Today in History
1494 – Christopher Columbus sights the island of Jamaica, which he names Santiago.
1814 – King Louis XVIII returns to Paris after defeat of Napoleon. 1897 – Margaret Cruickshank becomes New Zealand’s first registered female doctor.
1926 – Britain’s Trade Union Congress calls for the country’s first general strike, in support of coal miners. It lasts for nine days.
1929 – Charles Ewing Mackay, left, former mayor of Whanganui, who shot aman in his office after a homosexual advance, dies in a riot in Berlin.
1937 – Margaret Mitchell wins a Pulitzer Prize for her novel Gone with theWind.
1945 – Indian forces capture Rangoon, Burma, from Japanese.
1948 – US Supreme Court rules covenants prohibiting the sale of real estate to African Americans and other minorities are not legally enforceable.
1979 – Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher becomes Britain’s first female prime minister.
1988 – White House acknowledges that first lady Nancy Reagan used astrological advice to help schedule her husband’s activities.
2004 – The US military reprimands seven officers for abuse of inmates at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison.
2007 – British 3-year-old Madeleine McCann disappears while on holiday with her family in Portugal.
2011 – A tornado kills one person and injuresmore than 20 after ripping through a shopping centre north of Auckland.
2018 – US Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciencesmembers vote to expel Bill Cosby and Roman Polanski.
Birthdays
NicoloMachiavelli, Italian philosopher (1469-1527); Golda Meir, Israeli politician (1898-1978); Bing Crosby, US singer/actor (1903-77); James Brown, US musician (1933-2006); Honey Hireme-Smiler, NZ league/union player (1981-).