Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1966 | Romario | Better known simply as Romαrio, is a retired Brazilian football Forward striker. |
| * 1963 | Ismail Haniyeh | Senior political leader of Hamas and one of two disputed Prime Ministers of the Palestinian National Authority. |
| * 1960 | Tigran Sargsyan | Current prime minister of Armenia since taking office on 9 April 2008. |
| * 1959 | Nick Xenophon | South Australian barrister, anti-gambling campaigner and politician. |
| * 1954 | Oprah Winfrey | American talk-show host, actress, and entrepreneur. |
| * 1945 | Tom Selleck | American actor best known for his starring role on the long-running television show Magnum P I. |
| * 1939 | Germaine Greer | Australian author, academic, critic and journalist. |
| * 1937 | Charley Reese | American syndicated columnist. |
| * 1931 | Lesley Bricusse | British lyricist and composer. |
| * 1927 | Edward Abbey | American writer noted for his advocacy of environmental issues and criticism of public land policies. |
| * 1926 | Abdus Salam | Pakistani theoretical physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979 for his work in electroweak theory which is the mathematical and conceptual synthesis of the electromagnetic and weak interactions, the latest stage reached until now on the path towards a unification theory describing the fundamental forces of nature. |
| * 1905 | Barnett Newman | American artist. |
| * 1880 | W. C. Fields | Born William Claude Dukenfield, was an American Actor and Comedian. |
| * 1874 | John D. Rockefeller | American businessman and philanthropist, the son and heir of John D Rockefeller and the first president of the Rockefeller Foundation. |
| * 1866 | Romain Rolland | French writer who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1915 after the publication of his major work, Jean-Christophe. |
| * 1860 | Anton Chekhov | (Old Style: 17 January 1860 2 July 1904) was a major Russian short story writer and playwright. |
| * 1850 | Ebenezer Howard | Prominent British town planner famous for his publication Garden Cities of To-morrow (1898), prescribing utopian cities in which man lives harmoniously together with the rest of nature. |
| * 1843 | William McKinley | 25th President of the United States. |
| * 1835 | Sarah Chauncey Woolsey | American children's author who wrote under the pen name Susan Coolidge. |
| * 1756 | Henry III Lee | Called Light Horse Harry, was a cavalry officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolution. |
| * 1737 | Thomas Paine | English-American political writer, theorist, and activist who had a great influence on the thoughts and ideas which led to the American Revolution and the United States Declaration of Independence. |
| * 1688 | Emanuel Swedenborg | Swedish philosopher, mystic, and scientist. |
Deaths | ||
| 2011 | Milton Babbitt | American composer. |
| 2007 | Edward Robert Harrison | British astronomer and cosmologist, who spent much of his career at the University of Massachusetts and University of Arizona. |
| 2006 | Jamie Uys | South African film director. |
| 2005 | Ephraim Kishon | Israeli writer, satirist, dramatist, screenwriter, and film director. |
| 2003 | Edward M. Korry | US diplomat during the administrations of presidents Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon. |
| 2000 | Herbert Schiller | American media critic, sociologist, author, and scholar. |
| 1997 | Daniel P. Mannix | Born Daniel Pratt Mannix IV, was a Pennsylvania-born author and journalist whose best-known work is the 1967 novel The Fox and the Hound on which the Disney animated film The Fox and the Hound was based. |
| 1992 | Willie Dixon | Well-known American blues bassist, singer, songwriter, arranger and record producer. |
| 1980 | Jimmy Durante | American pianist, actor, comedian, composer, and singer; usually known as Jimmy Durante, also nicknamed "The Schnozzola", and "The Schnoz", in reference to his large nose. |
| 1963 | Robert Frost | American poet; winner of four Pulitzer Prizes. |
| 1956 | H. L. Mencken | Better known as H L Mencken, was a twentieth-century journalist, satirist, social critic, cynic, and freethinker, known as the "Sage of Baltimore" and the "American Nietzsche". |
| 1946 | Harry Hopkins | One of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's closest advisers. |
| 1933 | Sara Teasdale | American poet. |
| 1910 | Cyrus David Foss | Prominent Methodist bishop in the latter 19th century, primarily serving in New York and New England. |
| 1888 | Edward Lear | English artist, illustrator and writer known for his nonsensical poetry and his limericks, a form which he popularised. |
| 1859 | William H. Prescott | American historian, best known for his History of the Conquest of Mexico and History of the Conquest of Peru. |
| 1834 | Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis | Swiss poet. |
| 1820 | George III of the United Kingdom | King of Great Britain and King of Ireland from 25 October 1760 until 1 January 1801, and thereafter of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, formed by the union of these two countries, until his death. |
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