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UPI Almanac for Sunday, Oct. 12, 2014

Terrorists attack the USS Cole in Yemen and nightclubs in Bali ... on this date in history.

By United Press International
The damaged USS Cole is carried on the Norwegian heavy transport ship Blue Marlin in the Gulf of Aden en route to the United States Oct. 31, 2000. A terrorist attack on the Cole three weeks earlier (on Oct. 12) in Yemen's Aden Harbor killed 17 sailors and wounded 39. bc/Handout/US Navy Photo UPI.
1 of 7 | The damaged USS Cole is carried on the Norwegian heavy transport ship Blue Marlin in the Gulf of Aden en route to the United States Oct. 31, 2000. A terrorist attack on the Cole three weeks earlier (on Oct. 12) in Yemen's Aden Harbor killed 17 sailors and wounded 39. bc/Handout/US Navy Photo UPI. | License Photo

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Today is Sunday, Oct. 12, the 285th day of 2014 with 80 to follow.

The moon is waning. Morning stars are Jupiter and Venus. Evening stars are Mars, Mercury, Neptune, Saturn and Uranus.


Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They include Elmer Sperry, who devised practical uses for the gyroscope, in 1860; English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams in 1872; baseball Hall of Fame member Joe Cronin in 1906; comedian and activist Dick Gregory in 1932 (age 82); opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti and R&B singer Sam Moore (age 79), both in 1935; Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Melvin Franklin of the Temptations singing group in 1942; TV correspondent Chris Wallace in 1947 (age 67); singer/actor Susan Anton in 1950 (age 64); actors Hugh Jackman and Adam Rich, both in 1968 (age 46) and Kirk Cameron in 1970 (age 44); country music musician Martie Maguire (the Dixie Chicks) in 1969 (age 45); track star Marion Jones in 1975 (age 39); and Olympic gold medal-winning skier Bode Miller in 1977 (age 37).
On this date in history:
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In 1492, Christopher Columbus reached America, making his first landing in the New World on one of the Bahamas Islands. Columbus thought he had reached India.

In 1915, British nurse Edith Cavell, 49, was executed by a German firing squad in Brussels for helping Allied soldiers escape from Belgium in World War I.

In 1960, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev removed one of his shoes and pounded it on his desk during a speech before the United Nations.

In 1964, the Soviet Union launched Voskhod 1 into orbit around Earth, with three cosmonauts aboard. It was the first spacecraft to carry a multi-person crew and the two-day mission was also the first orbital flight performed without spacesuits.

In 1973, U.S. President Richard Nixon nominated House Minority Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan for the vice presidency to replace Spiro Agnew, who had resigned two days earlier.

In 1984, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher escaped injury in the bombing of a hotel in Brighton, England. Four people were killed in the attack, blamed on the Irish Republican Army.

In 1992, an earthquake near Cairo killed more than 500 people and injured thousands..

In 1998, University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard, a 21-year-old gay man, died five days after he was beaten, robbed and left tied to a fence. (The U.S. Hate Crimes Prevention Act is often called the "Matthew Shepard Act.")

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In 2000, 17 sailors were killed and 39 wounded in an explosion on the USS Cole as it refueled in Yemen. U.S. President Bill Clinton blamed the attack on al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

In 2002, terrorist bombings near two crowded nightclubs on the Indonesian island of Bali killed more than 200 people.

In 2010, the U.S. government lifted a ban on deep-water oil and natural gas drilling for companies that obey stricter rules aimed at avoiding a repeat of the massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

In 2013, Oscar Hijuelos, a Cuban-American novelist who wrote about immigrants adapting to a new culture and won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for his 1989 book "The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love," died in New York City at the age of 62,


A thought for the day: "Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently." -- Henry Ford

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