Павел Чарнота День народження, дата народження

Павел Чарнота

Павел Чарнота (пол. Paweł Czarnota; нар. 14 квітня 1988, Олькуш) – польський шахіст, гросмейстер від 2006 року.

Детальніше...
 
День народження, дата народження
четвер, 14 квітня 1988 р.
Місце народження
Олькуш
Вік
37
Знак зірки

14 квітня 1988 р. був четвер під знаком зірки . Це був 104 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був Ronald Reagan.

Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 37 років. Ваш останній день народження був понеділок, 14 квітня 2025 р., 204 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження вівторок, 14 квітня 2026 р. через 160 днів. Ви прожили 13 718 днів, або приблизно 329 240 годин, або приблизно 19 754 411 хвилин, або приблизно 1 185 264 660 секунд.

Деякі люди, які поділяють цей день народження:

14th of April 1988 News

Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 14 квітня 1988 р.

News Summary

Date: 15 April 1988

International A2-13 Afghan accords were signed in Geneva providing for the withdrawal of Soviet forces from the country and the creation of a nonaligned Government. Page A1 News analysis: Afghan chaos is expected to resume under the Geneva accords. More than one million Afghans have been killed and nearly one-half of the population has been uprooted. A1 The Afghan war changed the Soviet Union and its outlook on the world in subtle but significant ways. A1 A deep rift in the Honduran military contributed to the release of a major drug-trafficking suspect to Washington and that action has intensified the struggle, Government officials and foreign diplomats said. A1 A blast outside a G.I. club in Naples killed at least five people and wounded 15, including several American sailors. The police said the bombhad apparently been placed in or under a car. A3 A U.S. Navy frigate was damaged by an underwater blast in the central Persian Gulf that wounded at least 10 crew members and partly flooded the ship. However, she headed under her own power toward Bahrain. A3 Hijackers released one hostage but prospects for the release of other captives aboard a Kuwaiti airliner shifted as the hijackers held long talks with Algerian officials on the 10th day of the odyssey. A9 Sanctions against Mexico were voted overwhelmingly by the Senate on the ground that it has failed to cooperate fully in halting the flow of drugs across its borders. The measure must also be approved by the House. A6 National A14-22 The nation's trade deficit soared to $13.8 billion in February as imports surged more than twice as much as exports, the Commerce Department reported, surprising analysts. A1 The dollar plunged in reaction to the widening American trade gap, forcing world central banks to intervene to restore stability. D5 Stock prices also plummeted. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 101.46 points, or 4.82 percent, to 2,005.64. It was the index's fifth-worst point loss in history. A1 The grumblings of taxpayers have increased as the filing deadline nears. The simplicity and relief promised by architects of the new system have eluded many people. D2 A Navy heart surgeon was freed after a military appeals court set aside his conviction. The surgeon, Comdr. Donal M. Billig, was found guilty in 1986 of responsibility for the deaths of three patients. A17 Richard Nixon is in greater demand than ever. The former President, who appeared on the NBC News program ''Meet the Press'' last Sunday, plans several other television appearances and at least five speeches around the country. A14 A jetliner engine exploded and sliced into the plane, forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing in Charleston, W. Va. No injuries were reported among the 60 people aboard the Piedmont Airlines craft. A14 Storm brewing over Cape Hatteras lighthouse A14 E.P.A. declines to toughen rule on sulfur dioxide A16 U.S. Catholic bishops on nuclear deterrence A18 Politics A20-21 Mayor Koch backs Albert Gore Jr., the underdog, for the Democratic Presidential nomination. Mr. Koch said it was irrevelent that his endorsement might aid his least favorite aspirant, Jesse Jackson. A1 Gov. Michael S. Dukakis staked out an ambitious arms control platform that is much more liberal than the views of many Democratic military experts, who accuse the Presidential aspirant of naivete. A20 Hopefuls vie for best endorsements A21 Washington Talk A22 Reagan aides' disharmony on minority pacts Regional B1-5, B28 Harry and Leona Helmsley evaded more than $4 million in income taxes by fraudulently charging such luxuries as a marble dance floor above a swimming pool to their hotel and real-estate empire, the authorities said. A1 A key prosecution witness recanted key parts of his testimony against three reputed Mafia figures on trial in the murder of a police detective. Prosecutors contended the witness, Frank Simone, was recanting because of intimidation. B1 The state is studying all bridges in New York City that have deterioration levels similar to those on the Williamsburg Bridge, which was closed on Tuesday because of safety hazards. B4 A masked rapist left only one clue, his voice, in a series of attacks on Long Island. Prosecutors are relying on a ''voice lineup'' as the main way to identify the suspect, Scott Carroll, 27 years old, of Staten Island. B1 An anti-terrorist task force is investigating whether a Japanese man arrested with three homemade bombs on the New Jersey Turnpike has links with the Japanese Red Army, a left-wing group, the authorities said. B3 Jersey Shore residents are fearful about a chemical company's plan to build a $90 million plant in Toms River. The company, Ciba-Geigy, has been fined $1.45 million for dumping hazardous waste on its land. B1 The Knickerbocker News of Albany is folding and the staff of the afternoon newspaper is merging with that of the morning newspaper, The Times-Union. Both are owned by a division of the Hearst Corporation. D16 The Albany pas de deux on the budget B3 New York official says U.S. energy agency is arrogant B3 Boy killed in house fire in Queens B3 Arborcide at Temple Square B3 Two ex-military contractors indicted in fraud B28

Full Article

NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 14 April 1988

INTERNATIONAL A3-21 The gunmen holding a Kuwaiti jet acquired many weapons and explosives while the hijacked airliner spent three days in Iran last week, according to several passengers who were released in Cyprus. Page A1

Full Article

A News Magazine Planned for September

Date: 15 April 1988

By Philip H. Dougherty

Philip Dougherty

In September, The Christian Science Monitor plans to introduce a monthly news magazine called World Monitor.

Full Article

Profits Soar for 4 News Companies

Date: 15 April 1988

By Julia Flynn Siler, Special To the New York Times

Julia Siler

Benefiting from a lower tax rate, gains in classified advertising and cost-cutting efforts, four media companies reported today that their first-quarter net income rose sharply above the comparable period last year.

Full Article

Amoco and Exxon

Date: 14 April 1988

Reuters

The Amoco Production Company, a unit of the Amoco Corporation, and its partner, the Exxon Company U.S.A., said they had discovered a significant oil and gas field in the Gulf of Mexico. ''Results of a well drilled by Amoco and Exxon indicate that this Viosca Knoll discovery could be one of the larger deep-water finds to date in the Gulf of Mexico,'' said Richard Flury, an Amoco vice president. Development of the tract in Federal water 55 miles east of the Mississippi River delta could begin in the early 1990's, Mr. Flury said.

Full Article

The 'Hidden' News on Society Pages

Date: 15 April 1988

By Irene Fischl

Irene Fischl

LEAD: Anytime I want to plug into what's going on in American life, I find the society pages more fertile territory than the news sections. In the engagement and wedding announcements, the message seems clear: At least in urban areas, our lives have begun to mirror comedy films.

Full Article

Seabrook Forecast

Date: 15 April 1988

AP

The Public Service Company of New Hampshire will not flatly predict if its Seabrook nuclear power plant will ever operate, but its estimate for financial planning purposes has slipped again - to Jan. 1, 1990. That is 18 months later than Public Service's previous written planning assumption, although company officials told state regulators last year that the date had slipped at least to April 1989.

Full Article

5% Stake in Centel

Date: 15 April 1988

Special to the New York Times

The investor Asher B. Edelman and Metro Mobile CTS Inc., a New York-based maker of cellular telephones, raised their stake in the Centel Corporation to 5 percent of the company's shares outstanding, paying about $94 million. In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, the group suggested the sale of all or part of Centel, which is based in Chicago with interests in cable television, data processing, cellular communications and electricity. Centel rejected the group's approach.

Full Article

Pfizer Bid Denied

Date: 15 April 1988

Reuters

Ciba-Geigy A.G. denied that it plans a takeover of the United States phamarceutical company Pfizer Inc.. Rumors that Ciba-Geigy would make a bid pushed Pfizer's stock up $2.50, to $59.25, on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday, but after today's denial, it tumbled $3.25, to $56.875, as the overall market plummeted.

Full Article

5 Eastern Planes Flunk

Date: 15 April 1988

AP

Federal officials grounded five Eastern Airlines planes because of safety violations as part of the Government's inspection of the company's 267 aircraft.

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14.9% of Rowntree To Jacobs-Suchard

Date: 14 April 1988

Reuters

The Swiss food group Jacobs-Suchard A.G. secured 14.9 percent of the British confectioners Rowntree Mackintosh P.L.C. in a stock raid that analysts said could herald an eventual full bid. Rowntree issued a statement calling the move ''wholly unwelcome.''

Full Article