Felice Borel Fødselsdag, fødselsdato

Felice Borel

Felice Borel (1914–1993) var en italiensk fotballspiller som blant annet spilte for Juventus.

Han ble tatt ut til VM i fotball 1934, der laget hans vant gull .

Les mer...
 
Fødselsdag, fødselsdato
søndag 5. april 1914
Fødselssted
Nica
Alder
111
Stjernetegn

5. april 1914 var en søndag under stjernetegnet til . Det var 94 dagen i året. President i USA var Woodrow Wilson.

Hvis du ble født på denne dagen, er du 111 år gammel. Den siste bursdagen din var på lørdag 5. april 2025, 188 dager siden. Din neste bursdag er søndag 5. april 2026, om 176 dager. Du har bodd i 40 731 dager, eller omtrent 977 562 timer, eller omtrent 58 653 740 minutter, eller omtrent 3 519 224 400 sekunder.

Noen personer som deler denne bursdagen:

5th of April 1914 News

Nyheter slik de dukket opp på forsiden av New York Times på 5. april 1914

STOCK EXCHANGE NEWS.

Date: 05 April 1914

Memberships Transferred. -- Herbert P. Brown to Charles Morgan, 32 Broadway. William J. Alpers, (dec'd,) to George A. Nelson, T.L. Watson Co., 55 Broadway.

Full Article

NEWS OF BOOKS; Books on Outdoor Life, Public Questions, Fiction, &c.

Date: 05 April 1914

EX-PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT will probably emerge into civilization out of the South American wilderness at about the same time that one of the important results of his journey into the hunting grounds of South Africa will be set before the public. Charles Scribner's Sons will publish, on April 25, "Life Histories of African Game Animals," by Theodore Roosevelt and Edmund Heller, in two volumes.

Full Article

A Remarkable Record of Growth.

Date: 05 April 1914

From Dow, Jones & Co.'s News Bulletin

From Dow

Growth in circulation since 1896 commented upon

Full Article

GENERAL NEWS AND NOTES OF THE MUSIC WORLD; A Season's Orchestral Concerts and What They Have Produced -- Mr. Flagler and the New York Symphony.

Date: 05 April 1914

RICHARD ALDRICH

Richard ALDRICH

THE several series of orchestral concerts that have furnished so large a part of the season's music in New York have been brought to a close. The number of such concerts has been very large; in the estimation of some, larger than the effective demand of the musical public can properly support.

Full Article