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On This Day, March 29: Last U.S. combat troops leave Vietnam

On This Day, March 29: Last U.S. combat troops leave Vietnam

Yahoo29-03-2025

March 29 (UPI) -- On this date in history:
In 1812, Lucy Payne Washington, sister-in-law of U.S. President James Madison, married Supreme Court Justice Thomas Dodd in the first wedding performed in the White House.
In 1951, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage for passing atomic weapons information to the Soviet Union. They were executed in 1953.
In 1961, the 23rd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. The amendment gave District of Columbia residents the right to vote in presidential elections.
In 1971, cult leader Charles Manson and three followers (Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel) were sentenced to death in the Tate-Labianca slayings in Los Angeles. The sentences and a fifth death sentence, for Charles "Tex" Watson, were later commuted to life in prison.
In 1973, the last U.S. combat troops left South Vietnam (some advisers and others remained), ending the United States' direct military involvement in a war that didn't officially end until 1975.
In 1991, six-time Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti quit, opening the way for the country's 50th government since World War II.
In 2004, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia joined NATO.
In 2006, acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Kadima Party narrowly won the national election, taking 28 seats, forcing it into a coalition situation.
In 2010, two suicide bombers killed 39 people in attacks on the Moscow subway system.
In 2011, small levels of radiation from Japan's earthquake-tsunami-damaged Fukushima nuclear plant were detected in at least 15 U.S. states, but the Environmental Protection Agency said they posed no threat to public health.
In 2021, work crews refloated the jammed container ship Ever Given in Egypt's Suez Canal. It had blocked traffic in the vital trade waterway for nearly a week.
In 2024, Beyoncé her first country album, Cowboy Carter, the second in a planned trilogy including Renaissance.

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Marina von Neumann Whitman dies at 90; carved path for women in economics
Marina von Neumann Whitman dies at 90; carved path for women in economics

Boston Globe

time27 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Marina von Neumann Whitman dies at 90; carved path for women in economics

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She later rose to become group vice president for public relations, making her one of the highest-ranking women in corporate America at the time. 'One of the things about being an economist is that you seldom get the chance to practice your profession as well as teach,' she said in her own Oval Office comments, following Nixon's. Advertisement She was the daughter of mathematician John von Neumann, a polymath who developed game theory, made critical early advances in computer science, and played a central role in the development of the atomic bomb during World War II. He was one of several Hungarian Jewish emigres who worked on the Manhattan Project -- others included Leo Szilard and Edward Teller -- who came to be known, jokingly, as the Martians, for their intellectual brilliance and supposedly exotic personalities. 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After her divorce, she married James Kuper, a physicist who became a department chair at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island. Marina spent long stretches living with her father, whose Princeton home became a salon and way station for some of the country's leading intellectuals. Advertisement 'I was 15 before I realized this was not the normal American way of life,' she told The New York Times in 1972. The home, she added, was always filled with 'terribly interesting people and terribly interesting conversations.' She studied government at Radcliffe College, graduating at the top of her class in 1956. That same year, she married Robert F. Whitman, who was studying for his doctorate in English at Harvard. He died in 2024. Along with their son, Malcolm, a professor of developmental biology at Harvard, she leaves her half brother, George H. Kuper, and two grandchildren. Her daughter, Laura M. Whitman, an assistant professor of medicine at Yale University, died in 2023 at 59. 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What's Harder? Planning Interest Rates, Or Harvard's Class Of 2029?
What's Harder? Planning Interest Rates, Or Harvard's Class Of 2029?

Forbes

time44 minutes ago

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What's Harder? Planning Interest Rates, Or Harvard's Class Of 2029?

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LGBTQ+ community rallies in DC against 'coordinated attack' on rights
LGBTQ+ community rallies in DC against 'coordinated attack' on rights

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

LGBTQ+ community rallies in DC against 'coordinated attack' on rights

LGBTQ+ community rallies in DC against 'coordinated attack' on rights DC is hosting WorldPride at a time when rights for the queer community are being threatened. Show Caption Hide Caption Jim Obergefell talks LGBTQ+ rights 10 years after Supreme Court ruling Jim Obergefell, the lead plaintiff in the Supreme Court case that legalized gay marriage nationwide, looks back on its impact 10 years later. WASHINGTON − Thousands of members of the LGBTQ+ community and their supporters were gathering in the nation's capital Sunday for a rally and march for rights marking WorldPride 2025, a global festival promoting LGBTQ+ visibility and awareness. The events hosted by DC's Capital Pride Alliance, which is celebrating 50 years of Pride in the nation's capital, are part of Pride Month, which comes amid a seismic shift in federal policy as the Trump administration turns back the clock on diversity, equity and inclusion rights the queer community battled to attain. Organizers warn that while today's targets are gender, sexual orientation and race, decades of progress in all human rights face "coordinated, systematic attack." "Our fundamental freedoms − and our very democracy − are at risk," organizers say on the website promoting Sunday's rally and march. "And if we fail to recognize the urgency of this moment, we'll only have ourselves to blame. Resist the marginalization and persecution of people just for being who they are." The rally, which comes a day after a massive parade, will take begin at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. It will be followed by a march to the U.S. Capitol Building. A WorldPride DC Street Festival and concert are also planned. WorldPride comes to DC: Queer community vows to be 'louder than ever' President Donald Trump marked his first day in office by signing an executive order to dimantle diversity, equity and inclusion practices. The transgender community has been a primary target of the ensuing directives. They incude moves to end gender-affirming care for minors, revive a ban on transgender people in the military, remove references to the community from the Stonewall National Monument website and direct that federal agencies recognize only two sexes, male and female − affecting the ability of transgender people to identify on items such as passports. The actions have led some corporate sponsors to end support of Pride parades and prompted safety concerns for LGBTQ+ people traveling internationally to the WorldPride festival. Trump's 'bullying': LGBTQ+ advocates decry President Trump's actions during Pride Month "WorldPride is occurring at a crucial time, bringing together voices from around the world to support the LGBTQ+ community's ongoing fight for equality, visibility, and justice," the organization says on its website. "We encourage everyone in our global community to participate in this historic moment. By showing up and supporting Pride events globally, the LGBTQ+ community will be visible, vigilant, and heard."

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