Ester Dean 生日,出生日期

Ester Dean

Esther Renay Dean, known professionally as Ester Dean, is an American singer-songwriter and record producer. She rose to prominence as a pop songwriter in the late 2000s and wrote numerous hit songs for singers including Rihanna, Katy Perry, Britney Spears, Nicki Minaj, and Beyoncé through the 2010s. She has acted in numerous films, including the 2012 musical comedy Pitch Perfect and its sequels.

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生日,出生日期
1986年4月15日星期二
出生地
馬斯科吉
年龄
40
星号

1986年4月15日星期二 星号下的 。 这是一年中的 104 日。 美国总统是 Ronald Reagan

如果你出生在这一天,你已经 40 岁了。 您的最后一个生日是 2026年4月15日星期三46 天前。 2027年4月15日星期四 天后,您的下一个生日是 318。 你已经活了 14,656 天,或者大约 351,761 小时,或者大约 21,105,661 分钟,或者大约 1,266,339,660 秒。

分享这个生日的一些人:

15th of April 1986 News

1986年4月15日 出现在《纽约时报》头版的新闻

NEWS SUMMARY: TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1986

Date: 15 April 1986

International U.S. bombers attacked Libya in a series of strikes against what the White House called ''terrorist centers'' and military bases. President Reagan, in a broadcast speech, said the American forces had succeeded in their mission of retaliating for what he termed the ''reign of terror'' waged by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi against Americans. [ Page A1, Columns 1-6. ] Libyan agents have been deployed around the world for attacks against United States embassies in as many as 30 countries, according to Secretary of State George P. Shultz. He said the American bombing raids in Libya were necessary to deter it from future terrorist attacks. [ A1:3-4. ]

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NEWS SUMMARY: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1986

Date: 16 April 1986

Attack on Libya The bombing raid on Libya damaged Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi's ability ''to direct and control the export of international terrorism,'' according to the Reagan Administration. It warned the Libyan leader that he would face further American military retaliation unless he stopped sponsoring violence against Americans. [ Page A1, Column 6. ] The American bombers struck a number of Libyan military targets, including Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi's headquarters compound, a naval academy and air bases in Tripoli and Benghazi and also hit a residential area of the capital. The strikes upon the residences killed 15 people and wounded more than 60, according to hospital workers. The Libyan leader maintained a public silence and his whereabouts was not known. [ A1:4. ]

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2 PAPERS IN DETROIT PLAN TIE

Date: 15 April 1986

By John Holusha, Special To the New York Times

John Holusha

One of the bitterest battles for newspaper supremacy in a major American city ended today as the owners of The Detroit News and The Detroit Free Press agreed to merge all but the news operations of the two papers. Executives of the Gannett Company, which owns The News, and Knight-Ridder Newspapers Inc., which owns The Free Press, said the action was being taken to stanch large losses at the newspapers. In the last five years, they said, The Free Press has lost more than $35 million and The News, which carries more advertising, more than $20 million. Allen H. Neuharth, chairman of Gannett, which will have the upper hand in managing the combined operations, told News employees this morning that the losses ''and present-day economics of newspaper publishing clearly indicate that this market cannot support two high-quality, high-cost independent newspapers.''

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Calling Mr. Bush

Date: 15 April 1986

By Wayne King and Warren Weaver Jr

Wayne King

As interest increased in Vice President Bush's recent comments on collapsing oil prices, news reporters seeking to talk with Mr. Bush found their task more difficult than usual. One who called the White House to ask for him was told no one knew where he was, and the caller was given another number to call. That number had been disconnected.

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Product Introductions Climbed Again in March

Date: 16 April 1986

By Philip H. Dougherty

Philip Dougherty

March new-product introductions continued strong and ahead of the same month last year, just as January and February did, according to the Dancer Fitzgerald Sample New Product News.

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Technical Knocokut

Date: 16 April 1986

Dick Young, a columnist for The New York Post, was ejected from Larry Holmes's workout yesterday on the orders of the former heavyweight boxing champion. Young was taken from the Las Vegas, Nev., workout area by three members of Holmes's camp.

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OPPOSITION IS SEEN ON DETROIT LINKUP

Date: 15 April 1986

By Alex S. Jones

Alex Jones

Yesterday's announcement that The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News had agreed to merge came as no surprise to newspaper analysts who have watched them wage a costly competitive war. By merging production, advertising and circulation operations, while retaining separate news departments, the two newspapers could quickly become very profitable after years of losses. But some experts in newspaper antitrust law predict that the proposed Free Press-News joint operating agreement, known in the industry as a j.o.a., will prompt a fierce legal challenge. They say competing suburban newspapers and unions are likely to oppose the merger on the ground that the resulting mega-daily would represent an economic monopoly that would thwart suburban competition and eliminate jobs.

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IN THE U.S., AUDIENCES LISTEN IN ON THE ATTACK

Date: 15 April 1986

By Robert D. McFadden

Robert

Vivid reports of the American air strikes in Libya - of thundering explosions, jets roaring overhead and fires dancing on the horizon of a darkened city - were broadcast live to nationwide audiences last night by American network correspondents in Tripoli. Though confined to their hotel during the bombing and unable to provide pictures to accompany their audio reports, the correspondents nonetheless gave dramatic running accounts of what they could see and hear from windows and balconies overlooking the city and the harbor. They told of explosions that shook their building, the pounding of antiaircraft guns and the scream of planes coming in. Some also told of bursts of tracer fire in the night sky and fires leaping from targets that could not be identified.

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SULZBERGER HONORED FOR HIS DEDICATION TO FIRST AMENDMENT

Date: 16 April 1986

The Center for Communication yesterday presented Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, the publisher of The New York Times, with its annual Communication Award for his commitment to the First Amendment and journalistic excellence. In accepting the award in ceremonies at the Plaza Hotel, Mr. Sulzberger said, ''We in the United States operate the only truly free press in the world.'' ''No one can hold a candle to us,'' he said. ''And let me hasten to add that when I talk about the press, I include radio, television, magazines, advertising - the whole lot.''

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Comic Strip Suspended For Political Criticism

Date: 16 April 1986

AP

The Los Angeles Times has suspended the comic strip Doonesbury for its criticism of Reagan Administration appointees accused of misconduct. In place of the strip, The Times published a brief notice that the episodes scheduled for this week would not appear on the ground that they contained ''damaging material we know to be overdrawn and unfair.'' ''We feel this week's 'Doonesbury' grossly exaggerates the real and alleged transgressions of many Reagan Administration appointees,'' the newspaper said in the notice, which appeared Monday and today.

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