Lodi News-Sentinel

TODAY IN WORLD HISTORY

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Today is Wednesday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2017. There are 361 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On Jan. 4, 1967, “The Doors,” the self-titled debut album of the rock group featuring the song “Light My Fire,” was released by Elektra Records.

On this date • In 1717, France, Britain and Holland formed a Triple Alliance against Spain.

• In 1896, Utah was admitted as the 45th state.

• In 1904, the Supreme Court, in Gonzalez v. Williams, ruled that Puerto Ricans were not aliens and could enter the United States freely; however, the court stopped short of declaring them U.S. citizens. (Puerto Ricans received U.S. citizenshi­p in March 1917.)

• In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union address, called for legislatio­n to provide assistance for the jobless, elderly, impoverish­ed children and the handicappe­d.

• In 1943, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin made the cover of TIME as the magazine’s 1942 “Man of the Year.”

• In 1951, during the Korean War, North Korean and Communist Chinese forces recaptured the city of Seoul.

• In 1960, author and philosophe­r Albert Camus died in an automobile accident in Villeblevi­n, France, at age 46.

• In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson delivered his State of the Union address in which he outlined the goals of his “Great Society.”

• In 1974, President Richard Nixon refused to hand over tape recordings and documents subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee.

• In 1987, 16 people were killed when an Amtrak train bound from Washington, D.C., to Boston collided with Conrail locomotive­s that had crossed into its path from a side track in Chase, Maryland.

• In 1990, Charles Stuart, who claimed that he’d been wounded and his pregnant wife fatally shot by a robber, leapt to his death off a Massachuse­tts bridge after he himself came under suspicion.

• In 1995, the 104th Congress convened, the first entirely under Republican control since the Eisenhower era.

Ten years ago Nancy Pelosi was elected the first female Speaker of the House as Democrats took control of Congress. Harriet Miers resigned as White House counsel. Vincent Sardi Jr., owner of Sardi’s restaurant, the legendary Broadway watering hole, died in Berlin, Vermont, at age 91.

Five years ago Defying Republican lawmakers, President Barack Obama barreled past the Senate by using a recess appointmen­t to name Richard Cordray the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

One year ago Workers returned to their offices at the San Bernardino, California campus where 14 people were killed the previous month in a terror attack carried out by a county restaurant inspector Sayed Farook and his wife. The Justice Department sued Volkswagen over emissions-cheating software found in nearly 600,000 vehicles sold in the United States.

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