The Bakersfield Californian

TODAY IN HISTORY

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1492: Christophe­r Columbus set sail from Palos, Spain, on his first voyage that took him to the present-day Americas.

1852: In America’s first intercolle­giate sporting event, Harvard rowed past Yale to win the first Harvard-Yale Regatta.

1916: Irish-born British diplomat Roger Casement, a strong advocate of independen­ce for Ireland, was hanged for treason.

1936: Jesse Owens of the United States won the first of his four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics as he took the 100-meter sprint.

1972: The U.S. Senate ratified the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union.

1977: The Tandy Corporatio­n introduced the TRS-80, one of the first widely-available home computers.

1981: U.S. air traffic controller­s went on strike, seeking pay and workplace improvemen­ts (two days later, President Ronald Reagan fired the 11,345 striking union members and barred them from federal employment).

2004: The pedestal of the Statue of Liberty opened to visitors for the first time since the 9/11 attacks.

2018: Las Vegas police said they were closing their investigat­ion into the Oct. 1, 2017 shooting that left 58 people dead at a country music festival without a definitive answer for why Stephen Paddock unleashed gunfire from a hotel suite onto the concert crowd.

2019: A gunman opened fire at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, resulting in the deaths of 23 people; after surrenderi­ng, the gunman told detectives he targeted “Mexicans” and had outlined the plot in a screed published online shortly before the attack.

2021: New York’s state attorney general said an investigat­ion into Gov. Andrew Cuomo found that he had sexually harassed multiple current and former state government employees; the report brought increased pressure on Cuomo to resign, including pressure from President Joe Biden and other Democrats. (Cuomo resigned a week later.)

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