<<
Jun 12| HISTORY 4
2DAY |Jun
14 >> Events, deaths, births, of JUN 13 v.5.50 [For events of Jun 13 Julian go to Gregorian date: 1583~1699 Jun 23 1700s Jun 24 1800s Jun 25 1900~2099 Jun 26 |
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On
a 13 June: 2004 Elections for the European Union's parliament. 2002 The Afghan grand council (loya jirga), by 1295 out 1575 votes, elects Karzai [14 Jun 2002 photo >] as interim president for the next two years. The council goes on to discuss the structure of the interim government. Hamid ebn Abdul Ahad Karzai, born on 24 December 1957, has since 22 December 2001 headed the first transitional government after being chosen (05 December 2001) by Afghan leaders meeting in Bonn, Germany, under the auspices of the United Nations. 2002 The stock of communications services company Alamosa Holdings (APS), which on 12 June had fallen from its 11 June close of $1.92 to an intraday low of $1.05 and closed at $1.10, makes a new intraday low of $1.03 at 09:48 and then recovers steadily to make an intraday high of $1.55 several times (14:20, 14:59, 15:26) and closes at $1.47. 2002 The stock of Tyco International (TYC) confirms its 12 June recovery in after-hours trading (from its $10.15 close) by opening at $13.00, making an intraday high of $13.95 (at 15:45) and closing at $13.80. Tyco had announced the authorization of its sale of a subsidiary. 2002 Supreme Court Justice Steven Fisher vacates the conviction and dismisses the indictment of Angelo Martinez, 36, for the 10 April 1985 bingo hall murder of Rudolph Marasco, 70, for which on 24 October 1986 Martinez was sentenced him to 26 1/2-years-to-life in prison. In 1989, Charles Rivera, a federal prisoner in the witness protection program, confessed to the killing. Authorities didn't believe Rivera because he failed a lie detector test. But now investigators were able to confirm Rivera's account through new evidence (a witness who confirmed Rivera's guilt). Martinez will remain in prison until he can convince a federal judge that his 1993 24-year sentence for peddling cocaine while in prison should be reduced. 2000 The presidents of South Korea and North Korea opened a summit in the northern capital of Pyongyang with pledges to seek reunification of the divided peninsula. 2000 Italy pardoned Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish gunman who'd tried to kill Pope John Paul II in 1981. 1996 The US Supreme Court placed greater limits on congressional districts intentionally drawn to get more minorities elected to Congress. 1996 The 81-day-old Freemen standoff ended as 16 remaining members of the anti-government group surrendered to the FBI and left their Montana ranch. 1991 The US Supreme Court ruled a jailed suspect represented by a lawyer in one criminal case sometimes may be questioned by police about another crime without the lawyer present. 1990 Wash DC mayor Marion Barry announces he will not seek a 4th term.
1979 Sioux Indians are awarded $105 million in compensation for the US seizure in 1877 of their Black Hills in South Dakota. 1978 Israelis withdraw the last of their invading forces from Lebanon. (They went back in some years later) 1977 James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., was recaptured following his escape three days earlier from a Tennessee prison.
1951 UN troops seize Pyongyang, North Korea. Lt. Joe Kingston finds himself retreating and advancing in a single day. 1949 Installed by the French, Bao Dai enters Saigon to rule Vietnam.
1940 Paris ville ouverte -- Paris is evacuated before the German advance on the city. Four years later, with the Allies marching on Paris, Adolf Hitler decreed that the city should be left a smoking ruin. 1933 first sodium vapor lamps installed (Schenectady NY)
1923 The French set a trade barrier between the occupied Ruhr and the rest of Germany. 1920 The US Post Office Department rules that children may not be sent by parcel post.
1900 China's Boxer Rebellion against foreigners and Christians erupts into full-scale violence.
1895 Emile Levassor wins first Paris-Bordeaux-Paris auto race (24 km/h) 1888 US Congress creates the Department of Labor 1876 The Presbyterian Church in England merges with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, in creating a more uniform representation of the Reformed faith in the British Isles. 1866 US House of Representatives passes 14th Amendment to the Constitution. 1863 Confederate forces on their way to Gettysburg clash with Union troops at the Second Battle of Winchester, Virginia 1863 Siege of Port Hudson, Louisiana continues 1863 Siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi continues 1863 Samuel Butler publishes first part of Erewhon, Christchurch, NZ 1862 Federals, after a brief skirmish, occupy Romney, Virginia (now West Virginia) 1862 Skirmish at New Market, Virginia
1789 Mrs Alexander Hamilton serves ice cream for dessert to Washington 1777 Marquis de Lafayette lands in the United States to assist the colonies in their war against England. 1774 Rhode Island becomes first colony to prohibit importation of slaves 1525 German Reformer Martin Luther, 42, marries former nun Katherine von Bora, 26. Their 21-year marriage would bear six children. Kate would outlive her husband (who died in 1546) by six years. 1642 Arrestation de Cinq-Mars qui est incarcéré dans la citadelle de Montpellier. 1415 Henry the Navigator, the prince of Portugal, embarks on an expedition to Africa. This marks the beginning of Portuguese dominance of West Africa.
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Deaths
which occurred on a 13 June: 2005 Daudi Bamuwamye, 4, at 17:00 (21:00 UT) in Celebration Hospital, Orlando, Florida, after becoming unconscious earlier in the afternoon on the ‘Mission: Space' ride at the Epcot Center of Disney World, which simulates twice the normal force of gravity and, of all rides at Florida theme parks, is the one which which required most hospital visits during the 2003-2004 season: 6 people over the age of 55, who got chest pains and nausea. 2004 Four policemen, 8 others, and a suicide bomber, in Baghdad, Iraq, the occupying US Army's Camp Cuervo, at 09:15 (05:15 UT) as police was approaching the car which was traveling on the wrong side of the road. 13 persons are wounded. 2004 Kamal al-Jarah, 63, murdered outside his home in the Ghazaliya district of Baghdad, Iraq, at 07:30 (03:30 UT) as he was leaving for his work at the puppet government's Education Ministry, where he was in charge of contacts with foreign countries and the United Nations. 2003 Israeli Staff Sgt. Mordechai Sayada, 21, from Kiryat Carmel, by a bullet in the neck, as he was in an armored jeep on patrol in Jenin, West Bank. 2003 Fuad Gidawi, by at least two missiles launched at his car from Israel Air Force helicopters, in the evening, in Gaza City. 22 persons, including 7 children, are wounded. Gidawi, was a member of Hamas' military wing, Iz a Din al-Kassam. He had been an aide to Tito Massoud, a Hamas operative killed in an IAF missile strike on 11 June 2003. Gidawi's brother is Hamas' representative in Iran. The Israelis say that the occupants of the car were on their way to launch a Qassam rocket attack on an Israeli residential area. 2003 Ali Jassem, 70, three of his sons, and a relative, trying to extinguish fires in their wheat field caused by US flares, are shot early in the day by US troops, in Elheer, Iraq. 2002 Kevin Strawn, 27, Travis Strawn, 21, and Colby Strawn, 15, in a fall while climbing, roped together, the southeast ridge of 5300-meter Mount Foraker in Denali National Park, Alaska (third highest peak in Alaska). The three brothers, from the Anchorage area, were flown to a base camp on 11 June. On 13 June they radio that they have reached 3200 meters altitude. Then silence. At 16:40 on 17 June a Park Service search helicopter spots their bodies at an altitude of 2600 meters, and they are taken out in the evening. 2002 Maia Wojciechowska, of a stroke, Polish-born (07 August 1927) US private detective, translator for Radio Free Europe, publicity director for Hawthorn Books, professional tennis player and instructor, publisher, and author of 19 children's books, including Shadow of a Bull (1964), about a young boy in Spain who finds his identity after his father, a bullfighter, dies in the ring. 2002 Shim Mi-son, 14, and Shin Hyo-sun, 14, crushed by US armored vehicle (a 40-ton AVLM) driven by Sergeant Mark Walker, 36, with Sergeant Fernando Nino as lookout. . The two Korean girls were walking to a birthday party in Yangju county, Gyeonggi province, South Korea. The two sergeants would be acquitted of vehicular homicide in separate US court martials (Nino on 20 Nov 2002, Walker on 22 Nov 2002), after the US refused to cede jurisdiction to South Korean authorities. This would provoke widespread protests in South Korea, with demands for the withdrawal of the 37'000 US soldiers there. 1994 John Leslie Britton, British mathematician born on 18 November 1927. His major work, which he started after reading a 1959 paper of Novikov [28 (15 Julian) Aug 1901 – 09 Jan 1975] and S. I. Adian, pursued singlemindedly, and published in almost 300 pages in 1973, was what he thought was a solution of the Burnside Problem of 1902. But Adian pointed out that, while individual lemmas were correct, in order to apply them all simultaneously the inequalities needed to make their hypothesis valid were inconsistent. The Burnside problem asks whether it is possible for a finitely generated group to be infinite if all its elements have finite order. This version is usually called the General Burnside problem and an example of such a group was found in 1964. The Burnside group B(d, n) is the largest d generator group in which every element satisfies xn = 1. The Restricted Burnside problem asks whether, for fixed d and n, there is a largest finite d generator group in which every element satisfies xn = 1. A positive solution to the Restricted Burnside problem would show that there are only finitely many finite factor groups of B(d, n). 1984 Wendy Baribeault, 17, raped and strangled by Michael B. Ross [26 July 1959 – 13 May 2005]. 1982 King Khalid, 69, of Saudi Arabia 1977 Tom C Clark, 77, former Supreme Court Justice, in NY. 1947 Albert Marquet, French Fauvist painter born on 27 March 1875. [Il y avait un peintre du nom de Marquet / Qu'à Paris on voyait par rues et par quais. / Il était souvent recherché par le Parquet. / Mais alors pour outremer il s'embarquait, / Et personne ne le remarquait.] MORE ON MARQUET AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images.
1914 Rasputin, advisor to Czar Gregory, poisoned and stabbed to death in St. Petersburg. 1900 René Dagron, French photographer, inventor of telemeter and of microcopying. 1886 King Ludwig II of Bavaria drowns. 1876 Anton Schiffer, Austrian artist born on 18 August 1811.
1231 Saint Anthony of Padua, Wonder Worker. Reproductions of artwork representing SAINT ANTHONY ONLINE: The Vision of Saint Anthony Miracles of Saint Anthony
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Births
which occurred on a 13 June: 1942 The Office of War Information (OWI) is created by US President Roosevelt, who appoints radio news commentator Elmer Davis to be its head.. It would be an important US government propaganda agency during World War II. 1928 John Forbes Nash Jr., US mathematician who suffered from personality disorders since childhood, including schizophrenia from 1959 to the 1990s. 1917 Augusto Roa Bastos, born on 13 June 1917, Paraguayan novelist, who died on 26 April 2005. His fiction often examined Paraguay's social and political struggles. Former journalist, poet, and short-story writer Roa Bastos won the Cervantes Prize for Literature in Spanish in 1989. He is best known for his I the Supreme, a novelized version of the career of José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia [06 Jan 1766 – 20 Sep 1840], dictator of Paraguay from 1814. Roa Bastos lived in exile for 42 years, voluntarily at first. He returned briefly in 1982, only to be expelled as a “subversive” writer by the government of dictator (1954-1989) Alfredo Stroessner [03 Nov 1912~]. Roa Bastos returned permanently in the mid-1990's. He published more than 20 works of fiction, poems, plays and screenplays, many of them translated into dozens of languages. Among them were Hijo de Hombre (1960), a collection of stories; El Baldío (1966), a narrative of the social and political problems of Paraguay; Vigilia del Almirante (1992), a novel about Columbus, typical of his style of adding fictional elements to historical accounts. 1911 Luis W Alvarez physicist (Nobel-1968) 1908 Maria Elena Vieira da Silva, Portuguese French painter, engraver, stained glass and mosaic artist, who died on 06 March 1992. MORE ON VIEIRA AT ART 4 JUNE with links to images. 1899 Carlos Chavez Mexico City, conductor/composer (Sinfon¡a India) 1894 Mark van Doren Ill, author (The Happy Critic) 1894 Jacques-Henri Lartigue, French photographer who died in 1986.
1888 Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa, who died on 30 November 1935, Portuguese poet whose part in Modernism gave Portuguese literature European significance. From age 7 to 17 he lived in Durban, South Africa, where his stepfather was Portuguese consul. He became fluent in English. He worked as a commercial translator in Lisbon, while becoming a leading aesthetician of the Modernist movement, contributing articles to magazines. In 1918 he started publishing books of his English poetry. It is only after his death that he became famous for his Portuguese poetry, written in different styles under his own name and a variety of pen names embodying what he felt were his multiple personalities, such as Poesias de Fernando Pessoa Poesias de Alvaro de Campos Poemas de Alberto Caeiro Odes de Ricardo Reis. 1876 William Sealey Gosset “Student”, English chemist and mathematical statistician who died on 16 October 1937. He invented the t-test to handle small samples for quality control in brewing. 1875 Arthur Segal, Romanian artist who died on 23 June 1944. — more 1871 Ernst Steinitz, German mathematician who died on 29 September 1928. He worked on the theory of fields.
1839 Modesto Urgell e Inglada, Spanish artist who died on 03 April 1919. 1831 James Clerk Maxwell, Scottish mathematical physicist, who died on 05 November 1879. About 1862, he calculated that the speed of propagation of an electromagnetic field is approximately that of the speed of light. He concluded “that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.”. By treating gases statistically in 1866 he formulated, independently of Ludwig Boltzmann, the Maxwell-Boltzmann kinetic theory of gases. This theory showed that temperatures and heat involved only molecular movement. 1821 Albert duc de Broglie, France, premier (1873-1874, 1977) 1806 Anton Hartinger, Austrian artist who died on 24 January 1890. — Still Life with Fruit 1805 Magnus von Wright, Finnish painter and illustrator who died on 05 July 1868. — more with a bird, a fish, and a link to an image. 1786 Winfield Scott, US Army general famous for his victories in the War of 1812 and the War with Mexico, presidential candidate 1773 Thomas Young proponent of the wave theory of light 1752 Fanny Burney England, author (Camille, Evelina) BURNEY ONLINE: Johnson & Fanny Burney Evelina: or, The History of a Young Lady's Entrance Into the World 0823 Charles II (the Bald) king of France (843-77), emperor (875-77) 0040 Gnaeus Julius Agricola Roman general; conquered Wales and Northern. England |