THE EVENTS THOSE MAKES HISTORY

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

seo

Search engine optimization for blogger

Make Meta Tag SEO Friendly - Part A

Blog Marketing: Optimize Your Blog Posts for SEO

How to Optimize Your Keyword Matching in Google AdWords

Optimizing Your Blog For Traffic

How to Optimize Your Blog for Search Engines

google adsense

How to Create a Google AdSense Account.

Google AdSense Steps to Success

Making Google Adsense Account in a day


How to Make Money with Google Adsense - Step By Step Guide

Google AdSense Steps to Success

Open an AdSense Account Quickly


Google AdSense Steps to Success

Top Paying AdSense Keyword Lists

5 Surefire Ways to Increase Google Adsense Earnings

AdSense Mistakes

Create Google & SEO Friendly Page Titles

SEO Keyword Research Basics

SEO Training

Google Rank Checker Tool

SEO Optimization: How To Rule Google

AdSense Secrets Live with Joel Comm #1

AdSense Secrets Live with Joel Comm #2

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AdSense Secrets Live with Joel Comm #5

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Search Engine Optimization Tutorial - Google Site Command


Google Rank Checker Tool

How To Improve Your Google Ranking

Search Engine Optimization, Show Me How Videos
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How to Use SEO for Firefox

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

2006-2010






2006

2006 – On July 11, bombs planted on the train system in Mumbai exploded, killing 209 people.

2006 – North Korea conducted its first nuclear test on October 9.[8] This was preceded by years of political wrangling with the U.S. over the status of their nuclear program.

2006 – New Horizons is launched on a 9 year voyage to Pluto, January 19.

2006 – The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter arrives at Mars.

2006 - The Space Shuttle Discovery launches on STS-121, the second Return to Flight mission following the Columbia accident, July 4.

2006 - NASA resumes construction of the International Space Station following the Columbia accident with the launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis on STS-115 on September 9.

2006 – Pluto is reclassified from a planet to a dwarf planet, leaving the solar system with eight planets.
2006 six bombs explode in train stations in Mumbai, killing 190.

2007

2007 – Bulgaria and Romania join the European Union.
2007 – South Korea's Ban Ki-moon becomes the new United Nations Secretary-General,
2007 – Israel releases $100 million in frozen assets to President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian National Authority, in order to bolster the president's position.
2007 – Martti Ahtisaari unveils a United Nations plan for the final status of Kosovo; Serbian leaders denounce the proposal.
2007 – North Korea agrees to shut down its nuclear facilities in Yongbyon by April 14 as a first step towards complete denuclearization, receiving in return energy aid equivalent to 50,000 tons of heavy fuel oil.
2007– Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert admits that Israel had planned an attack on Lebanon in the event of kidnapped soldiers on the border, months before Hezbollah carried out its kidnapping.
2007 – Iran announces it will release the British sailors and marines that they captured on March 23.
2007 – Gliese 581 c, a potentially habitable Earth-like extrasolar planet, is discovered in theconstellation Libra.
2007 – Russians riot in Tallinn, Estonia, about moving the Bronze Soldier; 2 nights of rioting leave 1 dead.
2007 – NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft makes its second fly-by of Venus en route to Mercury.
2007 – Multiple suicide bombings kill 572 people in Qahtaniya, northern Iraq.
2007– Operation Orchard: Israeli airplanes strike a suspected nuclear site in Syria.
2007 – President Pervez Musharraf declares a state of emergency in Pakistan..
2007– A suicide bomber kills at least 50 people in Mazari Sharif, Afghanistan, including 6 members of the National Assembly.
2007 – High Speed 1 from London to the Channel Tunnel is opened to passengers.
2007– Former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto is assassinated, and at least 20 others are killed by a bomb blast at an election rally in Rawalpindi.
2007 – Over 200 people are killed in Kenya, due to riots over the results of the December 27 presidential election.

2008

2008 – A car bomb detonates, killing at least 4 and injuring 68, in Diyarbakır, Turkey. Police blame Kurdish rebels.
2008 – A Macedonian Army Mil Mi-17 helicopter crashes in thick fog southeast of Skopje, killing all 11 military personnel on board.
2008 – Thousands of Palestinians cross into Egypt, as the border wall with Gaza in Rafah is blown up by militants.
2008 – Rebels attack the capital of Chad, N'Djamena.
2008 – President of East Timor José Ramos-Horta is seriously wounded in an attack on his home by rebel soldiers. Rebel leader Alfredo Reinado is killed by Ramos-Horta's security guards during the attack.
2008 – Kosovo formally declares independence from Serbia, with support from some countries but opposition from others.
2008 – Eight Israeli civilians are killed and 9 wounded when a Palestinian attacker opens fire at a Jewish seminary in Jerusalem.
2008 – India sets a world record by sending 10 satellites into orbit in a single launch.
2008 – Over 133,000 in Burma/Myanmar are killed by Cyclone Nargis, the deadliest natural disaster since the Boxing Day Tsunami in 2004.
2008 – Armed conflict in August 2008 between Georgia on one side, and the Russian Federation together with Ossetians and Abkhazians on the other. Russia officially recognized independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
2008 – NASA's MESSENGER flies by Mercury, becoming the first spacecraft to do so in 33 years.
2008 – Phoenix Lander successfully arrives at Mars; later tests conducted by the spacecraft reveal evidence of ice on Mars.
2008 – Chinese space program launches its third manned space flight carrying its first three-person crew and conducts its first spacewalk that makes China the third nation after Russia and USA to do that, Shenzhou 7 on September 25.
2008 – The Indian Space Research Organisation's Chandrayaan-1 is launched on October 22. India becomes the fourth nation to reach the moon.
November 2008 Mumbai attacks, a series of ten coordinated terrorist attacks across Mumbai, India, killing 195 people and injuring 290 more.
2008 Sichuan earthquake - An earthquake in Sichuan, China killed 68,712, 17,921 missing.

2009

2009 –Barack Obama is elected first African-American president of the United States
2009 – North Korea tests a nuclear bomb beneath the ground in north east of the nation, which creates an earthquake that shows as 4 on the Richter scale.
2009 - NASA launches the Kepler Space Observatory on a three year mission to search the sky in the Cygnus, Lyra, and Draco constellations for Earth-like planets, March 6.
2009 – The Space Shuttle Atlantis rendezvous with the Hubble Space Telescope on STS-125 to give the Hubble much needed repairs. This mission will enable Hubble to last for approximately 5 to 10 years.
2009 - NASA conducts the Ares I-X test flight. The 6-minute suborbital flight was the only flight of the Constellation program that was supposed to replace the Space Shuttle fleet in the next decade.
2009 - NASA/ISRO discovers water on the Moon
2009 L'Aquila earthquake - A 6.3 magnitude earthquake strikes near L'Aquila (Italy) in April 2009, one of the worst in Italian history.
2009 flu pandemic - A worldwide outbreak of Influenza A virus subtype H1N1 spread around the world forming a pandemic by June 2009.


2010


2010 – Polish president Lech Kaczynski and 96 others died in an air disaster in western Russia. Investigations into the accident are still ongoing.
2010 Haiti earthquake - At least 230,000 are killed in Haiti after a massive earthquake. As of late February 2010, the death toll is expected to rise. Three million people were made homeless.
2010 – An 8.8 magnitude earthquake occurs in Chile, triggering a tsunami over the Pacific and killing 497.[15] One of the largest earthquakes in recorded history, this rare megathrust earthquake probably shifts Earth's axis and slightly shortens its days.2010 Yushu earthquake - A large 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the Yushu region of China in Qinghai near Tibet, killing over 2200 people.
2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull - A massive ash cloud is formed by the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajökull, grounding flights across northwest Europe.
2010 – A suicide bombing occurs at a volleyball game in northwestern Pakistan, killing at least 95, and injuring over.
2010 – The International Space Station program will take the record for the longest continuous occupation of space in history from Mir.
2010-2010 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Cancún, Mexico, also referred to as the 16th Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 16), it serves too as the 6th meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 6).

2001-2005






2001

2001 – George W. Bush becomes the second president of the United States to be the son of a former president, when he is inaugurated on January 20, 2001.
2001 – Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacked 4 commercial airliners and crashed 3 of them into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in the United States on September 11, killing nearly 3,000 people. The United States subsequently declared a War on Terrorism.
2001–present – The U.S. and NATO invaded Afghanistan on October 7, 2001 and overthrew the Al-Qaeda-supportive Taliban government. Troops remained to install a democratic government, fight a slowly escalating insurgency, and to hunt for Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden
2001 – Dennis Tito becomes the first space tourist by paying $19 million to board the International Space Station.
2001 19 members of al-Qaeda hijacked four commercial airliners, intentionally crashing two of them into The World Trade Centers in New York City, and one into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. The fourth plane's intended target was the White House, but passengers aboard the plane resisted the initiatives of the hijackers and crashed the plane into a field in Pennsylvania. 2,997 people from 90 different countries died. It remains one of the most striking and eventful terrorist attacks in contemporary history.
2001 Gujarat Earthquake - An earthquake in Gujarat,India on January 26, 2001 killed approximately 20,000.

2002

2002 – The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established on July 1.
2002 – A series of bombings carried out by Islamic militants killed 202 people at the resort of Kuta, Bali, Indonesia on October 12.
2002 – Mars Odyssey arrives in orbit around Mars.
2002 Bali terrorist bombings kill 202 people.

2003

2003–present – In February 2003, a conflict in Darfur, Sudan began and soon escalated into full-scale war. It is soon considered the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. By 2008 it is believed that up to 400,000 people have been killed and over 2.5 million displaced. In 2005, the ICC decided that Darfur war criminals would be tried, and on July 14, 2008, Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir was charged with 5 accounts of crimes against humaninty and 2 accounts of war crimes, although the ICC currently has no power to enforce these charges.
2003–present – The U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq on March 20, 2003 and overthrew the government of Saddam Hussein (who was executed by the Iraqi government on December 30, 2006). Coalition troops remain in the country to install a democratic government and fight an escalating insurgency. In addition to an insurgency against the American presence, Iraq also suffered from a civil war for several years. The war was soon seen as the central front of the War on Terror by many governments, despite growing international dissatisfaction with the war. The total death toll has been estimated at near 150,000 but these estimations are highly disputed. After the U.S.-led coalition initiated a troop surge in 2007, casualty numbers have decreased significantly.
2003 – Space Shuttle Columbia disaster February 1.
2003 – The Chinese space program launches its first manned space flight, Shenzhou 5 on October 15.
2003 – Discovery of an old dwarf human species, Homo floresiensis by modern humans (published October 2004).
2003 European heat wave - Approximately 30,000 people were killed across europe in a summer long heat wave.
2003 Bam earthquake - An earthquake in Bam, Iran on December 27, 2003 killed more than 26,000.

2004

2004 – The European Union expanded by 10 countries, including 8 former communist countries, plus Malta and Cyprus.
2004 – On March 11, bombings carried out by Islamic militants killed 191 people on the commuter rail system of Madrid, Spain.
2004 – Mars Exploration Rovers land on Mars; Opportunity discovers evidence that an area of Mars was once covered in water.
2004 – The Cassini–Huygens probe arrives at Saturn.
2004 – SpaceShipOne makes the first privately funded human spaceflight, June 21.
2004 – The first ever recorded hurricane in the South Atlantic forms.
2004 terrorist attacks shake several train stations on Spain's capital Madrid, killing 191 people and injuring 1,247.
2004 Indian Ocean earthquake - On December 26, 2004, an undersea earthquake resulted in a massive tsunami striking southeast Asia killing approxomately 230,000.

2005

2005 Hurricane Jeanne - Over 3,000 people are killed by Hurricane Jeanne in Haiti in September 2004.
2005 Hurricane Katrina - The hurricane killed 1,836 in southeast Louisiana and Mississippi (mostly in New Orleans). A significant portion of the city, most of which sits below sea level, was submerged.
2005 Kashmir earthquake An earthquake in Kashmir on October 8, 2005, killed at least 74,500 in India and Pakistan
2005 Cyclone Nagris - lead to massive landslides, leading to a death toll in excess of 100,000 and making millions homeless.
2005 – Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip on September 11.
2005 – The Huygens probe lands on Titan, the largest of Saturn's moons, January 14.
2005 – The Deep Impact probe impacts Comet Tempel 1, July 4.
2005 - The Space Shuttle Discovery launches on STS-114 on July 26, the first Return to Flight mission following the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster. The mission marks the beginning of the end of the current Space Shuttle Program (shuttles Endeavour, Atlantis, and Discovery)
2005 London bombings, Suicide terrorist attacks shake London transport system killing 52 people and injuring 700.
, terrorists attack various markets in New Delhi, killing 61 people and injuring 188 more, right before the start of the festival season in India.

1996-2000






1996

1996 Elections in Bosnia After several years of fighting and the deaths of tens of thousands, leaders of the battling forces met on November 1 at the Wright-Patterson Airforce Base, outside Dayton, Ohio, to negotiate a peace settlement. The Dayton Accords were initialed twenty days later, thus effectively bringing about a conditional end to armed hostilities. The accords were reinforced with 15,000 American ground troops, whose introduction assured that the ceasefire was observed by all sides. In an effort to construct a stable political system in the troubled region, elections were held on September 12, 1996; 60-70% of eligible voters cast votes, resulting in a three-headed presidency representing all the major ethnic groups.
1996 Taliban Capture Afghanistan At the end of September, the Taliban captured Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. The Taliban originated from a group of students studying at a fundamentalist Islamic school. In a period of two years, the insurgents took control of two-thirds of Afghanistan. Their advance was nearly unopposed. Many welcomed the Taliban, as they brought the first stabilty to Afghanistan since the Soviet invasion of 1979. However, the Taliban instituted strict Islamic law in all areas that they controlled, and were ruthless to their opponents. Seen in this picture is the public hanging of the former President of Afghanistan, Najibullah, and his brother, who had been living in the UN compound in Kabul. The Taliban faced substantial opposition in the northern provinces, where opponents to the Taliban united in October to fight them.
1996 Nigeria Unrest Moshood Abiola, a multi-millionaire businessman, was widely believed to have won the presidential election in Nigeria in June of 1993. General Ibrahim Babangida, who had ruled Nigeria for eight years, annulled the election results, which were unfavorable to his regime, before they could be released. On the one-year anniversary of the election, Mr. Abiola declared himself President. Two years later, his wife, Kudirat, and her driver were assassinated in Lagos. Shortly afterwards, Abiola was arrested and held on charges of treason.

The arrest further contributed to the government's reputation as an oppressive violator of human rights, a reputation which was earned both by the 1993 election scandal and the 1995 execution of nine Ogoni activists, including Ken Saro-Wiwa. Saro-Wiwa's organization, the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People, accused the Royal Dutch Shell Group -Nigerian government alliance of taking few, if any precautions to protect the local people from the harmful and sometimes fatal side-effects of pumping oil from the Ogoniland, the most oil-rich section of Nigeria. After years of government harassment, Saro-Wiwa and the eight other activists were arrested for the murder of four pro-government Ogoni tribal chiefs. The nine men were executed in November of 1995, after a mockery of a trial.
1996 Suicide Bombers Hit Israel A series of suicide bombings struck both Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, seriously affecting the peace process. The bombings helped defeat Shimon Peres, Rabin's succesor, and brought to power Benjamin Netanayahu.
1996 TWA Flight 800 Explodes TWA Flight 800 exploded off the coast of Long Island, shortly after taking off from JFK Airport in New York, bound for Paris. Initially, foul play was suspected, but eventually it was determined that the crash was most likely due to mechanical problems.

1997

1997 Mars Pathfinder Lands The US spacecraft Pathfinder landed on Mars. It began transmitting stunning images from the surface of the planet. Pathfinder released a robot vehicle to explore the surface.
1997 Britain Turns Over Hong Kong to China The long rule of Britain over Hong Kong came to an end on July 1, 1997. On that day, the sovereignty of the colony was turned over to China. China had agreed to maintain greater freedom in Hong Kong than was allowed in China itself.


1998


1998 Northern Ireland Peace Representatives of the Catholics and Protestants of Ireland, together with representatives of the Irish Republic and the United Kingdom, signed a major peace accord. US envoy former Senator Mitchell brokered the accord, and it was hoped it would bring to an end the bloodshed in Northern Ireland.
1998 Republicans lose seats in Congressional elections Much to the surprise of political pundits, the Republicans did not pick up any seats in the Congressional elections of 1998. In fact, in a precedent-breaking election, the Democrats, who were the party of the President, actually gained seats in a Congressional election during the second term of the Presidency. Many analysts explained the results as a repudiation of the Republican efforts to impeach President Clinton.
1998 US Embassies Bombed Simultaneously On August 7, 1998, bombs exploded simultaneously at US embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar el Islam, Tanzania. The bombings killed a total of 224 people. The bombings were said to be done by international terrorist Osama bin Laden. The United States responded by bombing terrorist sites in Afghanistan and the Sudan.

1999

1999 Kosovo Before the rise of Milosevic in Yugoslavia, the province of Kosovo, which was primarily populated by Moslem ethnic Albanians, had been granted extensive autonomy. Milosevic rescinded that autonomy, which resulted in growing resentment of Serbian control. It led to the rise of the KLA, which was dedicated to Kosovo independence. In order to avoid the slaughter that had taken place in Bosnia, NATO became actively involved in negotiating a peace settlement between the KLA and the Serbs. An agreement was reached between the KLA and the Serbs, which was accepted by the KLA and rejected by the Yugoslav government. NATO demanded that the Serbs accept the agreement and, when they refused, NATO began a bombing campaign that lasted 79 days. During the campaign, the Serbs engaged in an active campaign of ethnic cleansing of Kosovo, killing at least 10,000 ethnic Albanians. The bombing campaign, in which the US lost only two planes and no pilots, achieved its goal, and the Serbs withdrew from Kosovo, to be replaced by NATO peace-keeping forces.
1999 Free Parliamentary Elections in Indonesia On June 7, Indonesia held free parliamentary elections. The opposition leader, Megawati Sukarnoputri, won the most support. Her "Megawati's Indonesian Democratic Party - Struggle" (PDI-P) won 33.7% of the vote, followed by the ruling "Golkar Party" of President B.J. Habibie with 22.4%.
1999 Ehud Barak wins the elections by a landslide Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu lost his re-election bid to the "Israel One" canidate– Ehud Barak. Barak won a landslide victory, after campaigning to move the peace process forward. After his election Barak kept his promise and on September 4th, 1999 he signed a revised agreement with the PLO to implement further Israeli withdrawals from the West Bank. That agreement included a blueprint for final status negotiations aimed at a final peace accord.
1999 Nelson Mandela Retires On June 16, 1999, Nelson Mandela stepped down from the Presidency of South Africa. He was replaced by Thabo Mbeki, the new leader of the African National Congress. The ANC had won parliametary elections on June 2.
1999 President Clinton Impeached President Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives in a straight party-line vote. The President was accused of lying to a Grand Jury and giving false testimony in his deposition in the Paula Jones lawsuit. Paula Jones accused the President of improper advances while he was governor of Arkansas, and the President was accused of lying about his affair with Monica Lewinsky. When the case went to the Senate, the Senate voted to acquit on a vote of 50 to 50; 66 votes were needed to find the President guilty.

2000

Jan 07 An exhausted 14-year-old Tibetan Buddhist leader reaches India after trekking across the snowy Himalayas, a defection that embarrassed Chinese leaders who used him as a symbol of their rule over Tibet.
Jan 19 Film star Hedy Lamarr, 86, found dead in her Florida home
Jan 17 Almost 50,000 people marched in Columbia, S.C., to protest the flying of the Confederate battle flag over the state Capitol.
Jan 17 Almost 50,000 people marched in Columbia, S.C., to protest the flying of the Confederate battle flag over the state Capitol.
Jan 06 Quebec Central Railway takes over the former CPR Quebec Central Lines. Service between Sherbrooke and Vallee Jonction resumed 24 June 2000. The new Quebec Central is operated by Express Marco Inc
Jan 20 Moveable Media, internet pioneer, is founded
Feb 28 A 6.8 earthquake shook the Pacific Northwest resulting in injuries and over 1 billion dollars damage.
Feb 12 Former Dallas Cowboys coach Tom Landry dies at age 75 after battling leukemia for nine months.
Feb 12 Peanuts creator Charles Schulz dies of colon cancer in his Santa Rosa, California, home at age 77.
Feb 01 Scientists at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico say they have traced the origin of the AIDS virus to around 1930.
Feb 03 Natalie Rasmussen and Ryan Crump start dating
Feb 14 Tornadoes rip through southwestern Georgia just after midnight, killing 19 people and injuring more than 100 others.
Apr 02 French archaeologists announce they have discovered the remains of a 4,000-year-old queen's pyramid south of Cairo, complete with texts of special prayers previously found only with kings
Apr 03 62nd NCAA Men's Basketball Championship at RCA Dome Indianapolis
Nov 18 A major fire at the 350 room Marriot Mountain REsort in Vale Colorado starts no deaths
Nov 27 The Liberal government in Canada is re-elected for another 5 years, HO Well
Nov 29 Thieves steal a helicopter from a building near Manning in Northern Alberta, pushing it outside and taking off
Nov 20 A 17 year old student is stabbed and dies at a Calgary High School
Nov 30 South and North Korean relatives who have been separated for half a century are reunited in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang.
Sep 11 Scientists confirm the long held suspicion It can take just a few cigarettes to become addicted. Research shows some 12 and 13-year-olds show signs of addiction within days of their first cigarette.
Sep 20 Terrorists launch a small missile at Britain's MI6 intelligence headquarters in London.
Sep 11 Scientists confirm the long held suspicion: It can take just a few cigarettes to become addicted. Research shows some 12 and 13-year-olds show signs of addiction within days of their first cigarette.
Jun 04 In Southern Sumatera, Indonesia a 7.9 quake resulted in at least 103 people killed, 2,174 injured, extensive damage (VI) and landslides in the Bengkulu area; minor injuries and damage on Enggano
Jun 08 Pultizer Prize Winning cartoonist Jeff MacNelly, creator of the comic strip Shoe, dies of cancer at age 52.
Jan 16 Ricardo Lagos is elected Chile's first socialist president since Salvador Allende, whose government was toppled in a bloody 1973 military coup led by Gen Augusto Pinochet.
Jan 20 Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., warned the U.N. Security Council that the United States would withdraw from the world body if it failed to respect American sovereignty.
Jan 07 An exhausted 14-year-old Tibetan Buddhist leader reaches India after trekking across the snowy Himalayas, a defection that embarrassed Chinese leaders who used him as a symbol of their rule over Tibet.
Jan 06 Quebec Central Railway takes over the former CPR Quebec Central Lines. Service between Sherbrooke and Vallee Jonction resumed 24 June 2000. The new Quebec Central is operated by Express Marco Inc.

Jun 19 The last rail on the order books of Sysco (Sydney Steel) is rolled.
Aug 21 British troops are rushed on to Belfast streets after two men are killed in a violent feud between Protestant guerrilla groups.
Aug 15 A group of 100 separated family members from North Korea arrive in South Korea for temporary reunions with relatives they have not seen for half a century.
Aug 16 Heather breaks up with Wayne for good after 5 years and she says, " I'M FINALLY FREE!! "
Aug 23 A Gulf Air Airbus jetliner with 140 aboard crashes into the Persian Gulf near Bahrain shortly after takeoff, leaving no survivors.
Aug 23 In a 'reality TV' record an estimated 51 million US viewers tuned in for the finale of CBS' series Survivor, in which contestant Richard Hatch won the $US1 million prize.
Aug 05 Sir Alec Guinness, revered as one of Britain's most versatile actors, dies at 86.
Oct 12 USS Cole (Destroyer) was bombed while refuling in Aden, Yemen 17 sailors lost their lives
Oct 26 An Ilyushin-18 aircraft ploughs into a mountain in ex-Soviet Georgia, killing more than 80 people.
Oct 06 Heather and Brent started going out
Dec 28 Montgomery Ward announces it is closing 250 stores and laying off 37,000 workers
Dec 25 A bank machine in a supermarket in the town of Antibes France paid double the withdrawal amount while only recording the correct amount (Merry Christmas)
Dec 25 A Christmas day fire killed 309 people at a dance hall in the central Chinese city of Luoyang

Oct 25 Stormy seas prevent divers from entering the nuclear submarine Kursk a day after naval officials reveal evidence that more than 23 seamen had survived the initial explosions that sank the vessel.
Oct 17 Pope John Paul and Britain's Queen Elizabeth meet and speak of their hopes for Christian unity. It is her first visit to the Vatican in 20 years

1991-1995






1991

1991 Hubble Telescope Launched The space shuttle Discovery launched the Hubble Telescope -- seven years behind schedule. The telescope was defective and it required a later repair mission to fix it.
1991 Airlift of Ethiopian Jews To Israel In a period of 36 hours, Israel airlifted 14,500 Jews from Ethiopia to Israel.
1991 Failed Kremlin Coup On August 21, hardline Communists staged a coup attempt against the government of Gorbachev, putting him under house arrest. The coup, however, failed when Boris Yeltsin, the leader of the Russian Republic, rallied supporters at the Parliament building in Moscow. Thousands joined Yeltsin there, and many military leaders announced their support for Yeltsin. The coup ended when it became clear that the troops would not open fire on the citizens of Moscow. Gorbachev returned to power as President, in a much diminished capacity– true power having passed to Boris Yeltsin, who soon declared the Communist party illegal.
1991 Rajiv ghandi Killed Rajiv Gandhi, Prime Minister of India and son of Indira Gandhi, was killed in a massive explosion while campaigning. His death was attributed to the Tamil, who were revolting in Sri Lanka.
1991 Cambodia Civil War Ends Under pressure from the US, U.S.S.R. and China, the Vietnamese-controlled Cambodian government and the three rebel forces it was fighting reached a peace agreement. The day-to-day administration of the country was to be taken over by the UN until free elections could be held.
1991 Free Elections in Taiwan The first free elections since the government of Taiwan was established were held. The ruling party won the majority of seats in the Parliament.
1991 Eritrea Independent After a thirty-year armed struggle against Ethiopian domination, Eritrean forces suceeded in defeating the Ethiopian military and gained independence. Two years later, in a referendum at home and abroad, Eritreans voted for independence from Ethiopia.
1991 U.S. Announces Massive Nuclear Cutback US President Bush announced that all US tactical nuclear weapons would be eliminated from Europe. He also announced that the US Strategic Command would stand down from the 24 hour alert status it had maintained since the beginning of the Cold War.
1991 U.S.S.R. Comes to a formal End On December 21 representatives of 11 former Soviet Republics met in Alma Ata and signed the founding "Declaration of the Commonwealth of Independant States" – a loose confederation of the former Republics. Four days later, Gorbachev announced his resignation and the Soviet Union ceased to exist.

1992

1992 Civil War Begins in Former Yugoslavia Civil war broke out in Yugoslavia. As the Communist regime fell, Yugoslavia was divided up into Serbia, Bosnia-Hergezovenia, Macedonia, Croatia and Slovenia. Fighting soon broke out inside these areas, as Serbs attempted to gain control of the entire territory. The Serbs instituted a policy of "ethnic" cleansing, whose goal was to force non-Serbs out of all areas that the Serbs conquered.
1992 Kim Young Sam A former dissident, Kim Young Sam, became the first non-military candidate to be elected President of South Korea. He was replaced in 1998 by Kim Dae Jung, who spent many years imprisoned by the previous regime.
1992 Security Council Votes Sanctions on Libya The UN Security Council voted to impose sanctions on Libya for not surrendering two suspects in the bombing of a Pan Am flight over Scotland. All flights to Libya were banned, as well as sale of all munitions.
1992 El Salvador Signs Peace Agreement with Guerillas The guerrilla movement and the El Salvador government signed an agreement, ending the 13-year civil war.

1993

1993 Terrorists Attack World Trade Center In February, a powerful bomb exploded in the World Trade Center in New York. The explosion killed 7 and injured 1,000. The bombers were fundamental Muslims.
1993 Confrontation in Waco On April 19, 1993, the ATF launched an assualt on the headquarters of David Koresh in Waco, Texas. Koresh ordered his disciples to kill themselves and set the compound on fire. Eighty-six people died.
1993 Israel And PLO Reach Accord Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization reached an accord on an Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho. This interim agreement called for further negotiations on the status of the rest of the West Bank. The tentative agreement was signed in Washington on September 13; the full accord was signed in Cairo in May 1994.
1993 Marines Killed in Somalia Eighteen American soldiers, members of the United Nations Peace-keeping Forces, were killed in a 15-hour gun battle with Somali rebels in Mogadishu between October 3 and 4. The U.N. troops were sent into Somalia to maintain order in the face of civil unrest that was causing wide-spread famine and interfering with international aid relief. As a result of the incident, the US Congress put pressure on the administration to withdraw American troops. On October 7, President Clinton announced a March deadline for the withdrawal of most US troops in Somalia.

1994

1994 NATO shoots down Serb Aircraft The NATO Alliance warned Bosnian Serbs against operating ground attack jets in the UN-imposed no-fly zone. The ultimatum was ignored, and NATO shot down four Bosnian Serb jets. This was the first combat action ever taken by NATO in its 45-year history.
1994 Nelson Mandela is Elected President of South Africa Nelson Mandela was elected the first black leader of South Africa, after the country had its first free multiracial election. F.W. De Klerk became one of the Deputy Premiers.
1994 Civil War in Chechniya A civil war broke out in the Russian province of Chechniya. The Chechniyans demanded independence, like many of the states of the Soviet Union had been receiving. The Russians claimed that Chechniya was part of Russia and thus would not be granted independence. The war in Chechniya lasted for two years and was marked by brutality on both sides.
1994 Republicans take control of Congress In the mid-term election in November 1994, the Republicans gained control of both houses of Congress. Their major camapign theme was a based on a document called "Contract With America," whose major feature called for balancing the budget and welfare reform.

1995

1995 Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin Assasinated Yitzchak Rabin, Israel's Prime Minister, was assassinated on November 3, by a right wing Israeli opponent of the peace process, Yigal Amir. Rabin was succeeded by his Foreign Minister, Shimon Peres. In a subsequent election in May 1996, Peres was beaten by Benjamin Netanyahu, of the opposition party, which was pledged to slowing the peace process.
1995 Mexican Bailout President Clinton invoked emergency powers and granted a $20 billion loan to bail out Mexico. The loan was controversial, but Mexico repaid the loan early, and the loan averted a major financial crisis.
1995 Murrah Federal Building Destroyed by Blast A truck bomb exploded in front of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City. The bomb was placed by Timothy MacVeigh and Terry Nichols; 168 people were killed in the bombing.
1995 O.J. Simpson- " Not- Guilty" O.J. Simpson, the football superstar, was found "not-guilty" of killing his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. The trial, which was televised, gripped the nation.

1986-1990





1986

1986 Soviets free Scharansky The Soviet released Anotoly Scharansky, a leading Jewish dissedent. Scharansky was being held in Soviet jails, accused of espionage. The release, which took place on February 11, marked another event in the easing of East- West tension that had begun with Gorbachev's assumption of leadership.

President Reagan and Gorbachev had met in November 1985 at a summit in Geneva. Although no major agreements were reached, the Geneva summit marked the first in a series of meetings in which substanative agreements were reached. The release of Scharansky was soon followed by the granting of permission to emigrate for most of the leading Soviet Jewish "refuseniks" (those refused permission to emigrate).
1986 Soviets Nuclear Disaster At Chernobyl A Soviet nuclear reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in the Ukraine, not far from Kiev, exploded, releasing fatal radiation to the surrounding areas. The disaster at Chernobyl was important, not just to the over 100,000 that would eventually be affected by the radiation, but for its overall impact on Soviet citizens. The initial explosion was ignored both locally and in Moscow. Only when Scandinavian monitors noticed the high level of radiation did Soviet officials admit what had happened and begin evacuating residents from the affected areas.

The disaster and the belated reaction of the government further undermined the already diminished confidence the people of the Soviet Union had in their government.
1986 Summit at Reykjavik A two-day summit was held in Reykjavik, Iceland between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. At the summit, the Soviets made major concession in negotiations on Strategic Arms. An outline for an agreement on the elimination of intermediate missiles from Europe, as well as a framework for START (Strategic Arms Reduction Talks), was reached.

Unfortunately, Soviet demands that the US S.D.I. (Strategic Defense Initiative) program be haulted resulted in a last minute impasse in the talks. That impasse and the tired looks on the faces of the conferees at the end of the meetings resulted in the world's press labeling the sessions as a failure. However, a great deal of progress was made at the summit, progress upon which later meetings built.
1986 Portugal and Spain enter the Common Market Portugal and Spain joined the European Common Market, thus expanding the market.
1986 Marcos Flees the Phillippines On February 7, President Ferdinand Marcos, ruler of the Philippines for 20 years, ran for re-election against Corazon Aquino, widow of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino. Marcos had Parliament declare him the winner, even though Aquino had actually won. Mass demonstrations ensued, and Marcos was forced to flee when the army refused to put down the demonstrations.
1986 US plans attack on Tripoli After a terrorist attack in Germany, during which an American serviceman was killed, the United States launched an air attack on Libya. Targets were hit in Tripoli and Benghazi. Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi's headquarters were also hit.
1986 Shuttle Challenger Explodes Seventy–three seconds after blast-off, the shuttle Challenger exploded and killed all seven astronauts on board. The explosion was the greatest loss ever for the American Space Program. The tragedy was later blamed on faulty o-rings in the booster rocket.

The crew members were: Gregory B. Jarvis, Christa McAuliffe, Dr. Ronald E. McNair, Dr. Judith Resnick, Col. Ellison S. Onizuka, Commander Francis "Dick" Scobee and Commander Michael J. Smith.

MAY THEIR COURAGE AND QUEST FOR KNOWLEDGE BE AN INSPIRATION FOR GENERATIONS.
1986 Iran Contra Deal The Reagan Administration confirmed that it had been selling arms to Iran, which was fighting a war with Iraq, in an effort to obtain the release of American hostages in Lebanon. Money from the sales was used to help the Contras fighting the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua.
1986 US Responds to Libyan Terror On April 15, in response to a Libyan-sponsored terrorist attack against Americans in West Germany, American planes attacked various targets in Libya. As a result, the Libyans scaled back their support for terrorist activities against Western targets.

1987

1987 Gorbechav cmapaigns for Glasnonst and Perosroika Mikhail Go rbachev called for multi-party representation in local elections within the Soviet Union. The multi-party elections brought the first taste of democracy to the Soviets.
1987 Reagan and Gorbechav meet in Washington The signing of the I.N.F. (Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces) treaty in 1987 marked the beginning of the end of the Cold War. I.N.F. was the first treaty to eliminate a complete class of weapons. It was also the first treaty to include an in-depth verification program.

The treaty was concieved as a result of the United States' decision to deploy Pershing intermediate missiles in Europe, against strong Soviet opposition. At the same time, the Soviet Union, under the leadership of Mikhail Gorbachev, had undertaken a new course of external openness and internal reform. Thus, after failing to convince America to stop deploying the Pershing missile, Gorbachev agreed to negotiate the elimination of the Pershing. In return, the Soviets agreed to destroy all of their intermediate missiles. The Soviets had nearly three times as many intermediate missiles as the US Pershing inventory.

The I.N.F. treaty convinced many that it was possible to achieve a new set of agreements with the Soviets. As a result, Soviets were able to quicken the pace of what was known as "glasnost" (openess and reform). Glasnost would ultimately cause the end of the Soviet empire.

1987 Tamil Guerrilla Ambush Convey Tamil guerrillas, opposed to the government of the Sinhalese majority in Sri Lanka, attacked a convoy about 100 miles north of Colombo. The guerrillas killed 127 people and wounded 60. With the agreement of the Sri Lankan government, India sent peacekeeping forces to Northern Sri Lanka in July. That force grew to 40,000 men. By the time India withdrew its forces at the end of 1989, 1,000 had been killed and 3,000 wounded.
1987 Libyan Troops Driven Out of Chad Chad took the offensive in its civil war. The Army of Chad attacked Libyan forces in the northern village of Aozou and routed them. They then raided a Libyan air base that was being used to support the Libyan war effort in Chad. The Chadian Army claimed to have destroyed 26 Libyan planes. A cease-fire was soon negotiated.
1987 USS Stark Hit by Exocet Missiles The USS Stark, a US frigate, was attacked by an Iraqi air-to-sea missile and severely damaged. Thirty sailors were killed in the attack, which was apparently accidental.
1987 Intifada Begins When an Israeli truck in the Gaza Strip hit and killed four people, Palestinians responded by violent protests. The violent protests led by the youth became known and the "Intifada." The Israelis found it very difficult to put down the uprising.
1987 Rioting Brakes Out in Haj On the eve of the annual Haj, Shi'ite Muslims mostly from Iran started a riot with Saudi Arabian police. Four hundred and two were killed in the fighting.

1988

1988 Gorbechav Announces Unilateral Troop Cuts Soviet Premier Gorbachev announced at the UN that the Soviet Union was unilaterally cutting back its conventional forces in Eastern Europe by 500,000 troops. The cutback was greeted with joy in the West, but was, in fact, forced on the Soviets by their inability to maintain the forces. It soon became academic, as Eastern Europe became independent of Moscow.
1988 Soviets Pull Out of Afghanistan The Soviets agreed to remove their troops from Afghanistan. There was a total of 120,000 troops in Afghanistan at the time. The Soviet losses were estimated at 16,000 soldiers killed during the war in Afghanistan.
1988 Ten Day Siege of Golden Temple Thirty-six were killed during the siege of the Sikh Golden Temple by the Indian Army. During the first part of the year, 750 people were killed in fighting between Hindus and Sikhs.
1988 Iranian Passenger Jet Downed By US In a case of mistaken identity, the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian passenger plane. The Airbus was carrying nearly 300 passengers, and all were killed.
1988 Longest Underseas Tunnel Opens A railroad tunnel opened between Aomori on the Honshu Island and Hakidate in Hokkaido, Japan. The tunnel, called "Seikan," was 33.44 miles long and was as deep as 787 feet below water at one point.
1988 Free Elections held for Soviet Congress of Deputies Free elections were held in the Soviet Union for the first time in its history. The formation of the new Soviet Congress of Deputies brought many leading dissidents to elected postions in the Congress, including Andrei Sakharov. Boris Yeltsin was also elected. Yeltsin had been ousted from the Central Committee a year earlier.

Despite the fact that the majority of the seats in the Congress were held by members of the Communist Party, the sessions of the Congress held after the election were televised live on Soviet TV, and were free and open. The resulting debates brought home to the Soviet people, for the first time, the potential meaning of democracy. The debates also brought forth many of the secrets held by the Communist regime to the public eye for the first time.

1989

1989 Solidarity Wins Election in Poland On June 5, the Solidarity movement won, by an overwhelming majority, in the first free election in Poland. The elections came after an agreement was reached in April between the government and Solidarity, which called for free elections. Soldarity won 96 out of 100 seats in the new Senate. The overwhelming voice of the people forced Poland's Communists to concede defeat and resign. When the Soviets did nothing to forestall these actions, Communist regimes in the rest of Europe were doomed.
1989 Berlin Wall Comes Down On October 18, the regime of Erich Hoenecker, the Communist leader of East Germany, fell. It succumbed to increasing riots, as well as a flood of East Germans leaving via the open borders of Hungary. On November 10, the new government announced the end of all travel restrictions, and soon thousands of Berliners took part in taking down the Berlin Wall that had divided the city for 27 years.
1989 Havel becomes President of Czechoslavakia The Communist regime of Czechoslovakia yielded to popular demands and allowed free elections. In the election, Vaclev Havel, one of the leading Czech dissidents, was elected President, ending Communist rule in the country.
1989 Ceausecu Ousted in Romania In the only bloody revolt in Eastern Europe, Romanian strongman Nicole Ceausecu was deposed. The Romanian secret service fired on demonstrators, but before long, regular army troops turned on member of the Securiat, resulting in a brief civil war and the ouster of the regime. Ceausecu was tried and executed within days. He was the only former Communist leader of Eastern Europe to meet such a fate.
1989 Japanese Emperor Hirohito dies Japanese Emperor Hirohito died at the age of 87.
1989 Pro- Democracy Rallies in Tiananmen Square In April, students in Peking began a series of demonstrations demanding democratization of China. These demonstrations culminated in the occupation of Tiananmen Square, the central square in Peking. As the student rally continued, a power struggle ensued inside the Chinese government. The hard-liners won, and the order went out to clear the square. This was done with considerable loss of life. Mass arrests of the protesters followed. These events were broadcast live on television throughout the world.
1989 Angola Civil War Halted by Cease Fire Angola declared its independence from Portugal. Two separate governments were proclaimed: the Soviet-backed Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) and the National Union for Total Independence of Angola (UNITA). A civil war ensued, during which the MPLA accepted Cuban troops to support its cause. UNITA received aid from South Africa, which hurt its cause in the West.
1989 Exxon Valdez Runs Aground The worst oil spill in US history occurred when the super-tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground in Prince Willliam Sound, Alaska. About 730 miles of coastline were affected by the oil spill, and Exxon spent over $1 billion in trying to clean up the damage.
1989 Earthquake Hits San Francisco An earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale hit the San Francisco area. The quake killed 57 people but caused nearly $10 billion in damages.
1989 The first Liver Transplant The first liver transplant, using a live donor, took place at the Chicago Medical Center.
1989 Chilean Voters Vote To End Military Rule Elections held in December brought Patricio Aylwin to power as President of Chile. Chileans held their breaths, but Chilean military dictator, Augusto Pinochet, stepped aside at the beginning of 1990 in favor of the newly-elected President.
1989 US Troops invade Panama When Panamanian strongman, General Manuel Noriega, clamped down on the limited democracy existing in Panama, the US intervened and ousted the Noriega–led government. Noriega was arrested and brought to the United States to face charges of drug trafficking.


1990


1990 Lithuania Independent On March 11, the Lithuanian Parliament declared its independence from the Soviet Union. The parliament elected Vitautas Landsbergis the new leader. The Soviet Central Government took no significant action against the new Lithuanian regime, and soon the other Baltic States Latvia and Estonia declared their independence as well.

Minor clashes developed between Soviet troops and local demonstrators, but as the Soviet Union crumbled, there was little that it could do.

1990 Yeltsin President Of Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin was elected President of the Russian Federation. The election made Yeltsin the highest official directly elected by the Russian people and, thus, placed him on an equal status with Gorbachev, who had never been elected.
1990 Germany United On October 3, East and West Germany formally reunited. The newly-reunited Germany ended the division of Germany created with the end of World War II.
1990 Yugoslavia Brakes Up The Yugoslavian Communist Party voted to give up its monopoly on power and declared the country a "multi-party democracy." In Slovenia, a center right coalition favoring independence was elected. They then held a referendum, in which independence was approved for Slovenia. In Croatia, the population also voted for independence; while in Serbia, a party dedicated to a strong central government won the election.
1990 Walesa, Polish President Lech Walesa became the first freely-elected President of Poland. He received 74% of the vote.
1990 Elections in Myanmar In the first free elections in 30 years, the voters of Myanmar (formerly Burma) repudiated the military government. The military ignored the election and maintained their rule.
1990 Nelson mandela Freed Nelson Mandela, leader of the African National Congress, was released after spending 27 years behind prison walls. Mandela was released by President F.W. DeKlerk, as the first step in the creation of a multi-racial democracy.
1990 Nambia Free After being occupied by South Africa for nearly 70 years, Namibia became independent.
1990 Iraq Attacks Kurds in Northern Iraq Iraqi troops began an all-out assault on Kurdish forces revolting against Saddam Hussein in northern Iraq. After pressure from the US, Iraq withdrew from the northern border area, and the United States set up a security zone for the Kurds in northern Iraq.
1990 Gulf War Begins On August 2, Iraq attacked Kuwait. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had a number of claims against Kuwait, but most important among them was Iraq's longstanding assertion that Kuwait was actually part of Iraq. The U.N. Security Council passed a resolution demanding Iraqi withdrawal, and the US rushed troops to Saudi Arabia to defend it against an expected Iraqi attack. US President Bush put together an international coalition that massed in Saudi Arabia to force Iraq out of Kuwait.

On January 15, 1991 the US-led coalition struck with a massive air attack against Iraqi targets. Hussein responded with a missile attack against Israel, which did not retaliate due to US pressure.

On February 24, a land offensive was begun; it met little resistance as Iraqi forces collapsed. Coalition forces liberated Kuwait and occupied parts of Southern Iraq. A cease-fire was accepted before complete destruction of the Iraqi army occurred. When the war ended, Saddam Hussein remained in power. He successfully suppressed a Shi'ite revolt in the South and a Kurdish revolt in the North.

1990 Free elections were held in Nicaragua Violetta Chamorro, owner of the opposition newspaper La Prensa, led a broad spectrum of opposition to the Sandinistas. She won the election.