This Day in History – October 22
Today is the 295th day of 2013 There are 70 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
1918: The Great Influenza Epidemic begins. During World War I, over 18 million people die from the flu virus.
OTHER EVENTS
1721: Peter the Great takes the title Czar of All Russia.
1797: French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin makes the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of about 900 metres (3,000 feet).
1836: Sam Houston is inaugurated as the first constitutionally elected president of the Republic of Texas.
1862: Garrison in Athens, Greece, revolts, forcing King Otto I to resign.
1883: The original Metropolitan Opera House in New York holds its grand opening with a performance of Gounod’s Faust.
1934: Bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd is shot to death by federal agents at a farm in East Liverpool, Ohio.
1962: US President John F Kennedy orders US air and naval forces to quarantine Cuba after concluding that Soviet missile bases are being built on that island.
1979: The US government allows the deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment — a decision that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis.
1981: The Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organisation is decertified by the federal government for its strike the previous August.
1989: Forty-nine Commonwealth nations agree to enact further sanctions against South Africa if further reforms are not taken within six months. Britain is lone dissenter.
1993: Haiti’s last major gas retailer orders its pumps shut after a UN-imposed oil embargo.
1995: Fidel Castro, in New York for the UN anniversary, receives a warm welcome from residents in the Harlem neighbourhood.
1997: Russia’s hard-line Parliament withdraws a motion of no-confidence in President Boris Yeltsin’s government, a truce that marks an end to several weeks of confrontation with the Kremlin.
1998: In a drive to conclude a West Bank accord, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat agree on revising calls in the Palestinian charter for Israel’s destruction.
1999: Maurice Papon, the former Vichy official who fled France rather than face a 10-year-jail sentence for his role in sending Jews to Nazi death camps, is captured in Switzerland. The Swiss expel Papon and he is returned to France.
2001: A British Airways Concorde completes a round trip from London to New York, the supersonic jet’s first trans-Atlantic flight since service was suspended last year after a crash near Paris killed 113 people.
2005: Britain urges the European Union to ban imports of wild birds into the 25-nation bloc as British scientists try to determine whether a parrot that died of bird flu had the strain that has killed more than 60 people around the world.
2008: India launches its first mission to the moon to redraw maps of the lunar surface.
2010: A cholera epidemic spreads in central Haiti as aid groups rush doctors and supplies to fight the country’s deadliest health crisis since January’s earthquake. At least 150 people have died and more than 1,500 others are ill.
2011: Saudi Arabia’s ruling monarchy moves into a critical period of realignment after the death of the heir to the throne opens the way for a new crown prince: most likely a tough-talking interior minister who has led crackdowns on Islamic militants, but also has shown favour to ultraconservative traditions such as keeping the ban on women voting.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Bao Dai, former Vietnamese emperor (1913-1997); Franz Liszt, Hungarian-born composer (1811-1886); Sarah Bernhardt, French actress (1844-1923); Ivan Bunin, Russian writer and Nobel laureate (1870-1953); Benjamin Britten, British composer (1913-1976); Joan Fontaine, US actress (1917-); Catherine Deneuve, French actress (1943-); Jeff Goldblum, US actor (1952-); Shaggy, Jamaican reggae rapper (1968-); Doris Lessing, British writer and Nobel laureate (1919-).
— AP