Hikaru Nakamura (artist) День народження, дата народження

Hikaru Nakamura (artist)

Hikaru Nakamura (中村 光, Nakamura Hikaru; born April 21, 1984, in Shizuoka Prefecture) is a Japanese manga artist. She debuted in 2001 with the short story Kairi no Sue (海里の陶), published in Monthly Gangan Wing. She is best known as the creator of the manga series Arakawa Under the Bridge and Saint Young Men, the latter of which won a Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in 2009. A Nikkei Entertainment magazine article published in August 2011 listed her ninth overall among the top 50 manga creators by sales since 2010, with 5.54 million copies sold. Her artwork has also been featured in two manga exhibitions at the British Museum in London, England. Nakamura gave birth to her first child, a daughter, in November 2011.

Детальніше...
 
День народження, дата народження
субота, 21 квітня 1984 р.
Місце народження
Shizuoka
Вік
42
Знак зірки

21 квітня 1984 р. був субота під знаком зірки . Це був 111 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був Ronald Reagan.

Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 42 років. Ваш останній день народження був вівторок, 21 квітня 2026 р., 30 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження середа, 21 квітня 2027 р. через 334 днів. Ви прожили 15 370 днів, або приблизно 368 902 годин, або приблизно 22 134 165 хвилин, або приблизно 1 328 049 900 секунд.

Деякі люди, які поділяють цей день народження:

21st of April 1984 News

Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 21 квітня 1984 р.

BLOCK DISAVOWS CAMPAIGN LETTER

Date: 22 April 1984

John R. Block, the Secretary of Agriculture, has disavowed a fund-raising letter sent out with his signature by the Young Americans for Freedom saying President Reagan's views were not ''presented honestly by a biased news media.'' Michael J. Masterson, an aide to Mr. Block, said the letter had been signed by ''an overzealous staff member.''

Full Article

Warsaw Pact Demands NATO Stop Deployment of Missiles

Date: 21 April 1984

AP

The Warsaw Pact has again demanded that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization halt deployment of nuclear missiles in Western Europe and said the bloc's members ''insist'' the program be stopped as a condition for resuming arms limitation talks. A communique issued today by the seven Warsaw Pact Foreign Ministers, who ended a two-day meeting here, though repeating the Soviet bloc's position, contained some of the strongest language to date on the bloc's stand on resuming the Geneva arms talks. ''The meeting's participants pointed,'' the communique said, ''to the great responsibility of the states on whose territory the deployment of medium-range nuclear missiles has started or is being planned, responsibility for the fate of their own and all European peoples.

Full Article

Caging the Chemical Monster With an election in the offing and no progress to report on arms control, the White House has flamboyantly proposed a treaty on chemical weapons that the Russians denounced before they even read it. But the treaty is an important step forward, and the prospects for controlling this abhorrent form of warfare may not be as bleak as they seem.

Date: 22 April 1984

The drawn-out negotiations at Geneva have gained new impetus from Iraq's use of mustard and nerve gas in its war with Iran. President Reagan and his top aides also suspect, more dubiously, that chemical agents of some kind have been used by Vietnam. In any case, if other third-world countries resort to these easily made poisons, chemicals might quickly proliferate.

Full Article

MIG'S SHOOT AT ARMY COPTER ON WEST GERMAN-CZECH BORDER

Date: 21 April 1984

By the Associated Press By John Tagliabue

Two Soviet-built planes of ''unknown nationality'' fired on a United States Army helicopter today while it was on an observation mission along the West German-Czechoslovak border, the Pentagon announced. The Cobra helicopter was not hit by the rocket and cannon fire, the Pentagon said, and returned safely to its home station in West Germany. The brief announcement, which gave only sketchy information, said the Army's European headquarters in Stuttgart, West Germany, was investigating the incident, which occurred at 2:40 P.M. Mission Called Routine Pentagon officials said it was not known whether the helicopter entered Czechoslovak airspace or whether the MIG's entered West German airspace. (In Munich, an official of West Germany's paramilitary border police said there were ''indications that the helicopter was several kilometers into Czechoslovak territory'' when it was fired on. A United States Army spokesman in Stuttgart declined to comment on the statement.)

Full Article

TERRORISTS BOMB WASHINGTON CLUB FOR NAVY OFFICERS

Date: 21 April 1984

By Philip Taubman, Special To the New York Times

Philip Taubman

An explosion severely damaged the officers club at the Washington Navy Yard early this morning, and a group that said it opposed United States policy in Central America took responsibility. No one was in the building at the time. The Federal Bureau of Investigation said a group that called itself the Guerrilla Resistance Movement had taken responsibility for the bombing and had said it was ''in solidarity'' with the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, one of five leftist guerrilla groups fighting Government forces in El Salvador's civil war. The liberation front itself, often referred to as the F.M.L.N., denied any connection with the bombing. A spokesman in Washington, Francisco Altschul, said the F.M.L.N and the Frente Democratico Revolucionario, or F.D.R., the political arm of the guerrilla movement, ''categorically denies any involvement or responsibility in today's bombing of a U.S. Navy facility in Washington or in any other similar incident in the U.S.''

Full Article

PRAVDA CONDEMNS WEST'S NEW OFFER ON CUTS IN TROOPS

Date: 22 April 1984

By John F. Burns, Special To the New York Times

John Burns

An article in the Communist Party newspaper today rejected a new Western approach to troop reductions in Europe that the Reagan Administration had offered as an opening toward wider improvement in East-West relations. It was the second time this week that the Kremlin had reacted negatively to a Western arms initiative. Earlier commentaries in the party paper, Pravda, and elsewhere have dismissed a draft treaty on chemical weapons that Vice President Bush presented to the 40-nation conference on disarmament in Geneva four days ago. The Pravda commentary on the new Western offer at the talks on troop reductions in Central Europe avoided a detailed examination of the package, which was introduced three days ago at the East-West conference on the subject in Vienna. But Pravda said the proposals ''do not reflect even a semblance of the intention'' to overcome the central disagreement between the two sides on how many soldiers each has in Europe.

Full Article

SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS

Date: 21 April 1984

Preakness Likely For Dr. Carter LEXINGTON, Ky., April 20 (AP) - Dr. Carter, who had been considered one of the top colts headed for the Kentucky Derby, will skip the race because of a virus that has kept him in his stall since April 12, his trainer, John Veitch, said today. He said the colt should be back in training by Sunday and would probably run next in the Preakness Stakes on May 19, two weeks after the Derby.

Full Article

SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS

Date: 21 April 1984

Equestrians Led By Schneidman WESTMINSTER, Md., April 20 (AP) - Grant Schneidman of Barnesville took the lead today after the dressage phase of the Ship's Quarters Horse Trials, the first of four selection trials to determine the three- day-event team for the Los Angeles Olympics. Riding Margaret Coulter's The Flying Dutchman, Schneidman narrowly led Karen Stives of Dover, Mass., on Ben Arthur. Mike Plumb, the United States Equestrian Team captain, was third on Blue Stone, and Torrance Watkins Fleischmann, a 1980 Olympic bronze medalist, placed fourth on Finvarra.

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FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; Wild Lawns

Date: 22 April 1984

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Many suburban homeowners find grass-cutting painful. Nellie Shriver, head of the Fruitarian Network, says it's the other way around: It's the grass that feels the pain.

Full Article

FOLLOW-UP ON THE NEWS ; A Town Divided

Date: 22 April 1984

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Charging that the Mayor was meddling in its affairs, the nonpartisan Housing Authority in Anthony, Tex., packed up a year ago and moved its office three blocks to New Mexico. When the Mayor, Adrian Baca, ordered the defectors to return by Aug. 15, the authority sat tight in the sister town of Anthony, N.M. A rapprochement has been reached.

Full Article

Date:

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