August 4, 2004
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See also August 3, 2004 - August 2004 - August 5, 2004
- The National Institutes of Health decides not to override drug patents to allow generic production of anti-AIDS drug Norvir in the United States, despite claims of price gouging by patients' groups and some members of Congress. (ABC)
- U.S. aviation regulators threaten to cap commercial flights at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport to reduce delays that are affecting the nation's aviation system. (Reuters)
- Saddam Hussein wants to be transferred to a Swedish jail to await his trial. (Khaleej Times)
- The death toll from monsoon flooding in India exceeds 1,000. (MSNBC)
- NASA dedicates its new supercomputer 'KC' to the memory of India-born astronaut Kalpana Chawla, one of the seven crew members who died when the space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated in mid-air in 2003. (NDTV)
- A bomb explodes near an electrical substation outside Athens, 9 days prior to the beginning of the Olympic Games. (Melbourne Herald Sun)
- The FBI warns that Mumbai, Delhi, or Bangalore could be the target of terrorist attacks. (Times Of India)
- A ceremony is held at London's Cenotaph to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the United Kingdom's entry into the First World War. Four of the 23 surviving British veterans of the war, aged between 103 and 108, are well enough to attend. (BBC)
- Mary Kay Letourneau is released from a Washington prison after serving a sentence of over seven years for statutory rape. The former elementary school teacher became notorious for her sexual involvement with one of her male students, who was 12 years old when the illicit relationship began. She bore two children by the boy, who is now 21 years old. (FOX News)