Today in History: January 21, Concorde jet takes first supersonic passenger flight

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Today is Wednesday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 2026. There are 344 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Jan. 21, 1976, British Airways and Air France inaugurated scheduled passenger service on the supersonic Concorde jet.

Also on this date:

In 1793, during the French Revolution, King Louis XVI, condemned for treason, was executed by guillotine.

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In 1861, Jefferson Davis of Mississippi, with a dramatic farewell speech, resigned his U.S. Senate seat after his state and others seceded from the Union. He would later be elected president of the Confederacy shortly before the Civil War began.

In 1924, Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin died at age 53, setting off a bloody power struggle that would lead to the rise of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

In 1950, former State Department official Alger Hiss, accused of being part of a Communist spy ring, was found guilty in New York of lying to a grand jury. (Hiss, who proclaimed his innocence, served less than four years in prison.)

In 1960, the collapse of a mine in Coalbrook, South Africa, killed 437 miners.

In 1977, on his first full day in office, President Jimmy Carter pardoned almost all Vietnam War draft evaders.

In 1985, Galaxy Airlines Flight 203 crashed in a field shortly after takeoff from Reno, Nevada, killing all but one of the 71 people aboard. The survivor was a 17-year-old boy who was thrown clear of the aircraft and found conscious and still in his seat.

In 2010, a deeply divided U.S. Supreme Court, in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, vastly increased the influence of big business and labor unions by allowing unlimited contributions to political campaigns.

In 2017, a day after Donald Trump’s first presidential inauguration, an estimated 3 million to 5 million people rallied at Women’s March demonstrations across the U.S. to support civil rights and to protest Trump’s rhetoric and policies.

In 2020, the U.S. reported its first known case of the 2019 novel coronavirus circulating in China, saying a Washington state resident who had returned the previous week from the outbreak’s epicenter was hospitalized near Seattle.

In 2023, a gunman opened fire and killed 11 people at a ballroom dance hall in Monterey Park, California, during the city’s Lunar New Year festivities. The gunman killed himself as police closed in on him.

Today’s birthdays:

Golf Hall of Famer Jack Nicklaus is 86.
Opera singer Plácido Domingo is 85.
Singer-songwriter Billy Ocean is 76.
Artist Jeff Koons is 71.
Actor-director Robby Benson is 70.
Actor Geena Davis is 70.
Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota is 65.
Basketball Hall of Famer Hakeem Olajuwon is 63.
Singer Emma Bunton (Spice Girls) is 50.
Actor Luke Grimes is 42.
Mixed martial artist Ilia Tuporia is 29.
Singer-songwriter Em Beihold is 27.

2026 Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt Clue 4

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Pack your bag for riches to shag

The game demands your best

No need to be vandal to get a good handle

On how to fulfill your quest

Hunt clues will be released at about midnight at TwinCities.com/treasurehunt each day of the hunt.

See the Treasure Hunt rules.

Where has the medallion been discovered in past years?

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Timberwolves give up double-digit fourth-quarter lead, lose to Jazz

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Keyonte George scored a career-high 43 points, Jusuf Nurkic recorded his second career triple-double, and the Utah Jazz rallied to beat the Minnesota Timberwolves 127-122 on Tuesday night.

Nurkic finished with 16 points, 18 rebounds and 10 assists in his first triple-double since Jan. 16, 2019, with Portland in a 129-112 win over Cleveland.

Rookie Ace Bailey scored 20 points and Isaiah Collier had 18 points and 10 assists for the Jazz (15-29), who delivered coach Will Hardy his 100th career victory. George scored more than 30 points for the third time in his last six games.

Anthony Edwards scored 38 points for the Timberwolves (27-17), who squandered a 15-point lead and closed out a four-game trip with three straight losses. Julius Randle scored 19 points and Rudy Gobert added 11 points, 10 rebounds and four blocks.

Edwards had a three-point play that pulled Minnesota within 121-119 before George responded with a 3-pointer from the corner with 59.2 seconds left that give the Jazz the cushion needed to halt their four-game skid.

Bailey sparked an 11-2 run with an electrifying dunk and a 3-pointer that gave the Jazz the lead with 7:47 to play in the fourth quarter. The Jazz scored on their first 11 possessions of the final period.

Edwards scored 12 points in the third quarter as the Timberwolves turned a 1-point deficit into a 96-84 lead. The Timberwolves were outrunning the Jazz at home with a 23-9 advantage in fast-break points through three quarters, but couldn’t sustain that effort in the fourth.

Gobert returned after missing two of three games due to a league suspension for too many flagrant fouls and a hip bruise. He received a technical in the fourth quarter for elbowing Nurkic in the face, but wasn’t assessed a flagrant after a video review.

The Jazz were missing leading scorer Lauri Markkanen, Kevin Love and Brice Sensabaugh. The Jazz were 0-10 without Markkanen this season.

Up next

Timberwolves: Host the Chicago Bulls on Thursday.

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Late goal sinks Wild in Montreal

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Playing their third road game in the past four nights on Tuesday, the Minnesota Wild at times looked like a team running on fumes. Then, they would get a boost of energy and refuse to fly back to Minnesota without a fight.

In the end, the Wild held an early lead, rallied to tie in the second and third periods but couldn’t finish off a sweep of their three-game road trip.

Cole Caufield scored with 15 seconds left in the third for the Montreal Canadiens, lifting them to a 4-3 win.

Vladimir Tarasenko scored twice and Brock Faber got a goal for Minnesota, which comes home for its next four games in St. Paul. The Wild got 29 saves from Jesper Wallstedt in the loss.

The Wild looked discombobulated early and their hosts pounced, outshooting Minnesota 7-1 before the first period was half over.

The tide turned, briefly, when Faber was tripped, and Minnesota needed just 15 seconds of man advantage to take the lead. It was the fourth goal of the three-game road trip for Tarasenko and the 32nd time the Wild had scored first this season, which is tied with Washington for tops in the NHL.

Minnesota Wild’s Vladimir Tarasenko (91) celebrates his goal over the Montreal Canadiens during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Montreal, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via AP)

But the Canadiens didn’t let it get them down, forging a tie on Phillip Danault’s first goal of the season, then treading a long range shot by Alexandre Carrier through a crowd in the final minute of the first to lead 2-1 after the first. Montreal outshot Minnesota 15-2 in the opening 20 minutes.

The middle frame wake-up call came at the right time for the Wild, who tied the score when a Faber shot from long range slipped through a screen provided by Vinnie Hinostroza at the net front. But the momentum disappeared quickly, as the Canadiens went up 3-2 on a goal by Lane Hutson barely two minutes after Faber’s tying goal to lead after two periods.

The Wild’s golden chance came with eight minutes left in the third, as consecutive penalties on the Habs gave Minnesota 45 seconds of a 5-on-3 power play. The Wild called a timeout to rest their top man-advantage unit, and Tarasenko squeezed in a shot from the goal line to knot the game once again.

Former Ohio State standout goalie Jakub Dobes had 16 saves for Montreal, which makes its lone trip to Minnesota this season on Feb. 2.

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