на . Беше 7 ден от годината. Президент на Съединените щати беше Ronald Reagan.

Ако сте родени на този ден, вие сте на 43 години. Последният ви рожден ден беше на четвъртък, 8 януари 2026 г., преди 145 дни. Следващият ви рожден ден е на петък, 8 януари 2027 г., след 219 дни. Живял си за 15 851 дни, или около 380 436 часа, или около 22 826 185 минути, или около 1 369 571 100 секунди.

Някои хора, които споделят този рожден ден:

8th of January 1983 News

Новини, както се появиха на първа страница на New York Times на 8 януари 1983 г.

No Headline

Date: 09 January 1983

55 NOMINATING JURORS FOR PULITZER JOURNALISM PRIZES SELECTED (By The Associated Press) - A jury of 55 newspaper editors and writers has been chosen to submit nominations for the 1983 Pulitzer Prizes in journalism. The jurors nominate three works in each of 12 categories of journalism. The prizes are awarded each spring by Columbia University on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize board, which chooses among work nominated by the 55 jurors. The awards are for work published in 1982.

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News Analysis

Date: 08 January 1983

By Robert Pear, Special To the New York Times

Robert Pear

The decision of a Federal district judge in Chicago approving a school desegregation plan with no mandatory busing represents a victory for Reagan Administration policies in one case, but it does not necessarily set a precedent for other cities or signal a wave of the future. That was the tentative consensus today from interviews with Justice Department officials, lawyers for the Chicago Board of Education and civil rights activists in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Chicago Urban League. The reality in Chicago and some other cities, recognized by Judge Milton I. Shadur, is that there are just not enough white children left in the cities' public schools to desegregate the whole system. William L. Taylor, a civil rights expert at the Center for National Policy Review at Catholic University here, said of the Chicago ruling: ''It's another sad chapter in what I think has been a tragic story. Over the years, government failures have narrowed the options enormously.'' Mr. Taylor, a former staff director for the United States Commission on Civil Rights, predicted that the Chicago decision ''will not result in significant desegregation.''

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News Analysis

Date: 08 January 1983

By William K. Stevens, Special To the New York Times

William Stevens

It was a political upset of astonishing and unexpected magnitude. ''We never expected this rout,'' Vansantrao Patil, the secretary of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's Congress Party, said today in a rueful assessment of the party's defeat on Wednesday in legislative elections in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, where it had never lost. ''We thought it would be difficult, but never such a defeat,'' he said. ''It was a very bad beating. We have fallen from the highest pedestal to the lowest step.''

Full Article

Smokeless Work

Date: 09 January 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Many workers who don't smoke believe they have a right to a smokefree job. Last October a Federal worker, Irene C. Parodi of Fremont, Calif., won a landmark court decision upholding that right.

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News Summary; SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1983

Date: 08 January 1983

International The arms embargo on Guatemala was lifted by the Reagan Administration because of ''significant steps'' taken to end human rights abuses. The embargo's removal was regarded as an indication of the Administration's support for the Government of Gen. Efrain Rios Montt. (Page 1, Col. 1.) Confirmation of a falling satellite was received from the Russians, but they indicated that steps had been taken to prevent radioactive components from reaching the earth by splitting the satellite into fragments. But United States officials said they were not fully reassured by the Soviet explanation. Radar and tracking cameras indicated that the main body of the Soviet satellite, including a nuclear reactor and its enriched uranium fuel, appeared to remain intact. (1:1.)

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Prison Weddings

Date: 09 January 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

It is legal to get married in prison, but like everyone else, the convict must first obtain a license. This posed a problem at the Ossining (N.Y.) Correctional Facility in November 1981 when the Town Clerk refused to enter the prison to issue the licenses and the warden refused to let the prisoners go into town to get them.

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Pet Insurance

Date: 09 January 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Health insurance, with sickness and accident benefits, deductibles and major medical coverage, became available for family dogs and cats in April 1982. It was offered by companies in Monticello, N.Y., and Sacramento, Calif., and they had high hopes for expansion to other states.

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Paw Paw Sequel

Date: 09 January 1983

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

When it comes to frugality in government, Paw Paw, W. Va., may be without a peer. But early last year the town, run by a $25-a-month mayor and operating on a yearly budget of $25,000, wondered if it could stay solvent.

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SUNDAY, JANUARY, 9, 1983

Date: 09 January 1983

International Vice President Bush will go to Europe Jan. 30 for talks with American allies and to address the Committee on Disarmament in Geneva, President Reagan announced in his weekly radio address. Mr. Reagan, citing ''encouraging words'' from the new Soviet leadership, said, ''Clearly the Soviets want to appear more responsive and reasonable.'' (Page 1, Column 6.) A visit to the Falkland Islands was made Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain. She told the Falklanders that she had come ''to pay tribute to those who liberated the islands'' that Britain recaptured from Argentina in fighting last year. (1:5.)

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IRAQ REPORTS FRANCE WILL BUY MORE OIL AND CONTINUE AID

Date: 08 January 1983

By John Vinocur

John Vinocur

Tareq Aziz, a Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq, said today that France was increasing its purchases of Iraqi oil and continuing military aid on what he called a ''vast scale.'' Mr. Aziz spoke of French aid in general terms at a news conference and in a newspaper interview after five days of talks with French officials, including President Francois Mitterrand. French military sources said the Government was considering credit arrangements that would permit Iraq to go on buying French arms while France triples its purchases of Iraqi oil. In the first 10 months of 1982, France bought 1.6 billon barrels of oil from Iraq, or about 2.5 percent of its total needs

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