The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

TODAY IN HISTORY

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1938

Thornton Wilder’s play “Our Town” was performed publicly for the first time in Princeton, New Jersey.

1944

During World War II, Allied forces began landing at Anzio, Italy.

1947

America’s first commercial­ly licensed television station west of the Mississipp­i, KTLA-TV in Los Angeles, made its official debut.

1953

The Arthur Miller drama “The Crucible” opened on Broadway.

1995

Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy died at the Kennedy compound at Hyannis Port, Massachuse­tts, at age 104.

1997

The Senate confirmed Madeleine Albright as the nation’s first female secretary of state.

1998

Theodore Kaczynski (kahzihn’-skee) pleaded guilty in Sacramento, California, to being the Unabomber responsibl­e for three deaths and 29injuries in return for a sentence of life in prison without parole.

2006

Kobe Bryant scored 81 points, the second-highest in NBA history, in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 122-104victory over the Toronto Raptors.

2007

A double car bombing of a predominan­tly Shiite commercial area in Baghdad killed 88people. Iran announced it had barred 38nuclear inspectors on a United Nations list from entering the country in apparent retaliatio­n for U.N. sanctions imposed the previous month.

2008

Actor Heath Ledger, 28, was found dead of an accidental prescripti­on overdose in a New York City apartment.

2009

President Barack Obama signed an executive order to close the Guantanamo Bay prison camp within a year. (The facility remained in operation as lawmakers blocked efforts to transfer terror suspects to the United States; President Donald Trump later issued an order to keep the jail open and allow the Pentagon to bring new prisoners there.)

2020

Chinese health authoritie­s urged people in the city of Wuhan to avoid crowds and public gatherings after warning that a new viral illness that had infected hundreds of people and caused at least nine deaths could spread further. Health officials in Washington state said they were actively monitoring 16 people who’d come in close contact with a traveler to China, the first U.S. resident known to be infected with the virus.

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