The Sentinel-Record

Today in history

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On Feb. 10, 1962, the Soviet Union exchanged captured American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for Rudolf Abel, a Soviet spy held by the United States.

In 1840, Britain’s Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

In 1841, Upper Canada and Lower Canada were proclaimed united under an Act of Union passed by the British Parliament.

In 1863, showman P.T. Barnum staged the wedding of General Tom Thumb and Mercy Lavinia Warren — both little persons — in New York City.

In 1936, Nazi Germany’s Reichstag passed a law investing the Gestapo secret police with absolute authority, exempt from any legal review.

In 1959, a major tornado tore through the St. Louis area, killing 21 people and causing heavy damage.

In 1967, the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on, dealing with presidenti­al disability and succession, was ratified as Minnesota and Nevada adopted it.

In 1968, U.S. figure skater Peggy Fleming, 19, won America’s only gold medal of the Winter Olympic Games in Grenoble, France, in the ladies’ singles event. (Gabriele Seyfert of East Germany earned the silver medal, Hana Maskova of Czechoslov­akia, the bronze.)

In 1992, boxer Mike Tyson was convicted in Indianapol­is of raping Desiree Washington, a Miss Black America contestant. (Tyson served three years in prison.) Author Alex Haley died in Seattle at age 70.

In 2004, the White House, trying to end doubts about President George W. Bush’s Vietnam-era military service, released documents it said proved he had met his requiremen­ts in the Texas Air National Guard. Democrat John Kerry won the Virginia and Tennessee primaries.

Ten years ago: The Senate approved President Barack Obama’s giant economic stimulus measure. U.S. and Russian communicat­ion satellites collided in the first-ever crash of its kind in orbit, shooting out a pair of massive debris clouds.

Five years ago: In Iraq, an instructor teaching his militant recruits how to make car bombs accidental­ly set off explosives in his demonstrat­ion, killing 21 of them in a blast that alerted authoritie­s to the existence of a training camp north of Baghdad.

One year ago: In a tweet that appeared to take aim at the rising #MeToo movement, President Donald Trump wrote that “lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation;” the tweet came in the aftermath of the resignatio­n of a pivotal aide, Rob Porter, who’d been accused of abusing two exwives. The Korean women’s hockey team, the first in Olympic history to combine players from the North and South, lost its debut game, 8-0, to Switzerlan­d before a cheering, chanting sellout crowd at the Winter Olympics in South Korea.

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