Template:Selected anniversaries/December 23: Difference between revisions

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||1939: Ludwig Hopf dies ... theoretical physicist who made contributions to mathematics, special relativity, hydrodynamics, and aerodynamics.  Pic: https://www.geni.com/people/Prof-Dr-Ludwig-Hopf/6000000003495136149
||1939: Ludwig Hopf dies ... theoretical physicist who made contributions to mathematics, special relativity, hydrodynamics, and aerodynamics.  Pic: https://www.geni.com/people/Prof-Dr-Ludwig-Hopf/6000000003495136149
||1944: The Great Papago Escape was the largest Axis prisoner-of-war escape to occur from an American facility during World War II. On the night of December 23, 1944, twenty-five Germans tunneled out of Camp Papago Park, near Phoenix, Arizona, and fled into the surrounding desert. All of the escapees were eventually recaptured without bloodshed over the next few weeks, and although most were detained within Maricopa County, a few nearly made it to the border of Mexico, which is about 130 miles south of the camp. Pic.


||1947: The transistor is first demonstrated at Bell Laboratories.
||1947: The transistor is first demonstrated at Bell Laboratories.
File:Wilhelm Ackermann.jpg|link=Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|1948: Mathematician [[Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|Wilhelm Ackermann]] publishes his research on applications of the Ackermann function to detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]].


||1949: Arthur Eichengrün dies ... chemist, materials scientist, and inventor. He is known for developing the highly successful anti-gonorrhea drug Protargol, the standard treatment for 50 years until the adoption of antibiotics, and for his pioneering contributions in plastics. Pic.
||1949: Arthur Eichengrün dies ... chemist, materials scientist, and inventor. He is known for developing the highly successful anti-gonorrhea drug Protargol, the standard treatment for 50 years until the adoption of antibiotics, and for his pioneering contributions in plastics. Pic.
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||December 23 is the fictional date of the [[Zendian problem (nonfiction)|Zendian problem]], a US Army cryptography training exercise involving 375 radio messages said to have been intercepted on December 23 by the US Army contingent of a United Nations force landed on the fictional island of Zendia in the Pacific Ocean.
||December 23 is the fictional date of the [[Zendian problem (nonfiction)|Zendian problem]], a US Army cryptography training exercise involving 375 radio messages said to have been intercepted on December 23 by the US Army contingent of a United Nations force landed on the fictional island of Zendia in the Pacific Ocean.
File:Blue City Sunset.jpg|link=Blue City Sunset (nonfiction)|2016: Signed first edition of ''[[Blue City Sunset (nonfiction)|Blue City Sunset]]'' purchased for an undisclosed amount by "a well-known [[Gnomon algorithm]] theorist residing in [[New Minneapolis, Canada]]."


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Latest revision as of 17:30, 7 February 2022