The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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DECEMBER 15

1840: The state funeral of Napoleon Bonaparte took place in Paris, 19 years after his death.

1893: Dvorak’s From the New World premiered at Carnegie Hall, New York.

1916: French defeated Germans in Battle of Verdun, which resulted in the deaths of 364,000 Allied soldiers and 338,000 Germans.

1917: Armistice was signed by the new Soviet government, in agreement with the Central Powers (Austro-hungarian Empire, Bulgaria, German Empire and Ottoman Empire).

1939: Nylon was first produced commercial­ly in the United States.

1944: The plane carrying bandleader Glenn Miller disappeare­d over the English Channel while he was en route to Paris, where he was due to play for the troops.

1957: UN rejected Greek proposal that Cyprus was entitled to self-determinat­ion.

1958: Last steam locomotive made at Crewe works, No 92250, was the 7,331st steam loco built there since 1843.

1961: Adolph Eichmann, the Nazi who organised the execution of millions of Jews, was sentenced to death after fourmonth trial in Jerusalem. He was hanged on May 31 1962.

1961: UN General Assembly voted to admit Chinese People’s Republic.

1964: The Maple Leaf was adopted for national flag of Canada.

1965: US Mariner spacecraft relayed data about Venus as it flew past that planet.

1973: John Paul Getty III was released by kidnappers in Italy who had held him for five months and cut off his ear.

1976: The oil tanker Argo Merchant ran aground on Nantucket Shoals and spilled 7.6 million gallons of oil, one of the largest oil spills in marine history.

1985: Street battles broke out in Johannesbu­rg between police and anti-apartheid crowd demanding freedom for Nelson Mandela.

1989: Panamanian Assembly named Manuel Noriega head of government and declared “a state of war” with the US.

1991: Liz Mccolgan was voted BBC television’s sports personalit­y of the year.

1993: John Major and Irish premier Albert Reynolds signed a joint declaratio­n aimed at bringing peace to Ulster.

2000: The third reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear plant was shut down.

2001: The Leaning Tower of Pisa reopened after 11 years and £20 million to fortify it, without fixing its famous lean.

2004: David Blunkett resigned as home secretary over claims he helped the nanny of his former lover, Kimberly Quinn, get a visa.

2011: A French court gave former president Jacques Chirac a two-year suspended sentence for diverting public funds and abusing public trust dating back to his time as mayor of Paris.

2014: A cafe in Sydney, Australia was under siege for 16 hours as an armed terrorist held the occupants hostage. The siege ended when security forces stormed the building. Three people, including the gunman, died as a result.

 ??  ?? 0 The plane carrying bandleader Glenn Miller disappeare­d over the English Channel on this day in 1944
0 The plane carrying bandleader Glenn Miller disappeare­d over the English Channel on this day in 1944

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