TODAY IN HISTORY - June 05

Reuters

Following are some of the major events to have occurred on June 5:

1916 - Lord Horatio Herbert Kitchener of Khartoum, Irish soldier, statesman and conqueror of Sudan, was lost at sea when his ship struck a mine off the Orkneys.

1945 - The Allied Control Commission took control of Germany, dividing it into four occupation zones.

1947 - U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall announced his plan to help Europe recover financially from the effects of World War Two.

1968 - U.S. Senator Robert Kennedy was shot in Los Angeles by Palestinian-Arab Sirhan Sirhan. He died the next day.

1975 - The Suez Canal, closed in the 1967 Middle East war, reopened to all but Israeli shipping.

1999 - U.S. jazz singer Mel Torme died at age 73.

2000 - U.S. President Bill Clinton became the first major Western leader to address the Russian State Duma.

2002 - Sinn Fein, the IRA's political ally, took the symbolic top job in Belfast when a hardline republican won the post of lord mayor in the face of bitter Protestant opposition.

2003 - Pope John Paul arrived on the Adriatic island of Krk to begin the 100th foreign trip of his papacy, a five-day visit to Croatia.

2004 - Ronald Reagan, U.S. president from 1981-89, died of Alzheimer's disease. As the 40th U.S. president, he is credited with helping end the Cold War with the former Soviet Union. He was 93.

2007 - Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a former top aide to U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for lying and obstructing a probe into the handling of the Iraq war.