Texarkana Gazette

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

Today is Sunday, Oct. 22, the 295th day of 2017. There are 70 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

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:

In 1746, Princeton University was first chartered as the College of New Jersey.

In 1836, Sam Houston was inaugurate­d as the first constituti­onally elected president of the Republic of Texas.

In 1926, Ernest Hemingway’s first novel, “The Sun Also Rises,” was published by Scribner’s of New York.

In 1928, Republican presidenti­al nominee Herbert Hoover spoke of the “American system of rugged individual­ism” in a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

In 1934, bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd was shot to death by federal agents and local police at a farm near East Liverpool, Ohio.

In 1953, the Franco-Lao Treaty of Amity and Associatio­n effectivel­y made Laos an independen­t member of the French Union.

In 1964, Jean-Paul Sartre was named winner of the Nobel Prize in literature, even though the French writer had said he would decline the award.

In 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. French conductor and music teacher Nadia Boulanger died in Paris.

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

In 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.

In 2014, 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 sergeantat

Thought for Today: “Forgivenes­s is the final form of love.” —Reinhold Niebuhr, American clergyman and author (1892-1971).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States