The Chronicle

ON THIS DAY

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1875: Dr Albert Schweitzer, missionary surgeon, organist and Nobel Prize winner (1952), was born in Alsace. 1878: Queen Victoria was given a demonstrat­ion of Alexander Graham Bell’s new invention, the telephone. 1898:

Lewis Carroll, author of Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, died. 1900:

Puccini’s opera Tosca was premiered in Rome, despite a bomb scare by the composer’s envious contempora­ries. 1904:

Photograph­er and stage designer Sir Cecil Beaton was born in London. 1953:

Marshal Tito was elected president of Yugoslavia.

1957: Actor Humphrey Bogart died. His wife Lauren Bacall placed a gold whistle in his coffin with the inscriptio­n: “If you need anything, just whistle” - a line from their first film together, To Have And Have Not.

1989:

British Muslims held public burnings of Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses. 1997:

The trial began of footballer­s John Fashanu, Bruce Grobbelaar and Hans Segers for allegedly being bribed by a Far Eastern gambling ring to throw matches. All three were later acquitted.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR

Surfers are three times more likely to have antibiotic resistant E. coli in their guts than non-surfers, a study revealed.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Jack Jones, singer, 81; Trevor Nunn, theatre director, 79; Faye Dunaway, actress, 78; Carl Weathers, actor, 71; Steven Soderbergh, film director, 56; Emily Watson, actress, 52; LL Cool J, actor and rap star, 51; Dave Grohl, rock singer, 50.

 ??  ?? Humphrey Bogart marries Lauren Bacall, 1945
Humphrey Bogart marries Lauren Bacall, 1945

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