Rome News-Tribune

HIGHLIGHTS IN HISTORY

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Today’s highlight:

On May 26, 1868, The impeachmen­t trial of President Andrew Johnson ended with his acquittal on the remaining charges.

On this date:

1647: Alse (Alice) Young was hanged in Hartford, Connecticu­t, in the first recorded execution of a “witch” in the American colonies.

1805: Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned king of Italy in Milan.

1897: The Gothic horror novel “Dracula” by Bram Stoker was first published in London.

1918: The Democratic Republic of Georgia declared its independen­ce. Georgia was invaded by the Soviet Union in 1921, And did not reclaim its independen­ce until 1991.

1938: The House Un-American Activities Committee was establishe­d by Congress.

1940: Operation Dynamo, the evacuation of some 338,000 Allied troops from Dunkirk, France, began during World War II.

1954: Explosions rocked the aircraft carrier USS Bennington off Rhode Island, killing 103 sailors. The initial blast was blamed on leaking catapult fluid ignited by the flames of a jet.

1960: Cabot Lodge U.N. Ambassador accused the Henry Soviets during a meeting of the Security Council of hiding a microphone inside a wood carving of the Great Seal of the United States that had been presented to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.

1972: President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in Moscow. The U.S. withdrew from the treaty in 2002.

1978: Resorts Casino Hotel, the first legal U.S. casino outside Nevada, opened in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

1981: 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed onto the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz off Florida.

1998: The U.S. Supreme Court made it far more difficult for police to be sued by people hurt during high-speed chases. The Supreme Court ruled that Ellis Island, historic gateway for millions of immigrants, was mainly in New Jersey, not New York.

Ten years ago: President George W. Bush paid a Memorial Day tribute to America’s fighting men and women who died in battle, saying national leaders must have “the courage and character to follow their lead” in preserving peace and freedom. Chinese officials said they would waive their one-child policy for families with a child who was killed, severely injured or disabled in the country’s devastatin­g earthquake.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama visited tornado-devastated Moore, Oklahoma, consoling people staggered by the loss of life and property and promising that the government will be behind them “every step of the way.” A Nigerian tugboat carrying 12 crew members capsized and sank in about 100 feet of water; a sole survivor (Harrison Odjegba Okene) was miraculous­ly rescued three days later.

One year ago: President Donald Trump, attending a G-7 meeting in Sicily, vowed to crush “evil organizati­ons of terror” following an attack on Coptic Christians that killed at least 28 people near Cairo, Egypt. Two men were stabbed to death aboard a light-rail train in Portland, Oregon; police said the victims were trying to protect two women who were the target of a man’s anti-Muslim rant. (A suspect faces trial.) President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, died in Falls Church, Virginia, at age 89.

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