Waikato Times

Today in History

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1653 – Oliver Cromwell becomes lord protector of England, Scotland and Ireland.

1773 – American colonists, dressed as Native Americans, dump 342 chests of tea from a British ship in Boston Harbour, in a tax protest that becomes known as the

Boston Tea Party, right. 1809 – Napoleon Bonaparte divorces Empress Josephine by an act of the French Senate.

1905 – The All Black ‘‘Originals’’ lose 3-0 to Wales in Cardiff – their only defeat in a 35-match tour of Europe and North America.

1944 – Nazi Germany launches the Ardennes Offensive, also known as the Battle of the Bulge.

1950 – US President Harry Truman proclaims a national state of emergency to fight Communist imperialis­m.

1966 – United Nations Security Council votes 11-0 to invoke economic sanctions against white minority government in Rhodesia.

1971 – Pakistani troops surrender East Pakistan after a war with its rebels and their Indian allies. The territory soon becomes the independen­t nation of Bangladesh.

1977 – Parliament passes the Contracept­ion, Sterilisat­ion, and Abortion Act 1977, specifying the circumstan­ces in which contracept­ives could be supplied to young people, and abortions could be authorised in New Zealand.

2014 – A 16-hour siege inside the Lindt cafe in Martin Place, Sydney, ends with three deaths, including hostage taker Man Haron Monis.

Birthdays

Catherine of Aragon, Spanish-born English queen (1485-1536); Jane Austen, UK author (1775-1817); Sir Noel Coward, UK dramatist (1899-1973); Margaret Mead, US anthropolo­gist (1901-78); Arthur C Clarke, UK-born author (1917-2008); Wi Kuki Kaa, NZ actor (1938-2006); Benny Andersson, Swedish musician, Abba (1946-); Rodney Hide, NZ politician (1956-); Sir John Kirwan, All Black (1964-).

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