Wednesday, 6 June 2018

June 6, 2018

625 years ago
1393


Died on this date
Go-En'yū, 34
. Northern Pretender to the Japanese throne, 1371-1382. Go-En'yū was the fifth of the Ashikaga Pretenders during the period of two courts. He was preceded by Emperor Go-Kōgon and succeeded by Emperor Go-Komatsu.

475 years ago
1543


Exploration
Jean-François de La Roque de Roberval explored a short distance up the Saguenay River from La Malbaie in what is now Quebec.

210 years ago
1808


Europeana
Joseph Bonaparte, brother of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, was crowned King of Spain.

150 years ago
1868


Born on this date
Robert Falcon Scott
. U.K. explorer. Captain Scott was best known for his two expeditions to Antarctica: the Discovery Expedition (1901-1904), which was successful, and the ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition (1910-1913), in which the Scott party was beaten by Roald Amundsen in an attempt to be the first to reach the South Pole, and then froze to death on the way back. Capt. Scott was the last of his party to die, probably on March 29 or 30, 1912 at the age of 48. The bodies were discovered by a search party eight months later.

130 years ago
1888


Baseball
Henry Porter pitched a no-hitter for the Kansas City Blues as they blanked the Baltimore Orioles 4-0 at Union Park in Baltimore.

100 years ago
1918


Born on this date
Edwin G. Krebs
. U.S. biochemist. Dr. Krebs shared the 1992 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Edmond H. Fischer "for their discoveries concerning reversible protein phosphorylation as a biological regulatory mechanism." Dr. Krebs died on December 21, 2009 at the age of 91.

90 years ago
1928


Diplomacy
Harry Thaw, the wealthy American playboy who had killed architect Stanford White in 1906, arrived in London aboard a steamship, four years after being declared sane and regaining his freedom. The British Home Office refused him permission to land; he went to France; thence to Vienna, and finally back to the United States.

Scandal
Arthur K. Reading resigned as Attorney General of Massachusetts, the day after the state's House of Representatives voted 196-18 to impeach him after he accepted $60,000 worth of bribes, the largest being a $25,000 bribe from Decimo Club, Inc. The vote to impeach was the first such action taken in Massachusetts in 148 years.

Religion
It was reported that the Scottish Episcopal Church had eliminated the word "obey" from its marriage service. The Provisional Synod, which had been revising the canons and prayer book in use in Scotland, decided by majority vote of the Upper and Lower Houses to substitute the words: "Wilt thou love him and comfort him?" for "Wilt thou obey him and serve him?" They also decided that instead of the woman promising to "love, cherish and obey" she should undertake "to love and to cherish."

Economics and finance
A commercial treaty between the United States and Norway was signed in Washington.

75 years ago
1943


Died on this date
Pandelis Pouliopoulos, 43
. Greek Communist. Mr. Pouliopoulos was the founder of the Trotskyist movement in Greece. Imprisoned by the Greek regime of Ioannis Metaxas in 1938, he was one of 100 militants executed by Italian occupation forces in Nezero, near the Greek city of Larissa, in retaliation for the destruction by partisans of the Gorgopotamos bridge. The executions were carried out by the Carabinieri--the Italian military police--after soldiers refused to perform the task.

A. Lewis Hutchinson, 11. U.S. accident victim. Young Mr. Hutchinson was killed by a bullet fired from a rifle accidentally kicked over by William Donner Roosevelt, 10, grandson of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

War
U.K. warplanes shelled Pantelleraia Island for the fifth time, while U.S. planes bombed the island and attacked the Monserrato and Capoterra airfields in Sardinia. U.S. planes attacked Japanese troops and bases in the Yangtze River Valley between Ichang and Shasi, while Chinese troops reportedly killed or wounded 1,000 Japanese fleeing from Itu.

Defense
The U.S. Office of War Information reported that expected U.S. production of combat and cargo planes in 1943 would total $20.1 billion in value, one-quarter of the annual war budget.

Politics and government
Newly-installed President General Arturo Rawson dissolved the Argentine Congress, scheduled to meet the next day, and promised a new Congress when the time was "opportune."

Labour
The U.S. National War Labor Board ordered the Southport Petroleum Company of Texas City, Texas to abolish pay differentials between white and Negro workers engaged in equal work.

Baseball
The first game of the All-American Girls Softball League--later the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League--was played.

70 years ago
1948


On the radio
The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, starring John Stanley and Alfred Shirley, on MBS
Tonight's episode: The Complicated Poisoning at Eel Pie Island

Died on this date
Charles W. Nash, 84
. U.S. automobile executive. Mr. Nash worked as General Motors before founding Nash Motors in 1916. He became successful in marketing cars to middle-class people, and retired in 1937.

Politics and government
Galo Plaza Lasso, candidate of the National Democratic Civic Movement (MCDN) won a narrow victory in the Ecuadorian presidential election, taking 41.1% of the vote to 39.9% for Conservative Party (PC) candidate Manuel Flor Torres and 19.0% for Socialist Party-Broad Front (PLRE-PSE) candidate Camilo Ponce Enríquez.

A Roper Poll survey indicated that U.S. Army General (Retired) Dwight D. Eisenhower would defeat U.S. President Harry Truman 53%-26% in a current presidential election if he ran as the Republican nominee, and would defeat any Republican candidate if he ran as a Democrat.

60 years ago
1958


Hit parade
#1 single in the U.K. (New Musical Express): Who's Sorry Now--Connie Francis (4th week at #1)

On television tonight
Harbor Command, starring Wendell Corey
Tonight's episode: Lobster Smuggling

At the movies
The Man Who Died Twice, directed by Joseph Kane, and starring Rod Cameron, Vera Ralston, and Mike Mazurki, opened in theatres.



War
3,000 Muslim guerrillas attacked Lebanese government forces in the Tripoli-Halba area of northern Lebanon.

Politics and government
French Prime Minister Charles de Gaulle ordered the All-Algeria Committee of Public Safety to withdraw from political activity.

U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower nominated John McCone, a Republican businessman from Los Angeles, to succeed Lewis Strauss as chairman of the Atomic Energy Committee.

Economics and finance
Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, in a commencement address at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, proposed a program of U.S.-Canadian economic cooperation, including joint action against unemployment.

Labour
The U.S. Senate Labor Committee approved the Kennedy-Ives labour reform bill, providing for fedeal supervision of contested union elections.

Boxing
Virgil Akins (49-17-1) scored a technical knockout of Vince Martinez (60-6) at 52 seconds of the 4th round to win the world welterweight championship at St. Louis Arena. The title had been vacant since 1957, when Carmen Basilio relinquished the title in order to move up to the middleweight division.

50 years ago
1968


Died on this date
Kâzım Özalp, 87
. Turkish military officer and politician. General Özalp served in the Balkan Wars and World War I, and was a leading figure in the Turkish War of Independence. He was Turkey's Minister of National Defence from 1922-1924 and 1935-1939, and was Speaker of the Turkish Parliament from 1935-1939.

Randolph Churchill, 57. U.K. journalist and politician. Mr. Churchill, the son of Prime Minister Winston Churchill, was a reporter and columnist for various London newspapers and wrote the first two volumes of his father's biography. A Conservative, he won an uncontested by-election in Preston and represented the riding in the House of Commons from 1940-1945. Randolph Churchill, however, never won a contested election, in no small part because he could not conceal his dislike of the voters. He was best known for his unpleasant disposition, exacerbated by heavy drinking, which made him many enemies. Randolph Churchill eventually smoked and drank himself to death, dying of a heart attack in his sleep, nine days after his 57th birthday.

Robert F. Kennedy, 42. U.S. politician. Mr. Kennedy, a Democrat and the younger brother of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, was an attorney who worked with Senator Joseph McCarthy (Republican--Wisconsin) in the 1950s, and then served as Attorney General in the administrations of his brother and Lyndon Johnson (1961-1964). Mr. Kennedy was elected to the United States Senate in 1964, representing New York. His opposition to President Johnson's Vietnam policy led him to launch a campaign in March 1968 for the Democratic Party U.S. Presidential nomination. Sen. Kennedy won the California Democratic primary on June 4, and had just finished making his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles shortly after midnight on June 5 when he took a shortcut through the kitchen on his way out and was shot by Sirhan Sirhan. Sen. Kennedy died about 25 1/2 hours after being shot.





40 years ago
1978


On television tonight
20/20, hosted by Harold Hayes and Robert Hughes, on ABC

This was the first broadcast of the long-running newsmagazine program. It was such as disaster that Messrs. Hayes and Hughes were fired, and Hugh Downs took over as host for the next week's broadcast.



Law
The U.S. Supreme Court voted 7-2 to overturn a 1961 ruling and end the immunity of municipalities from civil rights lawsuits.

30 years ago
1988


Hit parade
#1 single in Australia (Australian Music Report): The Flame--Cheap Trick (2nd week at #1)

Labour
About two million black South Africans began a three-day strike in protest against a law before Parliament that would curb wildcat strikes, outlaw sympathy strikes, and possibly open striking unions to lawsuits. The strike was led by the Congress of South African Trade Unions, supported by the National Council of Trade Unions. It was believed to be the biggest strike in South African history.

25 years ago
1993


Hit parade
#1 single in New Zealand: That's the Way Love Goes--Janet Jackson (2nd week at #1)

#1 single in Austria (Ö3): What is Love?--Haddaway (5th week at #1)

#1 single in Switzerland: Informer--Snow (5th week at #1)

#1 single in Ireland (IRMA): In Your Eyes--Niamh Kavanagh (3rd week at #1)

Theatre
The Tony Awards for 1992-93 were presented at the Gershwin Theatre in New York. Angels in America: Millennium Approaches won four awards, including Best Play. Kiss of the Spider Woman won seven Tonys, including Best Musical. The Who's Tommy won five Tonys.

Disasters
At least 7 were killed, 16 injured, and 30 missing when a ship smuggling illegal Chinese aliens to the United States was wrecked in the surf off Queens, New York. The captain and and crew were charged the next day with smuggling aliens.

20 years ago
1998


Horse racing
Canadian-born Victory Gallop, with Gary Stevens up, won the 130th running of the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park, New York, in a time of 2:29.16, finishing inches ahead of Real Quiet and spoiling the latter horse's bid for the Triple Crown. Victory Gallop had placed second in both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes.

No comments: