|
| Moldova.org / Social |
English |
Romanian |
Russian
|
![]() |
|
Horoscope
Via mail - Daily horoscope ![]() Scorpio 23 October - 21 November Your ego is feeling a little bent out of shape today because you haven't been getting the praise you deserve -- but if you're patient, you'll get what's coming to you. Just try to smile and relax. Weather
Other location ...
|
The AlmanacThe moon is waxing. The morning stars are Mars, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus. The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn. Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include financier Cornelius Vanderbilt in 1794; social reformer Amelia Bloomer, for whom the undergarment was named, in 1818; poet Julia Ward Howe, who wrote the lyrics for In 1703, Czar Peter the Great founded St. Petersburg as the new capital of Russia. In 1930, Richard Gurley Drew received a patent for his adhesive tape, which was later manufactured by 3M as Scotch tape. In 1937, San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge was opened. An estimated 200,000 people crossed it the first day. In 1941, the British Navy sank the German battleship Bismarck 400 miles west of the French port of Brest. In 1968, the U.S. nuclear submarine Scorpion disappeared in the Atlantic with 99 men aboard. In 1988, the U.S. Senate voted 98-5 in favor of the U.S.-Soviet treaty to abolish intermediate-range nuclear missiles. In 1990, Cesar Gaviria, 34, was elected president of Colombia after a campaign in which three candidates were killed. He vowed to make no deals with the cocaine cartels. In 1992, hours after a Russian-brokered cease-fire went into effect in Bosnia, Serb guerrillas launched a surprise mortar bombardment on Sarajevo -- killing at least 20 people and injuring up to 160 more waiting in lines to buy bread. In 1993, U.S. sailor Terry Helvey was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to murder in the October 1992 death of gay shipmate Allen Schindler in Sasebo, Japan. Also in 1993, five people were killed when a car bomb exploded near an art gallery in Florence, Italy. A few paintings by relatively minor artists were destroyed but masterpieces by Botticelli and Michelangelo survived. In 1996, a cease-fire was signed in the Russian republic of Chechnya. In 1997, Russian President Boris Yeltsin and the leaders of NATO nations signed an agreement clearing the way for NATO expansion to the east. In 1999, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and four other Serbian leaders were indicted on murder and other war crimes. Milosevic went on trial in 2002 for war crimes but he died in 2006 before the trial ended. In 2003, a top U.N. official said the Also in 2003, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands swore in a new center-right government in The Hague after 125 days of coalition-forming talks. Christian Democrat Jan-Peter Balkenende remained prime minister. In 2004, a federal appeals court in San Francisco upheld Oregon's law authorizing doctors to help their terminally ill patients commit suicide. Also in 2004, more than 1 pound of explosives was found in Bratislava, the capital of the Slovak Republic, near a building where a NATO meeting was slated a few days later. In 2005, the U.N. conference on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty ended with failure to reach any substantive agreement on policy. Also in 2005, a suicide bomb killed 19 people at a crowded Muslim shrine in Islamabad, Pakistan, on the last day of a Shiite-Sunni religious festival. In 2006, a major earthquake struck the Indonesian island of Java, killing a reported 5,000 people and leaving an estimated 200,000 homeless. Publication date: 27 May 2007 Source: UPI-1-20070527-03280100-almanac.xml Archive
Bookmark
this news
ADsLatest news
Students, prisoners face off in chess
The seventh chess tournament between Princeton University and the New Jersey State Prison saw a surprising number of prisoner victories, participants said.The Inmates and Ivy chess tournament brought six Princeton students to the prison in Trenton to test their chess skills against a collection of convicted felons and thieves, The (Newark) New Jersey Star-Ledger reported Thursday.The Princeton students, who played several simultaneous games against groups of prisoners, said the event usually end more... 20.11.2008 - Airline nearly foils stem cell operation 20.11.2008 - School denies underwear checks 20.11.2008 - Alleged scam artist posed as Army sergeant 20.11.2008 - Grieving parrot prescribed Prozac 20.11.2008 - Bush name unlikely to dot U.S. landscape 20.11.2008 - Bush name unlikely to dot U.S. landscape 20.11.2008 - Men plead not guilty to digging up grave 20.11.2008 - Released prisoner refused to leave 20.11.2008 - Cell phone stops heart-bound bullet 20.11.2008 - Dog drove van through coffee shop window 20.11.2008 - Man, 112, rejoins Boy Scouts after century 20.11.2008 - Mayor clears way for festival food 20.11.2008 - Released prisoner refused to leave 20.11.2008 - Police search missed suspects, cars The most read news
- Your Daily Horoscope - World's tallest man becomes tallest dad - Man, 112, rejoins Boy Scouts after century - Polish Film Festival opens in Chisinau November 21 - Suit seeks return of ex's engagement ring - "Arrivederci" to be premiered in Chisinau - Student spends day glued to billboard - Fake poo piled at Swiss rail station - No fine for chicken-keeping jeweler - Jockstrip: The world as we know it. |
Social
What is New?
|
| © 1997-2008 moldova.org - All rights reserved. moldova.org is a registered mark by Moldova Foundation. Privacy Policy. Please read the terms of use when you can benefit from our services. Design and programming by Adpixel |