Texarkana Gazette

Today in History

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Today is Tuesday, March 7, the 66th day of 2023. There are 299 days left in the year.

Today’s highlight in history:

On March 7, 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrat­ors was violently broken up at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, by state troopers and a sheriff’s posse in what came to be known as “Bloody Sunday.” On this date:

• In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell received a U.S. patent for his telephone.

• In 1911, President William Howard Taft ordered 20,000 troops to patrol the U.S.Mexico border in response to the Mexican Revolution.

• In 1916, Bavarian Motor Works (BMW) had its beginnings in Munich, Germany, as an airplane engine manufactur­er.

• In 1926, the first successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversati­ons took place between New York and London.

• In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to march into the Rhineland, thereby breaking the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Pact.

• In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces crossed the Rhine at Remagen, Germany, using the damaged but still usable Ludendorff Bridge.

• In 1975, the U.S. Senate revised its filibuster rule, allowing 60 senators to limit debate in most cases, instead of the previously required two-thirds of senators present.

• In 1994, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimousl­y ruled that a parody that pokes fun at an original work can be considered “fair use.” (The ruling concerned a parody of the Roy Orbison song “Oh, Pretty Woman” by the rap group 2 Live Crew.)

• In 1999, movie director Stanley Kubrick, whose films included “Dr. Strangelov­e,” “A Clockwork Orange” and “2001: A Space Odyssey,” died in Hertfordsh­ire, England, at age 70, having just finished editing “Eyes Wide Shut.”

• In 2005, President George W. Bush nominated John Bolton to be U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, an appointmen­t that ran into Democratic opposition, prompting Bush to make a recess appointmen­t.

• In 2016, Peyton Manning announced his retirement after 18 seasons in the National Football League.

• In 2020, health officials in Florida said two people who had tested positive for the new coronaviru­s had died; the deaths were the first on the East Coast attributed to the outbreak.

Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council voted unanimousl­y for tough new sanctions to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test; a furious Pyongyang threatened a nuclear strike against the United States. The Senate confirmed John Brennan to be CIA director, 63-34, after the Obama administra­tion bowed to demands from Republican­s blocking the nomination and stated explicitly there were limits to the president’s power to use drones against U.S. terror suspects on American soil. Sybil Christophe­r, 83, the wife Richard Burton left in 1963 to marry Elizabeth Taylor, and who became a theater producer and nightclub founder, died in New York.

Five years ago: The White House said Mexico, Canada and other countries could be spared from President Donald Trump’s planned steel and aluminum tariffs under national security “carve-outs.” For the second time in less than a week, a storm rolled into the Northeast with as much as two feet of wet, heavy snow that grounded flights, closed schools and knocked out power.

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