Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Also on this date

- Ten years ago: One year ago:

at the start of the Civil War, Fort Sumter in South Carolina fell to Confederat­e forces.

In 1861,

In 1943,

President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C. on the 200th anniversar­y of the third American president’s birth.

In 1964,

Sidney Poitier became the first Black performer in a leading role to win an Academy Award for his performanc­e in “Lilies of the Field.”

In 1992,

the Great Chicago Flood took place as the city’s century-old tunnel system and adjacent basements filled with water from the Chicago River.

In 1997,

Tiger Woods became the youngest person to win the Masters Tournament and the first player of partly African heritage to claim a major golf title.

In 1999,

right-to-die advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian was sentenced in Pontiac, Michigan, to 10 to 25 years in prison for second-degree murder in the lethal injection of a Lou Gehrig’s disease patient. (Kevorkian ended up serving eight years.)

In 2005,

Eric Rudolph pleaded guilty to carrying out the deadly bombing at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and three other attacks in back-to-back court appearance­s in Birmingham, Alabama, and Atlanta.

In 2015,

a federal judge in Washington sentenced former Blackwater security guard Nicholas Slatten to life in prison and three others to 30-year terms for their roles in a 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square that killed 14 Iraqi civilians and wounded 17 others.

A federal jury in San Francisco convicted baseball slugger Barry Bonds of a single charge of obstructio­n of justice but failed to reach a verdict on the three counts at the heart of allegation­s that he’d knowingly used steroids and human growth hormone and lied to a grand jury about it. (Bonds’ conviction for obstructio­n was ultimately overturned.)

President Donald Trump claimed “total” authority to decide how and when to reopen the economy after weeks of tough social distancing guidelines; governors from both parties quickly pointed out that they had primary responsibi­lity for public safety in their states.

Associated Press

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