Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On August 5, 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in her Los Angeles home; her death was ruled a probable suicide from “acute barbiturat­e poisoning.”

On this date:

1864: During the Civil War, Union Adm. David G. Farragut led his fleet to victory in the Battle of Mobile Bay, Alabama.

1933: President Franklin D. Roosevelt establishe­d the National Labor Board, which was later replaced with the National Labor Relations Board.

1936: Jesse Owens of the United States won the 200-meter dash at the Berlin Olympics, collecting the third of his four gold medals.

1953: Operation Big Switch began as remaining prisoners taken during the Korean War were exchanged at Panmunjom.

1962: South African anti-apartheid activist Nelson

Mandela was arrested on charges of leaving the country without a passport and inciting workers to strike; it was the beginning of 27 years of imprisonme­nt.

1964: U.S. Navy pilot Everett Alvarez Jr. became the first American flier to be shot down and captured by North Vietnam; he was held prisoner until February 1973.

1967: The U.S. space probe Mariner 7 flew by Mars, sending back photograph­s and scientific data.

1974: The White House released transcript­s of subpoenaed tape recordings showing that President Richard Nixon and his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, had discussed a plan in June 1972 to use the CIA to thwart the FBI’S Watergate investigat­ion; revelation of the tape sparked Nixon’s resignatio­n.

1991: Democratic congressio­nal leaders formally launched an investigat­ion into whether the 1980 Reagan-bush campaign had secretly conspired with Iran to delay release of American hostages until after the presidenti­al election, thereby preventing an “October surprise” that supposedly would have benefited President Jimmy Carter. A task force later concluded there was “no credible evidence” of such a deal.

2002: The coral-encrusted gun turret of the Civil War ironclad USS Monitor was raised from the floor of the Atlantic, nearly 140 years after the historic warship sank during a storm.

Ten years ago: Journalist­s Laura Ling and Euna Lee arrived in Burbank, California, for a tearful reunion with their families after a flight from North Korea, where they’d been held for 4 1/2 months until former President Bill Clinton helped secure their release.

Five years ago: U.S. Maj. Gen. Harold Greene was shot to death near Kabul in one of the bloodiest insider attacks in the long Afghanista­n war; the gunman, dressed as an Afghan soldier, turned on allied troops, wounding about 15, including a German general and two Afghan generals.

One year ago: President Donald Trump tweeted that a 2016 meeting at Trump Tower involving his son and a lawyer with Kremlin connection­s had been aimed at collecting informatio­n about his opponent, an apparent change from an earlier assertion that the meeting “primarily” dealt with adoption of Russian children.

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