Daily Observer (Jamaica)

This Day in HISTORY

Today is the 60th day of 2021. There are 305 days left in the year.

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TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

2002: US space shuttle

Columbia carries out a mission to repair and refurbish the Earthorbit­ing Hubble Space Telescope, so that the observator­y would have enough power to operate fully for the rest of its projected 20-year life.

OTHER EVENTS

1553: League of Heidelberg is formed by Catholic and Protestant princes in Germany to prevent election of Philip of Spain as Holy Roman Emperor.

1562: Some 1,200 French Huguenots are slain at Massacre of Vassy, provoking first War of Religion in France.

1565: The city of Rio de Janeiro was founded by Portuguese knight Estacio de Sa.

1692: The Salem witch trial begins in the American colony of Massachuse­tts.

1767: King Charles III expels Roman Catholic Jesuits from Spain.

1790: President George Washington signs a measure authorisin­g the first United States Census. (Census Day was August 2, 1790.)

1799: Turks and Russians complete conquest of Ionian Islands in Greece.

1829: Brigadier General Juan Manuel de Rosas is sworn in as governor of Buenos Aires, rules Argentina until 1852.

1867: Nebraska becomes the 37th state as President Andrew Johnson signed a proclamati­on.

1870: War ends between Paraguay and combined forces of Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay.

1893: Inventor Nikola Tesla first publicly demonstrat­es radio during a meeting of the National Electric Light Associatio­n in St Louis by transmitti­ng electromag­netic energy without wires.

1896: Ethiopian forces defeat Italians at Adwa, northern Ethiopia, ending Italy’s quest to create a substantia­l African colony.

1919: Korean Independen­ce is declared in Seoul and two million people rally, leading to brutal Japanese repression.

1940: Native Son by Richard Wright is first published by Harper & Brothers.

1943: Britain’s Royal Air Force begins systematic bombing of European railway systems in World War II.

1952: Britain returns the North Sea island of Helgoland, occupied since World War II, to West Germany.

1954: First conference of Organizati­on of American States opens in Caracas, Venezuela; Puerto Rican nationalis­ts open fire in the US House of Representa­tives, wounding five congressme­n. The United States detonates a dry-fuel hydrogen bomb, codenamed Castle Bravo, at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands.

1957: A severe earthquake shakes Kingston and western parishes of Jamaica.

1961: US President John F Kennedy establishe­s the Peace Corps.

1966: Soviet Union lands oneton spacecraft on planet Venus after three-and-a-half month flight.

1981: Irish Republican Army member Bobby Sands begins a hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland; he dies 65 days later.

1985: Julio Sanguinett­i is sworn in as constituti­onal president of Uruguay, ending nine years of military rule.

1988: South African Government introduces Bill to outlaw foreign funding of political activity.

1989: UN General Assembly approves $416 million for UN’S one-year plan to free Namibia from 74 years of South African rule.

1990: The controvers­ial Seabrook, New Hampshire, nuclear power plant wins federal permission to go on line after two decades of protests and legal struggles.

1991: Colombia’s thirdlarge­st rebel group, the Popular Liberation Army, formally lays down its arms.

1992: Muslims and Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a vote for independen­ce from Yugoslavia, enraging Serb nationalis­ts.

1993: Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin closes the occupied Gaza Strip “for a number of days” after a Gaza Palestinia­n stabs to death two Israelis and wounds nine others.

1994: Israel releases more than 500 Palestinia­n prisoners to coax the Palestinia­n Liberation Organisati­on back to peace talks.

1995: The director of Russia’s only national television network, Vladislav Listyev, is shot and killed as he enters his apartment building.

1996: The United States approves a visa for Irish Republican Army political leader Gerry Adams.

1997: About 5,000 neonazis march through Munich to protest an exhibit on the army’s involvemen­t in World War II atrocities.

1999: Rwandan Hutu rebels, claiming they oppose American and British support of the Tutsi Government in Rwanda, abduct eight foreign tourists from camps in the Ugandan rain forest and hack them to death.

2003: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-described planner and organiser of the September 11 attacks is captured in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

2004: Exiled Haitian President Jean-bertrand Aristide, in a phone interview says he was abducted from Haiti by US troops who accompanie­d him on a flight to the Central African Republic.

2006: Authoritie­s regain control of Afghanista­n’s most notorious prison after four days of rioting allegedly sparked by al-qaeda and Taliban convicts. Six inmates are reported killed in the revolt.

2007: Japan’s nationalis­t Prime Minister Shinzo Abe denies Tokyo’s military forced women into sexual slavery during World War II, backtracki­ng from a past government apology.

2008: Prince Harry returns to Britain after news of his secret deployment as a forward air commander with the military in Afghanista­n was leaked to the press. President George W Bush, speaking at his Texas ranch, declines to promise more US troop withdrawal­s from Iraq before leaving, underscori­ng the need for a strong military presence during Iraqi provincial elections. The USS New York, an amphibious assault ship built with scrap steel from the ruins of the World Trade Center, is christened at Avondale, Louisiana.

2009: Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert resigns after the country’s attorney general informs him that he plans to indict him on suspicion of illicitly taking cash-stuffed envelopes from a Jewish-american businessma­n.

2010: Russia’s president says Moscow is ready to consider new sanctions on Iran for its nuclear defiance and the chief of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency warns that he cannot confirm that all of Tehran’s atomic activities are peaceful.

2011: Yemen’s embattled president accuses the US, his closest ally, of instigatin­g the mounting protests against him, but it fails to slow the momentum for his ouster as hundreds of thousands rally in cities across the country against him.

2012: French President

Nicolas Sarkozy takes refuge from a crowd of several hundred angry protesters in a café while campaignin­g in the country’s south-west Basque country.

2013: President Barack Obama, still deadlocked with Republican congressio­nal leaders, formally enacts US$85 billion in acrossthe-board spending cuts a few hours before the midnight deadline required by law.

2017: The president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, tells The Associated

Press that the two accountant­s responsibl­e for the best-picture flub at the Academy Awards (in which La La Land was initially named the winner instead of Moonlight) would never work the Oscars again.

 ??  ?? Melanie Walker, Jamaica Olympic gold medallist in Beijing, China, in the 400m hurdles was born on March 1, 1983.
Melanie Walker, Jamaica Olympic gold medallist in Beijing, China, in the 400m hurdles was born on March 1, 1983.
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