Hitomi Aizawa تاريخ الميلاد ، تاريخ الميلاد

Hitomi Aizawa

Hitomi Aizawa (相澤 仁美, Aizawa Hitomi; born 22 August 1982 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese actress, gravure idol and race queen.

In a 2006 article on an "Air Guitar roadshow" in which Aizawa participated, the website cinematopics.com noted that she was the top idol of the gravure world. Among the films in which Aizawa has appeared are Drift (ドリフト; 2006), Hitorimake (ヒトリマケ; 2008), and Cool Girls (クールガールズ; 2009) In 2006, she appeared in an episode of the Tokyo MX drama Tantei Boogie (探偵ブギ). The website cinematopics.com interviewed Aizawa about her role in the film Open Water 2 (オープン・ウォーター2; 2007), which was based on a true disaster-survival story. In September 2009, Aizawa starred as the title character in a DVD version of the 1980s manga series, Miss Machiko. Advertising for the release made much of Aizawa's prominent bustline.

اقرأ المزيد...
 
تاريخ الميلاد ، تاريخ الميلاد
الأحد، ٢٢ أغسطس ١٩٨٢
مكان الولادة
طوكيو
عمر
43
علامة النجمة

كان ٢٢ أغسطس ١٩٨٢ الأحد تحت علامة النجمة . كان هذا هو يوم 233 من السنة. كان رئيس الولايات المتحدة Ronald Reagan.

إذا كنت قد ولدت في هذا اليوم ، فأنت تبلغ٪ s سنة. كان عيد ميلادك الأخير في 43 ، الجمعة، ٢٢ أغسطس ٢٠٢٥ يوم مضى. عيد ميلادك القادم في 49 ، بعد السبت، ٢٢ أغسطس ٢٠٢٦ يوم. لقد عشت لمدة 315 يوم ، أو حوالي ١٥٬٧٥٥ ساعة ، أو حوالي ٣٧٨٬١٣٥ دقيقة ، أو حوالي ٢٢٬٦٨٨٬١٢٥ ثانية.

بعض الأشخاص الذين يشاركون عيد الميلاد هذا:

22nd of August 1982 News

الأخبار كما ظهرت في الصفحة الأولى لصحيفة نيويورك تايمز في ٢٢ أغسطس ١٩٨٢

GRIT, PRINTING 'GOOD NEWS,' FIGHTS FOR LIFE

Date: 22 August 1982

AP

The newspaper Grit turned a troubled 100 years old last month, beset by declining circulation and rising costs that could spell bad news for the nation's biggest ''good news'' paper. Largely unknown in big cities, the tabloid weekly offers family features with such titles as ''Twins: Twice the Fun for Mom and Dad,'' ''Old Grape Juice Provokes Barnyard Uproar'' and ''Indiana Cop Uses Puppets to Solve Crimes,'' along with recipes, dress patterns and advertisements for mail order products, farm equipment and health aids. Grit's contents have remained relatively unchanged since Dietrick Lamade, a 23-year-old German-born printer, took over the paper in 1884, two years after it was first published. No one is sure where the paper got its name, says James Crossley, its president. ''We think it comes from the old American 'stick to it' fortitude,'' he said. ''It means 'true grit.' ''

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News Units Cut Off From Beirut Contact

Date: 22 August 1982

Foreign-news organizations lost contact with their correspondents in Beirut yesterday because of an apparent power failure. The breakdown interrupted telephone and telex transmissions between the Lebanese capital and London.

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No Headline

Date: 22 August 1982

News Groups Challenge Ban On Jury Interviews in Indiana SOUTH BEND, Ind., Aug. 21 (UPI) - Eight news organizations, including four newspapers and NBC News, are challenging an order by a Federal district judge that bars reporters from interviewing jurors in the Joseph Paul Franklin case. Mr. Franklin, an avowed racist, was acquitted Tuesday of charges that he violated the civil rights of Vernon E. Jordan Jr., who was then the director of the National Urban League, by shooting Mr. Jordan in the back in May 1980. Mr. Jordan recovered.

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LISBON PRESS AGENCY PLAN CAUSES STIR

Date: 22 August 1982

Special to the New York Times

Prime Minister Francisco Pinto Balsemao is seeking to to replace the national press agency, ANOP, with an independent cooperative news agency free of state control. But the effort is opposed by Portugal's President, Antonio Ramalho Eanes, and a number of journalistic groups, which question whether the new agency would actually be free of Government control. The decree to close ANOP was announced Thursday, but it must be signed by President Eanes before it can take effect. On that day, the President told Theo Bogaert, secretary general of the International Federation of Journalists, and Gerard Qatinot, the federation's vice president - who are here in support of ANOP - that he would not sign because he was not satisfied with the official explanation for the Government's action.

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Around the World; Suspected Saboteurs Are Arrested in Peru

Date: 22 August 1982

Reuters

The police armed with emergency powers of search and arrest rounded up people suspected of being left-wing saboteurs today as the Peruvian press applauded the Government's tough new stand against political extremists. The police were tight-lipped about the security operation, but informed sources said between 30 and 60 people were picked up in connection with Thursday night's incidents in Lima -officially described as the worst night of political violence since democracy was restored two years ago.

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CANDIDATE'S PAST IS BAY STATE ISSUE

Date: 22 August 1982

Special to the New York Times

Only a week ago, John R. Lakian, a 39-year-old millionaire seeking the Republican nomination for Governor of Massachusetts in his first political campaign, was worried that voters would not recognize his name. But since The Boston Globe published an article Wednesday reporting a ''pattern of discrepancies'' between Mr. Lakian's words and his record, that problem has vanished. ''That problem has been solved,'' said Roger H. Woodworth, Mr. Lakian's political adviser. ''We're laughing about it, but the laugh is a little ironic and grim.''

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A PRELUDE IN FRANCE TO THE KILLING OF JEWS

Date: 22 August 1982

To the Editor: Reports of the recent attacks on Jews in France, which were claimed by the extreme leftist Action Directe (a group that also took responsibility for the murder of the Israeli diplomat Yaacov Barsinantov a few months ago), have overlooked an important factor.

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News Analysis

Date: 23 August 1982

By Alan Riding

Alan Riding

Mexico's confidence in its entire economic and political system has been badly shaken in recent weeks. In a matter of months, the country has been plunged from a period of unparalleled prosperity into its worst financial crisis in memory. Many Mexicans are still reeling from the shock, confused about what has happened, and why. At the same time, they feel angry and betrayed at having been led down the path of consumerism for five years only to be jerked back to the rough road of austerity for no apparent reason. Aggravating the uncertainty, President Jose Lopez Portillo, who is widely blamed for the crisis, is in his final months in office and his lame-duck administration has at times seemed virtually crippled. But President-elect Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado cannot provide immediate leadership because tradition requires that he remain out of view until his inauguration on Dec. 1.

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News Summary; SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1982

Date: 22 August 1982

International 397 P.L.O. guerrillas left Lebanon by ship for Cyprus, beginning a two-week withdrawal that will scatter the forces of the Palestine Liberation Organization throughout the Arab world. The departure of the first evacuees was accompanied by machine-gun volleys fired into the air by their comrades. At the same time, 1,000 more guerrillas bound for Tunisia were preparing for an evacuation by sea. (Page 1, Column 6.)

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News Summary; MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 1982

Date: 23 August 1982

International The P.L.O. evacuation from Beirut was delayed by Israeli warships after Israeli officials objected to 20 jeeps being driven aboard a ship that was to take about 1,000 of the Palestinian guerrillas to Tunisia. Israel gave the ship sailing orders after an American guarantee was given that the jeeps would be unloaded before the ship reached its destination in Tunisia. (Page A1, Column 6.) A group of 265 Palestinian guerrillas arrived in Jordan after a stopover in Cyprus and were warmly received by King Hussein. The Palestinians were part of the first contingent of fighters who left Lebanon by ferry on Saturday. They were flown to Jordan from Cyprus in two jetliners that were chartered by the P.L.O. and the United Nations, according to one of the pilots. The other Palestinians in the initial contingent were flown to Iraq, where an official reception was held. (A1:4.)

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