Daily Observer (Jamaica)

This Day in HISTORY

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TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

2011: Britain’s Prince William and Kate Middleton are married in an opulent ceremony at London’s Westminste­r Abbey.

OTHER EVENTS

1429: Joan of Arc enters Orleans, France, and defeats English.

1628: Sweden and Denmark sign defence treaty against Duke of Wallenstei­n, bringing Sweden into the Thirty Years’ War.

1706: Electors of Bavaria and Cologne are outlawed by Holy Roman Empire.

1781: French fleet under Admiral Suffren prevents Britain from seizing Cape of Good Hope. 1798: Joseph Haydn’s oratorio

The Creation is rehearsed in Vienna, Austria, before an invited audience.

1826: Liberal constituti­on is promulgate­d in Portugal for a hereditary monarchy.

1848: Pope Pius IX dissociate­s himself from Italian national movement.

1861: Maryland’s House of Delegates votes against seceding from the Union of the United States.

1862: New Orleans falls to Union forces during the American Civil War.

1913: Gideon Sundback of Hoboken, New Jersey, patents the zipper.

1916: The Easter Rising in Dublin collapses as Irish nationalis­ts surrender to British authoritie­s.

1931: US President Herbert Hoover receives the king of Siam. It was the first time an absolute monarch had travelled to the White House.

1945: US soldiers in Germany liberate 32,000 Nazi victims from a concentrat­ion camp in Dachau in World War II.

1946: Anglo-us committee advises against partition of Palestine; 28 former Japanese leaders are indicted in Tokyo as war criminals.

1968: The countercul­ture musical Hair opened on Broadway following limited engagement­s off-broadway.

1973: Israel decides to expand civil rights of its 336,000 Arab citizens to reward Israeli Arab community for its loyalty.

1974: US President Richard Nixon announces he is releasing edited transcript­s of secretly made White House tape recordings related to the Watergate scandal.

1975: US task force evacuates foreigners and Vietnamese by helicopter from Saigon.

1981: Truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admits in a London court to being the “Yorkshire Ripper”, the killer of 13 women in northern England during a fiveyear period.

1989: Police arrest about 2,200 workers and students in South Korea to try to block labour rally.

1990: Wrecking cranes tear down the section of the Berlin Wall surroundin­g the Brandenbur­g Gate, the wall’s most famous section.

1992: A jury in Los Angeles acquits policemen charged with a videotaped beating of black man Rodney King, setting off three days of riots that kill 55 people and causes Us$1-billion in damage.

1993: Gunmen in Costa Rica free 18 Supreme Court justices they had held hostage for four days. Police capture the five gunmen after a brief gun battle. Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II announced that, for the first time, Buckingham Palace would be opened to tourists to help raise money for repairs at firedamage­d Windsor Castle.

1994: South Africa’s first democratic elections end after an extra day of balloting intended to overcome delays and confusion.

1997: Astronaut Jerry

Linenger and cosmonaut Vasily Tsibliyev go on the first Usrussian space walk.

1998: Brazil announces an unpreceden­ted plan to protect an area of Amazon forest half the size of France.

2000: Police in Azerbaijan beat back more than 1,000 demonstrat­ors seeking to stage an unsanction­ed Opposition rally in the capital Baku.

2004: President George W Bush and Vice-president Dick Cheney met behind closed doors with the September 11 commission; afterward, Bush said he’d told the panel his Administra­tion tried to protect America from terrorists as warnings grew before the devastatin­g attack of 2001.

2006: Bolivian President Evo Morales joins Fidel Castro of Cuba and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela in Havana for an endorsemen­t of a socialist trade initiative aimed at providing an alternativ­e to Us-backed free trade efforts in Latin America.

2013: Opening statements take place in Los Angeles in a wrongful death lawsuit brought by Michael Jackson’s mother, Katherine Jackson, against concert giant AEG Live, claiming it failed to properly investigat­e a doctor who had cared for Jackson and was later convicted of involuntar­y manslaught­er in his 2009 death. (The jury determined in October 2013 that AEG Live was not liable.)

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

John Arbuthnot, English physicist-satirist (1667-1745); Alexander II, czar of Russia (1818-1881); Japan’s Emperor Hirohito (1901-1989); Sir Malcolm Sargent, English conductor (1895-1967); Zubin Mehta, Indian conductor (1936); Jerry Seinfeld, US comedian (1954- ); Michelle Pfeiffer, US actress (1958- ); Daniel Day-lewis, English-born actor (1957- ); Uma Thurman, US actress (1970- ); Andre Agassi, tennis player (1970- ); Master P, rapper (1970- ); Byiome Muir, better known by his stage name I-octane, Jamaican reggae dancehall recording artiste (1984- )

 ??  ?? On this day ten years ago, Britain’s Prince William and Kate Middleton are married in an opulent ceremony at London’s Westminste­r Abbey.
On this day ten years ago, Britain’s Prince William and Kate Middleton are married in an opulent ceremony at London’s Westminste­r Abbey.
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