
Today is Monday, Oct. 25, the 298th day of 2010 with 67 to follow.
The moon is waning. No morning stars. The evening stars are Mercury, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus, Jupiter, Venus and Mars.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They include British historian Thomas Macaulay in 1800; Austrian composer Johann Strauss in 1825; French composer Georges Bizet in 1838; automobile entrepreneur John Francis Dodge in 1864; artist Pablo Picasso in 1881; actor Leo G. Carroll in 1886; explorer Richard Byrd in 1888; Roman Catholic radio evangelist the Rev. Charles Coughlin in 1891; country comedian Minnie Pearl in 1912; actors Billy Barty in 1924, Tony Franciosa in 1928 and Marion Ross in 1928 (age 82); basketball coach and television analyst Bob Knight in 1940 (age 70); author Anne Tyler and pop singer Helen Reddy, both in 1941 (age 69); rock singer Jon Anderson and political strategist James Carville, both in 1944 (age 66); basketball Hall of Fame member Dave Cowens and Olympic gold medal wrestler Dan Gable, both in 1948 (age 62); Olympic gold medal U.S. hockey team member Mike Eruizone in 1954 (age 56); actors Nancy Cartwright in 1957 (age 53) and Tracy Nelson in 1963 (age 47); violinist Midori Goto in 1971 (age 39); and singer Katy Perry in 1984 (age 26).
On this date in history:
In 1825, the Erie Canal, America's first man-made waterway, was opened, linking the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean via the Hudson River.
In 1854, known to history as the Charge of the Light Brigade, 670 British cavalrymen fighting in the Crimean War attacked a heavily fortified Russian position and were wiped out.
In 1881, Pablo Picasso, one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century, was born in Malaga, Spain.
In 1929, during the Teapot Dome scandal, Albert B. Fall, who served as U.S. President Warren Harding's interior secretary, was found guilty of accepting a bribe while in office, first individual convicted of a crime committed while a presidential Cabinet member.
In 1971, the United Nations admitted China as a member, ousting the Nationalist Chinese government of Taiwan.
In 1983, U.S. troops, supported by six Caribbean nations, invaded the tiny, leftist-ruled island of Grenada. Nineteen Americans died in the fighting.
In 1986, the International Red Cross ousted South African delegates from a Geneva meeting because of Pretoria's policy of apartheid. It was the first such ejection in the organization's 123 years.
In 1993, Canadian voters rejected the Progressive Conservative party of Prime Minister Kim Campbell and gave the Liberal Party, led by Jean Chretien of Quebec, a firm majority in Parliament.
In 1994, Susan Smith reported to police in Union, S.C., that her two sons had been taken in a carjacking. Nine days later, she confessed she had rolled her car into a lake, drowning the children.
In 2000, AT&T announced it would break into four separate businesses in a bid to renew investor support.
In 2001, the U.S. Senate, by a 90-1 vote, approved a final package of anti-terror reforms designed to help law enforcement monitor and detain suspected terrorists.
In 2002, Democratic U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone of Minnesota and seven others were killed in the crash of a small plane near the Eveleth-Virginia Municipal Airport, about 180 miles northeast of Minneapolis.
In 2004, at least 78 Muslim detainees suffocated or were crushed to death in southern Thailand after the police rounded up 1,300 people and packed them into trucks following a riot.
In 2005, civil rights icon Rosa Parks died in Detroit at age 92. Parks, an African-American woman, gave new impetus to the rights movement when in 1955 she refused to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Ala., bus.
In 2006, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples "must be afforded on equal terms the same rights and benefits enjoyed by opposite-sex couples."
In 2007, the U.S. government issued a new wave of sanctions against Iran, focusing on the country's military, for its nuclear development activities.
In 2008, Yemen authorities reported 48 people dead or missing in flash flooding in the country's Hadramout region. An estimated 22,000 people were driven from their homes.
In 2009, twin suicide bombings in Baghdad killed a reported 160 people and wounded about 530 others in the deadliest attacks in the country in two years.
Also in 2009, the World Health Organization reported a global death toll from the H1N1 virus, known as swine flu, at 5,700 from among a growing number of 440,000 people confirmed with the disease.
A thought for the day: Pablo Picasso said, "I am only an entertainer who has understood his time."
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