Igorrr Γενέθλια, Ημερομηνία Γέννησης

Igorrr

Gautier Serre (born 5 June 1984), better known by his stage name Igorrr, is a French musician. Under the Igorrr alias, he combines a variety of disparate genres, including black metal, baroque music, breakcore, and trip hop, into a singular sound. Serre is also part of the now disbanded side-projects Whourkr and Corpo-Mente. The Igorrr project became a full band with the addition of vocalists Laure Le Prunenec and Laurent Lunoir, drummer Sylvain Bouvier, guitarist Martyn Clément and bassist Erlend Caspersen. In 2021, both vocalists left the band and were replaced with JB Le Bail and Aphrodite Patoulidou, who were later replaced by Marthe Alexandre. In 2024, Rémi Serafino took the position of the drummer.

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Γενέθλια, Ημερομηνία Γέννησης
Τρίτη 5 Ιουνίου 1984
Τόπος γέννησης
Ηλικία
41
Ζώδιο

Το 5 Ιουνίου 1984 ήταν Τρίτη κάτω από το σύμβολο του αστεριού του . Ήταν η 156 ημέρα του χρόνου. Πρόεδρος των Ηνωμένων Πολιτειών ήταν ο Ronald Reagan.

Εάν γεννηθήκατε αυτήν την ημέρα, είστε 41 ετών. Τα τελευταία σας γενέθλια ήταν στις Πέμπτη 5 Ιουνίου 2025, 362 ημέρες πριν. Τα επόμενα γενέθλιά σας είναι στις Παρασκευή 5 Ιουνίου 2026, σε 2 ημέρες. Έχετε ζήσει για 15.337 ημέρες ή περίπου 368.111 ώρες ή περίπου 22.086.660 λεπτά ή περίπου 1.325.199.600 δευτερόλεπτα.

Μερικά άτομα που μοιράζονται αυτά τα γενέθλια:

5th of June 1984 News

Ειδήσεις όπως εμφανίστηκαν στην πρώτη σελίδα των New York Times στο 5 Ιουνίου 1984

NEWS REPORTS PAINTED SUSPECT AS AN AVENGER

Date: 05 June 1984

By Jonathan Friendly

Jonathan Friendly

Last week, the police hunted a man who had stabbed two Harlem drug users, killing one and seriously wounding the other. Television news broadcasts and the city's two major tabloid newspapers repeatedly described him in sympathetic terms, as a vigilante opposed to drug-trafficking and angered that the police were not doing enough to combat the problem. The difference between their description and the reality became apparent on Friday, when the police captured a suspect, Richard Simpson, who they said had attacked his victims for giving him cocaine that made him sick. ''He's not a good guy, he's a bad guy,'' Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward said.

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Impostor Is a Suspect In Nicaragua Bombing

Date: 05 June 1984

UPI

Upi

A man posing as a Danish journalist when a bomb explosion wounded Ed en Pastora Gomez, the Nicaraguan rebel leader, and killed eight others carried a false passport and is a prime suspect in the assassination attempt, Denmark's Foreign Ministry said today. A rebel spokesman said last week that a journalist or an impostor may have set the bomb that exploded Wednesday at Mr. Pastora's news conference on the Nicaraguan side of the border with Costa Rica, killing two reporters and six rebels.

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Zimbabwe Warns Press On 'Distorted' Reports

Date: 05 June 1984

The Government said today that it will use its emergency powers to prosecute correspondents who write ''distorted or twisted'' reports about the country.

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METHOD OF POLLS IN TWO STATES

Date: 06 June 1984

The New York Times/CBS News exit poll in New Jersey is based on questionnaires completed by 2,018 Democratic voters as they left polling places in 74 randomly selected precincts in all parts of the state. In theory, in 19 cases out of 20, the results from a poll such as this should differ by no more than three percentage points, in either direction, from what would have been obtained by interviewing all Democratic voters.

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SENATORS CALL FOR EXEMPTIONS IN WEAPONS GUARANTEE LAW

Date: 06 June 1984

By Charles Mohr

Charles Mohr

A coalition of Senators announced today that they had reached agreement on revisions in a 1983 law that required manufacturers of military weapons to guarantee their products. Some advocates of the original law described the proposed changes as seriously weakening the concept of guarantees. The Pentagon bureaucracy that is primarily concerned with purchasing military equipment strongly opposed last year's guarantee law, as did almost all corporations that produce weapons and equipment for the armed services.

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WASHINGTON EDITOR WILL DIRECT NIEMAN PROGRAM

Date: 05 June 1984

By Fox Butterfield

Fox Butterfield

Howard A. Simons, managing editor of The Washington Post, has been selected as the new curator of the Nieman Foundation, the mid-career program for journalists at Harvard University, school officials said today. Mr. Simons, who is 55 years old and a former Nieman fellow himself, will replace James C. Thomson Jr. Mr. Simons is in Europe on vacation and could not be reached for comment. Mr. Simons's appointment ends a prolonged search in which a number of prominent editors, reporters and broadcasters were considered. His selection, confirmed today by school officials who asked not to be named, is to be officially announced June 13.

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STINGER MISSILE MIGHT PROVE INEFFECTIVE IN GULF, STUDY SAYS

Date: 05 June 1984

By Wayne Biddle

Wayne Biddle

The Army's Stinger antiaircraft weapon may not be effective in defense of shipping in the Persian Gulf, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service. The study by the research service, a nonpartisan division of the Library of Congress, was completed last week after the Reagan Administration announced the emergency delivery of 400 portable Stinger missiles to Saudi Arabia. The weapons are intended for use in protecting shipping in the Gulf region where oil tankers have come under intense attack in recent months by Iraqi and Iranian aircraft.

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INDICATIONS POINT TO IRANIAN ATTACK SOON

Date: 05 June 1984

By Bernard Gwertzman

Bernard Gwertzman

American intelligence officials said today that signs were accumulating that Iran might finally launch its long-expected ground offensive against Iraqi positions around the key city of Basra. With more than 300,000 Iranian forces in the vicinity since April, such an offensive is viewed by American officials as likely to take place soon, possibly with a decisive impact on the conflict, which began in September 1980. The officials cautioned, however, that they had been expecting the offensive since April and it had not occurred. The number of Iranian forces has at times been put as high as 500,000, many of them thought to be student volunteers.

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SENATORS ASSAIL ARMS SALE TO SAUDIS

Date: 06 June 1984

By Bernard Gwertzman

Bernard Gwertzman

The Reagan Administration's emergency shipment of 400 Stinger antiaircraft missiles to Saudi Arabia came under attack today from Democratic and Republican members of a key Senate committee. The criticism came as the committee members heard the Administration's first detailed explanation of its policy in the Persian Gulf conflict. Senator Bob Kasten, Republican of Wisconsin, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee's subcommittee on foreign operations, told Administration witnesses that in bypassing Congress on the Stinger sale the Administration had jeopardized its good will in Congress. The move would also encourage those seeking more stringent controls on arms sales, he said.

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ADMINISTRATION DEBATING ANTITERRORIST MEASURES

Date: 06 June 1984

By Leslie H. Gelb

Leslie Gelb

Three and a half years after announcing that combatting terrorism would be President Reagan's first national-security priority, officials say a debate on the subject is still going on in the Administration and that it will be taken up at the economic summit conference this week. The British are said to have drafted a tough statement designed to show that the seven leaders at the meeting that opens Thursday in London are determined to do something about state- sponsored terrorism. Another reason the statement was drafted, according to a key Administration official, is that ''They think we're serious about pre-emptive military attacks against countries supporting terrorism and they want to try to head this off.'' Two months ago, President Reagan signed a two-and-a-half-page decision memorandum that officials called a foundation for a policy but not specific guidelines for action or specific commitments of new resources. As described by a range of Adminstration officials, the document approved on April 3 lists general principles - including efforts to ''dissuade'' countries from sponsoring terrorism and the right ''to defend ourselves'' if victimized. But there is no discussion of how to do this, and no definition of state-sponsored terrorism.

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Date:

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