The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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1861: First public demonstrat­ion of the telephone made to the Physical Society, Frankfurt.

1863: Football Associatio­n was formed at a meeting in London.

1896: Italian protectora­te of Ethiopia was withdrawn by Treaty of Addis Ababa.

1907: The Territoria­l Army was establishe­d by Richard Haldane, secretary of state for War.

1911: Chinese Republic was proclaimed.

1912: Woolwich Tunnel under the River Thames was opened.

1917: Brazil declared war against Germany.

1950: First sound and television broadcast from the House of Commons as King George VI reopened chamber after repair of 1941 bombing damage.

1955: Republic of South Vietnam was proclaimed under Ngo Dinh Diem.

1962: Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev offered to withdraw missiles from Cuba if United States removed bases in Turkey, but was rebuffed.

1976: United Nations General Assembly, demonstrat­ing disapprova­l of apartheid, voted 134- 0 to call on member government­s to prohibit all contacts with the Transkei – first of South African black homelands to secure independen­ce.

1988: In Strasbourg, Jacques Delors accused Margaret Thatcher of wrecking progress towards an open European market in 1992.

1989: Nigel Lawson resigned as chancellor of the Exchequer, plunging the government into the greatest turmoil of the Margaret Thatcher years. She named John Major, her recentlyap­pointed foreign secretary, to succeed Mr Lawson.

1989: An RAF corporal and his baby daughter were shot dead by the IRA at a petrol station near RAF Wildenrath in West Germany.

1991: Hundreds of foreigners left Kinshasa as military mutiny spread in Zaire.

1994: An environmen­tal report called for a doubling of petrol prices in Britain in ten years and said the government had to move faster on restrainin­g the use of public cars.

1999: House of Lords voted to end the right of hereditary peers to vote in the upper chamber of Parliament.

2000: Laurent Gbagbo took over as president of Côte d’ivoire following a popular uprising against president Robert Guéï.

2001: The United States passed the Patriot Act into law.

2002: More than 100 hostages died when Russian special forces using knock- out gas attacked Chechen guerrillas holding more than 800 people hostage in a Moscow theatre.

2010: A survey revealed that more people ( 91 per cent) owned a mobile phone than a watch ( 86 per cent).

 ??  ?? 0 Laurent Gbagbo, right, took over as president of Côte d’ivoire following a popular uprising on this day in 2000
0 Laurent Gbagbo, right, took over as president of Côte d’ivoire following a popular uprising on this day in 2000

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