Rome News-Tribune

HIGHLIGHTS IN HISTORY

-

Today’s highlight:

On Feb. 6, 1911, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the United States, was born in Tampico, Illinois.

On this date:

1778: during the American Revolution­ary War, the United States won official recognitio­n and military support from France with the signing of a Treaty of Alliance in Paris.

1933: The 20th Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on, the so-called “lame duck” amendment, was proclaimed in effect by Secretary of State Henry Stimson.

1952: Britain’s King George

VI, 56, died at Sandringha­m House in Norfolk, England; he was succeeded as monarch by his 25-year-old elder daughter, who became Queen Elizabeth II.

1987: Wall Street Journal reporter Gerald Seib was released after being detained six days by Iran, accused of being a spy for Israel; Iran said the detention was a result of misunderst­andings. 1993: Tennis Hall of Famer and human rights advocate Arthur Ashe died in New York at age 49.

1998: President Bill Clinton signed a bill changing the name of Washington National Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Carl Wilson, a founding member of The Beach Boys, died in Los Angeles at age 51.

2003: Edging closer to war, President George W. Bush declared “the game is over” for Saddam Hussein and urged skeptical allies to join in disarming Iraq. ABC’s “20/20” aired a British documentar­y, “Living With Michael Jackson,” in which the King of Pop revealed he sometimes let children sleep in his bed.

2008: The Bush White House defended the use of the interrogat­ion technique known as waterboard­ing, saying it was legal — not torture as critics argued — and had saved American lives. The Phoenix Suns acquired Shaquille O’Neal in a stunning blockbuste­r deal that sent four-time All-Star Shawn

Marion and Marcus Banks to the Miami Heat.

Ten years ago: Key senators and the White House reached tentative agreement on an economic stimulus measure at the heart of President Barack Obama’s recovery plan. Federal health officials said Peanut Corp. of America, a Georgia peanut processor, had knowingly shipped salmonella-laced products as far back as 2007.

Five years ago: House Speaker John Boehner all but ruled out passage of immigratio­n legislatio­n before the fall elections.

Jay Leno said goodbye to NBC’s “The Tonight Show” for the second time, making way for Jimmy Fallon to take over as host. Baseball Hall of Famer Ralph Kiner, 91, died in Rancho Mirage, California. Former U.S. poet laureate Maxine Kumin died in Warner, New Hampshire, at age 88.

One year ago: Casino mogul Steve Wynn resigned as chairman and CEO of Wynn Resorts amid sexual misconduct allegation­s. SpaceX’s big new rocket blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center on its first test flight, carrying a red sports car on a route that would take it to the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Poland’s president signed legislatio­n making it a crime to blame Poland for Holocaust crimes committed by Nazi Germany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States