Daily Observer (Jamaica)

THIS DAY IN HISTORY

Today is the 138th day of 2015. There are 227 days left in the year.

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TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

1896: The US Supreme Court endorses the concept of “separate but equal” racial segregatio­n with its Plessy vs Ferguson decision, a ruling that is overturned 58 years later in Brown vs Board of Education.

OTHER EVENTS

1642: The Canadian city of Montreal is founded by French colonists.

1765: About one-fourth of Montreal is destroyed by a fire.

1781: Peruvian revolution­ary Tupac Amaru II is forced to witness the execution of his family by the Spanish in the main plaza in Cuzco and is then tortured and beheaded.

1804: Napoleon Bonaparte is proclaimed emperor of France.

1830: Edwin Budding of England signs an agreement for the manufactur­e of his invention, the lawnmower.

1860: Abraham Lincoln is nominated for US president.

1897: A public reading of

Bram Stoker’s new horror novel, Dracula, is staged in London.

1899: Internatio­nal peace conference is convened at The Hague in the Netherland­s. It adopts convention­s on warfare and creates the Permanent

Court of Arbitratio­n, now the UN Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

1910: Halley’s comet is seen from Earth as it moves across the sun. 1933: President Franklin D Roosevelt signs a measure creating the Tennessee Valley Authority. 1934: Congress approves and President Franklin D Roosevelt signs the so-called “Lindbergh Act”, providing for the death penalty in cases of interstate kidnapping.

1951: The United Nations, previously without a permanent home, begins to move into headquarte­rs in New York City.

1953: Jacqueline Cochran becomes the first woman to break the sound barrier as she piloted a Canadair F-86 Sabre jet over Rogers Dry Lake, California.

1954: European Convention of Human Rights goes into effect.

1967: United Nations agrees to Egyptian demand to withdraw UN forces from Gaza Strip.

1969: Astronauts Eugene A Cernan, Thomas P Stafford and John W Young blast off aboard Apollo 10 on a mission to orbit the moon.

1970: Khmer Rouge forces advance to within 40 kilometres (25 miles) of Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh. They are repulsed, but take the capital five years later. 1972: Four bomb-disposal experts parachute into Atlantic from Royal Air Force plane and board liner Queen Elizabeth II after bomb threat. 1973: Harvard law professor Archibald Cox is appointed Watergate special prosecutor by US Attorney General Elliot Richardson.

1974: India explodes a nuclear bomb for the first time, in the deserts of Rajasthan.

1991: Helen Sharman becomes the first Briton to rocket into space as she flies aboard a

Soviet Soyuz spacecraft with two cosmonauts on an eight-day mission to the Mir space station.

1993: Violent riots break out in Copenhagen, Denmark, after a majority of Danes in a referendum approve the Maastricht treaty calling for a closer European Union.

1997: Rebels led by Laurent Kabila take control of Kinshasa, capital of Zaire — now the Democratic Republic of the Congo — after overrunnin­g the country in seven months.

1999: Sierra Leone’s Government and the country’s rebels agree to a ceasefire to end seven years of savage fighting.

2003: Philippine military begins bombing positions of

Moro Islamic Liberation Front holdouts on the southern island of Mindanao. The Government holds the Muslim separatist group responsibl­e for recent violence on the island.

2006: Visiting one of the busiest crossing sectors between the US and Mexico, President George W Bush says in Yuma, Arizona, that it makes sense to put up fencing along parts of the border, but not to block off the entire 2,000-mile length to keep immigrants from entering the US illegally.

2007: The Vatican confirms that Pope Benedict XVI will loosen restrictio­ns on celebratin­g the old Latin Mass, reviving a rite that was essentiall­y swept away by the revolution­ary reforms of the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council.

2011: Dominique Strausskah­n, the managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, resigns, saying he wants to devote all his energy to battling the sexual assault charges he faces in New York. The charges are later dropped.

2012: Social network Facebook made its trading debut with one of the most highly anticipate­d IPOS in Wall Street history; however, by day’s end, Facebook stock closes up only 23 cents from its initial pricing of US$38.

2015: An 11-judge panel of the ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco says a threemembe­r panel of the same court should not have forced Youtube to take down an anti-muslim film that sparked violence in the Middle East and death threats to actors.

2016: In an unusual move, Republican candidate Donald Trump releases a list of 11 potential Supreme Court justices he would consider if elected president (not included was Trump’s eventual first pick for the nation’s highest bench, Neil Gorsuch).

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Frank Capra, US movie director (1897-1991); John Paul II (Karol Wojtyla), Polish-born pope (19182005); Dame Margot Fonteyn, English ballerina (1919-1991); George Strait, US country singer (1952- ); Tina Fey, US comedian and actress (1970- ); Jack Johnson, US musician (1975- ); Chow Yun-fat, Hong Kong-born actor (1955- ); Robert Morse, actor (1931-2022); Reggie Jackson, baseball hall-of-famer (1946- ); Page Hamilton, rock singer-musician (1960- ); Martika, singer-actress (1969- ); Spencer Breslin, actor (1992- )

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