Rome News-Tribune

HIGHLIGHTS IN HISTORY

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Today’s highlight:

On Sept. 15, 1972, a federal grand jury in Washington indicted seven men in connection with the Watergate break-in.

On this date:

1776: British forces occupied New York City during the American Revolution.

1789: The U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the Department of State.

1807: Former Vice President Aaron Burr was acquitted of a misdemeano­r charge two weeks after he was found not guilty of treason.

1935: The Nuremberg Laws deprived German Jews of their citizenshi­p.

1940: During the World War II Battle of Britain, the tide turned as the Royal Air Force inflicted heavy losses upon the Luftwaffe.

1942: During World War II, the aircraft carrier USS Wasp was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine; the U.S. Navy ended up sinking the badly damaged vessel.

1950: During the Korean conflict, United Nations forces landed at Incheon in the south and began their drive toward Seoul.

1961: The United States began Operation Nougat, a series of undergroun­d nuclear explosions in the Nevada Test Site, two weeks after the Soviet Union resumed testing its nuclear weapons.

1963: Four black girls were killed when a bomb went off during Sunday services at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Three Ku Klux Klansmen were eventually convicted for their roles in the blast. 1981: The Senate Judiciary Committee voted unanimousl­y to approve the Supreme Court nomination of Sandra Day O’Connor.

1982: Iran’s former foreign minister, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, was executed after he was convicted of plotting against the government. The first edition of USA Today was published.

2001: President George W. Bush ordered U.S. troops to get ready for war and braced Americans for a long, difficult assault against terrorists to avenge the Sept. 11 attack. Beleaguere­d Afghans streamed out of Kabul, fearing a U.S. military strike against Taliban rulers harboring Osama bin Laden.

Ten years ago: On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 504.48, or 4.42 percent, to 10,917.51 while oil closed below $100 a barrel for the first time in six months amid upheaval in the financial industry as Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection and Merrill Lynch & Co. was sold to Bank of America. Richard Wright,a founding member of Pink Floyd, died at age 65.

Five years ago: Hundreds of people, black and white, many holding hands, filled the Alabama church that was bombed by the Ku Klux Klan 50 years earlier to mark the anniversar­y of the blast that killed four little black girls and became a landmark moment in the civil rights struggle. Jackie Lomax,

69, a singer-songwriter who’d worked with the Beatles and had a long solo career, died in Wirral, England.

One year ago: North Korea fired an intermedia­te-range missile over Japan into the northern Pacific, its longest-ever such flight. A bomb partially detonated on a London subway car, injuring 51 people, including those hurt fleeing the train. NASA’s Cassini spacecraft disintegra­ted in the skies above Saturn after a journey of 20 years; it was the only spacecraft ever to orbit Saturn and sent back images of the planet, its rings and its moons.

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