Today in History: Aug. 20, 2015

In 1994, Benjamin Chavis Jr. was fired as head of the NAACP after a turbulent 16-month tenure. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
A Mexican policeman holds the short- handled pickax used by Ramon Mercader when he attacked and fatally wounded exiled Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky at his closely guarded home in Mexico City, Aug. 20, 1940. Mercader, aka Jacques Mornard and Frank Jackson, was considered a "friend of the family," by Trotsky. Before he died of his wounds, Trotsky said that his death was ordered by Josef Stalin. (AP Photo)
Walt Disney's Mouseketeers enter a large trailer that serves as their school on the Disney lot in Hollywood, Calif., Aug 20, 1957. Greeting them is their teacher Jean Seaman of the Los Angeles Public School System. State law requires that all juvenile performers attend school three hours a day. In all, there are 14 Mouseketeers, aged 10 to 16, who sing, dance, act, mug and clown through a 15-minute segment of the hour-long weekday TV show The Mickey Mouse Club. They were selected from among hundreds of applicants at talent auditions. The personnel changes from year to year as some of them outgrow their roles. Jimmy Dodd, red-haired and fortyish, is master of Mouseketeer ceremonies. Mouseketeer Annette Funicello can be seen at far left. (AP Photo/Ernest K. Bennett)
Charles M. Manson, squinting in the glare of a film cameraman's floodlight, marches to court, Aug. 20, 1970, for a hearing on his claim he is being mistreated by deputies in the Los Angeles County Jail. After the hearing his trial on murder charges resulting from the slayings of actress Sharon Tate and six others was scheduled to resume. (AP Photo/George Brich)
The Voyager 2 spacecraft, atop a Titan Centaur rocket, is launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Saturday morning on Aug. 20, 1977. The spacecraft will explore the outer planets Saturn and Jupiter in the solar system. (AP Photo)
The lava dome in the crater of Mount St. Helens continues to grow, Aug. 20, 1982, although scientists keeping watch on the volcano say they believe the latest eruption is tapering off. This view from over Spirit Lake, which is still largely covered with debris from the May 18, 1980 blast, looks into the mouth of the volcano with the lava dome now rising over 700 feet above the crater floor. (AP Photo/Gary Stewart)
Members of the Edmond, Okla., police department and medical personnel remove one of those killed in a shooting spree Aug. 20, 1986 at the Edmond Post Office in Edmond, Okla. On Aug. 20, 1986, Patrick Henry Sherrill, an ex-Marine and small arms instructor for the Oklahoma Air National Guard, tucked two .45-caliber pistols into his postal satchel, locked the doors and systematically killed 14 people before killing himself inside a suburban Oklahoma City post office. (AP Photo/Steve Gooch)
Protesters topple a militia booth and move it into position for use as a barricade across one of the streets near the Kremlin and Red Square in Moscow, Aug. 20, 1991, to prevent access of Soviet tanks and troops. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
Rwandan refugee children plead with Zairean soldiers to allow them across a bridge separating Rwanda and Zaire where their mothers had crossed moments earlier before the soldiers closed the border on Aug. 20, 1994. As new, independent African nations, Rwanda and Burundi have experienced a succession of ethnic slaughter. For years, majority Hutus and minority Tutsis lived peaceably, side by side, only to explode in homicidal violence in which 500,000 people, most of them Tutsi, were massacred. Millions of other Rwandans fled as refugees. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Today’s Highlights in History:

On August 20, 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid tribute to the Royal Air Force before the House of Commons, saying, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.” Exiled Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky was assassinated in Coyoacan, Mexico by Ramon Mercader, a Spanish Communist agent working at the behest of Josef Stalin. (Trotsky died the next day.)

On this date:

In 1833, Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of the United States, was born in North Bend, Ohio.

In 1866, President Andrew Johnson formally declared the Civil War over, months after fighting had stopped.

In 1882, Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” had its premiere in Moscow.

In 1910, a series of forest fires swept through parts of Idaho, Montana and Washington, killing at least 85 people and burning some 3 million acres.

In 1914, German forces occupied Brussels, Belgium, during World War I.

In 1953, the Soviet Union publicly acknowledged it had tested a hydrogen bomb.

In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Economic Opportunity Act, a nearly $1 billion anti-poverty measure.

In 1968, the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact nations began invading Czechoslovakia to crush the “Prague Spring” liberalization drive.

In 1972, the Wattstax concert took place at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

In 1977, the U.S. launched Voyager 2, an unmanned spacecraft carrying a 12-inch copper phonograph record containing greetings in dozens of languages, samples of music and sounds of nature.

In 1989, entertainment executive Jose Menendez and his wife, Kitty, were shot to death in their Beverly Hills mansion by their sons, Lyle and Erik. Fifty-one people died when a pleasure boat sank in the River Thames (tehmz) in London after colliding with a dredger.

In 1994, Benjamin Chavis Jr. was fired as head of the NAACP after a turbulent 16-month tenure.

Ten years ago: Northwest Airlines mechanics went on strike rather than accept pay cuts and layoffs; Northwest ended up hiring replacement workers. San Francisco 49ers offensive lineman Thomas Herrion, 23, died of a heart attack shortly after a preseason game against the Denver Broncos. With a deafening boom, the ashes of gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson were blown into the sky above Woody Creek, Colorado.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama invited Israel and the Palestinians to meet face-to-face in Washington the following month for talks aimed at achieving an agreement to establish an independent Palestinian state and secure peace for Israel.

One year ago: The United States launched a new barrage of airstrikes against Islamic State extremists and weighed sending more troops to Iraq as President Barack Obama vowed to be relentless in pursuit of a terrorist group that beheaded American journalist James Foley. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder arrived in Ferguson, Missouri, to meet with federal investigators and reassure residents of the community torn by several nights of racial unrest since the fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old by a white police officer.

Today’s Birthdays: Writer-producer-director Walter Bernstein is 96. Boxing promoter Don King is 84. Former Sen. George Mitchell, D-Maine, is 82. Former U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, is 80. Former MLB All-Star Graig Nettles is 71. Broadcast journalist Connie Chung is 69. Musician Jimmy Pankow (Chicago) is 68. Actor Ray Wise is 68. Actor John Noble is 67. Rock singer Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin) is 67. Country singer Rudy Gatlin is 63. Singer-songwriter John Hiatt is 63. Actor-director Peter Horton is 62. TV weatherman Al Roker is 61. Actor Jay Acovone is 60. Actress Joan Allen is 59. Movie director David O. Russell is 57. TV personality Asha Blake is 54. Actor James Marsters is 53. Rapper KRS-One is 50. Actor Colin Cunningham is 49. Actor Billy Gardell is 46. Rock singer Fred Durst (Limp Bizkit) is 45. Rock musician Brad Avery is 44. Actor Jonathan Ke Quan is 44. Actor Misha Collins is 41. Rock singer Monique Powell (Save Ferris) is 40. Jazz/pop singer-pianist Jamie Cullum is 36. Actor Ben Barnes is 34. Actress Meghan Ory is 33. Actor Andrew Garfield is 32. Actor Brant Daugherty is 30. Actress-singer Demi Lovato is 23.

Thought for Today: “Justice is conscience, not a personal conscience but the conscience of the whole of humanity.” – Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Russian author (1918-2008).

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