Manawatu Standard

Today in History

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1682 – William Penn leaves England to sail to the New World.

1918 – Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin is shot twice by Fanya Kaplan, a member of the Social Revolution­ary party. Lenin was seriously wounded but survived.

1903 – Guide Joseph Warbrick and three tourists die when a Rotorua geyser erupts unexpected­ly.

1928 – Jawaharlal Nehru founds the Independen­ce of India League. 1941 – Siege of Leningrad by German troops begins.

1963 – John F Kennedy becomes first US president to have a direct phone line to Kremlin in Moscow.

1974 – A train derails at a station in Zagreb, Yugoslavia, killing 153.

1991 – The Soviet republic of Azerbaijan declares independen­ce.

1999 – East Timor votes 99 per cent in favour of independen­ce after a nationwide referendum.

2001 – Papua New Guinea and Bougainvil­le island rebels sign a peace deal ending the South Pacific’s longest-running conflict.

2003 – Charles Bronson, left, best known for his tough-guy roles, dies at the age of 81.

2007 – Taliban terrorists in Afghanista­n release the final seven of 23 South Korean captives, ending a six-week hostage drama in which they killed two men.

2015 – Bart Cummings, who trained 12 Melbourne Cup winners, dies at the age of 87.

Birthdays

Mary Shelley, UK novelist

(Frankenste­in) (1797-1851); Ernest Rutherford, NZ scientist (1871-1937); Nancy Wake, Australian secret agent (1912-2011); Warren Buffett, US businessma­n (1930-); Bruce Mclaren, NZ racing driver (1937-1970); Alex Wylie, NZ rugby player, coach (1944-); Lance Revill, NZ boxer, referee (1953-); Barbara Kendall, NZ board sailor (1967-); Justin Vaughan, NZ cricket administra­tor (1967-); Cameron Diaz, US actress (1972-); Andy Roddick, US tennis player (1982-); Leisel Jones, Australian swimmer (1985-).

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