more events on September 5
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1996
Hurricane Fran comes ashore near Cape Fear, No. Car. It will kill 27 people and cause more than $3 billion in damage.
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1989
Katerina Graham, actress, model, singer, dancer (The Vampire Diaries TV series).
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1984
Space Shuttle Discovery lands afters its maiden voyage.
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1980
World’s longest tunnel opens; Switzerland’s St. Gotthard Tunnel stretches 10.14 miles (16.224 km) from Goschenen to Airolo.
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1978
Israel’s Menachem Begin and Egypt’s Anwar Sadat begin discussions on a peace process, at Camp David, Md.
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1977
Voyager 1 space probe launched.
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Hanns-Martin Schleyer, a German business executive who headed to powerful organization and had been an SS officer during WW2, is abducted by the left-wing extremist group Red Army Faction, who execute him on Oct. 18.
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1975
President Gerald Ford evades an assassination attempt in Sacramento, California.
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1972
“”Black September,” a Palestinian terrorist group take 11 Israeli athletes hostage at the Olympic Games in Munich; by midnight all hostages and all but 3 terrorists are dead.
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1969
Charges are brought against US lieutenant William Calley in the March 1968 My Lai Massacre during Vietnam War.
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1960
Leopold Sedar Sengingor, poet and politician, is elected president of Senegal, Africa.
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1958
Martin Luther King Jr. is arrested in an Alabama protest for loitering and fined $14 for refusing to obey police.
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1953
Victor Davis Hanson, military historian, columnist; received National Humanities Award (2007).
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1950
Cathy Guisewite, cartoonist, creator of Cathy.
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1945
Al Stewart, singer, songwriter, musician (“Year of the Cat,” “Roads to Moscow”).
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1944
Germany launches its first V-2 missile at Paris, France.
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1942
Werner Herzog (Stipetic), director, producer, screenwriter, actor; a leading figure in New German Cinema (Heart of Glass, Encounters at the End of the World).
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1940
Raquel Welch, actress (One Million Years B.C., Myra Breckinridge).
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1934
Carol Lawrence, actress and singer (Maria in Broadway version of West Side Story).
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1929
Bob Newhart, deadpan standup comedian and TV actor (The Bob Newhart Show).
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1921
Jack Valenti, an American film executive who created the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) voluntary system for rating film content as a guide for parents.
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1912
Franklin “Frank” Thomas, one of the “Nine Old Men” among Walt Disney’s team of animators.
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John Cage, inventive composer, writer, philosopher, and artist.
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1910
Marie Curie demonstrates the transformation of radium ore to metal at the Academy of Sciences in France.
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1905
Arthur Koestler, Hungarian novelist and essayist who wrote about communism in Darkness at Noon and The Ghost in the Machine.
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The Russian-Japanese War ends as representatives of the combating empires, meeting in New Hampshire, sign the Treaty of Portsmouth. Japan achieves virtually all of its original war aims.
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1897
A.C. Nielsen, founder of the Nielsen Ratings.
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1878
Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp, Bill Tilghman and Clay Allison, four of the West’s most famous gunmen, meet in Dodge City, Kansas.
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1877
The great Sioux warrior Crazy Horse is fatally bayoneted at age 36 by a soldier at Fort Robinson, Nebraska.
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1870
Author Victor Hugo returns to Paris from the Isle of Guernsey where he had lived in exile for almost 20 years.
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1867
The first shipment of cattle leaves Abilene, Kansas, on a Union Pacific train headed to Chicago.
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1859
Harriot E. Wilson’s Our Nig, is published, the first U.S. novel by an African American woman.
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1842
Jesse James, legendary outlaw of the American West.
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1816
Louis XVIII of France dissolves the chamber of deputies, which has been challenging his authority.
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1804
US Navy lieutenant Richard Somers and members of his crew are buried at Tripoli; they died when USS Intrepid exploded while entering Tripoli harbor on a mission to destroy the enemy fleet there during the First Barbary War.
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1792
Maximilien Robespierre is elected to the National Convention in France.
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1666
The Fire of London is extinguished after two days.
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1664
After days of negotiation, the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam surrenders to the British, who will rename it New York.
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1638
Louis XIV, “The Sun King” of France who built the palace at Versailles.
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1568
Tommaso Campanella, Italian philosopher and poet, who wrote City of the Sun.