Texarkana Gazette

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today is Sunday, Jan. 30, the 30th day of 2022. There are 335 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History:

On Jan. 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany.

On this date:

■ In 1649, England’s King Charles I was executed for high treason.

■ In 1911, James White, an intellectu­ally disabled Black man who’d been convicted of rape for having sex with a 14-year-old white girl when he was 16, was publicly hanged in Bell County, Kentucky.

■ In 1945, during World War II, a Soviet submarine torpedoed the German ship MV Wilhelm Gustloff in the Baltic Sea with the loss of more than 9,000 lives, most of them war refugees; roughly 1,000 people survived.

■ In 1948, Indian political and spiritual leader Mohandas K. Gandhi, 78, was shot and killed in New Delhi by Nathuram Godse (nehtoo-RAHM’ gahd-SAY’), a Hindu extremist. (Godse and a co-conspirato­r were later executed.)

■ In 1968, the Tet Offensive began during the Vietnam War as Communist forces launched surprise attacks against South Vietnamese towns and cities; although the Communists were beaten back, the offensive was seen as a major setback for the U.S. and its allies.

■ In 1969, The Beatles staged an impromptu concert atop Apple headquarte­rs in London; it was the group’s last public performanc­e.

■ In 1972, 13 Roman Catholic civil rights marchers were shot to death by British soldiers in Northern Ireland on what became known as “Bloody Sunday.”

■ In 1981, an estimated 2 million New Yorkers turned out for a ticker tape parade honoring the American hostages freed from Iran.

■ In 1993, Los Angeles inaugurate­d its Metro Red Line, the city’s first modern subway.

■ In 2005, Iraqis voted in their country’s first free election in a half-century; President George W. Bush called the balloting a resounding success.

■ In 2006, Coretta Scott King, widow of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., died in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, at age 78.

■ In 2020, health officials reported the first known case in which the new coronaviru­s was spread from one person to another in the United States. The World Health Organizati­on declared the virus outbreak, which had reached more than a dozen countries, to be a global emergency. Russia ordered the closure of its 2,600-milelong land border with China in an effort to limit the spread of the virus. President Donald Trump described the handful of U.S. cases of the virus as a “very little problem” and said those people were “recuperati­ng successful­ly.” The State Department advised U.S. citizens against traveling to China.

Ten years ago: All European Union countries except Britain and the Czech Republic agreed to sign a new treaty designed to stop overspendi­ng in the eurozone and put an end to the bloc’s crippling debt crisis. A reactor at a northern Illinois nuclear plant shut down after an electrical insulator failed. (The Unit 2 reactor at the Byron Generating Station resumed operating a week later.)

Five years ago: President Donald Trump fired Acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Yates after she publicly questioned the constituti­onality of his controvers­ial refugee and immigratio­n ban and refused to defend it in court. It became legal in Maine to possess and grow marijuana.

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