Today in history — June 20
1214: Oxford University is chartered. The charter is negotiated on behalf of the University by Italian Cardinal Nicholas de Romanis, the Papal Legate to England.
1782: The U.S. Congress adopts the Great Seal of the United States. The story that the “eye-on-the-pyramid” on the reverse of the seal is some kind of Masonic sign is a myth; the eye is that of God, who “has favored our undertakings” (Annuit Cœptis).
1863: West Virginia enters the Union as the 35th state.
1893: Lizzie Andrew Borden is acquitted of murdering her father and stepmother. Contrary to the popular rhyme, they only received 29 whacks between them.
1939: Heinkel-Flugzeugwerke’s He-176 becomes the first liquid-fueled rocket aircraft to fly. The German Luftwaffe isn’t interested and it winds up in a museum.
1948: Toast of the Town, later renamed the Ed Sullivan Show, premieres on CBS Television. The original guests, comics Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, pianist Eugene List, and tunesmiths Rogers & Hammerstein, are paid a total of $375.
1950: Future baseball Hall of Famer Willie Mays signs his first contract; the New York Giants give him a $6,000 signing bonus.
1977: The first oil begins to flow through the $7.7 billion Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
1996: Westinghouse Electric agrees to buy Infinity Broadcasting for $3.6 billion.
2002: China signs a contract to build a nuclear-powered desalination plant at Yingkou which will produce 80,000 tons of fresh water a day.