Texarkana Gazette

TODAY IN HISTORY

- —FROM STAFF REPORTS

Today is Saturday, Jan. 8, the eighth day of 2022. There are 357 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History:

On Jan. 8, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson, in his State of the Union address, declared an “unconditio­nal war on poverty in America.”

On this date:

■ In 1815, the last major engagement of the War of 1812 came to an end as U.S. forces defeated the British in the Battle of New Orleans, not having received word of the signing of a peace treaty.

■ In 1867, the U.S. House of Representa­tives joined the Senate in overriding President Andrew Johnson’s veto of the District of Columbia Suffrage Bill, giving Black men in the nation’s capital the right to vote.

■ In 1918, President Woodrow Wilson outlined his Fourteen Points for lasting peace after World War I. Mississipp­i became the first state to ratify the 18th Amendment to the Constituti­on, which establishe­d Prohibitio­n.

■ In 1935, rock-and-roll legend Elvis Presley was born in Tupelo, Mississipp­i.

■ In 1982, American Telephone and Telegraph settled the Justice Department’s antitrust lawsuit against it by agreeing to divest itself of the 22 Bell System companies.

■ In 1994, Tonya Harding won the ladies’ U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ip in Detroit, a day after Nancy Kerrigan dropped out because of the clubbing attack that had injured her right knee. (The U.S. Figure Skating Associatio­n later stripped Harding of the title.)

■ In 1998, Ramzi Yousef (RAHM’-zee YOO’-sef), the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, was sentenced in New York to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

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