Vindicator Logo

Years Ago

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Today is Tuesday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 2014. There are 99 days left in the year.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

On this date in:

1779: During the Revolutionary War, the American warship Bon Homme Richard, commanded by John Paul Jones, defeats the HMS Serapis in battle off Yorkshire, England; however, the damaged Bon Homme Richard sank two days later.

1780: British spy John Andre is captured along with papers revealing Benedict Arnold’s plot to surrender West Point to the British.

1806: The Lewis and Clark expedition returns to St. Louis more than two years after setting out for the Pacific Northwest.

1846: Neptune is identified as a planet by German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.

1889: American newspaperman and columnist Walter Lippmann is born in New York City.

1939: Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, dies in London at age 83.

1952: In what becomes known as the “Checkers” speech, Sen. Richard M. Nixon, R-Calif., salvages his vice-presidential nomination by appearing live on television to refute allegations of improper campaign fundraising.

1957: Nine black students who’d entered Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas are forced to withdraw because of a white mob outside.

1962: New York’s Philharmonic Hall (later renamed Avery Fisher Hall) formally opens as the first unit of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

“The Jetsons,” an animated cartoon series about a Space Age family, premieres as the ABC television network’s first program in color.

1973: Former Argentine president Juan Peron wins a landslide election victory that returns him to power; his wife, Isabel, is elected vice president.

1981: The Reagan administration announces plans for what becomes known as Radio Marti.

1999: The Mars Climate Orbiter apparently burns up as it attempts to go into orbit around the Red Planet.

2004: President George W. Bush denies painting too rosy a picture about Iraq, and says he will consider sending more troops if asked.

VINDICATOR FILES

1989: Trumbull County Commissioner Arthur Magee says a Lordstown industrial park is the frontrunner for a new regional distribution center for Toys R Us, the nation’s biggest toy retailer.

The Avanti Automotive Corp. permanently lays off 35 employees at its Youngstown plant and again delays a target date for introduction of its new four-door model.

Vickie Miklic begins her duties as director of youth ministries for the Westminster Presbyterian Church of Boardman.

1974: Ronald A. Daniels of Youngstown, an African studies teacher at Hiram College, is elected president of the National Black Political Assembly during a meeting in Columbus. He succeeds U.S. Rep. Charles Diggs of Michigan.

The Western Reserve Transit Authority rents 20 buses from a Chicago firm at a cost of $24,000 because General Motors Corp. failed to deliver 50 brand new buses.

A Cliff Stout-led offense gives Youngstown State all its points in the first half as the Penguins ride out a 35-21 victory over South Dakota State in Brookings, S.D.

1964: Auto manufacturers begin display of the 1965 models. Ford’s Lincoln Continental is the first new model shown, and its price remains at $5,766 for the four-door sedan.

The Cleveland Indians lose a doubleheader to the New York Yankees, 5-3 and 8-1, giving the Yankees an even tighter grip on first place in the American League.

1939: The Youngstown College Penguins suffer their first setback of their second season, losing to Harvey-Morris College, 7-0, in Charleston, W. Va.

J.L. Mauthe, district superintendent of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., is chairman of the membership drive of the Central YMCA.

A select group of Youngstowners attends an unusual premiere at the Uptown Theater as 15-year-old filmmaker Steve Downer, a student at South High, shows his hometown production of “The Barberton’s Perfect Picnic.”