This Day in History – October 27
Today is the 300th day of 2017. There are 65 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
1938: US company DuPont, announces the invention of nylon.
OTHER EVENTS
1787: The first of the Federalist Papers, a series of essays calling for ratification of the US Constitution, is published in a New York newspaper.
1806: France’s Napoleon Bonaparte occupies Berlin.
1807: Spain and France agree to conquer Portugal.
1871: Britain annexes the diamond fields of Kimberly, South Africa.
1904: The first rapid transit subway opens in New York City.
1922: Southern Rhodesia referendum rejects joining Union of South Africa.
1943: Germans close the Norway-Sweden border after moving up additional troops during World War II.
1961: US and Soviet tanks are brought to the border between East and West Berlin because of a decree ordering all foreigners to submit to identity controls on entering East Berlin.
1966: The UN General Assembly proclaims termination of South Africa’s mandate over south-west Africa.
1973: UN peacekeeping forces arrive in Cairo to attempt to set up a lasting ceasefire between Israeli and Arab forces.
1975: Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat and Israel’s Prime Minister Menachem Begin are awarded Nobel Peace Prize.
1977: US President Jimmy Carter rules out any US embargo on trade with South Africa or any ban on US investments to protest its racial policies.
1987: South Korean voters approve a new constitution, clearing the way for the first direct presidential elections in 16 years.
1989: Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega announces an end to ceasefire with US-backed anti-Sandinista rebels.
1990: Roman Catholic bishops concluded a month-long synod in Rome, reaffirming the policy of celibacy for priests. The possibility of easing the church’s opposition to married priests came up as a way to help overcome a shortage of clerics in some dioceses.
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.
1995: 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 between the two countries.
1997: The Dow Jones industrial average tumbles 554.26 points, forcing the stock market to shut down for the first time since the 1981assassination attempt on US President Ronald Reagan.
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 US federal budget surplus is put at $123 billion in 1998, marking the first back-to-back surpluses since the 1950s.
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.
2004: Pleading they cannot properly defend an unwilling client, Slobodan Milosevic’s court-appointed lawyers ask to quit, leaving the UN tribunal in a dilemma over how to conclude the most important war crimes trial in half a century in a way history will judge as fair.
2005: Israel kills seven Palestinians in a missile strike against Islamic Jihad, and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon refuses to meet with the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas until he cracks down on armed groups.
2006: Germany’s military suspends two soldiers from duty in connection with photos of troops posing with a skull in Afghanistan.
2007: Astronauts add a new room to the international space station, attaching a bus-sized living compartment named Harmony with the help of spacewalkers working outside and robot arm operators working inside.
2009: Seven former Guantanamo Bay detainees ask the High Court in London to reject a government request to use secret sessions to hear allegations that Britain was complicit in their torture overseas.
2010: Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden threatens in a new audio tape to kill French citizens to avenge their country’s support for the US-led war in Afghanistan and a new law that will ban face-covering Muslim veils.
2011: The excruciating work of inking a deal to contain their two-year debt crisis over, European leaders turn to a potentially more difficult task: implementing the agreement that asks banks to take on bigger losses on Greece’s debts.
— AP