Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Today is the 275th day of 2020. There are 91 days left in the year.

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TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

2008: The last czar and his family were victims of political repression, Russia’s Supreme Court rules, formally restoring the Romanov name and furthering a Kremlin effort to encourage patriotism by celebratin­g the country’s czarist past.

OTHER EVENTS

1596: Duke of Norfolk is imprisoned by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth for attempting to marry Mary Queen of Scots.

1800: Spain cedes Louisiana to France in a secret treaty.

1887: Baluchista­n is united with India.

1908:Henry Ford introduces his Model T automobile to the market.

1927: Russian-persian nonaggress­ion pact is signed.

1928: Soviet Union inaugurate­s first five-year plan to increase farm and industrial production.

1936: General Francisco Franco is named head of state in the part of Spain under Nationalis­t control.

1949: The People’s Republic of China is proclaimed in Beijing under Mao Zedong, with Zhou En-lai as premier and foreign minister.

1953: United States agrees to give France US$385 million in aid to train and equip more Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian troops and increase temporary French forces in Indochina.

1964: The US Free Speech Movement is launched at the University of California at Berkeley.

1970: Egypt’s Vice-president Anwar Sadat succeeds the late Gamal Abdel Nasser as president.

1971: Walt Disney World opens in Orlando, Florida.

1978: South Pacific archipelag­o of Tuvalu, formerly the Ellice Islands, becomes independen­t from Britain.

1982: Sony begins selling the first commercial compact disc player, the CDP-101, in Japan.

1986: Former US President Jimmy Carter’s presidenti­al library and museum is dedicated in Atlanta.

1989: Denmark becomes the first nation in the world to allow homosexual­s to marry; Communist East Berlin permits exodus of about 7,000 East Germans to the west.

1990: Minority Serbs in Croatia proclaim autonomy.

1991: US President George H W Bush condemns the military coup in Haiti, suspending economic and military aid and demanding that President Jeanbertra­nd Aristide be returned to power.

1992: Vice-president Itamar Franco takes over from Brazil’s impeached President Fernando Collor de Mello.

1993: At a conference in Washington, 43 countries pledge nearly US$2 billion to bankroll Palestinia­ns as they prepare for home rule.

1994: The US National Hockey League team owners begin a 103-day lockout of their players.

1996: The UN Security Council lifts sanctions against Yugoslavia in recognitio­n of Serbia’s role in helping bring peace to Bosnia.

1997: The founder of the militant Hamas movement, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, is freed from Israel’s Ayalon prison and flown to Amman, Jordan.

1998: Indonesia offers East Timor wide-ranging autonomy, bringing a possible conclusion to 20 years of civil war on the island.

2001: A Pakistan-based militant group attacks the state legislatur­e in Indian-ruled Kashmir, killing 40 people.

2003: President Paul

Kagame’s Rwandan Patriotic Front party wins a majority in the parliament­ary elections. It is the nation’s first multi-party legislativ­e elections since independen­ce from Belgium in 1962.

2004: A suicide attacker carrying a bomb in a briefcase strikes at a Shiite mosque crammed with worshipper­s in eastern Pakistan, killing at least 25 people and wounding more than 50 during prayer service.

2005: Twin bombings rip through restaurant­s crowded with foreign tourists on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, killing at least 22 people and wounding more than 50.

2006: Families in north-west Nigeria are swept away in a torrent of water and up to 40 people are feared dead after a dam collapses.

2007: A volcano erupts on Jabal al-tair, a tiny Yemeni island in the Red Sea, collapsing part of the island, covering the rest with lava, and forcing the evacuation of a small military base.

2009: Death toll climbs to more than 1,000 after a

7.6 magnitude earthquake ripples through Sumatra, the westernmos­t island in the Indonesian archipelag­o.

2010: American scientists deliberate­ly infected prisoners and patients in a mental hospital in Guatemala with syphilis 60 years ago, a recently unearthed experiment that prompted US officials to apologise and declare outrage over “such reprehensi­ble research”.

2011: President Hamid Karzai gives up trying to talk to the Taliban, saying in a video that Pakistan holds the only key to making peace with insurgents and must do more to support a political resolution to the war.

2012: A manifesto complainin­g about Iran’s stumbling economy addressed to the labour minister gets 10,000 signatures in one of the most wide-reaching public outcries over the state of the country’s economy.

2013: UN says sectarian bloodshed in Iraq has surged to levels not seen since 2008 with more than 5,000 people killed since April.

2017: A gunman opens fire from a room at the Mandalay Bay casino hotel in Las Vegas on a crowd of 22,000 country music fans at a concert below, leaving 58 people dead and more than 800 injured in the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history; the gunman, 64-year-old Stephen Craig Paddock, kills himself before officers arrived.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Bonnie Parker, of American criminal couple Bonnie and Clyde (1910 - 1934); Jimmy Carter, 39th Us president (1924- ); Richard Harris, Irish actor (1930 - 2002); Julie Andrews, English actress (1935- ); Theresa May, former UK prime minister

(1956- ); Mark Mcgwire, former US baseball player (1963- )

 ?? (AP Photo) (AP) ?? The Ford Model T, also known as Tin Lizzie, exhibited in 1927. It was first introduced on this day in history 1908.
(AP Photo) (AP) The Ford Model T, also known as Tin Lizzie, exhibited in 1927. It was first introduced on this day in history 1908.
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