Template:Selected anniversaries/February 21: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 55: | Line 55: | ||
File:Nixon April-29-1974.jpg|link=Watergate scandal (nonfiction)|1975: [[Watergate scandal (nonfiction)|Watergate scandal]]: Former United States Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former White House aides H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman are sentenced to prison. | File:Nixon April-29-1974.jpg|link=Watergate scandal (nonfiction)|1975: [[Watergate scandal (nonfiction)|Watergate scandal]]: Former United States Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former White House aides H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman are sentenced to prison. | ||
||Isaac Jacob Schoenberg (d. February 21, 1990) was a Romanian-American mathematician, known for his discovery of splines. Pic. | |||
||1999 – Gertrude B. Elion, American biochemist and pharmacologist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1918) | ||1999 – Gertrude B. Elion, American biochemist and pharmacologist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1918) |
Revision as of 08:49, 4 February 2018
1591: Mathematician and engineer Girard Desargues born. He will be one of the founders of projective geometry.
1592: Canterbury scrying engine crashes, predicts faulty future; the resulting paradox will develop into an epidemic of capacitor failure by the early twenty-first century.
1677: Philosopher, scholar, and lens-grinder Baruch Spinoza dies. He laid the groundwork for the 18th-century Enlightenment and modern biblical criticism, including modern conceptions of the self and the universe.
1788: Scientist, inventor, and engineer Francis Ronalds born. He will be knighted for creating the first working electric telegraph.
1899: Marie and Pierre Curie use radium to detect and expose crimes against mathematical constants.
1926: Physicist and academic Heike Kamerlingh Onnes dies. He received widespread recognition for his work, including the 1913 Nobel Prize in Physics for "his investigations on the properties of matter at low temperatures which led, inter alia, to the production of liquid helium".
1938: Astronomer and journalist George Ellery Hale dies. He discovered magnetic fields in sunspots, and was a leader or key figure in the planning or construction of several world-leading telescopes.
1975: Watergate scandal: Former United States Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former White House aides H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman are sentenced to prison.
2002: Capacitor plague affects several brands of portable envy devices.
Portable envy components at risk of capacitor plague.