The Sentinel-Record

Today in history

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On Dec. 9, 2000, the U-S Supreme Court ordered a temporary halt in the Florida vote count on which Al Gore pinned his best hopes of winning the White House.

In 1854, Alfred, Lord Tennyson's famous poem, "The Charge of the Light Brigade," was published in England.

In 1911, an explosion inside the Cross Mountain coal mine near Briceville, Tennessee, killed 84 workers. (Five were rescued.)

In 1940, British troops opened their first major offensive in North Africa during World War II.

In 1958, the anti-communist John Birch Society was formed in Indianapol­is.

In 1962, the Petrified Forest in Arizona was designated a national park.

In 1965, the James Bond film "Thunderbal­l," starring Sean Connery, had its world premiere in Tokyo.

In 1987, the first Palestinia­n intefadeh, or uprising, began as riots broke out in Gaza and spread to the West Bank, triggering a strong Israeli response.

In 1990, Solidarity founder Lech Walesa ( lek vah-WEN'sah) won Poland's presidenti­al runoff by a landslide.

In 1992, Britain's Prince Charles and Princess Diana announced their separation. (The couple's divorce became final in Aug. 1996.)

In 2001, the United States disclosed the existence of a videotape in which Osama bin Laden said he was pleasantly surprised by the extent of damage from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

In 2013, scientists revealed that NASA's Curiosity rover had uncovered signs of an ancient freshwater lake on Mars.

In 2014, U.S. Senate investigat­ors concluded the United States had brutalized scores of terror suspects with interrogat­ion tactics that turned secret CIA prisons into chambers of suffering and did nothing to make Americans safer after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

Ten years ago: In Britain's worst political violence in years, student protesters rained sticks and rocks on riot police, vandalized government buildings and attacked a car carrying Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, after lawmakers approved a controvers­ial hike in university tuition fees. Actor Wesley Snipes began serving a threeyear sentence at a federal prison in Pennsylvan­ia for failure to file income tax returns. Florida's Clemency Board pardoned Jim Morrison for indecent exposure and profanity charges stemming from a Doors concert in 1969. John du Pont, the chemical fortune heir who killed Olympic gold medal wrestler David Schultz in 1996, died in prison at age 72.

Five years ago: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel apologized for the 2014 police shooting of a Black teenager during a special City Council meeting that he called to discuss a police abuse scandal at the center of the biggest crisis of his administra­tion, and promised "complete and total" reform to restore trust in the police.

One year ago: At a hearing by the House Judiciary Committee, Democrats outlined the impeachmen­t case against President Donald Trump by saying his push to get Ukraine to investigat­e Joe Biden while withholdin­g U. S. military aid ran counter to U.S. policy and benefited Russia as well as himself. A long-awaited report from the Justice Department's internal watchdog said the FBI was justified in opening its investigat­ion into ties between the Trump presidenti­al campaign and Russia. A volcano on New Zealand's White Island erupted as 47 people visited the tourist destinatio­n; the eruption killed 13 people initially and eight more died later from severe burns. The Supreme Court left in place a Kentucky law requiring doctors to perform ultrasound­s and show images to patients before abortions. Former college baseball player Pete Frates, whose battle with Lou Gehrig's disease helped inspire the ice bucket challenge, died at 34. (The challenge raised more than $200 million worldwide for research into ALS.)

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