The Boston Globe

This day in history

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Today is Wednesday, Jan. 10, the 10th day of 2024. There are 356 days left in the year.

ºBirthdays: Opera singer Sherrill Milnes is 89. Movie director Walter Hill is 84. Actor William Sanderson is 80. Singer Rod Stewart is 79. Rock singer-keyboardis­t Donald Fagen (Steely Dan) is 76. Boxing Hall of Famer and entreprene­ur George Foreman is 75. Roots rock singer Alejandro Escovedo is 73. Rock musician Scott Thurston (Tom Petty and the Heartbreak­ers) is 72. Singer Pat Benatar is 71. Hall of Fame race car driver and team owner Bobby Rahal is 70. Singer Shawn Colvin is 68. Rock singermusi­cian Curt Kirkwood of Meat Puppets is 65. Rock singer Brad Roberts of Crash Test Dummies is 60. Rapper Chris Smith (Kris

Kross) is 45. Actor Sarah Shahi is 44. American roots singer Valerie June is 42.

ºIn 1776, Thomas Paine anonymousl­y published his influentia­l pamphlet, “Common Sense,” which argued for American independen­ce from British rule. ºIn 1860, the Pemberton Mill in Lawrence collapsed and caught fire, killing up to 145 people, mostly female workers from Scotland and Ireland.

ºIn 1861, Florida became the third state to secede from the Union.

ºIn 1863, the London Undergroun­d had its beginnings as the Metropolit­an, the world’s first undergroun­d passenger railway, opened to the public with service between Paddington and Farringdon Street. ºIn 1870, John D. Rockefelle­r incorporat­ed Standard Oil.

ºIn 1920, the League of Nations was establishe­d as the Treaty of Versailles went into effect.

ºIn 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson, in his State of the Union address, asked Congress to impose a surcharge on both corporate and individual income taxes to help pay for his “Great Society” programs as well as the war in Vietnam.

ºIn 1971, French fashion designer Coco Chanel died in Paris at age 87.

ºIn 1984, the United States and the Vatican establishe­d full diplomatic relations for the first time in more than a century.

ºIn 2002, Marines began flying hundreds of al-Qaida prisoners in Afghanista­n to a US base at

Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

ºIn 2003, North Korea withdrew from a global treaty barring it from making nuclear weapons.

ºIn 2007, the Democratic-controlled House voted 315-116 to increase the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.

ºIn 2011, a judge in Austin, Texas, ordered former US House majority leader Tom DeLay to serve three years in prison for his money laundering conviction. (DeLay’s conviction was ultimately overturned.)

ºIn 2022, Robert Durst, the New York real estate heir who was sentenced to life in prison for killing his best friend, died at age 78 at a hospital outside the California prison where he’d been serving his sentence.

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