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On this day - Oct 27 2004

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  • On this day - Oct 27 2004

    Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
    The Mercury, Australia
    Advertiser, Australia
    Sunday Times, Australia
    26 Oct. 2004

    On this day

    27oct04

    1999 – Up to five gunmen seize Armenia's parliament in a torrent of
    automatic weapons fire, killing the prime minister and seven others
    before taking dozens hostage. The gunmen surrender the next day.


    1505 – Ivan III, Ivan the Great, Tsar of Russia, who strengthened the
    authority of the monarchy and laid the foundations for a centralised
    state, dies.
    1523 – English expedition to France fails.
    1651 – Limerick, Ireland, surrenders to British after lengthy siege.
    1662 – Charles II of England sells Dunkirk to France for Stg400,000.
    1676 – Peace of Zurawna between Poland and Turkey.
    1789 – French attempt to invade Ireland fails.
    1795 – US and Spain sign the Treaty of San Lorenzo (also known as
    Pinckney's Treaty), providing free navigation of the Mississippi River.

    1806 – France's Napoleon Bonaparte occupies Berlin.
    1807 – Spain and France agree to conquer Portugal.
    1870 – French troops surrender Metz, France, to Prussians.
    1871 – Britain annexes diamond fields of Kimberley, South Africa.
    1900 – After four years of work, the first section of the New York
    subway is opened.
    1901 – The first known use of a getaway car occurs in Paris when
    thieves drove off after holding up a shop.
    1918 – Kaiser Wilhelm II accepts the resignation of General Erich
    Ludendorff after the failure of the German offensive on the Western
    Front.
    1922 – Southern Rhodesia referendum rejects joining Union of South
    Africa; The Italian government resigns under increasing pressure from
    the fascist movement of Benito Mussolini.
    1927 – Criminals Squizzy Taylor and Snowy Cutmore die in shootout at
    Carlton, Melbourne.
    1938 – Du Pont announces a name for its new synthetic yarn: nylon.
    1942 – An indecisive two-day air and sea battle around the Solomon
    Islands ends with severe damage to both US and Japanese fleets in WWII.

    1951 – Egyptians abrogate 1936 alliance treaty with Britain and 1899
    agreement over Sudan.
    1954 – Walt Disney's first television program, titled Disneyland after
    his yet-to-be completed theme park, premieres on American ABC.
    1961 – Mongolia and Mauritania are admitted as members of the United
    Nations.
    1964 – Eric Cooke, the "Moonstruck Murderer", is hanged in Perth for
    multiple killings.
    1966 – The UN General Assembly votes to end South Africa's mandate over
    South West Africa – now Namibia.
    1971 – Government of Congo announces the country will change its name
    to the Republic of Zaire.
    1973 – United Nations peacekeeping force arrives in Cairo to attempt to
    set up lasting ceasefire between Israeli and Arab forces.
    1977 – President Jimmy Carter rules out any US embargo on trade with
    South Africa or any ban on US investment in that nation to protest its
    racial policies.
    1978 – Egypt's President Anwar Sadat and Israel's Prime Minister
    Menachem Begin are awarded Nobel Peace Prize.
    1986 – The Big Bang takes place on the London Stock Exchange with the
    introduction of computerised dealing and deregulation of many controls.

    1987 – South Korean voters overwhelmingly approve new constitution
    clearing way for first direct presidential elections in 16 years.
    1988 – Czech authorities arrest dozens of dissidents and impose strict
    security on Prague.
    1989 – Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega announces end to ceasefire
    with US-backed anti-Sandinista rebels.
    1990 – American journalist Terry Anderson turns 43, spending his sixth
    birthday as hostage in Lebanon; New Zealand's voters oust the Labour
    Party of Mike Moore giving the National Party under James Bolger the
    biggest election victory in more than 50 years.
    1991 – European Community condemns Yugoslav army's siege of Dubrovnik
    and calls on forces to abide by October 18 ceasefire; Turkmenistan's
    Supreme Soviet passes a law establishing its independence from the
    Soviet Union.
    1992 – Israeli jets bomb Southern Lebanon avenging the deaths of six
    Israelis, but the Israeli government resists calls to withdraw from
    Middle East peace talks; Six people are shot dead on NSW central coast.

    1993 – Brush fires in southern California destroy at least 800 homes.
    1994 – In extraordinary talks in Syria, US President Bill Clinton says
    President Hafez Assad "went beyond anything he said before" on making
    peace with Israel.
    1995 – France sets off the third in a series of nuclear tests in the
    south Pacific at Mururoa atoll; After eluding a massive manhunt for
    three days, a North Korean spy is fatally shot when he tries to break
    through a cordon of South Korean commandos on a mountain near the
    border.
    1996 – A 12-storey apartment building in suburban Cairo collapses,
    killing at least 15 people and trapping dozens inside.
    1997 – The Dow Jones index fell 554.26 points, its largest one-day
    decline ever in points terms; the decline of 7.18 per cent was the
    biggest since the drop of 23 per cent in 1987.
    1998 – A second deadline for Serb troop withdrawal from Kosovo passes
    without NATO resorting to airstrikes, but NATO says that the use of
    force is still an option.
    1999 – Up to five gunmen seize Armenia's parliament in a torrent of
    automatic weapons fire, killing the prime minister and seven others
    before taking dozens hostage. The gunmen surrender the next day.
    1999 – The dress that Marilyn Monroe wore to sing "Happy Birthday, Mr
    President" to President John F Kennedy is sold for $US1,267,500 - a
    record for an item of clothing at auction.
    2000 – Stormy seas prevent divers from entering the nuclear submarine
    Kursk a day after naval officials reveal evidence that more than 23
    seamen had survived the initial explosions that sank the vessel.
    2000 – Canadian authorities arrest the men they say masterminded the
    1985 bombing of an Air India jumbo jet near Ireland that claimed the
    lives of all 329 people aboard.
    2001 – In Washington, the search for deadly anthrax widens to thousands
    of businesses and 30 mail distribution centres.
    2001 – Britain announces it will provide up to 600 special forces for
    operations in Afghanistan in a sign that allied forces are preparing
    for a sustained campaign of raids.
    2002 – Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva wins Brazil's presidential runoff
    election, becoming the nation's first leftist and working-class
    president.
    2003 – Five coordinated suicide bombing attacks kill at least 35 people
    in Baghdad, and wounded more than 200 others. The attacks all occurred
    within a 45-minute period and the targets were located no more than 16
    km apart, with the deadliest attack at the Red Cross headquarters.

    --Boundary_(ID_cITyxErQFwtJ9OLAsWWU5Q)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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