Texarkana Gazette

Today in History

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Today is Tuesday, July 25, the 206th day of 2023. There are 159 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On July 25, 1972, the notorious Tuskegee syphilis experiment came to light as The Associated Press reported that for the previous four decades, the U.S. Public Health Service, in conjunctio­n with the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, had been allowing poor, rural Black male patients with syphilis to go without treatment, even allowing them to die, as a way of studying the disease.

On this date:

■ In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of the Army of the United States, the first officer to hold the rank.

■ In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as premier of Italy by King Victor Emmanuel III, and placed under arrest. (He was later rescued by the Nazis and re-asserted his authority.)

■ In 1946, the United States detonated an atomic bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific in the first underwater test of the device.

■ In 1956, the Italian liner SS Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish passenger ship Stockholm off the New England coast late at night and began sinking; 51 people — 46 from the Andrea Doria, five from the Stockholm — were killed. (The Andrea Doria capsized and sank the following morning.)

■ In 1960, a Woolworth’s store in Greensboro, North Carolina that had been the scene of a sit-in protest against its whites-only lunch counter dropped its segregatio­n policy.

■ In 1978, Louise Joy Brown, the first “test tube baby,” was born in Oldham, England; she’d been conceived through the technique of in-vitro fertilizat­ion.

■ In 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan’s King Hussein signed a declaratio­n at the White House ending their countries’ 46-year-old formal state of war.

■ In 2000, a New Yorkbound Air France Concorde crashed outside Paris shortly after takeoff, killing all 109 people on board and four people on the ground; it was the first-ever crash of the supersonic jet.

■ In 2010, the online whistleblo­wer Wikileaks posted some 90,000 leaked U.S. military records that amounted to a blow-by-blow account of the Afghanista­n war, including unreported incidents of Afghan civilian killings as well as covert operations against Taliban figures.

■ In 2016, on the opening night of the Democratic national convention in Philadelph­ia, Bernie Sanders robustly embraced his former rival Hillary Clinton as a champion for the same economic causes that enlivened his supporters, signaling it was time for them to rally behind her in the campaign against Republican Donald Trump.

■ In 2019, President Donald Trump had a second phone call with the new Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, during which he solicited Zelenskyy’s help in gathering potentiall­y damaging informatio­n about former Vice President Joe Biden; that night, a staff member at the White House Office of Management and Budget signed a document that officially put military aid for Ukraine on hold.

Ten years ago: The U.S. attorney in New Jersey announced that four Russian nationals and a Ukrainian were charged with running a sophistica­ted hacking organizati­on that over seven years penetrated computer networks of more than a dozen major American and internatio­nal corporatio­ns, stealing and selling at least 160 million credit and debit card numbers, resulting in losses of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Five years ago: After a White House meeting, President Donald Trump and European Commission President Jean-claude Juncker (zhahn-klohd’ Yun’-kur) announced they had agreed to work toward “zero tariffs” and “zero subsidies” on non-automobile goods, dialing down tensions that had been rising. Sergio Marchionne (Sehr’-jee-oh mar-kee-oh’-nay), the founding CEO of Fiat Chrysler who saved two carmakers from near-certain failure, died at the age of 66 after complicati­ons from surgery in Switzerlan­d. A study published in the journal Science revealed that a huge lake of salty water appears to be buried deep in Mars, raising the possibilit­y of finding life on the planet.

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