Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

TODAY IN HISTORY

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On March 13, 1639, Harvard University was named for clergyman John Harvard.

In 1852 the first cartoon depicting Uncle Sam as the symbol of the United States appeared in a drawing by Frank Bellew in the New York Lantern.

In 1868 the Senate began its impeachmen­t trial of President Andrew Johnson. (He would be acquitted on a vote of 35-19.)

In 1884 Standard Time was adopted across the U.S.

In 1925 a law went into effect in Tennessee prohibitin­g the teaching of evolution.

In 1947 “Brigadoon,” the Lerner and Loewe musical, made its Broadway debut.

In 1969 the Apollo 9 astronauts splashed down, ending a mission that included the successful testing of the lunar module.

In 1980 Ford Motor Co. was acquitted of reckless-homicide charges that had resulted from three deaths in a fiery accident involving a Pinto.

In 1988, yielding to student protests, the board of trustees of Gallaudet University

in Washington, a liberal arts college for the hearing-impaired, chose I. King Jordan to become the school’s first deaf president, replacing Elisabeth Ann Zinser, a hearing woman.

In 1994 the Israeli Cabinet outlawed two Jewish extremist groups, Kach and Kahane Lives, branding them terrorist organizati­ons.

In 1996, in a crime that shocked Britain, a gunman burst into a kindergart­en classroom in Dunblane, Scotland, and killed 16 children and their teacher before shooting himself to death.

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