Today's highlight in history:
On Feb. 21, 1912, a new phrase entered the American political
lexicon as former President Theodore Roosevelt, traveling by train
to the Ohio Constitutional Convention, told a reporter in Cleveland,
"My hat is in the ring," signaling his intent to challenge President
William Howard Taft for the Republican nomination. (After losing the
nomination to Taft, Roosevelt then ran as the nominee of the
Progressive Party, also known as the Bull Moose Party; the resulting
split among Republicans is believed to have led to Democrat Woodrow
Wilson's victory in November.)
On this date:
In 1862, Nathaniel Gordon, captured at sea with nearly 900 Africans
aboard his ship, the Erie, became the first and only American
slave-trader to be executed under the U.S. Piracy Law of 1820 as he
was hanged in New York.
In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated.
In 1911, composer Gustav Mahler, despite a fever, conducted the New
York Philharmonic at Carnegie Hall in what turned out to be his
final concert (he died the following May).
In 1912, the Great Fifth Ward Fire broke out in Houston, Texas;
although property losses topped $3 million, no one was killed in the
blaze.
In 1916, the World War I Battle of Verdun began in France as German
forces attacked; the French were able to prevail after 10 months of
fighting.
In 1925, The New Yorker magazine made its debut.
In 1945, during the World War II Battle of Iwo Jima, the escort
carrier USS Bismarck Sea was sunk by kamikazes with the loss of 318
men.
In 1965, black Muslim leader and civil rights activist Malcolm X,
39, was shot to death inside the Audubon Ballroom in New York by
assassins identified as members of the Nation of Islam.
In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon began his historic visit to
China as he and his wife, Pat, arrived in Beijing.
In 1973, Israeli fighter planes shot down Libyan Arab Airlines
Flight 114 over the Sinai Desert, killing all but five of the 113
people on board.
In 1986, Larry Wu-tai Chin, the first American found guilty of
spying for China, killed himself in his Virginia jail cell.
In 1992, Kristi Yamaguchi (yah-mah-GOO'-chee) of the United States
won the gold medal in ladies' figure skating at the Albertville
Olympics; Midori Ito (mee-doh-ree ee-toh) of Japan won the silver,
Nancy Kerrigan of the U.S. the bronze.
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Ten years ago: The State Department declared
that Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was dead, a month
after he'd been abducted by Islamic extremists in Pakistan.
President George W. Bush failed to persuade China to halt sales of
missile technology as he neared the end of his six-day Asia tour. In
Salt Lake City, U.S. figure skater Sarah Hughes jumped from fourth
to first to win the gold after a near-flawless performance, leaving
teammate Michelle Kwan to settle for a bronze (Irina Slutskaya of
Russia won the silver).
Five years ago: British Prime Minister Tony
Blair announced his country would withdraw around 1,600 troops from
Iraq in the coming months; Denmark, meanwhile, said it would
withdraw its 460 troops.
One year ago: Deep cracks opened in Moammar Gadhafi's regime,
with Libyan government officials at home and abroad resigning, air
force pilots defecting and a major government building ablaze after
clashes in the capital of Tripoli. Yemen's embattled leader,
President Ali Abdullah Saleh (AH'-lee ahb-DUH'-luh sah-LEH'),
rejected demands that he step down, calling demonstrations against
his regime unacceptable acts of provocation and offering to begin a
dialogue with protesters.
Today's birthdays: Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe is 88.
Movie director Bob Rafelson is 79. Actor Gary Lockwood is 75.
Actor-director Richard Beymer is 73. Actor Peter McEnery is 72. U.S.
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., is 72. Film/music company executive David
Geffen is 69. Actor Alan Rickman is 66. Actress Tyne Daly is 66.
Actor Anthony Daniels is 66. Tricia Nixon Cox is 66. Sen. Olympia J.
Snowe, R-Maine, is 65. Rock musician Jerry Harrison (The Heads) is
63. Actress Christine Ebersole is 59. Actor William Petersen is 59.
Actor Kelsey Grammer is 57. Country singer Mary Chapin Carpenter is
54. Actor Jack Coleman is 54. Actor Christopher Atkins is 51. Rock
singer Ranking Roger is 51. Actor William Baldwin is 49. Rock
musician Michael Ward is 45. Actress Aunjanue Ellis is 43. Blues
musician Corey Harris is 43. Country singer Eric Heatherly is 42.
Rock musician Eric Wilson is 42. Rock musician Tad Kinchla (Blues
Traveler) is 39. Actress Jennifer Love Hewitt is 33. Singer
Charlotte Church is 26. Actress Ellen Page is 25. Actor Corbin Bleu
is 23.
Thought for today: "There is nothing more horrifying than
stupidity in action." -- Adlai E. Stevenson, American
politician and diplomat (1900-1965)
[Associated Press]
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