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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Monday, October 27, 2014

Monday, November 3

by  Associated Press Monday, November 3 by The Associated Press, Associated Press - 26 October 2014 20:02-04:00 Today is Monday, November 3, the 306th day of 2014. There are 59 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date: 1394 - Charles VI orders Jews expelled from France. 1534 - England's parliament confirms King Henry VIII holds all judicial and political powers formerly held by the Pope in England. 1839 - Opium war flares up when a British frigate sinks Chinese fleet. 1900 - The first automobile show in the United States opens at Madison Square Garden in New York under the Automobile Club of America. 1903 - Panama proclaims its independence from Colombia. 1918 - Poland declares its independence from Russia. 1928 - Turkey switches from Arabic to Roman alphabet. 1935 - Greek plebiscite recalls exiled King George II to throne. 1936 - U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt is re-elected in a landslide over Republican Alfred M. Landon. 1946 - Power in Japan is transferred from the emperor to elected assembly. 1956 - Britain and France agree to accept a Middle East cease-fire in the Suez War if U.N. forces can keep the peace. 1957 - The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 2, the second man-made satellite, into orbit. A dog on board named Laika is sacrificed in the experiment. 1968 - Storms, landslides and floods take more than 100 lives and cause heavy damage in northern Italy. 1970 - Marxist Salvador Allende becomes president of Chile. 1973 - U.N. Emergency Force reports success in easing tension between Egyptian and Israeli troops at positions west of Suez Canal. 1978 - The Soviet Union and Vietnam sign a 25-year treaty of friendship and cooperation. 1982 - Suriname's largest labor union, Moederbond, ends a five-day general strike after the nation's military commander promises free elections, a new constitution and the restoration of civil liberties. 1986 - "Ash-Shiraa," a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, breaks the story of U.S. arms sales to Iran, a revelation that escalates into the Iran-Contra affair. 1990 - Mozambique's parliament approves new constitution ending 15 years of one-party rule. 1991 - Israeli and Jordanian-Palestinian delegates agree to pursue talks on interim self-government in Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. 1992 - Bill Clinton defeats President George H. W. Bush in U.S. presidential election. 1993 - Bosnian government troops storm through a Croat district north of Sarajevo, prompting 15,000 terrified civilians to flee into the countryside. 1994 - A Bosnian refugee, determined to call attention to the slaughter in his homeland, hijacks an airliner only to surrender when he believes the world had heard his plea. 1995 - A teen convicted of killing a British tourist at a highway rest stop is sentenced to life in prison in Florida. 1996 - Relief officials scramble to find a way to bring aid to a million Rwandan Hutu refugees engulfed in a rebellion in eastern Zaire. 1997 - Iraqi President Saddam Hussein threatens to shoot down U.S. planes that are monitoring the disarmament of his country. The threat never materializes. 1998 - For the first time in a 30-year conflict, the Spanish government says it will hold talks with groups linked to the militant Basque ETA separatists. 1999 - The government of Yugoslavia's smaller republic, Montenegro, designates the German mark as its official currency, replacing the Yugoslav dinar. 2000 - Singapore Airlines apologizes for its first fatal crash after investigators discover the pilot of a Los Angeles-bound jumbo jet missed clear warning signs and crashed while trying to take off on a runway full of construction equipment. 2001 - U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld visits Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and India to shore up support for ongoing U.S. military operations in Afghanistan against the al-Qaida terrorist network. 2002 - The party of moderate President Ibrahim Rugova wins municipal elections in Kosovo, but loses some ground to parties headed by former ethnic Albanian rebels. 2003 - A 35-member commission unveils a draft constitution, which would be presented to a traditional Afghan 500-member national assembly, the loya jirga, for debate and ratification in mid-December. 2004 - Ending one of the U.S. Army's longest desertion cases, Charles Robert Jenkins is sentenced to 30 days in a military jail for abandoning his unit in North Korea nearly 40 years ago. 2005 - Allegations that the CIA set up secret jails in eastern Europe and elsewhere to interrogate al-Qaida prisoners trigger a flurry of denials from governments in the former Soviet sphere and prompt EU officials and human rights organizations to demand answers. 2006 - Latin American and Caribbean nations endorse Panama for a seat on the U.N. Security Council, after Guatemala and Venezuela withdrew to break a deadlock that dragged through 47 votes. 2007 - Gen. Pervez Musharraf declares a state of emergency in Pakistan, suspending the constitution, replacing the chief justice before a crucial Supreme Court ruling on his future as president, and cutting communications in the capital. 2008 - A U.S. military jury at Guantanamo sentences Osama bin Laden's former media aide, Ali Hamza al-Bahlul, to life for encouraging terrorist attacks. 2009 - North Korea claims that it has successfully weaponized more plutonium for atomic bombs, a day after warning Washington to agree quickly to direct talks or face the prospect of a growing North Korean nuclear arsenal. 2010 - President Barack Obama signals a new willingness to yield to Republican demands on tax cuts and gets rid of a key energy priority, less than 24 hours after he and fellow Democrats absorbed election losses so severe he called them a shellacking. 2011 - The global output of heat-trapping carbon dioxide jumps by the biggest amount on record, the U.S. Department of Energy calculates, a sign of how feeble the world's efforts are at slowing man-made global warming. 2012 — Three Syrian tanks enter the demilitarized zone in the Golan Heights, prompting an Israeli complaint to U.N. peacekeepers over the first such violation in 40 years. 2013 — The United States and Egypt try to put a brave face on their badly frayed ties and commit to restoring a partnership undermined by the military ouster of Egypt's first democratically elected president. Today's Birthdays: Karl Baedecker, German guide book compiler-publisher (1801-1859); Andre Malraux, French novelist and cultural minister (1901-1976); Charles Bronson, U.S. actor (1922-2003); Adam Ant, British pop singer (1954--); Kate Capshaw, U.S. actress (1953--). Thought for Today: On the plus side, death is one of the few things that can be done just as easily lying down. — Woody Allen, American actor/producer (1935-) News Topics: General news, Presidential elections, Constitutions, Homicide, Government and politics, Supreme courts, National elections, Elections, Violent crime, Crime, National courts, National governments, Courts, Judiciary People, Places and Companies: Bill Clinton, George H. Bush, Saddam Hussein, Donald Rumsfeld, Pervez Musharraf, Osama bin Laden, Barack Obama, Charles Bronson, Adam Ant, Kate Capshaw, Woody Allen, United Kingdom, England, Egypt, Panama, Russia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, United States, Pakistan, Soviet Union, North Korea, Kosovo, Middle East, Central Asia, Western Europe, Europe, North Africa, Africa, Central America, Latin America and Caribbean, Eastern Europe, North America, South Asia, Asia, East Asia Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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