Domain Registration

This Day in History: Feb. 24

  • February 24, 2020
  • Hot Gallary

Larry Flynt on the Development of PornographyVideo

Larry Flynt on the Development of Pornography

Publisher Larry Flynt on his life in the pornography industry.

On this day, Feb. 24 …

1988: In a ruling that would expand legal protections for parody and satire, the Supreme Court unanimously overturns a $150,000 award that the Rev. Jerry Falwell had won against Hustler magazine and its publisher, Larry Flynt.

Also on this day:

  • 1582: Pope Gregory XIII issues an edict outlining his calendar reforms. (The Gregorian Calendar is the calendar in general use today.)
  • 1761: Boston lawyer James Otis Jr. goes to court to argue against “writs of assistance” that allow British customs officers to arbitrarily search people’s premises, declaring: “A man’s house is his castle.” (Although Otis would lose the case, his statement would provide early inspiration for American independence.)
  • 1868: The U.S. House of Representatives impeach President Andrew Johnson by a vote of 126-47 following his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton; Johnson would be later acquitted by the Senate.
  • 1920: The German Workers Party, which would become the Nazi Party, meets in Munich to adopt its platform.
  • 1955: The Cole Porter musical “Silk Stockings” opens at the Imperial Theater on Broadway.
  • 1961: The Federal Communications Commission authorizes the nation’s first full-scale trial of pay television in Hartford, Conn.
  • 1983: A congressional commission releases a report condemning the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II as a “grave injustice.”
  • 1989: A state funeral is held in Japan for Emperor Hirohito, who had died the month before at age 87.
  • 1994: Entertainer Dinah Shore dies in Beverly Hills, Calif.
  • 2008: Cuba’s parliament names Raul Castro president, officially ending nearly 50 years of rule by his brother Fidel.
  • 2009: In the first prime-time speech of his term, President Obama appears before Congress to sketch an agenda that begins with jobs, then broadens quickly to include a stable credit system, better schools, health care reform, reliable domestic sources of energy and an end to the war in Iraq.
  • 2014: “Late Night with Seth Meyers” premieres on NBC.
  • 2018: The U.N. Security Council unanimously demands a 30-day cease-fire across Syria to deliver humanitarian aid and evacuate the wounded, as the death toll reaches 500 from a Syrian bombing campaign in the rebel-held suburbs of Damascus. (The cease-fire would fail to take hold.)
  • 2018: At the Winter Olympics in South Korea, American men win the gold medal in curling in a decisive upset of Sweden; it is only the second curling medal in U.S. history.

Article source: https://www.foxnews.com/us/this-day-in-history-feb-24

Related News

Search

Find best hotel offers