Відтворення понеділок, 12 лютого 2007 р.

12 лютого 2007 р. був понеділок під знаком зірки . Це був 42 день року. Президентом Сполучених Штатів був George W. Bush.

Якщо ви народилися в цей день, вам 19 років. Ваш останній день народження був четвер, 12 лютого 2026 р., 114 днів тому. Ваш наступний день народження пʼятниця, 12 лютого 2027 р. через 250 днів. Ви прожили 7 054 днів, або приблизно 169 304 годин, або приблизно 10 158 259 хвилин, або приблизно 609 495 540 секунд.

Деякі люди, які поділяють цей день народження:

12th of February 2007 News

Новини, як вони з'явилися на першій сторінці New York Times на 12 лютого 2007 р.

Inflation in Japan Rises at a Slower Pace

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Japan’s producer prices rose at the slowest pace in more than a year in January as oil costs fell, easing pressure on companies to pass expenses on to consumers.

Full Article

F.B.I. Lags in Securing Its Laptops and Weapons

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

A report says that 160 weapons and 160 laptops had been lost or stolen over a 44-month period.

Full Article

Verizon Sells Venezuela Stake

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Venezuela’s government agreed to buy the stake held by Verizon Communications in Compañía Anónima Nacional Teléfonos de Venezuela for $572 million.

Full Article

Yum Brands Reports Profit and Sales Rose

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Yum Brands, operator of the Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and KFC chains, said that fourth-quarter profit rose, helped by increased sales in China, its fastest-growing market.

Full Article

Real Actual News

Date: 12 February 2007

By The Bagger

The Bagger has been waiting all night at the Writers Guild Awards for the movie portion of the evening — who knew there was much wonderful television that was being written? — and the time is finally nigh.

Full Article

Canada: Uranium Producer Acquired

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

SXR Uranium One agreed to buy UrAsia Energy for $3.1 billion to form the world’s second-largest uranium producer as rising demand for nuclear fuel drives prices to records. SXR, owner of South Africa’s largest undeveloped uranium deposit, bid 7.05 Canadian dollars ($6.01) a share for UrAsia, which is based in Vancouver, British Columbia, and owns mines in Central Asia. That was 13 percent more than UrAsia’s Feb. 9 closing price in Toronto, the companies said. SXR’s stock rose 6.8 percent to a record. The combined company, once all its mines are operating, will trail only Cameco in production and be the only producer in Kazakhstan, South Africa, Australia, the United States and Canada, the five largest holders of uranium deposits.

Full Article

Charles Walgreen Jr., 100, Who Built the Family Drug Chain, Is Dead

Date: 13 February 2007

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Charles Walgreen Jr. helped build his father’s drugstore chain into America’s biggest.

Full Article

No News From Iran’s Leader on Nuclear Program

Date: 12 February 2007

By Nazila Fathi

Nazila Fathi

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad pulled back from making a promised announcement about “good news” in the country’s nuclear progress.

Full Article

News Analysis: Outside pressure broke Korea deadlock - Asia - Pacific - International Herald Tribune

Date: 13 February 2007

By David E. Sanger

David Sanger

WASHINGTON — It is hard to imagine that either George W. Bush or Kim Jong Il would have agreed even a year ago to the kind of deal they have now approved. The pact, announced Tuesday, would stop, seal and ultimately disable North Korea's nuclear facilities, as part of a grand bargain that the administration has previously shunned as overly generous to a repressive country — especially one that has not yet said when or if it will give up its nuclear arsenal.

Full Article

News Analysis: Much skepticism greets U.S. charge of Iranian role in Iraq - Americas - International Herald Tribune

Date: 13 February 2007

By Helene Cooper and Mark Mazzetti

Helene Cooper

WASHINGTON — Three weeks after promising that it would show proof of Iranian meddling in Iraq, the Bush administration has laid out its evidence — and received in return a healthy dose of skepticism.

Full Article