4evadionne
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RE: On this day
September 28th
1778 - USA: A battle fought between American Forces and pro-British Indians near the Pennsylvanian town of Wyalusing, is won by the Americans under Colonel Thomas Hartley.
1906 - Cuba: US War Secretary William Taft intervenes to fill the Cuban power vacuum left by the resignation of President Palma, declaring himself provisional governor.
1909 - London: The House of Commons confirms that nine suffragettes being held in prison in Birmingham have been force fed.
1911 - North Africa: Italy declares war on Turkey for possession of Tripolitania.
1924 - USA: Three US Army aeroplanes land safely in Seattle, Washington after a 27,000 mile round-the-world flight.
1927 - Lithuania: The government claims the Polish town of Vilna as capital of Lithuania.
1928 - Germany: The state of Prussia lifts its ban on Adolf Hitler speaking in public.
1933 - London: Anti-Nazi uproar breaks out at the Shaftesbury Theatre, due to an appearance by German Actor Werner Kraus.
1936 - Spain: General Franco is appointed head of the rebel forces.
1949 - Moscow: The USSR rescinds its mutual assistance treaty with Yugoslavia.
1951 - New York: Britain appeals for UN intervention in the Iran oil dispute.
1953 - UK: Motor Company Ford unveils its new Anglia and Prefect models.
1956 - Moscow: The USSR and Japan agree a formula to end their state of war and restore full diplomatic relations.
1961 - Damascus: Syrian troops revolt against alleged Egyptian domination of the United Arab Republic.
1964 - UK: A survey reveals Radio Caroline has more listeners than BBC radio.
1966 - South Vietnam: The US accidentally bombs a friendly villiage killing 28 people.
1969 - Belfast: Royal Engineers supported by the Royal Ulster Constabulary build a six-feet barbed wire peace wall between the Protestant stronghold near the Shankhill Road and the Catholic area of the Falls Road.
1973 - Vienna: The Poet W.H. Auden dies aged 66.
1975 - UK: Ten Territorial Army soldiers drown in an accident during an exercise on the River Trent.
1976 - New York: Muhammad Ali defeats Ken Norton to retain his world heavyweight boxing title.
1983 - Moscow: Russia rejects President Ronald Regan's proposal to limit medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
1985 - London: Youths go on the rampage in Brixton after a black woman, Cherry Groce, is shot during a police raid.
1986 - USA: Londoner Lloyd Honeyghan defeats Don Curry to become world welterweight boxing champion.
1992 - Germany: After protests from Britain, Bonn calls off celebrations to mark the 50th anniversary of the V-2 rocket.
1998 - London: The Marylebone Cricket Club, votes to abolish a 211-year ban on female membership.
2008 - Berlin: Haile Gebreslassie of Ethiopia, sets a new world marathon record of 2 hours, 3 minutes, 58 seconds.
2010 - USA: American film director Arthur Penn, director of "Bonnie and Clyde", "Badlands" and "Little Big Man", dies in New York from congestive heart failure aged 88.
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28-09-2013 10:52 |
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4evadionne
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RE: On this day
September 29th
1902 - Paris: French novelist Emile Zola, dies at his home, after being suffocated by fumes from a blocked chimney, aged 62.
1908 - Switzerland: An International Conference on Workers Protection, bans night shifts for children under 14.
1913 - Ireland: Ulster Unionists set up a provisional government on the same day that a bill giving Home Rule to Ireland becomes law.
1916 - UK: Medical scientists announce the discovery of the procedure by which internal organs can be photographed. The X-ray.
1925 - UK: The Labour Party conference rejects a proposal for a link up with the British Communist Party.
1927 - USA: A tornado quickly sweeps through St Louis, killing 69 people and injuring around another 600.
1930 - London: George Bernard Shaw declines the offer of a peerage.
1933 - Leipzig: Dutchman Marinus van der Lubbe, admits in court to setting fire to the Berlin Reichstag.
1934 - Poland: Conscription is introduced for men and women.
1939 - Warsaw: Polish troops evacuate, as the city surrenders to the Wehrmacht.
1940 - New York: The Movie "Strike Up The Band" starring Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, has it's premiere.
1947 - UK: To cut fuel costs, it is announced that the Midlands will have no power for one day a week.
1950 - Korea: US troops reach the 38th parallel.
1958 - London: The CEGB announces it's sixth nuclear power station will be built at Sizewell in Suffolk.
1961 - London: The Electricians Union is expelled from the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party.
1965 - UK: Aston Martin unveils its first new four-seater car, the DB6.
1968 - Nigeria: 55 Nigerian troops die when a Red Cross DC-4 crashes.
1971 - London: Chelsea beat Jeunesse Hautcharage 13-0 in the European Cup Winners Cup second round, a European record of 21-0 on aggregate.
1975 - Nepal: Mountaineer Mike Burke, a member of the British team which climbed Everest a week before, dies while attempting a second climb.
1979 - Ireland: Pope John Paul II arrives on the first papal visit to Ireland.
1984 - Ireland: A massive IRA arms haul is seized aboard an Irish trawler off the south west coast.
1986 - Washington: The House of Representatives overrides Ronald Reagan's veto of sanctions against South Africa.
1988 - USA: The space shuttle "Discovery" goes into orbit, putting the US back into the space race.
1991 - Baghdad: UN inspectors investing Iraq's nuclear weapons programme are allowed to leave after being besieged in a car park for a week.
1995 - Los Angeles: The final summing up begins in the O.J Simpson trial. The Jury has heard testimonies from 126 witnesses and seen 857 exhibits.
2004 - Yemen: Rahim al-Nashiri and Jamal Mohammed found guilty of organising the October 12 2000 bombing of the "USS Cole" are sentenced to death by a court in Yemen.
2007 - New Jersey: Robert Levy, the mayor of Atlantic City disappears after being found to have embellished his Vietnam War Record.
2008 - Brazil: Brazil's government is named as the worst illegal logger of the Amazon Rain Forest.
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29-09-2013 11:37 |
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4evadionne
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RE: On this day
September 30th
1901 - France: Registration becomes compulsory for cars capable of speeds of more than 20mph.
1910 - Constantinople: Turkey signs a military convention with Rumania.
1922 - London: A telephone toll exchange system is inaugurated in the capital.
1927 - New York: Baseball Player Babe Ruth hits his record 60th home run of the season.
1929 - Germany: The first rocket-powered aeroplane invented by Fritz von Opel makes it's maiden flight.
1930 - New York: Franklin D. Roosevelt wins the Democratic nomination for re-election as governor.
1935 - USA: George Gershwin's opera "Porgy and Bess" has its premiere in Boston.
1942 - Egypt: The Eighth Army seize key positions near El Alamein in a dawn raid.
1944 - France: Calais falls to Canadian Troops.
1949 - Belgrade: Poland and Hungary announce they are renouncing their friendship pacts with Yugoslavia.
1952 - UK: Bevanites win six out of seven constituency seats on Labour's NEC, ousting Hugh Dalton and Herbert Morrison.
1960 - New York: 15 new African nations are admitted to the UN.
1961 - Damascus: Syria declares independence from the UAR and orders the deportation of 27,000 Egyptians.
1963 - USA: 189 Negros are arrested during a civil rights protest in Alabama.
1965 - UK: EMI records begins selling LP records through 3,000 grocery stores for 12/6d.
1968 - UK: The Labour Party Conference votes to urge the repeal of the Governments wage restraints.
1971 - Belfast: The official IRA condemns a pub bombing by the Provisionals in which two people were killed.
1978 - Rhodesia: 300 people are reported killed in the bloodiest month so far in the guerrilla war.
1980 - Israel: The shekel replaces the pound as Israel's unit of currency.
1987 - London: Former MP Keith Best is jailed for four months for share-cheating.
1988 - USSR: Mikhail Gorbachev retires President Andrei Gromyko, Russia's former Foreign Minister.
1990 - Moscow: The USSR re-opens diplomatic relations with Israel, which were broken in 1967.
1992 - London: The Royal Mint introduces a new, smaller 10-pence coin.
1995 - UK: The British Publishing Industry waves goodbye to minimum retail book prices, after a legislation change, because of European law banning anti-competitive price-fixing.
2007 - Mexico City: Indian player Viswanathan Anand becomes world chess champion.
2009 - Indonesia: A 7.6 magnitude earthquake strikes western Indonesia killing 75 people, and leaving many injured.
2010 - USA: American actor Tony Curtis, star of "Spartacus, Some Like It Hot, and The Defiant Ones, dies at his home in Henderson in Nevada from a cardiac arrest aged 85.
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30-09-2013 08:03 |
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4evadionne
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RE: On this day
October 1st
1906 - UK: In it's trials the battleship "Dreadnought" reaches a record speed of 21.5 knots.
1908 - Detroit: The Model T Ford goes on sale for the first time; it is the first motor car with left-hand drive.
1912 - Balkans: Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia mobilise for war with Turkey.
1921 - Washington: A US agenda for talks on the role of the four powers in the Pacific is accepted by the UK, France, and Japan.
1923 - London: The Broadcasting Committee recommends, a ten shillings wireless licence, with 7/6d going to the BBC.
1925 - New York: Woolworth Heiress Mrs James Donahue is robbed of $750,000 in jewels while in her hotel bathroom.
1927 - Moscow: The USSR signs a non-aggression pact with Persia.
1928 - UK: "Elastoplast" sticking plasters are first manufactured in Hull.
1930 - UK: 14 miners are killed after an explosion at Grove Colliery near Walsall.
1933 - Germany: The German Post Office establishes the first "telex" operation between Berlin and Hamburg.
1936 - London: The BBC begins regular television broadcasts from Alexandria Palace.
1939 - UK: 250,000 more conscripts are called up.
1940 - Helsinki: Finland signs a military and economic treaty with Germany.
1947 - USA: Screen goddess Rita Hayworth files for divorce from actor and director Orson Welles.
1952 - Korea: 52 Chinese prisoners of war are killed, and 140 are wounded when US guards open fire in an attempt to end a demonstration in a POW compound on Cheju Island off south-west Korea.
1956 - London: The Suez Canal User's Association is formally inaugurated with 15 nations as members.
1962 - Indonesia: The UN takes control of west New Guinea from Holland.
1969 - France: Concorde 001 breaks the sound barrier for the first time.
1970 - Cairo: 46 people die as thousands of mourners mob President Abdel Nasser's funeral cortege.
1974 - London: Britain's first McDonald's hamburger restaurant opens in south London.
1978 - Washington: Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko meets President Jimmy Carter to discuss strategic arms limitations.
1984 - London: Johnson Matthey Bankers, with £150 million loan losses is bought by the Bank of England.
1985 - Tunisia: Around 50 people are reported killed after an Israeli air strike on PLO offices near Tunis.
1988 - USSR: Mikhail Gorbachev is appointed President.
1995 - Tahiti: France carries out the second of its nuclear bomb tests.
1996 - New Jersey: A federal grand jury in Newark indicts suspected Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski for the murder of Thomas J. Mosser.
1998 - New York: The UN security council condemns Serb massacres of ethic Albanians in Kosovo, and threaten to launch NATO air strikes in retaliation.
2006 - UK: New laws against age discrimination in the workplace - officially titled Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006, come into force.
2008 - USA: AFRICOM - a new US armed forces unified combatant command for Africa is created.
2009 - Africa: Paleontologist's announce the discovery of an Ardipithecus Ramidus fossil skeleton deeming it to be the oldest fossil skeleton of a human ancestor.
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01-10-2013 09:10 |
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4evadionne
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RE: On this day
October 3rd
1906 - Liverpool: The biggest TUC conference opens with 490 delegates representing 1.5 million union members.
1912 - Balkans: Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia issue an Ultimatum to Turkey.
1916 - London: Doctors receive help providing diagnostic tests and drugs to combat an increase in syphilis.
1918 - Berlin: Prince Maximilian of Baden is appointed Imperial Chancellor in succession to Georg von Hertling.
1928 - Spain: 43 sailors are killed when the French Submarine "Ondine" collides with a Greek steamer off the Spanish coast.
1929 - Belgrade: The informal term Yugoslavia is declared the official name of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes.
1936 - Spain: A cabinet reshuffle brings anarchists into the government for the first time, with four becoming ministers.
1938 - London: Duff Cooper resigns as First Lord of the Admiralty over Neville Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler.
1939 - London: Neville Chamberlain announces the set-up of a new Whitehall department to handle censorship and control of news.
1941 - New York: John Huston's classic "The Maltese Falcon" with Humphrey Bogart, has it's premiere.
1942 - Washington: President Roosevelt orders a freeze on wages, rents, and farm prices.
1952 - London: The government announces the end of tea rationing.
1957 - UK: 1,000 parish councillors ask the government to stop British Rail closing branch lines.
1960 - Nice: Actress Brigette Bardot leaves hospital after recovering from a suicide attempt.
1963 - Honduras: A coup overthrows President Ramon Morales.
1965 - Washington: President Lyndon Johnson announces all refugees from Castro's Cuba are welcome to come to the US.
1967 - Hanoi: North Vietnam rejects a US offer of peace talks.
1971 - South Vietnam: Nguyen Van Thieu wins another four-year term as president.
1975 - Belfast: Ulster Secretary Merlyn Rees, bans the Ulster Volunteer Force.
1976 - Rhodesia: Black leader Bishop Abel Muzorewa returns to a tumultuous welcome after 15 months in exile.
1980 - UK: The Housing Act comes into force, allowing council tenants to buy their homes.
1985 - London: Sir Robert Haslam is appointed to succeed Ian MacGregor as NCB chairman.
1987 - Scotland: SAS troops storm Peterhead jail to free a prison officer held hostage by inmates.
1993 - Mogadishu: 12 US soldiers are killed and 78 are wounded in a failed attempt to capture leaders of Somali warlord Mohammed Aidid's militia.
1995 - Los Angeles: The trial of O.J Simpson which had lasted nine months, comes to a swift conclusion when the jury of ten women and two men return a verdict of "Not Guilty."
1997 - Paris: Princess Diana's bodyguard Trevor Rees Jones is released from hospital, experts she he cannot recall the events leading up to the crash, but say his memory may return.
2008 - Sweden: Remains of a Viking-era stave church, with the skeletal remains of a woman are uncovered near the cemetery of the Lannas church in Odensbaken outside Orebro, in central Sweden.
2009 - UK: Archaeologist's discover a similar prehistoric site near Stonehenge, dubbed as "Bluehenge" named after the hue of the stones.
2010 - USA: Tiger Woods drops out of golfs Top 50 for the first time in nearly 15 years.
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03-10-2013 10:09 |
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4evadionne
You can't beat a laugh!
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RE: On this day
October 4th
1910: Portugal: King Manuel flees to Gibraltar aboard the royal yacht "Amelia" after being deposed in a well-planned revolution.
1921 - Berlin: Owing to the fall of the mark, the government puts a 100% surcharge on all imports.
1922 - Dublin: The Irish government offers amnesty to all who lay down their arms and surrender seized property.
1923 - Scotland: Five men are rescued from a flooded mine at Redding, near Falkirk, after being trapped for ten days.
1933 - Geneva: Britain and Italy launch an attack on Nazism during a League of nations session.
1937 - Washington: Judge Hugo Black joins the Supreme Court despite his former membership of the Ku Klux Klan.
1941 - Norway: The Germans warn the Norwegian people that they will face starvation if anti-Nazi unrest continues.
1942 - El Alamein: Irwin Rommel is reported to be in full retreat; 9,000 Axis prisoners are captured, and 300 tanks are destroyed.
1943 - Corsica: The island falls to the French Resistance, becoming the first department of France to be liberated.
1948 - London: Winston Churchill's first volume of the history of the Second World War "The Gathering Storm" is published.
1950 - London: Three generations of the Bowler Family attend a celebration to mark the centenary of the bowler hat.
1957 - Russia: Russia launches its man-made satellite Sputnik 1.
1965 - New York: Pope Paul VI becomes the first Pope to visit the western hemisphere as he arrives to address the UN.
1966 - London: The government invokes a price and wage freeze under the new Prices and Incomes Act.
1967 - Nigeria: Federal troops capture Enugu, the capital of Biafra.
1970 - USA: Rock singer Janis Joplin is found dead at the Landmark Hotel in Hollywood from an heroin overdose.
1976 - UK: The world's fastest diesel rail services begin as British Rail introduces its HS-125 trains.
1978 - USA: Emily and William Harris are jailed for ten years for the Kidnapping of Patty Hearst.
1984 - UK: Norman Willis is elected to succeed Len Murray as TUC general secretary.
1986 - Nicaragua: US Air Force pilot Eugene Hasenfus is captured after his cargo plane is shot down.
1988 - Belgrade: Workers besiege parliament demanding the government's resignation.
1993 - Strasbourg: Rumania becomes a member of the Council of Europe.
1995 - Tokyo: Japan's public TV channel announces that Shoko Asahara, leader of the Aum Supreme Truth Cult, has confessed to carrying out the Tokyo gas attack.
1997 - Cyprus: Around 700 crew and passengers are rescued after the cruise ship Romantica catches fire off the coast of Cyprus.
2007 - Russia: Russia celebrates the 50th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik 1.
2009 - Taiwan: A 6.3 Earthquake hits Taiwan during the middle of the night.
2010: Isle of Man: After suffering a series of strokes the much-loved comedian/actor/songwriter Sir Norman Wisdom passes away at Abbotswood nursing home on the Isle of Man aged 95.
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04-10-2013 10:06 |
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4evadionne
You can't beat a laugh!
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RE: On this day
October 5th
1906 - Russia: An estimated 1,000 political prisoners a day are reported to being sent to exile in Siberia.
1907 - London: The first UK public display of an airship takes place as a dirigible circles St. Paul's Cathedral.
1908 - Balkans: Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria declares his country independent of the Ottoman Empire.
1916 - USA: President Woodrow Wilson announces the US is prepared to fight for a "just cause."
1917 - Lima: The Peruvian parliament votes to break off diplomatic relations with Germany.
1920 - Hamburg: The world's largest liner, the Bismarck, is destroyed by fire.
1926 - UK: 250,000 striking miners return to work.
1927 - Blackpool: The Labour Party conference votes to nationalise the mines.
1933 - London: Health minister Sir Hilton Young announces a £95 million slum clearance scheme, seeing over a million people rehoused and 210,000 slum dwellings demolished.
1934 - Spain: An uprising begins in Catalonia.
1939 - Riga: Latvia signs a mutual aid pact with the USSR.
1941 - Yugoslavia: Soviet bombers aid partisan insurgents led by Josip Broz Tito.
1944 - Berlin: Josef Goebbels announces food rations will be cut.
1945 - Tokyo: Baron Kijuro Shidehara is appointed Japan's new premier.
1949 - New York: The UN flag is hoisted over the new UN building.
1954 - USA: Marilyn Monroe sues Joe DiMaggio for divorce, citing conflicting career demands.
1960 - South Africa: The country's whites vote for a republic.
1966 - Spain: General Franco bans all traffic to and from Gibraltar.
1967 - London: The British Lawn Tennis Association proposes to abolish the distinction between amateurs and professionals.
1969 - UK: The first episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus is transmitted by the BBC.
1972 - Somalia: Tanzania and Uganda sign a peace pact to end their border war.
1974 - UK: Five people are killed and 65 are injured in IRA bomb attacks in two Guildford pubs.
1975 - Austria: Niki Lauda becomes F1 motor racing world champion.
1977 - Dublin: The former head of the IRA Seamus Costello is murdered.
1983 - London: Trade and Industry Secretary Cecil Parkinson admits having had a relationship with his secretary Sarah Keys.
1984 - UK: Police and customs men seize £7.2 million worth of drugs in Europe's biggest haul of cannabis.
1987 - London: A court quashes share cheat Tory MP Keith Best's four-month jail term.
1994 - Wirral: Britain's oldest man 109 year-old William Proctor dies.
2004 - USA: Gordon Cooper, aeronautical engineer and pilot of the final Mercury spaceflight in 1963, dies from heart failure at his home in Ventura, California aged 77.
2006 - Afghanistan: NATO expands its security mission to the whole of Afghanistan, taking command of more than 13,000 US troops in the east of the country.
2011 - London: Scottish folk musician and founder member of the band "Pentangle" Herbert "Bert" Jansch dies after a long battle with lung cancer at a hospice in Hampstead, aged 67.
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05-10-2013 13:00 |
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4evadionne
You can't beat a laugh!
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RE: On this day
October 6th
1902 - South Africa: A 2,000 mile railway between Cape Town and Beira in Mozambique is completed.
1909 - Switzerland: US aeronaut E.W. Mix wins the Gordon Bennett International Balloon Race.
1913 - China: Yuan Shi-kai is elected president of the republic.
1918 - UK: 430 people die when two liners, one a US troop ship collide off the Scottish coast.
1921 - Brussels: A conference of 16 countries meet to discuss famine aid for Russia.
1927 - New York: The stock exchange begins trading in foreign shares.
1932 - Oxford: John Turner, 17 is the first Briton to be treated with an "iron lung" at the Wingfield Morris Hospital.
1938 - Palestine: 60 Arabs are killed after a 6 hour gun-battle with British Troops.
1939 - Berlin: Adolf Hitler reassures Holland and Belgium of his friendship.
1942 - London: 16 year-old galley boy John Conroy wins the British Empire Medal for bravery on Russian convoys.
1943 - Rome: The Germans begin looting the city's art treasures ahead of the Allied advance.
1950 - Lebanon: The world's longest pipeline is completed running 1,068 miles from the US oil fields in the Gulf to Sidon.
1951 - Singapore: Sir Henry Gurney, High Commissioner for Malaya, is killed in a Communist ambush.
1953 - British Guiana: Britain orders troops and warships to the colony to forestall a feared Communist coup attempt.
1957 - Warsaw: Students riot against the government for the third day running.
1963 - London: A crowd of around 1,000 people hurl eggs and apples at Nazi leader Colin Jordan after his wedding.
1968 - USA: Jackie Stewart, Graham Hill, and John Surtees finish 1st, 2nd, and 3rd in the US Grand Prix.
1976 - Bangkok: The army seizes power after violent clashes between police and students.
1978 - France: The Ayatollah Khomeini is granted asylum by france after being expelled from Iraq.
1981 - Belfast: John DeLorean begins a libel action after the government denies it is investigating his car firm.
1982 - London: Sid Weighell resigns as general secretary of the NUR in a row over his alleged misuse of the rail unions vote.
1988 - Chile: The military dictator General Augusto Pinochet, is defeated in the election, and his cabinet resigns.
1990 - USA: Porn Actress Jynx Maze is born in Long Beach, California.
1992 - Spain: Stalwart British TV and Film Actor Denholm Elliot dies at his home in Santa Eularia des Riu on Ibiza from Aids- related tuberculosis, aged 70.
2006 - USA: NASA releases close-ups of Mars taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, revealing its hidden oceanic past.
2009 - Philippines: Typhoon Parma makes landfall at Luzon.
2011 - London: The Bank of England injects a further £75 billion into the British economy through quantitative easing.
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06-10-2013 10:41 |
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