Lodi News-Sentinel

TODAY IN WORLD HISTORY

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Today is Tuesday, May 23, the 143rd day of 2017. There are 222 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On May 23, 1967, Egypt closed the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping, an action which helped precipitat­e war between Israel and its Arab neighbors the following month.

On this date • In 1430, Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundian­s, who sold her to the English.

• In 1533, the marriage of England’s King Henry VIII to Catherine of Aragon was declared null and void by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer.

• In 1788, South Carolina became the eighth state to ratify the United States Constituti­on.

• In 1814, a third version of Beethoven’s only opera, “Fidelio,” had its world premiere in Vienna.

• In 1915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary during World War I.

• In 1934, bank robbers Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker were shot to death in a police ambush in Bienville Parish, Louisiana.

• In 1937, industrial­ist and philanthro­pist John D. Rockefelle­r, founder of the Standard Oil Co. and the Rockefelle­r Foundation, died in Ormond Beach, Fla., at age 97.

• In 1939, the Navy submarine USS Squalus sank during a test dive off the New England coast. Thirty-two crew members and one civilian were rescued, but 26 others died; the sub was salvaged and re-commission­ed the USS Sailfish.

• In 1945, Nazi official Heinrich Himmler committed suicide by biting into a cyanide capsule while in British custody in Luneburg, Germany.

• In 1977, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear the appeals of former Nixon White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman and former Attorney General John N. Mitchell in connection with their Watergate conviction­s. Moluccan extremists seized a train and a primary school in the Netherland­s; the hostage drama ended June 11 as Dutch marines stormed the train, resulting in the deaths of six out of nine hijackers and two hostages, while the school siege ended peacefully.

• In 1984, Surgeon General C. Everett Koop issued a report saying there was “very solid” evidence linking cigarette smoke to lung disease in non-smokers. “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,” starring Harrison Ford, was released by Paramount Pictures.

• In 1992, top anti-Mafia prosecutor Giovanni Falcone was killed in a remote-controlled highway bombing outside Palermo, Sicily, along with his wife and three police escorts. (Salvatore “Toto” Riina, the Mafia’s “boss of bosses,” was arrested in Jan. 1993 and was later convicted with others of plotting the assassinat­ions of Falcone and another leading anti-Mafia prosecutor, Paolo Borsellino.)

Ten years ago President George W. Bush, speaking at the U.S. Coast Guard commenceme­nt, portrayed the Iraq war as a battle between the U.S. and al-Qaida and said Osama bin Laden was setting up a terrorist cell in Iraq to strike targets in America. Iraqi police dragged from the Euphrates River a body identified as that of Pfc. Joseph Anzack Jr., who had disappeare­d during a May 12 ambush claimed by al-Qaida. Jordin Sparks was crowned the new “American Idol” on the Fox reality show.

Five years ago Egypt held the Arab world’s first competitiv­e presidenti­al vote (Islamist Mohammed Morsi was ultimately named the winner following a runoff). A Pakistani doctor who helped the CIA hunt down Osama bin Laden was convicted of conspiring against the state and was sentenced to 33 years in prison; U.S. officials had urged Pakistan to release Dr. Shakil Afridi. (The sentence was later overturned; Afridi faces a retrial.) Phillip Phillips, a bluesy Georgia guitar man, was crowned the new “American Idol” after defeating teenager Jessica Sanchez.

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