The Last Word.
Date: 09 November 1904
From The Chicago News
Viktor Hermann Brack (Haaren (actualmente parte de Aquisgrán); 9 de noviembre de 1904 - Landsberg am Lech, 2 de junio de 1948) fue un criminal nazi, organizador del programa de eutanasia Aktion T4, por el cual el Estado nazi asesinó sistemáticamente a personas con alguna discapacidad. Posteriormente, fue uno de los responsables del gaseo de judíos en los campos de exterminio y se reunió con Odilo Globocnik para discutir la implementación práctica de la Solución Final. Brack fue sentenciado en el Juicio de los doctores de Núremberg a la pena capital en agosto de 1947 y ejecutado en la horca el 2 de junio de 1948.
Leia mais...O dia 9 de novembro de 1904 foi um quarta-feira sob o signo de ♏. Foi o dia 313 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi Theodore Roosevelt.
Se você nasceu neste dia, você tem 121 anos de idade. Seu último aniversário foi no dia domingo, 9 de novembro de 2025, 205 dias atrás. Seu próximo aniversário é no dia segunda-feira, 9 de novembro de 2026, em 159 dias. Você viveu 44.400 dias, ou cerca de 1.065.620 horas, ou cerca de 63.937.255 minutos, ou cerca de 3.836.235.300 segundos.
Date: 10 November 1904
CHE-FOO, Nov. 9. -- A junk which left Port Arthur on Nov. 7 has arrived here, bringing the news that the garrison up to that time had repulsed all Japanese attacks.
Date: 10 November 1904
LONDON, Thursday, Nov. 10. -- Special dispatches from Port Arthur and Che-Foo which are printed in this morning's newspapers add little to the recent news of the besieging operations at Port Arthur, but give terrible descriptions of the condition of the besieged.
Date: 09 November 1904
Special to The New York Times
ESOPUS, N.Y., Nov. 8. -- It was 8:25 o'clock this evening when Judge Parker received a telegram from the Democratic National Committee announcing the election of President Roosevelt. After a minute of reflection he dictated his telegram of congratulation to the President.
Date: 09 November 1904
OLEAN, N.Y., Nov. 8. -- Lieut. Gov. Higgins voted in the Second Ward a few minutes before 9 o'clock. His ballot was number 107. After voting he exchanged greetings with numerous friends and returned to his home.
Date: 10 November 1904
The post-election boom arrived yesterday. Whoever wanted to realize was able to do so in multiples of thousand-share lots, and whoever wanted to buy could only do so at higher prices as a rule. Not that stocks were not weaker at some moments than others; indeed, the close was below the best; but the swing was unmistakably upward.