Rome News-Tribune

On this date

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1216 — John, King of England, died, more than a year after affixing his royal seal to Magna Carta (“The Great Charter”). 1781 — British troops under Gen. Lord Cornwallis surrendere­d at Yorktown, Virginia, as the American Revolution neared its end. 1789 — John Jay was sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States. 1864 — Confederat­e Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early’s soldiers attacked Union forces at Cedar Creek, Virginia; the Union troops were able to rally and defeat the Confederat­es. 1914 — The U.S. Post Office began delivering mail with government-owned cars, as opposed to using contracted vehicles. The First Battle of Ypres (EE’-pruh) began during World War I. 1936 — H.R. Ekins of the New York World-Telegram beat out Dorothy Kilgallen of the New York Journal and Leo Kieran of The New York Times in a round-the-world race on commercial flights that lasted 18 1/2 days. 1944 — The U.S. Navy began accepting black women into WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service). The play “I Remember Mama” by John Van Druten opened at the Music Box Theater on Broadway. 1953 — The Ray Bradbury novel “Fahrenheit 451,” set in a dystopian future where books are banned and burned by the government, was first published by Ballantine Books. 1967 — The U.S. space probe Mariner 5 flew past Venus. 1977 — The supersonic Concorde made its first landing in New York City. The body of West German industrial­ist Hanns Martin Schleyer (SHLY’-ur), who had been kidnapped by left-wing extremists, was found in Mulhouse, France. 1982 — Automaker John Z. DeLorean was arrested by federal agents in Los Angeles, accused of conspiring to sell $24 million of cocaine to salvage his business. (DeLorean was acquitted at trial on grounds of entrapment.) 1994 — 22 people were killed as a terrorist bomb shattered a bus in the heart of Tel Aviv’s shopping district. Entertaine­r Martha Raye died in Los Angeles at age 78.

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