Monday, May 4, 2026

Special "May the Fourth Be With You" Post

  




Here is a picture that I saw and reposted last year for "May the Fourth" day, also known unofficially as Star Wars day.

This was called "Leia on a Half Shell." Obviously, this was a reworking of a already well-known classic work of art, but it is well done. A modern update to a great work of art, if you ask me, yet also obviously meant to be quite humorous. Indeed, she does look a bit like a modern day Venus, although for the fictional, yet also mythical, Star Wars saga.

This was really cool, and it felt like I needed to share it last year on Facebook. This year, it seemed like a good idea to do the same here.

Enjoy!







Moe Labelle enoSrospdtth M 15 1 m 0 a8tcu 4 730mu00l609hfla y a 3 2 36l 2 ff1   3g   8162c1   ·  A Long Time Ago in an Art Gallery Far, Far Away...

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=4595007220514276&set=gm.2261901367273883

May the Fourth Be With You - May 4th is Star Wars Day

  

MAY THE FOURTH BE WITH YOU...

Star Wars Logo




Picture courtesy of Global Panorama's Flickr Page - Star Wars Logo: https://www.flickr.com/photos/121483302@N02/14137284401


This year, "May the Fourth be With You" Day seems especially relevant, given the news that Peter Mayhew, who played everyone's favorite wookie, Chewbacca, has passed.

So, it is in his honor that I post this particular post today.


Star Wars Darth Maul/Savage Opress Pumpkin


Spencer Wright's Flickr Page - Star Wars Darth Maul/Savage Opress Pumpkin: https://www.flickr.com/photos/spencer77/6295994505
Creative Commons License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/





Enjoy Star Wars Day!!

May 4th: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 1256, the Augustinian monastic order is constituted at the Lecceto Monastery when Pope Alexander IV issued a papal bull Licet ecclesiae catholicae. In 1303 on this day, the Flemings conquered Middelburg. Religious reformers John Wycliffe and Jan Hus were condemned as heretics on this day in 1415 at the Council of Constance. On this day in 1471, the Yorkists of King Edward IV defeated the Landcastrians of ex-Queen Margaretha in England, at the Battle of Tewkesbury in the War of the Roses. Christopher Columbus landed in what is now Jamaica on this day in 1494. Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on what is now the island of Manhattan Island on this day in 1626. Native Americans later famously sold the island for $24 worth of cloth and brass buttons. Minuit became the Director-General of New Netherlands, as New York City came to be called. The Battle at Etampes was fought on this day in 1652, with the French army under Turenne defeating Fronde rebels. The municipality of Ilagan was founded on this day in 1686 in the Philippines. George F Handel's opera "Tolomeo, re di Egitto," premiered in London on this day in 1728. On this day in 1776, Rhode Island declared its independence from England two months before the Declaration of Independence was adopted. In 1795 on this day during the French Revolution, thousands of rioters entered jails in Lyons, France, and massacred 99 Jacobin prisoners. Napoleon Bonaparte disembarked at Portoferraio on the island of Elba in the Mediterranean on this day in 1814, during his first exile. In 1862 during the American Civil War in Yorktown, Virginia, General McClellan halted his troop before town as it was filled with armed torpedoes left by Confederate Brigadier General Gabrial Rains. On this day in 1910, the Canadian Currency Act received Royal Assent. The Canadian Parliament passed a measure for the creation of Royal Canadian Navy on this day in 1910. Mahatma Gandhi was arrested by the British on this day in 1930. On this day in 1945 in the very late stages of the European part of World War II, German troops in Netherlands, Denmark and Norway surrendered. The Hague Court of Justice convicted Nazi Hans Rauter of the SS to death on this day in 1948. CORE started freedom rides on this day in 1961 as thirteen civil rights activists, dubbed "Freedom Riders," began a bus trip through the South from Washington, DC, and heading for New Orleans, Louisiana. In on this day in 1961 during the apartheid era of white minority rule in South Africa, ANC leader John Nkadimeng was arrested. The Soviet government signed an accord to build a Fiat factory in the USSR on this day in 1966. On this day in 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on unarmed students during an anti-Vietnam war protest at Kent State University. Four students were killed and nine others were wounded. In 1979 on this day, Margaret Thatcher was elected to become the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Oliver North, a former White House aide, was convicted of shredding documents and two other crimes on this day in 1989. He was acquitted of nine other charges stemming from his role relating to the Iran-Contra affair. The three convictions were later overturned on appeal. On this day in 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO leader Yasser Arafat signed a historic accord granting Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and Jericho. On this day in 1998, a federal judge in Sacramento, California, handed the "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski four life sentences plus 30 years. The sentence was under a plea agreement that spared Kaczynski the death penalty. The Scottish National Party won the Scottish general election on this day in 2007, becoming the largest party in the Scottish Parliament for the first time in history.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

•  On this day in 1256, the Augustinian monastic order is constituted at the Lecceto Monastery when Pope Alexander IV issued a papal bull Licet ecclesiae catholicae.


•  In 1303 on this day, the Flemings conquered Middelburg.


• Religious reformers John Wycliffe and Jan Hus were condemned as heretics on this day in 1415 at the Council of Constance.


 • On this day in 1471, the Yorkists of King Edward IV defeated the Landcastrians of ex-Queen Margaretha in England, at the Battle of Tewkesbury in the War of the Roses.


1493 - Spanish Pope Alexander VI divides the Americas between Spain and Portugal






Christopher Columbus

•  Christopher Columbus landed in what is now Jamaica on this day in 1494.





1540 - Venice & Turkey sign Treaty of Constantinople

1572 - Veere sides with Geuzen (20,000 acres) for $24 in cloth and butons.

• Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on what is now the island of Manhattan Island on this day in 1626. Native Americans later famously sold the island for $24 worth of cloth and brass buttons. Minuit became the Director-General of New Netherlands, as New York City came to be called.  

1634 - Johan van Walbeecks fleet departs to West-Indies

• The Battle at Etampes was fought on this day in 1652, with the French army under Turenne defeating Fronde rebels.

• The municipality of Ilagan was founded on this day in 1686 in the Philippines.

1715 - French manufacturer debuts first folding umbrella (Paris)






Picture of a bust of German-born British composer George Frideric Handel

• George F Handel's opera "Tolomeo, re di Egitto," premiered in London on this day in 1728.





1747 - Willem IV appointed viceroy of Overijssel





Statue of a Continental Soldier of the American Revolutionary War of Independence in Trenton, New Jersey

•  On this day in 1776, Rhode Island declared its independence from England two months before the Declaration of Independence was adopted.




1780 - American Academy of Arts and Science founded

1780 - Charles Bunbury on Diomed wins 1st Epsom Derby

1783 - Herschel reports seeing a red glow near lunar crater Aristarchus

•  In 1795 on this day during the French Revolution, thousands of rioters entered jails in Lyons, France, and massacred 99 Jacobin prisoners.

1799 - Fourth Anglo-Mysore War: The Battle of Seringapatam: The siege of Seringapatam ends when the city is assaulted and the Tipu Sultan killed by the besieging British army, under the command of General George Harris.

1805 - Henry C Overing buys 80 acres of Throggs Neck in Bronx



French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte



• Napoleon Bonaparte disembarked at Portoferraio on the island of Elba in the Mediterranean on this day in 1814, during his first exile.



1814 - Bourbon reign restored in France

1814 - King Ferdinand VII of Spain signs the Decrete of the 4th of May, returning Spain to absolutism.

1818 - Netherlands & England sign treaty against illegal slave handling

1834 - Charles Darwin's expedition reaches 200 km from Atlantic Ocean

1839 - The Cunard Steamship Company Ltd forms San Bonifacio

1843 - Great-Britain annexes Natal

1846 - US state Michigan ends death penalty

1847 - NY State creates a Board of Commissioners of Emigration

1851 - First major San Francisco fire

1858 - War of Reform (Mexico); Liberals establish capital at Vera Cruz

1859 - The Cornwall Railway opens across the Royal Albert Bridge linking the counties of Devon and Cornwall in England.

1861 - At Gretna Louisiana, one of first guns of Rebel navy is cast

1862 - -5] Battle at Williamsburg, Virginia

•  In 1862 during the American Civil War in Yorktown, Virginia, General McClellan halted his troop before town as it was filled with armed torpedoes left by Confederate Brigadier General Gabrial Rains.

1863 - Battle of Chancellorsville-action at Salem Church

1863 - End of Chancellorsville - Union army is defeated and withdraws

1864 - -16] actions at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia

1864 - Gen Grant's Army at Potomac attacks at Rappahannock

1864 - Ulysses S. Grant crosses Rapidan and begins his duel with Robert E Lee

1865 - Battle of Citronville, Alabama; Richard Taylor surrenders

1865 - Battle of Mobile, Alabama

1866 - Woodward's Gardens opens to public

1869 - The Naval Battle of Hakodate takes place in Japan.

1871 - First baseball league game (National Association of Baseball Players), (Ft Wayne 2, Cleveland 0) Deacon Jim White gets 1st hit, a double

1878 - Phonograph shown for 1st time at Grand Opera House

1883 - John Gordon Cashmans begins "Vicksburg Evening Post" (Miss)

1886 - Chichester Bell and Charles S. Tainter patented the gramophone. It was the first practical phonograph.

1886 - Haymarket riot in Chicago; bomb kills 7 policemen   The Haymarket Square riot broke out as a result of a labor demonstration.

1888 - Italy and Spain sign military covenant

1893 - Cowboy Bob Pickett invents bulldogging

1896 - First edition of London Daily Mail (halfpenny)

1896 - Grease fire ignites half ton of dynamite at Cripple Creek Colorado

1897 - 23rd Kentucky Derby: Buttons Garner aboard Typhoon II wins in 2:12.5

1897 - Fire in Paris bazaar at Rue Jean Goujon kills 200

1898 - 24th Kentucky Derby: Willie Simms aboard Plaudit wins in 2:09

1899 - 25th Kentucky Derby: Fred Taral aboard Manuel wins in 2:12

1904 - Construction begins by the United States on the Panama Canal.

1904 - Charles Stewart Rolls meets Frederick Henry Royce at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England.

1905 - Belmont Park opened in suburban Long Island. It opened as the largest race track in the world.

• On this day in 1910, the Canadian Currency Act received Royal Assent.

 

🍁 🍁 🍁 🍁 🍁

🍁 🍁 🍁 🍁 🍁


• The Canadian Parliament passed a measure for the creation of Royal Canadian Navy on this day in 1910.





1910 - Tel Aviv founded

1912 - Italian mariners occupy Turkish Island of Rhodes

1915 - Italy drops Triple Alliance with Austria-Hungary & Germany

1916 - At the request of US President Woodrow Wilson,, Germany curtailed its submarine warfare

1917 - Arabs sack Tel Aviv

1918 - Yankees set record with 8 sacrifices, beat Red Sox's Babe Ruth 5-4

1919 - First legal Sunday baseball game in NYC (Phillies beat Giants 4-3)

1919 - FVC soccer team forms

1919 - Giants play their first legal Sunday home game, 35,000 see Phils win 4-3

1922 - KNX-AM in Los Angeles CA begins radio transmissions

1923 - Bloody street battles between nazi's, socialist and police in Vienna

1923 - NY state revokes Prohibition law

1924 - VIII Olympic games open at Paris, France

1924 - German Republic election fascists and communists win

1925 - League of Nations conference on arms control & poison gas usage

1926 - General strike hits Britain

1927 - 1st balloon flight over 40,000 feet (Scott Field, Ill)

1927 - Nicaragua agrees to a US supervised presidential election in 1928

1929 - Lou Gehrig hits 3 consecutive HRs, Yankees 11, Tigers 9



Statue of Gandhi in State Parliament Square, London, UK

•  Mahatma Gandhi was arrested by the British on this day in 1930.





1931 - Mustafa Kemal Pasja becomes Turkish president

1932 - Public Enemy Number One, Al Capone, was jailed and entered Atlatana Penitentiary for tax evasion.

1933 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Archibald Macleish (Conquistador)

1935 - 61st Kentucky Derby: Willie Saunders aboard Omaha wins in 2:05

1936 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Harold L Davis (Honey in the Horn)

1938 - Douglas Hyde (a protestant) becomes 1st president of Eire

1940 - 21 "not neutral" nazis & communists arrested in Netherlands

1940 - 66th Kentucky Derby: Carroll Bierman aboard Gallahadion wins in 2:05

1942 - The Battle of the Coral Sea commenced (first sea battle fought solely in air) as American and Japanese carriers launched their attacks at each other.

1942 - Food first rationed in the United States began.

1942 - German occupiers imprison 450 prominent Dutch as hostages

1942 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Ellen Glasgow (In this our Life)

1943 - NL Ford Frick demonstrates revised balata ball to reporters by bouncing it on his office carpet ball proves to be 50% livelier

•  On this day in 1945 in the very late stages of the European part of World War II, German troops in Netherlands, Denmark and Norway surrendered.

1946 - A two-day riot at Alcatraz prison in San Francisco Bay ended. Five people were killed.

1946 - 72nd Kentucky Derby: Warren Mehrtens aboard Assault wins in 2:06.6

1946 - Wash's Cecil Travis gets 6 straight hits before being stopped

•  The Hague Court of Justice convicted Nazi Hans Rauter of the SS to death on this day in 1948.

1949 - Air crash at Turijn (whole Torino-soccer team survives)

1953 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Ernest Hemingway (Old Man & The Sea)

1954 - The first intercollegiate court tennis match was played in the U.S. It was between Yale and Princeton.

1954 - US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Bikini Island

1956 - Queen Juliana unveils National Monument to Dams in Amsterdam

1956 - US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Enwetak

1957 - 83rd Kentucky Derby: Bill Hartack aboard Iron Liege wins in 2:02.2

1957 - Alan Freed hosts "Rock n' Roll Show" first prime-time network rock show

1957 - Anne Frank Foundation forms in Amsterdam

1958 - Alberto Lleras Camargo chosen president of Colombia

1959 - 1st Grammy Awards: Perry Como and Ella Fitzgerald win

1959 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Archibald Macleish (JB)

1960 - First great Delta dam closes, North-South Beveland

1961 - First on-the-road Spacemobile lecture given.

•  CORE started freedom rides on this day in 1961 as thirteen civil rights activists, dubbed "Freedom Riders," began a bus trip through the South from Washington, DC, and heading for New Orleans, Louisiana.

1961 - Malcolm Ross and Victor Prather reach 34,668 m (record) in balloon



Flag of South Africa during the days of apartheid.

• In on this day in 1961 during the apartheid era of white minority rule in South Africa, ANC leader John Nkadimeng was arrested.




1962 - US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island

1963 - 89th Kentucky Derby: Braulio Baeza aboard Chateaugay wins in 2:01.8

1963 - Pitcher Bob Shaw sets record of 5 balks in a game

1964 - "Another World" and "As the World Turns" premieres on TV

1964 - 70 GATT-countries confer in Geneva

1964 - KIII TV channel 3 in Corpus Christi, TX (ABC) begins broadcasting

1964 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Richard Hofstadter (Anti-intellectualism)

1965 - Willie Mays 512th HR breaks Mel Ott's 511th NL record

•  The Soviet government signed an accord to build a Fiat factory in the USSR on this day in 1966.

1967 - Lunar Orbiter 4 launched by US; begins orbiting Moon May 7

1968 - 1st ABA championship: Pitts Pipers beat NO Buccaneers, 4 games to 3

1968 - 94th Kentucky Derby: Ismael Valenzuela aboard Forward Pass wins

1968 - Dancer Image DQ due to drugs after winning 94th Kent Derby in 2:02½

1969 - Charles Gordone's "No Place to be Somebody," premieres in NYC

1969 - Sandra Haynie wins LPGA Shreveport Kiwanis Club Golf Invitational

1969 - Stanley Cup: Montreal Canadiens sweep St Louis Blues in 4 games

• On this day in 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on unarmed students during an anti-Vietnam war protest at Kent State University. Four students were killed and nine others were wounded.

1970 - Premier Kosygin affirms existence Russian military advisors in Egypt

1970 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Erik H Erikson (Gandhi's Truth)

1972 - Vietcong forms revolutionary government in Quang Tri South Vietnam

1972 - The Don't Make A Wave Committee, a fledgling environmental organization founded in Canada in 1971, officially changes its name to "Greenpeace Foundation".

1973 - 1st TV network female nudity-Steambath (PBS)-Valerie Perrine

1973 - Longest game in Veterans' Stadium, Phillies beat Braves 5-4 in 20

1973 - Patriarch Shenuda II of Kopitisch church visits the pope

1973 - Phillies beat Braves 5-4 in 20 innings

1973 - Wings release "Red Rose Speedway" in UK

1974 - 100th Kentucky Derby: Angel Cordero Jr. aboard Cannonade wins in 2:04

1975 - Houston's Bob Watson scores baseball's one-millionth run of all time

1976 - "1600 Pennsylvania Avenue" opens at Mark Hellinger NYC for 7 perfs

1978 - Russian president Brezhnev visits West-Germany

1979 - Jackie Mercer wins her 4th golf title 31 years after her 1st

•  In 1979 on this day, Margaret Thatcher was elected to become the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. 

1979 - NASA launches Fltsatcom-2

1980 - Dodgers bat out of order against Phillies in 1st inning

1980 - Hollis Stacy wins LPGA CPC Women's Internationalional Golf Tournament

1980 - White Sox 1st baseman Mike Squires catches final inning of 11-1 loss to Brewers, becoming first lefty to catch since Dale Long in 1958

1981 - The Federal Reserve Board raised its discount rate to 14%.

1981 - Rockline premieres on KLOS FM in Los Angeles

1981 - Silvana Cruciata runs 15k female world record (49:44.0)

1981 - Yankee Ron Davis strikes out 8 consecutive Angels, ran record of 13 strikeouts of last 14 faced, also saved Gene Nelsons 1st win, 4-2

1982 - British torpedo boat Sheffield off Falkland hit by Exocet rocket

1982 - Nordiques 2-Isles 4-Semifinals-Isles win series 4-0

1982 - Twins rookie outfielder Jim Eisenreich, who suffers from Tourette's Syndrome, removes himself, due to taunts from Red Sox bleacher fans

1983 - China PR performs nuclear test at Lop Nor PRC

1984 - Dave Kingman's fly ball never comes down (stuck in Metrodome ceiling)

1985 - 111th Kentucky Derby: Angel Cordero Jr on Spend A Buck wins 2:00.2

1986 - President Babrak Karmal resigns as party leader of Afghanistan

1987 - Live models were used for the first time in Playtex bra ads.

1988 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

•  Oliver North, a former White House aide, was convicted of shredding documents and two other crimes on this day in 1989. He was acquitted of nine other charges stemming from his role relating to the Iran-Contra affair. The three convictions were later overturned on appeal.

1989 - Junior Felix of Toronto becomes 53rd to hit HR on 1st at bat

1989 - US launches Magellan to Venus 1989 - US space shuttle STS-30 launched

1990 - Angela Bowie reveals that ex husband David slept with Mick Jagger

1990 - Latvia's parliament votes 138-0 (1 abstention) for Independence

1990 - Oriole Gregg Olson sets relief pitcher rec of 41 cons scoreless inns

1991 - 117th Kentucky Derby: Chris Antley aboard Strike the Gold wins in 2:03

1991 - ABC Masters Bowling Tournament won by Doug Kent

1991 - Actress Sharon Gless and producer Barney Rosenzeig wed

1991 - Indians' Chris James sets club record for most RBIs in a game (9)

1991 - Morris K Udall, (Rep-D-Ariz), resigns due to Parkinson disease

1991 - NY Mets M Sasser and Mark Carreon are 8th to hit consecutive pinch HRs

1991 - President Bush is hospitalized for erratic heartbeat

1993 - "Angels in America-Millennium Approaches" opens at Kerr for 367 perfs 1994 - Arsenal wins 34th Europe Cup II


• On this day in 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO leader Yasser Arafat signed a historic accord granting Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and Jericho..   On May 4, 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat reached agreement in Cairo on the first stage of Palestinian self-rule.     The agreement was made in accordance with the Oslo Accords, signed in Washington, D.C. on September 13, 1993.   This was the first direct, face-to-face agreement between Israel and the Palestinians and it acknowledged Israel's right to exist. It was also designed as a framework for future relations between the two parties.     The Gaza-Jericho agreement signed on this day in history addressed four main issues: security arrangements, civil affairs, legal matters and economic relations. It included an Israeli military withdrawal from about 60 percent of the Gaza Strip (Jewish settlements and their environs excluded) and the West Bank town of Jericho, land captured by Israel during the Six-Day War of 1967. The Palestinians agreed to combat terror and prevent violence in the famous "land for peace" bargain. The document also included an agreement to a transfer of authority from the Israeli Civil Administration to the newly created Palestinian Authority, its jurisdiction and legislative powers, a Palestinian police force and relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.     The Israeli Defense Forces withdrew from Jericho on May 13 and from most of the Gaza Strip on May 18-19, 1994.  Palestinian Authority police and officials immediately took control.  During the first few days there was a spate of attacks on Israeli troops and civilians in and near the Strip. Arafat himself arrived in Gaza to a tumultuous, chaotic welcome on July 1.     As time went on, timetables stipulated in the deal were not met, Israel's re-deployments were slowed and new agreements were negotiated.  Israeli critics of the deal claimed "Land for Peace" was in reality "Land for Nothing."     The momentum toward peaceful relations between Israel and the Palestinians was seriously jolted by the outbreak of the 2000 Palestinian uprising, known as "Second Intifada."  Further strain was put on the process after Hamas came into power in the 2006 Palestinian elections.


1994 - Courtney Love cleared of drug charges

1996 - 122nd Kentucky Derby: Jerry Bailey aboard Grindstone wins in 2:01

1996 - ABC Bud Light Masters Bowling Tournament won by Ernie Schlegel

1996 - Greg Pavlik one-hits Tigers making the Rangers first AL team to pitch back-to-back one-hitters since the Washington Senators in 1917

1997 - Bruno's Memorial Senior Golf Classic

1997 - Phil Blackmar wins 50th Houston golf Open

1997 - Tammie Green wins LPGA Sprint Titlehoders Championship


• On this day in 1998, a federal judge in Sacramento, California, handed the "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski four life sentences plus 30 years. The sentence was under a plea agreement that spared Kaczynski the death penalty.

1999 - Several severe tornadoes hit the Midwest U.S. overnight. At least 45 people were killed.

1999 - Manuel Babbitt was executed for killing Leah Schendel in 1980. Babbitt had received a purple heart for his injuries in Vietnam while on death row.

2000 - Ken Livingstone becomes the first Mayor of London.

2001 - The Milwaukee Art Museum addition, the first Santiago Calatrava-designed structure in the United States, opens to the public.

2002 - Barry Bonds hits his 400th home run as a Giant, leading his team to a 3-0 win over Cincinnati. Bonds is the first player to hit 400 homers for one team and 100 with another

2003 - Idaho Gem was born. He was the first member of the horse family to be cloned.

2007 - Greensburg, Kansas is almost completely destroyed by a 1.7m wide EF-5 tornado.

•  The Scottish National Party won the Scottish general election on this day in 2007, becoming the largest party in the Scottish Parliament for the first time in history.

2010 - Pablo Picasso's "Nude, Green Leaves and Bust" sold for $106.5 million.

2012 - 14 decapitated bodies and 9 hung from a bridge are found in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.





These are the online sources that I used for the completion of this blog entry:


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/rabin-and-arafat-sign-accord-for-palestinian-self-rule

http://www.historyorb.com/events/may/4

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/may04.htm

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory/May-4

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Anthony Scaramucci Breaks Down the Three Main Factors He Sees Having Contributed to the Decline of the United States

Saw this brief video which Anthony Scaramucci posted.

While I do not agree with everything that he has to say. Not all that surprising, actually, given that he was, however briefly, a member of Trump's first administration.

That said, he has proven to be more thoughtful and intelligent than I had first supposed. He has some interesting insights and commentaries.

And in this video, he discusses what he feels were the three major factors which strongly contributed to the decline of the United States.

Take a look:




3 Steps to America's Collapse I Anthony Scaramucci   

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/KBK5AHUFWNo

3 Steps to America's Collapse I Anthony Scaramucci

3 Steps to America's Collapse I Anthony Scaramucci

Weekend Humor: George Carlin, Among Others, Predicted the Dark Turn the Country Would Take

Sometimes, in some very important ways, it feels like the world is going backwards. Like things just systematically grow worse and worse. Mostly, it seems that people are responsible for this false order of things. And nowhere does that seem to be happening more completely or faster than right here in the good old US of A.

Then you might get around to thinking about some people from the past who never lived to see the days grow figuratively darker. In some cases, these same people seemed instinctively to sense the dark turn that was coming. I specifically am thinking of three people: Carl Sagan, Frank Zappa, and comedian George Carlin.

Boy I miss those guys.

Today, in this particular blog entry, I wanted to focus on George Carlin. Because he, like the other two guys, foresaw the nightmare to come. Unlike the other two, he did not beat around the bush about it. The world was going to become a nightmare in the future.

Why?

Because people are stupid. 

The other two were a bit more polite about it, and perhaps hinted at it. Meanwhile, Carlin screamed it out, almost shouted it from the rooftops.

Yet indeed, as the title of the video (see link below) suggests, we collectively did not listen.

Man, I wish we had.

Take a look and see what you think:


George Carlin Was Right About This All Along...But Nobody Listened!

https://youtu.be/QqlT59SA8xA?si=CCcO9msBhAgz_5Ts

George Carlin Was Right About This All Along...But Nobody Listened!

May 3rd: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 1294, John II became the Duke of Brabant/Limburg. Count Hartmann II became the ruler of Vaduz (Liechtenstein) on this day in 1342. The Battle on Beverhoutsfield near Brugge was fought on this day in 1382. Jews fled Spain on this day in 1455. On this day in 1469, the Italian philosopher and writer Niccolo Machiavelli was born. In 1491 on this day, Kongo monarch Nkuwu Nzinga was baptised by Portuguese missionaries, adopting the baptismal name of João I. In 1515 on this day, the Portuguese fleet occupied Ormuz in the Persian Gulf: The Treaty of Loudun was signed on this day in 1615, and briefly put a temporary end to the conflict of rule of France between the Prince of Condé and Concino Concini, the Queen Mother Marie de Medici's favorite. Johannes Hevelius observes the third transit of Mercury ever to be seen on this day in 1661. Edmund Halley observed a total eclipse phenomenon "Baily's Beads" on this day in 1715. Pierre de Marivaux' "La Double Inconstance," premiered in Paris on this day in 1722. Washington, D.C. was incorporated as a city on this day in 1802. On this day in 1849, the May Uprising in Dresden began. It was- the last of the German revolutions of 1848. In 1861 on this day during the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln asked for 42,000 Army Volunteers & another 18,000 seamen. British-controlled Egypt took control over the Sinai peninsula from the Ottoman Empire on this day in 1906.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


•  On this day in 1294, John II became the Duke of Brabant/Limburg.

•  Count Hartmann II became the ruler of Vaduz (Liechtenstein) on this day in 1342.

• The Battle on Beverhoutsfield near Brugge was fought on this day in 1382.

•  Jews fled Spain on this day in 1455.

• In 1491 on this day, Kongo monarch Nkuwu Nzinga was baptised by Portuguese missionaries, adopting the baptismal name of João I.


Bust of Italian philosopher and writer, Prince Niccolo Machiavelli 

• On this day in 1469, the Italian philosopher and writer Niccolo Machiavelli was born. A lifelong patriot and diehard proponent of a unified Italy, Machiavelli became one of the fathers of modern political theory.    Machiavelli entered the political service of his native Florence by the time he was 29. As defense secretary, he distinguished himself by executing policies that strengthened Florence politically. He soon found himself assigned diplomatic missions for his principality, through which he met such luminaries as Louis XII of France, Pope Julius II, the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and perhaps most importantly for Machiavelli, a prince of the Papal States named Cesare Borgia. The shrewd and cunning Borgia later inspired the title character in Machiavelli's famous and influential political treatise The Prince (1532).    Machiavelli's political life took a downward turn after 1512, when he fell out of favor with the powerful Medici family. He was accused of conspiracy, imprisoned, tortured and temporarily exiled. It was an attempt to regain a political post and the Medici family's good favor that Machiavelli penned The Prince, which was to become his most well-known work.    Though released in book form posthumously in 1532, The Prince was first published as a pamphlet in 1513. In it, Machiavelli outlined his vision of an ideal leader: an amoral, calculating tyrant for whom the end justifies the means. The Prince not only failed to win the Medici family's favor, it also alienated him from the Florentine people. Machiavelli was never truly welcomed back into politics, and when the Florentine Republic was reestablished in 1527, Machiavelli was an object of great suspicion. He died later that year, embittered and shut out from the Florentine society to which he had devoted his life.    Though Machiavelli has long been associated with the practice of diabolical expediency in the realm of politics that was made famous in The Prince, his actual views were not so extreme. In fact, in such longer and more detailed writings as Discourses on the First Ten Books of Livy (1517) and History of Florence (1525), he shows himself to be a more principled political moralist. Still, even today, the term "Machiavellian" is used to describe an action undertaken for gain without regard for right or wrong.



• In 1491 on this day, Kongo monarch Nkuwu Nzinga was baptised by Portuguese missionaries, adopting the baptismal name of João I.

1494 - Jamaica discovered by Columbus; he names it "St Iago"

1512 - Pope Julius II opens 5th Council of Lateran at St. John Lateran Basilica in Rome

• In 1515 on this day, the Portuguese fleet occupied Ormuz in the Persian Gulf:

1568 - French forces in Florida slaughtered hundreds of Spanish.



Royal France

•  The Treaty of Loudun was signed on this day in 1615, and briefly put a temporary end to the conflict of rule of France between the Prince of Condé and Concino Concini, the Queen Mother Marie de Medici's favorite.



1621 - Francis Bacon accused of bribery

1624 - Spanish silver fleet sails to Panama

1629 - French huguenot leader duke De Rohan signs accord with Spain

1640 - English Upper house accept Act of Attainder

1654 - Bridge at Rowley Mass begins charging tolls for animals

1660 - Sweden, Poland, Brandenburg & Austria sign Peace of Oliva

•  Johannes Hevelius observes the third transit of Mercury ever to be seen on this day in 1661.






1662 - Royal charter granted Connecticut




1678 - French conquering fleet at Curacao, 1200 die

•  Edmund Halley observed a total eclipse phenomenon "Baily's Beads" on this day in 1715.

•  Pierre de Marivaux' "La Double Inconstance," premiered in Paris on this day in 1722.

1747 - Willem IV appointed viceroy of Holland/Utrecht

1765 - 1st US medical college opens in Philadelphia








1791 - The Constitution of May 3 (the first modern constitution in Europe) is proclaimed by the Sejm of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.




•  Washington, D.C. was incorporated as a city on this day in 1802.

1808 - Goya's "Executions of 3rd of May"

1808 - Finnish War: Sweden loses the fortress of Sveaborg to Russia.

1808 - Peninsular War: The Madrid rebels who rose up on May 2 are fired upon near Príncipe Pío hill.

1810 - Lord Byron swims Hellespont

1815 - Battle at Tolentino: Austria beats king Joachim of Naples

1822 - Society for Propagation of Faith starts (Lyon, France)

1830 - 1st regular steam train passenger service starts

1837 - The University of Athens is founded.

1845 - 1st black lawyer (Macon B Allen) admitted to bar (Mass)

1845 - Fire kills 1,600 in popular theater in Canton China

1846 - Mexican army surrounds fort in Texas

•  On this day in 1849, the May Uprising in Dresden began. It was- the last of the German revolutions of 1848.

1851 - Most of SF destroyed by fire; 30 die

1855 - Antwerp-Rotterdam railway opens

1855 - Macon B. Allen became the first African American to be admitted to the Bar in Massachusetts.

1859 - France declared war on Austria.

1860 - Charles XV of Sweden-Norway is crowned king of Sweden.

1861 - Gen Winfield Scott presents his Anaconda Plan for the North against the South in US Civil War






Lincoln Memorial Sculpture by Daniel French in Washington, D.C.

•  In 1861 on this day during the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln asked for 42,000 Army Volunteers & another 18,000 seamen.





1863 - Battle of Fredricksburg, Virginia (Marye's Heights)

1863 - Battle of Salem Church, VA

1864 - Third day in Battle at Alexandria Louisiana: Confederate assault

1867 - The Hudson's Bay Company gives up all claims to Vancouver Island.

1886 - M A Maclean elected 1st mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia







Monuments to Thomas Edison at Menlo Park in Edison,  NJ 


•  Thomas Edison organized the Edison Phonograph Works on this day in 1888.




1898 - Camp Merriman forms at Presidio (SF) (see 0517)

1900 - 26th Kentucky Derby: Jimmy Boland aboard Lieut Gibson wins in 2:06.25

1901 - Fire destroyed 1,700 buildings in Jacksonville, Florida

1902 - 28th Kentucky Derby: Jimmy Winkfield on Alan-a-Dale wins in 2:08.75

1903 - AVC Heracles (SC Heracles '74) soccer team forms in Almelo

•  British-controlled Egypt took control over the Sinai peninsula from the Ottoman Empire on this day in 1906.

1909 - 35th Kentucky Derby: Vincent Powers on Wintergreen wins in 2:08.2

1916 - Irish nationalist leaders Padraic Pearse and two others were executed in Dublin by the British for their roles in the Easter Rising.

1917 - First performance of Ernest Bloch's symphony "Israel"

1919 - Afghanistan Emir Amanoellah begins war against Great Britain

1919 - America's first passenger flight (NY-Atlantic City)

1921 - West Virginia imposed the first state sales tax.

1922 - Mayor Hylan closes streets for building of Yankee Stadium

1922 - Salt layer find at Winterswijk

1923 - First nonstop transcontinental flight (NY-San Diego) completed

1924 - Aleph Zadik Aleph is formed in Omaha, Nebraska by Sam Beber.

1926 - The revival of Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" opened in New York.

1926 - British trade unions began a general strike-3 million workers support miners

1926 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Sinclair Lewis (Arrowsmith)

1926 - US marines landed in Nicaragua (9-mo after leaving), and stayed until 1933

1927 - Francis E.J. Wilde of Meadowmere Park, NY, patented the electric sign flasher.







1928 - Japanese atrocities in Jinan, China.

1929 - Prussia bans anti-fascists

1932 - 24 tourists begin 1st air-charter holiday (London-Basle, Switz)

1933 - The U.S. Mint was under the direction of a woman for the first time when Nellie Ross took the position.

1936 - French People's Front wins elections

1936 - NY Yankee Joe DiMaggio makes his major-league debut, gets 3 hits

1937 - Margaret Mitchell won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction for "Gone With the Wind"

1938 - Concentration camp at Flossenburg went into use

1938 - Lefty Grove defeats Tigers 4-3 for 1st of record 20 consecutive wins at his home field Fenway Park; he doesn't lose there until May 12 1941

1938 - Vatican recognizes Franco-Spain

1939 - The All India Forward Bloc is formed by Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose.

1941 - -4] German air raid on Liverpool

1941 - 67th Kentucky Derby: Eddie Arcaro aboard Whirlaway wins in 2:01.4

1942 - Japanese troop attack Tulagi, Gavutu & Tanambogo, Solomon Islands

1942 - Luftwaffe bombs Exeter 

1942 - Nazi's execute 72 OD'ers in reprisial in Sachsenhausen, Netherlands

1942 - Nazi's require Dutch Jews to wear a Jewish star

1943 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Upton Sinclair (Dragon's Teeth)

1943 - Strike against obligatory labor camps ends, after 200 killed

1943 - US 1st armour division occupies Mateur Tunisia

1944 - "Meet Me in St Louis" opens on Broadway

1944 - Wartime rationing of most grades of meats ended in the United States.

1944 - Dr. Robert Woodward and Dr. William Doering produced the first synthetic quinine at Harvard University.

1945 - First Polish armour brigade occupies Wilhelmshafen

1945 - Allies arrests German nuclear physics Werner Heisenberg

1945 - Indian forces captured Rangoon, Burma, from the Japanese.

1945 - German ship "Cap Arcona" sinks in East Sea, 5,800 killed





Flag of Japan

1946 - International military tribunal in Tokyo begins

May 3, 1946: Japanese war crimes trial begins     In Tokyo, Japan, the International Military Tribunals for the Far East begins hearing the case against 28 Japanese military and government officials accused of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity during World War II.    On November 4, 1948, the trial ended with 25 of 28 Japanese defendants being found guilty. Of the three other defendants, two had died during the lengthy trial, and one was declared insane. On November 12, the war crimes tribunal passed death sentences on seven of the men, including General Hideki Tojo, who served as Japanese premier during the war, and other principals, such as Iwane Matsui, who organized the Rape of Nanking, and Heitaro Kimura, who brutalized Allied prisoners of war. Sixteen others were sentenced to life imprisonment, and two were sentenced to lesser terms in prison. On December 23, 1948, Tojo and the six others were executed in Tokyo.    Unlike the Nuremberg trial of Nazi war criminals, where there were four chief prosecutors, to represent Great Britain, France, the United States, and the USSR, the Tokyo trial featured only one chief prosecutor--American Joseph B. Keenan, a former assistant to the U.S. attorney general. However, other nations, especially China, contributed to the proceedings, and Australian judge William Flood Webb presided. In addition to the central Tokyo trial, various tribunals sitting outside Japan judged some 5,000 Japanese guilty of war crimes, of whom more than 900 were executed. Some observers thought that Emperor Hirohito should have been tried for his tacit approval of Japanese policy during the war, but he was protected by U.S. authorities who saw him as a symbol of Japanese unity and conservatism, both favorable traits in the postwar U.S. view.




1947 - 73rd Kentucky Derby: Eric Guerin aboard Jet Pilot wins in 2:06.8

1947 - Japan formed a constitutional democracy

1947 - New post-war Japanese constitution goes into effect.

1948 - Pulitzer prize awarded to James Michener & Tennessee Williams

1948 - The US Supreme Court, in Shelley v. Kraemer, stated that it is unconstitutional for a court to enforce a restrictive covenant which prevents people of a certain race from owning or occupying property, and that covenants prohibiting the sale of real estate to blacks and other minorities were legally unenforceable.

1949 - First firing of a US Viking rocket; reached 80 km

1951 - Gil McDougald ties major league record with 6 RBIs in 1 inning

1951 - NY Yankee Gil McDougald is 5th to get 6 RBIs in an inning (9th)

1951 - London's Royal Festival Hall opens.

1951 - The Festival of Britain opens.

1952 - "Call Me Madam" closes at Imperial Theater NYC after 644 performances

1952 - First landing by an airplane at geographic North Pole

1952 - 78th Kentucky Derby: Eddie Arcaro aboard Hill Gail wins in 2:01.6

1953 - WTVO TV channel 17 in Rockford, IL (NBC) begins broadcasting

1953 - Westchester conference of American Library Association proclaims "Freedom to Read"

1954 - KTEN TV channel 10 in Ada-Ardmore, OK (ABC) begins broadcasting

1954 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Charles A Lindbergh & John Patrick

1954 - WHA TV channel 21 in Madison, WI (PBS) begins broadcasting

1956 - "Most Happy Fella" opens at Imperial Theater NYC for 678 performances

1956 - A new range of mountains discovered in Antarctica (2 over 13,000')

1956 - Frank Loesser's musical "Most Happy Fella," premieres in NYC

1958 - 84th Kentucky Derby: Ismael Valenzuela aboard Tim Tam wins in 2:05

1958 - WINS suspends Alan Freed for causing a riot in Boston, he quits

1959 - The Detroit Tiger's Charlie Maxwell hits 4 consecutive HRs in a doubleheader

1960 - Harvey Schmidt/Tom Jones' musical "Fantasticks," premieres in NYC

1960 - The Anne Frank House opens in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

1961 - Warren Spahn pitches a 2 hitter after pitching a no hitter

1962 - Express train crashed into wreckage of a commuter train & a freight, killing 163, injuring 400 (Tokyo, Japan)

1965 - First use of satellite TV, Today Show on Early Bird Satellite

1965 - Third Mayor's Trophy Game, Mets beat Yanks 2-1 in 10

1965 - Cambodia drops diplomatic relations with the US

1965 - Don Steele, begins a 40+ year radio career at KRTH (LA California)

1965 - KTCI TV channel 17 in St. Paul-Minneapolis, MN (PBS) 1st broadcast

1965 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Irwin Unger (Greenback Era)

1966 - The game "Twister" was featured on the "Tonight Show" with Johnny Carson.

1966 - WDHO (now WNWO) TV channel 24 in Toledo, OH (ABC) begins broadcasting

1967 - Black students seize finance building at Northwestern University

1968 - After three days of battle, the U.S. Marines retook Dai Do complex in Vietnam. They found that the North Vietnamese had evacuated the area.

1968 - Holland Pirate Radio Station VRON becomes Radio Veronica Intl

1970 - 24th NBA Championship: NY Knicks beat LA Lakers, 4 games to 3

1970 - Sandra Haynie wins LPGA Shreveport Kiwanis Golf Invitational

1971 - National Public Radio broadcast for the first time.  "All Things Considered" premieres on 112 National Public Radio stations






Flag of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), better known as East Germany

1971 - Erich Honecker succeeds Walter Ulbricht as East German party leader




1971 - National Public Radio begins programming

1971 - Anti-war protesters began four days of demonstrations in Washington, DC.

1971 - Nixon administration arrests 13,000 anti-war protesters in 3 days

1971 - James Earl Ray, Martin Luther King's assassin, was caught in a jailbreak attempt.

1971 - Pulitzer prize awarded to John Toland (Rising Sun)

1973 - Chicago's Sears Tower, world's tallest building (443 m), topped out

1973 - KC Royals' George Brett gets his 1st major league hit

1975 - 101st Kentucky Derby: Jacinto Vasquez on Foolish Pleasure wins 2:02

1975 - Christa Vahlensieck runs female world record marathon (2:40:15.8)

1976 - Panama 747SP lands after record flight around world (46:26)

1976 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Saul Bellow (Humboldt's Gift) 1978 - "Sun Day" - solar energy events are held in US

1978 - Anderlecht wins 18th Europe Cup II 1978 - Last cricket test match appearance for Bobby Simpson, at Kingston

1978 - WI all set to lose cricket test v Aust at Kingston till riots end game

1978 - The first unsolicited bulk commercial e-mail (which would later become known as "spam") is sent by a Digital Equipment Corporation marketing representative to every ARPANET address on the west coast of the United States.

1979 - Margaret Thatcher became the first woman elected prime minister of England.

1979 - Bobby Bonds hits his 300th HR (2nd to have 300 HRs & 300 stolen bases)

1979 - Martin Sherman's "Bent," premieres in London

1980 - 106th Kentucky Derby: Jacinto Vasquez on Genuine Risk wins in 2:02

1980 - Giants first baseman Willie McCovey hits his 521st & final HR

1980 - Texas Ranger Ferguson Jenkins becomes 4th to win 100 games in AL & NL

1981 - "Can-Can" closes at Minskoff Theater NYC after 5 performances

1981 - "Moony, Shapiro Songbook" opens & closes at Morosco Theater NYC

1981 - Sally Little wins LPGA CPC Women's Golf International

1982 - ABC's All Talk network begins on radio (2 west coast stations)

1982 - NY Times reports that military will get 25% of NASA's budget

1982 - Pres Reagan begins 5 minute weekly radio broadcasts

1983 - Bruins 3-Isles 8-Wales Conference Championship-Isles hold 3-1 lead

1983 - Soviet leader Andropov decreases nuclear weapons in Europe

1983 - US bishops condemn nuclear weapons

1985 - Date of $5 million check in "View to a Kill"

1986 - 112th Kentucky Derby - At the age of 54, legendary horse jockey Bill Shoemaker became the oldest person to win the Kentucky Derby, riding Ferdinand to victory in 2:02.8

1986 - In NASA's first post-Challenger launch, an unmanned Delta rocket lost power in its main engine shortly after liftoff. Safety officers destroyed it by remote control.

1986 - Air Lanka crashes, killing 22

1986 - Cubs 3rd baseman Ron Cey hits his 300th & 301st HR

1986 - NASA launches Goes-G, it failed to achieve orbit

1986 - NY Yankee Don Mattingly is 6th to hit 3 sacrifice flies in a game

1987 - "Mikado" closes at Virginia Theater NYC after 46 performances

1987 - Miami Herald reports a woman spent Friday & Saturday with Gary Hart

1988 - The White House acknowledged that first lady Nancy Reagan had used astrological advice to help schedule her husband's activities.

1988 - 4,200 kg Colombian cocaine in seized at Tarpon Springs Florida

1988 - Jasper Johns' "Diver" sold for $4,200,000

1991 - 356th & final episode of CBS 2nd longest running series Dallas, 2nd only to Gunsmoke







Flag of Namibia

1991 - The Declaration of Windhoek is signed.





1992 - Five days of rioting and looting ended in Los Angeles, CA. The riots, that killed 53 people, began after the acquittal of police officers in the beating of Rodney King.  

1992 - Baltimore's Gregg Olson, 25, is youngest to record 100 saves

1992 - NY Met Eddie Murray is 24th to hit 400 HRS

1992 - Ohio Glory wins first WLAF game (after 6 losses), beat Frankfurt 20-17

1993 - "Kiss of the Spider Woman" opens at Broadhurst NYC for 906 perfs

1994 - 29th Academy of Country Music Awards: Garth Brooks wins

1994 - D66/Dutch Liberal Party win Dutch 2nd Parliamentary election

1994 - US space probe Clementine launched

1995 - "My Thing of Love" opens at Beck Theater NYC for 16 performances

1995 - Australia beat West Indies to regain the Frank Worrell Cricket Trophy

1995 - David Bell debuts for the Indians (3rd generation player, Gus & Buddy)

1996 - Martin Moxon & Michael Vaughan make 362 1st wkt Yorks v Glam

1997 - 123rd Kentucky Derby: Gary Stevens aboard Silver Charm wins in 2:02.3

1997 - ABC Bud Light Masters Bowling Tournament won by Jason Queen

1997 - Garry Kasparov begins chess match with IBM supercomputer Deep Blue

1997 - The "Republic of Texas" surrendered to authorities ending an armed standoff where two people were held hostage. The group asserts the independence of Texas from the U.S.

1998 - "The Sevres Road," by 18-century landscape painter Camille Corot, stolen from the Louvre in France.

1999 - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma is slammed by an F5 tornado killing forty-two people, injuring 665, and causing $1 billion in damage. The tornado was one of 66 from the 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak. Kansas and Oklahoma were hit by an outbreak of more than 55 tornadoes, including one measured at F5 on the Fujita scale.

1999 - Mark Manes, at age 22, was arrested for supplying a gun to Eric Harris and Dylan Kleibold, who later killed 13 people at Columbine High School in Colorado.

1999 - The Dow Jones Industrial Average closes above 11,000 for the first time in its history at 11,014.70.

1999 - Hasbro released the first collection of toys for the Star Wars movie "Episode I: The Phantom Menace."

1999 - Stephen Hendry defeats Mark Williams 18-11 to win the World Snooker Championship for a record seventh time.

2000 - The sport of geocaching begins, with the first cache placed and the coordinates from a GPS posted on Usenet.

2000 - The trial of two Libyans accused of killing 270 people in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 (over Lockerbie) opened.

2001 - The United States, a member of the UN Human Rights Commission since its inception, lost its seat. It would be restored the following year.  It has been a member since the commission was formed in 1947.

2002 - A military MiG-21 aircraft crashes into the Bank of Rajasthan in India, killing eight.




2003 - New Hampshire’s symbol, the granite Old Man of the Mountain, collapsed in the state’s Franconia Mountains.



2006 - Armavia Flight 967 crashes into the Black Sea, killing 113 people on board, with no survivors.

2006 -In Alexandria, Virginia.  Al-Quaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui was given a sentence of life in prison for his role in the terrorist attack on the U.S. on September 11, 2001.

2007 - British girl Madeleine McCann disappears from her bed in a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal.


These were the sources that I used for completing this blog entry:

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/may03.htm

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php