Big Spring Herald

This Date In History

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Today in History

Today is Monday, Sept. 21, the 265th day of 2020. There are 101 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Sept. 21, 1981, the Senate unanimousl­y confirmed the nomination of Sandra Day O’Connor to become the first female justice on the Supreme Court.

On this date:

In 1792, the French National Convention voted to abolish the monarchy.

In 1937, “The Hobbit,” by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published by George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. of London.

In 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming some 700 lives.

In 1970, “NFL Monday Night Football” made its debut on ABC-TV as the Cleveland Browns defeated the visiting New York Jets, 31-21.

In 1976, Orlando Letelier (lehtel-YEHR’), onetime foreign minister to Chilean President Salvador Allende (ah-YEN’day), was killed when a bomb exploded in his car in Washington D.C. (The bombing, which also killed Letelier’s assistant, Ronni Moffitt, was blamed on Chile’s secret police.)

In 1982, Amin Gemayel, brother of Lebanon’s assassinat­ed president-elect, Bashir Gemayel, was himself elected president. National Football League players began a 57-day strike, their first regular-season walkout ever.

In 1985, in North Korea and South Korea, family members who had been separated for decades were allowed to visit each other as both countries opened their borders in an unpreceden­ted family-reunion program.

In 1987, NFL players called a strike, mainly over the issue of free agency. (The 24-day walkout prompted football owners to hire replacemen­t players.) In 1989, Hurricane Hugo crashed into Charleston, South Carolina (the storm was blamed for 56 deaths in the Caribbean and 29 in the United States). Twenty-one students in Alton, Texas, died when their school bus, hit by a soft-drink delivery truck, careened into a water-filled pit. In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act denying federal recognitio­n of same-sex marriages, a day after saying the law should not be used as an excuse for discrimina­tion, violence or intimidati­on against gays and lesbians. (Although never formally repealed, DoMA was effectivel­y overturned by U.S. Supreme Court decisions in 2013 and 2015.)

In 2001, Congress again opened the federal coffers to those harmed by terrorism, providing $15 billion to the airline industry, which was suffering mounting economic losses since the Sept. 11 attacks.

In 2008, baseball said farewell to the original Yankee Stadium as the Bronx Bombers defeated the Baltimore Orioles 7-3. Ten years ago: The mayor and ex-city manager of the Los Angeles suburb of Bell were among eight current and former city officials arrested in a corruption scandal that authoritie­s said cost the blue-collar city more than $5.5 million in excessive salaries and illegal personal loans. Two men filed a lawsuit accusing Atlanta megachurch pastor Bishop Eddie Long of coercing them into sexual relationsh­ips when they were teenage members of his congregati­on. (Long, who denied the allegation­s, later reached out-of-court settlement­s with them and two other men.)

Five years ago: Pope Francis traveled to Cuba’s fourthlarg­est city, Holguin, where he celebrated a Mass marking the anniversar­y of the day he decided as a teenager to become a priest by pressing a subtle message to Cubans: Overcome ideologica­l preconcept­ions and be willing to change. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker abandoned his bid for the 2016 Republican presidenti­al nomination. A federal judge in Albany, Georgia, sentenced former Peanut Corporatio­n of America owner Stewart Parnell to 28 years in prison for his role in a deadly 2008-9 salmonella outbreak blamed for nine deaths.

One year ago: In a tweet, President Donald Trump said his July conversati­on with Ukraine’s president was “perfectly fine and routine,” and added: “Nothing was said that was in any way wrong.” Officials reported a handful of arrests from a three-day gathering near Nevada’s once-secret

Area 51 military base; it had been prompted by an appeal from an internet hoaxster for people to “storm” the base to see space aliens. Today’s Birthdays: Authorcome­dian Fannie Flagg is 79. Producer Jerry Bruckheime­r is 77. Former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear is 76. Musician Don Felder is 73. Author Stephen King is 73. Basketball Hall of Famer Artis Gilmore is

71. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is 70. Former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is 63. Movie producer-writer Ethan Coen is 63. Actor-comedian Dave Coulier is 61. Actor David James Elliott is

60. Actor Serena Scott-Thomas is 59. Actor Nancy Travis is

59. Actor Rob Morrow is 58. Actor Angus Macfadyen is

57. Retired MLB All-Star Cecil Fielder is 57. Actor Cheryl

Hines is 55. Country singer Faith Hill is 53. Rock musician Tyler Stewart (Barenaked Ladies) is 53. Country singer Ronna Reeves is 52. Actor-talk show host Ricki Lake is 52. Rapper Dave (De La Soul) is 52. Actor Billy Porter is 51. Actor Rob Benedict is 50. Actor James Lesure is 49. Actor Alfonso Ribeiro (rih-BEHR’-oh) is 49. Actor Luke Wilson is 49. Actor Paulo Costanzo is 42.

Actor Bradford Anderson is

41. Actor Autumn Reeser is 40. TV personalit­y Nicole Richie is 39. Actor Maggie Grace is

37. Actor Joseph Mazzello is

37. Actor Ahna O’Reilly is 36. Rapper Wale (WAH’-lay) is

36. R&B singer Jason Derulo is

34. Actor Ryan Guzman is 33. Actors Lorenzo and Nikolas Brino are 22.

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