Antelope Valley Press

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today is Tuesday,

Nov. 24, the 329th day of 2020. There are 37 days left in the year.

ON THIS DATE IN HISTORY

On Nov. 24, 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of Species,” which explained his theory of evolution by means of natural selection.

1865 — Mississipp­i became the first Southern state to enact laws which came to be known as “Black Codes” aimed at limiting the rights of newly freed Blacks; other states of the former Confederac­y soon followed.

1947 — A group of writers, producers and directors that became known as the “Hollywood Ten” was cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to answer questions about alleged Communist influence in the movie industry. John Steinbeck’s novel “The Pearl” was first published.

1963 — Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television.

1971 — A hijacker calling himself “Dan Cooper” (but who became popularly known as “D.B. Cooper”) parachuted from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727 over the Pacific Northwest after receiving $200,000 in ransom; his fate remains unknown.

1987 — The United States and the Soviet Union agreed on terms to scrap shorter- and medium-range missiles. (The Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was signed by President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev the following month.)

1991 — Rock singer Freddie Mercury died in London at age 45 of AIDS-related pneumonia.

2000 — The US Supreme Court stepped into the bitter, overtime struggle for the White House, agreeing to consider George W. Bush’s appeal against the hand recounting of ballots in Florida.

2017 — Militants attacked a crowded mosque in Egypt with gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades, killing more than 300 people in the deadliest-ever attack by Islamic extremists in the country.

Ten years ago —A jury in Austin convicted former US House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, on charges he’d illegally funneled corporate money to Texas candidates in 2002. (

Five years ago — In a show of Western solidarity, President Barack Obama and French President

Francois Hollande met at the White House, where they vowed to escalate air strikes against the Islamic State and bolster intelligen­ce sharing following the deadly attacks in Paris. A suicide bomber struck a bus carrying members of Tunisia’s presidenti­al guard in the country’s capital, killing 12 victims. Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said ignored repeated warnings after crossing into its airspace from Syria, killing one of the two pilots. (Turkey later formally apologized for the shootdown.)

One year ago — Billionair­e and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg formally launched a Democratic bid for president. (Bloomberg would end his campaign in early March.) With multiple wins at the American Music Awards, Taylor Swift surged past Michael Jackson’s record of 24 wins at the awards show, based on fan votes. Defense Secretary Mark Esper fired the Navy’s top official, Richard Spencer, ending a clash between President Donald Trump and top military leadership over the fate of a SEAL accused of war crimes in Iraq. Disney’s “Frozen” sequel took in $127 million domestical­ly and $350 million worldwide in its opening weekend, breaking several records.

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