Today in History.....June 16
On this day in …
* 1858, in a speech in Springfield, Ill., Senate candidate Abraham Lincoln said the slavery issue had to be resolved, declaring, "A house divided against itself cannot stand."
* 1897, the government signed a treaty of annexation with Hawaii
* 1917, Harry Miller completed the Golden Submarine, the first of his expensive custom-made race cars that would change the shape of things to come in American auto racing
* 1933, the National Industrial Recovery Act became law. (It was later struck down by the Supreme Court.)
* 1940, Marshal Henri-Philippe Petain, World War I hero, becomes prime minister of the Vichy government of France
* 1958, Imre Nagy, a former Hungarian premier and symbol of the nation's 1956 uprising against Soviet rule, is hanged for treason by his country's communist authorities
* 1961, following a meeting between President John F. Kennedy and South Vietnam envoy Nguyen Dinh Thuan, an agreement is reached for direct training and combat supervision of Vietnamese troops by U.S.
instructors. ALSO: Soviet ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev defected to the West while his troupe was in Paris
* 1963, the world's first female space traveler, Valentina Tereshkova, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union aboard Vostok 6
* 1977, Leonid Ilich Brezhnev, first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party since 1964, is elected president of the Supreme Soviet, thereby becoming both head of party and head of state
* 1978, President Carter and Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos exchanged the instruments of ratification for the Panama Canal treaties
* 1996, Russian voters went to the polls in their first independent presidential election; the result was a runoff between President Boris Yeltsin (the eventual winner) and Communist challenger Gennady Zyugano
* 1998, Compaq breathed a sigh of relief on this day in 1998 as a Brooklyn jury tossed out a lawsuit filed against the computing giant and its recently acquired subsidiary, Digital Equipment Corp. (DEC).
The suit had been filed by a group of nine people who claimed that DEC's keyboards had caused them "repetitive stress injuries." In return for their pain, the nine plaintiffs had sought a tidy $10 million in damages
* 1999, Kathleen Anne Soliah, a former member of the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), is arrested near her home in St. Paul, Minnesota. The small, radical American paramilitary group made a name for itself with a series of murders, robberies and other violent acts. They were most well-known for the 1974 kidnapping of heiress Patty Hearst, who later became a member of the group.
Soliah, who now calls herself Sara Jane Olsen, had been evading authorities for more than 20 years
* 2001, face to face for the first time, President Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged during a meeting in Slovenia to deepen their nations' bonds and to explore the possibility of compromise on U.S. missile defense plans
* 2005, European Union leaders put on hold plans to unite their 25 nations under a single constitution
1 Comments:
* 1961, following a meeting between President John F. Kennedy and South Vietnam envoy Nguyen Dinh Thuan, an agreement is reached for direct training and combat supervision of Vietnamese troops by U.S.
instructors.
Democrats In Action?
Post a Comment
<< Home