This day in history — July 22

Associated Press

Today’s highlight in history 

On July 22, 1942, the Nazis began transporting Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto to the Treblinka concentration camp.

On this date 

In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln presented to his cabinet a preliminary draft of the Emancipation Proclamation.

John Dillinger posed for this photo not long before his death in Chicago on July 22, 1934.

In 1934, bank robber John Dillinger was shot to death by federal agents outside Chicago’s Biograph Theater, where he had just seen the Clark Gable movie “Manhattan Melodrama.” 

In 1937, the U.S. Senate rejected President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s proposal to add more justices to the Supreme Court.

In 1946, the militant Zionist group Irgun blew up a wing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, killing 91 people. 

Elvis Costello and the Attractions let it rip at Milwaukee's Electric Ballroom in 1977. This photo by Larry Widen appeared in Widen's book "Milwaukee Rock and Roll."

In 1977, Elvis Costello’s debut album, “My Aim Is True,” was released by Stiff Records.

In 1992, Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar escaped from his luxury prison near Medellin. (He was killed by security forces in December 1993.)

In 2011, Anders Breivik, a self-described “militant nationalist,” massacred 69 people at a Norwegian island youth retreat after detonating a bomb in nearby Oslo that killed eight others in the nation’s worst violence since World War II. 

Ten years ago: A bus carrying Polish Catholic pilgrims from a holy site in the French Alps plunged off a steep mountain road, killing 26 people.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama made a quick trip to Colorado to meet with families of those gunned down in an Aurora movie theater and to hear from state and local officials about the shooting that left 12 people dead and dozens more injured.

One year ago: A gunman opened fire at a mall in Munich, Germany, killing nine people before taking his own life.

Associated Press

Author, poet, biographer and former Milwaukee newspaperman Carl Sandburg laughs during an interview in Milwaukee on Nov. 18, 1958. This photo was published in the Nov. 19, 1958, Milwaukee Journal.

QUOTE UNQUOTE

"Yesterday is done. Tomorrow never comes. Today is here. If you don't know what to do, sit still and listen."

Carl Sandburg,

American author, historian and poet Carl Sandburg, who worked as a reporter in Milwaukee early in his career; he died on this date in 1967 at age 89