Friday 29 June 2018

June 29: Do not fear failure but rather fear not trying.



On this day, 29 June...

1956 - The Act that made possible the modern interstate highway system in the U.S. was signed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Eisenhower had seen the speed and efficiency in moving troops and equipment on the four-lane autobahns in Germany during WW II. 

1916 - Boeing aircraft flies for the 1st time.

1993 - 24 Jawans were killed in an ambush by NSCN militants in Manipur.

1998 - Indian Government decides to grant full statehood for Delhi and create three new States namely Uttaranchal, Vananchal and Chattisgarh.

1999 - An Indian High Commissioner member N. R. Doraiswamy is beaten up by Pakistani intelligence operatives.

Born 

1893 – Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, Indian economist and statistician (d. 1972)

1991 – R. Jeeva, Indian Tamil Musician

RIP

1533 - Chaitanya Maha Prabhu, vaishnav Sant.

1873 - Micheal Madhusudan Dutta, first Bengali modern poet.

2000 – Kamini Kadam, actor.

2011 – K. D. Sethna, Indian poet, scholar, writer, philosopher, and cultural critic (b. 1904)

Titbits

2008 - Thomas Beatie, the world's first pregnant man, gives birth to a daughter.

2002 - US Vice President Dick Cheney, serves as Acting President for two and a half hours, while President George W. Bush undergoes a colonoscopy procedure. 

You may have known...

Most people forget 90% of their dreams. 

Business News


  • PNB scam: ED files Prosecution Complaint/charge sheet in the court against Mehul Choksi. The complaint charged Choksi and 13 others - Eight Individuals and Five Companies - under section 4 of the Act for the offence of money laundering.

  • HDFC Asset Management Co. Ltd, the Country’s Largest Mutual Fund, receives SEBI’s Approval to Float an Initial Public Offer (IPO).

  • Indian Bank to Withdraw Dividend Payment Resolution after RBI's reply that the Bank can declare a dividend after Fully Providing for Mark-to-Market (MTM) Loss, Gratuity and Other Provisions.

  • GSTN to Temporarily Shut Down on 1st July, on the First Anniversary Day of GST.

  • United Forum of IDBI Bank Officers and Employees Conveys its Serious Concern to the Finance Minister over the Govt’s move to sell a Significant Stake in the bank to LIC.

  • Special CBI Court sentenced Additional Commissioner of Income-Tax,  Sumitra Banerjee and Asst. Comm. I-tax, Anjali Bambole, to Five Years' Imprisonment for allegedly demanding Rs 1.7 Crore Bribe from a Thane-based builder, in a graft case of 2010.

  • LIC Buys First Issuance of Longest Maturity 30-year Bonds of Rs. 2000 crore sold by NHAI.

  • As per an Internal Report, Government Rejects Bad Bank Proposal to Resolve NPA Crisis.

Thursday 28 June 2018

June 28: Leadership cannot really be taught. It can only be learned.


On this day, 28 June...

 1762 - 1st reported counterfeiting attempt (Boston).

1832 - In 1832, the first American case of a cholera epidemic was reported in New York City. Previously, Europe and the Americas were unaffected by the First Cholera Pandemic of 1817 when cholera, long endemic to the Indian subcontinent, spread to Arabia, Syria, and southern Russia. This abated in the early 1820's, but a new cholera cycle began in 1826. It invaded the British Isles in Oct 

1831. Canada was struck shortly before cholera reached New York. 

1846 - Saxophone is patented by Antoine Joseph Sax.

1859 - 1st dog show held (Newcastle-on-Tyne, England).

1909 - 1st French air show, Concours d'Avation opens.

1919 - Treaty of Versailles, ending WWI and establishing the League of Nations, is signed in France.

1928 - Austrian Friedrich Schmiedl launched his first experimental rocket. The design he first used was not successful. However, by 9 Sep 1931, he started the world's first official postal rocket-mail service between two Austrian towns. A parachute provided a safe landing. His rocket-mail service continued until 16 Mar 1933 when laws prohibited the civilian use of explosives (including his rocket fuel).

1938 -    In 1938, an aerial tramway, the first in North America, was dedicated. This was popular with the Boston-area ski clubs.

1958 - In 1958, the Mackinac Bridge, the then world longest suspension bridge, 3800 feet, was dedicated. (Today there are many bridges longer than this. The longest suspension bridge since 1998 is Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, 1991 metres).

1965 - 1st US ground combat forces in Vietnam authorised by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

1965 - The first commercial telephone conversation over a satellite took place over Early Bird I between America and Europe. 

1975 - As a response to anti-government demonstrations, India imposes the toughest press censorship since independence.

1976 - the 1st woman was admitted to US Air Force Academy.

1986 - Indian Union Government sanctions maternity leave for unmarried women employees too.

1986 - Accord with Mizo National Front; Lal Denga to be the chief minister of Mizoram.

1992 - A 35-year-old man at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre became the world's first recipient of a baboon liver transplant. Dr John Fung with colleagues Drs. Andreas Tzakis and Satoru Todo performed the transplant operation. The patient was dying from hepatitis B. Although the patient died from a brain haemorrhage 71 days after the historic surgery, the field of xenotransplantation, or cross-species transplantation, was advanced considerably. A second xenotransplant operation was made on 10 Jan 1993 on a 62-year-old man who lived 26 days with the baboon's liver. No further xenotransplants are currently planned there, but xenotransplantation research remains a major focus of the investigation at the university.

Born

1921 - P V Narasimha Rao, former Prime Minister.

1976 - Jaspal Rana, shooter.

Titbits

1820 - Tomato is proven non-poisonous.

You may have known…

Women blink twice as much as men.

Business News

  • GSTN to go in for Third-Party Audit of its Software developed by Infosys to ensure that all changes in the law are Adequately Captured and its Performance is not lagging on any count says CEO Prakash Kumar 

  • Bombay HC admits plea by Real estate developers, challenging GST on the sale of land. The high court has Issued Notices to the Central Govt., the Maharashtra Govt. and the GST Council in this matter.

  • PNB scam: Mehul Choksi Moves Court Seeking Cancellation of Non-Bailable Warrant (NBW) issued against him 

  • NCLAT Declines to Stay Delisting of ElectroSteel Steels by Vedanta on the plea of Renaissance Steel, whose bid was rejected by the committee of creditors (CoC)

  • Govt Approves & Provides Capital Infusion Support of Rs 2,000 Crore to Export Credit Guarantee Corporation (ECGC) to Enhance Insurance Coverage to Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises Exports(MSME). It has also Approved Contribution of Grant-in-Aid (corpus) of Rs 1,040 Crore to National Export Insurance Account Trust (NEIA) to Promote Project Exports

  • State Bank of India (SBI) has Closed Six Foreign Branches and is in the process of closing down another nine branches as part of Rationalisation of Overseas Operations

  • SEBI  is gearing up to usher the next set of reforms in the Commodity Market by Allowing Mutual Funds to participate in the segment while also Actively Considering Allowing Derivatives on Commodity Indices.

Wednesday 27 June 2018

June 27: There is no “one” way to be a perfect leader, but there are a million ways to be a good one.



On this day, 27 Jun...

1954 - The world's first atomic power station began producing electricity in Obninsk, U.S.S.R., a small town 60 miles south of Moscow.

1955 - 1st automobile seat belt legislation enacted (Illinois, US).

1964 - Teen Murti Bhavan, which had been the official residence of Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru, was converted into the Nehru Memorial Museum.

1967 - First Indian made AVRO aircraft passenger Plane HS748 handed over to Indian Airlines.

1978 - The first pen with truly erasable ink, the Gillette Eraser Mate, was invented. 

1979 - Heavyweight Muhammad Ali confirms that his 3rd retirement is final (it wasn't).

1990 - Salman Rushdie, condemned to death by Iran, contributes $8600 to help their earthquake victims.

2000 - The Clinton administration rejects a demand by 21 U.S. Congressmen for declaring India a terrorist state in the wake of attacks on Christian priests and churches.

2008 - Bill Gates steps down as Chairman of Microsoft Corporation to work full time for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Born

1838 - Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay (Chatterjee), the famous novelist, "the father of modern Indian fiction" and writer of national song 'Vande Mataram'.

1939 - RD Burman (Panchami Da), composer, singer, and actor.

1964 - PT Usha, athlete.

RIP

1839 - Maharaja Ranjit Singh, ruler of Punjab.

2008 - Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, former Indian Army Chief.

Titbits

 1932 - In Britain, the Baird Laboratories exhibited a range of domestic TV sets. The screen size was.  

You may have known…

Women’s hearts are proven to beat faster than men’s.

Business News

  • GST Provisions on TDS/TCS, Reverse Charge Mechanism Deferred by another 3 Months Till September-end.

  • Petition in Madras HC against the constitution of GST Appellate Tribunal 

  • NCLT Admits Insolvency Petition filed by SBI Against Uttam Value Steel Ltd, a Listed Subsidiary of Uttam Galva Steels Ltd

  • SEBI Receives 8 Counter Bids, that can Offer Higher Price for the Properties belonging to PACL group, than that proposed by the company

  • A Special Court in Mumbai allows probe agency ED to Start Extradition Process Against Nirav Modi

  • China to Cut Import Tariffs on Soybean & Other Items from India amid trade war with the US. The reduction of duties, announced by the State Council or China’s cabinet, will take effect from July 1.

  • EPFO gives its members an option to withdraw 75 percent of their funds after one month of unemployment and keep their PF account with the body.

  • RBI slaps ₹6-Crore Penalty on Tamilnad Mercantile Bank for its Lapses in adhering to the Master Directions issued by it on Issue and Pricing of Shares.

  • Federation of Indian Art Silk Weaving Industry (FIASWI) has demanded Imposition of Additional Customs Duty on Silk Fabrics Imported from Vietnam to provide a Level-Playing Field to Indian Manufacturers.

Tuesday 26 June 2018

June 26: Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing.


On this day, 26 June...

4 AD – Augustus adopts Tiberius.

221 – Roman emperor Elagabalus adopts his cousin Alexander Severus as his heir and receives the title of Caesar.

363 – Roman emperor Julian is killed during the retreat from the Sasanian Empire.

684 – Pope Benedict II is chosen.

699 – En no Ozuno, a Japanese mystic, and apothecary who will later be regarded as the founder of a folk religion Shugendō, is banished to Izu Ōshima.

1243 – Mongols defeat the Seljuk Turks at the Battle of Köse Dağ.

1295 – Przemysł II crowned king of Poland, following Ducal period. The white eagle is added to the Polish coat of arms.

1407 – Ulrich von Jungingen becomes Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights.

1409 – Western Schism: The Roman Catholic Church is led into a double schism as Petros Philargos is crowned Pope Alexander V after the Council of Pisa, joining Pope Gregory XII in Rome and Pope Benedict XII in Avignon.

1460 – Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, and Edward, Earl of March, land in England with a rebel army and march on London.

1483 – Richard III becomes King of England.

1522 – Ottomans begin the second Siege of Rhodes.

1541 – Francisco Pizarro is assassinated in Lima by the son of his former companion and later antagonist, Diego de Almagro the younger. Almagro is later caught and executed.

1579 – Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory begins.

1718 – Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia, Peter the Great's son, mysteriously dies after being sentenced to death by his father for plotting against him.

1723 – After a siege and bombardment by cannon, Baku surrenders to the Russians.

1740 – A combined force of Spanish, free blacks, and allied Indians defeat a British garrison at the Siege of Fort Mose near St. Augustine during the War of Jenkins' Ear.

1794 – French Revolutionary Wars: Battle of Fleurus marked the first successful military use of aircraft.

1830 – William IV becomes king of Britain and Hanover.

1843 – Treaty of Nanking comes into effect, Hong Kong Island is ceded to the British "in perpetuity".

1848 – End of the June Days Uprising in Paris.

1857 – The first investiture of the Victoria Cross in Hyde Park, London.

1870 – The Christian holiday of Christmas is declared a federal holiday in the United States.

1886 – Henri Moissan isolated elemental Fluorine for the first time.

1889 – Bangui is founded by Albert Dolisie and Alfred Uzac in what was then the upper reaches of the French Congo.

1906 – The first Grand Prix motor racing event held.

1909 – The Science Museum in London comes into existence as an independent entity.

1917 – World War I: The American Expeditionary Forces begin to arrive in France. They will first enter combat four months later.

1918 – World War I: Allied forces under John J. Pershing and James Harbord defeat Imperial German forces under Wilhelm, German Crown Prince in the Battle of Belleau Wood.

1924 – The American occupation of the Dominican Republic ends after eight years.

1927 – The Cyclone roller coaster opens on Coney Island.

1934 – United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Federal Credit Union Act, which establishes credit unions.

1936 – Initial flight of the Focke-Wulf Fw 61, the first practical helicopter.

1940 – World War II: Under the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the Soviet Union presents an ultimatum to Romania requiring it to cede Bessarabia and the northern part of Bukovina.

1941 – World War II: Soviet planes bomb Kassa, Hungary (now Košice, Slovakia), giving Hungary the impetus to declare war the next day.

1942 – The first flight of the Grumman F6F Hellcat.

1944 – World War II: San Marino, a neutral state, is mistakenly bombed by the RAF based on faulty information, leading to 35 civilian deaths.

1944 – World War II: The Battle of Osuchy in Osuchy, Poland, one of the largest battles between Nazi Germany and Polish resistance forces, ends with the defeat of the latter.

1945 – The United Nations Charter is signed by 50 Allied nations in San Francisco, California.

1948 – Cold War: The first supply flights are made in response to the Berlin Blockade.

1948 – William Shockley files the original patent for the grown-junction transistor, the first bipolar junction transistor.

1948 – Shirley Jackson's short story The Lottery is published in The New Yorker magazine.

1952 – The Pan-Malayan Labour Party is founded in Malaya, as a union of statewide labor parties.

1953 – Lavrentiy Beria, head of MVD, is arrested by Nikita Khrushchev and other members of the Politburo.

1955 – The South African Congress Alliance adopts the Freedom Charter at the Congress of the People in Kliptown.

1959 – Swedish boxer Ingemar Johansson becomes world champion of heavyweight boxing, by defeating American Floyd Patterson on the technical knockout after two minutes and three seconds in the third round at Yankee Stadium.

1960 – The former British Protectorate of British Somaliland gains its independence as Somaliland.

1960 – Madagascar gains its independence from France.

1963 – Cold War: U.S. President John F. Kennedy gave his "Ich bin in Berliner" speech, underlining the support of the United States for democratic West Germany shortly after Soviet-supported East Germany erected the Berlin Wall.

1967 – Karol Wojtyła (later John Paul II) made a cardinal by Pope Paul VI.

1974 – The Universal Product Code is scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley's chewing gum at the Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio.

1975 – Two FBI agents and a member of the American Indian Movement are killed in a shootout on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota; Leonard Peltier is later convicted of the murders in a controversial trial.

1977 – Elvis Presley held his final concert in Indianapolis, Indiana at Market Square Arena

1978 – Air Canada Flight 189, flying to Toronto, overruns the runway and crashes into the Etobicoke Creek ravine. Two of the 107 passengers on board perish.

1991 – Yugoslav Wars: The Yugoslav People's Army begins the Ten-Day War in Slovenia.

1995 – Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani deposes his father Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani, the Emir of Qatar, in a bloodless coup d'état.

1997 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the Communications Decency Act violates the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

2000 – The Human Genome Project announces the completion of a "rough draft" sequence.

2000 – Pope John Paul II reveals the third secret of Fátima.

2003 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules in Lawrence v. Texas that gender-based sodomy laws are unconstitutional.

2006 – Mari Alkatiri, the first Prime Minister of East Timor, resigns after weeks of political unrest.

2007 – Pope Benedict XVI reinstates the traditional laws of papal election in which a successful candidate must receive two-thirds of the votes.

2008 – A suicide bomber dressed as an Iraqi policeman detonates an explosive vest, killing 25 people.

2012 – The Waldo Canyon fire descends into the Mountain Shadows neighborhood in Colorado Springs burning 347 homes in a matter of hours and killing two people.

2013 – Riots in China's Xinjiang region kill at least 36 people and injure 21 others.

2013 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 5–4, that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional and in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

2015 – Five different terrorist attacks in France, Tunisia, Somalia, Kuwait, and Syria occurred on what was dubbed Bloody Friday by international media. Upwards of 750 people were either killed or injured in these uncoordinated attacks.

2015 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 5–4, that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marriage under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution.

Born

1873 – Gauhar Jaan, One of the first performers to record music on 78 rpm records in India. (d. 1930)

1926 – Mahendra Bhatnagar, Indian poet.

RIP

2004 – Yash Johar, Indian film producer, founded Dharma Productions (b. 1929)

Monday 25 June 2018

June 25: Successful leaders see the opportunities in every difficulty rather than the difficulty in every opportunity.


On this day, 25 June...

1630 - Fork introduced to American dining by Gov Winthrop. (Knives and spoons are ancient. But we’ve only been eating with forks for a few centuries. Knives are the descendants of sharpened hand axes—the oldest human tools. It is likely that the first spoons derived from whichever local objects were used to scoop up liquid. The word for spoon in both Latin and Greek derives from a snail shell while the Anglo-Saxon ‘spon’ means chip. The fork was commonly viewed with skepticism or even outright hostility.  The fork's image problem could be connected to its resemblance to the devil's pitchfork, a word from which it derives its name). 

1658 - 6th Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb arrested his father Shahjahan and put him in Agra Fort Jail.

1667 - 1st blood transfusion performed by French Doctor Jean-Baptiste Denys.

1783 - Antonie Lavoisier announced to the French Academy of Sciences that water was the product formed by the combination of hydrogen and oxygen. ( However, this discovery had been made earlier by the English chemist Henry Cavendish). 

1867 - Barbed wire was patented by Lucien B. Smith of Kent, Ohio, US. His simple idea that was an artificial "thorn hedge" consisting of wire with short metal spikes twisted on by hand at regular intervals. For prairie farmers and cattlemen natural fencing materials were scarce, so the invention met the need to keep their cattle safely away from crops. (Barbed wire prevented crop damage by cattle and improved agriculture. It also reduced the cost of fencing vis-à-vis wood, particularly in areas with limited woodlands).

1924 - Tuberculosis vaccine was developed by Prof Albert Calmette and Alphonse Guerin.

1932 - Commencement of India's 1st cricket Test v England at Lord's.

1951 - Advent of color TV.  At 4:35 pm, the Columbia Broadcasting System televised the one-hour premiere of commercial color television with a programme named Premiere.

1975 - President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed signed the declaration of Emergency Rule in India. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi implemented the same very next day.

1983 - India won 'Prudential World Cup' Cricket Championship held in England after defeating West Indies.

2011 - According to a new study, the number of adults in the world with diabetes has doubled since 1980.

Born

1900 - Louis Mountbatten, last British Viceroy and first Governor General of independent India.

1903 - George Orwell [Eric Arthur Blair], British writer;   born in Motihari, Bihar.  

1931 - Vishwanath Pratap Singh, former Prime Minister of India.

1951 – Satish Shah, actor.

1974 - Karisma Kapoor, actor.

1975 – Manoj Kumar Pandey, an Indian Army Captain of 1/11 Gorkha Rifles who was posthumously awarded India's highest gallantry award ‎Param Vir Chakra in Kargil.

RIP

2009 - Michael Jackson, American recording artist, entertainer and King of Pop music. 

Titbits

1997 - Christie's auctions off Princess Diana’s clothing for $5.5 million.

You may have known...

In Tokyo, a bicycle is faster than a car for commutes that are less than 50 minutes.

Sunday 24 June 2018

June 24: Real leaders are ordinary people with extraordinary determinations.


On this day, 24 Jun...

1873 - Samuel Clemens (the author known as Mark Twain) received a U.S. patent for a self-pasting Scrapbook.  (Earlier, in 1871, Samuel Clemens received his first patent for "An Improvement in Adjustable and Detachable Garment Straps"). 

1894 - Decision was taken to hold modern Olympics every 4 years.

1930 - The first radar detection of aircraft took place (in US).

1943 - Dr. William Randolph Lovelace II jumped out of a B-17 bomber flying at 40,200 feet in order to test the emergency oxygen unit he had designed with colleagues. It was his first ever parachute jump. (An unaided parachutist at such high altitude would quickly lose consciousness due to lack of oxygen, and unable to pull the parachute ripcord when needed. When he opened his parachute, it was the sudden deceleration of 32 g's, which knocked him unconscious. He lost a glove, and in the sub-zero (-40º F) temperature his hand became frostbitten. The oxygen unit kept him alive. He regained consciousness at a lower altitude, and landed almost 24 minutes after he bailed out. His test led to development of automatic parachute opening devices).

1946 - Congress party rejects British plan for provisional govt pending constitution in New Delhi.

1961 Indian Manufactured Supersonic fighter HF24 took to air for the first time.

1963 - The first demonstration of a home video recorder was made at the BBC News Studios in London.  The open-reel recorder was mounted on the top of a television cabinet. Developed by Norman Rutherford and Michael Turner.

1986 – Indian Government announced that unmarried mothers under its employment would also get maternity leave.

1989 - A Majority of Opposition Members in the Lok Sabha Resign on the Issue of the CAG Report on the Bofors Gun Deal.

1990 - Defence scientists in India successfully test fired country's first third generation anti-tank    

1991 - The first-ever BJP ministry led by Kalyan Singh takes over in UP.

2011 - The cell phone of Osama bin Laden's courier is reported to contain contacts with Harakat-ul-Mujahadeen, suggesting potential ties to Pakistan's intelligence agencies.

Born

1885 - Master Tara Singh, freedom fighter and leader of Akali Dal.

1908 - Guru Gopinath, Indian classical dancer.  

1962 - Gautam Adani, businessperson.

RIP

1966 - Bombay-New York Air India flight crashes into Mont Blanc (Switzerland), 117 die.

1980 - Varahagiri Venkata Giri, Fourth President of India. 

Titbits

1916 - Mary Pickford becomes the first female film star to get a million dollar contract. 

1974 - India all out for 42 in Lord's Test cricket in 77 mins.
2010 - Longest match in tennis history: John Isner of the U.S. defeats Nicolas Mahut of France at Wimbledon after 11 hours, 5 minutes of play over three days.

You may have known...

A jellyfish is about 95% water.

Saturday 23 June 2018

June 23: The ultimate measure of a leader is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.


On this day, 23 Jun...

930 - World's oldest parliament, the Icelandic Parliament, was established. 

1661 - Princess Catherine of Portugal wed King Charles II of England. Portugal gave island of Mumbai to England as present. The British got Bombay as dowry from Portugal.

1757 - Robert Clive defeats Nawab Siraj-ud-daulah, the last independent Nawab of Bengal, at Plassey, wins control of Bengal. (Plassey is an anglicised name for Palashi, a village on the Bhagirathi river).

1775 - The first American-made book was advertised in Philadelphia. Titled Impenetrable Secret, the book was printed and sold by Story and Humphreys. Sadly, no copy of the book has survived.  

1784 - In Baltimore,  America's first balloonist, was a teenager,13-year-old Edward Warren, who soloed in a 35-foot diameter hot-air balloon held in place from the ground with a tether.

1868 - Christopher Latham Sholes, Carlos Glidden and Samuel W. Soule of Milwaukee, US, received a patent for an invention he called a “Type-Writer”. It only had capital letters and fit in a box about 2 feet square and 6" high. The typists didn't know if they were making errors because the paper could not be seen as it was being typed; it was inside the machine.

1964 - Arthur Melin obtained a patent for the hula-hoop. An Australian visiting California told Melin that in his country, children twirled bamboo hoops around theirs waists in gym class.

1894 - The International Olympic Committee is founded at the Sorbonne, Paris, at the initiative of Baron Pierre de Coubertin.

1927 - All India radio broadcasting service started by a private transmitting station in Bombay and Calcutta.

1930 - The Simon Commission recommends a federal India and separation of Burma.

1946 - In South Africa, a group of white men attack and assault Indian Passive Resisters.

1961 - The Antarctic Treaty, ensuring that Antarctica is used for peaceful purposes; for international cooperation in scientific research; and does not become the scene or object of international discord, comes into force.

1961 - An X-15 jet airplane set a speed record, travelling over 3,000 mph at Edwards Air Force Base, California. 

1985 - Bomb destroys Air India Boeing 747 'Kanishka' in air near Ireland. A total of 329 people were killed, including 268 Canadian citizens, 27 British citizens and 24 Indian citizens. Canadian law enforcement determined that the main suspects in the bombing were members of the Sikh militant group Babbar Khalsa. The subsequent investigation and prosecution lasted almost twenty years. This was the most expensive trial in Canadian history, costing nearly C$130 million. The report concluded a "cascading series of errors" by various Canadian security agencies.  

1992 - "Teen Bigha Day" protest in India of corridor opening to Bangladesh.
The Teen Bigha Corridor  is a strip of land belonging to India on the West Bengal–Bangladesh border which, in September 2011, was leased to Bangladesh so that it can access its Dahagram–Angarpota enclaves. (According to the Indira Gandhi-Sheikh Mujibur Rahman treaty of 16 May, 1974, India and Bangladesh were to hand over the sovereignty of the Teen Bigha Corridor  and South Berubari to each other. Bangladesh did hand over the sovereignty of the smaller South Berubari to India instantly in 1974. India, however, could not transfer the Tin Bigha Corridor to Bangladesh as it required constitutional amendment which could not be done due to political reasons. After much Bangladesh government protest, India, instead of handing over sovereignty in 2011, proposed to lease the Teen Bigha Corridor to Bangladesh for a certain time. South Berubari, meanwhile, would remain in the possession of India).


Born

1921 - Rehman, actor.

1952  - Raj Babbar, actor, politician

RIP

1953 - Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, great social reformer, politician and national leader, founder of Jan Sangh Party.

1975 - General Prannath Thapar, former Army Chief.

1980 - Sanjay Gandhi, politician and General Secretary AICC (I).

Titbits

1928 - In Germany, a rocket-powered auto built by Opel was wrecked in a test after reaching a speed of 156 mph.   

You may have known...

A classic violin contains about 70 different pieces of wood.

Business News

  • The Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) has directed the SEBI to conduct a fresh probe into the acquisition of Network18 Media & Investments by Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL)

  • A year into implementation,  GST has not delivered on the promised formalisation of the economy as yet, while the glitches in the one-nation-one-tax regime has increased the demand for cash, says a foreign brokerage report.

  • The income-tax (I-T) department has proposed clear-cut timelines by which excess amount assessed by transfer pricing officials  over what was declared by associated enterprises of  MNCs has to be brought in India. These timelines relate to advance pricing agreements (APAs) and mutual agreement procedures (MAPs). 

  • Alarmed over the number of card-skimming cases at ATMs, the RBI has asked banks to install anti-skimming devices and ‘white-listing’ solutions in the cash machines by March 2019.

  • The Indian Banks’ Association  has suggested setting up of an independent committee and to include a RBI official as a part of the panel to scrutinise charges against bankers. 

Friday 22 June 2018

June 22: Leadership does not depend on being right.


On this day, 22 Jun...

1555 - Humayun crossed the Indus and captured Lahore and ousted Sikandar Suri of Delhi throne.

1633 - Galileo Galilei was forced to recant his Copernican views that the Earth orbits the Sun by the Pope. He was forced to “abjure, curse, and detest” his Copernican heliocentric views. “I, Galileo...do swear that I have always believed, do now believe and, with God's aid shall believe hereafter, all that which is taught and preached by the ... church. I must wholly forsake the false opinion that the sun is the center of the world and moves not and that the earth is not the center of the world and moves....”.  

1675 - The Royal Greenwich Observatory was created by Royal Warrant in England by Charles II. Apart from other contributions, it established the longitude of Greenwich as a baseline for time calculations.

1815 - the 2nd abdication of Napoleon (after Waterloo).

1832 - A pin manufacturing machine was patented by John Ireland Howe.  He also invented the machine to stick the pins in paper packets.

1841 - The first U.S. patent for a typesetting machine was issued to Frenchman Adrien Delcambre and Englishman James Hadden Young.

1897 - The Chafekar brothers, Damodar and Balkrishna, shot British Officer Rand in Pune. This event played a very important role in the revolutionary freedom struggle. (In late 1896, Pune was hit by the bubonic plague. By the end of February 1897, the epidemic was raging, with a mortality rate double the norm. Half the population of the city left. A Special Plague Committee was formed, under the chairmanship of W. C. Rand, an Indian Civil Services officer. Troops were brought in to deal with the emergency. The measures employed included forced entry into private houses, forced stripping and examination of occupants - including women - by British officers in public. These measures were considered oppressive by the populace of Pune and complaints were ignored by Rand. On 22 June 1897, the Diamond Jubilee of the coronation of Queen Victoria, Rand, and his military escort Lt. Ayerst were shot while returning from the celebrations at Government House. Both died. The three Chafekar brothers, including Vasudev, were found guilty and hanged).

1940 - Netaji Subhashchandra Bose established the 'Forward Block' after differences with Congress leaders. 

1944 - British 14th Army frees Imphal, Assam (now Manipur).

1946 - Speaking at a prayer meeting in New Delhi, Gandhi calls on the South African government to stop 'hooliganism' by Whites.

1962 - 1st test flight of a Hovercraft.

1973 - The first Skylab crew of astronauts splashed down safely after a then-record 28 days in space.

1990 - Nelson Mandela addresses the United Nations Special Committee against Apartheid in New York, saying that nothing, which has happened in South Africa, calls for a revision of the position that the Organisation has taken in its struggle against apartheid; he adds that a democratic, non-racial SA is within reach.

1996 - Saurav Ganguly scores 131 at Lord's on Test debut.

2004 - A  report, based on a 50-year study of a group of almost 35,000 British doctors who smoked, found that almost half of persistent cigarette smokers were killed by their habit, and a quarter died before age 70. Further, those who quit by age 30 had the same life expectancy as a nonsmoker. Even quitting at age 50 saved six more years of life over those who continued smoking. At age 80, 65% of non-smokers were still alive, but only 32% of smokers.  

Born

1932 - Amrish Puri, film actor. 

RIP

1994 - L. V. Prasad, father of South Indian film industry. A Dadasaheb Phalke awardee, he had the unique distinction of acting in the first talkies of three different languages of Indian cinema; Alam Ara (Hindi), Bhakta Prahlada (Telugu) and Kalidas(Tamil).

Titbits

1981 - Tennis player John McEnroe exhibits a disgraceful act of misbehavior at Wimbledon.

You may have known...

A sneeze travels out your mouth and nose at 100 MPH.

Business News

  • GST: CBIC modifies Procedure for Interception of Conveyance and clarifies that only Such Goods or Conveyances should be detained in respect of which the Violation of the GST provisions has been made vide Circular No. 49/23/2018- GST, Dated 21-06-2018.

  • Kerala Abolishes Plantation Tax and Announces Moratorium on Agriculture Income Tax.

  • Enforcement Directorate (ED) has sought information on Offshore Investments by Directors of RNT Associates, a Closely Held Firm which functions as a Family Office and Investment Vehicle of Ratan Tata.

  • Bank of Baroda goes to CBI with Loan Fraud Charges Against Bankrupt Pipes Maker “PSL Ltd”, for siphoning off about Rs 700 crore from a Dedicated Account Linked to GAIL Projects, the payments from which were due to the Lender and not the Insolvent Company.

  • SEBI announces a new set of IPO reforms, reducing the timeline for announcement of IPO Price Band, a Recast of the Share Buyback Regulations and revamp of the Governance Framework for Stock Exchanges and Depositories. It also signals to move to bring CAs & CS under its ambit. 

  • RBI asks Banks to Upgrade Software at ATMs for Greater Security by June 2019 or Face Penalty.

  • Punjab National Bank names 54 Officers in its Internal Investigation Report on the Nirav Modi Scam.

  • Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) is looking into an Rs 1420-crore transaction carried out by Ruchi Soya with a Singapore-based company on the suspicion that the latter was a related party and that the nature of the transaction was irregular.

Thursday 21 June 2018

June 21: If a man hasn’t found anything to die for, he isn’t fit to live.


On this day, 21 June...

1768 -The first commencement of a U.S. medical college was held.    Of the ten degrees granted, John Archer being alphabetically at the head of the list,  became the first doctor in the U.S. to receive such a degree.

1834 - Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his reaping machine, recognized as the first such practical machine. He demonstrated his machine in 1831 at a public trial, which was impressive,  cutting six acres in half a day. Although it did the work of six men, it was very difficult to popularise, and it took until 1841 before McCormick sold his first two machines.

1838 - His discovery of the stereoscopic viewer was described in a paper by Charles Wheatstone, 'On some remarkable, and hitherto unobserved, Phenomena of Binocular Vision', which he read to the Royal Society, London. (This is the visual effect whereby pictures of an object drawn from slightly different viewpoints for individual eyes could be viewed with his stereoscope and give the perception of the object in three dimensions). 

1853 - The first U.S. patent for a commercially successful "Envelop-Folding Machine" was issued to Dr. Russell L. Hawes of Worcester.

1854 - First Victoria Cross won during the  Crimean War. Awardee was 21-year old Lucas of HMS Hecla.

1893 - The first Ferris wheel premiered at Chicago’s Columbian Exposition, America’s third world’s fair. It was invented by George Washington Ferris,  for the purpose of creating an attraction like the Eiffel Tower in Paris.  

1913 - The first successful parachute jump from an airplane by a woman was made by Georgia Broadwick, age 18, in Los Angeles, California.  

1921 - The UK, the Dominions, and India become the British Commonwealth of Nations.

1948 - The first stored-programme computer, the Small-Scale Experimental Machine, SSM, ran its first programme. Written by Professor Tom Kilburn, it took 52 minutes to run. The tiny experimental computer had no keyboard or printer, but it successfully tested a memory system developed at Manchester University in England. 

1948 - The first successful long-playing microgroove phonograph records (33 1/3 RPM) were introduced to the public at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. 

1948 - Lord Mountbatten resigns as Governor-General of India (formerly the last Viceroy).

1948 - C. Rajagopalachari was appointed the first Indian Governor General of Indian union (After January 25, 1950, this post was abolished). 

1998 - India and Russia sign a $2.5-billion deal to set up a nuclear power station at Koodankulam in Tamil Nadu.

1999 - Leander Paes was seeded number one in double's ranking. This was his highest doubles ranking.

2004 - Mike Melvill became the first civilian to pilot a craft into space. 

Born

1953 - Benazir Bhutto, 11th Prime Minister of Pakistan and 1st female leader of a Muslim nation. 

1976 - Tushar Kapoor, actor.

RIP

1940 - Keshavrao Baliram Hedgewar, politician, and founder of Rashtriya Swayansewak Sangh (RSS)

Titbits

1879  - F W Woolworth opens 1st store (failed almost immediately).

2014 - Tiger Woods has announced that he will begin golfing again after a three-month hiatus he took to recover from back surgery.

You may have known...

A Boeing 747 airliner can hold 57,285 gallons of fuel.

Wednesday 20 June 2018

June 20: Effort and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.


On this day, 20 Jun...

712 – Arabs Muhammad of Bin Qasim (Kasim), attacked on Sindh and captured it, defeating and killing Hindu King Dahir at Rawar.

1756 - A group of British soldiers along with Havel were imprisoned by some rebels in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole of Calcutta." Most of them died.

1791 - King Louis XVI caught trying to escape French Revolution.

1840 - Samuel F.B. Morse received a patent for telegraphy signals. (The International Morse Code, a method of transmitting text information as a series of on-off tones, lights, or clicks that can be directly understood by a skilled listener or observer without special equipment, is named after him). 

1858 - Gwalior fort was captured by British troops and the first Indian Sepoy Mutiny officially came to an end.

1873 - Young Men Christian Association of India was established in Calcutta.

1899 - Black American inventor Wesley Johnson has issued a patent for a "Velocipede". Although conventional in appearance in a side view, the innovation claimed was to use two wheels separated by four to six inches in the front fork, and two wheels in similar fashion at the back. The patent claimed this gives better stability and safety, especially for those first learning to balance and ride a bicycle, the timid, elderly or the invalid. Further, it said, corners could be turned on slippery ground with better stability.

1921 - At the Imperial Conference in London, V.S. Srinivasa Sastri puts forward a case for the granting of full citizenship rights to Indians in South Africa and other British colonies.

1926 - A wireless phone for autos was demonstrated in Berlin, Germany, by Herr Schaetzle.

1967 - Boxer Muhammad Ali convicted of refusing induction into armed services.

1979 - 32 solar panels installed on the White House roof,  were dedicated by  President Carter  He stated, “In the year 2000 this solar water heater behind me, which is being dedicated today, will still be here supplying cheap, efficient energy.” That was not to be. While the roof was being resurfaced in 1986, the  President, Ronald Reagan, with one of the worst environmental records of any president, had them removed and sent to warehouse storage. In the same year, he slashed the research and development budget for renewable energy and eliminated tax breaks for wind turbines and solar projects

1994 - Anti-Pakistan slogans rent the air in Jammu & Kashmir against the killing of Qazi Nissar Ahmed, Mirwaiz of South Kashmir and a famous religious Kashmiri leader who was gunned down by Pak-aided terrorists.

1996 - Govt. of India declares at Geneva conference on 'Global Ban On Nuclear Testing' that it won't sign the CTBT. The CTBT essentially bans all nuclear explosions in all environments, be it for military or civilian purposes. The treaty was signed by 71 countries, except India. (The history of the CTBT goes back to March 1st, 1954 when America tested a 15-megaton hydrogen bomb in Namu Atoll, an island in the Pacific Ocean. By exceeding the estimated outcome and causing a large fallout beyond that of the restricted testing area, this test increased the fallout of dangerous radioactive materials. Official calculations confirmed that 28 American and 236 residents of the neighboring Marshall Islands had been contaminated by radioactive emissions).

2002 - An agreement was signed to establish a seawater desalination and heating plant - using atomic reactors - at the coastal city of  Yingkou, China. It is designed to address severe water shortages in China.

Born

1869 - Laxmanrao Kirloskar, great industrialist, social reformer, patriot, and founder of Kirloskar Industry.

1952 - Vikram Seth, poet. 

RIP

1987 - Dr. Salim Ali, internationally renowned expert of birds.

1997 - Basu Bhattacharya, film-maker.

2007 - Anita Guha, actor.

Titbits

1895 - 1st female Ph.D. from an American University, earned by Caroline Willard Baldwin (in Science) at Cornell University.

1909 - 1st balloon honeymoon (Roger Burham & Eleanor Waring).

You may have known...

Astronauts get pretty severe motion sickness. 

Tuesday 19 June 2018

June 19: The task of leadership is not to put greatness into people, but to elicit it.


On this day, 19 Jun...

240 BC - Eratosthenes, a Greek astronomer, and mathematician estimated the circumference of the earth. As the director of the gr, at the library of Alexandria, he read in a papyrus book that in Syene, approaching noon on the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, shadows of temple columns grew shorter. At noon, they were gone. The sun was directly overhead. However, a stick in Alexandria, far to the north, could cast a pronounced shadow. Thus, he realized that the surface of the Earth could not be flat. It must be curved. Not only that but the greater the curvature, the greater the difference in the shadow lengths. By measurement on the ground and application of geometry, he calculated the circumference of the earth.

1269 - King Louis IX of Frances decrees all Jews must wear a badge of shame. 

1829 - Robert Peel founds the London Metropolitan Police (Bobbies).

1841 - An underwater torpedo operated by electric current was described by its inventor, Samuel Colt in a letter to U.S. President John Tyler. The invention was a combination of Robert Fulton's stationary torpedo and Prof. Robert Hare's galvanic current. Colt proved his mines could sink ships with a demonstration on 4 Jul 1842 sinking the gunboat Boxer in New York Harbour.  By 13 Apr 1843, He was called upon to demonstrate to the President and his Cabinet, and Colt blew up a schooner on the Potomac River by an electric main from a distance of five miles.

1888 - Thomas A. Edison, with co-inventor Ezra T. Gilliland was granted a patent for "Railway Signaling".

1900 - Michael Pupin was granted a U.S. patent for long distance telephony.

1910 - Father's Day celebrated for 1st time (Spokane, Washington).

1931 - Installation was completed on the first commercial doors operated by the photoelectric cell.  

1941- O-shaped 'Cheerios'  whole grain oat cereal was invented to provide a more convenient and better-tasting alternative to cooked oatmeal.   Since a competitor had exclusive rights on the word ‘oats’, its manufacturer, the General Mills called it simply ‘Cheerios’.      

1949 - People of Chandernagar, the French Indian Settlement, decided to merge with the Indian Union.

1966 - Shiv Sena was established. Founded by Balasaheb Thackeray (also known as Bal Thackeray) in Mumbai. Balasaheb Thackeray, initially a cartoonist with an English daily, was immensely inspired by his father Keshav Sitaram Thackeray who was a prominent figure in the Samyukta Maharashtra Movement. This movement, which was at its peak during the 1950’s, demanded the creation of a separate linguistic state of Maharashtra, with  Bombay as its capital.

1978 - Garfield, created by Jim Davis, 1st appears as a comic strip.

1979 - Morarji Desai resigns as PM after split in Janata Party.

1981 - India's APPLE satellite, 1st to be stabilized on 3 axes, launched.

1999 - The ''people's bus'' from Calcutta rolls into Dhaka and is formally received by the Prime Minister and his Bangladesh counterpart.

2013 - Microsoft takes negative feedback into account, and announces plans to change many features of its Xbox One.

Born

1595 - Guru Har Govind, the sixth Guru.

1945 - Aung San Suu Kyi, Burmese politician, leader of the National League for Democracy and human rights activist (1991 Nobel Peace Prize). 

1947 - Salman Rushdie, British Indian novelist.

1958 - Mukesh Khanna, actor.

1970 - Rahul Gandhi, politician.
RIP

1949 – Syed Zafarul Hasan, Indian philosopher and academic.

Titbits

1942 - Actress Marilyn Monroe (16) marries first husband James Dougherty (21), a policeman. (She married thrice).

1981 - Heaviest known orange (2.5 kg) exhibited, Nelspruit, South Africa.

You may have known...

The oldest bookshop in the world is located in Portugal.

Monday 18 June 2018

June 18: The real leader has no need to lead, he is content to point the way.



On this day, 18 Jun...

1815 - Battle of Waterloo; Napoleon and France defeated by British forces under Wellington and Prussian troops under Blucher. 
(The term 'meet one's waterloo' meaning 'To encounter one's ultimate obstacle and to be defeated by Waterloo into being after this battle. Incidentally, Waterloo is a municipality in  Belgium. It is north of Braine-l'Alleud, which is the site of the Battle of Waterloo. A memorial, 'Lion's Mound' atop an artificial hillock was erected after the battle.  It commemorates the location on the battlefield  where a musket ball hit the shoulder of William II of the Netherlands (the Prince of Orange) and knocked him from his horse during the battle). 

1912 - A patent was issued for a mercury vapour lamp to Peter Hewitt. 

1940 - In India Forward Block Party was established.

1959 - 1st telecast transmitted from England to US.

1966 - California's hippie subculture converged into a mass of long hair, flowers, and rock music this weekend, as 50,000 flowed into the fairgrounds of the Monterey International Pop Festival. The event featured the largest collection of major rock acts ever assembled; thousands of fans had to be turned away from the sold-out concert. Established artists such as the Byrds, Jefferson Airplane, Otis Redding, and the Mamas and the Papas received the expected ovations from the huge audience. But the response was equally enthusiastic for performances by Indian sitar master Ravi Shankar.

1965 - The first large solid-fuel rocket - a Titan 3C - was launched into orbit. Better than a liquid-propellant rocket, a solid-propellant rocket has fewer parts, simpler construction, is safer and more reliable. It is more powerful than a liquid-propellant rocket of the same size. 

1978 - The Karakoram Highway, linking Gilgit in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir with Sinkiang in China, is opened.

1981 - The first genetically engineered vaccine was announced: the first effective subunit vaccine for any animal or human disease using gene splicing. It was designed to prevent hoof and mouth disease. 

1983 - Sally K. Ride, mission specialist, became America's first woman in space.   Challenger was the seventh shuttle mission, and the first to carry a woman crew member.

1989 - India and Pakistan decide to end the five-year-old confrontation in Siachen Glacier area by redeploying their forces.

1993 - Shri Advani takes over as BJP President.

2000 - K.M. Beenamol breaks P.T. Usha's record in 400m at 51.21 sec in an international meet at Kiev in Ukraine.

2001 - Protests occur in Manipur over the extension of the ceasefire between Naga insurgents and the government of India.

2013 - New data reveals that over 280 previously unknown craters exist on the Moon.

2014 - Internet retailer Amazon, Inc. releases its own 'Fire' smart phone; the phone will allow users to connect directly to Amazon.com to shop for items they scan or identify in video and audio clips on the device.

2015 - Kennewick Man was confirmed to be Native American in a letter published in Nature. The 8,500-year-old skeleton discovered on 28 July 1996 at first seemed possibly of Caucasian or Asian origin.

Born

1931 - Kuppalli Sitaramayya Sudarshan, he was the fifth Sarsanghachalak of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.

1942 - Paul McCartney, English musician and member of The Beatles. 

RIP

2003 – Jankidas, actor.

2005 – Mushtaq Ali, Indian cricketer.

You may have known...

McDonalds fries are fried in oil that contains beef.

Sunday 17 June 2018

June 17: Humanity needs heroic leadership from those who see all life as precious.


On this day, 17 Jun...

1756 - Nawab Sira-ud-Daulah attacked on Calcutta with 50,000 soldiers and captured it on June 21. 

1837 - Charles Goodyear obtained his first rubber-processing patent. At this time, the original india-rubber would become sticky melt in the summer heat. Goodyear resolved to solve this problem. After various unsuccessful methods, he devised a process to treat the India rubber with metallic solutions such as copper nitrate and strong acid for a few minutes, followed by washing with water. Such process treated both rubber on the surface and below the surface to a useful condition. 

1885 - The Statue of Liberty arrived in New York Harbour from France.   The hand and torch of the Statue of Liberty had been displayed at the 1876 Centennial Exhibition, in Philadelphia, ten years before the rest of the statue was completed by French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi. The engineer for the framework was Gustave Eiffel (also known for his Eiffel Tower).

1928 - Amelia Earhart  became the first woman passenger to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, from Newfoundland to Wales.  

1932 - Bonus Army: around a thousand World War I veterans amass at the United States Capitol as the U.S. Senate considers a bill that would give them certain benefits. (The Bonus Army – also referred to as Bonus Marchers were the 43,000 marchers—17,000 U.S. World War I veterans, their families, and affiliated groups. They had been awarded bonuses in the form of certificates they could not redeem until 1945. Since due to the Great Depression most veterans were out of job, they wanted immediate payment. The contingent was led by Walter W Waters, a former Sergeant. To disperse them Washington police opened fire in juring two who later died. President Herbert Hoover then ordered the Army to clear the marchers' campsite. Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur commanded the infantry and cavalry supported by six tanks. The Bonus Army marchers with their wives and children were driven out, and their shelters and belongings burned).
1936 - Edwin H. Armstrong demonstrated his invention of FM radio in Washington D.C.    

1950 - The first kidney transplant operation took place in Chicago in a 45-minute operation performed by Dr. Richard H. Lawler.

1967 - China tested its first hydrogen bomb. This was China's sixth nuclear test, and its first full scale radiation implosion weapon test. Thus China became world's 4th thermonuclear power.

1970 - Edwin Land patented the Polaroid camera.

1988 - Microsoft releases MS DOS 4.0.

1991 - The body of Zachary Taylor, 12th President of the USA, is exhumed to test how he died; rumours had persisted since his death in 1850 of arsenic poisoning - no evidence of this was found.

1991 - South Africa abolishes last of its apartheid laws.

2015 - The Japanese parliament votes to lower the nation's voting age to 18 from 20.

Born

1930 – Anup Kumar, actor (Kolkata).

1973 - Leander Vece Paes, tennis player.  

1980 - Venus Williams, American tennis star considered one of the all-time greats of women's tennis. 

1986 - Liza Haydon, actor/model (Chennai).

RIP

1631 - Mumtaz Mahal dies during childbirth. Her husband, Mughal emperor Shah Jahan I, then spends more than 20 years building her tomb, the Taj Mahal.

1674 - Jijabai Shahaji Bhosale, sometimes referred to as Rajmata Jijabai or even simply Jijai, Jijau was the mother of Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, founder of Maratha Empire.

1858 - Rani Lakshmibai, queen of Jhansi, one of the leading figures of the Indian rebellion of 1857.   

1965 - Motilal, famous film actor.

1996 - Balasahab Devras, third  Sarsangha Chalak of Rashtriya Sawyamsewak Sangh.

Titbits

1988 - Givens' Family reports boxer Mike Tyson beats his wife Robin Givens. 

You may have known…

"Scraunched" is the longest one syllable word in the English language.

Popular Posts (Last 30 Days)

Popular News (All Ever Green)