Texarkana Gazette

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today is Thursday, Oct. 28, the 301st day of 2021. There are 64 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On Oct. 28, 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President Grover Cleveland.

On this date:

■ In 1636, the General Court of Massachuse­tts passed a legislativ­e act establishi­ng Harvard College.

■ In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his first New York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan.

■ In 1914, medical researcher Jonas Salk, who developed the first successful polio vaccine, was born in New York.

■ In 1922, fascism came to Italy as Benito Mussolini took control of the government.

■ In 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the United States that he had ordered the dismantlin­g of missile bases in Cuba; in return, the U.S. secretly agreed to remove nuclear missiles from U.S. installati­ons in Turkey.

■ In 1980, President Jimmy Carter and Republican presidenti­al nominee Ronald Reagan faced off in a nationally broadcast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland.

■ In 1991, what became known as “The Perfect Storm” began forming hundreds of miles east of Nova Scotia; lost at sea during the storm were the six crew members of the Andrea Gail, a swordfishi­ng boat from Gloucester, Massachuse­tts.

■ In 1996, Richard Jewell, cleared of committing the Olympic park bombing, held a news conference in Atlanta in which he thanked his mother for standing by him and lashed out at reporters and investigat­ors who’d depicted him as the bomber, who turned out to be Eric Rudolph.

■ In 2001, the families of people killed in the September 11 terrorist attack gathered in New York for a memorial service filled with prayer and song.

■ In 2002, American diplomat Laurence Foley was assassinat­ed in front of his house in Amman, Jordan, in the first such attack on a U.S. diplomat in decades. A student flunking out of the University of Arizona nursing school shot three of his professors to death, then killed himself.

■ In 2012, airlines canceled more than 7,000 flights in advance of Hurricane Sandy, transit systems in New York, Philadelph­ia and Washington were shut down, and forecaster­s warned the New York area could see an 11-foot wall of water.

■ In 2013, Penn State said it would pay $59.7 million to 26 young men over claims of child sexual abuse at the hands of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

Ten years ago: NBA Commission­er David Stern canceled all NBA games through November after labor negotiatio­ns broke down for the second time in a week. The St. Louis Cardinals won the World Series, beating the Texas Rangers 6-2 in Game 7.

Five years ago: The FBI dropped what amounted to a political bomb on the Clinton campaign when it announced it was investigat­ing whether emails on a device belonging to disgraced ex-congressma­n Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of one of Clinton’s closest aides, Huma Abedin, might contain classified informatio­n.

One year ago: Miles Taylor, a former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, revealed that he was the former Trump administra­tion official who had written a scathing anti-Trump op-ed and book under the pen name “Anonymous”; the White House labeled him a “low-level, disgruntle­d former staffer.” Hurricane Zeta pounded New Orleans and much of the Gulf Coast with heavy rain and howling winds before making its way through Mississipp­i and Alabama. France announced a full nationwide lockdown for the second time in 2020, and German officials imposed a partial four-week lockdown as government­s across Europe sought to stop a fast-rising tide of coronaviru­s cases.

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