Sebastian Schönberger Dzimšanas diena, dzimšanas datums

Sebastian Schönberger

Sebastian Schönberger (born 14 May 1994) is an Austrian racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team Team Felt–Felbermayr. He rode at the 2013 UCI Road World Championships.

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Dzimšanas diena, dzimšanas datums
sestdiena, 1994. gada 14. maijs
Dzimšanas vieta
Vecums
31
Zodiaks

1994. gada 14. maijs bija sestdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes . Tā bija 133 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 31 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija trešdiena, 2025. gada 14. maijs, pirms 173 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir ceturtdiena, 2026. gada 14. maijs pēc 191 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 11 496 dienas jeb aptuveni 275 915 stundas, vai aptuveni 16 554 928 minūtes vai aptuveni 993 295 680 sekundes.

Daži cilvēki, kuri dalās šajā dzimšanas dienā:

14th of May 1994 News

Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1994. gada 14. maijs

Observer; Secrets Of the Trade

Date: 14 May 1994

By Russell Baker

Russell Baker

Do you ever wonder what Plato wrote for his Saturday column? Not "The Republic," I'll bet. Column-wise, "The Republic" is strictly Sunday stuff: big, serious, double-dome. Heavyweight thinking went into "The Republic." Sunday-column thinking. Maybe an editor would have let Plato get by with "The Republic" as a Wednesday or Friday column. Both days can accommodate earnest, no-nonsense columns.

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Worlds Apart, Arabs Here and There

Date: 15 May 1994

By Elsa Brenner

Elsa Brenner

IN the crowded Nodine Hill section of this city, where generations of newly arrived Italians and Irish once settled, prospered and eventually moved to more affluent neighborhoods, Walid Fanek, a 40-year-old delicatessen owner from Jordan, caters now to a new wave of immigrants -- his fellow Arabs. He works in a neighborhood of shops and modest multifamily houses, where blacks, Hispanic residents and Arabs intermingle peacefully most days -- and where, at the corner of Elm and Oak Streets, he proudly stocks the bulging shelves of his tiny market with Middle Eastern delicacies like jameed (dried yogurt), pine nuts and fresh spices.

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Farm and Home in Deal

Date: 14 May 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Roosevelt Financial Group Inc. said today that the Office of Thrift Supervision had approved its $258 million acquisition of the Farm and Home Financial Corporation. Roosevelt Financial, the parent of Roosevelt Bank, a Federal savings bank, said it expected to complete the all-stock transaction by June 30. Farm and Home, based in Nevada, Mo., is the parent of the Farm and Home Savings Association.

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Dollar Up vs. Yen on Move To Resume Talks on Trade

Date: 14 May 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The dollar rose against the Japanese yen yesterday amid new efforts by the United States and Japan to resume trade talks. Contributing to the dollar's rise were a modest rally in the bond market and speculation that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates next week.

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Coffee at Its Highest Price Since End of Quotas in '89

Date: 14 May 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Coffee soared yesterday to its highest price since it began trading freely on the world market, amid increasing concerns about available supply from Brazil. Separately, copper prices surged above $1 a pound for the first time since January 1993.

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Aspirin Study News Embargo Harmed No One

Date: 14 May 1994

To the Editor: Dr. I. Herbert Scheinberg's assertion that The New England Journal of Medicine impeded the flow of information to the public on the role of aspirin in preventing heart attacks (letter, April 30) contains multiple errors. Contrary to his statement that we held the authors to our timetable, we waited an additional week (of the five weeks between receipt of the manuscript and publication) at the authors' request, to let them honor their commitment to inform trial participants before the results were made generally available.

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 14 May 1994

International 3-7 JERICHO GETS ITS OWN FORCE The last Israeli soldier left the ancient town of Jericho, ending Israel's 27-year occupation and giving Palestinians control over the first West Bank foothold for their hoped-for independent state. 1 Settlers mourned at the sight of Palestinians guarding a synagogue. 7 U.N. PLANS RWANDA DEPLOYMENT The United Nations Security Council finally agreed on a plan to send an all-African force to war-torn Rwanda to protect threatened civilians and aid workers. 1 CHINESE DISSIDENT RELEASED In an important gesture to the Clinton administration, China released Chen Ziming, the second of two major figures still serving long prison terms for leading the Tiananmen Square uprising of 1989. 7 In a village, decaying corpses with frozen expressions of terror. 3 RUSSIA JOINS BALKAN EFFORT Russia formally joined the United States and the European Union in a reinvigorated effort to end the two-year-old war in Bosnia. The nations supported a plan that calls on the Bosnian Serbs to cede nearly a third of the land they control. 6 MEXICAN CANDIDATES DEBATE Mexico's leading presidential candidates held the first nationally broadcast debate in the country's history. Analysts hailed the event as a glimpse of the democracy that the governing party has promised. 7 POLISH-GERMAN BORDER BOOM Cheap prices have been a boon for Poland's Oder-Neisse region, which has been transformed from an area of contention into a magnet for eastern German shoppers. 6 Twillingate Journal: A threat to a coastal passion: fishing. 4 National 8-11, 28 BREYER IS COURT NOMINEE President Clinton nominated Judge Stephen Breyer of Boston to replace Harry Blackmun on the United States Supreme Court. 1 A MODERATE CONSENSUS BUILDER Man in the News: Judge Breyer is a man of undisputed intellect who builds consensus quietly, but one whom some critics consider a "technocrat" lacking in passion. 1 News analysis: The President chose a judge's judge. 10 'MEMORY THERAPY' REJECTED In a much watched case calling into question some psychologists' practice of helping patients "recover" traumatic memories, a California jury sided with a man who accused therapists of conning his daughter into accusing him of incest. 1 CALIFORNIA'S TOURISM TROUBLES Even as the state struggles to climb out of its recession, it has lost almost half of its share of the lucrative Japanese tourism market. 8 PRODUCE FOR THE INNER CITY New farmers markets at two Philadelphia housing projects are bringing fresh fruit and vegetables to areas of the city where they were previously scarce. 8 A VETERAN'S DESPAIR The suicide of the Pulitzer Prize winning author Lewis Puller was a final surrender in a 26-year battle against depression, drug and alcohol addiction and despair. 9 RULES BROKEN IN DEADLY RESEARCH The Food and Drug Administration accused four scientists and two drug company officials of violating Federal rules in experiments led to at least five deaths. 8 A WOMAN-CENTERED THEOLOGY The aftershocks of a conference of Protestant women that centered on a revolutionary vision of a feminist God are still being felt. 28 Beliefs: Turmoil over family and marriage in America. 28 Metro Digest 23 HOMELESS SLEEPING IN CITY OFFICE Eight years after a court ordered an end to the practice, some homeless families are sleeping in the city's lone remaining all-night homeless assistance office. 1 Business Digest 37 Your Money 35-36 Arts/Entertainment 12-16, 49 Fanfare for the channel tunnel. 13 Powerful twin art dealers. 13 Music: Masur, Ax, Beethoven. 16 Dance: Betontanc of Slovenia. 14 Television: NBC's fall lineup. 49 Sports 30-34 Baseball: Past is present for Polonia. 31 Mets lose to Braves. 31 Basketball: Bulls thwart Knicks comeback. 31 Columns: Araton on the Bulls. 31 Golf: Walton and Sheehan tied for L.P.G.A. lead. 33 Hockey: Devils to play it one game at a time. 33 Horse Racing: Holy Bull to bypass Preakness. 31 Obituaries 29 Paul Child, a former foreign-service officer and Julia Child's husband. Lil Picard, an artist and critic. Editorials/Op-Ed 20-21 Editorials Another new Justice. A victory for abortion rights. Sad blow for British democracy. Build the neighborhood clinics. Letters Anna Quindlen: The human touch. Russell Baker: Secrets of the trade. Victoria de Grazia: Will Il Duce's successors make facts run on time? Judith Chernaik: O Brooklyn local. Vicente Echerri: Help Cuba. Tighten the embargo. Chronicle 22 Bridge 12 Crossword 14

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NEWS SUMMARY

Date: 15 May 1994

International 3-21 JAPAN'S BUREAUCRATS CHALLENGED Japanese bureaucrats are accustomed to acting as they choose, but a Tokyo neighborhood's challenge of a decision on an elevated railway was a watershed in a freedom of information revolution. 1 NORTH KOREA CHALLENGE TO U.S. North Korea said it has begun extracting nuclear fuel from its largest reactor without international inspectors present, a process that the U.S. has said could provide material for four or five nuclear bombs. 1

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From Ricoh, a Copier That Turns Pages

Date: 14 May 1994

By Andrew Pollack

Andrew Pollack

As technical announcements go, this one is a real page turner. A Japanese copier company has developed a system that it says will automatically turn pages, making it far easier to make photocopies from books and magazines. The Ricoh Company said it believed its system was the first such system. Given the time people spend standing over copiers lifting up a book, turning the page and placing the book back down on the glass, it is perhaps surprising that it has taken several decades since the advent of xerography to open this chapter in technology.

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Utility Votes Not to Finish Atom Plants

Date: 14 May 1994

By Harriet King

Harriet King

A stormy chapter in the Pacific Northwest's nuclear-power history came close to an end today with a 9-to-4 vote by the board of the Washington Public Power Supply System to terminate two unfinished nuclear plants. Public Power Supply has one nuclear plant producing electricity. The only other nuclear plant in the Northwest that ever generated power, the Trojan plant in Rainier, Ore., owned by Portland General Electric, was closed in January 1993.

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