The Bakersfield Californian

TODAY IN HISTORY

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1766: Britain repealed the Stamp Act of 1765.

1922: Mohandas K. Gandhi was sentenced in India to six years’ imprisonme­nt for civil disobedien­ce. (He was released after serving two years.)

1925: The Tri-State Tornado struck southeaste­rn Missouri, southern Illinois and southweste­rn Indiana, resulting in some 700 deaths.

1937: In America’s worst school disaster, nearly 300 people, most of them children, were killed in a natural gas explosion at the New London Consolidat­ed School in Rusk County, Texas.

1940: Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini met at the Brenner Pass, where the Italian dictator agreed to join Germany’s war against France and Britain.

1942: President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an executive order authorizin­g the War Relocation Authority, which was put in charge of interning Japanese Americans, with Milton S. Eisenhower (the younger brother of Dwight D. Eisenhower) as its director.

1963: The U.S. Supreme Court, in Gideon v. Wainwright, ruled unanimousl­y that state courts were required to provide legal counsel to criminal defendants who could not afford to hire an attorney on their own.

1965: The first spacewalk took place as Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov went outside his Voskhod 2 capsule, secured by a tether.

1974: Most of the Arab oil-producing nations ended their 5-month-old embargo against the United States that had been sparked by American support for Israel in the Yom Kippur War.

2002: Brittanie Cecil died two days short of her 14th birthday after being hit in the head by a puck at a game between the host Columbus Blue Jackets and Calgary Flames; it was apparently the first such fan fatality in NHL history.

2016: Police in Brussels captured Europe’s most wanted fugitive, Salah Abdeslam, who was the prime suspect in the deadly 2015 Paris attacks.

2020: The U.S. and Canada agreed to temporaril­y close their shared border to nonessenti­al travel in the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

2022: Vladimir Putin appeared at a huge flag-waving rally at a Moscow stadium and lavished praise on his troops fighting in Ukraine, three weeks into the invasion that led to heavier-than-expected Russian losses on the battlefiel­d and increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule.

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