June 1989
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The following events occurred in June 1989:
June 1, 1989 (Thursday)[]
- Pope John Paul II begins a 10-day trip to Norway, Iceland, Finland, Denmark and Sweden. He arrives in Norway on June 1 and leaves on June 3, visiting Oslo, Trondheim and Tromsø.[1][2]
- Cold War: A farmer discovers the burned remains of German security hacker Karl Koch in a forest near Celle, Lower Saxony, West Germany. Despite the unusual circumstances, Koch, who had sold computer data from military and aerospace companies to the KGB, is determined to have committed suicide by self-immolation on May 23.[3]
- During a police diver training exercise, PC Stephen Taylor and PC Andrew John Morrison of the Essex Police in England are overcome by fumes inside a sunken barge. Taylor dies on June 1; Morrison will die on June 2.[4]
- Trooper Milan Dexter Hendrix of the Florida Highway Patrol is killed on duty when his patrol car collides with a log truck in Pensacola, Florida.[5]
- Sergeant Robert L. Mondary of the Hamilton County, Ohio Sheriff's Office dies of a heart attack during recovery operations after a May 26 bridge collapse in Miamitown, Ohio.[6]
- During the night of June 1–2, American serial killer Oba Chandler rapes 36-year-old Joan Rogers and her 17- and 14-year-old daughters Michelle and Christe and then murders them by throwing them, alive, into Tampa Bay, Florida, weighted with concrete blocks.[7][8]
- Born:
- Died:
- Irena Dubiska, Polish violinist (b. 1899)[12]
- Aurelio Lampredi, Italian automobile and aircraft engine designer (b. 1917)[13]
- Martin Zoborosky, Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman; played one game in the National Hockey League (b. 1916)[14]
June 2, 1989 (Friday)[]
- Sōsuke Uno succeeds Noboru Takeshita as Prime Minister of Japan.[15]
- 18-year-old Tina Bell disappears in Billingham, England. Her remains will be found in April 1990 on wasteland at ICI Billingham. As of 2019, Bell's murder will remain unsolved.[16]
- The Uniroyal Chemical Co. announces a voluntary halt to sales in the United States of the chemical Alar, used to improve the shelf life and color of apples. Studies had linked Alar with tumor development in lab animals.[17]
- Born:
- Freddy Adu, American soccer player; in Tema, Ghana[18]
- Liviu Antal, Romanian footballer; in Șimleu Silvaniei, Romania[19]
- Davide Appollonio, Italian professional road bicycle racer; in Isernia, Molise, Italy[20]
- Dean Burmester, South African professional golfer; in Mutare, Zimbabwe[21]
- Austin Davis, National Football League quarterback and coach; in Meridian, Mississippi[22]
- Cooper Helfet, National Football League tight end; in Kentfield, California[23]
- Alex Love, American flyweight boxer; in Monroe, Washington[24]
- Willy Moon (born William George Sinclair), New Zealand musician, singer and songwriter; in Wellington, New Zealand[25]
- Kilakone Siphonexay, Laotian Olympic sprinter; in Vientiane, Laos[26]
- Steve Smith, Australian cricketer; in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia[27]
- Darius van Driel, Dutch professional golfer; in Leidschendam, Netherlands[28][29]
- Shane Yarran, Australian rules footballer; in Seville Grove, Western Australia (d. 2018, suicide)[30][31]
- Nanda Zulmi, Indonesian footballer (d. 2017)[32][33]
- Died:
- Ted à Beckett, Australian cricketer, Australian rules footballer and solicitor (b. 1907)[34]
- Guido Agosti, Italian pianist and piano teacher (b. 1901)[35]
- Dick Mayer (born Alvin Richard Mayer), American professional golfer (b. 1924)[36]
- Takeo Watanabe, Japanese musician and composer, cancer (b. 1933)[37][38]
June 3, 1989 (Saturday)[]
- The world's first high-definition television (test) broadcasts commence in Japan, in analogue.[39]
- Dissolution of the Soviet Union: The Fergana massacre begins in the Fergana Valley, Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union. By the time the massacre ends on June 12, at least 97 Meskhetian Turks will have been killed and over 1000 wounded by Uzbek extremists.[40][41][better source needed]
- Pope John Paul II arrives in Iceland, visiting Reykjavík and Þingvellir before leaving on June 4.[1][42]
- The SkyDome, the world's first retractable roof stadium, opens in Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada.[43]
- Born:
- Nicole Della Monica, Italian Olympic pair skater; in Trescore Balneario, Province of Bergamo, Italy[44]
- Megumi Han, Japanese actress; in Tokyo, Japan[45]
- Katie Hoff, American Olympic swimmer; in Abingdon, Maryland[46]
- Artem Kravets, Ukrainian footballer; in Dniprodzerzhynsk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union[47]
- Imogen Poots, British actress; in London, England[48]
- Viengsavanh Sayyaboun, Laotian footballer; in Vientiane, Laos[49]
- Anthony Taugourdeau, French footballer; in Marseille, France[50]
- Daniela Vega, Chilean actress and opera singer; in San Miguel, Santiago Province, Chile[51]
- Died:
June 4, 1989 (Sunday)[]
- A giant wave strikes the trimaran Rose-Noëlle, carrying four men from New Zealand on an adventure trip to Tonga, flipping it upside-down. The men will drift at sea for 119 days before winds and currents carry the wrecked yacht in a loop to Great Barrier Island.[55]
- 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre: A violent military crackdown takes place on pro-democracy protesters in Tiananmen Square, Beijing.[56]
- Death and state funeral of Ruhollah Khomeini: Tehran radio announces Khomeini's death at 7:00 a.m. At 9:00 a.m., Ali Khamenei, the President of Iran, begins reading Khomeini's last will and testament to the Assembly of Experts.[54] In the afternoon the Assembly elects Khamenei as Supreme Leader (rahbar).[53][54]
- Ufa train disaster: A natural gas explosion near Ufa, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Soviet Union, kills 575 as two trains passing each other throw sparks near a leaky pipeline. The disaster receives relatively little media attention, possibly due to Soviet censorship and the other major news events of the day.[56]
- Revolutions of 1989: Solidarity's victory in the first round of the 1989 Polish legislative election[57][58] is the first of many anti-communist revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe.
- Pope John Paul II arrives in Finland, visiting Helsinki and Turku before leaving on June 6.[1][59]
- The bodies of Joan, Michelle and Christe Rogers are found floating in Tampa Bay.[7][60]
- American driver Dale Earnhardt wins the 1989 Budweiser 500 stock car race at Dover Downs International Speedway in Dover, Delaware.[61]
- The begins in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It will continue through June 9.[62]
- At the 43rd Tony Awards, The Heidi Chronicles wins the award for Best Play, while Jerome Robbins' Broadway wins the award for Best Musical.[63]
- Born:
- Federico Erba, Italian footballer; in Rome, Italy[64]
- Paweł Fajdek, Polish Olympic hammer thrower; in Świebodzice, Poland[65]
- Eldar Gasimov, Azerbaijani singer (Ell & Nikki); in Baku, Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union[66]
- Bernard Le Roux, South African-born French rugby union player; in Moorreesburg, Western Cape, South Africa[67]
- Died:
- Dik Browne, American cartoonist, cancer (b. 1917)[68][69]
- Vernon Cracknell, New Zealand politician (b. 1912)[70]
June 5, 1989 (Monday)[]
- 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre: An unknown Chinese protester, "Tank Man", stands in front of a column of military tanks on Chang'an Avenue in Beijing, temporarily halting them, an incident which achieves iconic status internationally through images taken by Western photographers.[71]
- Death and state funeral of Ruhollah Khomeini: Eight people are killed and hundreds injured in a human crush during the viewing of Khomeini's body at the Musalla in Tehran.[54]
- Benazir Bhutto, the Prime Minister of Pakistan, arrives in the United States for a state visit, during which she will receive an honorary degree from Harvard University.[72]
- Patrol Officer Louie Gordon Mizelle of the Anchorage Police Department in Alaska is shot five times while responding to a report of shots fired at an apartment complex. He will die in surgery the following day.[73]
- Born:
- Cam Atkinson, American National Hockey League right winger; in Riverside, Connecticut[74]
- Mónica Castaño, Colombian beauty queen and model[75]
- Roxana Cocoș, Romanian Olympic weightlifter; in Bucharest, Romania[76]
- Ed Davis, National Basketball Association player; in Washington, D.C.[77]
- Megumi Nakajima, Japanese voice actress and singer; in Mito, Ibaraki, Japan[78]
- Died: Maurice Philippe, British aircraft and Formula One car designer (b. 1932)[79]
June 6, 1989 (Tuesday)[]
- Japanese serial killer Tsutomu Miyazaki murders 5-year-old Ayako Nomoto. Over the next two days he will engage in sexual acts with the girl's corpse and take photos and videos of it.[80]
- Death and state funeral of Ruhollah Khomeini: The Ayatollah Khomeini's first funeral in Tehran is aborted by officials after a large crowd storms the funeral procession, nearly destroying Khomeini's wooden casket in order to get a last glimpse of his body. At one point, his body almost falls to the ground, as the crowd attempt to grab pieces of the death shroud. The Ayatollah's body has to be returned for the burial preparations to be repeated, before being brought back to the cemetery a few hours later.[53][54]
- Pope John Paul II arrives in Denmark, visiting Åsebakken Priory, Roskilde, Copenhagen and Øm before leaving on June 7.[1][81]
- PC Jacqueline Ann Brown of the Hertfordshire Constabulary dies of injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Harpenden, England, during a prisoner transport.[82]
- Democratic Representative Tom Foley of Washington is elected Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, defeating Republican Representative Robert H. Michel by a vote of 251-164. The Speaker's chair had been vacated by the resignation of Jim Wright due to a scandal.[83]
- Deputy Sheriff Lawrence W. Bragg, III, of the Newberry County, South Carolina Sheriff's Office dies on duty in an automobile accident during a prisoner transport.[84]
- In professional basketball, the 1989 NBA Finals begin between the Detroit Pistons and the Los Angeles Lakers.[85]
- Born:
June 7, 1989 (Wednesday)[]
- The British government announces that it will sell the Short Brothers aerospace company, the largest employer in Northern Ireland, to the Canadian company Bombardier Inc.[88]
- Surinam Airways Flight 764, originating from Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, crashes in Paramaribo, Suriname, due to pilot error, killing 176. Among the dead are 14 members of an exhibition football team known as the "Colourful XI" (Kleurijk Elftal) (one of whom dies in hospital three days later) and their coach; three players survive.[89]
- Died in the crash of Surinam Airways Flight 764:
- Ruud Degenaar, 25, Heracles Almelo
- Lloyd Doesburg, 29, AFC Ajax
- Steve van Dorpel, 23, FC Volendam
- Wendel Fräser, 22, RBC Roosendaal
- Frits Goodings, 25, FC Wageningen
- Jerry Haatrecht, 28, Neerlandia
- Virgall Joemankhan, 20, Cercle Brugge K.S.V.
- Andro Knel, 21, NAC Breda
- Ruben Kogeldans, 22, Willem II Tilburg
- Fred Patrick, 23, PEC Zwolle
- Andy Scharmin, 21, FC Twente
- Elfried Veldman, 23, De Graafschap
- Florian Vijent, 27, SC Telstar
- Nick Stienstra, 34, RCH (coach)[89]
- The United States Navy submarine USS Blenny, launched in 1944, is sunk as part of an artificial reef off Ocean City, Maryland. Former crewmembers of the Blenny are present for the sinking ceremony.[90]
- Police Officer Joseph Emmanuel Davis of the Atlanta Police Department in Georgia is shot and killed with his own handgun by a robbery suspect.[91]
- Born:
- James Hamilton, New Zealand Olympic snowboarder; in Takapuna, New Zealand[92]
- Seiji Kobayashi, Japanese professional baseball catcher[93]
- Agyemang Opoku (born Nana Opoku Agyemang-Prempeh), Ghanaian footballer; in Obuasi, Ashanti Region, Ghana[94]
- Mitch Robinson, Australian rules footballer[95]
- Sofía Sisniega, Mexican actress; in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico[96]
- Died:
June 8, 1989 (Thursday)[]
- Pope John Paul II arrives in Sweden, visiting Stockholm, Uppsala and Vadstena Castle before leaving for Rome on June 10.[1][99]
- A team led by Dr. Robert Ballard locates the wreck of the German battleship Bismarck, which was sunk in 1941, about 600 miles (970 km) west of Brest, France at a depth of 15,000 feet (4,600 m).[100][101]
- U.S. President George H. W. Bush holds the first prime time news conference of his presidency. When asked whether he has contacted any of China's leaders by telephone about the recent events there, Bush replies, "Line was busy. Couldn't get through."[102]
- Born:
- Timea Bacsinszky, Swiss tennis player; in Lausanne, Switzerland[103]
- Richard Fleeshman, English actor and singer-songwriter; in Manchester, England[104]
- Simon Trummer, Swiss racing driver; in Frutigen, Canton of Bern, Switzerland[105]
- Minami Tsuda, Japanese voice actress; in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan[citation needed]
- Amaury Vassili, French operatic tenor; in Rouen, Upper Normandy, France[106]
- Died:
- Susan Daniels Smith, American FBI informant (b. 1961), murdered by her handler and lover, Agent Mark Putnam[107]
- Albert Spaggiari, French criminal, lung cancer (b. 1932)[citation needed]
June 9, 1989 (Friday)[]
- Deputy Sheriff William Mahon Banks of the Greenville County, South Carolina Sheriff's Office is killed when a vehicle running a stop sign strikes his patrol car.[108]
- Lieutenant Benedict James Thomas of the Florida Highway Patrol is struck and killed by a vehicle while returning to his patrol car after investigating an abandoned vehicle on I-75 in Tampa, Florida.[109]
- Born:
- Chloë Agnew, Irish singer; in Knocklyon, County Dublin, Ireland[110]
- Danilo Avelar, Brazilian footballer; in Paranavaí, Brazil[111]
- Logan Browning, American actress; in Atlanta, Georgia[112]
- Baden Kerr, New Zealand rugby union player; in Papakura, Auckland, New Zealand[113]
- Josie Tomic, Australian Olympic track cyclist; in Subiaco, Western Australia[114]
- Dídac Vilà, Spanish footballer; in Mataró, Spain[115]
- Died:
- George Beadle, American geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Alzheimer's disease (b. 1903)[116][117]
- Rashid Behbudov, Azerbaijani singer and actor, kidney disease (b. 1915)[118]
- Vladimir Kasatonov, Soviet admiral of the fleet, Hero of the Soviet Union (b. 1910)[119]
- José López Rega OIC, Argentine politician, diabetes/heart attack (b. 1916)[120][121][122]
- Wolfdietrich Schnurre, German writer, heart failure (b. 1920)[123]
June 10, 1989 (Saturday)[]
- A groundbreaking ceremony is held for a new, modern facility for Woodbridge Hospital (later known as the Institute of Mental Health) in Singapore.[124]
- United States Air Force Captain graduates from the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base, the first female pilot to do so.[125]
- Born:
- DeAndre Kane, American-born Hungarian professional basketball player; in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[126]
- David Miller, South African cricketer; in Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa[127]
- Alexandra Stan, Romanian singer-songwriter; in Constanța, Romania[128]
- William Whetton, New Zealand rugby union player[129]
- Died:
- Ortwin Linger, Dutch footballer (HFC Haarlem), dies three days after the crash of Surinam Airways Flight 764 as a result of his injuries.[89]
- Richard Quine, American actor and director, suicide by gunshot (b. 1920)[130]
June 11, 1989 (Sunday)[]
- American racer Kevin Schwantz of the Suzuki Pepsi Cola team wins the 1989 Yugoslavian motorcycle Grand Prix at the Automotodrom Grobnik circuit near Rijeka, Yugoslavia.[131]
- 27-year-old New Zealand mountaineer David Heymann falls 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) to his death from the Hörnli Ridge on the Matterhorn. His climbing partner, Greg Houston, descends the mountain alone without the pair's ropes, which Heymann had been carrying.[132]
- American driver Ricky Rudd wins the 1989 Banquet Frozen Foods 300 stock car race at Sears Point International Raceway in Sonoma, California.[133][134]
- A Beechcraft sightseeing plane carrying 10 tourists and the pilot disappears between the islands of Hawaii and Maui.[135]
- Born:
- Lorenzo Ariaudo, Italian footballer; in Turin, Italy[136]
- Keith Aulie, Canadian National Hockey League defenceman; in Rouleau, Saskatchewan, Canada[137]
- Conrad Baden, Norwegian composer and organist (b. 1908)[138]
- Ana Clara Duarte, Brazilian tennis player; in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil[139]
- Maya Moore, American professional and Olympic champion basketball player; in Jefferson City, Missouri[140]
June 12, 1989 (Monday)[]
- A powerful time bomb kills at least seven people and injures or maims 54 others at the main railroad station in New Delhi, India.[141]
- The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. cancels Robert Mapplethorpe's photography exhibition, "Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Moment", due to its sexually explicit content. Mapplethorpe had died of AIDS in March 1989.[142]
- Glen Sather steps down as head coach of the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers and is succeeded by John Muckler.[143]
- Dubin inquiry: Canadian Olympic sprinter Ben Johnson admits under oath that he used steroids beginning in 1981, leading to his disqualification at the 1988 Summer Olympics.[144]
- At Caesars Palace in Paradise, Nevada, American boxers Sugar Ray Leonard and Thomas Hearns fight in a rematch of their September 1981 bout. The fight ends in a draw after 12 rounds.[145][146] On the undercard, Andrew Maynard defeats , Ray Mercer knocks out , Kennedy McKinney wins by decision over , Michael Carbajal defeats , and Robert Wangila wins by decision over Buck Smith.[145]
- Born:
- Emma Eliasson, Swedish professional and Olympic ice hockey defender; in Karesuando, Kiruna, Sweden[147]
- Andrea Guardini, Italian cyclist; in Tregnago, Italy[148]
- Ibrahim Jeilan, Ethiopian long-distance runner; in Bale Province, Ethiopia[149]
- Shane Lowry, Australian footballer; in Perth, Western Australia[150]
- Tim Nanai-Williams, New Zealand-born Samoan rugby union player; in Auckland, New Zealand[151]
- Dale Stephens, English footballer; in Bolton, England[152]
- Died:
- Bruce Hamilton CBE, Australian public servant (b. 1911)[153]
- Cath Vautier OBE, New Zealand netball player, teacher and sports administrator (b. 1902)[154]
June 13, 1989 (Tuesday)[]
- Six miners drown at the Emu Mine near Leinster, Western Australia, in an accident caused by heavy rains.[155][156]
- End of socialism in Hungary: Formal beginning of the Hungarian Round Table Talks.[157]
- During a four-day visit by Mikhail Gorbachev, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, to West Germany, Gorbachev and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl sign a joint declaration in Bonn which promises respect for human rights and expresses support for disarmament measures. One passage constitutes Gorbachev's renunciation of the Brezhnev Doctrine.[158]
- The sixteenth James Bond film, Licence to Kill, premieres at the Odeon Cinema in London, England. The first Bond film not to use or paraphrase the title of an Ian Fleming story, it is also the second and final film to star Timothy Dalton as the fictional spy. Charles, Prince of Wales and Diana, Princess of Wales attend the premiere.[159]
- Aboard Air Force One, U.S. President Bush vetoes a bill passed by the U.S. Congress that would have increased the minimum wage to $4.55 an hour over three years.[160]
- The Detroit Pistons win the 1989 NBA Finals, defeating the Los Angeles Lakers 4 games to 0.[85]
- Born:
- Coline Aumard, French professional squash player; in Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, Paris, France[161]
- Ben Barba, Australian rugby league footballer; in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia[162]
- James Calado, English racing driver; in Cropthorne, Worcestershire, England[163]
- Ryan McDonagh, American National Hockey League defenceman; in Saint Paul, Minnesota[164]
- Daniel Mortimer, Australian rugby league footballer; in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia[165]
- Andreas Samaris, Greek footballer; in Patras, Greece[166]
- Andreas Sander, German Olympic alpine skier; in Schwelm, North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany[167]
- Tommy Searle, English motocross racer; in Pembury, Kent, England[168]
- Lisa Tucker, American singer and actress; in Anaheim, California[169]
- Hassan Whiteside, National Basketball Association player; in Gastonia, North Carolina[170]
- Erica Wiebe, Canadian Olympic champion wrestler; in Stittsville, Ontario, Canada[171]
- Dino Wieser, Swiss professional ice hockey forward[172]
- Died:
- Fran Allison, American actress and television personality, bone marrow failure (b. 1907)[173]
- Scott Ross, American-born harpsichordist, pneumonia related to AIDS (b. 1951)[174]
June 14, 1989 (Wednesday)[]
- During his first visit to London since leaving office in January, former U.S. President Ronald Reagan has lunch at Buckingham Palace with Queen Elizabeth II, who makes him an honorary knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath.[160][175]
- The Secretary of State (United Kingdom) announces that, in cases where people incorrectly refused entry into the UK as children because they were "not related as claimed" can now prove their relationship to their relatives in the UK through DNA fingerprinting, in order to immigrate to the UK they will have to prove that they are still dependent on their UK sponsors and, if they are over 18, that there are compassionate circumstances other than the fact of wrongful separation.[176]
- The first Titan IV rocket is launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, carrying a classified military payload.[125]
- Born:
- Lucy Hale (born Karen Lucille Hale), American actress and singer; in Memphis, Tennessee[177]
- Cory Higgins, National Basketball Association player; in Danville, California[178]
- Jubin Nautiyal, Indian playback singer; in Dehradun, Uttar Pradesh, India[citation needed]
- Mónica Olivia Rodríguez, Mexican Paralympic middle-distance runner; in Ciudad Guzmán, Zapotlán el Grande, Mexico[179]
- Brad Takairangi, Australian-New Zealand rugby league footballer; in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia[180]
- Died:
- Louis-Philippe-Antoine Bélanger, Canadian politician (b. 1907)[181]
- Pete de Freitas, English musician and producer (Echo & the Bunnymen), motorcycle accident (b. 1961)[182][183]
- Joseph Malula, Congolese Catholic archbishop and cardinal (b. 1917)[184]
June 15, 1989 (Thursday)[]
- The 1989 European Parliament election begins in the twelve member states of the European Community.[185]
- At the 1989 Irish general election, Fianna Fáil, led by Taoiseach Charles Haughey, fails to win a majority.[186]
- The Troubles: 21-year-old soldier Adam Gilbert of the Royal Marines is killed by friendly fire when his patrol fires at a stolen car in Belfast.[187][188][189]
- Sub Pop releases Bleach, the debut studio album by the American rock band Nirvana.[190]
- Born:
- Bayley (born Pamela Rose Martinez), American professional wrestler; in San Jose, California[191]
- Victor Cabedo, Spanish cyclist; in Onda, Castellón, Spain (d. 2012 in training crash)[192]
- Bryan Clauson, American auto racing driver; in Carmichael, California (d. 2016 in race crash)[193]
- Alex Puccio (born Alexandrea Elizabeth Cocca), American professional climber; in McKinney, Texas[194]
- Died:
- Maurice Bellemare, OC, Canadian lawyer and politician, diabetes (b. 1912)[195]
- Victor French, American actor and director, lung cancer (b. 1934)[196]
- Judy Johnson (born William Julius Johnson), American Negro league baseball third baseman and manager (b. 1899)[197]
- Ray McAnally, Irish actor, heart attack (b. 1926)[198]
June 16, 1989 (Friday)[]
- End of socialism in Hungary: A crowd of at least 100,000 gathers at Heroes Square in Budapest for the reburial of Imre Nagy, the former Hungarian Prime Minister who had been executed in 1958.[199]
- At about 7 a.m., three bank robbers, one of them disguised as a security guard, take four employees and police officer Daniel C. O'Connell hostage at the City National Bank of Florida in Hallandale, Florida. Police Lt. David H. Miles arrives on scene and a shootout ensues. Miles is shot in the upper abdomen and neck, but survives due to his bulletproof vest and arrests one robber; O'Connell shoots a second robber to death. The third man escapes but will be arrested on January 23, 1990.[200][201][202] Miles and O'Connell will be named Officers of the Year by the Broward 10-13 Club in New York City in January 1991.[202]
- Police evacuate about 7,500 people from the east side of Akron, Ohio due to the discovery of cases of unstable dynamite during building demolition. Members of the Summit County, Ohio hazardous materials squad and the sheriff's bomb squad burn the dynamite safely.[203]
- Born: Odion Ighalo, Nigerian footballer; in Lagos, Nigeria[204]
- Died:
- Arthur Häggblad, Swedish Olympic cross-country skier (b. 1908)[205]
- Jerzy Pniewski, Polish physicist (b. 1913)[206]
June 17, 1989 (Saturday)[]
- Interflug Flight 102 crashes on takeoff from Berlin Schönefeld Airport in East Germany, killing 21 of the 113 people on board.[207][208]
- At least six people die in the crash of an Army National Guard helicopter in Yarmouth Port, Yarmouth, Massachusetts.[209]
- Fire Chief Ronald Nelson Boyd of the Round Mountain, Arkansas Fire Department dies of a heart attack while he and other firefighters are unloading lumber for construction of a new fire station.[210]
- Born:
- Died:
- S. David Griggs, American naval aviator and NASA astronaut, in crash of vintage World War II airplane (b. 1939)[214][215]
- John Matuszak, American football player and actor, acute propoxyphene intoxication (b. 1950)[216][217]
June 18, 1989 (Sunday)[]
- Second round of the 1989 Polish legislative election.[58]
- In the first Greek legislative election of the year, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement, led by Prime Minister of Greece Andreas Papandreou, loses control of the Hellenic Parliament.[218]
- Belgian driver Thierry Boutsen of the Williams-Renault team wins the 1989 Canadian Grand Prix at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[219][220]
- American driver Terry Labonte wins the 1989 Miller High Life 500 stock car race at Pocono International Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania.[221]
- Born:
- Jonas Acquistapace, German footballer; in North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany[222]
- Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, French-born Gabonese professional and Olympic footballer; in Laval, Mayenne, France[223]
- Chris Harris Jr., National Football League cornerback; in Tulsa, Oklahoma[224]
- Anna Veith (born Anna Fenninger), Austrian Olympic champion alpine ski racer; in Hallein, Salzburg, Austria[225]
- Renee Olstead (born Rebecca Renee Olstead), American actress and singer; in Houston, Texas[226]
- Died:
- John Rainey Adkins, American guitarist and songwriter, heart attack (b. 1941)[227][228]
- I. F. Stone, American investigative journalist and author (b. 1907)[229]
June 19, 1989 (Monday)[]
- Burma officially changes its name in English to the Union of Myanmar, also changing the name of its people's nationality from "Burmese" to "Myanmar". "Rangoon", the name of Myanmar's capital, is to be spelled "Yangon" in English.[230]
- The Troubles: At 1:10 a.m., a bomb explodes at the barracks of the British Army's Osnabrück Garrison in Osnabrück, West Germany, blowing a hole about 8 feet (2.4 m) in diameter from the ground floor to the roof of the building. No one is injured in the blast. A 62-year-old West German boilerman surprises two suspects before they can set four more bombs to detonate; they flee after hitting the boilerman in the face, leaving him with bruises and scratches. West German authorities believe the Provisional Irish Republican Army is responsible for the bombing.[231]
- Spain joins the European Monetary System.[185]
- Policeman Douglas Ortiz-Jusino of the Puerto Rico Police Department is working off-duty as a security guard at a Chinese restaurant in San Juan, Puerto Rico when an employee notifies him of a person carrying a firearm. When Ortiz-Jusino pursues the suspect on foot, the man shoots and kills him.[232]
- Born: Giacomo Gianniotti, Italian-Canadian actor; in Rome, Italy[233][234]
- Died:
- Dieter Aderhold, German political scientist, university teacher and politician (b. 1939)[235]
- Betti Alver, Estonian poet (b. 1906)[236]
- Andrey Prokofyev, Soviet Olympic champion track and field athlete, suicide by hanging (b. 1959)[237]
June 20, 1989 (Tuesday)[]
- Born:
- Christopher Mintz-Plasse, American actor and comedian; in Woodland Hills, California[238]
- Javier Pastore, Argentine footballer; in Córdoba, Argentina[239]
- Terrelle Pryor, National Football League quarterback and wide receiver; in Jeannette, Pennsylvania[240]
- Matthew Raymond-Barker, English singer; in London, England[241]
- Died: Otto Kässbohrer, German entrepreneur and design engineer (b. 1904)[242]
June 21, 1989 (Wednesday)[]
- The Supreme Court of the United States rules in Texas v. Johnson that American flag-burning is a form of political protest protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.[243]
- Trooper Harry Mckinley Coker, Jr. of the South Carolina Highway Patrol is struck and killed on duty by a speeding vehicle.[244]
- Born:
- Albert Anae, New Zealand rugby union player; in Wellington, New Zealand[245]
- Raheleh Asemani, Iranian-born Belgian Olympic taekwondo practitioner; in Karaj, Iran[246]
- Jarno Gmelich, Dutch cyclist; in Almere, Netherlands[247]
- Abubaker Kaki Khamis, Sudanese Olympic runner; in Muglad, Sudan[248]
- Christopher Lamb, American ski jumper[249]
- Died:
- Lee Calhoun, American Olympic champion track and field athlete (b. 1933)[250]
- Henri Sauguet, French composer (b. 1901)[251]
June 22, 1989 (Thursday)[]
- Angolan Civil War: In Gbadolite, Zaire, 18 African heads of state witness the declaration of Gbadolite, proclaiming a ceasefire in Angola to take effect on June 24.[252]
- British police arrest 260 people celebrating the summer solstice at Stonehenge.[253]
- The University of Limerick and Dublin City University are raised to the status of universities, the first established in Ireland since independence in 1922.[citation needed]
- Born:
- Daniel Aase, Norwegian footballer; in Kristiansand, Norway[254]
- Jeffrey Earnhardt, American race car driver; in Mooresville, North Carolina[255]
- Christian Eyenga (born Christian Eyenga Moenge), Congolese National Basketball Association player; in Kinshasa, Zaire[256]
- Jung Yong-hwa, South Korean musician, singer-songwriter, record producer and actor; in Yeoksam-dong, Gangnam District, Seoul, South Korea[257]
- Andreas Mikkelsen, Norwegian alpine skier and rally driver; in Oslo, Norway[258]
- Cédric Mongongu, Congolese footballer; in Kinshasa, Zaire[259]
- Died: Glenn Michael Souther (a.k.a. Mikhail Yevgenyevich Orlov), American-Soviet sailor and defector, suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning (b. 1957)[260][261]
June 23, 1989 (Friday)[]
- The Greek-registered oil tanker World Prodigy strikes a reef at the mouth of Narraganset Bay off Newport, Rhode Island, spilling 297,000 US gallons (1,120,000 l; 247,000 imp gal) of home heating oil into the ocean. Beaches and shellfish beds in Rhode Island are forced to close, but the environmental damage is relatively light.[262]
- Born:
- Lauren Bennett, English model, dancer and singer (G.R.L.); in Meopham, Kent, England[263]
- Lisa Carrington, New Zealand Olympic champion flatwater canoeist; in Tauranga, New Zealand[264]
- Marielle Jaffe, American actress, singer and model; in Valencia, Santa Clarita, California[265]
- Jordan Nolan, Canadian National Hockey League forward; in Garden River First Nation, Ontario, Canada[266]
- Ayana Taketatsu, Japanese voice actress; in Saitama Prefecture, Japan[267]
- Died:
June 24, 1989 (Saturday)[]
- In the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square protests, Jiang Zemin becomes General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, succeeding Zhao Ziyang.[272][273]
- The Troubles: 36-year-old Catholic civilian Liam McKee is shot and killed by the Ulster Freedom Fighters at his home in Lisburn, County Antrim.[188]
- Patrolman James Monroe McGaha of the Hueytown, Alabama Police Department is attempting to remove a drunk pedestrian from the roadway when a vehicle strikes and kills McGaha and the pedestrian.[274]
- Born:
- Juan José Barros, Peruvian footballer; in Barranquilla, Colombia[275]
- Fabian Böhm, German handball player; in Potsdam, East Germany[276]
- Ilektra-Elli Efthymiou, Greek Olympic rhythmic gymnast[277]
- Teklemariam Medhin, Eritrean Olympic long-distance runner; in Hazega, Ethiopia[278]
- Died:
- Hibari Misora, Japanese singer, heart failure (b. 1937)[279]
- Prince Vasili Alexandrovich of Russia (b. 1907)[280]
June 25, 1989 (Sunday)[]
- Mexican boxer Humberto González defeats South Korean boxer Lee Yul-woo in a bout in Jeonju, South Korea, to claim the WBC Light Flyweight Championship.[281]
- Investigator Eugene Natale Gaiotti of the Vermont Department of Liquor Control dies on duty when his vehicle strikes a horse in the roadway in Clarendon, Vermont.[282]
- American driver Bill Elliott wins the 1989 Miller High Life 400 (Michigan) stock car race at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan.[283]
- A group of 16- and 17-year-old volunteer firefighters at the District Heights Fire Station in Prince George's County, Maryland, are discussing their frustration with their fire chief's criticisms of their performance when one of them suggests setting a fire to help prove themselves. The conversation leads to some of the first in a series of arsons that will continue until July 1990 and also involve young volunteer firefighters from Boulevard Heights, acting independently of the District Heights group.[284]
- Born: Chris Brochu, American actor and singer-songwriter; in Washington, D.C.[285][unreliable source?]
- Died: Idris Cox, Welsh communist activist and newspaper editor (b. 1899)[286]
June 26, 1989 (Monday)[]
- The Supreme Court of the United States rules in Penry v. Lynaugh that the execution of persons with intellectual disabilities does not violate the ban on cruel and unusual punishment in the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.[287]
- Born:
- Carlos Lopez, American stunt performer; in North Carolina (d. 2014, accidental fall)[288][289]
- Magid Magid, Somali-British activist and politician; in Burao, Somali Democratic Republic[290]
- Died:
- Howard Charles Green, PC, Canadian politician and parliamentarian (b. 1895)[291]
- Earle Riddiford, New Zealand mountaineer (b. 1921)[292]
June 27, 1989 (Tuesday)[]
- The International Labour Organization adopts the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989, the major binding international convention concerning indigenous peoples and tribal peoples.[293]
- The Troubles: 34-year-old Protestant David Black of the Royal Ulster Constabulary is killed while off-duty by a bomb attached to his car by the Irish Republican Army at his home in Artigarvan, County Tyrone.[188]
- Patrolman Orville Franklin Evans of the Rossville, Tennessee Police Department dies of a heart attack during a physical stress test at the , in which officers shoot at targets while moving through an obstacle course.[294]
- Born:
- Hana Birnerová, Czech tennis player[295]
- Sabino Brunello, Italian chess Grandmaster; in Brescia, Italy[296]
- Kimiko Glenn, American actress and singer; in Phoenix, Arizona[297]
- Matthew Lewis, British actor; in Leeds, England[298]
- Frank Stäbler, German Olympic Greco-Roman wrestler; in Böblingen, Baden-Württemberg, West Germany[299]
- Bruna Tenório, Brazilian supermodel; in Maceió, Alagoas, Brazil[300]
- Died:
June 28, 1989 (Wednesday)[]
- On the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo, Serbian President Slobodan Milošević delivers the Gazimestan speech at the site of the historic battle.[304]
- Born:
- Ronny Fredrik Ansnes, Norwegian cross-country skier; in Meldal, Norway (d. 2018, drowned)[305][306]
- Sergio Asenjo, Spanish footballer; in Palencia, Spain[307]
- Jason Clark, Australian rugby league footballer; in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia[308]
- Andrew Fifita, Tongan rugby league footballer; in Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia[309]
- David Fifita, Tongan rugby league footballer; in Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia[310][311]
- Joe Kovacs, American Olympic shot putter; in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania[312]
- Markiplier (born Mark Edward Fischbach), American YouTube personality; in Honolulu, Hawaii
- Nicole Rottmann, Austrian tennis player; in Wagna, Austria[313]
- Julia Zlobina, Azerbaijani Olympic ice dancer; in Kirov, Kirov Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union[314]
- Died:
June 29, 1989 (Thursday)[]
- Born:
- Maciej Szymon Cieśla, Polish graphics designer; in Katowice, Poland (d. 2016, bone cancer)[317]
- Isabelle Gulldén, Swedish Olympic and professional handball player; in Sävedalen, Partille Municipality, Sweden[318]
- Maciej Sadlok, Polish footballer; in Oświęcim, Poland[319]
- Jens Westin, Swedish professional ice hockey defenceman; in Kalix, Sweden[320]
June 30, 1989 (Friday)[]
- 1989 Sudanese coup d'état: A military coup led by Omar al-Bashir ousts the civilian government of Prime Minister of Sudan Sadiq al-Mahdi.[321]
- At 10:29 a.m., an electrical fire breaks out on the sixth floor of the South Tower of Peachtree 25th, a 10-story office building in Atlanta, Georgia. The fire kills five people and injures 29.[322]
- Trooper Stanley E. Gerling and Trooper Pilot Lance G. Dietsch of the Iowa State Patrol are killed in a plane crash at the conclusion of a successful search for an elderly man who wandered away from a nursing home.[323][324]
- In Washington, D.C., over 900 artists and supporters of the late Robert Mapplethorpe take part in a protest of the cancellation of his exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, during which enlargements of Mapplethorpe's photos are projected onto the façade of the gallery.[142]
- Born:
- Asbel Kiprop, Kenyan Olympic champion middle-distance runner; in Eldoret, Kenya[325]
- Ginta Lapiņa, Latvian model; in Riga, Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union[326]
- Steffen Liebig, German rugby union player[327]
- Damián Lizio, Argentine-born Bolivian footballer; in Florida, Buenos Aires, Argentina[328]
- David Myers, Australian rules footballer[329]
- Died: Hilmar Baunsgaard, Danish politician and 34th Prime Minister of Denmark (b. 1920)[330]
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