Wednesday,  Feb. 26, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 225 • 40 of 41

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Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 26, 1904, the United States and Panama proclaimed a treaty under which the U.S. agreed to undertake efforts to build a ship canal across the Panama isthmus.

On this date:
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile on the Island of Elba.
• In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson signed a congressional act establishing Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona.
• In 1929, President Calvin Coolidge signed a measure establishing Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.
• In 1945, authorities ordered a midnight curfew at night clubs, bars and other places of entertainment across the nation.
• In 1952, Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced that Britain had developed its own atomic bomb.
• In 1962, after becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, astronaut John Glenn told a joint meeting of Congress, "Exploration and the pursuit of knowledge have always paid dividends in the long run."
• In 1970, National Public Radio was incorporated.
• In 1984, the last U.S. Marines deployed to Beirut as part of an international peacekeeping force withdrew from the Lebanese capital.
• In 1987, the Tower Commission, which had probed the Iran-Contra affair, issued its report, which rebuked President Ronald Reagan for failing to control his national security staff.
• In 1993, a truck bomb built by terrorists exploded in the parking garage of New York's World Trade Center, killing six people and injuring more than 1,000 others.
• In 1994, a jury in San Antonio acquitted eleven followers of David Koresh of murder, rejecting claims they'd ambushed federal agents; five were convicted of voluntary manslaughter.
• In 2012, in a case that drew national attention, Trayvon Martin, 17, was shot to death in Sanford, Fla., during an altercation with neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who said he'd acted in self-defense. (Zimmerman was subsequently acquitted of second-degree murder.)

Ten years ago: Two church-sanctioned studies documenting sex abuse by U.S. Roman Catholic clergy said that about four percent of clerics had been accused of molesting minors since 1950 and blamed bishops' "moral laxity" in disciplining of

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