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Friday, October 18, 1996

  • Today's Events
  • On Horizon
  • On This Day
  • Newslink
  • Holidays & more
  • Almanac archive
  • "The Clinton-Gore team have given the California gold rush new meaning. They're now holding fundraisers in Buddhist temples where you have to take a vow of poverty before you can get in. Then they raised about $50 grand there,"

    -- Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole.



    | AllPolitics Campaignland |

    Today's Events


    President Clinton meets with the prime minister of Lebanon at the White House.

    The U.S. Commerce Department issues the August international trade report.

    French telephone numbers are scheduled to change from eight to 10 digits.

    The Pink Panther, Energizer Bunny and plain and peanut M&Ms are among the attendees at the Patent and Trademark Office's 14th annual trademark expo in Washington.

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    On the horizon


    On Saturday, October 19, Major League Baseball's World Series is scheduled to open at Yankee Stadium in New York.

    On Sunday, October 20, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev will speak on human rights during a visit to the University of Connecticut.

    On Sunday, October 20, Finland holds municipal elections and the first elections to the European Parliament.

    On Monday, October 21, the International Conference on Ozone Protection Technologies opens in Washington, D.C.

    On Tuesday, October 22, a conference on the Impact of European Unity on the Economics of the Arab World is scheduled to be held in Cairo in conjunction with the Arab League.

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    On this day


    In 1405, Pope Pius II was born as Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini. He became pope in 1458 and tried to unite Europe in a crusade against the Turks.

    In 1697, Canaletto, an Italian artist famous for his views of Venice, London and English country homes, was born as Giovanni Antonio Canal.

    In 1748, the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, negotiated largely by Britain and France, ended the Austrian War of Succession.

    In 1860, British troops burned the Yuanmingyuan, the imperial summer palace in Beijing, to the ground.

    In 1865, Lord Palmerston, British statesman and politician, died. He was prime minister twice between 1855 and 1865.

    In 1867, the U.S. flag flew for the first time at Sitka, following the purchase of Alaska from Russia.

    In 1871, Charles Babbage, British mathematician and inventor who pioneered the forerunner of the computer, died.

    In 1893, Sir Sidney Holland, a New Zealand statesman who became leader of the National Party in 1940 and prime minister in 1949, was born.

    In 1905, Felix Houphouet-Boigny, president of the Republic of the Ivory Coast from 1960-93, was born.

    In 1912, Italy and Turkey signed a peace treaty at Lausanne, Switzerland, whereby Cyrenaica and Tripoli gained autonomy and the Dodecanese Islands were restored to Turkey.

    In 1919, Canadian statesman Pierre Elliott Trudeau was born. He was prime minister 1968-79 and 1980-84.

    In 1922, the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) was formed in England.

    In 1925, Melina Mercouri, a Greek actress who became a politician and Minister of Culture, was born.

    In 1931, Thomas Alva Edison, an American inventor, died. In his lifetime he held over 1,000 patents, including the electric lamp, the phonograph and the motion picture projector.

    In 1939, Lee Harvey Oswald, assumed assassin of President John F. Kennedy, was born.

    In 1956, Martina Navratilova was born. The Czech-born tennis player received political asylum in the U.S.

    In 1963, Harold Macmillan resigned as British prime minister and was replaced by Lord Home, who renounced his peerage and became Sir Alec Douglas-Home.

    In 1967, the Soviet Venera 4 spacecraft entered the atmosphere of Venus and transmitted data back to Earth before losing contact 27km above the surface.

    In 1970, in Canada, the body of Pierre Laporte, the Quebec Minister of Labor, was found following his kidnap by the Quebec Liberation Front.

    In 1977, three Palestinian hijackers were killed when a German anti-terrorist squad stormed a Lufthansa aircraft at Mogadishu Airport. All 86 passengers who had been held hostage for five days were freed.

    In 1989, East Germany leader Erich Honecker stepped down, officially on health grounds, and was replaced by Egon Krenz.

    In 1989, Hungary's parliament purged the constitution of its Stalinist elements to create a Western-style basic law for a return to multiparty democracy.

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    Newslink


    Today, Alaska celebrates becoming a part of the United States. On this day in 1867, Russia transferred Alaska to the U.S. The act became official on Sitka's Castle Hill. For all those in the lower 48 curious about Last Frontier, surf here for maps, photos, weather information, links to Alaskan cities, towns and communities, national and state parks, visitors information and much more!


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    Holidays and more


    Today is the Day of the State of Independence in the Azerbaijan Republic.

    Today is Alaska Day.

    Today is Persons Day in Canada, a day to commemorate the anniversary of the 1929 ruling that declared women to be persons in Canada.

    Today begins the 7th annual Cranberry Harvest weekend on Nantucket Island, Mass.

    The Daytona Fall Motorcycle races are today.

    Actress Erin Moran is 35.

    Jazz musician Wynton Marsalis is 35.

    Actress Pam Dawber is 45.

    Football Hall of Famer is 57.

    Writer Wendy Wasserstein is 46.

    George C. Scott is 69.

    Singer, songwriter Chuck Berry is 70.

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    Sources: Reuters Ltd.,
    Chase's Calendar of Events 1996, J.P. Morgan



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