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Jan 30 HISTORY 4 2DAY
|Feb 01 >> Events, deaths, births, of JAN 31 v.7.00 [For Jan 31 Julian go to Gregorian date: 1583~1699: Feb 10 1700s: Feb 11 1800s: Feb 12 1900~2099: Feb 13] |
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On
a 31 January: 2006 Alan Greenspan [06 Mar 1926~], chairman of the US Federal Reserve Bank since 11 August 1987, resigns. He is succeeded by Ben Bernanke [13 Dec 1953~]. — (060201) 2003 The US Food and Drug Administration determines that Prussian blue (ferric hexacyanoferrate) [sample >] swallowed in a 500-mg capsule, can reduce by half the time the body takes to eliminate radioactive cesium and thallium, which might be used in a radiation-spreading bomb. — more 2001 Libyan intelligence officer Abdelbasset Ali al-Megrahi, 48, is convicted of the murder of the 270 victims of the 21 December 1988 Pan Am crash in Lockerbie, Scotland. His Libyan co-defendant, Ali Amin Khalifa Fhimah, 44, is acquitted by the Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands. al-Megrahi's mandatory sentence is life in prison, the court recommends consideration of parole after 20 years. An appeal is expected. The families of the victims are expected to proceed with a $10 billion civil suit against Libya. 2001 During a 55-minute period a computer error posts extravagantly low United Airlines fares at www.ual.com. For example $24.98 for San Francisco to Paris round trip (at the special E-fare rate listed on 20 February 2001 at http://www.itn.net/cgi/get?itn/air/uamultipromo/index it would be $298). 143 such tickets are sold and United refuses to honor them until, faced with outraged customers, it relents on 19 February.
1996 The last Cubans held in refugee camps at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base board a plane for Florida. 1994 Dow Jones Industrial Average reaches a record 3978 1991 Allied forces claim victory against Iraqi attackers at battle for Khafji, Saudi Arabia, which ends after 3 days. 1991 During the Gulf War, Army Specialists Melissa Rathbun-Nealy and David Lockett are captured by Iraqi forces near the Kuwaiti-Saudi border; both would be eventually released. 1990 State of the Union Address by US President George H. W. Bush (Sr.).
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1990 First McDonald's in Soviet Union opens.The Soviet Union's first McDonald's fast food restaurant, the biggest in the world, opens in Moscow. Throngs of people line up to pay the equivalent of several days' wages for Big Macs, shakes, and french fries. The appearance of this notorious symbol of capitalism and the enthusiastic reception it received from the Russian people were signs that times were changing in the Soviet Union. An American journalist on the scene reported the customers seemed most amazed at the "simple sight of polite shop workers...in this nation of commercial boorishness." A Soviet journalist had a more practical opinion, stating that the restaurant was "the expression of America's rationalism and pragmatism toward food." He also noted that the "contrast with our own unrealized pretensions is both sad and challenging." For the average Russian customer, however, visiting the restaurant was less a political statement than an opportunity to enjoy a small pleasure in a country still reeling from disastrous economic problems and internal political turmoil. The arrival of McDonald's in Moscow was a small but certain sign that change was on the horizon. In fact, less than two years later, the Soviet Union ceased to exist as a nation, Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as leader of the country, and various Soviet republics proclaimed their independence. As the American newsman reported, the first Russian McDonald's customers "had seen the future, and it works, at least as far as their digestive tract." 1985 South African President PW Botha offers to free Mandela if he denounces violence 1982 10 Arabian oryx (extinct except in zoos) released in Oman [photo >] 1977 Frenchman François Claustre freed, after 33 months as hostage in Chad 1973 Washington Post story: Last Two Guilty in Watergate Plot Ex-Aides of Nixon to Appeal Jury Convicts Liddy, McCord in 90 Minutes by Lawrence Meyer (reporting on For the previous day) 1972 Birendra becomes king of Nepal (crowned in 1975), upon the death of his father king Mahendra. 1972 Military coup replaces the civilian government of Ghana by a National Redemption Council of military men chaired by Colonel Ignatius Kutu Acheampong. The national assembly was dissolved, public meetings prohibited, political parties proscribed, and leading politicians imprisoned.
1968 Nauru (formerly Pleasant Island) declares independence from Australia (celebrates Independence Day) 1968 Record high barometric pressure (1083.8 mb, 32"), at Agata, USSR
1961 NATO secretary-General Paul-Henri Spaak says he'll resign 1961 Ham is first primate in space (158 miles) aboard Mercury/Redstone 2 1958 James van Allen discovers radiation belt 1958 The US launches Explorer 1, the country's first satellite. Satellite communication would prove instrumental to the growth of wireless communications, including cell phones, pagers, cellular modems, and a variety of other mobile computing devices. 1957 Trans-Iranian oil pipe line finished 1956 French government of Mollet forms 1956 Juscelino Kubitschek becomes President of Brazil
1945 US 4th Infantry division occupies Elcherrath 1944 During World War II, US forces begin invading Kwajalein Atoll and other parts of the Japanese-held Marshall Islands. 1944 Operation-Overlord (D-Day) postponed until June 1943 Chile breaks diplomatic relations with Germany and Japan
1942 62 U boats sunk this month (327'000 tons) 1942 Chrysler, Plymouth, and Studebaker Retool For War The last pre-war automobiles produced by Chrysler, Plymouth, and Studebaker rolled off the assembly lines today. Wartime restrictions had shut down the commercial automobile industry almost completely, and auto manufacturers were racing to retool their factories for military gear. 1941 21 U boats sunk this month (127'000 tons) 1940 40 U boats sunk this month (111'000 tons)
1933 French government of Daladier takes power 1933 Hitler promises parliamentary democracy 1929 Leon Trotsky expelled from Russia to Turkey 1927 International allies military command in Germany disbands 1925 Premier Ahmed Zogu becomes President of Angola
1906 Strongest instrumentally recorded earthquake, Colombia, 8.6 Richter 1905 first auto to exceed 100 mph (161 kph), A G MacDonald, Daytona Beach 1901 Boer Generals Jan Smuts and De la Rey conquer Mud river Transvaal, during the South African war. 1895 José Martí and others leave New York City NY for invasion of Spanish Cuba 1871 Millions of birds fly over western San Francisco, darken the sky 1865 US House of Representatives passes 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery (121-24) 1865 General Robert E Lee named Commander-in-Chief of Confederate Armies 1865 Robert Edward Lee named General-in-Chief of all Confederate armies 1863 Confederate ironclads temporarily break the blockade at Charleston Harbor, South Carolina 1863 first black Civil War regiment, SC Volunteers, mustered into US army 1846 Corn Laws abolished in Britain
1627 Spanish government goes bankrupt 1596 Catholic League disjoins 1531 Kings Ferdinand of Austria/János Zápolyai of Hungary accept each other 1504 By treaty of Lyons, French cede Naples to Ferdinand of Aragon 0993 St. Ulrich, who lived 890-973, and was Bishop of Augsburg from 923, was canonized at a Lateran Synod. With this action by Pope John XV, St. Ulrich became the first individual in Roman Catholic history formally elevated to sainthood. 0876 Charles becomes king of Italy 0314 St Sylvester I begins his reign as Pope |
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Deaths
which occurred on a 31 January: 2005 Robert McCartney, 33, from injuries received the previous evening when he was beaten by about 20 IRA men and stabbed outside Magennis' pub in Belfast, Northern Ireland. McCartney’s friend Brendan Devine was badly injured. On 04 June 2005 Terence Malachy Davison, 49, is charged with McCartney’s murder and James McCormick, 36, is charged with the attempted murder of Devine. 2005 Norhan Deeb, 10, Palestinian girl, hit in the head by Israeli tank fire at a school administered by the UN Relief and Works Agency in the Rafah refugee camp, in the south of the Gaza Strip, 800 m from the border. The students were lined up in the schoolyard for afternoon assembly. Another schoolgirl, 7, is wounded in the hand. 2005 Three US Marines, killed in combat in Babil province, Iraq. 2005 US Army Spc. Holly J. McGeogh, 19, woman, by a roadside bomb near Kirkuk, Iraq. —(051025) 2004 Kevin Ponce, 6, from burns suffered the previous evening in El Paso, Texas, in a fire which caused the deaths of his father, Gilberto Ponce, his sisters, Valeria Ponce, 2, and Jennifer Ponce, 7, and his cousin Ruben Castillo Ponce, 11. Kevin and his sisters lived across the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, with their mother, but visited the El Paso home on weekends. 2004 Possibly 175 civilians, 700 government soldiers, and uncounted rebels, in West Darfur state in western Sudan, during an ongoing offensive by government forces, both regular army and Janjaweed militia, including bombing with Antonov planes, helicopter gunships, and heavy artillery, in areas held by the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), one of two main rebel groups in the area. According to rebels, four villages are burned and more than 75 civilians killed in government-led attacks in the area of west Jebel Marra, about 200 km east of Geneina, capital of West Darfur; and more than 100 civilians are killed and five villages burned in the Jebel Moon area, northeast of Geneina. 2004 One Iraqi civilian, by terrorist bomb in the Baladiyyat district of Baghdad, Iraq, in the late evening. 2004 Five Iraqi civilians, by terrorist bomb in the Baladiyyat district of Baghdad, Iraq, in the afternoon. 2004 Ten persons including suicide car bomber in front of a two-story police station in Mosul, Iraq. The bomber had driven through a security barricade. 44 persons are injured. 2004 Three US soldiers, by the explosion of a terrorist bomb at the passage of a 4th Infantry Division convoy 40 km southwest of Kirkuk, Iraq. 2004 Mehdi Mohammed Bayatli, assistant of Turkomen leader Hussein Maliand, who is injured, by shots from assailants, in the mainly Turkomen town Taza-hurmatu just outside Kirkuk, Iraq. The minority Turkomen are often in conflict with Kurds in the multiethnic Kirkuk region. 2003 Hazel Luther, in Florida. She was born on 11 December 1889 in Massachusetts. 2003 Iyad Mussa and a Palestinian firefighter, soon after midnight, in Jenin, West Bank. Israeli soldiers from the Egoz unit had surrounded the fire house, and called on wanted Hamas militant Mussa and firefighters to come out with their arms in the air and give themselves up. They did, except Mussa, who came out shooting. The Reuters body count of the al-Aqsa intifada is now “at least” 1810 Palestinians and 698 Israelis. 2003:: 18 persons on a minibus, on the Rambasi Bridge, 10 km south of Kandahar, Afghanistan, at 08:00 (03:30 UT), after anti-tank mine rigged to a mortar shell explodes. The driver, Ahmad Zia, 26, and a boy, Naimatullah, 12, are the only survivors. 2003 Twelve persons including the driver on a four-car train, speeding at 80 km/h in a 50km/h zone, with some 80 aboard which derails at 07:30, 4 km south of Waterfall station on its way from Sydney (30 km to the north) to Port Kembla. 2003
Philip Johannes Hendrik “Werenfried”
(Warrior for Peace) van Straaten “the Bacon Priest”
[< 1999 photo], born on 17 January 1913, Dutch Norbertine
(= Premonstratensian),
founder
on 25 December 1947 of Aid
to the Church in Need (Kirche
in Not / Osterpriesterhilfe). Author of Where God Weeps (1969)2000 All 83 passenger and 5 crew members aboard Alaska Airlines Flight 261, a McDonnell Douglas MD-83, which crashes at 16:17 into the Pacific Ocean off Point Mugu, California, after taking off from Puerta Vallarta at 14:30 bound for San Francisco. The plane had experienced stabilizer trim problems and was diverting to Los Angeles when it totally lost control, tumbling, spinning, nose down, continuous roll, corkscrewing, and inverted. [list of victims] 1996::
88 persons, in one of the worst attacks in Sri Lanka's civil war,
as members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam ram and explode a truck
packed with explosives into the Central Bank in Colombo. Some 1400 persons
are injured.
^ 1995 George Stibitz, inventor of early digital computer. George Stibitz developed an early digital calculator just to ease up his workload. In 1940, Stibitz worked on relay-switching equipment for Bell Telephone Laboratories, a job that required him to perform complex mathematical computations very quickly. One night at home after work, Stibitz devised an electronic adding machine, using dry cell batteries, metal strips from a tobacco can, and flashlight bulbs. The adding machine, called the Model I Complex Calculator, was used at Bell for the next nine years. Stibitz performed the first remote computer calculation on the Model I in 1941, contacting the machine in New York City via teletypewriter from Dartmouth. Stibitz later taught physiology at Dartmouth Medical School, where he pioneered computer applications in the biomedical arena. ^ 1980. Vicente Menchu, 27 Indian peasants, and 11 others, burned alive, inside the Spanish Embassy in Guatemala City, by the Guatemalan security forces. The peasants had occupied the embassy to protest massacres of Indians by the Guatemalan military during the 36-year civil war. Vicente Menchu's daughter, 1992 Nobel Peace Prize-winner Rigoberta Menchu weeps during a forum on justice in Guatemala City, 000128,. marking the 20th anniversary of the massacre. ^ 1974 Samuel Goldwyn, 92, Polish/English/US film magnate (MGM) Goldwyn was born Schmuel Gelbfisz in Warsaw, Poland. At age 11, he journeyed alone to England, where he stayed with relatives and worked as a blacksmith's helper. Two years after arriving in England, he emigrated alone and penniless to the United States, where he worked as an apprentice glovemaker for $3 a week and attended night school. He changed his name to Samuel Goldfish, and at age 18 he became a successful glove salesman. In 1910, he married Blanche Lasky, the sister of vaudeville performer and producer Jesse L. Lasky, and when the glove industry took a dive two years later, Goldfish needed a better way to make a living. He entered the film business with his brother-in-law and Cecil B. De Mille. Their first picture, The Squaw Man (1914), was a resounding success, generating enough revenue to fund the making of some 20 more films the same year. In 1916, their company merged with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players, and Goldfish was named chairman of the board. His partners bought him out soon afterward, so Goldfish formed a partnership with Edgar Selwyn. They called the company Goldwyn, a blend of their surnames. In 1918, Goldfish legally changed his surname to Goldwyn. Though the men had successfully recruited famous stars and top writers, their company struggled, and in 1922 Goldwyn was edged out of the corporation, which later merged with Metro Pictures and Louis B. Mayer productions to form MGM. On his own, Goldwyn formed Samuel Goldwyn Productions in 1923 and thrived on his newfound independence. His only collaborator was his second wife, former Broadway actress Frances Howard, who was the mother of his son, independent producer Samuel Goldwyn Jr. Stars launched under Goldwyn's tutelage included Danny Kaye, Gary Cooper, Will Rogers, and Lucille Ball, and among the writers he employed were Robert Sherwood, Sinclair Lewis, and Ben Hecht. He received the Irving Thalberg Memorial Award during the 1946 Oscars for high quality of production, and won a Best Picture Oscar the same year for The Best Years of Our Lives. He was also known for his philanthropy and seemingly endless series of classic "Goldwynisms," such as "A verbal agreement isn't worth the paper it's written on," and "Anyone seeing a psychiatrist should have his head examined." He died in 1974. 1967 Chief Thundercloud, 100, actor (Ambush, Colt 45, Typhoon) 1960 Auguste Herbin, French painter born on 29 April 1882. — more with link to an image.
1954 Edwin H Armstrong, 63, US radio inventor (FM), suicide 1953 Nearly 2000 drown as hurricane-like winds flood Netherlands
1891 Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier, French Academic painter specialized in historical scenes, sculptor, and illustrator, born on 21 February 1815. MORE ON MEISSONIER AT ART 4 JANUARY with links to images. 1888 St John Bosco, priest, founder of the Salesian Society. 1886 Watson, mathematician. — {When he asked what kind of mathematics he should study for his thesis, did his faculty advisor reply: “Elementary, my dear Watson.”?} 1854 Silvio Pellico, Italian author and patriot born on 24 June 1788. — (060111) 1841 Loyd, mathematician. 1788 [Bonnie Prince] Charles E Stuart, 67, English pretender. 1715 Giovanni Fagnano, mathematician. 1635 Willem Corneliszoon Duyster, Dutch painter of genre scenes and portraits born in 1599. MORE ON DUYSTER AT ART 4 JANUARY with links to images. 1632 Joolt Bürgi, Swiss clockmaker, maker of scientific instruments, mathematician, born on 28 February 1552. He discovered logarithms independently of Napier [1550 – 04 Apr 1617].
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Births
which occurred on a 31 January: 1955 First music synthesizer is demonstrated by RCA. 1948 Magnetic tape recorder developed by Wireway 1941 Richard A Gephardt (Representative-D-MO, 1977- ) 1938 Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard queen of Netherlands (1980- ) 1937 Philip Glass Baltimore MD, composer (Einstein on the Beach) 1934 Sommerville, mathematician. 1928 Scotch tape first marketed by 3-M Company 1923 Norman Mailer New Jersey, New York City NY mayoral candidate/novelist (Naked and the Dead) (Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist: The Armies of the Night; Miami and the Siege of Chicago, The Executioner's Song, The Naked and the Dead, An American Dream) 1920 Stewart L Udall St Johns AZ, US Secretary of Interior (1961-69) 1919 Jackie Robinson Georgia, first black major league baseball player (Dodgers) 1915 Thomas Merton France, Trappist monk/poet/essayist (7 Storey Mt) 1902 Alva Myrdal Uppsala Sweden, diplomat (Nobel Peace Prize-1982) 1881 Irving Langmuir physical chemist/colloid researcher/inventor (tungsten filament lamp/Nobel 1932) 1881 Max Hermann Pechstein, German Expressionist painter and printmaker who died on 25 (19?) June 1955. — more with links to images. 1878 Pio Semeghini, Italian painter who died on 11 March 1964. — more with links to images. 1876 Josef Anton von Gegenbaur, German painter born on 06 March 1800. — more with link to an image.
1824 Willem Vester, Dutch artist who died in July 1871. — links to images. 1797 Franz Peter Schubert Lichtenthal Austria, composer (Unfinished Symphony) 1735 T. Kettle, British painter, active in India, who died in July 1786. — more with links to images. 1573 Giulio Cesare Monteverdi composer |
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