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November 18 is the 322nd day of the year (323rd in leap years), with 43 remaining.
Events
- 1307 (Legendary) - William Tell
shoots an apple off his son's head.
- 1421 - A seawall at the Zuider Zee
dike breaks, flooding 72 villages and killing about 10,000 people in the Netherlands.
- 1477 - William Caxton
produces "Dictes or Sayengis of the Philosophres", the first English book printed on
a printing press.
- 1626 - St. Peter's
Basilica is consecrated
- 1865 - Mark Twain's story
The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County is published in the
New York
Saturday Press.
- 1883 - American and Canadian railroads institute four standard
continental time zones, ending the confusion of thousands of local times.
- 1903 - The Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty is signed by the United States and Panama, giving the Americans exclusive rights
over the Panama Canal Zone.
- 1905 - Prince Carl of Denmark becomes King
Haakon VII of Norway.
- 1909 - Two United States
warships are sent to Nicaragua after 500 revolutionaries (including two
Americans) are executed by order of dictator Jose Santos
Zelaya.
- 1916 - World War I: First Battle of the Somme ends - In France, British Expeditionary Force commander Douglas Haig calls off the battle which started on July 1,
1916.
- 1918 - Latvia declares its independence from
Russia.
- 1926 - George Bernard
Shaw refuses to accept the money for his Nobel Prize, saying, "I can
forgive Alfred Nobel for inventing dynamite, but only a fiend in human form could have invented the Nobel Prize."
- 1928 - Release of the animated short Steamboat Willie, the first fully synchronized sound cartoon, directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks, featuring the second
appearances of Cartoon stars Mickey and Minnie Mouse.
- 1929 - 1929 Grand Banks earthquake: Off the south coast of Newfoundland in the Atlantic Ocean, a Richter magnitude 7.2 submarine earthquake centered on Grand Banks, breaks 12 submarine
transatlantic telegraph cables and
triggers a tsunami that destroys many south coast communities in the Burin Peninsula area.
- 1938 - Trade union members elect
John L. Lewis as the first president of the Congress of Industrial
Organizations.
- 1940 - World War II: German leader Adolf Hitler and Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano
meet to discuss Benito Mussolini's disastrous invasion of Greece.
- 1943 - World War II: 440 Royal
Air Force planes bomb Berlin causing only light damage and killing 131. The RAF
lost nine aircraft and 53 aviators.
- 1959 - William Wyler's film
Ben-Hur premieres at Loew's Theater in New York City.
- 1970 - US President Richard
Nixon asks the United States Congress for US$155
million in supplemental aid for the Cambodian government (US$85 million was for
military assistance in order to help prevent the overthrow of the government of Premier Lon Nol by the Khmer Rouge and North Vietnam).
- 1978 - Jonestown
mass suicide: In Jonestown, Guyana,
Jim Jones leads his People's Temple in a mass murder-suicide; 913 die, including 276 children.
- 1987 - Iran-Contra
scandal: The United States Congress issues its
final report on the Iran-Contra affair, stating
that US President Ronald Reagan bore "ultimate responsibility" for
wrongdoing by his aides and his administration exhibited "secrecy, deception, and disdain for the law."
- 1987 - Kings Cross fire: In London, 31 people die in a fire at the city's busiest underground station at King's Cross.
- 1988 - War on Drugs: US President
Ronald Reagan signs a bill into law providing the death penalty for murderous drug traffickers.
- 1991 - Shiite Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon set Anglican Church
envoys Terry Waite and Thomas Sutherland free.
- 1993 - In South Africa, 21
political parties approve a new constitution.
- 1996 - World-renowned bird expert Tony Silva is sentenced to seven years in
prison without parole for leading an illegal parrot smuggling ring.
- 1998 - Alice McDermott wins the National Book
Award with her novel Charming Billy.
- 1999 - In College Station, Texas, 12 are killed and 28 injured at Texas A&M University when a huge bonfire under construction collapses.
- 1999 - In Jasper, Texas, 24-year old Shawn Allen Berry is sentenced
to life in prison, becoming the third person convicted in the racially-motivated
dragging death of James Byrd,
Jr.
- 2002 - Iraq
disarmament crisis: United Nations weapons inspectors led by
Hans Blix arrive in Iraq.
- 2002 - New Jersey schools ban dodgeball and tag.
Births
- 1757 - William Blake, poet (d.
1827)
- 1786 - Carl Maria von
Weber, composer (d. 1826)
- 1787 - Louis-Jacques Daguerre, inventor, photographer
(d. 1851)
- 1836 - Sir William S.
Gilbert, dramatist (d. 1911)
- 1836 - Cesare Lombroso, professor of psychiatry, founder of criminology (d. 1909)
- 1856 - Nikolai Nikolaevich Romanov, Grand Duke of Russia (d. 1929)
- 1860 - Ignacy
Paderewski, pianist, composer (d. 1941)
- 1861 - Dorothea Dix, journalist,
activist (d. 1951)
- 1874 - Clarence Day, American author (d. 1935)
- 1882 - Jacques Maritain,
French philosopher (d. 1973)
- 1883 - Carl Vinson, United States Congressman (d. 1981)
- 1891 - Gio Ponti, Italian architect (d. 1979)
- 1897 - Patrick Blackett, English physicist, 1948 Nobel Prize in Physics (d. 1974)
- 1898 - Joris Ivens, filmmaker (d.
1989)
- 1899 - Eugene Ormandy,
conductor (d. 1985)
- 1901 - George Gallup,
statistician, opinion pollster (d. 1984)
- 1906 - Klaus Mann, publicist,
dramatist and narrator (d. 1949)
- 1906 - George Wald, American chemist, 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine (d. 1997)
- 1908 - Imogene Coca, actress,
comedienne (d. 2001)
- 1909 - Johnny Mercer, lyricist (d. 1976)
- 1916 - Amelita
Galli-Curci, opera soprano (d. 1963)
- 1923 - Alan Shepard, astronaut
(d. 1998)
- 1935 - Alain Barrière
- 1935 - Rudolf Bahro, dissident
(d. 1997)
- 1936 - Hank Ballard, musician (d.
2003)
- 1939 - Brenda Vaccaro, actress
- 1939 - Margaret Atwood,
writer
- 1941 - Gary Bettenhausen, automobile racer
- 1941 - David Hemmings,
British actor (d. 2003)
- 1942 - Linda Evans, actress
- 1944 - Susan Sullivan, actress
- 1946 - Alan Dean Foster,
author
- 1948 - Andrea Marcovicci, singer, actress
- 1948 - Jack Tatum, American football star
- 1950 - Jameson Parker, cator
- 1956 - Warren Moon, Canadian football and American football star
- 1958 - Laura Miller, mayor of
Dallas, Texas
- 1960 - Kim Wilde, singer
- 1963 - Dante Bichette,
baseball player
- 1968 - Owen Wilson, actor
Deaths
- 1814 - William Jessop,
canal and railway engineer
- 1886 - Chester A.
Arthur, 21st President of the United
States
- 1941 - Chris Watson, third
Prime Minister of Australia
- 1962 - Niels Bohr, physicist
- 1965 - Henry A. Wallace,
Vice President of the United
States
- 1969 - Joseph
P. Kennedy, Sr., patriarch of the Kennedy family
- 1976 - Man Ray, artist
- 1978 - Jim Jones, cult leader (suicide)
- 1982 - Duk Koo Kim, boxer
- 1987 - Jacques Anquetil,
cyclist (cancer)
- 1994 - Cab Calloway, band
leader
- 1999 - Paul Bowles, novelist
- 2002 - James Coburn, actor
Holidays and observances
In Catholicism, the feast of St Odo of Cluny, St Romanus of Antioch,
St Mawes, and St Rose
Philippine Duchesne
November 17 - November
19 - October 18 - December
18 -- listing of all days
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