This Week in History
HISTORY, 30 Oct 2017
Satoshi Ashikaga – TRANSCEND Media Service
Oct 30 – Nov 5, 2017
QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
OCTOBER 30
2014 Sweden is the first European Union member state to officially recognize the State of Palestine.
- Sweden Gives Recognition to Palestine, by Isabel Kershner – Oct. 30, 2014 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- Sweden Recognizes Palestine State, by Karl Ritter – 10/30/2014 – HuffingtonPost.com
- ‘MidEast not IKEA simple’ – Israeli FM spaps at Sweden over Palestine – RT.com
2013 45 people die after a bus fuel tank catches fire in the Indian city of Mahbubnagar.
2005 The rebuilt Dresden Frauenkirche (destroyed in the firebombing of Dresden during World War II) is reconsecrated after a thirteen-year rebuilding project.
1995 Quebec citizens narrowly vote (50.58% to 49.42%) to remain a province of Canada in their second referendum on national sovereignty.
1993 The Troubles: The Ulster Defence Association, an Ulster loyalist paramilitary, carry out a mass shooting at a Halloween party in Greysteel, Northern Ireland. Eight civilians are murdered and thirteen wounded.
1991 The Madrid Conference for Middle East peace talks opens.
1987 In Japan, NEC releases the first 16-bit (fourth generation) video game console, the PC Engine, which is later sold in other markets under the name TurboGrafx-16.
1985 Space Shuttle Challenger lifts off for mission STS-61-A, its final successful mission.
1983 The first democratic elections in Argentina after seven years of military rule are held.
1980 El Salvador and Honduras sign a peace treaty to put the border dispute fought over in 1969‘s Football War before the International Court of Justice.
1978 Uganda troops attack Tanzania.
1975 Prince Juan Carlos becomes Spain’s acting head of state, taking over for the country’s ailing dictator, Gen. Francisco Franco.
1974 The Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman takes place in Kinshasa, Zaire.
1973 The Bosphorus Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey is completed, connecting the continents of Europe and Asia over the Bosphorus for the second time.
1970 In Vietnam, the worst monsoon to hit the area in six years causes severe floods, kills 293, leaves 200,000 homeless and virtually halts the Vietnam War.
1968 Nobel prize for physics awarded to Luis Alvarez (bubble chamber).
1968 Nobel prize for chemistry awarded to Lars Onsager (thermodynamics).
1965 Vietnam War: Near Da Nang, United States Marines repel an intense attack by Viet Cong forces, killing 56 guerrillas.
1962 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Johnston Island.
Nuclear Tests by the United States:
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Operation Argus – Wikipedia
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearArchive.org
- Nuclear Test Sites – AtomicArchive.com
- United States Nuclear Tests: July 1945 Through September 1992 – FAS.org
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
Johnston Atoll:
Various Weapons Tests and Storage at Johnston Atoll, and Permanent Contamination:
- Johnston Atoll, and Kalama Atoll – WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION – GlobalSecurity.org
- South Pacific tests on Johnston Island in 1951 – NIMIA.com
- Contaminants in Fishes from Johnston Atoll, by L. Kerr Lobel and P.S. Lobel – Boston University, Department of Biology
- “During the Cold War era, the US Air Force used JI [Johnston Island] to support several highly classified missions. In the early 1960’s, it was involved with Operation Dominic, which tested a primitive anti-ballistic missile system as well as the impact of EMP on military command and control systems.” – Johnstone Island, by Bob Fish – EarthLink.net
- Aspects of the Biology and Geomorphology of Johnston and Wake Atolls, Pacific Ocean, by Philp S. Lobel and Lisa Kerr Lobel – DODLegacy.org
- “Construction began on a Parsons-designed prototype full-scale chemical weapons incinerator at Johnston Island in the South Pacific Ocean.” – Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program (CSDP) – Parsons.com
- “In the 1950’s and 60’s, the United States Air Force conducted 12 test launchings of nuclear missiles on tiny Johnston Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. In 1962, two of the shots were aborted and the missiles exploded over the runway, drenching the area in radioactive contaminants.” – Radioactive Dump on Pacific Wildlife Refuge Raises Liability Concerns, by Katharine Q. Seelye – January 27, 2003 – The New York Times
- Johnston Island – Air Force Space & Missile Museum
- “At sunset one quiet July day an armada of ships was positioned in the ocean waters around Johnston Atoll, upwind from a line of barges with hundreds of cages containing Rhesus monkeys on their decks (figure 4).” – Bio Terror 4 – BiologyWriter – BiologyWriter.com
- Johnston Atoll: “The site was used for high-altitude nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s. Until late in 2000 the atoll was maintained as a storage and disposal site for chemical weapons. Munitions destruction, cleanup, and closure of the facility were completed by May 2005.” – THE UNITED STATES PACIFIC ISLAND WILD LIFE REFUGES – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Cleaning up Johnston Atoll – Nautilus Institute
- South Pacific islands fell victim to tragedy of nuclear tests – March 27, 2015 – The Asahi Shimbun
- AGENT ORANGE – Johnston Island, AFB – War-Stories.com
- “Another issue addressed by the investigation was a 2003 U.S. Army report – titled “An Ecological Assessment of Johnston Atoll” – which stated that 25,000 barrels of Agent Orange had been on Okinawa prior to 1972.” – Deny, Deny Until All the Veterans Die” – Pentagon Investigation into Agent Orange in Okinawa – Truth-Out.org
- Summary Document: Agent Orange at Johnston Island – GuamAgentOrange.info
- Johnston Atoll Airport, USA – 14 of the world’s most amazing abandoned airports – SkyScanner.net
- HISTORY OF JOHNSTON ATOLL – GuamAgentOrange.info
- Case Name: Johnston Atoll Chemical Waste – Chemical Weapons Disposal Dispute – TED Case Study
- Johnstone Atoll: An Isolated and Abandoned Military Air Base in the Mid Pacific Ocean – 8 April 2010 – UrganGhostsMedia.com
- Secret Bases – Johnston Atoll – TheLivingMoon.com
- The Forgotten Atoll of Johnston Atoll – Jason-Sevens.com
- History of Johnston Island – Johnston Memories
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
1961 Because of “violations of Vladimir Lenin‘s precepts”, it is decreed that Joseph Stalin‘s body be removed from its place of honour inside Lenin’s tomb and buried near the Kremlin Wall with a plain granite marker instead.
1961 Nuclear testing: USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Novaya Zemlya USSR: The USSR detonates the hydrogen bomb Tsar Bomba over Novaya Zemlya; at 50 megatons of yield, it remains the largest explosive device ever detonated, nuclear or otherwise.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1961:
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
Novaya Zemlya Nuclear Test Site:
- Novaya Zemlya – GlobalSecurity.org
- NOVAYA ZEMLYA – AtlasObscura.com
- Novaya Zemlya – GiantBomb.com
- NOVA ZEMLYA (NOVAYA ZEMLYA) 58 MEGA TON H BOMB TEST – ArkCode.com
- Central Test Site of Russia on Novaya Zemlya – NTI.org
- ICE Case Studies – Novaya Zemlya, by Carrie McVicker – American.edu
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – Image – NASA
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – NovayaZemlya.net
- Novaya Zemlya, Russia – Nuclear-Risks.org
- Novaya Zemlya: test site for most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated – July 31, 2014 – TASS Russian News Agency
- Novaya Zemlya: birds, animals adapt nuclear test site, by Tatyana Sinitsyna – RIA Novosti, Russia – 15 August 2006
- UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRPAPHICAL SURVEY – Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501 – Reston, Virginia – 1993
1960 Michael Woodruff performs the first successful kidney transplant in the United Kingdom at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.
1953 Cold War: US President Dwight D. Eisenhower formally approves the top secret document National Security Council Paper No. 162/2, which states that the United States’ arsenal of nuclear weapons must be maintained and expanded to counter the communist threat.
National Security Council Paper No. 162/2:
- OCT 30, 1953: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Eisenhower approves NSC 162/2 – History.com
- NSC 162/2 – A REPORT TO THE NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL BY THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY on BASIC NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY – October 30, 1953 – WASHINGTON – pdf, or October 30, 1953 – NOTE BY THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
to the NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL on BASIC NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY – The Pentagon Papers Gravel Edition Volume 1 Document 18, Statement of Policy by the National Security Council on Basic National Security Policy, 30 October 1953, pp. 412-429 – MTHOLYOKE.edu - Eisenhower moves to expand US nuclear weapons, October 30, 1953, by Suzanne Deffree – October 30, 2014 – EDN Network – EDN.com
- New Look-NSC-162/2 – Ramapo.edu
1951 US performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Nevada Test Site.
Atmospheric Nuclear Testing at the Nevada Site:
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
- US Atmospheric Nuclear Test Page – Nuclear Weapons – Zvis.com
Atmospheric Nuclear Tests of the United States and Radioactive Fallout:
- Atmospheric Nuclear Testing at the Nevada Site – OnlineNevada.org
- The Years of Atmospheric Testing 1945-1963 – Trinity Atomic Web Site – Abomb1.org
- High-altitude nuclear explosions – JohnstonArchive.org
- RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR TESTING AT NEVADA TEST SITE, 1950-60 – GPO.gov – pdf
- Cancer Mortality at the US Nuclear Weapons Tests – US Department of Veterans Affairs – VA.gov
- Atmospheric Nuclear Testing and The US Navy – A BILIOGRAPHY – FMD-INC.org
- Feasibility Study of Weapons Testing Fallout – CDC.gov
- “Between 16 July 1945 and 23 September 1992 the United States of America conducted (by official count) 1054 nuclear tests, and two nuclear attacks….These pages focus principally (although not exclusively) on the period from 16 July 1945 to 4 November 1962, the era of atmospheric testing.” – RADIOCHEMISTORY SOCIETY – US NUCLEAR TESTS – Info Gallery – Radiochemistry.org
- When We Tested Nuclear Bombs, by Alan Taylor – May 06, 2011 – TheAtlantic.com
- US ATMOSPHERIC NUCLEAR TESTING – The Connection Between John Wayne and Radioactive Fallout, and Other Tales, by Bruce W Church – October 22, 2000 – FalloutRadiation.com – pdf
- Marshall Islands, site of largest-ever U.S. nuclear weapons test, sues 9 superpowers including USA – June 6, 2015 – BoingDoing.net
- YouTube video (13 min. 49 sec.): Declassified US Nuclear Test Film #55
- YouTube video (14 min. 35 sec.): High-altitude Atomic Tests – Operation Dominic parts 1-2 – 1962
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
US Nuclear Tests at Nevada Site:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1950 Pope Pius XII witnesses the “Miracle of the Sun” while at the Vatican.
Pope Pius XII and the Miracle of the Sun on October 30, 1950:
- Pius XII and the Miracle of the Sun – HALLOWEDGROUND – WordPress.com
- Pope Pius XII and the Miracle of the Sun – DEFEAT MODERNISM – DefeatModernism.com
- Pius XII saw “Miracle of the Sun” – Zenit.org
Miracle of the Sun in Fátima on October 13, 1917:
- Oct 13, 1917 – Miracle of the Sun – WorldHistoryProject.org
- The Miracle of the Sun – Fatima.org
- Apparitions and Miracles of the Sun, by Auguste Meessen – International Forum in Porto “Science, Religion and Conscience” October 23 -25, 2003, Actas do Forum International, Centro Transdisciplinar de Estudos da Consciência, 2005 Consciências, 2, Editores: J. Fernandes, N.L. Santos, ISSN: 1645-6564, p. 199-222.. – Meesen.net – pdf
- Top Ten Scientific Explanation of Miracle of Sun in Fatima – Creative Minority Report – CreativeMinorityReport.com
- The Lady of Fatima & the Miracle of the Sun, by Benjamin Radford – May 02, 2013 – Live Science – LiveScience.com
- Marks in the evolution of western thinking about nature – ScienceTimeline.net
1947 The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which is the foundation of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), is founded.
GATT/WTO:
- GATT/WTO – Duke.edu
- World Trade Organization – Official Site
- The World Trade Organization – GATT.org
- GATT and Goods Council – WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
- General Agreement On Tariffs And Trade – GATT – INVESOPEDIA – Investopedia.org
- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) – Infoplease.com, and General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (former agency of the United Nations) – Infoplease.com
1945 Jackie Robinson of the Kansas City Monarchs signs a contract for the Brooklyn Dodgers to break the baseball color barrier.
1944 Anne and Margot Frank are deported from Auschwitz to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where they die from disease the following year, shortly before the end of WWII.
Anne and Margot Frank:
- ANNE FRANK – HISTORY – History.com
- Anne Frank – Biography.com
- BIOGRAPHY – ANNE FRANK – AnneFrank.ch
- The Diary of Anne Frank – BBC
- ANNE FRANK – OVERVIEW AND BACKGROND – Holocaust Encyclopedia – USHMM.org
- Margot Frank – AnneFrank.org
- The Silent Sister Margot Frank – TheSilentSister.com
- MARGOT FRANK – Marge and in Charge – Shmoop.com
- Margot Betti Frank – FindAGrave.com
- Margot Frank (1926-1945) – Anglefire.com
- Anne Frank died earlier than thought, new study says – March 31, 2015 – Yahoo.com
Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp:
- Concentration Camps: Auschwitz-Birkenau – Jewish Virtual Library
- Auschwitz: a short history of the largest mass murder site in human history – TheGuardian.com
- GATE TO HELL: AUSCHWITZ – Auschwitz.dk
- AUSCHWTIZ – Holoccaust Encyclopedia – USHMM.org
- AUSCHWITZ – HISTORY – History.com
- AUSCHWITZ-BIRKENAU MEMORIAL AND MUSEUM – Auschwitz.org
Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp:
- Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp – History & Overview – Jewish Virtual Library
- Bergen-Belsen – KZ camp – Aushwitz.dk
- Bergen-Belsen – Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team – HolocaustResearchProject.org
- “Forget You Not”: Bergen-Belsen Death Camp – Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project
- Stalag XIC (311) and KZ Bergen-Belsen, A History from 1935 – BegenBelsen.co.uk
- Bergen-Belsen – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Bergen-Belsen – Teaching the Holocaust with Primary Sources – EIU.edu
1942 Lt Tony Fasson, Able Seaman Colin Grazier and canteen assistant Tommy Brown from HMS Petard board U-559, retrieving material which would lead to the decryption of the German Enigma code.
1941 One thousand five hundred Jews from Pidhaytsi (in western Ukraine) are sent by Nazis to Bełżec extermination camp.
Bełżec Extermination Camp:
- Belzec Concentration Camp – Jewish Virtual Library
- Belzec Camp History – DeathCamps.org
- The Belzec Death Camp – HolocastResearchProject.org
- “Established November 1st, 1941, Belzec extermination center consisted of two camps divided into three parts: administration section, barracks and storage for plundered goods, and extermination section. Initially, there were three gas chambers using carbon monoxide housed in a wooden building. They were later replaced by six gas chambers in a brick and concrete building. Belzec extermination center began operations March 17th, 1942 and ended operations December 1942. The estimated number of deaths is 500-600,000, mainly Jews.” – Belzec (Poland) – Jewishgen.org
- Belzec Death Camp Memorial and Museum, Poland – UMN.edu
- Belzec – Holocaust Encyclopedia – USHMM.org
- MAJOR DEPORTATIONS TO BELZEC – THE HOLOCAUST EXPLAINED
1941 World War II: Franklin Delano Roosevelt approves U.S. $1 billion in Lend-Lease aid to the Allied nations.
1938 Orson Welles broadcasts his radio play of H. G. Wells‘s The War of the Worlds, causing anxiety in some of the audience in the United States.
1929 The Stuttgart Cable Car is constructed in Stuttgart, Germany.
1925 John Logie Baird creates Britain’s first television transmitter.
1920 The Communist Party of Australia is founded in Sydney. The Communist Party of Australia is founded in Sydney.
1918 The Ottoman Empire signs an armistice with the Allies, ending the First World War in the Middle East.
Armistice of the Ottoman Empire:
- OCT 30, 1918: Ottoman Empire signs treaty with the Allies – History.com
- The Ottoman Empire and the Armistice of Moudros, by Erik Jan Zurcher – Academia.edu – pdf downloadable
Ottoman Empire and World War I:
- Defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Middle Eastern theater of World War I – Wikipedia
- The Fall of the Ottoman Empire – HistoryGuy.com
- The Ottoman Empire – page 9 – Collapse of the Ottoman Empire1918-1920 – NZHistory.net.nz
History of the Ottoman Empire:
- History of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Ottoman Empire – History – Infoplease.com or Ottoman Empire – Infoplease.com
- A Brief History of Ottoman Empire – UMICH.edu
- History – The Ottomans – TheOttomans.org
- Ottoman Empire (1301-1922) – BBC
- THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE – 1600 – 1023 – Turizm.net
- The Ottoman Empire – About.com
History of Turkey:
- History of Turkey – Wikipedia
- History – Turkey – CountryStudies.us
- Turkey – History – Infoplease.com
- History of Turkey – HistoryOfTurkey.com
- History and Culture of Turkey: From Anatolian Civilization to Modern Republic – Chatham.edu – pdf
- HISTORY OF TURKEY – HistoryWorld.net
- History – All About Turkey – AllAboutTurkey.com
- Turkey – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History – Turkey – CountryStudies.us
- Turkey | Facts and History – About.com
- History of Turkey – CBSNews.com
- History of Turkey – HowStuffWorks.com
- Turkey profile – Timeline – BBC
Turkey:
- TURKEY – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Turkey – UN Data
- Turkey – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Turkey – Infoplease.com
- Turkey – CountryStudies.us
- Turkey: Country Profile – About.com
- Turkey country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Turkey:
- Foreign relations of Turkey – Wikipedia
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey
- FOREIGN RELATIONS OF TURKEY – WorldHeritage.org
- Turkey – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Turkey – US Department of State
- Turkey-EU Relations – REPUBLIC OF TURKEY MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Economy of Turkey:
- Economy of Turkey – Wikipedia
- Turkey – WORLD BANK
- Turkey – Data – WORLD BANK
- Turkey – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Turkish Economy – EnjoyTurky.com
1905 Czar Nicholas II of Russia grants Russia’s first constitution, creating a legislative assembly.
Russian Constitution of 1906:
Nicholas II:
- Nicholas II – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Nicholas II – About.com
- Nicholas II – Infoplease.com
- Nicholas II (Russia) – Encyclopedia.com
- Prominent Russians: Nicholas II – RUSSIAPEDIA.RT.com
- Nicholas II of Russia – Military.Wikia.com
- Tsar Nicholas II – Spartacus-Educational.com
- Tar Nicholas II – a summary – History in an hour – HistoryInAnHour.com
- NICHOLAS II (NIKOLAI ALEXANDROVICH) – 1968-1918 – EMPEROR OF ALL RUSSIA 1894-1917 – St. Petersburg Times – SPTimes.com
1864 Helena, Montana is founded after four prospectors discover gold at “Last Chance Gulch”.
1864 Second Schleswig War ends. Denmark renounces all claim to Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg, which come under Prussian and Austrian administration.
1831 In Southampton County, Virginia, escaped slave Nat Turner is captured and arrested for leading the bloodiest slave rebellion in United States history.
1817 The independent government of Venezuela is established by Simón Bolívar.
1806 Believing he is facing a much larger force, Prussian Lieutenant General Friedrich von Romberg, commanding 5,300 men, surrendered the city of Stettin to 800 French soldiers commanded by General Lassalle.
1657 Spanish forces fail to retake Jamaica at the Battle of Ocho Rios during the Anglo-Spanish War.
OCTOBER 31
Today is the WORLD SAVINGS DAY:
2014 Virgin Galactic‘s SpaceShipTwo crashes in the Mojave Desert during a test flight,
2011 The global population of humans reaches seven billion. This day is now recognized by the United Nations as Seven Billion Day.
2003 Mahathir bin Mohamad resigns as Prime Minister of Malaysia and is replaced by Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, marking an end to Mahathir’s 22 years in power.
2002 A federal grand jury in Houston, Texas indicts former Enron chief financial officer Andrew Fastow on 78 counts of wire fraud, money laundering, conspiracy and obstruction of justice related to the collapse of his ex-employer.
2000 Singapore Airlines Flight 006 crashes on takeoff in Taipei killing 83 people.
2000 Soyuz TM-31 launches, carrying the first resident crew to the International Space Station. The ISS has been crewed continuously since then.
1999 EgyptAir Flight 990 crashes into the Atlantic Ocean killing all 217 people on board.
1999 Yachtsman Jesse Martin returns to Melbourne after 11 months of circumnavigating the world, solo, non-stop and unassisted.
1998 Iraq disarmament crisis begins: Iraq announces it would no longer cooperate with United Nations weapons inspectors.
1989 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1984 Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is assassinated by two Sikh security guards. Riots break out in New Delhi and other cities and nearly 10,000 Sikhs are killed.
1973 Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape. Three Provisional Irish Republican Army members escape from Mountjoy Prison, Dublin, Republic of Ireland aboard a hijacked helicopter that lands in the exercise yard.
1969 The Disappearance of Patricia Spencer and Pamela Hobley occurs.
1968 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
- For some more pertinent information, see “1989 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site”, mentioned above.
1968 Vietnam War October surprise: Citing progress with the Paris peace talks, US President Lyndon B. Johnson announces to the nation that he has ordered a complete cessation of “all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam” effective November 1.
1961 In the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin‘s body is removed from Vladimir Lenin’s Tomb.
1956 Suez Crisis: The United Kingdom and France begin bombing Egypt to force the reopening of the Suez Canal.
Suez Crisis of 1956:
- SUEZ CRISIS – History.com
- Suez Crisis – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The Suez Crisis 1956 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- Suez Crisis, 1956 – AmericanForeignPolicy.PBWorks.com
- The Suez Crisis, by Laurie Milner – History – BBC
- The 1956 Suez Canal Crisis!! – Reformation.org
1944 Erich Göstl, a member of the Waffen-SS, is awarded the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross, to recognize extreme battlefield bravery, after losing his face and eyes during the Battle of Normandy.
1943 World War II: An F4U Corsair accomplishes the first successful radar-guided interception by a USN or USMC aircraft.
1941 World War II: The destroyer USS Reuben James is torpedoed by a German U-boat near Iceland, killing more than 100 U.S. Navy sailors. It is the first US Navy vessel sunk by enemy action in WWII.
1941 After 14 years of work, Mount Rushmore is completed.
1940 World War II: The Battle of Britain ends: The United Kingdom prevents a possible German invasion.
1938 Great Depression: In an effort to restore investor confidence, the New York Stock Exchange unveils a fifteen-point program aimed to upgrade protection for the investing public.
Great Depression:
- Great Depression – Encyclopedia Britannica
- About the Great Depression – Illinois.edu
- Great Depression, by Gene Smiley – Library of Economics and Liberty
- The Great Depression of the 1930s and Its Origins – SJSU.edu
- Timeline of the Great Depression – AMECRIAN EXPERIENCE – PBS.org
- THE TIMELINE OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION – HyperHistory.com
1924 World Savings Day is announced in Milan, Italy by the Members of the Association at the 1st International Savings Bank Congress (World Society of Savings Banks).
1923 The first of 160 consecutive days of 100° Fahrenheit at Marble Bar, Western Australia.
1922 Benito Mussolini is made Prime Minister of Italy
Benito Mussolini:
- BENITO MUSSOLINI – History.com
- Who Was Benito Mussolini? – About.com
- Benito Mussolini – Summary of Mussolini – About.com
- Benito Mussolini (1983-1945) – Biography.com
- Benito Mussolini – CommandoSupremo.com
- “Benito Mussolini’s Italy posed another threat to world peace. Mussolini, Italy’s ruler from 1922 to 1943, promised to restore his country’s martial glory. Surrounded by storm troopers dressed in black shirts, Mussolini delivered impassioned speeches from balconies, while crowds chanted, ‘Duce! Duce!’” – Italy – Digital History ID 3486 – Digital History – UH.edu
- 9 Things You May Not Know About Mussolini – HISTORY IN THE HEADLINES – History.com
Timeline – Mussolini:
- Timeline – Benito Mussolini – HistoryMole.com
- Mussolini Timeline – SoftSchools.com
- Mussolini Timeline – Skepticism.org
- Family of Benito Mussolini – Timeline – WhenInTime.com
- History – Benito Mussolini (1983-1945) – BBC
Mussolini’s Doctrine:
- THE DOCTRINE OF FASCISM – BENITO MUSSOLIN (1932) – WorldFutureFund.org
- The Basic Philosophy of Fascism: Benito Mussolini – Chapter 35 – WWNorton.com
- Mussolini, Doctrine of Fascism (1932) – The History Guide – HistoryGuide.org
- The Religion and Political Views of Benito Mussolini – HallowVerse.com
- Fascism – Wikipedia
- “Italian Fascism (in Italian, Fascismo) is the authoritarian political movement which ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943 under the leadership of Benito Mussolini (1883 – 1945). It is the original model which inspired other Fascist ideologies, and is generally referred to simply as Fascism.” – The Basics of Philosophy – PhilosophyBasics.com
- Fascism and Philosophy – MACRO HISTORY AND THE TIMELINE
- Mussolini and Jews – THE ITALIAN HOLOCAUST
- Mussolini and the Rise of Fascism – CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS FOUNDATION – Bill of Rights in Action – SUMMER 2010 (Volume 25, No. 4)
- Archive for the Benito Mussolini Speeches’ Category – HISTORICAL SPEECHES – WordPress.com
1918 World War I: Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Austro-Hungarian (Hapsburg) Empire:
- Hapsburg Monarchy – Wikipedia
- Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy – Infoplease.com
- Austria-Hungary | historical empire, Europe – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The Tragic Death of the Hapsburg Empire, by James Kurth – FIRST PRINCIPLES – FirstPrinciplesJournal.com
- Hapsburgs – The House of Hapsburg – Hapsburgs.net
History of the Austro-Hungarian (Hapsburg) Empire:
- History of Austro-Hungarian Empire – Academic.com
- HISTORY OF THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE – HistoryWorld.net
- Hapsburg – Infoplease.com
- History – Austro-Hungarian Empire – PINTEREST.com
- Empire of Austria-Hungary – AlmanachDeGotha.org
- Austria-Hungary – Colorado.edu
- Austro-Hungarian History – ACADEMIA.edu
- AUSTRIA-HUNGARY BEFORE WORLD WAR I – AlphaHistory.com
- Austro-Hungarian Monarchy – THURAYA – Encyclopedia.com
- Map of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1914 – NZHistory.net.nz
1917 World War I: Battle of Beersheba: The “last successful cavalry charge in history”.
Battle of Beechsheba of 1917:
- Battle of Beersheba, 31 October 1917 – HistoryOfWar.org
- Oct 31, 1917 – Battle of Beersheba – WorldHistoryProject.org
- “Early on the morning of October 31, 1917, Allied forces under General Edmund Allenby launch an attack on Turkish positions at Beersheba, in Palestine, beginning the Third Battle of Gaza.” – OCT 31, 1917: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Third Battle of Gaza – History.com
- Battle of Beersheba – Military.Wikia.com
- “The Third Battle of Gaza was fought on the night of 1/2 November 1917 between British and Ottoman forces during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of World War I, and came after the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) victory at the Battle of Beersheba had ended the Stalemate in Southern Palestine.” – Third Battle of Gaza – Wikipedia
1876 A monster cyclone ravages India, resulting in over 200,000 deaths.
1863 The Maori Wars resume as British forces in New Zealand led by General Duncan Cameron begin their Invasion of the Waikato.
Maori Wars a.k.a. New Zealand Wars:
- New Zealand Wars – Wikipedia
- The Waikato War of 1863-64: A guide to the main events and sites, by Neville Ritchie – doc.govt.nz – pdf
- WAIKATO WAR – NEW ZEALAND – VICTORIANS IN THE WAIKATO REGIMENTS – 1863-1864 – NetConnect.com.au
- Hauhauism: An Episode in the Maori Wars 1863-1866 – Victoria.ac.nz
- Waikato War – The Encyclopedia New Zealand
NOVMEBER 01
- Today is the WORLD VEGAN DAY:
2012 A fuel tank truck crashes and explodes in the Saudi Arabian capital Riyadh killing 26 people and injuring 135.
2000 Serbia and Montenegro joins the United Nations.
- “The State Union of Serbia and Montenegro ended its existence in June 2006 when Montenegro voted, after a referendum in favor of independence, to leave the State Union. Serbia proclaimed its independence on 5 June 2006, as the successor state to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro.” – Serbia and Montenegro – NationsOnline.org
- “Eventually, after the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević from power as president of the federation in 2000, the country dropped those aspirations, accepted the opinion of the Badinter Arbitration Committee about shared succession, and reapplied for and gained UN membership on 2 November 2000.” – Yugoslavia – Wikipedia
1993 The Maastricht Treaty takes effect, formally establishing the European Union.
Maastricht Treaty:
- NOV 1, 1993: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: European Union goes into effect – History.com
- Maastricht Treaty – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Treaty of Maastricht on European Union – Europa.eu
- Text of the TREATY ON EUROPEAN UNION – pdf
1982 Honda becomes the first Asian automobile company to produce cars in the United States with the opening of its factory in Marysville, Ohio. The Honda Accord is the first car produced there.
1981 Antigua and Barbuda gains independence from the United Kingdom.
Antigua and Barbuda:
- ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Antigua and Barbuda – UN Data
- Antigua and Barbuda – Infoplease.com
- Antigua and Barbuda – Encyclopedia Britannica
Foreign Relations of Antigua and Barbuda:
- Foreign relations of Antigua and Barbuda – Wikipedia
- Foreign Relations – Antigua and Barbuda – CountryStudies.us
History of Antigua and Barbuda:
- History of Antigua and Barbuda – Wikipedia
- Antigua and Barbuda – History – Infoplease.com
- Antigua and Barbuda’s History and Culture – Geographia.com
Economy of Antigua and Barbuda:
- Economy of Antigua and Barbuda – Wikipedia
- Antigua and Barbuda: Economy – TheCommonWealth.org
- Country Summary: Antigua and Barbuda – World Bank Group Finances
- Antigua and Barbuda – Data – WORLD BANK
1980 USSR performs underground nuclear test at Krasnoyarsk.
Krasnoyarsk:
- “Krasnoyarsk-26, currently Zheleznogorsk, was established in 1950 to produce plutonium for weapons. The facility’s original name was the Combine 815. At present it is known as the Mining and Chemical Combine. Zheleznogorsk is situated in the southern part of Central Siberia on the banks of the Yenissei River.” – Krasnoyarsk-26/Zheleznogorsk – GlobalSecurity.org
- Zheleznogorsk, Krasnoyarsk Krai – Wikipedia
- Kranoyarsk [glad kaya] – FAS.org
Nuclear Weapons Tests if the Soviet Union:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
1979 In Bolivia, Colonel Alberto Natusch executes a bloody coup d’état against the constitutional government of Dr. Wálter Guevara.
1977 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1973 Watergate scandal: Leon Jaworski is appointed as the new Watergate Special Prosecutor.
Aftermath of Saturday Night Massacre:
- “The Saturday Night Massacre was the term given by political commentators to U.S. President Richard Nixon’s executive dismissal of independent special prosecutor Archibald Cox, and the resignations of Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus on October 20, 1973 during the Watergate scandal.” – Saturday Night Massacre – Wikipedia
- Watergate Scandal – 40 years ago – November 1, 1973 Leon Jaworsky Appointed Special Prosecutor, posted by Michael Flarherty – November 1, 2013
Saturday Night Massacre:
- What was the Saturday Night Massacre? – History.com
- Saturday Night Massacre – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The Saturday Night Massacre – AMERICAN EXPERIENCE – PBS.org
- 20, 1973 | Nixon Tries to Stop Investigation – New York Times – NYTimes.com
- “Archibald Cox, the Watergate Special Prosecutor sacked by President Richard Nixon in the famous ‘Saturday Night Massacre’ of 1973, has been awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal by President Bill Clinton. The medal was ironically established by Nixon in 1969 to honor exemplary service. Clinton said that “the greatest title any of us can hold is that of citizen.” – Clinton Awards Presidential Medal To Archibald Cox – Jan 08, 2001 – Watergate.info
Watergate Scandal:
- Watergate scandal – Wikipedia
- WATERGATE SCANDAL – History.com
- WATERGATE SANDAL – Videos – History.com
- What Was The Watergate Scandal? – About.com
- What was Watergate? – Overview – Watergate.info
- Watergate scandal – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Watergate Scandal – UNITED STATES HISTORY – U-S-History.com
- THE WATERGATE SCANDAL – TIMLINE – The Washington Post – WashingtonPost.com
- Watergate Scandal Timeline – AuthenticHistory.com
Watergate Tapes:
- Watergate Collection – Miller Center – MillerCenter.org
- Watergate Tapes – Archived Posts – Watergate.info
- Richard M. Nixon – The Watergate Tapes – Berkeley.edu
- Watergate Tapes Online – The Washington Post
- Watergate-Related Tapes – For Researchers – Nixon Presidential Library & Museum – Nixon.Archives.gov
- Nixon White House Tapes – Online – Virtual Library – Nixon Presidential Library & Museum
- Watergate ‘18-Minute Gap’ May be Recovered – 06/17/02 – About.com
- Nixon 1973 Watergate Tapes – April 1, 1973 – C-SPAN
- Last batch of Nixon tapes on Watergate released, by Matt Smith – August 22, 2013 – CNN
- Audio & Transcripts – NixonTapes.org
- Watergate Tapes – Discogs.com
- Correcting the Historic Record – Watergate.com
- Watergate Tape: More Than 18 Minutes Of History Remain A Mystery (VIDEO) – 06/16/11 – Huffington Post
- Who erased 18 minutes of Nixon Watergate Tapes? – August 22, 2013 – CBS News
1962 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1962:
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1962 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Novaya Zemlya USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1962:
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
Novaya Zemlya Nuclear Test Site:
- Novaya Zemlya – GlobalSecurity.org
- NOVAYA ZEMLYA – AtlasObscura.com
- Novaya Zemlya – GiantBomb.com
- NOVA ZEMLYA (NOVAYA ZEMLYA) 58 MEGA TON H BOMB TEST – ArkCode.com
- Central Test Site of Russia on Novaya Zemlya – NTI.org
- ICE Case Studies – Novaya Zemlya, by Carrie McVicker – American.edu
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – Image – NASA
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – NovayaZemlya.net
- Novaya Zemlya, Russia – Nuclear-Risks.org
- Novaya Zemlya: test site for most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated – July 31, 2014 – TASS Russian News Agency
- Novaya Zemlya: birds, animals adapt nuclear test site, by Tatyana Sinitsyna – RIA Novosti, Russia – 15 August 2006
- UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRPAPHICAL SURVEY – Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501 – Reston, Virginia – 1993
1962 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Johnston Island.
Nuclear Tests by the United States:
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Operation Argus – Wikipedia
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearArchive.org
- Nuclear Test Sites – AtomicArchive.com
- United States Nuclear Tests: July 1945 Through September 1992 – FAS.org
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
Johnston Atoll:
Various Weapons Tests and Storage at Johnston Atoll, and Permanent Contamination:
- Johnston Atoll, and Kalama Atoll – WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION – GlobalSecurity.org
- South Pacific tests on Johnston Island in 1951 – NIMIA.com
- Contaminants in Fishes from Johnston Atoll, by L. Kerr Lobel and P.S. Lobel – Boston University, Department of Biology
- “During the Cold War era, the US Air Force used JI [Johnston Island] to support several highly classified missions. In the early 1960’s, it was involved with Operation Dominic, which tested a primitive anti-ballistic missile system as well as the impact of EMP on military command and control systems.” – Johnstone Island, by Bob Fish – EarthLink.net
- Aspects of the Biology and Geomorphology of Johnston and Wake Atolls, Pacific Ocean, by Philp S. Lobel and Lisa Kerr Lobel – DODLegacy.org
- “Construction began on a Parsons-designed prototype full-scale chemical weapons incinerator at Johnston Island in the South Pacific Ocean.” – Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program (CSDP) – Parsons.com
- “In the 1950’s and 60’s, the United States Air Force conducted 12 test launchings of nuclear missiles on tiny Johnston Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. In 1962, two of the shots were aborted and the missiles exploded over the runway, drenching the area in radioactive contaminants.” – Radioactive Dump on Pacific Wildlife Refuge Raises Liability Concerns, by Katharine Q. Seelye – January 27, 2003 – The New York Times
- Johnston Island – Air Force Space & Missile Museum
- “At sunset one quiet July day an armada of ships was positioned in the ocean waters around Johnston Atoll, upwind from a line of barges with hundreds of cages containing Rhesus monkeys on their decks (figure 4).” – Bio Terror 4 – BiologyWriter – BiologyWriter.com
- Johnston Atoll: “The site was used for high-altitude nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s. Until late in 2000 the atoll was maintained as a storage and disposal site for chemical weapons. Munitions destruction, cleanup, and closure of the facility were completed by May 2005.” – THE UNITED STATES PACIFIC ISLAND WILD LIFE REFUGES – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Cleaning up Johnston Atoll – Nautilus Institute
- South Pacific islands fell victim to tragedy of nuclear tests – March 27, 2015 – The Asahi Shimbun
- AGENT ORANGE – Johnston Island, AFB – War-Stories.com
- “Another issue addressed by the investigation was a 2003 U.S. Army report – titled “An Ecological Assessment of Johnston Atoll” – which stated that 25,000 barrels of Agent Orange had been on Okinawa prior to 1972.” – Deny, Deny Until All the Veterans Die” – Pentagon Investigation into Agent Orange in Okinawa – Truth-Out.org
- Summary Document: Agent Orange at Johnston Island – GuamAgentOrange.info
- Johnston Atoll Airport, USA – 14 of the world’s most amazing abandoned airports – SkyScanner.net
- HISTORY OF JOHNSTON ATOLL – GuamAgentOrange.info
- Case Name: Johnston Atoll Chemical Waste – Chemical Weapons Disposal Dispute – TED Case Study
- Johnstone Atoll: An Isolated and Abandoned Military Air Base in the Mid Pacific Ocean – 8 April 2010 – UrganGhostsMedia.com
- Secret Bases – Johnston Atoll – TheLivingMoon.com
- The Forgotten Atoll of Johnston Atoll – Jason-Sevens.com
- History of Johnston Island – Johnston Memories
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
1963 The 1963 South Vietnamese coup begins.
1963 South Vietnamese Coup:
- TODAY IN HISTORY: JFK AND THE COUP IN VIETNAM NOVEMBER 1 AND 2, 1963 – FreeRepublic.com
- VIETNAM WAR HISTORY – History.com
Viet Nam War and Pertinent Events:
- Chronology of Viet Nam War and Pertinent Events – Digital History – DigitalHistory.UH.edu
- The Vietnam War – The Jungle War 1965 – 1968 – The History Place – HistoryPlace.com
- The VIETNAM WAR: US Involvement & Escalation – ARCHIVAL TELEVISION AUDIO Inc. – RESEARCH REPORT – PART ONE – April 23, 1961 – May 27, 1968 – ATVAudio.com
- The Diplomatic Course of the Vietnam War, by David L Anderson – Illinois.edu
- America’s Vietnam War in Indochina – U-S-History.com
- Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968, Volume VII, Vietnam, September 1968-January 1969 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- Britain and the Tet Offensive 1967-1968: A ‘Turning Point’ in British Foreign Policy? – All Empires – AllEmpires.com
1963 The Arecibo Observatory in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, with the largest radio telescope ever constructed, officially opens.
1961 Fifty thousand women in 60 cities participate in the inaugural Women Strike for Peace (WSP) against nuclear proliferation.
1960 While campaigning for President of the United States, John F Kennedy announces his idea of the Peace Corps.
1959 In Rwanda, Hutu politician Dominique Mbonyumutwa is beaten up by Tutsi forces, leading to a period of violence known as the wind of destruction.
1958 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric).
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1958:
- 1958 Soviet nuclear weapons test – Wikipedia
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union – Wikipedia
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
1955 The bombing of United Airlines Flight 629 occurs near Longmont, Colorado, killing all 39 passengers and five crew members aboard the Douglas DC-6B airliner.
1954 The Front de Libération Nationale fires the first shots of the Algerian War of Independence.
Algerian War (of Independence):
- Algerian War – Encyclopedia Britannica
- French Resistance and Algerian War – HistoryToday.com
- Algeria and War, 1954-1962 – FSMITHA.com
- Algerian War of Independence, by Nellie Sanderson, Izzy Esler, and Laura Kington – UahsibHistory.WikiSpaces.com
- Chronology of the Algerian War of Independence – TheAtlantic.com
- Algerian National Liberation (1954-1962) – GlobalSecurity.com
- Algerian War for Independence – MSU.edu
- Timeline of the Algerian War of Independence – About.com
History of Algeria:
- History of Algeria – Wikipedia
- Algeria – History – Infoplease.com
- A Synopsis of Algeria’s History – Algeria.com
- Algeria – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Algeria – NationsOnline.org
- HISTORY OF ALGERIA – HistoryWorld.net
- Algerian War (of Independence) – Wikipedia
- Algerian Civil War – Wikipedia
- Culture of Algeria – EveryCulture.com
- Culture of Algeria – Wikipedia
- Effects of French-Algerian War 1954-1962 – Prezi.com
- Algeria Timeline – Part I: Prehistory to Colonization
Algeria:
- Algeria – The World Factbook – CIA
- Algeria – Data – UN Data
- Algeria – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Algeria – Infoplease.com
- Algeria – CountryStudies.us
- Algeria country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Algeria:
- Foreign relations of Algeria – Wikipedia
- Algeria – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Algeria – US Department of State
- Algeria – Foreign Relations – GlobalSecurity.org
- Some elements about the Algerian Foreign Policy
- ALGERIAN FOREIGN POLICY IN THE CONTEXT OF THE ARAB SPRING, by Anouar Boukhars – January 14, 2013 – USMA.edu
- Algeria – Foreign Relations & Military – Country-Facts.com
Algeria and the United Nations:
- Permanent Mission of Algeria to the United Nations, New York
- Permanent Mission to the United Nations of Algeria in Geneva
Economy of Algeria:
- Economy of Algeria – Wikipedia
- Algeria – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Algeria – Economy – Algeria.com
- Algeria – The Heritage Foundation
- Algeria – Overview – THE WORLD BANK
- Algeria – Data – THE WORLD BANK
1953 Andhra Pradesh attains statehood, with Kurnool as its capital.
1952 Operation Ivy: The United States successfully detonates the first large hydrogen bomb, codenamed “Mike” [“M” for megaton], in the Eniwetok atoll, located in the Marshall Islands in the central Pacific Ocean. The explosion had a yield of ten megatons.
First Hydrogen Bomb on November 1, 1952:
- NOV 1, 1952: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: United States tests first hydrogen bomb – History.com
- The First Hydrogen Bomb Dropped 1 November 1952 – Air-Boyne.com
- Un-Remembered Origin of “Nuclear Holocaust”: World’s First Thermonuclear Explosion of Nov. 1, 1952, by Beverly Keever – WagingPeace.org
- YouTube video (1 min. 15 sec.): Hydrogen Bomb test at Enewetak Atoll November 1, 1952
- YouTube video (2 min. 24 sec.): HD Let’s return to Enewetak Atoll explosion aftermath
- “Between July 1945 and November 1962 the United States conducted at least 216 atmospheric and underwater nuclear tests.” – Atomic Test on the Enewetak Atoll – Iconic Photos – WordPress.com
- Thermonuclear weapon – Wikipedia
- Hydrogen Bomb – Infoplease.com
Operation Ivy:
- Operation Ivy – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Ivy Mike – Wikipedia
- US explodes first hydrogen bomb ‘Ivy Mike,’ in 1952 – The Bulletin
Enewetak (Eniwetok) Atoll:
- Enewetak – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Enewetak – Infoplease.com
- Marshall Islands Atoll Information: Enewetak Atoll – Marshalls – CSU.edu
- Enewetal Atoll, Marshall Islands, by James E. Maragos – Springer.com
- Enewetak Atoll – Underwaterkwaj.com
- “The Pacific Proving Grounds was the name used to describe a number of sites in the Marshall Islands and a few other sites in the Pacific Ocean, used by the United States to conduct nuclear testing at various times between 1946 and 1962.” – Pacific Proving Grounds – Wikipedia
- Remember Enewetak CBS News video (17 min.) – CBSNews.com
Environmental and Health Issues, and the Enewetak Atoll:
- Enewetak coral atoll transformed by US atomic bombing testing – June 25, 2013 – Nuclear-News.net
- “After an initial series of nuclear tests on Bikini Atoll in 1946, local inhabitants of Enewetak Atoll were relocated to …. Operation Ivy, in 1952, set the stage for the first test of a large thermonuclear device. The Mike thermonuclear blast of 31 October of 1952 had an explosive yield of 10.4 Mt (USDOE, 2000) vaporizing the island of Elugelab and leaving behind a deep crater about 1 km in diameter.” – Enewetak – MARSHALL ISLANDS DOSE ASSESSMENT & RADIOECOLOGY PROGRAM
- ENEWETAK ATOLL CLEANUP DOCUMENTS – Defense Threat Reduction Agency – DTRA.mil
- “We are but a few of the Survivors of the 1977-1980 Enewetak Atoll Atomic Debris Cleanup Mission in the Marshall Islands. Our main focus is to help each other with information and moral support during challenging times…” – Atomic Cleanup Vets – Enewetak Atoll Atomic Debris Cleanup Mission Survivors
- “What you see on the pictures below is a massive concrete lid to a 107 m diameter nuclear waste trash can on a beautiful island in the middle of the Pacific ocean.” – Enewetak Atoll – Nuclear trash can of the Pacific – UTAOT.com
- “If you or a family member have had internal cancer or leukemia within the last fifty years (even if family member is deceased) or if you get cancer and were physically present at either the Nevada test site / Mercury Nevada, Trinity test site / Los Alamos New Mexico. South Pacific / Marshall Islands Bikini Atoll Enewetak Atoll Johnston Atoll or Christmas Island….” – Atomic Veterans National Cancer Benefits Center: Bikini Atoll – Christmas Island – Enewetak Atoll – Johnston Atoll – Nevada Test Site
- YouTube video (12 min. 49 sec.): Enewetak Cleanup 1976 Defense Nuclear Agency; Pacific Atoll Nuclear Test Cleanup
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
1951 Operation Buster–Jangle: Six thousand five hundred American soldiers are exposed to ‘Desert Rock’ atomic explosions for training purposes in Nevada. Participation is not voluntary.
1951 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
- For some more pertinent information, see “1977 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site”, mentioned above.
1950 Pope Pius XII claims papal infallibility when he formally defines the dogma of the Assumption of Mary.
1950 Puerto Rican nationalists Griselio Torresola and Oscar Collazo attempt to assassinate US President Harry S Truman at Blair House.
1948 Athenagoras I, Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople is enthroned.
1948 Off southern Manchuria, 6,000 people die as a Chinese merchant ship explodes and sinks.
1946 Karol Wojtyla, the future Pope John Paul II, is ordained to the priesthood by Kraków‘s archbishop, Adam Sapieha.
Karol Wojtyla or Pope John Paul II:
- Karol Wojtyla (John Paul II) Timeline – CBN.com
- Early life of John Paul II – Wikipedia
- THE ROOTS OF ANTI-JUDAISM IN THE CHRISTIAN ENVIRONMENT – THE JEWISH “ROOTS” OF KAROL WOJTYLA- Vatican.va
- “On October l6, 1978, the world community was stunned when the Roman Catholic Church’s College of Cardinals elected a Polish Cardinal to become the 264th successor to St. Peter. Karol Cardinal Wojtyla was the first non-Italian Pope chosen for over 400 years and the first Polish Pope ever elected.” – Pope John Paul II – PolishAmericanCenter.org
- THE TRUTH OF THE ENCYCLICAL “HUMANAE VITAE” Cardinal Karol Wojtyla – EWTN.com
- Korol Wojtyła’s Notion of the Irreducible in Man and the Quest for a Just World Order, by Hans Köchler – HansKoechler.com – pdf
- OPTIONAL MEMORIAL OF SAINT JOHN PAUL II – UNITED STATES CONFERENCES OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS
1945 Australia joins the United Nations.
Australia:
- AUSTRALIA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Australia – UN Data
- Australia – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Australia – Infoplease.com
- Australia – NationsOnline.org
- Australia country profile – BBC
Foreign Relations of Australia:
- Foreign relations of Australia – Wikipedia
- Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia
- Australia – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Australia – US Department of State
- CHINA-AUSTRALIAN RELATIONS – Lowy Institute – LowyInstitute.org
- India-Australia Relations – MEA.gov.in – pdf
- HISTORIALS OF AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN RELATIONS – AustraliaForeignRelations.org.au
- Australia’s International Relations – Embassy.gov.au
Australia and the United Nations:
History of Australia:
- History of Australia – Wikipedia
- AUSTRALIA’S HISTORY – Australia.com
- Australia History – About-Australia.com
- History – Australian History – VISA SOLUTION LLC
- Australia profile – Timeline – BBC
Economy of Australia:
- Economy of Australia – Wikipedia
- Country Summary – Australia – World Bank Group Finances
- Australia – Data – WORLD BANK
- Australia – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
1945 The official North Korean newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, is first published under the name Chongro.
1944 World War II: Units of the British Army land at Walcheren in the Netherlands.
1943 World War II: In support of the landings on Bougainville, US aircraft carrier forces attack the huge Japanese base at Rabaul.
1943 World War II: In the Battle of Empress Augusta Bay, United States Marines, the 3rd Marine Division, land on Bougainville in the Solomon Islands.
1942 World War II: Matanikau Offensive begins during the Guadalcanal Campaign and ends three days later with an American victory.
1941 American photographer Ansel Adams takes a picture of a moonrise over the town of Hernandez, New Mexico that would become one of the most famous images in the history of photography.
1939 The first rabbit born after artificial insemination is exhibited to the world.
1938 Seabiscuit defeats War Admiral in an upset victory during a match race deemed “the match of the century” in horse racing.
1937 Stalinists execute Pastor Paul Hamberg and seven members of Azerbaijan’s Lutheran community.
1928 The Law on the Adoption and Implementation of the Turkish Alphabet, replacing the version of the Arabic alphabet previously used with the Latin alphabet, comes into force in Turkey.
1922 Abolition of the Ottoman Sultanate: The last sultan of the Ottoman Empire, Mehmed VI, abdicates.
Ottoman Empire and World War I:
- Defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Middle Eastern theater of World War I – Wikipedia
- The Fall of the Ottoman Empire – HistoryGuy.com
- The Ottoman Empire – page 9 – Collapse of the Ottoman Empire1918-1920 – NZHistory.net.nz
History of the Ottoman Empire:
- History of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Ottoman Empire – History – Infoplease.com or Ottoman Empire – Infoplease.com
- A Brief History of Ottoman Empire – UMICH.edu
- History – The Ottomans – TheOttomans.org
- Ottoman Empire (1301-1922) – BBC
- THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE – 1600 – 1023 – Turizm.net
- The Ottoman Empire – About.com
1918 The short-lived Banat Republic is founded.
1918 Western Ukraine gains its independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
History of Ukraine:
- Western Ukraine – Wikipedia
- History of Ukraine – Wikipedia
- Behind the Headlines: History and Geography Help Explain Ukraine Crisis, by Eve Conant – NationalGeographic.com
- Western Ukraine – UkraineTrek.com
- BRAMA – History of Ukraine – 20th Century – Chronologically Synchronized Tables – BRAMA.com
- Ukraine – Culture – EveryCulture.com
- The Conflict in Ukraine – a Historical Perspective, by Lauren McLaughlin – Harvard.edu
- Ukraine History – Chronological Table – UAZone.net
1918 Malbone Street Wreck: The worst rapid transit accident in US history occurs under the intersection of Malbone Street and Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, New York City, with at least 102 deaths.
1916 Pavel Milyukov delivers in the State Duma the famous “stupidity or treason” speech, precipitating the downfall of the Boris Stürmer government.
1915 Parris Island is officially designated a United States Marine Corps Recruit Depot.
1914 World War I: The Australian Imperial Force (AIF) departed by ship in a single convoy from Albany, Western Australia bound for Egypt.
1914 World War I: The first British Royal Navy defeat of the war with Germany, the Battle of Coronel, is fought off of the western coast of Chile, in the Pacific, with the loss of HMS Good Hope and HMS Monmouth.
1911 The first dropping of a bomb from an aircraft in combat, during the Italo-Turkish War.
1901 Sigma Phi Epsilon, the largest national male collegiate fraternity, is established at Richmond College, in Richmond, Virginia.
1897 The first Library of Congress building opens its doors to the public. The Library had been housed in the Congressional Reading Room in the U.S. Capitol.
1894 Nicholas II becomes the new (and last) Tsar of Russia after his father, Alexander III, dies.
Nicholas II:
- Nicholas II – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Nicholas II – About.com
- Nicholas II – Infoplease.com
- Nicholas II (Russia) – Encyclopedia.com
- Prominent Russians: Nicholas II – RUSSIAPEDIA.RT.com
- Nicholas II of Russia – Military.Wikia.com
- Tsar Nicholas II – Spartacus-Educational.com
- Tar Nicholas II – a summary – History in an hour – HistoryInAnHour.com
- NICHOLAS II (NIKOLAI ALEXANDROVICH) – 1968-1918 – EMPEROR OF ALL RUSSIA 1894-1917 – St. Petersburg Times – SPTimes.com
NOVEMBER 02
Today is the INTERNATIONAL DAY TO END IMPUNITY FOR CRIMES AGAINST JOURNALISTS (A/RES/68/163):
2014 A suicide attack killed 60 at Wagah.
2007 50,000–100,000 people demonstrate against the Georgian government in Tbilisi.
Democracy and Georgia (country):
- 2007 in Georgia (country) – Wikipedia
- Democracy Index – Wikipedia
- Rule of Law – Democracy and Human Rights – UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the Human Rights of Georgia
- George: Flickering Beacon of Democracy – Human Rights in Georgia in 2007, by Human Rights Centre (HRIDC) – pdf
History of Georgia:
- History of Georgia (country) – Wikipedia
- Georgia – CountryStudies.us
- History of Georgia – ABOUT GEORGIA – Tripod.com
- Georgia – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Georgia – History – Infoplease.com
- Our Georgia History – OurGeorgiaHistory.com
- Georgia – Culture and History – EveryCulture.com
- Democratic Republic of Georgia (May 1918 – February 1921 – Wikipedia
- Georgia profile – Timeline – BBC
Georgia:
- GEORGIA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Georgia – UN Data
- Georgia – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Georgia – Infoplease.com
- Georgia country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Georgia:
- Foreign relations of Georgia – Wikipedia
- US Relations with Georgia – US Department of State
- Georgia – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Relations between Turkey and Georgia – REPUBLIC OF TURKEY MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Economy of Georgia:
- Economy of Georgia (country) – Wikipedia
- Georgia – Overview – WORLD BANK
- Georgia – Data – WORLD BANK
- Georgia – Economy – Asian Development Bank – ADB.org
- Georgia – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development of Georgia
- Georgia – Economy – Infoplease.com
2000 The first resident crew to the ISS docked with their Soyuz TM-31 spacecraft.
1988 The Morris worm, the first Internet-distributed computer worm to gain significant mainstream media attention, is launched from MIT.
1984 Capital punishment: Velma Barfield becomes the first woman executed in the United States since 1962.
1983 US President Ronald Reagan signs a bill creating Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day:
Martin Luther King, Jr.:
- Martin Luther King, Jr. – Nobelprize.org
- Dec 10 1964: Martin Luther King, Jr. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Martin Luther King, Jr. Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1964 – Nobelprize.org
- Martin Luther King in London, 1964: reflection on the landmark visit, by Hugh Muir – Tuesday 2 December 2014 – TheGuardian.com
- OCT 14, 1964: ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: King wins Nobel Prize
- YouTube video (59 min. 05 sec.): Martin Luther King December 7, 1964
- “The 35-year-old civil rights leader is the youngest winner of the prize that Dr. Alfred Nobel instituted since the first was awarded in 1901. The prize honors acts ‘for the furtherance of brotherhood among men and to the abolishment or reduction of standing armies and for the extension of these purposes.’” – Martin Luther King Wins The Nobel Prize for Peace – The New York Times
- MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. TIMELINE – VT.edu – pdf
1978 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1974 USSR performs nuclear test (underground) at Novaya Zemlya USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1974
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
Novaya Zemlya Nuclear Test Site:
- Novaya Zemlya – GlobalSecurity.org
- NOVAYA ZEMLYA – AtlasObscura.com
- Novaya Zemlya – GiantBomb.com
- NOVA ZEMLYA (NOVAYA ZEMLYA) 58 MEGA TON H BOMB TEST – ArkCode.com
- Central Test Site of Russia on Novaya Zemlya – NTI.org
- ICE Case Studies – Novaya Zemlya, by Carrie McVicker – American.edu
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – Image – NASA
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – NovayaZemlya.net
- Novaya Zemlya, Russia – Nuclear-Risks.org
- Novaya Zemlya: test site for most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated – July 31, 2014 – TASS Russian News Agency
- Novaya Zemlya: birds, animals adapt nuclear test site, by Tatyana Sinitsyna – RIA Novosti, Russia – 15 August 2006
1973 The Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Communist Party of India form a ‘United Front’ in the state of Tripura.
1972 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1972:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1967 Vietnam War: US President Lyndon B. Johnson and “The Wise Men” conclude that the American people should be given more optimistic reports on the progress of the war.
Vietnam War in 1967:
“Wise Men” on the Vietnam War:
- NOV 2, 1967: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Jonson meets the “Wise Men”
- “On November 1 and 2, 1967, President Johnson brought together: Dean Acheson, George Ball, General Omar Bradley, McGeorge Bundy, Clark Clifford, Arthur Dean, Douglas Dillon, Justice Abe Fortas, Averell Harriman, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Robert Murphy and General Maxwell Taylor.” – The Wise Men – Geni.com
- The Military and Diplomatic Course of the Vietnam War, by David L Anderson – Illinois.edu
1966 The Cuban Adjustment Act comes into force, allowing 123,000 Cubans the opportunity to apply for permanent residence in the United States.
1965 Norman Morrison, a 31-year-old Quaker, sets himself on fire in front of the river entrance to the Pentagon to protest the use of napalm in the Vietnam war.
1964 King Saud of Saudi Arabia is deposed by a family coup, and replaced by his half-brother Faisal.
Royal Family Coup of Saudi Arabia:
- A New King in Saud Arabia – Faisal al Saud became ruler on November 2nd, 1964 – HistoryToday.com
- This Day in History: November 2, 1964: Royal Family Coup in Saudi Arabia – HistoryChannel.com.au
- Modern history – History of Saudi Arabia – Wikipedia
1963 South Vietnamese President Ngô Đình Diệm is assassinated following a military coup.
Ngô Đình Diệm:
- Ngo Dinh Diem – Encyclopedia Britannica
- September 1964 South Vietnam coup attempt – Wikipedia
- The Assassination of Ng Dinh Diem – 06/12/2006 – HistoryNet.com
- The Republic of Vietnam – President Ngo Dinh Diem – tripod.com
- Ngo Dinh Diem – Spartacus-Educational.com
1957 The Levelland UFO Case in Levelland, Texas, generates national publicity.
1953 The Constituent Assembly of Pakistan names the country The Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
1951 Korean War: A small platoon of 28 Canadian soldiers defend a vital area against an entire battalion of 800 Chinese troops in the Battle of the Song-gok Spur. The engagement lasts into the early hours of November 3.
1949 The Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference ends with the Netherlands agreeing to transfer sovereignty of the Dutch East Indies to the United States of Indonesia.
1947 In California, designer Howard Hughes performs the maiden (and only) flight of the Spruce Goose or H-4 The Hercules; the largest fixed-wing aircraft ever built.
1944 Auschwitz begins gassing inmates.
Gas Chamber at Auschwitz:
- Auschwitz and Birkenau: Crematoria & Gas Chambers – Jewish Virtual Library
- The Seven Gas Chambers at Auschwitz – deathcamps.org
- Auschwitz Survivor Gena Turgel Walked Out of Gas Chamber Alive, by Bill Kelly – Jan 26, 2015 – nbcnews.com
- Auschwitz Concentration Camp – The Gas Chambers and Crematoria – Mass Extermination – holocaustresearchproject.org
- Gas Chamber at Station Z execution site – scrapbookpages.com
- Auschwitz Gas Chamber – Live Leak – liveleak.com
- YouTube video (1 min. 23 sec.): Auschwitz Concentration Camp Gas Chamber
- “ON MAY 20, 1944, I arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau as a fourteen-year old from the camp at Theresienstadt. The crematorium greeted us with its horrible tongues of flame coming out of its smokestacks.” – The Buchenwald Report – David A. Hackett – fpp.co.uk
The Holocaust and the Auschwitz:
- Holocaust Encyclopedia: Auschwitz
- Auschwitz Concentration and Death Camp
- Auschwitz and Birkenau Memorial and Museum
- YouTube video: Auschwitz: Drone video of Nazi Concentration Camp (2 min. 29 sec.)
Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp:
- Concentration Camps: Auschwitz-Birkenau – Jewish Virtual Library
- Auschwitz: a short history of the largest mass murder site in human history – TheGuardian.com
- GATE TO HELL: AUSCHWITZ – Auschwitz.dk
- AUSCHWTIZ – Holoccaust Encyclopedia – USHMM.org
- AUSCHWITZ – HISTORY – History.com
- AUSCHWITZ-BIRKENAU MEMORIAL AND MUSEUM – Auschwitz.org
- Discovery of Concentration Camps and the Holocaust, by C. Peter Chen – World War II Database – WW2DB.com
1943 Jewish ghetto of Riga, Latvia, is destroyed.
Riga Ghetto:
- Riga Ghetto – Wikipedia
- Riga Ghetto – DeathCamps.org
- Riga, Latvia – Virtual Jewish World – Jewish Virtual Library
- History of Jews in Latvia – Wikipedia
1940 World War II: First day of Battle of Elaia–Kalamas between the Greeks and the Italians.
Battle of Elaia-Kalamas of 1940:
- Battle of Elaia – Kalamas (Greece, 28 October-8 November, 1940) – MyFastForum.org
- “The Battle of Elaia–Kalamas (Greek: Μάχη Ελαίας-Καλαμά) took place in Epirus from 2–8 November 1940. The battle was fought between the Greeks and the Italians during the initial stage of the Greco-Italian War. The Italian Army, deployed on the Greek-Albanian border, launched a major offensive against Greece on 28 October 1940.” – Battle of Elaia-Kalamas – Wikipedia
- The Battle of Elaia-Kalamas begins – 1940 – WW2DayByDay
1936 The British Broadcasting Corporation initiates the BBC Television Service, the world’s first regular, “high-definition” (then defined as at least 200 lines) service. Renamed BBC1 in 1964, the channel still runs to this day.
1936 The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is established.
1930 Haile Selassie is crowned emperor of Ethiopia.
1920 In the United States, KDKA of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania starts broadcasting as the first commercial radio station. The first broadcast is the result of the United States presidential election, 1920.
1917 The Military Revolutionary Committee of the Petrograd Soviet, in charge of preparation and carrying out the Russian Revolution, holds its first meeting.
1917 The Balfour Declaration proclaims British support for the “establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people” with the clear understanding “that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities”.
Balfour Declaration:
- NOV 2, 1917: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: The Balfour Declaration – Histoy.com
- Full text of the Balfour Declaration – Archive.org, or the same text of this Avalon Project site
- NOV 2, 1917: Balfour Declaration – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Balfour Declaration – About.com
- The Balfour Declaration – November 2, 1917 – Zionism-Israel.com
- Pre-State Israel: The Balfour Declaration (November 1917) – Jewish Virtual Library
- “AN OVERWHELMINGLY JEWISH STATE” – FROM THE BALFOUR DECLARATION TO THE PALESTINE MANDATE, by Martin Gilbert – ISRAEL’S RIGHTS as a Nation-State in International Diplomacy – Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs – pdf
- The Balfour Declaration – PalestineFacts.org
- Balfour Declaration – Encyclopedia Britannica
History and Background of the Balfour Declaration:
- Behind the Balfour Declaration: Britain Great War Pledge To Lord Rothschild, by Robert John – IHR.org
- Background to Treason: The Balfour Declaration, by Willian Pierce – Counter-Currents.com
- THE GREAT BETRAYAL – American Deception, by STEPHEN S WISE AND JACOB DE HAAS – 1930 – pdf
- “The drafter of the Balfour Declaration was a secret Zionist in what historian William Rubinstein states was ‘probably the most remarkable example of concealment of identity in twentieth-century British political history’” – THE SECRET OF LEOPOLD AMERY – IF AMERICANS KNEW – IfAmericansKnew.org
- British Support for Jewish Restoration – MideastWeb.org
- Lord Arthur Balfour on Zionism – Zionism-Israel.com
- “Hasten !, Now is the moment, which may not return for thousands of years, to claim the restoration of civic rights among the population of the universe which had been shamefully withheld from you for thousands of years, your political existence as a nation among the nations…” – Napoleon Bonaparte’s Letter to the Jews – April 20, 1799 – MideastWeb.org
- “Rather than a colonist’s love song to Zionism, as some pro-Palestinian U.K. campaigners now claim, the Balfour Declaration of 1917 was based on miscalculations, anti-Semitism and propaganda – and set in train a war that is yet to end. ” – Should Britain Apologize for the Balfour Declaration?, by James Renton – Apr 29, 2013 – Haaretz.com
- The Balfour Declaration: “Nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine” – THE BALFOUR DECLARATION ABOVE PROTECTED NON-JEWS BUT ISRAEL MURDERS THEIR CHILDREN ON A DAILY BASIS – JewWatch.com
- “A further purpose of the WWI was to cause the destruction of the Ottoman Empire, in order to free the land of Palestine from its grasp, leading to the creation of the Zionist state of Israel. After Prime Minister of England, Lord Asquith, was deposed in 1916, because he had opposed Zionist interests. David Lloyd George, whose career was made as a lawyer for the World Zionist Organization, as well as Winston Churchill and Arthur Balfour of the Round Table, were placed in power.” – Arthur Balfour – The Fall of the Ottoman Empire – World War One and the Illuminati – Jesus-Is-Savior.com
- The Balfour Declaration – Background: World War 1 – “Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem…” – Psalm 122:6 – ForThePeaceOfJerusalem.com
- The Hidden History of the Balfour Declaration, by John Cornelius – John McCarthy – Tripod.com
- Background – Balfour Declaration (of 1917) – Wikipedia
- It Wasn’t Just a European War: WWI in Arabia, by Shehryar Fazli – April 20th, 2014 – LAReviewOfBook.org
- Jews Blackmailed Wilson into WWI – RealJewsNews.com
- The Origin of the Palestine-Israel Conflict, by H. Richard – MAGAZINE ARTICLE – Washington Report on Middle East Affairs – Questia.com
- ON THE ORIGINS OF THE BALFOUR DECLARATION, by Nicholas Lysson – May 2006 – IGC.org
- PALESTINE-ISRALE TIMELINE: 1917-1929 – ColdWarStudies.com
- The Balfour Project – Timeline – BalfourProject.org
1914 World War I: The Russian Empire declares war on the Ottoman Empire and the Dardanelles are subsequently closed.
Russia’s Declaration of War Against Ottoman of 1914:
1909 Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity is founded at Boston University.
1899 The Boers begin their 118-day siege of British-held Ladysmith during the Second Boer War.
Siege of Ladysmith:
- Siege of Ladysmith – Wikipedia
- Siege of Ladysmith, 2 November 1899-27 February 1900 – historyofwar.org
- The Siege of Ladysmith – britishbattles.com
- Battle of Ladysmith – britishbattles.com
Second Boer War:
- Second Boer War – HistoryNet.com
- South African War (Second Boer War) – Encyclopedia Britannia
- South African ‘Boer War’ – Page South African War 1899-1902 – NZHistory.net.nz
- Boer War 1899-1902 – AngloBoerWar.com
- Second Boer War – HistoryWarsWeapons.com
- “The Boer War (or Anglo-Boer War) was a conflict in which the British Empire fought the forces of two “Boer Republics” from 1899 to 1902 in southern Africa. The Boers lost the war, but resistance gained them concessions even in defeat.” – Boer War – Encyclopedia.com
- Background – Second Boer War – Wikipedia
- BOER WAR – History-Net.com
- Impact of Second Boer War – Quizlet.com
- Weapons of the Second Boer War – KieranMcMullen.com
- Second Boer War – FindTheData.com
- What were the causes of the second boer war? – Answers.com
- List of the Second Boer War Battles – Ranker.com
NOVEMBER 03
2014 UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calls for global action on climate change after warning from scientists.
UN and the Climate Change:
- UN Panel Issues Starkest Warning Yet on Global Warming, by Justin Gilles – Nov. 2, 2014 – The New York Times
- UN AND CLIMATE CHANGE
- “Most important assessment of global warming yet warns carbon emissions must be cut sharply and soon, but UN’s IPCC says solutions are available and affordable.” – ICPP: rapid carbon emission cuts vital to stop severe impact of climate change – Nov.2, 2014 – TheGuardian.com
- SUMMARY OF THE CLIMATE SUMMIT 2014: 23 SEPTEMBER 2014 – pdf
- Climate Change – UNEP
2013 A solar eclipse sweeps across Africa, Europe and the Eastern United States.
2012 Syrian rebels launch a major assault on Taftanaz airbase.
Syrian Civil War:
- Syrian Civil War – Wikipedia
- List of Syrian Air Forces bases, including the Taftanaz airbase – Wikipedia
Syrian Civil War Timeline:
- Timeline of the Syrian Civil War – Wikipedia
- Timeline of Syria’s raging war – Aljazeera.com
- Syrian Civil War – A Timeline of Tragedy – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFERL.org
- Syrian Civil War – Timeline created by Dean, Will S – TimeToast.com
- Syrian Civil War Fast Facts – August 27, 2013 – CNN
- SYRIA – COVERGE HIGHLIGHTS – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
1997 The United States of America imposes economic sanctions against Sudan in response to its human rights abuses of its own citizens and its material and political assistance to Islamic extremist groups across the Middle East and Eastern Africa.
1996 Death of Abdullah Çatlı, leader of the Turkish ultra-nationalist organization Grey Wolves in the Susurluk car-crash, which leads to the resignation of the Turkish Interior Minister, Mehmet Ağar (a leader of the True Path Party, DYP).
1988 Sri Lankan Tamil mercenaries try to overthrow the Maldivian government. At President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom‘s request, the Indian military suppresses the coup attempt within 24 hours.
1988 Soviet Union agrees to allow teaching of Hebrew.
Hebrew Teaching in Soviet Union:
- Soviet Said to Agree to End Ban on Teaching of Hebrew – November 3, 1988 – The New York Times
- History of Jews in Russia – Wikipedia
1986 The Federated States of Micronesia gain independence from the United States of America.
1986 Iran–Contra affair: The Lebanese magazine Ash-Shiraa reports that the United States has been secretly selling weapons to Iran in order to secure the release of seven American hostages held by pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon.
1982 The Salang Tunnel fire in Afghanistan kills up to 2,000 people.
1979 Greensboro massacre: Five members of the Communist Workers Party are shot dead and seven are wounded by a group of Klansmen and neo-Nazis during a “Death to the Klan” rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, United States.
1978 Dominica gains its independence from the United Kingdom.
History of Dominica:
- History of Dominica – Wikipedia
- Dominica – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Dominica – HowStuffsWorks.com
- Dominica: History – The Commonwealth –TheCommonwealth.org
- History of Dominica – WorldRover.com
- Dominica’s History timeline – AVirtualDominica.com
- Dominica country profile – Timeline – BBC
Dominica:
- DOMINICA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Dominican Republic – UN Data
- Dominica – CountryStudies.us
- Dominica – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Dominica – Infoplease.com
- Dominica – FactMonster.com
- Dominica country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Dominica:
- Foreign relations of Dominica – Wikipedia
- Dominica Government – Foreign Relations – Photius.com
- Dominica – Foreign Relations – CountryStudies.us
- US Relations with Dominica – US Department of State
- Dominica – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
Economy of Dominica:
- Economy of Dominica – Wikipedia
- Dominican Republic – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Dominica – Overview – WORLD BANK
- Dominica – Data – WORLD BANK
- Dominica – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Dominica – Economy – CountryStudies.us
- Dominica: Economy – TheCommonwealth.org
1975 Syed Nazrul Islam, A H M Qamaruzzaman, Tajuddin Ahmad, and Muhammad Mansur Ali, Bangladeshi politicians and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman loyalists, murdered in the Dhaka Central Jail.
1973 Mariner program: NASA launches the Mariner 10 toward Mercury. On March 29, 1974, it becomes the first space probe to reach that planet.
1969 Vietnam War: US President Richard M. Nixon addresses the nation on television and radio, asking the “silent majority” to join him in solidarity on the Vietnam War effort and to support his policies.
1967 Vietnam War: The Battle of Dak To begins.
1964 Washington D C residents are able to vote in a presidential election for the first time.
1962 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Novaya Zemlya USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1962:
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
Novaya Zemlya Nuclear Test Site:
- Novaya Zemlya – GlobalSecurity.org
- NOVAYA ZEMLYA – AtlasObscura.com
- Novaya Zemlya – GiantBomb.com
- NOVA ZEMLYA (NOVAYA ZEMLYA) 58 MEGA TON H BOMB TEST – ArkCode.com
- Central Test Site of Russia on Novaya Zemlya – NTI.org
- ICE Case Studies – Novaya Zemlya, by Carrie McVicker – American.edu
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – Image – NASA
- Novaya Zemlya Archipelago – NovayaZemlya.net
- Novaya Zemlya, Russia – Nuclear-Risks.org
- Novaya Zemlya: test site for most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated – July 31, 2014 – TASS Russian News Agency
- Novaya Zemlya: birds, animals adapt nuclear test site, by Tatyana Sinitsyna – RIA Novosti, Russia – 15 August 2006
- UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRPAPHICAL SURVEY – Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501 – Reston, Virginia – 1993
1960 The land that would become the Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge was established by an Act of Congress after a year-long legal battle that pitted local residents against Port Authority of New York and New Jersey officials wishing to turn the Great Swamp into a major regional airport for jet aircraft.
Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge in New Jersey:
- Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge | New Jersey, and Wildlife & Habitat – Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge | New Jersey
- Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge | New Jersey – Brochure – FWS.gov – pdf
- Friends of Great Swamp National Wildlife
- The Great Swamp – Skylands Visitor – New Jersey – NJSkylands.com
- GREAT SWAMP NATIONAL REFUGE – StateParks.com
- Great Swamp Outdoor Education Center – Morris County NJ Park Commission – MorrisParks.net
1957 Sputnik program: The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 2. On board is the first animal to enter orbit, a dog named Laika.
1956 The Khan Yunis killings are perpetrated by the Israel Defense Forces in Egyptian-controlled Gaza, resulting in the deaths of 275 male Arabs.
1954 Nobel for physics awarded to Max Born & Walter Bothe.
1954 The first Godzilla film is released and marks the first appearance of the character of the same name.
Godzilla:
- “Godzilla is a metaphor for Nuclear Destruction, this song suits that beautifully…The ending still gives me chills how it’s set up as an uncertain future whether we can get past war and destruction. All that accompanied by this song.” – YouTube video (2 min. 55 sec.): Godzilla (1954) “Prayer for Peace” – Akira Ifukune, or YouTube video (2 min. 59 sec.): Godzilla- Prayer for Peace
- Godzilla: Poetry After the A-Bomb, by J. Hoberman – CURRENT – Criterion.com
- The Monster That Morphed Into a Metaphor, by Terrance Rafferty – May 2, 2004 – From the NY Times – UPENN.edu
- “Since its inception in 1954, Godzilla has been repeatedly Americanized….The original concept for Godzilla was as a social commentary on the devastation of the atomic bombs that ravaged Japanese society. It served as a metaphor for what occurs in the heinous aftermath of using nuclear technology, specifically weapons.” – Godzilla: The Anti-Nuclear Monster Movie, by Willis Pattenaude – May 18, 2014 – Ranti Lifestyle – Rantilifestyle.com
- A Brief History of Godzilla, Our Walking Nuclear Nightmare, by Brian Merchant – August 23, 2013 – Mother Board – Voice.com
- New GODZILLA To Parallel Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Disaster? – ComicBookMovie.com
- The New ‘Godzilla’ reflects our current fears of nuclear and natural disasters – Sunday, May 11, 2014 – New York Daily News – NYDailyNews.com
- How ‘Godzilla’ Dances Around That Whole Nuclear Issue – May 16, 2014 – Tierney Sneed – US News – USNews.com
1944 World War II: Two supreme commanders of the Slovak National Uprising, Generals Ján Golian and Rudolf Viest are captured, tortured and later executed by German forces.
1943 World War II: 500 aircraft of the U.S. 8th Air Force devastate Wilhelmshaven harbor in Germany.
1942 World War II: The Koli Point action begins during the Guadalcanal Campaign and ends on November 12.
1941 The order is given to bomb Pearl Harbor.
Order to Attack Pearl Harbor:
1930 Getúlio Dornelles Vargas becomes Head of the Provisional Government in Brazil after a bloodless coup on October 24.
1918 The German Revolution of 1918–19 begins when 40,000 sailors take over the port in Kiel.
1918 Poland declares its independence from Russia.
History of Poland:
- History of Poland – Wikipedia
- HISTORY OF POLAND – HistoryWorld.net
- Poland – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Poland – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Poland – HISTORY – CountryStudies.us
- A BRIEF HISTORY OF POLAND – LocalHistories.org
- Poland – The Virtual Jewish World – Jewish Virtual Library
- Timeline of Polish History – Roots Web – Ancestry.com
- Historical Maps of Poland – Buffalo.edu
- Poland country profile – Timeline – BBC
Poland and Russia:
- Poland-Russia relations – Wikipedia
- HISTORY OF RUSSIAN-POLISH RELATIONS – Euro-Dialogue.org
- “The first years of independence were very difficult: war havoc, hyperinflation and the Polish-Bolshevik War of 1920. In the course of this war, the Battle of Warsaw was fought on the Eastern outskirts of the city, and the capital was successfully defended and the Red Army defeated. Poland stopped on itself the full brunt of the Red Army and defeated an idea of the ‘export of the revolution.’” – History of Warsaw – Wikipedia
- Russia-Poland: a history too terrible – OpenDemocracy.net
- POLISH-RUSSIAN RELATIONS: HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY AND GEOPOLITICS, uploaded by Fatih Özbay – Academia.edu – pdf downloadable
- Poland vs. Russia in a war of words, rent and history – DW.com
- Russo-Polish Wars: Wars and Conflicts Between Russia and Poland – HistoryGuy.com
- Russia, Poland and the history wars – OpenDemocracy.net
Poland:
- POLAND – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Poland – UN Data
- Poland – Infoplease.com
- Poland – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Poland – FactMonster.com
- Geography of Poland – About.com
- Poland country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Poland:
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland
- Foreign relations of Poland – Wikipedia
- Poland – FOREIGN RELATOINS – CountryStudies.us
- Poland – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Poland-United States relations – Wikipedia
- US Relations with Poland – US Department of State
Economy of Poland:
- Economy of Poland – Wikipedia
- Poland – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Poland – WORLD BANK
- Poland – Data – WORLD BANK
- Poland – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
1918 Austria-Hungary enters into an armistice with the Allies, and the Habsburg-ruled empire dissolves.
Austria-Hungarian Empire (Hapsburg) and the Armistice with the Allies:
- Full text of “Supplement to Protocol of Armistice with Austro-Hungary, November 3, 1918” – Archive.org
- “The following text is reproduced from the English translation of the noted Austrian historian Edmund von Glaise-Horstenau’s The Collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire* published in 1930. The extract deals with the confused situation that led to the capture of thousands of Austro-Hungarian soldiers in November 1918. The ranks of Austro-Hungarian officers have been rendered in the correct German for” – The Armistice of Villa Giusti 1918 – Austro-Hungarian-Army.co.uk
Austro-Hungarian (Hapsburg) Empire:
- Hapsburg Monarchy – Wikipedia
- Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy – Infoplease.com
- Austria-Hungary | historical empire, Europe – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The Tragic Death of the Hapsburg Empire, by James Kurth – FIRST PRINCIPLES – FirstPrinciplesJournal.com
- Hapsburgs – The House of Hapsburg – Hapsburgs.net
History of the Austro-Hungarian (Hapsburg) Empire:
- History of Austro-Hungarian Empire – Academic.com
- HISTORY OF THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE – HistoryWorld.net
- Hapsburg – Infoplease.com
- History – Austro-Hungarian Empire – PINTEREST.com
- Empire of Austria-Hungary – AlmanachDeGotha.org
- Austria-Hungary – Colorado.edu
- Austro-Hungarian History – ACADEMIA.edu
- AUSTRIA-HUNGARY BEFORE WORLD WAR I – AlphaHistory.com
- Austro-Hungarian Monarchy – THURAYA – Encyclopedia.com
- Map of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1914 – NZHistory.net.nz
1903 With the encouragement of the United States, Panama separates from Colombia.
Independence of Panama:
History of Panama:
- History of Panama – Wikipedia
- Panama History – HistoryCentral.com
- HISTORY OF PANAMA – HistoryWorld.net
- History Of Panama – Caribbean and Panama
- Panama – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- HISTORY – Panama – CountryStudies.us
- A Guide to the United States’ History of Recognition, Diplomatic, and Consular Relations, by Country, since 1776: Panama – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN –US Department of State
- Panama country profile – Timeline – BBC
Panama:
- PANAMA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Panama – UN Data
- Panama – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Panama – Infoplease.com
- Panama – NationsOnline.org
- Panama profile – BBC
Foreign Relations of Panama:
- Foreign relations of Panama – Wikipedia
- Panama – FOREIGN RELATIONS – CountryStudies.us
- Panama – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Panama – US Department of State
- Panama-United States relations – Wikipedia
- Panama FOREIGN RELATIONS – Photius.com
- Panama – Foreign Relations – Articles – LATimes.com
Economy of Panama:
- Economy of Panama – Wikipedia
- Panama – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Panama – WORLD BANK
- Panama – Data – WORLD BANK
- Panama – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
Colombia:
- COLOMBIA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Colombia – UN Data
- Colombia – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Colombia – Infoplease.com
- Colombia country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Columbia:
- Foreign relations of Colombia – Wikipedia
- Colombia – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Colombia – US Department of State
- Colombia – FOREIGN RELATIONS – CountryStudies.us
- Colombia – Foreign Relations – GlobalSecurity.org
- Colombia FOREIGN RELATIONS – Photius.com
- Colombia – Foreign Relations – UPENN.edu
Colombia and the United Nations:
- Permanent Mission of Colombia to the United Nations
- Permanent Representative of Colombia to the United Nations – Wikipedia
- Permanent Mission of Colombia to the United Nations and other international organizations in Geneva
History of Columbia:
- History of Colombia – Wikipedia
- Colombia – History – Infoplease.com
- Colombia – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- HISTORY OF COLOMBIA – HistoryWorld.net
- Colombia – History – WorldRover.com
- The History of Colombia – About.com
- Colombia country profile – Timeline – BBC
Economy of Columbia:
- Economy of Colombia – Wikipedia
- COLOMBIA – WORLD BANK
- Colombia – Data – WORLD BANK
- Colombia – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Colombia – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Colombia – Economy – MapsOfWorld.com
- Economy of Colombia – 123IndependenceDay.com
1898 France withdraws its troops from Fashoda (now in Sudan), ending the Fashoda Incident.
NOVEMBER 04
Today is the WORLD TSUNAMI AWARENESS DAY (A/RES/70/203):
2008 Barack Obama becomes the first person of African-American descent to be elected President of the United States.
2002 Chinese authorities arrest cyber-dissident He Depu for signing a pro-democracy letter to the 16th Communist Party Congress.
1995 Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin is assassinated by an extremist Israeli.
Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin:
- NOV 4, 1995: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Yitzhak Rabin assassinated – History.com
- The Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin (November 4, 1995) – Jewish Virtual Library
- ISRAEL – Rabin Assassination – Mukingum.edu
- ON THIS DAY: OBITUARY – Assassination in Israel; Yitzhak Rabin, 73, an Israeli Soldier Turned Prime Minister and Peacemaker, by Marilyn Berger – November 5, 1995 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- Yitzhak Rabin Assassination – About.com
- Rabin’s assassination: The story that changed the nation, by Caroline Frank – 11/04/2014 – The Jerusalem Post – Jpost.com
- The Rabin Assassination – TorahCode.us
1979 Iran hostage crisis: A mob of Iranians, mostly students, overruns the US embassy in Tehran and takes 90 hostages (53 of whom are American).
Iran Hostage Crisis:
- IRAN HOSTAGE CRISIS – History.com
- NOV 4, 1979 – Hostage Crisis Begins – Iranian Militants Seize the US Embassy in Teheran – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Iranians storm US embassy Nov 4, 1979, by Andrew Glass – 11/04/07 – Politico.com
- US Embassy in Iran Seized November 4, 1979 – Army.Mil
- November 4, 1979: Iranian Mob Attacks US Embassy Teheran; Hostages Compensated $50/Day, by Domani Srepo – November 4, 2013 – Diplopundit.net
- The Hostage Crisis in Iran – JIMMY CARTER PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY & MUSEUM
- November 4, 1979: The Iran Hostage Crisis, by Ray Takeyh – posted November 4, 2011 – TheHistoryReader.com
- Iran Hostage Crisis timeline – HistoryProject.org
- Date: 4 November 1979 – US Embassy in Teheran is Taken Over by Iranian Militants – Skepticism.org
- US-Iran relations timeline: 7 major events since the Iranian Revolution, by Alexander Besant – Sep 28, 2013 – GlobalPost.com
1978 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1978:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1973 The Netherlands experiences the first Car-Free Sunday caused by the 1973 oil crisis. Highways are deserted and are used only by cyclists and roller skaters.
1970 Salvador Allende takes office as President of Chile, the first Marxist to become president of a Latin American country through open elections.
1970 Vietnam War: Vietnamization: The United States turns control of the Binh Thuy Air Base in the Mekong Delta over to South Vietnam.
1966 The Arno River floods Florence, Italy, to a maximum depth of 6.7 m (22 ft), leaving thousands homeless and destroying millions of masterpieces of art and rare books. Also Venice was submerged on the same day at its record all-time acqua alta of 194 cm.
1962 In a test of the Nike Hercules air defense missile, Shot Dominic-Tightrope is successfully detonated 69,000 feet above Johnston Atoll. It would also be the last atmospheric nuclear test conducted by the United States.
Nuclear Tests by the United States:
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Operation Argus – Wikipedia
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearArchive.org
- Nuclear Test Sites – AtomicArchive.com
- United States Nuclear Tests: July 1945 Through September 1992 – FAS.org
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
Johnston Atoll:
Various Weapons Tests and Storage at Johnston Atoll, and Permanent Contamination:
- Johnston Atoll, and Kalama Atoll – WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION – GlobalSecurity.org
- South Pacific tests on Johnston Island in 1951 – NIMIA.com
- Contaminants in Fishes from Johnston Atoll, by L. Kerr Lobel and P.S. Lobel – Boston University, Department of Biology
- “During the Cold War era, the US Air Force used JI [Johnston Island] to support several highly classified missions. In the early 1960’s, it was involved with Operation Dominic, which tested a primitive anti-ballistic missile system as well as the impact of EMP on military command and control systems.” – Johnstone Island, by Bob Fish – EarthLink.net
- Aspects of the Biology and Geomorphology of Johnston and Wake Atolls, Pacific Ocean, by Philp S. Lobel and Lisa Kerr Lobel – DODLegacy.org
- “Construction began on a Parsons-designed prototype full-scale chemical weapons incinerator at Johnston Island in the South Pacific Ocean.” – Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program (CSDP) – Parsons.com
- “In the 1950’s and 60’s, the United States Air Force conducted 12 test launchings of nuclear missiles on tiny Johnston Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. In 1962, two of the shots were aborted and the missiles exploded over the runway, drenching the area in radioactive contaminants.” – Radioactive Dump on Pacific Wildlife Refuge Raises Liability Concerns, by Katharine Q. Seelye – January 27, 2003 – The New York Times
- Johnston Island – Air Force Space & Missile Museum
- “At sunset one quiet July day an armada of ships was positioned in the ocean waters around Johnston Atoll, upwind from a line of barges with hundreds of cages containing Rhesus monkeys on their decks (figure 4).” – Bio Terror 4 – BiologyWriter – BiologyWriter.com
- Johnston Atoll: “The site was used for high-altitude nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s. Until late in 2000 the atoll was maintained as a storage and disposal site for chemical weapons. Munitions destruction, cleanup, and closure of the facility were completed by May 2005.” – THE UNITED STATES PACIFIC ISLAND WILD LIFE REFUGES – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Cleaning up Johnston Atoll – Nautilus Institute
- South Pacific islands fell victim to tragedy of nuclear tests – March 27, 2015 – The Asahi Shimbun
- AGENT ORANGE – Johnston Island, AFB – War-Stories.com
- “Another issue addressed by the investigation was a 2003 U.S. Army report – titled “An Ecological Assessment of Johnston Atoll” – which stated that 25,000 barrels of Agent Orange had been on Okinawa prior to 1972.” – Deny, Deny Until All the Veterans Die” – Pentagon Investigation into Agent Orange in Okinawa – Truth-Out.org
- Summary Document: Agent Orange at Johnston Island – GuamAgentOrange.info
- 11 Johnston Atoll Airport, USA – 14 of the world’s most amazing abandoned airports – SkyScanner.net
- HISTORY OF JOHNSTON ATOLL – GuamAgentOrange.info
- Case Name: Johnston Atoll Chemical Waste – Chemical Weapons Disposal Dispute – TED Case Study
- Johnstone Atoll: An Isolated and Abandoned Military Air Base in the Mid Pacific Ocean – 8 April 2010 – UrganGhostsMedia.com
- Secret Bases – Johnston Atoll – TheLivingMoon.com
- The Forgotten Atoll of Johnston Atoll – Jason-Sevens.com
- History of Johnston Island – Johnston Memories
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
1960 At the Kasakela Chimpanzee Community in Tanzania, Dr. Jane Goodall observes chimpanzees creating tools, the first-ever observation in non-human animals.
1956 Soviet troops enter Hungary to end the Hungarian revolution against the Soviet Union, that started on October 23. Thousands are killed, more are wounded, and nearly a quarter million leave the country.
The End of Hungarian Revolution of 1956:
- NOV 4, 1956: ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Soviet ends brutal end in Hungarian revolution. – History.com
- Timeline of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 – MTHOLYOKE.edu
The “Hungarian Revolution of 1956” or the Struggle of Hungarians against the Soviet Power: October 23 – November 4, 1956:
- OCT 23, 1956: ON THIS DAY: Hungarian protest turns violent – History.com
- 1956 OCTOBER 23 – START OF THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION – 23 Oct 2013 – DailyNewsHungary.com
- “In 1945, during World War II, the Russians came in to liberate Hungary from the Nazis, but when the Communists took over in 1949, liberation became domination and the Hungarian government was totally subordinate to Soviet control. There was freedom in the air on October 23, 1956 when Hungarian students began demonstrating against the Communist government. The Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin had died three years before; and in March of 1956, Nikita Khrushchev had spoken out against Stalin at the 20th Party Congress.” – 1956 HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION
- October 23rd – Revolution of 1956 – VisitBudapest.travel
- October 23rd 1956 Revolution – Budapest by Locals
- Hungarian Revolution of 1956 – UAHSIB History
- The 1956 Hungarian Revolution: A History in Documents – GWU.edu
- The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 – a summary – February 21, 2013 – Historian in an Hour – HistorianInAnHour.com
- HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION – THE COLD WAR MUSEUM
History of Hungary:
- History of Hungary – Wikipedia
- Hungary – CountryStudies.us
- HUNGARY’S HISTORY IN A NUTSHELL – GoToHungary.com
- HISTORY OF HUNGARY – HistoryWorld.net
- The History of Hungary – Tripod.com
- Hungary – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Hungary – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Hungary profile: Timeline – BBC
1952 The United States government establishes the National Security Agency, or NSA.
National Security Agency:
- National Security Agency – Official Site
- National Security Agency – Infoplease.com
- What is the National Security Agency? – About.com
- NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY – FAS.org
- National Security Agency – Encyclopeida.com
- National Security Agency – Articles – The New York Times
- National Security Agency – Articles – The Huffington Post
- The National Security Agency: Declassified – The National Security Archive – GWU.edu
- A history of the NSA – The Washington Post
1944 World War II: Bitola Liberation Day
1942 World War II: Second Battle of El Alamein: Disobeying a direct order by Adolf Hitler, General Field Marshal Erwin Rommel leads his forces on a five-month retreat.
1939 War II: US President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Customs Service to implement the Neutrality Act of 1939, allowing cash-and-carry purchases of weapons by belligerents.
1924 Nellie Tayloe Ross of Wyoming is elected the first female governor in the United States.
1922 In Egypt, British archaeologist Howard Carter and his men find the entrance to Pharaoh Tutankhamun‘s tomb in the Valley of the Kings.
1921 The Italian unknown soldier is buried in the Altare della Patria (Fatherland Altar) in Rome.
1921 The Sturmabteilung or SA, whose members were known as “brownshirts”, physically assault Adolf Hitler‘s opposition after his speech in Munich.
1918 World War I: Austria-Hungary surrenders to Italy.
1890 City and South London Railway: London’s first deep-level tube railway opens between King William Street and Stockwell.
1867 Camagüey, Cuba revolts against Spain during the Ten Years’ War.
1852 Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour becomes the prime minister of Piedmont–Sardinia, which soon expands to become Italy.
1847 Sir James Young Simpson, a British physician, discovers the anaesthetic properties of chloroform.
1829 Newport Rising: The last large-scale armed rebellion against authority in mainland Britain.
1791 Beginning of the Russo-Ottoman siege of Corfu.
1791 The Western Confederacy of American Indians wins a major victory over the United States in the Battle of the Wabash.
1783 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart‘s Symphony No. 36 is performed for the first time in Linz, Austria.
Mozart’s Symphony No. 36:
1780 José Gabriel Condorcanqui aka Túpac Amaru II starts his Rebellion on Peru against Spain.
NOVEMBER 05
2013 India launches the Mars Orbiter Mission, its first interplanetary probe.
2007 Android mobile operating system is unveiled by Google.
2007 China’s first lunar satellite, Chang’e 1 goes into orbit around the Moon.
2006 Saddam Hussein, former president of Iraq, and his co-defendants Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti and Awad Hamed al-Bandar are sentenced to death in the al-Dujail trial for the role in the massacre of the 148 Shi’a Muslims in 1982.
Saddam Hussein:
- Saddam Hussein – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Saddam Hussein – Infoplease.com
- Saddam Hussein – Biography.com
- Saddam Hussein – News Archive – The New York Times
Saddam Hussein’s Trial:
- The Trial of Saddam Hussein – TOP DOCUMENTARY FILMS – TopDocumentaryFilms.com
- Try Saddam in an International Court – December 14, 2003 – Human Rights Watch
- Saddam Should Face International Court, by Helen Thomas – Friday, December 19, 2003 – CommonDreams.org
- Did the Iraqi dictator receive a fair trial? – THE TRIAL OF SADDAM HUSSEIN – AMERICA AT A CROSSROADS – PBS.org
- The Illegal Trial of Saddam Hussein – December 11, 2006 – DavidDuke.com
- “Already two defence lawyers are dead, one has fled, scores of witnesses appear to be too frightened to give evidence and eight people have been reportedly arrested for planning to kill an investigative judge”, said Nicholas Howen, Secretary-General of the ICJ [International Commission of Jurists]. These serious developments further reduce the credibility of the trial. They make it increasingly difficult for the Court to deliver a calm, fair and just trial.” – International Commission of Jurists
- “Furthermore, Saddam’s lawyers claimed that they had been denied access to their client and that they had received death threats from members of the Iraqi government. While no mainstream media outlet at the time offered an explanation of these strange occurrences, logic would suggest that there is something about the man that appeared in court that the US military did not want the Iraqi people and the rest of the world, to see, or hear.” – The Capture, Trial and Conviction of Saddam Hussein – Another US Intelligence Farce, by Joe Quinn – Thu, 28 Dec 2006 – Sott Focus – Sott.net
- Execution of Saddam Hussein – Wikipedia
1996 Pakistani President Farooq Ahmed Khan Leghari dismisses the government of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and dissolves the National Assembly of Pakistan.
1995 André Dallaire attempts to assassinate Prime Minister Jean Chrétien of Canada. He is thwarted when the Prime Minister‘s wife locks the door.
1990 Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the far-right Kach movement, is shot dead after a speech at a New York City hotel.
1986 USS Rentz, USS Reeves and USS Oldendorf visit Qingdao (Tsing Tao) China – the first US Naval visit to China since 1949.
1977 George W Bush marries Laura Welch in Midland, Texas.
George W. Bush’s Marriage:
President George W Bush and the War Crimes:
- Lethal Military Operations Without UN Permission Is a War Crime, by Michael Haas – August 27, 2015 – GEORGE W BUSH, WAR CRIMINAL? – USWarCrimes.com
- George W Bush, Dick Cheney Convicted Of War Crimes, by Justin Rosario – May 13, 2012 – AddictingInfo.org
- Former Counterterrorism Czar Richard Clarke: Bush, Cheney Committed War Crimes, by Shadee Ashtari – 5/29/2014 – HuffingtonPost.com
- Bush War Crimes – BushWarCrimes.com
- “Former U.S. terror czar Richard Clarke (shown), who resigned in 2003, dropped two bombshell statements about the Bush administration he served during a recent TV interview. First, he said, former President George W. Bush and then-Vice President Dick Cheney probably perpetrated what amounts to ‘war crimes’ surrounding the unconstitutional attack on Iraq.” – UN Could Prosecute Bush for War Crimes, Says Ex-US Terror Czar, by Alex Newman – Monday, 09 June 2014 – TheNewAmerican.com
- “The Department of Justice has filed a Grant of Immunity for war crimes against George W. Bush, Richard Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, Paul Wolfowitz, and Donald Rumsfeld. The filing for the immunity of war crimes was made with the United States District Court, Northern District of California San Francisco Division. The filing is for procedural immunity in a case alleging that they planned and waged the Iraq War in violation of international law.” – August 22, 2013; updated June 26, 2014 – DOJ pursues immunity for Bush and six other for Iraq war crimes – Examiner.com
1976 USSR performs underground nuclear test in Sakha (Yakutia), Russia.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1976:
Nuclear Test in Sakha:
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
1970 Vietnam War: The United States Military Assistance Command in Vietnam reports the lowest weekly American soldier death toll in five years (24).
Vietnam War in 1970:
1967 The Hither Green rail crash in the United Kingdom kills 49 people. Survivors include Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees.
1966 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1955 After being destroyed in World War II, the rebuilt Vienna State Opera reopens with a performance of Beethoven‘s Fidelio.
1953 Nobel prize for physics awarded/appended on Frederik Zernicke.
1951 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
- For some more pertinent information, see “1966 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site”, mentioned above.
1950 Korean War: British and Australian forces from the 27th British Commonwealth Brigade successfully halted the advancing Chinese 117th Division during the Battle of Pakchon.
Battle of Pakchon:
- 5 November 1950 – Battle of Pakchon – Korean War – C3i Ops Center
- “November 5, 1950 – The Battle of Pakchon took place ten days after the start of the Chinese First Phase Offensive, following the entry of the People’s Volunteer Army into the Korean War. The offensive reversed the United Nations (UN) advance towards the Yalu River which had occurred after their intervention in the wake of the North Korean invasion of South Korea at the start of the war. The battle was fought between British and Australian forces from the 27th British Commonwealth Brigade with American armour and artillery in support, and the Chinese 117th Division, around the village of Pakchon on the Taeryong River.” – November 5 This Day During the Cold War
- About: Battle of Pakchon – DBPedia.org
Korean War:
- KOREAN WAR – History.com
- Korean War and Its Origins – Documents – TrumanLibrary.org
- Military Resources: Korean War – NARA Resources
- Korean War, 1951-1953 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- The Korean War: An Overview, by Kennedy Hickman – About education – About.com
- Korean War – 1950-1953 – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Korean War – Infoplease.com
- Korean War – Encyclopedia.com
- People & Events – The Korean War – AMERICAN EXPERIENCE – PBS.org
- The Korean War – US History.org
- KOREAN WAR, edited by R A Guisepi – History-World.org
- The Korean War: An Overview – History – BBC
- KOREAN WAR VIDEOS – KOREAN WAR – History.com
- “The Korean War is the forgotten war of the 20th century. Maybe it was because it took place so soon after the end of of Wolrd War II, or maybe because it ended in a stalment and to this day that stalemate has not been resolved. For whatever reason it was a war that no great movie(other then the TV show Mash) were done about it, there was never much discussion about it. But for the 5,720,000 US troops who served, of which 36,995 died and another 103,235 were wounded it was every bit a war.” – HistoryCentral.com
- Korean War News – ABC.go.com
Korean War Timelines:
- THE KOREAN WAR (1950-1953) – Timeline – SparkNotes.com
- Timeline of the Korean War Events – KoreanWar60.com
- THE KOREAN WAR TIMELINE – Shmoop.com
- Korean War –Timeline Description – SoftSchool.com
- Korean War – Timeline – The History Guy – HistoryGuy.com
- Korean War – Pre-Korean War Timeline and the Korean War Timeline – TotallyHistory.com
- KOREAN WAR TIMELINE – KoreanWarOnline.com
1945 Colombia joins the United Nations.
Colombia:
- COLOMBIA – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Colombia – UN Data
- Colombia – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Colombia – Infoplease.com
Foreign Relations of Columbia:
- Foreign relations of Colombia – Wikipedia
- Colombia – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations with Colombia – US Department of State
- Colombia – FOREIGN RELATIONS – CountryStudies.us
- Colombia – Foreign Relations – GlobalSecurity.org
- Colombia FOREIGN RELATIONS – Photius.com
- Colombia – Foreign Relations – UPENN.edu
Colombia and the United Nations:
- Permanent Mission of Colombia to the United Nations
- Permanent Representative of Colombia to the United Nations – Wikipedia
- Permanent Mission of Colombia to the United Nations and other international organizations in Geneva
History of Columbia:
- History of Colombia – Wikipedia
- Colombia – History – Infoplease.com
- Colombia – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- HISTORY OF COLOMBIA – HistoryWorld.net
- Colombia – History – WorldRover.com
- The History of Colombia – About.com
Economy of Columbia:
- Economy of Colombia – Wikipedia
- COLOMBIA – WORLD BANK
- Colombia – Data – WORLD BANK
- Colombia – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Colombia – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Colombia – Economy – MapsOfWorld.com
- Economy of Colombia – 123IndependenceDay.com
1943 World War II: Bombing of the Vatican.
1940 World War II: The British armed merchant cruiser, HMS Jervis Bay, is sunk by the German pocket battleship Admiral Scheer.
1937 Adolf Hitler holds a secret meeting and states his plans for acquiring “living space” for the German people.
“Lebensraum” or” Living Space”, and Nazi Germany:
- Lebensraum – About.com
- “On November 5, 1937, Adolf Hitler held a secret conference in the Reich Chancellery during which he revealed his plans for the acquisition of Lebensraum, or living space, for the German people at the expense of other nations in Europe.” – The Hossbach Memorandum – World War II in Europe – The History Place – HistoryPlace.com
- “From the very beginning of his career until his dying day, Adolf Hitler had just two major goals. His primary goal was the forcible acquisition of Lebensraum (living space) for the German people. Secondly, he desired some kind of final reckoning with the Jews.” – Hitler Reveals War Plans – The Triumph of Hitler – The History Place – HistoryPlace.com
- The Holocaust – Timeline of Jewish Persecution (1932-1945) – Jewish Virtual Library
Adolf Hitler:
- Adolf Hitler – Wikipedia
- The Rise of Adolf Hitler – The History Place – historyplace.com
- ADOLF HITLER – history.com
- Adolf Hitler – Biography.com
- Adolf Hitler, by Jennifer Rosenberg – about.com
- Hitler Facts, by Jennifer Rosenberg – About education – about.com
- Adolf Hitler – Jewish Virtual Library
- Hitler Historical Museum – hitler.org
- ADOLF HITLER – adolfhitler.dk
- Adolf Hitler – Spartacus-educational.com
- Adolf Hitler Biography – imdb.com
- Adolf Hitler – encyclopedia.com
- Adolf Hitler – newencyclopedia.org
- Adolf Hitler Biography – who2.com
- Articles on Adolf Hitler – TMS Search
- Death of Adolf Hitler – Wikipedia
- Books related to Adolf Hitler – Amazon.com
History of Nazi Germany:
- History of Nazi Germany – World War II History – 123HelpMe.com
- THE ORIGINS OF NAZISM – alphahistory.com
- Nazi Germany – Spartacus-educational.com
- Nazi Regime in Germany – Jewish Virtual Library
- Nazi Germany – history.co.uk
- Nazi Germany – An Austro-Historical Analysis – hiddenhistoryhumanity.com
- The Revisiting The Rise and the Fall of the Third Reich – smithsonianmag.com
- THE SS – history.com
- BLACK HISTORY IN NAZI GERMANY, A BRIEF HISTORY – aaregistry.org
- Nazi Germany Timeline – historyonthenet.com
- NAZI PARTY – history.com
- History – Nazi Germany – Wikipedia
- Nazi Germany – historylearningsite.co.uk
- Nazi Germany and the Jews 1933-1939 – Rise of the Nazis and Beginning of Persecution – Yadvashem.org
History of Germany:
- History of Germany – Wikipedia
- History of Germany – MotherEarthTravel.com
- History of Germany – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Germany – History – Infoplease.com
- HISTORY OF GERAMNY – HistoryWorld.net
- Outline of Germany’s History – NationslOnline.org
- German HISTORY – All Facts and Events – GermanCulture.com.ua
- GERMANY HISTORY – GERAMNY TRAVEL – JustGermany.org
- Foreign relations of East Germany – MusicIllustratedMagazine.com
- Nazi Germany – Wikipedia
- German Foreign Policy 1933-1945 – Holocaust Encyclopedia
- 1919-1933: an economic review – THE HOLOCAUSE EXPLAINED – TheHolocaustExplained.org
- History of Germany – Germany is Younger Than You Think – The German Way & More – German-Way.com
- THE ECONOMIC HISTORY OF GERMANY – SJSU.edu
- Germany – Culture – EveryCulture.com
- Germany Timeline – WorldAtlas.com
- Timeline of German History – Wikipedia
- Germany profile – Timeline – BBC
1925 Secret agent Sidney Reilly, the first “super-spy” of the 20th century, is executed by the OGPU, the secret police of the Soviet Union.
Sidney Reilly:
- Sidney Reilly – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Sidney Reilly – Spartacus-Educational.com
- Sidney Reilly – SpyMuseum.com
1917 St Tikhon of Moscow is elected the Patriarch of Moscow and of the Russian Orthodox Church.
1917 October Revolution: In Tallinn, Estonia, Communist leader Jaan Anvelt leads revolutionaries in overthrowing the Provisional Government (As Estonia and Russia are still using the Julian calendar, subsequent period references show an October 23 date).
October Revolution of 1917:
History of Estonia:
- History of Estonia – Wikipedia
- Estonia – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- A BRIEF HISTORY OF ESTONIA – LocalHistories.org
- Estonian History – VisitEnstonia.com
- Estonia – History – Infoplease.com
- Estonia’s History – Chronology – Estonia.eu
- History of Estonia – HowStuffWorks.com
- Estonia – History – Contents – Enstonca.org
- List of rulers of Estonia – Sensagent.com
1916 The Everett massacre takes place in Everett, Washington as political differences lead to a shoot-out between the Industrial Workers of the World organizers and local police.
1916 The Kingdom of Poland is proclaimed by the Act of 5th November of the emperors of Germany and Austria-Hungary.
1914 World War I: France and the British Empire declare war on the Ottoman Empire.
Ottoman Empire and World War I:
- Defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Middle Eastern theater of World War I – Wikipedia
- The Fall of the Ottoman Empire – HistoryGuy.com
- The Ottoman Empire – page 9 – Collapse of the Ottoman Empire1918-1920 – NZHistory.net.nz
History of the Ottoman Empire:
- History of the Ottoman Empire – Wikipedia
- Ottoman Empire – History – Infoplease.com or Ottoman Empire – Infoplease.com
- A Brief History of Ottoman Empire – UMICH.edu
- History – The Ottomans – TheOttomans.org
- Ottoman Empire (1301-1922) – BBC
- THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE – 1600 – 1023 – Turizm.net
- The Ottoman Empire – About.com
1913 King Otto of Bavaria is deposed by his cousin, Prince Regent Ludwig, who assumes the title Ludwig III.
1912 Woodrow Wilson is elected to the presidency of the United States.
1911 After declaring war on the Ottoman Empire on September 29, 1911, Italy annexes Tripoli and Cyrenaica.
1872 Women’s suffrage in the United States: In defiance of the law, suffragist Susan B Anthony votes for the first time, and is later fined $100.
Susan B Anthony:
- Susan B Anthony – History.com
- Susan B Anthony – About.com
- Susan B Anthony On Women’s Right to Vote – HistoryPlace.com
- Woman’s Rights to the Suffrage, by Susan B Anthony (1820-1909) – NationalCenter.org
- SUSAN B ANTHOY: THE WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT – Weebly.com
- “Susan B. Anthony(1820-1906) is perhaps the most widely known suffragist of her generation and has become an icon of the woman’s suffrage movement. Anthony traveled the country to give speeches, circulate petitions, and organize local women’s rights organizations.” – Women’s Rights – NPS.gov
- Susan B Anthony Quotes – About.com
Women’s Suffrage:
- THE FIGHT FOR WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE – History.com
- WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT – HistoryNet.com
- HISTORY OF WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE – Women’s Suffrage – Scholatic.com
- WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE – IPU.org
- Women’s Rights Are Human Rights – UUSC.org
- Timeline of women’s suffrage – Wikipedia
Women’s Suffrage in the United States:
- Women’s suffrage in the United States – Wikipedia
- Women’s Rights Movements in the US – 1848 – 1920 – Infoplease.com
- The Women’s Rights Movements 1840-1920 – HISTORY, ART & ARCHIVES – United States House of Representatives – House.gov
- LESSON MODULE: WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE IN THE UNITED STATES – Rutgers.edu
The Nineteenth Amendment and Women’s Suffrage:
- “The Nineteenth Amendment (Amendment XIX) to the United States Constitution prohibits any United States citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex. It was ratified on August 18, 1920. The Constitution allows the states to determine the qualifications of voters, subject to limitations imposed by later amendments. Until the 1910s, most states disenfranchised women.” – Nineteenth Amendment – Wikipedia
- 19th Amendment to the US Constitution: Women’s Rights to Vote (1920) – OurDocuments.gov
- 19TH AMENDMENT – History.com
- Teaching with Documents: Women’s Suffrage and the 19th Amendment – NATIONAL ARCHIVES – Archives.gov
History of Women’s Suffrage (Movement) in the United States:
- A History of American Suffragist Movement – Saffragist.com
- Women’s Suffrage and World War I – CUNY.edu
- Leaders in the US Suffrage Movement, by Susan B. Anthony – TeacherVision.com
- January 1, 1919: Map: States grant women the right to vote – National Constitution Center
- US Women Suffrage – Teaching with Documents: Women Suffrage and the 19th Amendment – SusanAnthony.net
- Timeline of women’s suffrage in the United States – Wikipedia
- Women’s Suffrage Timeline (1840-1920) – NATIONAL WOMEN’S MUSEUM
1862 American Native People Wars: In Minnesota, 303 Dakota warriors are found guilty of rape and murder of whites and are sentenced to hang. 38 are ultimately executed and the others reprieved.
1854 Crimean War: The Battle of Inkerman.
Battle of Inkerman:
- Battle of Inkerman – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Battle of Inkerman, 5 November 1854 – The Soldier’s Battle – HistoryOfWar.org
- The Battle of Inkerman – BritishBattles.com
- Crimean War: Battle of Inkerman – About.com
- INKERMAN BATTLE (24 October [5 Nov. NS], 1854 – XENOPHONE Group – Xenonphon-mil.org
Crimean War:
- CRIMEAN WAR – History.com
- Crimean War 1953-1856 – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Crimean War 1853-1856 – HistoryOfWar.org
- The Crimean War – History – BBC
- THE HISTORY OF THE CRIMEAN WAR – HistoryWorld.net
- The Cause of the Crimean War – Preceden.com
- How The Crimean War Still Echoes Today – March 13, 2014 – Here&Now – WBUR.org
Timeline of Crimean War:
History of Crimea:
- Crimea – Encyclopedia Britannica
- History of Crimea – Wikipedia
- Crimea – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Crimea – History – Infoplease.com
- A Brief History of Crimea – Voice of America – VOANews.com, and/or Crimea’s Complicated History in Brief – Voice of America – VOANews.com
- Black Sea – Crimea – History – BlackSea-Crimea.com
- 300 Years of Embattled Crimea in 6 Maps – National Geographic – NationalGeographic.com
1831 Nat Turner, American slave leader, is tried, convicted, and sentenced to death in Virginia.
1811 Salvadoran priest José Matías Delgado, rings the bells of La Merced church in San Salvador, calling for insurrection and launching the 1811 Independence Movement.
1768 Treaty of Fort Stanwix, the purpose of which is to adjust the boundary line between Indian lands and white settlements set forth in the Royal Proclamation of 1763 in the Thirteen Colonies.
1757 Seven Years’ War: Frederick the Great defeats the allied armies of France and the Holy Roman Empire at the Battle of Rossbach.
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(Sources and references: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/october30 to november_5; http://www.onthisday.com/events/october/30 to november/5; http://www.brainyhistory.com/days/october_30.html. to november_5.html; and other pertinent web sites and/or documents, mentioned above.)
- The views expressed in the cited or quoted websites and/or documents in this article do not necessarily reflect those of the author of this article. These websites and/or documents are cited or quoted for academic or educational purposes. Neither the author of this article nor the Transcend Media Service (TMS) is responsible for the contents, information, or whatsoever contained in these websites and/or documents.
- One of the primary purposes of this article is to provide the readers with opportunities to think about “peace”, including positive peace and negative peace as well as external/outer peace and internal/inner peace, and more, directly or indirectly, from various angles and/or in the broadest sense, through historical events. It is because this article is prepared specifically for the TMS whose main objective is to address “peace”.
Satoshi Ashikaga, having worked as researcher, development program/project officer, legal protection/humanitarian assistance officer, human rights monitor-negotiator, managing-editor, and more, prefers a peaceful and prudent life, especially that in communion with nature. His previous work experiences, including those in war zones and war-torn zones, remind him of the invaluableness of peace. His interest and/or expertise includes international affairs, international law, jurisprudence, economic and business affairs, project/operations or organizational management, geography, history, the environmental/ecological issues, science and technology, visual/audio documentation of nature and culture, and more. Being a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace, Development and Environment, he is currently compiling This Week in History on TMS.
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 30 Oct 2017.
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