Rome News-Tribune

HIGHLIGHTS IN HISTORY

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Today’s highlight:

On Nov. 13, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure lowering the minimum draft age from 21 to 18.

On this date:

1789: Benjamin Franklin wrote in a letter to a friend, JeanBaptis­te Leroy: “In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.”

1909: 259 men and boys were killed when fire erupted inside a coal mine in Cherry, Illinois.

1956: The Supreme Court struck down laws calling for racial segregatio­n on public buses.

1969: Speaking in Des Moines, Iowa, Vice President

Spiro T. Agnew accused network television news department­s of bias and distortion, and urged viewers to lodge complaints.

1974: Karen Silkwood,a 28-year-old technician and union activist at the KerrMcGee Cimarron plutonium plant near Crescent, Oklahoma, died in a car crash while on her way to meet a reporter.

1982: The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

1994: Sweden voted in a non-binding referendum to join the European Union, which it did the following year.

2000: Lawyers for George W. Bush failed to win a court order barring manual recounts of ballots in Florida. Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris announced she would end the recounting at 5 p.m. Eastern time the next day -- prompting an immediate appeal by lawyers for Al Gore.

2001: President George W. Bush approved the use of a special military tribunal that could put accused terrorists on trial faster and in greater secrecy than an ordinary criminal court. President Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin met at the White House, where they pledged to slash Cold Warera nuclear arsenals by two-thirds.

2015: Islamic State militants carried out a set of coordinate­d attacks in Paris on the national stadium, restaurant­s and streets, and a crowded concert hall, killing 130 people in the worst attack on French soil since World War II.

Ten years ago: A wind-driven fire erupted in Southern California; the blaze destroyed more than 200 homes in Santa Barbara and neighborin­g Montecito. Investors did an abrupt turnaround on Wall Street, muscling the Dow Jones industrial average up more than 550 points after three straight days of selling.

Five years ago: The Obama administra­tion revealed that just 26,794 people had enrolled for health insurance during the first, flawed month of operations for the federal “Obamacare” website. More than 79,000 others had signed up in the 14 states with their own websites. Toronto Mayor Rob Ford admitted during a heated City Council meeting that he’d bought illegal drugs while in office, but he adamantly refused calls from councilors to step down and seek help.

One year ago: A second woman accused Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore of sexually assaulting her as a teenager in the late 1970s; Moore described the charge as “absolutely false” and a “political maneuver.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Moore should drop out of the race. Moore went on to lose a special election to Democrat Doug Jones.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the first drug with a sensor that alerts doctors when the medication has been taken. President Donald Trump picked former pharmaceut­ical executive

Alex Azar to be his health secretary.

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