<h3>This week's cover</h3>

The image of German actor Ulrich Moue in the film Eavesdropping Storm. (Infographic/Figure)
<h3>event</h3>
On August 9, 1974, Nixon left the White House shortly before his resignation went into effect. (Infographic/Figure)
June 20, 1409: Construction of the Ming Tombs begins.
23 June 1894: The International Olympic Committee is established, with its first chairman being the Greek Zemetlius Viquelas.
June 23, 1961: The Antarctic Treaty, signed by twelve countries to designate Antarctica for peaceful purposes, enters into force.
June 17, 1967: China successfully exploded its first hydrogen bomb over the western region with an explosive yield of 3.3 million tons of TNT.
June 17, 1972: Five suspects infiltrate the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee to install wiretaps and take documents, are accidentally arrested, and the Watergate incident breaks out. In 1974, U.S. President Richard Nixon resigned over an impeachment motion sparked by the incident.
June 19, 1973: Vietnamese-American journalist Hoang Kung Woo won the Pulitzer Prize for his photojournalism "Fire From The Sky," which the media called "a photograph that brought the Vietnam War to an early end."
June 19, 1978: Garfield, a comic strip by American cartoonist Jim Davis, begins serialization in 41 newspapers, and "Garfield" is derived from the name of the author's grandfather.
Maradona eventually led Argentina to a Hercules Cup in Mexico. (Infographic/Figure)
22 June 1986: In the quarter-finals of the Fifa World Cup in Mexico against England, Argentine star Diego Maradona scored the "Hand of God" and the "goal of the century" with six players.
June 23, 1993: Fermat's Last Theorem is proved by British mathematician Andrew Wiles, and after correction, the proof is officially published in the May 1995 Journal of Mathematics.
June 23, 2001: Three tenors, Pavarotti, Domingo and Carreras, give a concert at noon gate square in the Forbidden City in Beijing.
On October 1, 1955, Sartre and De Beauvoir were on the Tiananmen Observatory. (Infographic/Figure)
<h3>Born</h3>
- 19 June 1623 – Blaise Pascal, French mathematician, physicist, philosopher (d. 1662)
"Man is nothing but a reed, the most fragile thing in nature; but he is a reed that can think... Thus, our total dignity lies in our thoughts. — Pascal's Thoughts
- 17 June 1882 – Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky, Russian-American composer and conductor (d. 1971)
June 23, 1889: Anna Andreevna Akhmatova, representative poet of the Russian "Silver Age", formerly known as Anna Andreevna Golenko (died 1966)
Akhmatova has been praised as the "moon of Russian poetry", while Pushkin is known as the "sun of Russian poetry".
- June 23, 1894 – Alfred Kinsey, American biologist and sexologist (died 1956)
21 June 1905 – Jean-Paul Sartre, French philosopher and writer, becomes the first Nobel laureate in literature to refuse to accept the prize in 1964 (died 1980)
In 1946, Osamu Dazai was in a bar, photographed by Hayashi Tadahiko. (Infographic/Figure)
- June 19, 1909 – Osamu Dazai, Japanese novelist, real name Shuji Tsushima (died 1948)
Osamu Dazai, who finally died after five suicides, was a writer who was "lost" to the extreme, and the autobiographical novel "Human Disqualification" focused on his thoughts.
- 23 June 1912 – Alan Turing, British mathematician (died 1954)
- 18 June 1914 – Xie Tian, actor and director, née Hsieh Hongkun (died 2003)
- June 17, 1920 – Setko Hara, Japanese actor (died 2015)
- June 18, 1929 – Jurgen Habermass, German philosopher
- 19 June 1945 – Aung San Suu Kyi, Burmese politician and winner of the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize
June 19, 1947: Salman Rushi, British novelist, wins the Booker Prize for Midnight's Children in 1981
- June 22, 1949 – Meryl Streep, American actor
Meryl Streep has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress seventeen times and has won two awards for "Sophie's Choice" and "The Iron Lady."
- 20 June 1953 – Ulrich Moue, German actor, starring in the film Eavesdropping Storm (died 2007)
- 21 June 1955 – Michel Platini, French footballer and former president of UEFA
On June 18, 2019, Platini was interrogated by French police on suspicion of corruption related to the 2022 World Cup bid.
June 22, 1962 – Stephen Chow, director and actor
"Star Lord" is rarely interviewed. "Kangxi Lai" because of the "Yangtze River No. 7" interview Zhou Xingchi, the business level is high such as Cai Kangyong, Xiao S can only keep the cold field. There are countless passages and incisions circulating from Stephen Chow's films, such as the code name 9527, which is pronounced "dove is easy to come out" in Cantonese, referring to the fact that the words cannot be raised in time, and is extended to "no seed".
June 21, 1963: Aoyama Kosho, Japanese manga artist
In 1993, Tsuyoshi Aoyama won the Elementary School Manga Award for "City Storm", becoming a well-known newcomer to manga. In the same year, he repeatedly studied Conan Doyle's The Complete Detective Sherlock Holmes, and thus named the protagonist "Conan". In January 1994, he began publishing the comic strip Detective Conan.
June 22, 1964 – Dan Brown, American novelist
- June 22, 1964 – Hiroshi Abe, Japanese actor
June 21, 1965: Yang Liwei, astronaut
- June 23, 1966 – Ren Xianqi, singer and actor
June 20, 1967: Nicole Kidman, American actress, wins the 75th Academy Award for Best Actress for All the Time
June 20, 1969 – Jiang Wenli, actress
- June 20, 1970 – Li Jiaxin, actor.
- June 22, 1971 – Dao Lang, singer, formerly known as Rollin
- June 23, 1972 – Zinedin Zidane, French player and coach
June 19, 1973 – Fan Shaohuang, actor
- June 17, 1983 – Kazuya Ninomiya, Japanese singer and actor
June 21, 1983 – Edward Snowden, former employee of the Central Intelligence Agency
Southern Weekend reporter Liu Youxiang