Today's Highlight in History:
On September 16th, 1940, Samuel T. Rayburn of Texas was elected Speaker of the US House of Representatives.
On this date:
In 1630, the Massachusetts village of Shawmut changed its name to Boston.
In 1638, France's King Louis the 14th was born.
In 1810, Mexico began its revolt against Spanish rule.
In 1893, hundreds of thousands of settlers swarmed1 onto a section of land in Oklahoma known as the "Cherokee Strip."
In 1919, the American Legion was incorporated by an act of Congress.
In 1940, President Roosevelt signed into law the Selective Training and Service Act, which set up the first peacetime military draft in US history.
In 1966, the Metropolitan2 Opera opened its new opera house at New York's Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.
In 1974, President Ford3 announced a conditional4 amnesty program for Vietnam war deserters and draft-evaders.
In 1977, Maria Callas, the American-born prima donna famed for her lyric5 soprano and fiery6 temperament7, died in Paris at age 53.
In 1982, the massacre8 of hundreds of Palestinian men, women and children by Lebanese Christian9 militiamen began in west Beirut's Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps.
Ten years ago: Iraqi television broadcast an eight-minute videotaped address by President Bush, who warned the Iraqi people that Saddam Hussein's brinksmanship could plunge10 them into war "against the world."
Five years ago: President Clinton voiced support for a Senate welfare overhaul11 plan sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole12. Shawntel Smith of Oklahoma was crowned "Miss America" at the pageant13 in Atlantic City, New Jersey14.
One year ago: Hurricane "Floyd" hit the Carolinas and began making its way up the East Coast, damaging 12,000 homes and claiming more than 50 lives even after it weakened to a tropical storm. In southern Russia, an explosion described by authorities as the fourth massive terrorist attack in two weeks demolished15 an apartment building, killing16 at least 18 people.