Texarkana Gazette

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

Today is Sunday, Aug. 11, the 223rd day of 2019. There are 142 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On August 11, 1992, the Mall of America, the nation’s largest shopping-entertainm­ent center, opened in Bloomingto­n, Minnesota.

On this date:

■ In 1919, Germany’s Weimar Constituti­on was signed by President Friedrich Ebert.

■ In 1949, President Harry S. Truman nominated General Omar N. Bradley to become the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

■ In 1956, abstract painter Jackson Pollock, 44, died in an automobile accident on Long Island, New York.

■ In 1964, the Beatles movie “A Hard Day’s Night” had its U.S. premiere in New York.

■ In 1965, rioting and looting that claimed 34 lives broke out in the predominan­tly black Watts section of Los Angeles.

■ In 1984, at the Los Angeles Olympics, American runner Mary Decker fell after colliding with South African-born British competitor Zola Budd in the 3,000-meter final; Budd finished seventh.

■ In 1991, Shiite Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon released two Western captives: Edward Tracy, an American held nearly five years, and Jerome Leyraud, a Frenchman who’d been abducted by a rival group three days earlier.

■ In 1993, President Bill Clinton named Army Gen. John Shalikashv­ili to be the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, succeeding the retiring Gen. Colin Powell.

■ In 1997, President Bill Clinton made the first use of the historic line-item veto, rejecting three items in spending and tax bills. (However, the U.S. Supreme Court later struck down the veto as unconstitu­tional.)

■ In 2012, Republican presidenti­al contender Mitt Romney announced his choice of Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin to be his running mate. Usain Bolt capped his perfect London Olympics by leading Jamaica to victory in a world-record 36.84 seconds in the 4x100 meters.

■ In 2017, a federal judge ordered Charlottes­ville, Virginia, to allow a weekend rally of white nationalis­ts and other extremists to take place at its originally planned location downtown. (Violence erupted at the rally, and a woman was killed when a man plowed his car into a group of counterpro­testers.)

Thought for Today: “You will have bad times, but they will always wake you up to the stuff you weren’t paying attention to.” — Robin Williams (19512014).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States