Rome News-Tribune

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today is Monday, May 15, the 135th day of 2017. There are 230 days left in the year.

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Today’s Highlights in History

On May 15, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure creating the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, whose members came to be known as WACs. Wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17 Eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for non-essential vehicles.

On this date

1776 — Virginia authorized its delegation to the Continenta­l Congress to support independen­ce from Britain. 1862 — President Abraham Lincoln signed an act establishi­ng the Department of Agricultur­e. 1911 — The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Standard Oil Co. was a monopoly in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act, and ordered its breakup. 1930 — Registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oaklandto-Chicago flight operated by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of United Airlines). 1955 — The United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France signed the Austrian State Treaty, which re-establishe­d Austria’s independen­ce. 1963 — Astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard Faith 7 on the final mission of the Project Mercury space program. 1967 — The U.S. Supreme Court, in its unanimous In re Gault decision, ruled that juveniles accused of crimes were entitled to the same due process afforded adults. 1970 — Just after midnight, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green, two black students at Jackson State College in Mississipp­i, were killed as police opened fire during student protests. 1971 — Chieftains Museum opened to the public. 1972 — Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace was shot and left paralyzed by Arthur H. Bremer while campaignin­g for president in Laurel, Maryland. (Bremer served 35 years for attempted murder.) 1975 — U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of Koh Tang and captured the American merchant ship Mayaguez, which had been seized by the Khmer Rouge. (All 39 crew members had already been released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen were killed in connection with the operation.) 1988 — The Soviet Union began the process of withdrawin­g its troops from Afghanista­n, more than eight years after Soviet forces entered the country. 1991 — Edith Cresson was appointed by French President Francois Mitterrand to be France’s first female prime minister.

Five years ago

Francois Hollande became president of France after a ceremony at the Elysee Palace in central Paris; he was the country’s first Socialist leader since Francois Mitterrand left office in 1995.

In Bogota, Colombia, a midday bombing killed two bodyguards of an archconser­vative former interior minister, Fernando Londono, who was injured.

One year ago

A suicide bomber detonated explosives among policemen standing in line outside a police base in the southern Yemeni city of Mukalla, killing 25.

Today’s Birthdays

Countercul­ture icon Wavy Gravy is 81. Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is 80. Actress-singer Lainie Kazan is 75. Actress Gunilla Hutton is 75. Country singer K.T. Oslin is 75. Actor Nicholas Hammond (Film: “The Sound of Music”) is 67. Actor Chazz Palminteri is 65. Actor Lee Horsley is 62. Football Hall-of-Famer Emmitt Smith is 48. Rock musician Ahmet Zappa is 43. Olympic gold-medal gymnast Amy Chow is 39. Actor David Krumholtz is 39. Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler is 36. Actress Alexandra Breckenrid­ge is 35. Rock musician Brad Shultz (Cage the Elephant) is 35. Rock musician Nick Perri is 33. Tennis player Andy Murray is 30.

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