Dayton Daily News

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today’s Highlight:

On March 22, 1894, hockey’s first Stanley Cup championsh­ip game was played; home team Montreal defeated Ottawa, 3-1.

On this date:

In 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act to raise money from the American colonies, which fiercely resisted the tax. (The Stamp Act was repealed a year later.)

In 1882, President Ches- ter Alan Arthur signed a measure outlawing polygamy.

In 1941, the Grand Coulee hydroelect­ric dam in Washington state officially went into operation.

In 1945, the Arab League was formed with the adop- tion of a charter in Cairo, Egypt.

In 1963, The Beatles’ debut album, “Please Please Me,” was released in the United Kingdom by Parlophone.

In 1978, Karl Wallenda, the 73-year-old patriarch of “The Flying Wallendas” high-wire act, fell to his death while attempting to walk a cable strung between two hotel towers in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

In 1988, both houses of Congress overrode President Ronald Reagan’s veto of the Civil Rights Restoratio­n Act.

In 1993, Intel Corp. unveiled the original Pen- tium computer chip.

In 1997, Tara Lipinski, at age 14 years and 10 months, became the youngest ladies’ world figure skating champion in Lausanne, Switzer- land.

In 2010, Google Inc. stopped censoring the internet for China by shifting its search engine off the mainland to Hong Kong.

In 2019, special counsel Robert Mueller closed his Russia investigat­ion with no new charges, delivering his final report to Justice Department officials. Former President Jimmy Carter became the longest-living chief executive in American history; at 94 years and 172 days, he exceeded the lifespan of the late former President George H.W. Bush.

In 2020, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered all nonessenti­al businesses in the state to close and nonessenti­al workers to stay home. Kentucky Republican Rand Paul became the first member of the U.S. Senate to report testing positive for the coronaviru­s; his announceme­nt led Utah senators Mike Lee and Mitt Romney to place themselves in quarantine.

Ten years ago: Anxious to keep Syria’s civil war from spiraling into even worse problems, President Barack Obama said during a visit to Jordan that he worried about the country becoming a haven for extremists when — not if — President Bashar Assad was ousted from power.

Five years ago: Trump set in motion tariffs on as much as $60 billion in Chinese imports, and China threatened retaliatio­n; the heightenin­g trade tensions brought a selloff on Wall Street, where the Dow industrial­s plunged more than 700 points.

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