this is the week that was
4 March:
1908: The New York Board of Education bans the use of the whip in schools.
1919: Oxford University drops compulsory Greek for entrance.
1924: The song "Happy Birthday to You" is first published.
1944: Following tests on 3,341 children in Bath, it is claimed that those conceived in winter are more intelligent.
5 March:
1946: Winston Churchill coins the term "iron curtain" in a speech in Missouri.
1986: Villagers in Malaysia beat to death a dog in the belief that it is one of a gang of thieves who transform themselves into animals.
6 March:
1899: Aspirin is patented by Felix Hoffman.
1902: The British army permits soldiers to wear glasses both on and off duty.
1924: Pope Pius XI is the first to have a wireless installed in the Vatican.
1930: Frozen foods, developed by Clarence Birdseye, first go on sale in Massachusetts.
1946: The Food Ministry issues a recipe for squirrel pie.
7 March:
1900: Fire destroys the roof of Buckingham Palace.
1912: Henri Seimet makes the first non-stop flight from Paris to London.
1969: The Victoria Line opens on the London underground.
8 March:
1910: Elise Deroche and JTC Moore Brabazon (later Baroness de Laroche and Lord Brabazon of Tara) are the first to obtain pilot's licences.
1927: A 5,000-year-old manicure set is found in Iran.
9 March:
1562: Kissing in public is banned in Naples, on penalty of death.
1796: Napoleon marries Josephine.
1831: King Louis Philippe founds the French Foreign Legion.
1961: The Russians launch the first dog in space. It happens on the 27th birthday of Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space.
1988: Death of Richard C Adams, inventor of the paint roller.
10 March:
1886: The first Cruft's Dog Show opens in London.
1910: China abolishes slavery.
1974: A Japanese soldier is discovered on Lubang Island in the Philippines, who believed that World War Two was still being fought.
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