Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On June 26, 1948, the Berlin Airlift began in earnest after the Soviet Union cut off land and water routes to the isolated western sector of Berlin.

On this date:

1870: The first section of Atlantic City, New Jersey’s Boardwalk, was opened to the public.

1911: John J. Mcdermott became the first American-born golf player to win the U.S. Open, played in Chicago.

1917: The first troops of the American Expedition­ary Force deployed to France during World War I landed in St. Nazaire.

1936: President Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for a second term of office by delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia.

1963: President John F. Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he delivered his famous speech expressing solidarity with the city’s residents, declaring: “Ich bin ein Berliner” (I am a Berliner).

1968: President Lyndon B. Johnson announced his choice of Abe Fortas to succeed the retiring Earl Warren as chief justice of the United States. (However, Fortas later withdrew in the face of stiff Senate opposition.)

1974: The supermarke­t price scanner made its debut in Troy, Ohio, as a 10-pack of Wrigley’s Juicy Fruit chewing gum costing 67 cents and bearing a Uniform Product Code (UPC) was scanned by a Marsh Supermarke­t cashier.

1977: Elvis Presley performed his last concert at Market Square Arena in Indianapol­is.

1993: President Bill Clinton announced the U.S. had launched missiles against Iraqi targets because of “compelling evidence” Iraq had plotted to assassinat­e former President George H.W. Bush.

1996: The Supreme Court ordered the Virginia Military Institute to admit women or forgo state support.

1997: The first Harry Potter novel, “Harry Potter and the Philosophe­r’s Stone” by J.K. Rowling, was published in the United Kingdom. It was later released in the United States under the title “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.”

2013: In deciding its first cases on the issue, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the nation’s legally married gay couples equal federal footing with all other married Americans and also cleared the way for same-sex marriages to resume in California.

Ten years ago: At odds over how to strengthen the global economic recovery, Group of Eight leaders meeting in Canada did find common ground on foreign policy, condemning North Korea for the alleged sinking of a South Korean warship and endorsing a five-year exit timetable for Afghanista­n.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and their wives visited Charleston, South Carolina, where nine black churchgoer­s had been shot to death; Obama eulogized one of the victims, the Rev.

Clementa Pinckney, who was the pastor of the church and also a state senator.

One year ago: Meeting for the first time on the debate stage in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, ten Democrats railed against an economy and an administra­tion that they argued exist only for the rich, as they embraced income inequality as a defining theme in their fight to deny Donald Trump a second term in office. Ten other Democrats would meet in a separate debate a day later.

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