Rahul Bhatt Fødselsdag, fødselsdato

Rahul Bhatt

Rahul Bhatt (born 24 January 1982) is an Indian fitness trainer and actor. The son of film director Mahesh Bhatt and Kiran Bhatt, Rahul gained notoriety in 2009 following the revelations that David Headley, an accused in the 2008 Mumbai attacks, had befriended him and they were close friends. In an investigative report by PBS, Bhatt was described as a B-movie actor, asking for favours to reveal more details about Headley. In 2010, he was a contestant in the reality show Bigg Boss 4.

Les mer...
 
Fødselsdag, fødselsdato
søndag 24. januar 1982
Fødselssted
Mumbai
Alder
43
Stjernetegn

24. januar 1982 var en søndag under stjernetegnet til . Det var 23 dagen i året. President i USA var Ronald Reagan.

Hvis du ble født på denne dagen, er du 43 år gammel. Den siste bursdagen din var på fredag 24. januar 2025, 259 dager siden. Din neste bursdag er lørdag 24. januar 2026, om 105 dager. Du har bodd i 15 965 dager, eller omtrent 383 175 timer, eller omtrent 22 990 525 minutter, eller omtrent 1 379 431 500 sekunder.

Noen personer som deler denne bursdagen:

24th of January 1982 News

Nyheter slik de dukket opp på forsiden av New York Times på 24. januar 1982

EXPANSION OF CBS NEWS IS RESISTED

Date: 25 January 1982

By Tony Schwartz

Tony Schwartz

CONTINUING opposition from CBS-TV's affiliated stations may yet doom the network's plan to expand its evening news from 30 minutes to an hour early next year. CBS disclosed the other day for the first time details of its plan for an expanded newscast. The network would offer the one-hour newscast from 6 to 7 P.M. in the Pacific time zone, 5 to 6 in the Mountain and Central zones and 6:30 to 7:30 in the East. Some affiliates have argued that the real need is for more local news, not national and international news, and that their future success is largely dependent on a strong local identity. But the primary resistance to the expanded network news is economic.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 25 January 1982

By Stuart Taylor Jr., Special To the New York Times

Stuart Taylor

The American Bar Association, characteristically gray, pin-striped, businesslike, and traditionalist as its mid-year convention plods through a frigid weekend here, is uncharacteristically worried about the future of the legal system. David R. Brink, the association's president, is a careful man who rose to senior partner of the largest law firm in Minneapolis by helping affluent clients plan their estates. Yet he has been warning in speeches, news conferences and interviews here that ''we are confronted at this very moment with a legislative threat to our nation that may lead to the most serious constitutional crisis since our great Civil War.'' It is not the radicals of the left, the bugaboos of past A.B.A. presidents, about whom Mr. Brink and other dignitaries of the legal establishment have been sounding alarms.

Full Article

Follow-Up on the News; On Child Abuse

Date: 24 January 1982

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

The news item was dated Dec. 25, 1980, and it said the Federal Department of Health and Human Services had granted $1.4 million for projects to combat the sexual abuse of children by family members and others. The National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect was to distribute the money.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 25 January 1982

By Richard Eder, Special To the New York Times

Richard Eder

French politics, generally, is the art of the expected, and it takes only a small dose of the unexpected to convulse it. Convulsion is only a shade too strong for the unexpectedly bad weekend suffered by the Socialist Government of President Francois Mitterrand earlier this month. A double defeat, one legal and one political, suddenly interrupted the series of relatively easy circumstances it has found itself in since it took over last spring. On Jan. 16, the Constitutional Council decided that the Government's nationalization law was partly unconstitutional. The Government will have to resubmit parts of the legislation to Parliament. Although passage is assured, the result will be delay and a higher price tag for compensating stockholders.

Full Article

News Analysis

Date: 25 January 1982

By Ralph Blumenthal

Ralph Blumenthal

Two recent court decisions and other disclosures have raised a host of questions about the conduct of Representative Frederick W. Richmond as a public and corporate official. Some of the questions are expected to be the first business before the House ethics committee when Congress reconvenes today. The committee, whose formal name is the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, does not disclose its deliberations. According to the office of one member on the committee, the panel staff has advise d membe rs of some matters involving Mr. Richmond that are scheduled to come up for discussion soon.

Full Article

News Summary; News Summary; SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 1982

Date: 24 January 1982

Intern ational A French-Soviet natural gas contract was signed by France despite strong objections by the Reagan Administration, which fears that the agreement will make Western Europe too dependent on Soviet energy. The gas is to be carried in a 2,800-mile pipeline from western Siberia and extending into France, West Germany, Italy and several other Western European countries. (Page 1, Column 6.) A Soviet economic report for 1981 confirmed previous predictions of a generally poor year economically. Breaking with precedent, it omitted the size of last year's grain harvest, suggesting a figure so low as to be politically embarrassing. (1:5.)

Full Article

Major News in Summary; 'Linkage' Revived Over Poland

Date: 24 January 1982

The Reagan Administration last week turned a new cold shoulder to Moscow. Geneva talks scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday between Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko were cut back to just Tuesday. More importantly, Mr. Haig, instead of setting a date to resume strategic arms limitation negotiations, will focus on Moscow's role in Poland's military crackdown. Arms talks, the State Department said, ''cannot be insulated from other events.''

Full Article

Follow-Up on the News; The Army Way

Date: 24 January 1982

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

The Army wanted an alternative to its shiny black boot. It began adopting standards as far back as 1970. What emerged was a prototype no-shine boot with a suede-like finish that resisted detection by heat-sensing devices.

Full Article

Follow-Up on the News; Cocktail Lessons

Date: 24 January 1982

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

To fight alcoholism, the Johnson Count y Mental Health Center in Shawnee, Kan. , said it would teach people how to drink. It began in 1979 to arrange cocktail parties that combined instruction i n ''sensible'' drinking with serious discussion of the consequences of overconsumption.

Full Article

Follow-Up on the News; Ties to Kiribati

Date: 24 January 1982

By Richard Haitch

Richard Haitch

Perhaps you have heard of Kiribati? On Aug. 11, 1980, the State Department announced that the United States had established diplomatic relations with this new nation, part of the Gilbert Islands in the South Pacific. The announcement said that ambassadors would be exch anged.

Full Article