Lodi News-Sentinel

TODAY IN WORLD HISTORY

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Today is Thursday, March 9, the 68th day of 2017. There are 297 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History

On March 9, 1841, the U.S. Supreme Court, in United States v. The Amistad, ruled in favor of a group of Africans captured by U.S. authoritie­s after they had seized control of a Spanish schooner, La Amistad, that was transporti­ng them to a life of slavery in Cuba; the justices ruled, 71, that the Africans had been illegally enslaved, and should be set free.

On this date

• In 1796, the future emperor of the French, Napoleon Bonaparte, married Josephine de Beauharnai­s (boh-ahr-NAY’). (The couple later divorced.)

In 1862, during the Civil War, the ironclads USS Monitor and CSS Virginia (formerly USS Merrimac) clashed for five hours to a draw at Hampton Roads, Virginia.

• In 1907, Indiana’s General Assembly passed America’s first involuntar­y sterilizat­ion law, one aimed at “confirmed criminals, idiots, imbeciles, and rapists” in state custody. (This law was struck down in 1921 by the Indiana Supreme Court, but a new law was passed in 1927 that was repealed in 1974.)

• In 1916, more than 400 Mexican raiders led by Pancho Villa attacked Columbus, New Mexico, killing 18 Americans. During the First World War, Germany declared war on Portugal.

• In 1933, Congress, called into special session by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, began its “hundred days” of enacting New Deal legislatio­n.

• In 1945, during World War II, U.S. B29 bombers began launching incendiary bomb attacks against Tokyo, resulting in an estimated 100,000 deaths.

• In 1954, CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow critically reviewed Wisconsin Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy’s anti-communism campaign on “See It Now.”

• In 1964, the U.S. Supreme Court, in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, raised the standard for public officials to prove they’d been libeled in their official capacity by news organizati­ons.

• In 1977, about a dozen armed Hanafi Muslims invaded three buildings in Washington, D.C., killing one person and taking more than 130 hostages. (The siege ended two days later.)

• In 1987, Chrysler Corp. announced it had agreed to buy the financiall­y ailing American Motors Corp.

• In 1992, former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (men-AH’-kem BAY’-gihn) died in Tel Aviv at age 78.

• In 1997, gangsta rapper The Notorious B.I.G. (Christophe­r Wallace) was killed in a stillunsol­ved drive-by shooting in Los Angeles; he was 24. French journalist Jean-Dominique Bauby (zhahn doh-mee-NEEK’ baw-BEE’), 44, died at a hospital outside Paris just after publicatio­n of his book “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” which he’d dictated by blinking his left eyelid after being almost totally paralyzed by a stroke.

Ten years ago

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and FBI Director Robert S. Mueller (MUHL’-ur) acknowledg­ed the FBI had improperly used the USA Patriot Act to secretly pry out personal informatio­n about Americans; they apologized and vowed to prevent further illegal intrusions. Former FBI agent Robert Levinson went missing after checking out of a hotel on Iran’s Kish (kihsh) Island a day before his 59th birthday; his fate remains unknown. Brad Delp, lead singer for the band Boston, was found dead in his southern New Hampshire home; he was 55.

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