Iran Bars Delay in Oil Nationalizing In Statement to British Company; IRAN NOT TO DELAY OIL NATIONALIZING
Date: 31 May 1951
By MICHAEL CLARK Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Michael Special
Iran ousts newsman H Nicholson
Zdravko Čolić (Serbian Cyrillic: Здравко Чолић, pronounced [zdrǎːv̞.kɔ̝ t͡ʃɔ̝̌ː.lit͡ɕ]; born 30 May 1951) is a Bosnian-Serbian pop singer and widely considered one of the greatest vocalists and cultural icons of the former Yugoslavia. Favourably compared to Paul McCartney and Tom Jones by music critics and the general public, he has garnered fame in Southeastern Europe for his emotionally expressive tenor voice, fluent stage presence and numerous critically and commercially acclaimed albums and singles.
Among his songs, "Ti si mi u krvi" (You're In My Blood), from the eponymous album, is widely considered one of the most popular ballads of ex-Yugoslav music.
Lees meer...30 mei 1951 was een woensdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♊. Het was de 149e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was Harry S. Truman.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 74 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op vrijdag 30 mei 2025, 158 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op zaterdag 30 mei 2026, in 206 dagen. Je hebt 27.187 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 652.493 uur, of ongeveer 39.149.611 minuten, of ongeveer 2.348.976.660 seconden.
Date: 31 May 1951
By MICHAEL CLARK Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Michael Special
Iran ousts newsman H Nicholson
Date: 31 May 1951
Natl Price Office freezes newspaper prices to forestall rises by leading dailies
Date: 31 May 1951
Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Vietnam to take over censorship of dispatches abroad from French; foreign newsmen apprehensive
Date: 30 May 1951
unfounded bomb threat against NY Jewish Daily Forward and Jewish Day causes evacuation of several bldgs
Date: 30 May 1951
Publisher D M Torino held for alleged disrespect of police
Date: 30 May 1951
Pres Ballivian says mil junta will give newspapers dollar exch for newsprint imports and foreign news services; stresses press freedom