South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

TODAY IN HISTORY

- Associated Press

Allied air forces raided Rome during World War II, the same day Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini met in Feltre in northern Italy.

the Democratic National Convention convened in Chicago with the nomination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt considered a certainty.

TWA became the first airline to begin showing regularly scheduled in-flight movies as it presented “By Love Possessed” to first-class passengers on a flight from New York to Los Angeles.

Apollo 11 and its astronauts, Neil Armstrong, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Michael Collins, went into orbit around the moon.

the Moscow Summer Olympics began, minus dozens of nations that were boycotting the games because of the Soviet military interventi­on in Afghanista­n.

Christa McAuliffe of New Hampshire was chosen to be the first schoolteac­her to ride aboard the space shuttle. (McAuliffe and six other crew members died when the Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff in January 1986.)

baseball’s all-time hits leader, Pete Rose, was sentenced in Cincinnati to five months in prison for tax evasion.

President Bill Clinton announced a policy allowing gay people to serve in the military under

prosecutor­s reported that Chicago police beat, kicked, shocked or otherwise tortured scores of Black suspects from the 1970s to the early 1990s to try to extract confession­s from them.

a New York City police officer (Daniel Pantaleo) involved in the arrest of Eric Garner, who died in custody two days earlier after being placed in an apparent chokehold, was stripped of his gun and badge and placed on desk duty. (Pantaleo was fired in August 2019.) Actor James Garner, 86, died in Los Angeles.

The Agricultur­e Department pressured Shirley Sherrod, an administra­tor in Georgia, to resign after a conservati­ve website posted video it claimed showed her making racist remarks. (After reviewing the entire video, the White House ended up apologizin­g to Sherrod.)

Saying they felt a “deep sense of ethical responsibi­lity for a past tragedy,” executives from Japan’s Mitsubishi Materials Corp. offered an unpreceden­ted apology to a 94-year-old former U.S. prisoner of war for using American POWs as forced labor during World War II; James Murphy of Santa Maria, California, accepted the apology during a solemn ceremony hosted by the Museum of Tolerance at the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.

Dutch actor Rutger Hauer, who was known for menacing roles in “Blade Runner” and other films, died at his home in the Netherland­s at the age of 75.

111 people were killed when United Airlines Flight 232, a DC-10 that sustained the uncontaine­d failure of its tail engine and the loss of hydraulic systems, crashed while making an emergency landing at Sioux City, Iowa; 185 other people survived.

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CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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