more events on September 7
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2008
US Government assumes conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the country’s two largest mortgage financing companies, during the subprime mortgage crisis.
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2004
Hurricane Ivan damages 90% of buildings on the island of Grenada; 39 die in the Category 5 storm.
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1988
Pilot and cosmonaut Abdul Ahad Mohmand, the first Afghan to travel to outer space, returns to earth after 9 days aboard the Soviet space station Mir.
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1986
Desmond Tutu becomes first black leader of the Church of the Province of Southern Africa (now the Anglican Church of South Africa).
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1979
ESPN, the Entertainment and Sports Programing Network, debuts.
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1978
Secret police agent Francesco Gullino assassinates Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov in London by firing a ricin pellet from a specially designed umbrella.
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1977
Panama and US sign Torrijos-Carter Treaties to transfer control of the Panama Canal from the US to Panama at the end of the 20th century.
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1970
Jockey Bill Shoemaker earns 6,033rd win, breaking Johnny Longden’s record for most lifetime wins; Shoemaker’s record would stand for 29 years.
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1965
Pro Football Hall of Fame opens in Canton, Ohio.
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1956
Michael Feinstein, singer, musician; archivist for Great American Songbook.
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1954
Integration of public schools begins in Washington D.C. and Maryland.
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1953
Nikita Krushchev elected first secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
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1950
Margaret “Peggy” Noonan, author, The Wall Street Journal columnist; special assistant to President Ronald Reagan.
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Julie Kavner, Emmy Award–winning actress (Rhoda, 1968) and voice actress (The Simpsons, 1992); best known as the voice of Marge Simpson in The Simpsons.
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1949
Gloria Gaynor, Grammy Award–winning singer (“I Will Survive”).
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1943
Beverley McLachlin, first woman to serve as Chief Justice of Canada.
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1942
The Red Army pushes back the German line northwest of Stalingrad.
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1940
Germany’s blitz against London begins during the Battle of Britain.
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1936
Buddy Holly, singer, songwriter, rock ‘n roll pioneer.
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1930
Sonny Rollins, saxophonist.
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1916
The U.S. Congress passes the Workman’s Compensation Act.
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1914
James Alfred Van Allen, discovered and named the two radiation belts surrounding the Earth.
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1912
French aviator Roland Garros sets an altitude record of 13,200 feet.
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1909
Elia Kazan, producer, screenwriter and director who won directing Oscars for Gentleman’s Agreement and On the Waterfront.
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1900
Taylor Caldwell, novelist.
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1892
The first heavyweight-title boxing match fought with gloves under Marquis of Queensbury rules ends when James J. Corbett knocks out John L. Sullivan in the 21st round.
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1888
An incubator is used for the first time on a premature infant.
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1876
The James-Younger gang botches an attempt to rob the First National Bank of Northfield, Minnesota.
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1864
Union General Phil Sheridan’s troops skirmish with the Confederates under Jubal Early outside Winchester, Virginia.
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1860
Edith Sitwell, poet.
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Anna Marie Robertson (Grandma Moses), American folk painter who started her career at age 78, best known for her paintings of rural life.
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1813
The earliest known printed reference to the United States by the nickname “Uncle Sam” occurs in the Troy Post.
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1812
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1778
Shawnee Indians attack and lay siege to Boonesborough, Kentucky.
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1701
England, Austria, and the Netherlands form an Alliance against France.
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1630
The town of Trimountaine in Massachusetts is renamed Boston. It became the state capital.
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1571
At the Battle of Lepanto in the Mediterranean Sea, the Christian galley fleet destroys the Turkish galley fleet.
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1533
Elizabeth I, Queen of England (1558-1603), led her country during the exploration of the New World and war with Spain.