History for October 18 - On-This-Day.com:
Pierre Elliott Trudeau 1919 - Prime Minister of Canada, Chuck Berry (Charles Edward Anderson Berry) 1926 - Singer, George C. Scott 1927 - Actor ("Patton," "Taps")
Lee Harvey Oswald 1939 - Accused of assassinating U.S. President John F. Kennedy, Willie Horton 1942 - Baseball player, Laura Nyro 1947 - Singer, songwriter
Pam Dawber 1951 - Actress ("Mork & Mindy"), Martina Navratilova 1956 - Tennis player, Jean-Claude Van Damme 1960- Actor ("Double Impact," "Hard Target")
1469 - Ferdinand of Aragon married Isabella of Castile. The marriage united all the dominions of Spain.
1767 - The Mason-Dixon line was agreed upon. It was the boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania.
1842 - Samuel Finley Breese Morse laid his first telegraph cable.
1867 - The U.S. took formal possession of Alaska from Russia. The land was purchased of a total of $7 million dollars (2 cents per acre).
1943 - The first broadcast of "Perry Mason" was presented on CBS Radio. The show went to TV in 1957.
1967 - The American League granted permission for the A's to move to Oakland. Also, new franchises were awarded to Kansas City and Seattle.
1968 - Two black athletes, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, were suspended by the U.S. Olympic Committee for giving a "black power" salute during a ceremony in Mexico City.
1971 - After 34 years, the final issue of "Look" magazine was published.
If Hillary Rodham Clinton wins the Democratic presidential nomination, her Republican opponents will not let her off so easy.On Tuesday night in Las Vegas, Clinton faced a set of Democratic rivals who seemed to lack the skill — or the will — to challenge her about her record on foreign policy, her changes in position, her handling of government data on a private e-mail server, or her claim to be an “outsider” after two decades in national politics.When the former secretary of state praised Libya — now a cauldron of chaos and Islamist militias — as “smart power at its best,” nobody scoffed. When she was challenged about her e-mail practices, a controversy that has concerned many voters, top rival Bernie Sanders actually stepped in to dismiss the question. Americans are “tired of hearing about” it, he said.