Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1969 | Gabriel Batistuta | Former professional footballer who played as a striker for the Argentine national team. |
| * 1969 | Andrew Breitbart | American publisher, commentator for the Washington Times, author, an occasional guest commentator on various news programs who has served as an editor for the Drudge Report website. |
| * 1965 | Sherilyn Fenn | Better known by her stage name Sherilyn Fenn, is an American actress, best known for her role as Audrey Horne in the American television series Twin Peaks. |
| * 1942 | Terry Jones | British comedian, actor, screenwriter, film director, political commentator, children's writer and Chaucerian scholar. |
| * 1941 | Jerry Spinelli | Noted children's author, specializing on novels written for and about early adolescence. |
| * 1939 | Fritjof Capra | Austrian-born American physicist, author and founding director of the Center for Ecoliteracy in Berkeley, California. |
| * 1939 | Fritjof Capra | Austrian-born American physicist, author and founding director of the Center for Ecoliteracy in Berkeley, California. |
| * 1938 | Jimmy Carl Black | Known as Jimmy Carl Black, is a drummer who was a member of the rock group The Mothers of Invention. |
| * 1931 | Boris Yeltsin | First president of post-Soviet Russia. |
| * 1928 | Tom Lantos | Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from 1981 until his death, representing California's 12th congressional district, located in the southwest part of San Francisco and the area just south in San Mateo County. |
| * 1927 | Galway Kinnell | One of the most influential American poets of the latter half of the 20th century. |
| * 1918 | Muriel Spark | Scottish novelist, short-story writer, biographer and literary critic. |
| * 1915 | Stanley Matthews | Football player. |
| * 1904 | S. J. Perelman | American humorist and writer for the stage and screen. |
| * 1902 | Langston Hughes | American poet, novelist, playwright and newspaper columnist. |
| * 1901 | Frank Buckles | Was, at age 110, the last known surviving American-born veteran of the First World War. |
| * 1901 | Clark Gable | Academy Award-winning American film actor. |
| * 1900 | Stephen Potter | English scholar, critic, broadcaster and humorist. |
| * 1885 | Friedrich Kellner | Justice inspector during the Nazi period in Germany. |
| * 1884 | Yevgeny Zamyatin | Russian author, known mostly for his dystopian novel, We, which influenced and inspired later dystopian works such as Aldous Huxley's Brave New World and George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four. |
| * 1801 | Thomas Cole | American artist and poet. |
| * 1787 | Richard Whately | English logician and theological writer, and served as archbishop of Dublin. |
| * 1780 | Charles Miner | Member of the U S House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. |
| * 1757 | John Philip Kemble | English actor. |
| * 1552 | Edward Coke | Early English colonial entrepreneur and jurist whose writings on the English common law were definitive legal texts for some 300 years. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2013 | Ed Koch | United States Congressman representing New York from 1969 to 1977 and the Mayor of New York City from 1978 to 1989. |
| † 2012 | Wislawa Szymborska | Polish poet, essayist and translator. |
| † 2003 | Kalpana Chawla | Indian-born American astronaut and space shuttle mission specialist. |
| † 2000 | Peter Levi | Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford. |
| † 1997 | Herb Caen | Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper columnist working in San Francisco. |
| † 1995 | Richey James Edwards | Guitarist and lyricist from the the Manic Street Preachers. |
| † 1976 | Werner Heisenberg | German physicist, Nobel laureate, and one of the founders of the field of quantum mechanics. |
| † 1966 | Buster Keaton | American actor and filmmaker, often called The Great Stone Face, he was the first person ever called "Buster", acquiring the nickname from Harry Houdini who saw him take a fall down some stairs as an infant. |
| † 1958 | Clinton Davisson | American physicist who won the 1937 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of electron diffraction. |
| † 1957 | Friedrich Paulus | Officer in the German military from 1910 to 1943, attaining the rank of Generalfeldmarschall during World War II He is most known for commanding the Sixth Army's assault on Stalingrad during Operation Blue in 1942. |
| † 1945 | Johan Huizinga | Dutch historian, and one of the founders of modern cultural history. |
| † 1944 | Piet Mondrian | Dutch painter starting in Dutch impressionism but soon developping abstraction in his landscape paintings. |
| † 1903 | Sir George Stokes | Mathematician and physicist, who at Cambridge made important contributions to fluid dynamics, optics, and mathematical physics. |
| † 1899 | Charles Seymour Robinson | Pastor, and an editor and compiler of hymns. |
| † 1851 | Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley | English novelist. |
| † 1803 | Anders Chydenius | Swedish-Finnish priest and member of the Riksdag of the Estates. |
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