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Today's Highlight in History: In 1935, the Works Progress Administration was approved by Congress. In 1946, the League of Nations assembled in Geneva for the last time. In 1950, ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky died in London. In 1970, the Senate rejected President Nixon's nomination2 of G. Harold Carswell to the US Supreme3 Court. In 1973, artist Pablo Picasso died at his home near Mougins, France, at age 91. In 1975, Frank Robinson, major league baseball's first black manager, got off to a winning start as his team, the Cleveland Indians, defeated the New York Yankees, 5-to-3. In 1981, General Omar N. Bradley died in New York at age 88. In 1992, tennis great Arthur Ashe announced at a New York news conference that he had AIDS. (Ashe died in February 1993 of AIDS-related pneumonia4 at age 49.) In 1994, Kurt Cobain, singer and guitarist for the grunge band Nirvana, was found dead in Seattle from an apparently5 self-inflicted gunshot wound; he was 27. Ten years ago: Ryan White, the teen-age AIDS patient whose battle for acceptance gained national attention, died in Indianapolis at age 18. The cult6 series "Twin Peaks" premiered on ABC TV. Five years ago: Former secretary of defense8 Robert S. McNamara, in an interview with AP Network News and "Newsweek" magazine to promote his memoirs9, called America's Vietnam War policy "terribly wrong." One year ago: At a White House news conference, President Clinton said NATO could still win in Kosovo by air power alone, and he expressed hope for an early release of three American POW's; also at the session with reporters was visiting Chinese Premier7 Zhu Rongji (joo rahng-jee), who promised to cooperate in investigations10 of alleged11 nuclear-weapons spying and illegal campaign contributions by Beijing.
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