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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
On June 2:
1966 - The U.S. space probe Surveyor I landed on the Moon and began transmitting detailed photographs of the lunar surface. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveyor_I |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
Shlomo Argov, 52, was leaving a diplomatic function at the Dorchester Hotel in Mayfair when a young man who had been seen loitering outside the building attacked him.
The gunman fired two shots with a machine pistol - one narrowly missing Mr Argov's police protection officer and the other hitting the envoy in the head. The assailant was shot by the bodyguard and also has serious head injuries. Two other men fled the scene in a car but were later stopped and arrested by police in Brixton. Witnesses Pergamon Press chairman Robert Maxwell was in the hotel when the shooting occurred. "It happened so suddenly and so unexpectedly that we really only noticed the consequences after it was over - we came out, there were shots and a man fell," he said. Assistant Commissioner Gilbert Kelland - a senior police officer also at the party - said Mr Argov's protection officer had then pursued the assailant into nearby South Street and shot him. Both the injured men were taken to Westminster Hospital and a witness told BBC correspondent Peter Snow they were in a "very serious state". Mr Argov - a career diplomat who is married with two daughters - was later transferred to a specialist unit at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Bloomsbury, for an emergency operation. Two shots were fired at Mr Argov In Context Shlomo Argov survived the attack but was permanently paralysed. Two Jordanians and an Iraqi linked to Palestinian extremist Abu Nidal were convicted of the attempted murder of the envoy in March 1983. Israeli Prime Minister Menachen Begin retaliated with "Operation Peace for Galilee", a full-scale invasion of Lebanon. The war lasted for 11 months and Israeli forces did not begin to withdraw from the country until June 1985. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
On June 3:
1965 - Astronaut Edward White became the first American to "walk" in space, during the flight of Gemini 4. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
On June 4:
1944 - The U.S. Fifth Army began liberating Rome during World War II. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
June 5, 1977 - The Apple II, the first practical personal computer, goes on sale.
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
On June 5:
1783 - Joseph Montgolfier and Jacques Montgolfier publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon in a 10-minute flight in France. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
http://www.history.com/tdih.do?action=tdihVideoCategory&id=51795
June 6th 1944 : D-Day On this day in 1944, Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower gives the go-ahead for largest amphibious military operation in history: Operation Overlord, code-named D-Day, the Allied invasion of northern France. By daybreak, 18,000 British and American parachutists were already on the ground. At 6:30 a.m., American troops came ashore at Utah and Omaha beaches. At Omaha, the U.S. First Division battled high seas, mist, mines, burning vehicles-and German coastal batteries, including an elite infantry division, which spewed heavy fire. Many wounded Americans ultimately drowned in the high tide. British divisions, which landed at Gold, and Sword beaches, and Canadian troops, landing at Juno beach, also met with heavy German fire, but by the end of the day they were able to push inland. Despite the German resistance, Allied casualties overall were relatively light. The United States and Britain each lost about 1,000 men, and Canada 355. Before the day was over, 155,000 Allied troops would be in Normandy. However, the United States managed to get only half of the 14,000 vehicles and a quarter of the 14,500 tons of supplies they intended on shore. Three factors were decisive in the success of the Allied invasion. First, German counterattacks were firm but sparse, enabling the Allies to create a broad bridgehead, or advanced position, from which they were able to build up enormous troop strength. Second, Allied air cover, which destroyed bridges over the Seine, forced the Germans to suffer long detours, and naval gunfire proved decisive in protecting the invasion troops. And third, division and confusion within the German ranks as to where the invasion would start and how best to defend their position helped the Allies. (Hitler, convinced another invasion was coming the next day east of the Seine River, refused to allow reserves to be pulled from that area.) Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, commander of Britain's Twenty-first Army Group (but under the overall command of General Eisenhower, for whom Montgomery, and his ego, proved a perennial thorn in the side), often claimed later that the invasion had come off exactly as planned. That was a boast, as evidenced by the failure to take Caen on the first day, as scheduled. While the operation was a decided success, considering the number of troops put ashore and light casualties, improvisation by courageous and quick-witted commanders also played an enormous role. The D-Day invasion has been the basis for several movies, from The Longest Day (1962), which boasted an all-star cast that included Richard Burton, Sean Connery, John Wayne, Robert Mitchum-and Fabian, to Saving Private Ryan (1998), which includes some of the most grippingly realistic war scenes ever filmed, captured in the style of the famous Robert Capa still photos of the actual invasion. |
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Former Member
Cruncher Joined: May 22, 2018 Post Count: 0 Status: Offline |
On June 6:
1933 - The first drive-in movie theater opened, in Camden, New Jersey. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive-in_theater |
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