History
1903 -- Following the death of Pope Leo XIII, Giuseppe Sarto was crowned as Pope Pius X before 70,000 people.
1919 -- Ruggiero Leoncavallo, Italian composer and librettist famed for his opera "Pagliacci", died.
1942 -- After the All-India Congress agreed on a "quit India" campaign, the British colonial authorities arrested Mahatma Gandhi and 50 others in Bombay.
1945 -- The United States dropped a second atomic bomb on Japan, this time on the city of Nagasaki; a wide area was reduced to ashes and more than 70,000 people were killed.
1974 -- Gerald Ford was sworn in as 38th president of the United States after Richard Nixon resigned.
1975 -- Dmitri Shostakovich, Soviet composer, died. He wrote 15 symphonies as well as operas, ballets and film and theatre scores.
1995 -- Jerry Garcia, leader of the Grateful Dead rock band and a leading symbol of the U.S. counter-culture revolution of the 1960s, died.
2000 -- Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez arrived on the first visit to Iraq by an elected head of state since Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990.
2004 -- Terry Nichols was sentenced to 161 life sentences without parole for the deadly 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City in the United States, which killed 168 people.
2005 -- Canadian-born Peter Jennings, a high school dropout who rose to become prime-time anchorman for ABC News and whose career spanned five decades, died aged 67.