Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On Oct. 22, 1962, in a nationally broadcast address, President John F. Kennedy revealed the presence of Soviet-built missile bases under constructi­on in Cuba and announced a quarantine of all offensive military equipment being shipped to the Communist island nation.

On this date:

1797: French balloonist Andre-jacques Garnerin made the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of about 3,000 feet over Paris.

1811: Composer and piano virtuoso Franz Liszt was born in the Hungarian town of Raiding in presentday Austria.

1934: Bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy”

Floyd was shot to death by federal agents and local police at a farm near East Liverpool, Ohio.

1979: The U.S. government allowed the deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment — a decision that precipitat­ed the Iran hostage crisis.

1981: The Profession­al Air Traffic Controller­s Organizati­on was decertifie­d by the federal government for its strike the previous August.

1986: President Ronald Reagan signed into law sweeping tax-overhaul legislatio­n.

1991: The European Community and the European Free Trade Associatio­n concluded a landmark accord to create a free trade zone of 19 nations by 1993.

1995: The largest gathering of world leaders in history marked the 50th anniversar­y of the United Nations.

2001: A second Washington, D.C., postal worker, Joseph P. Curseen, died of inhalation anthrax.

2002: Bus driver Conrad Johnson was shot to death in Aspen Hill, Md., in the final attack carried out by the “Beltway Snipers.”

2004: In a wrenching videotaped statement, aid worker Margaret Hassan, kidnapped in Baghdad, begged the British government to help save her by withdrawin­g its troops from Iraq, saying these “might be my last hours.” Hassan was apparently killed by her captors a month later.

Ten years ago: Mortars fired by Islamic militants slammed into Somalia’s airport as President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed boarded a plane, sparking battles that killed at least 24 people; the president was unhurt.

Five years ago: A gunman shot and killed a soldier standing guard at a war memorial in Ottawa, then stormed the Canadian Parliament before he was shot and killed by the usually ceremonial sergeant-at-arms.

One year ago: President Donald Trump declared that the U.S. would start cutting aid to three Central American countries he accused of failing to stop thousands of migrants heading for the U.S. border.

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