Rome News-Tribune

HIGHLIGHTS IN HISTORY

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Today’s highlight:

On May 16, 1868, At the U.S. Senate impeachmen­t trial of President Andrew Johnson, 35 out of 54 senators voted to find Johnson guilty of “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” over his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, falling one vote short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict; the trial ended 10 days later after two other articles of impeachmen­t went down to defeat as well..

On this date:

1532: Spanish conquistad­or Francisco Pizarro and a small band of soldiers landed on the northweste­rn coast of Peru.

1703 (Old Style calendar): The Russian city of Saint Petersburg was founded by Peter the Great.

1770: Marie Antoinette, age 14, married the future King Louis XVI of France, who was 15.

1920: Joan of Arc was canonized by Pope Benedict XV.

1939: The federal government began its first food stamp program in Rochester, New York.

1946: The Irving Berlin musical “Annie Get Your Gun,” starring Ethel Merman as Annie Oakley, opened on Broadway.

1948: CBS News correspond­ent George Polk, who had been covering the Greek civil war between communist and nationalis­t forces, was found slain in Salonika Harbor.

1953: Associated Press correspond­ent William N. Oatis was released by communist authoritie­s in Czechoslov­akia, where he had been imprisoned for two years after being forced to confess to espionage while working as the AP’s Prague bureau chief.

1966: China launched the Cultural Revolution, a radical as well as deadly reform movement aimed at purging the country of “counter-revolution­aries.”

1975: Japanese climber Junko Tabei became the first woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.

1988: The U.S. Supreme Court, in California v. Greenwood, ruled that police could search discarded garbage without a search warrant. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop released a report declaring nicotine was addictive in ways similar to heroin and cocaine.

1991: Queen Elizabeth II became the first British monarch to address the United States Congress as she lauded U.S.-British cooperatio­n in the Persian Gulf War.

Ten years ago:

Osama bin Laden said in an audio statement that al-Qaida would continue its holy war against Israel and its allies until the liberation of the Palestinia­ns. Robert Mondavi, the patriarch of California wine country, died in Yountville at age 94.

Five years ago:

President Barack Obama named a temporary chief for the scandal-marred Internal Revenue Service and pressed Congress to approve new security money to prevent another Benghazist­yle terrorist attack.

One year ago:

The White House issued a furious denial after a report that President Donald Trump personally appealed to FBI Director James Comey to abandon the bureau’s investigat­ion into National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

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