Otago Daily Times

Today in history

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Today is Thursday, August 2, the 214th day of 2017. There are 151 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1802 — Napoleon Bonaparte, of France, is declared Consul for Life, giving him the power to name his successor.

1830 — King Charles X of France abdicates after

three days of an uprising in Paris.

1838 — French whaling captain Jean Langlois negotiates the purchase of Banks Peninsula from local Maori for 1000 francs.

1851 — A prospectus is issued for the Otago

Banking Company.

1858 — The British Parliament passes the India Bill, transferri­ng the government of India to the Crown from the East India Company.

1865 — Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is

published in England.

1876 — Wild Bill Hickok, United States marshal and one of the most colourful figures of the Wild West, is killed in a saloon.

1907 — Lytteltonb­orn rower Billy Webb defeats Australian George Towns on the Parramatta River in Sydney, in the world sculling championsh­ips.

1934 — Germany’s president, Paul von Hindenburg, dies aged 87, opening the way for Adolf Hitler to become dictator.

1935 — Britain passes the Government of India Act, which reforms the government­al system, separates Burma and Aden from India, grants provincial government­s greater selfgovern­ment and creates a central legislatur­e in New Delhi. 1939 — Albert Einstein, concerned that the Nazis are working on powerful bombs using uranium, writes to US president Franklin Roosevelt urging him to start an atomic project.

1940 — New Zealand’s war cabinet approves the establishm­ent of a Home Guard. By the end of the war, more than 100,000 men will have volunteere­d; Hermann Goering, chief of the Luftwaffe, gives the Eagle Day directive to destroy British air power in order to pave the way for an invasion of Britain.

1942 — The second major earthquake in six weeks, measuring 7 on the Richter scale, strikes the Wellington, Wairarapa and Manawatu region. It causes extensive damage and comes just five weeks after a magnitude7.2 earthquake rocked the lower North Island.

1943 — A cargo plane carrying Japanese internee families crashes on takeoff from Whenuapai with the loss of 15 lives; US navy patrol torpedo boat PT109, commanded by Lieutenant John F. Kennedy, sinks after being sheared in two by a Japanese destroyer off the Solomon Islands. Kennedy was credited with saving members of the crew.

1945 — The Potsdam Conference ends with Truman, Stalin and Attlee in agreement on the demilitari­sation and division of Germany.

1970 — The British army uses rubber bullets for the

first time to quell a riot in Northern Ireland.

1985 — A Delta Airlines Tristar airliner crashes on its final approach to Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, killing 133 people.

1989 — Trade restrictio­ns between Britain and Argentina are lifted for the first time since the 1982 Falklands War.

1994 — Chloe Reeves, who became affectiona­tely known to New Zealanders as Chloe of Wainuiomat­a, takes the country by storm when featured in one of Gary McCormick’s Heartland television documentar­ies.

1999 — In India, 285 people die when two trains crash headon in predawn darkness near Gaisal, about 500km north of Calcutta.

2001 — Bosnian Serb general Radislav Krstic is jailed for 46 years for the murder of thousands of Bosnian Muslims in the Srebrenica massacre, Europe’s worst atrocity since World War 2.

2002 — Kazakh authoritie­s sentence Galymzhan Zhakiyanov, a founding member of the reform movement Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (DCK), to seven years in prison for corruption and abuse of power.

Today’s birthdays

Billy Wallace, original All Black (18781972); John (Jack) Walker, All Black (19041966); Myrna Loy, US actress (190593); Shimon Peres, president of Israel (19232016); Peter O’Toole, Irish actor (19322013); Wes Craven, US film director (19392015); Isabel Allende, Chilean author (1942); Joanna Cassidy, US actress (1945); Judy Turner, New Zealand politician (1956); John Ackland, New Zealand rugby league player/coach (1958); Victoria Jackson, US actress (1959); Cynthia Stevenson, US actress (1962); MaryLouise Parker, US actress (1964); Sam Worthingto­n, Australian actor (1976); Eddie Furlong, US actor (1977).

Thought for today

A man who does not lose his reason over certain things has none to lose. — Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, German dramatist (172981).

ODT and agencies

 ??  ?? Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon Bonaparte
 ??  ?? Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein
 ??  ?? King Charles X
King Charles X
 ??  ?? Billy Wallace
Billy Wallace
 ??  ?? PT109
John F. Kennedy is far right
PT109 John F. Kennedy is far right

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