Мате Павич День народження, дата народження

Мате Павич

Мате Павич (хорв. Mate Pavić) — хорватський тенісист, спеціаліст з парної гри, перша парна ракетка світу.

Свій перший титул Великого шолома Павич виграв на Відкритому чемпіонаті США 2016 в міксті в парі з Лаурою Зігемунд. На Відкритому чемпіонаті Австралії 2018 йому підкорилися одразу два парні титули: чоловічу пару він виграв з австрійцем Олівером Марахом, а змішану — з канадкою Габріелою Дабровскі.

З 28 травня 2018 року впродовж 8 тижнів Павич був першою ракеткою світу в парній грі. Він знову повернув собі це звання в квітні 2021 року.

Детальніше...
 
День народження, дата народження
неділя, 4 липня 1993 р.
Місце народження
Split
Вік
32
Знак зірки

4 липня 1993 р. був неділя під знаком зірки . Це був 184 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 32 років. Ваш останній день народження був пʼятниця, 4 липня 2025 р., 74 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження субота, 4 липня 2026 р. через 290 днів. Ви прожили 11 762 днів, або приблизно 282 288 годин, або приблизно 16 937 318 хвилин, або приблизно 1 016 239 080 секунд.

Деякі люди, які поділяють цей день народження:

4th of July 1993 News

Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 4 липня 1993 р.

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 04 July 1993

International 3-13 AGREEMENT BY HAITIANS

Full Article

RUSSIAN ECONOMY BEARS GOOD NEWS

Date: 04 July 1993

By Celestine Bohlen

Celestine Bohlen

Invited as the extra man at the annual meeting of leaders of the Group of Seven major industrial nations, President Boris N. Yeltsin will come bearing news that Russia's wrenching economic transformation has made notable progress since a Western aid package was assembled three months ago in Tokyo. Inflation, which was running as high as 30 percent a month last winter and looked as if it might be hurtling toward the hyperinflation rate of 50 percent, has cooled to less than 20 percent, and Finance Minister Boris G. Fyodorov predicted that the figure could fall below 15 percent in the near future.

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 05 July 1993

International 2-5 WHAT SUMMIT? JAPANESE MAY ASK

Full Article

Seattle Times Places a Ban On Tobacco Advertisements

Date: 05 July 1993

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

The Seattle Times, a dominant newspaper in the Northwest, has added its name to the short list of American newspapers that refuse advertisements from tobacco companies. The decision puts the newspaper firmly on the antismoking side of a long-running debate in American journalism. Most American newspaper publishers have argued that their duty to assure a free flow of information requires that they adopt as few restrictions as possible on the advertising of legal products. 'Almost No Redeeming Value' Critics have said that newspapers are concerned most about the loss of revenues. Frank Blethen, publisher of The Seattle Times, said the issue was a matter of conscience. "Just as we refuse advertising for legal products such as handguns, escort services and X-rated movies," Mr. Blethen said, "we have concluded that tobacco advertising has almost no redeeming value."

Full Article

THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Press; The Baby Bells Are Finding an Unlikely Ally in the Information-Services War: Newspapers.

Date: 05 July 1993

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

FOR most of the decade since the Baby Bell companies were born, newspaper companies have been fearing them -- and fighting them. The newspapers have argued that the Bells, the seven regional telephone companies created in the big A.T.& T. antitrust case, should be barred from selling information services over telephone lines -- everything from news updates to beauty tips and race results. Telephone information services that were owned by the Baby Bells would unfairly compete with newspapers, the newspapers said, because the telephone companies controlled the conduit. If they were not stopped, the newspapers said, the monopoly telephone companies would damage the newspapers.

Full Article

Horror Stories

Date: 04 July 1993

By Frank Rich

Frank Rich

You may already have forgotten The Great Pepsi Scare of 1993. It raged out of control for less than a week, though it did leave whole states and several major news organizations terrorized in its wake. The facts, if they can be called that, were these. On June 10, an elderly Tacoma, Wash., couple, Earl (Tex) and Mary Triplett, said a syringe had turned up in their can of Diet Pepsi. Within days, dozens of other syringe sightings were reported by Pepsi drinkers -- the very health-conscious drinkers of Diet Pepsi in particular -- in 23 states. Soon all three network evening news programs led with the crisis. Jay Leno's monologue likened President Clinton's inoculation program to "the Pepsi challenge" while Ted Koppel countered with a Pepsi "Nightline." A big-eyed 9-year-old boy in the Bronx who said his gum had been pricked by a hypodermic needle posed with the accused Pepsi bottle in The New York Post. USA Today published a front-page map showing the tainted Pepsi states in red, should readers wish to reroute their vacations.

Full Article

Ending Abuse by Priests

Date: 04 July 1993

I will not knowingly permit a single act of abuse to be covered up or excused, and I will involve myself in the process of healing any wounds that have been opened. With these words, John Cardinal O'Connor, the Archbishop of New York, released a detailed plan for dealing with the cases of sexual abuse by priests that have rocked the Roman Catholic Church for nearly a decade.

Full Article

Base Closings Less Painful Than Feared

Date: 04 July 1993

By Thomas J. Lueck

Thomas Lueck

It was a disaster waiting to happen. For a region already mired deep in recession, the Government's plan to aggressively shut down military bases seemed certain to shower more economic distress on New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. But by Friday, when President Clinton said he would support the recommendations of a Presidential commission to close 35 major bases across the nation, and sharply scale back others, some of the gloom in the New York region had begun to lift.

Full Article

Mia R. Freund, Ramsey R. Walker

Date: 04 July 1993

Mia R. Freund, a daughter of Dr. Myron E. Freund and Winifred S. Freund of Port Washington, L.I., was married last evening to Ramsey R. Walker, a son of Beth Walker of Stonington, Conn., and the late Samuel S. Walker Jr. Rabbi Judith Lewis officiated at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Mrs. Walker is a story developer at "20/20," the ABC News program. She graduated from Princeton University. Her father is an attending urologic surgeon at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, L.I., and an assistant clinical professor of surgery at Cornell University Medical College in New York. Her mother is the project director at the Center for Family Resources in Mineola, L.I., which serves teachers and social workers.

Full Article

Haitian General Begins a Selling Job; Haitians in U.S. Hopeful

Date: 05 July 1993

By Raymond Hernandez

Raymond Hernandez

Haitian immigrants in New York spoke with great caution about the latest sign that democracy would be restored to their homeland. But in the end, there was more hope than misgiving in their voices. Haitians around the city went about their normal routines yesterday, gathering in churches, barber shops and restaurants, where they eagerly exchanged news from back home.

Full Article

U.S.-Japan Trade Talks To Resume

Date: 05 July 1993

By Andrew Pollack

Andrew Pollack

The United States and Japan will resume negotiations on a new comprehensive trade agreement, officials said today, brightening the outlook for President Clinton's meeting this week with the Prime Minister of Japan, Kiichi Miyazawa. The Clinton Administration has decided that a Japanese compromise proposal, delivered to Washington on Friday, is substantive enough to merit further discussion, according to officials familiar with the negotiations.

Full Article

Mandela Defends Joint Award With de Klerk

Date: 04 July 1993

By Larry Olmstead

Larry Olmstead

Nelson Mandela today defended his plans to receive a medal with President F. W. de Klerk of South Africa, saying Mr. de Klerk was an important part of resolving the political situation in their country. "As far as any attempt to address the problems of our country, we need all of the political leaders with a substantial following to take part, and that includes Mr. de Klerk," Mr. Mandela told reporters after arriving for his first visit to Philadelphia.

Full Article