一晚涼o左好多 都差d冷親 ~
朝早彈起睇當年今日 發覺今日都好邪
1917-1963
1963: Kennedy shot dead in Dallas
The president of the United States has been assassinated by a gunman in Dallas, Texas.
1990: Thatcher quits as prime minister
Margaret Thatcher is to stand down as prime minister after her cabinet refuses to back her in a second round of leadership elections.
仲有1989年 黎巴嫩國慶日 總統遇弒
你話邪唔邪
"Restoring order is what we need now" ~ Eduard Shevardnadze
Georgia in political turmoil
Saakashvili hailed a "velvet revolution"
Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze has declared a state of emergency after the opposition seized the parliament building and his presidential offices.
He refused to resign over what he described as an attempted coup.
Crowds led by main opposition leader Mikhail Saakashvili stormed the newly-convened parliament during a speech by the president.
In Pictures: I remember the day when JFK was shot...
Joan Bakewell
On the 40th anniversary of John F Kennedy's death a number of public figures share their memories of the tragedy.
The writer and broadcaster Joan Bakewell says the news of the US president’s death felt like the loss of a hero.
She was at home watching television when it was interrupted by a news flash.
Tony Benn
Tony Benn is a former cabinet minister and icon of the Labour left.
He was at home with his children when he heard that John F Kennedy had been shot.
He remembers the youngsters drawing a picture of the shooting which read "No, no, no."
Betty Boothroyd
As a young woman Baroness Boothroyd had worked for the 'Kennedy for President' campaign in the USA.
The former speaker of the Commons heard the news on her car radio as she was driving from London on the A1 to visit her mother in Yorkshire.
Peter Jay
Peter Jay is a former economics editor of the BBC and was a British ambassador to the United States.
He remembers hearing the news of the president's death as he was on his way home.
He says the assassination took away a great hero.
Paul Gambaccini
Broadcaster and DJ Paul Gambaccini was only 14 at the time of John F Kennedy's death.
He was in the 10th Grade at high school in Connecticut when he heard the news.
He remembers thinking that it was inconceivable that the president of the United States could be shot.
Martin Bell
The distinguished foreign affairs correspondent and "accidental MP" Martin Bell was listening to the radio when he heard the news.
He says the death of the US president overshadowed everything for months.