The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

MONDAY, FEB. 27

-

Today’s highlight

On Feb. 27, 1922, the Supreme Court, in Leser v. Garnett, unanimousl­y upheld the 19th Amendment to the Constituti­on, which guaranteed the right of women to vote.

On this date

1807: Poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born in Portland, Maine.

1933: Germany’s parliament building, the Reichstag, was gutted by fire; Chancellor Adolf Hitler, blaming the Communists, used the fire to justify suspending civil liberties.

1939: The Supreme Court, in National Labor Relations Board v. Fansteel Metallurgi­cal Corp., effectivel­y outlawed sit-down strikes.

1942: The Battle of the Java Sea began during World War II; Imperial Japanese naval forces scored a decisive victory over the Allies.

1951: The 22nd Amendment to the Constituti­on, limiting a president to two terms of office, was ratified.

1973: Members of the American Indian Movement occupied the hamlet of Wounded Knee in South Dakota, the site of the 1890massac­re of Sioux men, women and children. (The occupation lasted until the following May.)

1991: Operation Desert Storm came to a conclusion as President George H.W. Bush declared that “Kuwait is liberated, Iraq’s army is defeated,” and announced that the allies would suspend combat operations at midnight, Eastern time.

1997: Divorce became legal in Ireland.

1998: With the approval of Queen Elizabeth II, Britain’s House of Lords agreed to end 1,000years of male preference by giving a monarch’s first-born daughter the same claim to the throne as any first-born son.

2006: Former Newark Eagles co-owner Effa Manley became the first woman elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. 2010: In Chile, an 8.8magnitude earthquake and tsunami killed 524people, caused $30 billion in damage and left more than 200,000 homeless. 2020: U.S. stocks posted their worst one-day drop since 2011, as worldwide markets plummeted amid growing anxiety about the coronaviru­s; the Dow tumbled nearly 1,200 points. President Donald Trump declared that a widespread U.S. outbreak of the virus was not inevitable, even as top health authoritie­s at his side warned that more infections were coming. 2021: The U.S. got a third vaccine to prevent COVID-19, as the Food and Drug Administra­tion cleared a Johnson & Johnson shot that worked with just one dose instead of two.

2013: The Senate confirmed Jacob Lew to be Treasury secretary by a vote of 71-26. President Barack Obama unveiled a statue of civil rights icon Rosa Parks at the U.S. Capitol. Van Cliburn, the internatio­nally celebrated pianist whose triumph at a 1958Moscow competitio­n launched a spectacula­r career that made him the rare classical musician to enjoy rock star status, died in Fort Worth, Texas, at age 78.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States