Miami Herald (Sunday)

ON THIS DATE

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2019: The World Health Organizati­on first learned of “viral pneumonia” cases in Wuhan, China; the disease was later determined to be COVID-19, which became a global pandemic the following year.

2004: Taipei 101, then the tallest building in the world, reaching a height of 1,667 feet (508 metres), opened in Taipei, Taiwan.

1999: Russian President Boris Yeltsin resigned, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin became acting president; Putin was elected to the post the following year.

1999: The United States officially handed over control of the Panama Canal to Panama.

1991: The Soviet Union legally ceased to exist, Russia and other former Soviet republics having declared themselves independen­t and having founded the Commonweal­th of Independen­t States on December 21, 1991.

1972: Baseball great Roberto Clemente died in an airplane crash en route to Nicaragua with relief supplies collected for earthquake survivors.

1937: Welsh actor Anthony Hopkins is born. He is best remembered for his Academy Award-winning role as demented serial killer Hannibal Lecter in

(1991).

1880: George C. Marshall, the U.S. Army chief of staff during World War II (1939–45), U.S secretary of state (1947–49) and of defense (1950–51), architect of the Marshall Plan for European recovery, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1953, was born.

1857: Ottawa, located in Ontario at the confluence of the Ottawa, Gatineau, and Rideau rivers and whose area was first described by Samuel de Champlain in 1613, was named the capital of Canada by Queen Victoria this day in 1857.

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