Daily Observer (Jamaica)

This Day in HISTORY

-

Today is the 123rd day of 2022. There are 242 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGLIGHT

1979: Conservati­ve Party leader Margaret Thatcher becomes Britain’s first female prime minister as the Tories oust the incumbent Labour Government in parliament­ary elections.

OTHER EVENTS

1494: Columbus arrives in Jamaica for the first time.

1660: Peace of Olivia is signed, ending war between Brandenbur­g, Poland, Austria and Sweden.

1765: The first US medical school, University of Pennsylvan­ia, is founded.

1791: Polish Parliament approves Europe’s first modern constituti­on.

1814: France’s King Louis XVIII returns to Paris after allied forces defeat Napoleon Bonaparte.

1841: New Zealand is formally proclaimed a British colony.

1859: France declares war on Austria.

1898: Bread riots erupt in Milan, Italy, and are crushed with heavy loss of life.

1921: West Virginia imposes the first US state sales tax.

1933: Nellie Taylor is sworn in as the first female director of the US Mint.

1937: Margaret Mitchell wins a Pulitzer Prize for her novel Gone with the Wind.

1945: Allied troops enter Hamburg, Germany, in World War II. Indian forces capture Rangoon, Burma, from the Japanese.

1947: Japan’s new post-war Constituti­on, reflecting the policies of Allied occupiers, takes effect.

1948: The US Supreme Court rules that covenants prohibitin­g the sale of real estate to blacks and other minorities are legally unenforcea­ble.

1963: Government crisis in Syria threatens recently agreed upon union of Syria, Iraq and United Arab Republic.

1971: Anti-war protesters, calling themselves the Mayday Tribe, begin four days of demonstrat­ions in Washington, DC, aimed at shutting down the nation’s capital.

1972: Turkish guerrillas hijack Turkish plane and land in Sofia, Bulgaria.

1985: Lebanese Christians protesting against sectarian fighting in their country occupy their diplomatic missions in Argentina, Australia and Sweden.

1986: In NASA’S first post-challenger launch, an unmanned Delta rocket loses power in its main engine shortly after liftoff, forcing safety officers to destroy it by remote control.

1988: The White House acknowledg­es that First Lady Nancy Reagan used astrologic­al advice to help schedule her husband’s activities.

1991: Hundreds of Iraqi troops withdraw from an expanded allied security zone in northern Iraq.

1992: Guerrillas loyal to radical fundamenta­list Gulbuddin Hekmatyar fight with militia on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanista­n.

1993: Thousands of workers drop their tools and leave factories around eastern Germany to demand the 26 per cent wage hike they were promised after German reunificat­ion.

1994: Civil war erupts in Yemen.

1995: The Armed Islamic Group in Algeria expands its terrorist threat against women by vowing to kill every mother, sister or daughter of government officials.

1996: Warlord Roosevelt Johnson is secretly carried out of Monrovia, Liberia, and to neighbouri­ng Freetown, Sierra Leone, aboard a US helicopter.

1997: The rebels of the Guatemalan Revolution­ary Unit surrender the last of their weapons to the Government, marking the end of one of Latin America’s most drawn-out wars.

1998: Yugoslav forces battle ethnic Albanian rebels smuggling weapons into Kosovo, killing at least 10 according to Serbs.

2000: Four hostages held by Muslim rebels in the southern Philippine­s are killed when Government troops stumble upon the group; 15 of the original 27 hostages are rescued.

2001: Ronnie Biggs, fugitive robber of Britain’s 1963 “Great Train Robbery”, says he is ready to return home to face justice after three decades of exile in Brazil.

2002: A ferry carrying hundreds of people sinks in a storm on the Meghna River about 40 miles (64 kilometres) south of Dhaka. More than 300 perish.

2003: James Miller, British freelance journalist and producer of internatio­nal award-winning documentar­ies Beneath

the Veil and Innocents Lost, is shot and killed by Israeli military tank in the Gaza Strip.

2004: The US military reprimands seven officers in the alleged abuse of inmates at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison, the first known punishment­s in the case. Six of them — officers and non-commission­ed

On this day in history, 1937, Margaret Mitchell wins the Pulitzer Prize for her novel Gone with the Wind, on which a movie of the same name was based two years later. officers — receive the most severe administra­tive reprimand in the US military. A seventh officer receives a more lenient admonishme­nt.

2005: In a major setback to Kuwaiti women hoping to participat­e in their first elections, lawmakers stall just long enough to keep women out of this year’s race. The next municipal elections to be held were scheduled for 2009.

2006: An Armenian airliner carrying 113 people tumbles into the Black Sea harbour of the Russian resort of Sochi.

2007: At least 21 workers — most of them foreigners — are kidnapped in separate attacks in Nigeria’s oil-rice Delta region, leaving a Nigerian soldier dead. Eight foreigners and a Nigerian driver were later freed.

2008: Cyclone Nargis strikes Myanmar, killing at least 78,000 and leaving 56,000 others missing. Aid workers shackled by the country’s military regime struggled to get even the most basic data about the needs of up to 2.5 million survivors, and to get aid to them.

2009: Pakistan’s army and the Taliban blame each other for a rise in tensions that threatens to destroy a muchcritic­ised peace deal.

2010: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton engage in a verbal nuclear exchange Monday on the UN stage, where nations gathered for a month-long debate over the world’s ultimate weapons.

2011: An authoritat­ive internatio­nal assessment says the ice of Greenland and the rest of the Arctic is melting faster than expected and could help raise global sea levels by as much as 5 feet (1.5 metres) this century — dramatical­ly higher than earlier projection­s.

2012: Letters from Osama bin Laden’s last hideaway, released by US officials intent on discrediti­ng his organisati­on, portray a network weak, inept and under siege — with its leader seemingly near wits’ end about the passing of his global jihad’s glory days.

2013: Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservati­ves take a drubbing in local British elections amid a surge of support for an anti-european Union and antiimmigr­ation party.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Nicolo Machiavell­i, Italian political philosophe­r (1469-1527); William Broome, English scholar-poet (1689-1745); Golda Meir, Israeli statesman (1898-1978);

William Inge, US playwright (1913-1973);

Betty Comden, US songwriter-entertaine­r (1919-2006); James Brown, US soul musician (1928-2006); Pete Seeger,

US folk singer (1919-2014); Engelbert Humperdinc­k, British singer (1936- );

Christophe­r Cross, US singer (1951- ).

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? An iceberg in the western Antarctic peninsula is shown here. The ice of Greenland and the rest of the Arctic, according to an authoritat­ive internatio­nal assessment on this day in history 2011, is said to be melting faster than expected and could contribute to increased global sea levels by up to 5 feet.
(Photo: AFP) An iceberg in the western Antarctic peninsula is shown here. The ice of Greenland and the rest of the Arctic, according to an authoritat­ive internatio­nal assessment on this day in history 2011, is said to be melting faster than expected and could contribute to increased global sea levels by up to 5 feet.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica