A Focus on History: June 22 through June 28

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June 22

U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the G.I. Bill, an unprecedented act of legislation designed to compensate returning members of the Armed Services, known to thank G.I.s, for their efforts in World War II. – 1944.

During World War II, the U.S. 10th Army overcomes the last major pockets of Japanese resistance on Okinawa Island to end one of the bloodiest battles of World War II. The Japanese lost 120,000 troops in the defense of Okinawa, while the Americans suffered 12,500 dead and 35,000 wounded. – 1945.

June 23

U.S. president Richard Nixon signs into law the Higher Education Act, which includes the groundbreaking Title IX legislation. Title IX barred discrimination in higher education programs, including funds for sports, and other extracurricular activities. As a result, women’s participation in team sports, particularly in collegiate athletics, surged with the passage of this act. – 1972.

OSHA issues its standard on cotton dust to protect 600,000 workers from byssinosis, known as “brown lung.” – 1978.

Mafia boss John Gotti, who was nicknamed the “Teflon Don” after escaping unscathed from several trials during the 1980s, is sentenced to life in prison after being found guilty on 14 accounts of conspiracy to commit murder and racketeering. Moments after his sentence was read in a federal courthouse in Brooklyn, N.Y., hundreds of Gotti’s supporters storm the building and overturn and smash cars. – 1992.

June 24

U.S. Air Force officials release a 231-page report dismissing long-standing claims of an alien spacecraft crash in Roswell, N.M., almost exactly 50 years earlier. – 1997.

The Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, stating that there is no longer a federal constitutional right to an abortion. Abortion rights are to be determined by states. – 2022.

June 25

Native American forces, led by Chiefs Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, defeat the U.S. Army troops of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer in a bloody battle near southern Montana’s Little Bighorn River. – 1876.

Fair Labor Standards Act passes Congress which bans child labor and sets the 40-hour work week. – 1938.

Major General Dwight D. Eisenhower takes command of U.S. military forces in Europe. After proving himself on the battlefields of North Africa and Italy in 1942, Eisenhower is appointed supreme commander of Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of northwestern Europe. – 1942.

Armed forces from communist North Korea smash into South Korea, to set off the Korean War. The United States, acting under the auspices of the United Nations, quickly springs to the defense of South Korea and fight a bloody and frustrating war for the next three years. – 1950.

June 26

During World War I, the first 14,000 U.S. infantry troops land in France at the port of Saint Nazaire. The landing site had been kept secret because of the menace of German submarines, but by the time the Americans had lined up to take their first salute on French soil, an enthusiastic crowd had gathered to welcome them. – 1917.

U.S. and British pilots begin delivering food and supplies by airplane to Berlin after the city is isolated by a Soviet Union blockade. – 1948.

The U.S. Congress approves the Federal Highway Act, which allocates more than $30 billion for the construction of 41,000 miles of interstate highways; it was the largest public construction project in U.S. history to that date. – 1956.

June 27

The Germans set up two-way radio communication in a newly-occupied French territory and employ their most sophisticated coding machine, Enigma. – 1940.

U.S. president Harry S Truman announces that he is ordering U.S. air and naval forces to South Korea to aid the democratic nation in repulsing an invasion by communist North Korea. – 1950.

A 26-day strike of New York City hotels by 26,000 workers, the first such walkout in 50 years, ends with a five-year contract calling for big wage and benefit gains – 1985.

June 28

Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie, are shot to death by a Bosnian Serb nationalist during an official visit to the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. The killings sparked a chain of events that led to the outbreak of World War I by early August. June 28, 1919, five years to the day after Franz Ferdinand’s death, Germany and the Allied Powers sign the Treaty of Versailles, to officially mark the end of World War I. There were more than 16 million deaths and 20 million wounded during the Great War. – 1914.

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