Antelope Valley Press

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

Today is Wednesday, April 6, the 96th day of 2022. There are 269 days left in the year.

ON THIS DATE IN HISTORY

On April 6, 1896, the first modern Olympic games formally opened in Athens, Greece.

1864 — Louisiana opened a convention in New Orleans to draft a new state constituti­on, one that called for the abolition of slavery.

1909 — American explorers Robert E. Peary and Matthew A. Henson and four Inuits became the first men to reach the North Pole.

1917 — The United States entered World War I as the House joined the Senate in approving a declaratio­n of war against Germany that was then signed by President Woodrow Wilson.

1945 — During World War II, the Japanese warship Yamato and nine other vessels sailed on a suicide mission to attack the US fleet off Okinawa; the fleet was intercepte­d the next day.

1954 — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis., responding to CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow’s broadside against him on “See It Now,” said in remarks filmed for the program that Murrow had, in the past, “engaged in propaganda for Communist causes.”

1968 — Forty-one people were killed by two consecutiv­e natural gas explosions at a sporting goods store in downtown Richmond, Indiana.

1974 — Swedish pop group Abba won the Eurovision Song Contest held in Brighton, England, with a performanc­e of the song “Waterloo.”

2008 — Democratic presidenti­al candidate Barack Obama, speaking at a private fundraiser in San Francisco, spoke of voters in Pennsylvan­ia’s Rust Belt communitie­s who “cling to guns or religion” because of bitterness about their economic lot; Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton seized on the comment, calling it “elitist.”

2014 — Legendary Hollywood actor Mickey Rooney, 93, died in North Hollywood.

2020 — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was transferre­d to the intensive care unit of a London hospital where he was being treated for COVID-19, after his condition deteriorat­ed.

Ten years ago — Five Black people were shot, three fatally, in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Jake England and Alvin Watts, who admitted targeting the victims because of race, pleaded guilty to murder, and were sentenced to life in prison without parole. A Navy F18 Hornet jet whose pilots were forced to eject crashed in a spectacula­r fireball into a big apartment complex in Virginia Beach, Virginia; miraculous­ly, no one died. Fang Lizhi , 76, who was one of China’s best-known dissidents, died in Tucson, Arizona. Painter Thomas Kinkade, 54, died in Monte Sereno, Calif.

Five years ago — President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping opened a two-day summit at Trump’s Florida beach resort. Don Rickles, the big-mouthed, bald-headed “Mr. Warmth” whose verbal assaults endeared him to audiences and peers and made him the acknowledg­ed grandmaste­r of insult comedy, died at his Beverly Hills home at age 90.

One year ago — Moving up his deadline by about two weeks, President Joe Biden said every adult in the US would be eligible for a Coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n by April 19. Major League Baseball announced that the All-Star Game would be played at Coors Field in Denver; the game had been pulled from Atlanta because of objections to changes in Georgia’s voting laws.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Nobel Prize-winning scientist James D. Watson is 94. Actor Billy Dee Williams is 85. Actor Roy Thinnes is 84. Actor John Ratzenberg­er is 75. Baseball Hall of Famer Bert Blyleven is 71. Actor Marilu Henner is 70. Actor Michael Rooker is 67. Rock musician Warren Haynes is 62. Actor Ari Meyers is 53. Actor Paul Rudd is 53. Actor Zach Braff is 47. Actor Joel Garland is 47. Actor Candace Cameron Bure is 46. Actor Teddy Sears is 45. Jazz and R&B musician Robert Glasper is 44. Actor Eliza Coupe is 41. Folk singer-musician Kenneth Pattengale (Milk Carton Kids) is 40. Actor Bret Harrison is 40. Actor Charlie McDermott is 32.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States