The Boston Globe

This day in history

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Today is Monday, March 27, the 86th day of 2023. There are 279 days left in the year.

Birthdays: Hall of Fame racer Cale Yarborough is 84. Actor-director Austin Pendleton is 83. Actor Michael York is 81. Rock musician Tony Banks (Genesis) is 73. Rock musician Andrew Farriss (INXS) is 64. Movie director Quentin Tarantino is 60. Rock musician Derrick McKenzie (Jamiroquai) is 59. Actor Pauley Perrette is 54. Singer Mariah Carey is 53. Rock musician Brendan Hill (Blues Traveler) is

53. Actor Elizabeth Mitchell is

53. Actor Nathan Fillion is 52. Hip-hop singer Fergie is 48.

► In 1625, Charles I acceded to the English throne upon the death of James I.

► In 1794, Congress approved “An Act to provide a Naval Armament” of six armed ships.

► In 1912, first lady Helen Herron Taft and the wife of Japan’s ambassador to the United States, Viscountes­s Chinda, planted the first two of 3,000 cherry trees given to the US as a gift by the mayor of Tokyo.

► In 1945, during World War II, General Dwight D. Eisenhower told reporters in Paris that German defenses on the Western Front had been broken.

► In 1964, Alaska was hit by a magnitude 9.2 earthquake (the strongest on record in North America) and tsunamis that together claimed about 130 lives.

► In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to orbit the Earth in 1961, died when his MiG-15 jet crashed during a routine training flight near Moscow; he was 34.

► In 1973, “The Godfather” won the Academy Award for best picture of 1972, but its star, Marlon Brando, refused to accept his Oscar for best actor. Liza Minnelli won best actress for “Cabaret.”

► In 1975, constructi­on began on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, which was completed two years later.

► In 1977, in aviation’s worst disaster, 583 people were killed when a KLM Boeing 747, attempting to take off in heavy fog, crashed into a Pan Am 747 on an airport runway on the Canary Island of Tenerife.

► In 1980, 123 workers died when a North Sea floating oil field platform, the Alexander Kielland, capsized during a storm.

► In 2013, lawyers for Colorado theater mass shooting suspect James Holmes said he would plead guilty to the attack that killed 12 people and serve the rest of his life in prison to avoid the death penalty. (Prosecutor­s rejected the offer, but Holmes ended up being sentenced to life in prison anyway.)

► In 2018, retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, in an essay on The New York Times website, called for the repeal of the Second Amendment to allow for significan­t gun control legislatio­n. The co-owner of a Kansas water park and a ride designer were charged with reckless second-degree murder in the decapitati­on of a 10-yearold boy on the ride in 2016. (A judge later dismissed the charges, finding that state prosecutor­s had shown inadmissib­le evidence to grand jurors.)

► In 2019, Facebook said it was extending its ban on hate speech to prohibit the promotion and support of white nationalis­m and white separatism.

► Last year Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused the West of cowardice as his country fought to stave off Russia’s invading troops, making an exasperate­d plea for fighter jets and tanks to sustain a defense as the war ground into a battle of attrition. “CODA” won best picture at an Oscars ceremony marred by Will Smith’s onstage slap of Chris Rock. Smith would go on to win best actor minutes later. (Smith was later expelled from the movie academy and received a 10-year ban from the Oscars.)

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