Manawatu Standard

Today in history

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1524 - James V is declared fit to govern by the Scottish Parliament.

1759 - About 11,000 British soldiers drive a small French garison of 400 out of Fort Ticonderog­a, New York.

1821 - Turkey and Russia sever relations after Turkey refuses to protect Christian subjects.

1847 - West African nation Liberia becomes the first African colony to declare independen­ce, from the United States.

1891 - France annexes South Sea island of Tahiti.

1908 - The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion – the FBI – is establishe­d in the United States.

1941 - President Franklin Roosevelt appoints General Douglas Macarthur commander of US Forces in the Far East. He also freezes all Japanese assets in the US, virtually halting Japanese-american trade.

1942 - Royal Air Force stages heavy raid on Hamburg, Germany.

1956 - Egypt’s President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalis­es Suez Canal, and Britain, France and US announce financial retaliatio­n.

1965 - Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean become independen­t, having been a British protectora­te since 1887.

1974 - Konstantin­os Karamanlis, new Greek premier, forms civilian Cabinet after seven years of military rule in Greece.

1991 - Communist leaders overwhelmi­ngly approve Mikhail Gorbachev’s new party platform, abandoning decades of Marxist dogma.

1997 - KR Narayanan takes the oath of India’s presidency, the first member of the class once known as ‘‘untouchabl­es’’ to do so.

1999 - In New York, the 30th anniversar­y of the legendary Woodstock musical festival ends violently with fires, looting and vandalism.

2010 - A Un-backed tribunal sentences the Khmer Rouge’s chief jailer to 35 years for overseeing the deaths of up to 16,000 people – the first verdict involving a senior member of the ‘‘killing fields’’ regime that devastated a generation of Cambodians.

2015 - English cyclist Chris Froome, of Team Sky, wins the Tour de France for the second time. Today’s Birthdays: George Bernard Shaw, Irish writer (1856-1950); Carl Jung, Swiss psychologi­st (1875-1961); Aldous Huxley, British author (1894-1963); Stanley Kubrick, US film director (1928-1999); John Howard, 25th Australian prime minister (1939-); Mick Jagger, British rock singer (1943-); Helen Mirren, English actress (1945-); Susan George, British actress (1950-); Wayne Grady, Australian profession­al golfer (1957-); Kevin Spacey, US actor (1959-); Sandra Bullock, US actress (1964-); Kate Beckinsale, British actress (1973-);

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