Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Trump Threatens New War To Come With a ‘New Dawn for Cuba'

This is a picture of a magnet that was being sold at Strand's Book Store in New York City a few years ago. No, I did not buy it, but I liked it and took a picture, which I am sharing here now. 



Thought that I had posted this some days ago, after he first mentioned this.

Apparently, I did not.

But President Trump is now threatening quick and decisive action against Cuba. Because, you know, not only have America's foreign wars been going so extremely well for us, but recent past history should tell us that fighting multiple wars at the same time is an even better idea. 

Especially from the president who campaigned on the promise not to get us involved in any new foreign wars.

Here, specifically, is some of what he said (see link to the NBC article below):

“And very soon, this great strength will also bring about a day 70 years in waiting. It’s called A New Dawn for Cuba,” he said.  

“We’re going to help them out with Cuba.”

The president continued: “We have a lot of great Cuban Americans. Not too many people in this audience, I don’t think. But you go to Miami, we have people, Cuban Americans, people that were brutally treated, whose families were killed, brutalized, and now watch.”

Plus, he has been starting to talk about Greenland, and taking what is rightfully ours, as he puts it.

Remind me when Greenland ever was part of the United States again? I must have missed that chapter in history. 

What times we live in.



Trump says a ‘New Dawn for Cuba' is coming ‘very soon' "And very soon, this great strength will also bring about a day 70 years in waiting," he said. By NBC6 • Published April 17, 2026 • Updated on April 17, 2026 at 11:40 pm

https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/cuba/trump-says-a-new-dawn-for-cuba-is-coming-very-soon/3797577/

Trump says a new dawn for Cuba is coming very soon – NBC 6 South Florida

April 29th: 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 1091, the Battle at Monte Levunium was fought, as Emperor Alexius I defeated Petshegenes. On this day in 1429, Joan of Arc entered the city of Orléans (which the American city New Orleans is named after). Eventually, she would end its months-long siege and would become known as the "Maid of Orléans." The Chinese Ming dynasty occupied Taiwan on this day in 1661. On this day in 1672 during the Franco-Dutch War, King Louis XIV of France (known as the "Sun King") invaded the Netherlands. In 1707 on this day, the Act of Union was ratified by the Scottish Parliament. Thus, the Parliament of Great Britain was proclaimed, which marked the formal unification of the Kingdoms of England and Scotland into one sovereign nation, Great Britain (also known as the United Kingdom). John Flamsteed observed Uranus for the sixth time on this day in 1715. On this day in 1781 during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, the French fleet occupied Tobago. The French fleet, led by Admiral Suffren, stopped the naval fleet of Great Britain from seizing the Cape of Good Hope (in modern day South Africa) on this day in 1781. This day in 1784 marked the premiere of Mozart's Sonata in B flat, K454 in Vienna, Austria. Rubber was patented on this day in 1813. Charles Darwin's expedition in the HMS Beagle saw the snowy white tops of the Andes Mountains from Patagonia on this day in 1834. On this day in 1862 during the American Civil War, the city of New Orleans fell to Union forces. There was an anti-Semitic riot in Budapest, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire, on this day in 1901. Pierre de Brazza landed in Libreville, Gabon, on this day in 1905. On this day in 1916, Irish nationalists set a post office on fire in Dublin,  as the Easter rebellion in Ireland ended with the surrender of Irish nationalists. Telephone connection between Great Britain and Australia went into service on this day in 1930. On this day in 1940 during World War II, Norwegian King Haakon and the exiled Norwegian government fled to England following the Nazi German occupation. Japanese troops marched into Lashio on this day in 1942 during World War II, cutting off the Burma Road. On this day in 1942 during World War II, Jews were forced to wear an identifying yellow Jewish Star in Netherlands and in Vichy-France. On this day in 1945 near the end of the European theater of World War II, the terms of surrender for the German armies in Italy was signed. US troops liberated 31,601 from the Nazi concentration camp in Dachau, Germany, on this day in 1945 late in World War II. In 1946 on this day, 28 former Japanese leaders were indicted in Tokyo as war criminals. The seventeenth space shuttle mission (51-B)-Challenger 7 was launched on this day in 1985. Wrecking cranes began tearing down the Berlin Wall at the Brandenburg Gate on this day in 1990. Croatia declared independence on this day in 1991. On this day in 2004, the National World War II Memorial opened in Washington, D.C., to thousands of visitors. It provided long overdue recognition for the 16 million U.S. men and women who served in that war. 


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!

A lot of the events on these timelines recently have centered on World War II. Indeed, the spring time was a very busy time for the war throughout, beingh conducive to beginning major combat operations and invasions. It makes sense.  But this date also marks the anniversary of the National World War II Memorial in Washington, and that is what this short piece by the History Channel's website focuses on. It can be found at: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/world-war-ii-monument-opens-in-washington-dc





 On this day in 1091, the Battle at Monte Levunium was fought, as Emperor Alexius I defeated Petshegenes.




Picture of the Monument Jeanne d'Arc/Joan of Arc Monument (above) in the gardens in Québec City which now bears her name.


Joan of Arc Statue in Philadelphia

 On this day in 1429, Joan of Arc entered the city of Orléans (which the American city New Orleans is named after). Eventually, she would end its months-long siege and would become known as the "Maid of Orléans."



1522 - Emperor Charles V names Frans van Holly inquisitor-gen of Netherlands

1540 - Emperor Charles declares all privileges of Gent ended

1550 - Emperor Charles V gives inquisiters additional authority

1553 - Flemish woman introduces practice of starching linen into England

1623 - 11 Dutch ships depart for the conquest of Peru

1628 - Sweden & Denmark sign defense treaty against Duke of Wallenstein

1636 - Prince Frederik Henry occupies Schenkenschans

1644 - Farm leader Li Zicheng becomes emperor of China & flees Peking

  The Chinese Ming dynasty occupied Taiwan on this day in 1661.


1670 - Pope Clemens X elected


Louis XIV, the "Sun King" of France

 On this day in 1672 during the Franco-Dutch War, King Louis XIV of France (known as the "Sun King") invaded the Netherlands.



1701 - Drenthe Neth adopts Gregorian calendar, tomorrow is May 12, 1701

1706 - Emperor Jozef I becomes monarch of Cologne/Bavaria


 

• In 1707 on this day, the Act of Union was ratified by the Scottish Parliament. Thus, the Parliament of Great Britain was proclaimed, which marked the formal unification of the Kingdoms of England and Scotland into one sovereign nation, Great Britain (also known as the United Kingdom).



• John Flamsteed observed Uranus for the sixth time on this day in 1715.

• On this day in 1781 during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, the French fleet occupied Tobago.



• The French fleet, led by Admiral Suffren, stopped the naval fleet of Great Britain from seizing the Cape of Good Hope (in modern day South Africa) on this day in 1781.





Bust of Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

•  This day in 1784 marked the premiere of Mozart's Sonata in B flat, K454 in Vienna, Austria.



1793 - Cornerstone laid for Groningen's new townhall

• Rubber was patented on this day in 1813.









British Botanist Charles Darwin

• Charles Darwin's expedition in the HMS Beagle saw the snowy white tops of the Andes Mountains from Patagonia on this day in 1834.




1845 - Macon B Allen & Robert Morris Jr, 1st blacks to open law practice

1852 - First edition of Peter Roget's Thesaurus published

1853 - Comet C/

1853 G1 (Schweizer) approaches within 0.0839 AUs of Earth

1856 - Peace between England and; Russia

1857 - US Army, Pacific Div HQ permanently forms at Presidio (SF)

1861 - Maryland's House of Delegates votes against seceding from Union

1862 - 100,000 federal troops prepare to march into Corinth, Mississippi




A picture of a cannon near the banks of the Mississippi River with the famous Jackson Square in the background in New Orleans, Louisiana.

• On this day in 1862 during the American Civil War, the city of New Orleans fell to Union forces.



1863 - Battle of Chancellordville, VA (Fredericksburg, Wilderness Tavern)

1864 - -30] Skirmish at Jenkins' Ferry, Arkansas

1864 - The Theta Xi fraternity is founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York.

1882 - The "Elektromote" - forerunner of the trolleybus - is tested by Ernst Werner von Siemens in Berlin.

1886 - First public Dutch electricity opens

1888 - Old Kavallison, Congo: Stanley meet Emin Pasha

1892 - Charlie Reilly is baseball's first pinch hitter

1894 - Commonweal of Christ (Coxey's Army) arrives in Wash, DC 500 strong to protest unemployment; Coxey arrested for trespassing at Capitol

1901 - 27th Kentucky Derby: Jimmy Winkfield on His Eminence wins in 2:07.75

• There was an anti-Semitic riot in Budapest, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire, on this day in 1901.

1903 - Limestone slides at Turtle Mountain kills 9 (Frank Alberta)

1905 - 2" rain falls in 10 mins in Taylor, TX

•  Pierre de Brazza landed in Libreville, Gabon, on this day in 1905.

1910 - Ex-president Theodore Roosevelt visits Amsterdam

1912 - 108°F (42°C), Tuguegarao, Philippines (Oceania record)

1912 - Frank Wedekind's "Tod und Teufel," premieres in Berlin

1913 - Swedish engineer Gideon Sundback of Hoboken patents all-purpose zipper



Flag of Ireland

• On this day in 1916, Irish nationalists set a post office on fire in Dublin,  as the Easter rebellion in Ireland ended with the surrender of Irish nationalists.




1918 - Tris Speaker ties career outfield record of 4 unassisted double plays

1922 - First official Intl Weightlifting Federation Champ (Tallinn, Estonia)

1925 - Netherlands returns to gold standard

1926 - France ad the; United States reach accord on repayment of World War I

1927 - Construction of Spirit of St Louis is completed

1930 - North Sea floodgate at Ijmuiden (biggest in world) officially opens

• Telephone connection between Great Britain and Australia went into service on this day in 1930.


1931 - Cleveland Indian Wes Ferrell no-hits St Louis Browns, 9-0

1936 - 1st pro baseball game in Japan is played Nagoya defeats Daitokyo, 8-5

1939 - Whitestone Bridge connecting Bronx and Queens opens in New York City

 On this day in 1940 during World War II, Norwegian King Haakon and the exiled Norwegian government fled to England following the Nazi German occupation.

1940 - Robert Sherwood's "There Shall be No Night," premieres in NYC

• Japanese troops marched into Lashio on this day in 1942 during World War II, cutting off the Burma Road.

• On this day in 1942 during World War II, Jews were forced to wear an identifying yellow Jewish Star in Netherlands and in Vichy-France.

1943 - Dietrich Bonhoeffer arrested by Nazis

1943 - Noel Coward's "Present Laughter," premieres in London

1943 - US 34th Division occupies Hill 609, North Tunisia

1944 - Surprise attack by Van de Peat on General Landsdrukkerij in the Hague

1945 - 1st food drop by RAF above nazi-occupied Holland (operation Manna)

1945 - Japanese army evacuates Rangoon






 On this day in 1945 near the end of the European theater of World War II, the terms of surrender for the German armies in Italy was signed.



 US troops liberated 31,601 from the Nazi concentration camp in Dachau, Germany, on this day in 1945 late in World War II.

1945 - Venice and Mestre were captured by the Allies

 • In 1946 on this day, 28 former Japanese leaders were indicted in Tokyo as war criminals.


1948 - Bradman scores 107 Aust v Worcs, 152 mins, 15 fours

1953 - The first U.S. experimental 3D-TV broadcast showed an episode of Space Patrol on Los Angeles ABC affiliate KECA-TV.

1955 - G Gronchi elected president of Italy

1956 - Betsy Rawls wins LPGA Peach Blossom Golf Open

1956 - WLUC TV channel 6 in Marquette, MI (CBS/NBC/ABC) begins broadcasting

1956 - WSPA TV channel 7 in G'ville-Spartanburg, SC (CBS) begins broadcasting

1956 - WWBT TV channel 12 in Richmond, VA (NBC) begins broadcasting

1957 - First military nuclear power plant dedicated, Fort Belvoir Va

1961 - ABC's "Wide World of Sports, debuts

1964 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site


1965 - Australian government announces it would send troops to Vietnam

1965 - Earthquake hits Seattle; 5 die

1965 - Malta is 18th member of Council of Europe

1967 - Aretha Franklin releases "Respect"

1970 - 50,000 American and South Vietnamese troops invade Cambodia

1971 - Boeing receives contract for Mariner 10, Mercury exploration

1971 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site



1974 - President Nixon said he will release edited tapes made in White House




1975 - Ethiopia nationalizes all ground/earth

1975 - Vietnam War: Operation Frequent Wind: The U.S. begins to evacuate US citizens from Saigon prior to an expected North Vietnamese takeover. U.S. involvement in the war comes to an end.

1976 - Minister Irene Vorrink begins fluoridating Dutch drinking water

1977 - British Aerospace forms

1980 - Corazones Unidos Siempre Chi Upsilon Sigma National Latin Sorority Inc. is founded.

1981 - Peter Sutcliffe admits he is the Yorkshire Ripper (murdered 13 women)

1982 - Alfredo Magana elected pres of El Salvador

1982 - Nordiques 2-Isles 5-Semifinals-Isles hold 2-0 lead

1983 - Harold Washington sworn in as Chicago's first black mayor



Picture of the space shuttle at Expo Park in Los Angeles, California


 • The seventeenth space shuttle mission (51-B)-Challenger 7 was launched on this day in 1985.

1985 - Ranger Larry Parrish is 5th to hit 3 HRs in a game in both leagues

1985 - Tony Tubbs TKOs Greg Page in 15 for heavyweight boxing title

1986 - 800,000 books destroyed by fire in Los Angeles Central Library

1987 - Japan's premier Nakasone visits the US

1988 - Orioles beat White Sox 9-0 for first 1988 win after 21 loses

1989 - 2nd government of Lubbers falls

1990 - STS-31 (Discovery 10) lands



The longest single piece of the Berlin Wall still standing, I believe, is at the Topographie des Terrors, which is within easy walking distance of Checkpoint Charlie, and not too far from the Potsdam Platz, either. 

• Wrecking cranes began tearing down the Berlin Wall at the Brandenburg Gate on this day in 1990.





Flag of Croatia

• Croatia declared independence on this day in 1991.




1991 - Cyclone strikes Bangladesh, 139,000 die/10 million homeless

1991 - Earthquake in Georgia, kills 100

1992 - Country singer Doug Stone, 35, undergoes quadruple bypass surgery

1992 - Jury acquits Los Aangeles police officers of beating Rodney King, riots begin

1992 - Sheena Easton collapses on stage while performing in "Man of LaMancha"

1992 - Voting ends on choice of Elvis stamps

1994 - Ferry boat smashes into Mombasa Harbor Kenya, kills over 300

1994 - Israel and the PLO sign economic accord

1995 - Longest sausage ever, at 2877 miles, made in Kitchener Ontario

1997 - KC Royal Chili Davis is 75th to hit 300 HRs

1997 - The Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993 enters into force, outlaws the production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons among its signatories.

1999 - Avala TV Tower near Belgrade is destroyed in NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.

2002 - The United States is re-elected to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, one year after losing the seat it had held for 50 years.

2004 - Dick Cheney and George W. Bush testify before the 9/11 Commission in a closed, unrecorded hearing in the Oval Office.

2004 - Oldsmobile builds its final car ending 107 years of production.


Fountains of the World War II Memorial in Washington

On this day in 2004, the National World War II Memorial opened in Washington, D.C., to thousands of visitors. It provided long overdue recognition for the 16 million U.S. men and women who served in that war. The memorial is located on 7.4 acres on the former site of the Rainbow Pool at the National Mall between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. The Capitol dome is seen to the east, and Arlington Cemetery is just across the Potomac River to the west.    The granite and bronze monument features fountains between arches symbolizing hostilities in Europe and the Far East. The arches are flanked by semicircles of pillars, one each for the states, territories and the District of Columbia. Beyond the pool is a curved wall of 4,000 gold stars, one for every 100 Americans killed in the war. An Announcement Stone proclaims that the memorial honors those "Americans who took up the struggle during the Second World War and made the sacrifices to perpetuate the gift our forefathers entrusted to us: A nation conceived in liberty and justice."    Though the federal government donated $16 million to the memorial fund, it took more than $164 million in private donations to get it built. Former Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, who was severely wounded in the war, and actor Tom Hanks were among its most vocal supporters. Only a fraction of the 16 million Americans who served in the war would ever see it. Four million World War II veterans were living at the time, with more than 1,100 dying every day, according to government records.    The memorial was inspired by Roger Durbin of Berkey, Ohio, who served under Gen. George S. Patton. At a fish fry near Toledo in February 1987, he asked U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur why there was no memorial on the Mall to honor World War II veterans. Kaptur, a Democrat from Ohio, soon introduced legislation to build one, starting a process that would stumble along through 17 years of legislative, legal and artistic entanglements. Durbin died of pancreatic cancer in 2000.    The monument was formally dedicated May 29, 2004, by U.S. President George W. Bush. Open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, it received some 4.4 million visitors in 2005.




2005 - Syria completes withdrawal from Lebanon, ending 29 years of occupation. 2005 - New Zealand's first civil union takes place.

2007 - Republic Protests in Turkey.

2012 - International Chemical Weapons Convention deadline for chemical weapon stockpiles comes into effect


The following are the websites that I used to compile this list for this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/events/april/29

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory/April-29

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/apr29.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/world-war-ii-monument-opens-in-washington-dc

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Book Review: Private Paris by James Patterson

  



Recently, I have been doing book reviews of books which I already read, albeit many years ago. This, however, is not one of them. This is the first time that I ever read this book, and still probably only the third or fourth James Patterson book that I have ever read.

This book was quite different than the other Patterson books which I had previously read. In many respects, that made it quite enjoyable.

Before I go any farther, however, let me give the usual warnings to stop reading if you intend to read this book, because there will be spoilers ahead.

SPOILER ALERT

SPOILER ALERT

SPOILER ALERT

Okay, so by now if you are still reading this, I have to imagine that you either are familiar with this story already, or perhaps you do not mind the spoilers. Please just don't say that you were not given advanced warning. 

This story takes place in Paris. Of course, there is a picture of the Arc de Triumph as seen from the Champs-Élysées, in what is without argument one of the most iconic scenes in Paris, right on the cover of this book. So you might think that Patterson will focus on the most famous parts of the City of Light. Yet, we are taken to some darker, lesser known parts of Paris and the banlieues. This is not quite what I expected, and I commend Patterson for that. Showing a very different, grimier side to Paris. No action scenes on the Eiffel Tower or stolen art from the Louvre or an episode inside of the Notre-Dame Cathedral here, which is truly a refreshing change.

Otherwise, it goes along the way that you would guess that a spy mystery novel would. The bad guys are clearly the bad guys in every way. The good guys are good guys, also in every way. There are no real shades of gray, and the world feels a bit two dimensional in that sense. While I admittedly did not know the specifics of the plan -which turned out to be quite clever, actually - there are some things which made this book nevertheless predictable. The bad guys were plotting something bad, and it looks impressive and unstoppable early on. They look too well-coordinated and unbeatable. Then, they begin to make some mistakes. Also, the incredible insight and instincts of the main character, Jack Morgan, help to foil the evil plot. The bad guys are defeated just in the nick of time, then receive their just deserts in the way of worldwide condemnation and jail time. 

None of that exactly came as a surprise. 

The plot, simply, is this: there are high-profile murders all across Paris in just a short span of days. They all have a similar mark left by the killers: AB-16. At first, nobody knows or has a clue as to what AB-16 means. In time, of course, we learn what it means. For all intents and purposes, it is a call to arms for all Muslims across France to fight back against oppression and work to destroy decadent French culture and turn France into an Islamic republic. 

There is a twist ending. We find out that the bad guys, wo at first seem to side with the Muslim majority and feel that they are oppressed, instead seem angry and resentful towards Muslims. They arm them, but only with defective weapons that pose only symbolic danger. Mostly, they want to trigger a war (like a racial war) that, they are sure, will drive Islam out of France. In short, AB-16 is a scam to get militant Muslims brainwashed and to start a Holy War of sorts, but then for France to expel Islam out of the country altogether to save French culture. 

All in all, this mostly is what you expect from a James Patterson book. It is entertaining and moves fast. Not boring reading, to be sure. The chapters are short, so it feels like you are progressing through the book fast, making very good progress. As I understand it, that is one of the draws for fans of Patterson. It is not meant to be taken too seriously or to make very deep, poignant points or to get you thinking very deeply about topics. It is simply a fun book to read, perfect for beach reading. As such, it certainly achieves it's end. This was a fun read.

If there is one criticism that I have of James Patterson - and it is true with the characters in this book, as well as his more well known characters, especially Alex Cross - it is that the characters feel a bit paper thin. Jack Morgan as a main character feels remarkably similar to Alex Cross, another main character in Patterson books. The problem that I have with them is believability. They are one-dimensional. Too flawless. Frankly, they are too perfect, too successful, too attractive with incredible women desperately wanting to be near them. Also, they always find themselves in the middle of intense action from which they emerge relatively (and predictably) unscathed. All of this is a formula, and a repetitive one. Patterson writes entertaining, fun books. But I do not love the characters as I do with, say Stephen king's characters, who feel more believable to me, even if the stories, sometimes, do not. The characters which populate King books feel far more real and relatable.

That said, of course, this book is mostly meant as a fun read. In that capacity, it does it's job. It is fast-paced and packed with action which, I believe, is the reason why most readers turn to an author like Patterson in the first place.

Recommended for fun, not overly serious reading.




Movie Review: The Edge (1997)




For the first time in years, I watched one of my very favorite movies, The Edge, on Saturday evening with my girlfriend. 

Not sure why this movie is not better known than it is. Most people have never seen it, and in most cases, have never even heard of it. Yet to me, this is a great film. Not everybody likes it. The reviews back at the time were mixed. I can even understand some of the criticisms of it. Watching it again, perhaps for the first time since Trump's rise to political power, it struck me how odd it seems to me that this movie puts the viewer in position to root for the billionaire. Also, it works under the assumption that the most sympathetic character in this movie is that billionaire, and implies that he must have made his fortune because he is so smart and wily and admirable, while the reality is that almost all billionaires inherited much of their wealth, and are incredibly greedy.

But I digress....

This movie has always been one of my favorites since the first time that I watched it, back in the late 1990's. Don't remember if I saw it in the theaters, but I do remember watching it at a friend's home. This would have been around the time when I was obsessed with mountains, and so the scenery of majestic mountains and unspoiled nature really always appealed to me. 

Yet, the reason that I love this movie goes well beyond mere natural beauty. I loved Seven Years in Tibet for the scenery, as well, and enjoy the message within it. However, I never felt quite the desire or even need to watch that movie again like I feel almost a need to watch this movie again. And there is a reason for that. This movie feels like it has important lessons for the viewer, if you are open to it. Also, that message is easier to access for the average person than it is in Seven Years. These characters feel like areal people, and while the circumstances that they find themselves in are relatively rare, it does feel like something which could (and does) happen to people sometimes.  

Before I go on, of course, there should be the standard warning to stop reading if you intend to read this book, because there will be spoilers ahead.

SPOILER ALERT

SPOILER ALERT

SPOILER ALERT


Okay, so by now if you are still reading this, I have to imagine that you either are familiar with this movie already, or perhaps you do not mind the spoilers. Please just don't say that you were not given advanced warning. 

Alright, so now that you have been warned about spoilers, and there are no excuses, let's get into the part of this review which is filled with spoilers.

So I mentioned that a lot of people did not seem to like this movie. Gene Siskel said that it was formulaic and not profound, and hated Alec Baldin's acting in this one. He simply did not care about Baldwin's character. Other people also feel that this movie dragged for the first half hour or so, and Siskel's opinion that this movie has been done in other ways a thousand times before is a fairly common view. Point taken.

Except that it has some virtues to it that I think many people are overlooking. I did not think that Alec Baldwin's acting was that bad in this movie. But even if you think that it was, Anthony Hopkins was off the charts with how good his acting was in this one. Somehow, you feel the internal struggle, you almost read what the character is thinking throughout the movie. Hopkins plays billionaire Charles Morse. He is married to Mickey, his literally supermodel wife. It is clear that he loves her, but less clear how she feels about him. There is a significant age difference, which perhaps lead to some questions. Some characters in this movie seem to lean towards pointing this out without blatantly saying it, until one of the characters, Robert (or Bob) Green, played by Alec Baldin, outright states it quite late in the movie. But let me not get ahead of myself. 

This is not a minor point. Indeed, Charles is always, always thinking and observing. He has a wealth of knowledge of things, a fact established almost immediately in the film. He does not always see any real advantage to possessing this wealth of knowledge, although it will come in handy later on. For now, we just know that he is highly intelligent and sees things that others probably do not suspect he knows or sees. For example, we see him observing Mickey, and how she is with Bob, an attractive man in his own right. Bob feels entitled to making his fortune, although he has not yet done so. But it seems clear early in the movie that he and Mickey are closer than they perhaps should be, and that they have not quite hidden it as successfully as perhaps they should have from Charles. This is a source of friction and distrust between Charles and Bob. And while mostly unspoken - again, almost until the very end - you can sense that it is a bone of contention between the two men. 

Anyway, the group is somewhere in the remote north, either Canada or, more likely, Alaska. It is never outright mentioned where they are in the movie, but everyone seems to say Alaska, so let's go with that. It is cold, but we get the sense that it is not yet winter. The weather is growing cold, but it seems like this is the fall season. Bears in this remote region are a huge problem and are not yet hibernating. The danger that bears pose is made clear almost from the first, although early on, it is just foreshadowing what is to come. 

Bob is a photographer, and he is looking for the perfect shot. A model has canceled on him, making him desperate for some kind of replacement. To that end, he finds a picture of a local Native American, Jack Hawk (played by Gordon Tootoosis). Bob feels that this man, Jack Hawk, has the right look for his picture. But he lives in a cabin twenty miles away. Remember, this is a remote mountain region. No major roads - in fact, no roads of any kind can be seen, apparently - and so they will have to get to that cabin by plane. Bob and his assistant Stephen (played by Harold Perrineau) go there, and Bob invites Charles to go with them. Mickey seems to like the idea and encourages Charles, who seems eager to get away after the host of the cabin has pitched a sales idea on him. This is another thing clearly weighing on Charles. He is a billionaire, and so everyone seems to want a piece of his money, making him distrustful of their intentions. 

Ultimately, Charles goes with Bob and Stephen. They get on a plane, flying over some remote mountains. As mentioned earlier, there really is spectacular scenery throughout this movie, and we see it particularly as they fly over these mountains. When they reach the log cabin, there is a note saying that Jack Hawk is out hunting up by Big Bass Lake, about twenty miles north of the cabin. So they head up in that direction. One problem that comes back to haunt the group later: Bob takes the note that Jack Hawk left on his cabin, which means that later, when search and rescue missions begin, nobody will know that this group headed 20 miles north of the cabin.

So when the plane hits some geese along the way, forcing the plane to crash into the edge of a mountain peak and crash into a near freezing lake far below, nobody could possibly know where this group wound up. Which of course means that this group is on their own. They will have to survive the elements and walk out of these isolated woods themselves.

Now, there are problems with all of this. I will address them, but I will not explore them here, because to do so is to get sidetracked from the actual movie itself. However, the pilot gets a face full of glass, limiting his ability to guide the plane after the birds crash into the plane, and thus making a much more serious accident all but inevitable. Yet, the pilot is the only one who sustains any kind of real injury. And in his case, he is the only one who does not survive. After getting out of the lake, they are desperate to warm themselves, and Bob decides - all on his own and against basic common sense - to use the flares to light the fire to warm themselves. Then Stephen cuts himself  - quite badly - while trying to carve a spear. It is a serious injury and, ultimately, it will cost him his life after Bob hangs the blood-stained tourniquet instead of burying it, as Charles has advised. 

Let's get beyond those questions left unanswered. And let's also get beyond the fairly well-known fact that the three survivors are right by a river of some sort, yet steer away from it for some reason. I cannot pretend to be an expert on outdoors survival skills when you are lost in the wilderness. However, the one thing that I do know, and which seems to be common knowledge, is that when you find a river, you stick close to it and follow it, because that will inevitably, eventually, lead out of the wilderness and take you to some sort of signs of civilization.

Yeah, let's put all of that aside. These three guys are lost in the woods, by themselves. Surely, it is no surprise that they likely will make mistakes. And so they do. Let's leave it at that.

They go and head to the direction which feels south to them, even though they seem to ignore the sun in the sky, which could be more effective in terms of giving them a sense of direction. Again, more unanswered questions, but let's get beyond that. They walk and climb, climb and walk. Ultimately, they find the remnants of their own fire by the same lake which they crashed in. Meaning that they have spent a day or two walking in one big circle. 

It is at this point when Stephen stabs himself with the knife and, later, when the bear attacks and kills him. This leave Charles and Bob, and the tensions which exist between them. And yet, to survive the bear and the elements, they are now forced to rely on one another. It is an uneasy alliance to be sure, but for now, it is an alliance. 

By the way, the bear is a real one, played by Bob the Bear. He is excellent in this movie. Probably his best performance. However, even here there are more questions than answers. These guys consistently manage to outrun the bear, which is simply unrealistic. Bears may look big and fat and clumsy, but they are in fact very athletic and can run far faster than even the fastest humans can. So for these guys to consistently outrun him, and since the bear seems to lose interest in them at times, and then resume stalking them, it also feels questionable. However, he will make an appearance again, and soon.

Eventually, they realize that the bear is toying with them. Stalking them, seemingly outsmarting them. Of course, the bear is in his element, and they are not. It will not allow them to eat or make any real progress out of the woods. They had tried to get a squirrel, with a trap, and then immediately forget about it once they hear a helicopter. They run through the woods and manage to find a clearing, but not on time for the helicopter to see them, as it is already too far away. So without any real hope of being saved from a search crew, and without any real resources other than their own ingenuity, they realize that they have to kill the bear. Charles is the first to recognize it, and he convinces Bob, despite Bob's reluctance and obvious skepticism. 

A showdown with the bear is inevitable. Eventually, it comes, and the two men have prepared very well. Probably a little too well, because it feels a little contrived. Their have somehow prepared their battlefield immaculately, although the plan does not go accordingly. Still, it comes down to the two men are in some kind of a stream and have to make their final stand against the bear. Both of them get hit and tossed aside easily, but they get up and resume the fight. Bob is about to get overwhelmed by the bear, but Charles steps in and stabs the bear with a spear. He then provokes the bear to attack, and when the time is right, Charles plants the spear between two rocks and points it upward. When the bears pounces, he impales himself on the spear.

Game, set, match.

Suddenly, the two men have plenty to eat. They also make these nifty makeshift coats, and Charles makes bear tooth necklaces for both men. They have conquered the most immediate and obvious threat. But they have also killed the one thing which kept their uneasy alliance going. Having survived such a grave, serious and immediate threat to their lives, you might think that the experience would help to bring the men closer, right?

Actually, the opposite happens. At first, they continue to work together to brave the still difficult elements. They keep trecking and seem to be in deep and serious conversations most of the time. Until, that is, they find a cabin. 

This is the point where you find out what both men are really made of. It seems to them both that this will be the end of their adventure. The cabin offers some shelter, some drinks (tea and hard liquor) and, most importantly, a canoe. Once they test it and find that it floats, the odds now seem in their favor to walk out of these hostile woods, just as Charles originally predicted. 

Except that Bob begins to drink the whiskey. Heavily. It becomes clear that he is drinking like this for a reason. Charles seems to know, seems to understand. He has seen the note hidden (forgotten) in the box which his pocket knife came in. Somehow, his wife had forgotten to take this little note out, which is actually instructions on what to engrave on two pieces of jewelry. One is the gift knife for Charles, but the other is for Bob's watch, thanking him for all of the nights. By now, Charles knows without a shadow of a doubt that bob is having an affair with his wife, and knows also that Bob intends to kill him. Especially when Bob grabs the gun stored in the cabin and begins to put bullets in it. They talk and all pretense of civility goes away quickly. Bob says that Mickey is only with Charles because of his money, that he has no business with a beautiful woman like that. 

Bob tells Charles to go outside. They go and continue to talk. Bob clearly seems uncomfortable, and we cannot be sure if he has it in him to actually go ahead and kill Charles. Meanwhile, Charles had spotted a deadfall, a disguised hole in the ground intended to protect against bears. Charles leads Bob close to the deadfall, although Bob remains oblivious. They continue talking, and Charles tries to talk Bob out of killing him. At some point he approaches Bob, making him nervous and forcing him to back up...right into the deadfall, as it turns out.

Despite all of the odds against him, Charles has come out on top. He has used his wits to best the hostile elements, the bear, and Bob's plan to kill him. Yet, he decides to try and save Bob, who otherwise would be doomed. He brings him back to the cabin and applies a tourniquet. Then he gets Bob in the canoe and they paddle down the river. They reach a lake and stop for a break at an isolated stretch. Once again, they talk a bit. Bob apologizes for trying to kill Charles, and then makes clear that he believes he is about to die. Charles urges him to hang on, but Bob will have none of it.

And then a plane comes by. Charles tries waving it down, then runs to grab some pine branches atop the fire to create visible smoke. The plane finally does see it, and heads to the two men. It seems that after all of this, they are finally saved.

Except that when Charles turns around, excited that the plane has seen them and they are about to be saved, he sees Bob laying facedown in an awkward position. He checks and finds Bob is dead.

When we see Charles next, he is getting off the helicopter. A lot of press is there, reporting on this story. So they rush to try and get a comment from Charles. But Charles walks past and first stops by the old man who had last tried to sell him on the idea of developing this region. He asks him why the bunny is unafraid, and the old man responds that the hare is not afraid because he is smarter than the panther, a reference to an exchange between the two men earlier in the movie. Then Charles goes to his wife, Mickey, who first looks at the body bag containing Bob's corpse being taken off the helicopter, then looks at her husband. They embrace, and Charles places something in her hands. It is Bob's watch, with the engraving that she had for him. Clearly he knows that she has cheated on him. They exchange a meaningful look.

Then Charles turns and addresses the press. When asked how the others with him had died, he tearfully explains that they died saving his life.

All of that, at least, sums up what happens in the movie. However, as mentioned earlier, there is a whole lot more going on than that. I loved this movie, despite the lukewarm reception and the criticisms that people have of this movie. Apparently, there were more criticisms of it from my end than even I expected, because it was a longer list than I was consciously aware of, admittedly.

Still, it is a story of survival, even if at times flawed. It is action, yet it is not mindless action. Maybe they make mistakes in this movie, trying to survive in the wild. And maybe the knowledge which Charles has learned of survival in the wild is flawed. Nonetheless, the point is that he is thinking and sees things which others do not. He does not allow obvious or even major disappointments to defeat him, but keeps them in perspective. Maintains an attitude that they are temporary setbacks and not permanent defeats.

Also, his thinking stretches beyond just immediate survival. He is aware that Bob, despite appearances, is himself a rival and a threat to his survival. Silently, keeping his calm, he observes and looks for opportunities to protect himself in the event that he is attacked, as evidenced by his silently observing the deadfall just outside of the cabin minutes before Bob leads him outside to eliminate him. This thinking is what keeps him - and the group as a whole - alive. 

Another aspect of this film that I like is that despite these men not particularly liking each other, they nevertheless work together for their mutual survival. They use their best tools - thinking - to defeat the bear as well as extremely hostile elements in the isolated and unfamiliar wilderness they find themselves in. And there is something to be said for that.

Highly recommended. 






Found this original review from many years ago, and thought it would be fitting to post it here, along with the new review. But I took pains not to read it, although I did go back and reference the names (which I forgot). Otherwise, I did not read it before writing this newer review and, in fact, still have not read it as I am about to publish this particular review. The original review, which I posted here almost 14 years ago now:


Movie Rental Review: The Edge published on Sunday, September 16, 2012:

https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2012/09/move-rental-review-edge.html

"The Charbor Chronicles": Move Rental Review: The Edge


I love this movie! I mean, it just has so much to offer, and it does so in an intelligent, subtle, adult manner. Yet, it is also an edge of your seat thriller!

Perhaps I am dating myself here, but the commercials, when they came out, did not do this movie justice. It looked like an exciting movie, and the bear chasing men somewhere deep in the woods looked exciting enough. But this movie has so much more to offer than that. It is, ultimately, almost a spiritual movie (in a non-religious way), addressing what we have become in this modern world of ours, and how hard it is, in essence, to truly find ourselves, to keep our wits about us and keep an overall better perspective, when thrown, involuntarily, into an unfamiliar setting.

Anthony Hopkins, who I personally think is one of the most capable and talented actors out there, plays Charles Morse, a billionaire who shows a penchant for retaining obscure facts and information that he has never quite fully been able to put a full use to (something that I, admittedly, can kind of relate to on some levels), takes a trip with an entourage to a very remote locale in North America somewhere (we have to figure that it is either in Alaska or northern Canada, somewhere, judging by the nordic remoteness, and the snow capped mountain range). This entourage includes his wife, Mickey (played by model Elle Macpherson) , Charles's assistant Robert (Bob) Green (played by Alec Baldwin), and Stephen (played by Harold Perrineau, who you might recognize from the latter two Matrix movies, and he was also on a few episodes of Lost).

We do not know precisely what business they are in, but we do know that Bob Green is trying to get the perfect photograph. It is during one of his photo  shoots with Mickey (Charles's supermodel wife), that we first essentially learn that she is having an affair with Bob. Charles notices, too, perhaps for the first time, but perhaps not. One way or the other, he knows, but says nothing. Robert is, in fact, having a somewhat difficult and stressful trip, however. It is Charles's birthday, and it clearly bothers him to see Charles and Mickey close together. Also, he has come to get the perfect picture, but the person that he specifically wanted to take pictures of has grown severely sick. When Bob comes across a picture that Styles, the backwoodsman host at the remote cabin lodge where the group is staying, has taken a picture of a local Native American, Jack Hawk (played by Gordon Tootoosis), who seems to have the right look that Bob is looking for in a picture. Bob instinctively decides to go after this mysterious man.

It proves a fateful decision, because when they go up to Jack Hawk's cabin, they find it deserted, but with a note attached, saying that he is out hunting up by Big Bass Lake, about twenty miles north of the cabin. They decide to go looking for him, and that is when a flock of birds winds up flying right into the airplane, and they crash into a lake. the pilot is killed in the crash, while Bob, Stephen, and Charles all survive. Bob has taken the note with him, so there really is no way that anyone would necessarily know that the men are actually twenty miles further north than their last stated destination.

Bob and Stephen went on the plane trip because they were looking for the perfect picture with the native, but Charles has decided to go, rather instinctively (and passively) himself for another reason: to get away from the cabin, and specifically the host, Styles. Styles, played quite well by L.O. Jones) seems to be quite knowledgeable about the wilderness himself. Styles comments on how pretty Charles's wife is, but keeps his thoughts to himself, just essentially noticing it (and hinting, perhaps, at the obvious age difference between husband and wife). When Styles hears that Charles is supposed to be quite knowledge of facts, he challenges him. he takes down an oar that is hanging, which shows a panther, and asks Charles what is on the other side. Charles calmly responds that it is a rabbit, smoking a pipe - a sign that he is unafraid, because he knows that he is smarter than the panther. Styles is impressed each time he finds out how much knowledge Charles actually has and, at one point, begins to talk to him about the possibility of developing the area, in order to try and make this beautiful, but extremely remote location more readily accessible for more people to be able to enjoy. Charles is listening to all of this patiently, wordlessly, until Styles mentions a specific dollar amount, when he stops the conversation, understanding that Styles is trying to make some sort of business proposal, obviously aware of Charles's money. There is now clear tension between the two men, and that proves to be the reason that Charles goes on the fateful plane trip. We get the sense that he just wanted to clear his head a little bit. As it turns out, he gets much more than he bargained for.

So, the three men are out in the middle of a very remote wilderness. They have to try and keep warm (they crashed into a northern lake and had to swim their way out), and build a fire. They have difficulty with it, though, and that is the first time we notice a real difference between Bob and Charles. Bob takes the flares that Charles had the foresight of taking from the plane. It lights the fire that warms them, but in the process, they minimized the chances of using them in order to be found by the inevitable search party.

Charles mentions to Bob at one point that the main reason that people die when they get lost in the woods is due to shame, and says that they forgot to do the one thing that could have saved them - thinking.

As the movie goes on, we find a lot of such differences between Bob, who is not used to the woods and thinks only instinctively, looking for any and all comforts that he can (including the comfort of wanting to indulge in hopes of some miraculous return), and Charles, who constantly, relentlessly focuses on the possible worst case scenario and tries to remain prepared for all manner of possible challenges, although he remains optimistic that they will, in fact, walk out of the woods, and back to safety.

They begin their hike back southwards, assuming that they will find their way, hopefully, back to the Jack Hawk's cabin. It is not an easy hike, and along the way, they get chased by a huge bear (played by Bart the Bear), who goes after them relentlessly. They manage to escape, at least this time, and they continue their hike. But when they arrive at the exact location where they had been when they started the hike, they are all disheartened. Charles remains cool, but the other two are showing signs of not just frustration, but nearly panic. Charles gives Stephen a task to do, in order to get his mind off things. He makes him carve a spear, and it is here that Stephen accidentally cuts himself quite severely. Charles tries to attend to the wound, and tears off the blood stained cloth of the pants, handing it to Bob to bury. But Bob hangs it up on a tree branch instead, and the bear smells it in the air and finds them, attacking Stephen and killing him.

Suddenly, the stakes seems very high.

Charles and Bob make their escape, and continue their venture. But before long, they find out that the bear is still following them, essentially stalking them. It is then that Charles knows that they will have to have a confrontation with the bear, a struggle to the death, either for the bear, or for one or both of the men. He prepares, although they are starving, and really still just look for something, some kind of a break that never comes. Help, to be found at last, or even just to finally eat something to restore their strength. maybe a bit of rest.

***Spoiler alert***

Of course, the confrontation is inevitable. The bear comes, and we see just how big of a beast he is. He is huge, enormous, and simply overwhelming. It hardly seems possible that even two grown men with sticks could prevail.

Yet, that is what happens. Charles, having read the book, knows to try and coax the bear and get it to loom over him, then to use it's enormous weight against it once it comes down, in effect impaling it.

Now, they can finally eat as well as stay warm considerably more easily, and can likely traverse through those woods and return to civilization.

Finally, they reach an old, abandoned cabin. It has a boat and some oars, and once they test it out, they know that they have gotten through, and will likely return to the lives that they had known before.

But it is then that Bob, seemingly overly preoccupied with drinking and loading the gun. We see him brooding, and preparing himself to do what he does not want to do.

Charles, in the meantime, has anticipated this. We notice him spotting the deadfall outside, and then, when the two men walk outside in order for Bob to do the deed, Charles rather slyly directs Bob right next to the deadfall, and gets him to engage in conversation, asking him how long the affair with his wife has been going on.

Bob, already nervous and emotionally charged, trying to prepare himself to actually commit an act of murder, just wants to get this whole thing over with. He looks and sounds unstable, while Charles, in facing death, sounds calm and almost conversational. There comes a point when he actually starts to approach Bob, which  startles Bob enough that he takes a step back - and in the process, falls right into the deadfall.

His leg has been impaled by one of the sharp sticks on the bottom. The situation has obviously now completely reversed, with Charles in complete control and alive, while Bob, has sustained a serious injury and has now been rendered completely helpless. Charles has a choice, and he makes it quickly. He decides to save Bob.

It takes some doing, but again, Charles remains calm throughout. Bob seems to be wavering in and out of consciousness, and he is clearly not healthy any longer.

Charles managed to do the best that he can with him, and manages, nonetheless, to get him out and onto the kayak. Equipped with a boat, he intends to take the boat and find safety.


They find themselves on an island, essentially seemingly taking a rest. Charles has figured that Bob really needs to warm up, because he is in really rough shape. So, he builds him a fire on the island to keep him warm. Bob, in the meantime, begins to question Charles, questions why he would save a man who had intended to murder him. Bob finally apologizes for what he did, and seems on the verge of giving up, of expiring.

Just then, there is the whirring of a distant engine, but it is so faint, that Charles cannot be sure if he heard it right. When he hears it more distinctly, and more importantly, when it actually comes into view, Charles does everything that he can to signal it, wave it down. But it seems not to see them, so Charles quickly uses the knife that Bob gave him as a gift to cut some plants in order to create smoke, and once he does this, the plane finally sees them, and circles around towards their direction.

They are saved, and Charles is ecstatic - until he looks over at Bob, and sees that he is in a very awkward position, face down. He has died indeed, and surely of shame, much like Charles had warned him about at the beginning of their wilderness adventure.

When returned finally to the safety of the camp, Charles once again turns to Styles, and asks him the question that Styles asked of him not long before. Why is the rabbit unafraid? Because he is smarter than the panther. Styles gives him a knowing smile.

The media assembled all want anything, any small statement or scrap for stories for the publications back home. Charles mentions how life's tests never seem to come at the time or in the form that you expect them.

When asked how the other men died, Charles tears up, and says that they died saving Charles's own life.

In conclusion, this is a really awesome movie! It is one of those strange movies that I simply cannot get enough of. Nary a year will pass without me somehow putting it on to watch yet again, and I always enjoy it, even though I know exactly what will happen, by now. But there always seems to be some small, subtle thing, perhaps even a detail, that I initially missed. When a movie keeps you interested enough to pay attention to such small details, you know it's good!

April 28th: 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 357, Emperor Constantius II visited Rome. In 585 on this day, the war between Lydia & Media was ended by a solar eclipse. This day in 1192 marked the assassination of Conrad of Montferrat (Conrad I), King of Jerusalem, in Tyre, two days after his title to the throne was confirmed by election. The killing was carried out by Hashshashin. In 1202 on this day, King Philip II threw out John without Country, from France. On this day in 1253, Nichiren, a Japanese Buddhist monk, propounded Nam Myoho Renge Kyo for the first time and declared it to be the essence of Buddhism, in effect founding Nichiren Buddhism. In 1521 on this day during the Treaty of Worms, Emperor Charles named his brother Ferdinand Arch Duke of Netherlands-Austria. The first volume of Isaac Newton's "Principia" was published on this day in 1686. On this day in 1770, Captain James Cook landed at Botany Bay in Australia while aboard the Endeavour. In 1804 on this day, 31 British ships sailed up the Suriname River demanding transition colony from the Dutch. Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera "L'Africaine" premiered in Paris on this day in 1865. Using the ISO 8601 standard Year Zero definition for the Gregorian calendar preceded by the Julian calendar, the one billionth minute since the start of January 1, Year Zero occurs at 10:40 AM on this day in 1902. On this day in 1945, "Il Duce," Benito Mussolini, and his mistress, Clara Petacci, were shot by Italian partisans who had captured the couple as they attempted to flee to Switzerland. In 1965 on this day, U.S. troops landed in the Dominican Republic in an effort to forestall what American President Lyndon B. Johnson claimed would become a "communist dictatorship" in the country, like in Cuba. Johnson sent more than 22,000 U.S. troops to restore order on the island nation. World heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali refused to be inducted into the U.S. Army on this day in 1967, and was then immediately stripped of his heavyweight title. On this day in 1969, Charles de Gaulle resigned as president of France after he was defeated with his proposals for constitutional reform in a national referendum. In 1970 on this day during the American conflict in Vietnam, American President Richard Nixon formally approved of a Cambodian incursion, effectively widening the war, despite having promised to being an honorable end to the war prior to this.



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

 On this day in 357, Emperor Constantius II visited Rome.

 In 585 on this day, the war between Lydia & Media was ended by a solar eclipse.

  This day in 1192 marked the assassination of Conrad of Montferrat (Conrad I), King of Jerusalem, in Tyre, two days after his title to the throne was confirmed by election. The killing was carried out by Hashshashin.

 In 1202 on this day, King Philip II threw out John without Country, from France.

1253 - -May 7th) Utrecht destroyed by fire

 On this day in 1253, Nichiren, a Japanese Buddhist monk, propounded Nam Myoho Renge Kyo for the first time and declared it to be the essence of Buddhism, in effect founding Nichiren Buddhism.

1376 - English parliament demands supervision on royal outlay
1503 - Battle at Cerignalo: Spanish army under G Cordoba beats France
 In 1521 on this day during the Treaty of Worms, Emperor Charles named his brother Ferdinand Arch Duke of Netherlands-Austria.
1550 - Powers of Dutch inquisition extends
1611 - Establishment of the Pontifical and Royal University of Santo Tomas, The Catholic University of the Philippines, the oldest existing university in Asia and the largest Catholic university in the world.
1635 - Virginia Gov John Harvey accused of treason & removed from office
1655 - English admiral Blake beats Tunen pirate fleet



Bust of Sir Isaac Newton

• The first volume of Isaac Newton's "Principia" was published on this day in 1686.






Picture of a statue of British explorer Captain James Cook

• On this day in 1770, Captain James Cook landed at Botany Bay in Australia while aboard the Endeavour.





 Maryland officially became the seventh state to ratify the Constitution on this day in 1788, thus becoming the seventh state of the Union. 




1789 - Fletcher Christian leads Mutiny on HMS Bounty & Capt William Bligh
1796 - Cease fire of Cherasco

• In 1804 on this day, 31 British ships sailed up the Suriname River demanding transition colony from the Dutch.


1818 - Monroe proclaims naval disarmament on Great Lakes & Lake Champlain


1829 - Dutch parliament accepts new press laws
1847 - George B Vashon becomes 1st black to enter NY State Bar
1848 - Free last slaves in French colonies
1855 - 1st veterinary college in US incorporated in Boston

• Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera "L'Africaine" premiered in Paris on this day in 1865.

1892 - 1st performance of Antonin Dvorák's overture "Carneval"
1901 - 1st soccer game between Belgium (8) & Netherlands (0)
1901 - Cleveland's Bock Baker gives up a record 23 singles as White Sox beat Blues (Cleveland Blues!) 13-1

• Using the ISO 8601 standard Year Zero definition for the Gregorian calendar preceded by the Julian calendar, the one billionth minute since the start of January 1, Year Zero occurs at 10:40 AM on this day in 1902.


1910 - 1st night air flight (Claude Grahame-White, England)
1914 - 181 die in coal mine collapse at Eccles WV
1914 - W H Carrier patents air conditioner
1919 - 1st jump with Army Air Corp (rip-cord type) parachute (Les Irvin)
1920 - Azerbaijan SSR joins USSR (1st time)
1922 - WOI (Ames, Iowa) country's 1st licensed educational radio station
1923 - Wembley Stadium opens-Bolton Wanderers vs West Ham United (FA Cup)
1924 - 119 die in Benwood West Virginia coal mine disaster
1925 - Kurdish rebels surrender to Turkish army
1925 - Netherlands & Great Britain return to gold standard
1930 - 1st night organized baseball game played in Independence Kansas
1931 - Program for woman athletes approved for 1932 Olympics track & field
1932 - 1st broadcast of "One Man's Family" on NBC-radio
1932 - Yellow fever vaccine for humans announced
32nd US President Franklin D. Roosevelt32nd US President Franklin D. Roosevelt 1934 - FDR signs Home Owners Loan Act
1934 - Soccer team Blue White '34 forms
1934 - Spanish government of Samper forms
1934 - Tigers' Goose Goslin grounds into 4 straight double plays
1935 - Moscow underground opens (81 km long)
1937 - 1st animated cartoon electric sign displayed (NYC)
1937 - 1st commercial flight across Pacific, Pan Am



 1939 - Hitler claims German-Polish non-attack treaty still in effect

1940 - Glenn Miller records "Pennsylvania 6-5000"





Auschwitz




 1940 - Rudolf Hess becomes commandant of concentration camp Auschwitz



1941 - Last British troops in Greece surrender
1942 - "WW II" titled so, as result of Gallup Poll
1942 - Nightly "dim-out" begins along US East Coast
1943 - 1st performance of Marc Blitzstein's "Freedom Morning"
1943 - German-Italian counter offensive in North-Africa
Dictator of Nazi Germany Adolf HitlerDictator of Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler 1943 - US 34th Division occupies Djebel el Hara North Tunisia
1944 - Stalin meets Polish/US priest S Orlemanski
1944 - Exercise "Tiger" ends with 750 US soldiers dead in D-Day rehearsal after their convoy ships were attacked by German torpedo boats
1945 - British commandos attack Elbe & occupies Lauenburg
1945 - US 5th army reaches Swiss border

 On this day in 1945 during the last days of World War II in Europe, "Il Duce," Benito Mussolini, and his mistress, Clara Petacci, were executed by Italian partisans as they attempted to flee Italy. They were shot by Italian partisans who had captured the couple as they attempted to flee to Switzerland.    The 61-year-old deposed former dictator of Italy was established by his German allies as the figurehead of a puppet government in northern Italy during the German occupation toward the close of the war. As the Allies fought their way up the Italian peninsula, defeat of the Axis powers all but certain, Mussolini considered his options. Not wanting to fall into the hands of either the British or the Americans, and knowing that the communist partisans, who had been fighting the remnants of roving Italian fascist soldiers and thugs in the north, would try him as a war criminal, he settled on escape to a neutral country.    He and his mistress made it to the Swiss border, only to discover that the guards had crossed over to the partisan side. Knowing they would not let him pass, he disguised himself in a Luftwaffe coat and helmet, hoping to slip into Austria with some German soldiers. His subterfuge proved incompetent, and he and Petacci were discovered by partisans and shot, their bodies then transported by truck to Milan, where they were hung upside down and displayed publicly for revilement by the masses.

1947 - Thor Heyerdahl & "Kon-Tiki" sail from Peru to Polynesia
1949 - Bkln, Commish Chandler suspends Durocher but he is absolved on May 3 NY fan charges Leo Durocher with assault after Giants lose 15-2 to
1949 - Former Philippine First Lady Aurora Quezon, 61, is assassinated while en route to dedicate a hospital in memory of her late husband; her daughter and 10 others are also killed.
1952 - Patty Berg wins LPGA Richmond Golf Open
1952 - St Louis Browns lend 2 black minor leaguers to Hankyu Braves of Japan
1952 - WW II Pacific peace treaty takes effect
1952 - Dwight D. Eisenhower resigns as Supreme Commander of NATO.
1955 - WBIQ TV channel 10 in Birmingham, AL (PBS) begins broadcasting


1956 - Last French troop leave Vietnam   On April 28, 1956, the last French Expeditionary Force troops left South Vietnam, ending decades of French military presence. This departure marked a major shift in the Vietnam War, allowing American military advisors to take over training responsibilities. Concurrently, Ngo Dinh Diem consolidated power, declining to hold reunification elections. 



1956 - Reds Frank Robinson hits his 1st of 586 HRs
Baseball Player and Manager Leo DurocherBaseball Player and Manager Leo Durocher 1957 - Patty Berg wins LPGA Western Golf Open
1957 - WSOC TV channel 9 in Charlotte, NC (ABC) begins broadcasting
1958 - Great Britain performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island
1958 - Vanguard TV-5 launched for Earth orbit (failed)
1958 - Vice Pres Richard Nixon begins goodwill tour of Latin America
1959 - KLOE TV channel 10 in Goodland, KS (CBS) begins broadcasting
1959 - KPLR TV channel 11 in Saint Louis, MO (IND) begins broadcasting
1960 - "Christine" opens at 46th St Theater NYC for 12 performances
1960 - WIPM TV channel 3 in Mayaguez, PR (PBS) begins broadcasting
1960 - Elena Kagan,New York, US Supreme Court Judge
1961 - Lt Col Gueorgui Mossolov takes E-66A to 34,714 m altitude
1961 - Warren Spahn pitches 2nd no hitter at 41 beats SF Giants, 1-0
1963 - Marilynn Smith wins LPGA Titleholders Golf Championship
1963 - 17th Tony Awards: "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" win
1964 - Japan joins OECD
Singer-songwriter & Actress Barbra StreisandSinger-songwriter & Actress Barbra Streisand 1965 - Barbra Streisand stars on "My Name is Barbra" special on CBS
1965 - Lindsey Nelson broadcasts game at Astrodome from a hanging gondola
1965 - Richard Helms replaces Marshall S Carter as deputy director of CIA
1965 - US marines invade Dominican Republic, stay until October 1966






Bust of American President Lyndon B. Johnson

 In 1965 on this day, U.S. troops landed in the Dominican Republic in an effort to forestall what American President Lyndon B. Johnson claimed would become a "communist dictatorship" in the country, like in Cuba. Johnson sent more than 22,000 U.S. troops to restore order on the island nation. Johnson's action provoked loud protests in Latin America and skepticism among many in the United States.    Troubles in the Dominican Republic began in 1961, when long-time dictator Rafael Trujillo was assassinated. Trujillo had been a brutal leader, but his strong anticommunist stance helped him retain the support of the United States. His death led to the rise of a reformist government headed by Juan Bosch, who was elected president in 1962. The Dominican military, however, despised Bosch and his liberal policies. Bosch was overthrown in 1963. Political chaos gripped the Dominican Republic as various groups, including the increasingly splintered military, struggled for power. By 1965, forces demanding the reinstatement of Bosch began attacks against the military-controlled government. In the United States government, fear spread that "another Cuba" was in the making in the Dominican Republic; in fact, many officials strongly suspected that Cuban leader Fidel Castro was behind the violence. On April 28, more than 22,000 U.S. troops, supported by forces provided by some of the member states of the Organization of American States (a United Nations-like institution for the Western Hemisphere, dominated by the United States) landed in the Dominican Republic. Over the next few weeks they brought an end to the fighting and helped install a conservative, non-military government.    President Johnson declared that he had taken action to forestall the establishment of a "communist dictatorship" in the Dominican Republic. As evidence, he provided American reporters with lists of suspected communists in that nation. Even cursory reviews of the list revealed that the evidence was extremely flimsy--some of the people on the list were dead and others could not be considered communists by any stretch of the imagination.    Many Latin American governments and private individuals and organizations condemned the U.S. invasion of the Dominican Republic as a return to the "gunboat diplomacy" of the early-20th century, when U.S. Marines invaded and occupied a number of Latin American nations on the slightest pretexts. In the United States, politicians and citizens who were already skeptical of Johnson's policy in Vietnam heaped scorn on Johnson's statements about the "communist danger" in the Dominican Republic. Such criticism would become more and more familiar to the Johnson administration as the U.S. became more deeply involved in the war in Vietnam.





1965 - William F Raborn Jr replaces John A McCone as 7th head of CIA
1966 - 20th NBA Championship: Boston Celtics beat LA Lakers, 4 games to 3
1966 - 38th Academy Awards - "Sound of Music", Julie Christie & Lee Marvin win
1966 - Cleve ties record with 10th straight win since Opening Day
1966 - OCAM, Common Afro-Mauritian Organization forms




 1967 - Expo 67 opens in Montreal

1967 - Muhammad Ali refuses induction into army & stripped of boxing title

 World heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali refused to be inducted into the U.S. Army on this day in 1967, and was then immediately stripped of his heavyweight title. Ali, a Muslim, cited religious reasons for his decision to forgo military service.    Born Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., in Louisville, Kentucky, on January 14, 1942, the future three-time world champ changed his name to Muhammad Ali in 1964 after converting to Islam. He scored a gold medal at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome and made his professional boxing debut against Tunney Husaker on October 29, 1960, winning the bout in six rounds. On February 25, 1964, he defeated the heavily favored bruiser Sonny Liston in six rounds to become heavyweight champ.    On April 28, 1967, with the United States at war in Vietnam, Ali refused to be inducted into the armed forces, saying “I ain’t got no quarrel with those Vietcong.” On June 20, 1967, Ali was convicted of draft evasion, sentenced to five years in prison, fined $10,000 and banned from boxing for three years. He stayed out of prison as his case was appealed and returned to the ring on October 26, 1970, knocking out Jerry Quarry in Atlanta in the third round. On March 8, 1971, Ali fought Joe Frazier in the “Fight of the Century” and lost after 15 rounds, the first loss of his professional boxing career.  On June 28 of that same year, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned his conviction for evading the draft.    At a January 24, 1974, rematch at New York City’s Madison Square Garden, Ali defeated Frazier by decision in 12 rounds. On October 30 of that same year, an underdog Ali bested George Forman and reclaimed his heavyweight champion belt at the hugely hyped “Rumble in the Jungle” in Kinshasa, Zaire, with a knockout in the eighth round. On October 1, 1975, Ali met Joe Frazier for a third time at the “Thrilla in Manila” in the Philippines and defeated him in 14 rounds. On February 15, 1978, Ali lost the title to Leon Spinks in a 15-round split decision. However, seven months later, on September 15, Ali won it back. In June 1979, Ali announced he was retiring from boxing. He returned to the ring on October 2, 1980, and fought heavyweight champ Larry Holmes, who knocked him out in the 11th round. After losing to Trevor Berbick on December 11, 1981, Ali left the ring for the final time, with a 56-5 record. He is the only fighter to be heavyweight champion three times. In 1984, it was revealed Ali had Parkinson’s disease.


1968 - 11 year-old Mary Bell strangles 4 year-old
1968 - Carol Mann wins LPGA Raleigh Ladies' Golf Invitational
1969 - Charles de Gaulle resigns as president of France








French President Charles De Gaulle

 On this day in 1969, Charles de Gaulle resigned as president of France after he was defeated with his proposals for constitutional reform in a national referendum.   A veteran of World War I, de Gaulle unsuccessfully petitioned his country to modernize its armed forces between the wars. After Henri Petain and other French leaders signed an armistice with Nazi Germany in June 1940, he fled to London, where he organized the Free French forces and rallied French colonies to the Allied cause. His forces fought successfully in North Africa, and in June 1944 he was named head of the French government in exile. On August 26, following the Allied invasion of France, de Gaulle entered Paris in triumph. Three months later, he was unanimously elected provisional president of France.    He resigned in January 1946, however, claiming he lacked sufficient governing power. De Gaulle formed a new political party that had only moderate electoral success, and in 1953 he retired. However, five years later, a military and civilian revolt in Algeria created a political crisis in France, and he was called out of retirement to lead the nation. A new constitution was passed, and in late December he was elected president of the Fifth Republic.    During the next decade, President de Gaulle granted independence to Algeria and attempted to restore France to its former international stature by withdrawing from the U.S.-dominated NATO alliance and promoting the development of French atomic weapons. However, student demonstrations and workers' strikes in 1968 eroded his popular support, and in 1969 his proposals for further constitutional reform were defeated in a national vote. On April 28, 1969, Charles de Gaulle, 79 years old, retired for good. He died the following year.






1969 - King Crimson with Greg Lake & Ian McDonald debuts
French President Charles de GaulleFrench President Charles de Gaulle 


 In 1970 on this day during the American conflict in Vietnam, American President Richard Nixon formally approved of a Cambodian incursion, effectively widening the war, despite having promised to being an honorable end to the war prior to this. Nixon gives his formal authorization to commit U.S. combat troops, in cooperation with South Vietnamese units, against communist troop sanctuaries in Cambodia.    Secretary of State William Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, who had continually argued for a downsizing of the U.S. effort in Vietnam, were excluded from the decision to use U.S. troops in Cambodia. Gen. Earle Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, cabled Gen. Creighton Abrams, senior U.S. commander in Saigon, informing him of the decision that a "higher authority has authorized certain military actions to protect U.S. forces operating in South Vietnam." Nixon believed that the operation was necessary as a pre-emptive strike to forestall North Vietnamese attacks from Cambodia into South Vietnam as the U.S. forces withdrew and the South Vietnamese assumed more responsibility for the fighting. Nevertheless, three National Security Council staff members and key aides to presidential assistant Henry Kissinger resigned in protest over what amounted to an invasion of Cambodia.    When Nixon publicly announced the Cambodian incursion on April 30, it set off a wave of antiwar demonstrations. A protest at Kent State University resulted in the killing of four students by Army National Guard troops. Another student rally at Jackson State College in Mississippi resulted in the death of two students and 12 wounded when police opened fire on a women's dormitory. The incursion angered many in Congress, who felt that Nixon was illegally widening the war; this resulted in a series of congressional resolutions and legislative initiatives that would severely limit the executive power of the president.        



1971 - Dutch social democratic party/D'66/DS'70 win parliamentary election
1971 - Samuel Lee Gravely Jr becomes 1st black admiral in US Navy
1972 - Courts award 1968 Kentucky Derby prize money to 2nd place winner due to the winner being given drugs before the race
1973 - Over 6000 Mk. 82 500 pound bombs detonate over the course of 18 hours in a railyard in northern California. 5500 structures are damaged, and the town of Antelope, California ceases to exist, with every building being reduced to the foundation. This accident leads to the passing of the Transportation Safety Act of 1974 which makes the NTSB an independent agency.





1974 - The last Americans were evacuated from Saigon. 




1974 - Jane Blalock wins LPGA Birmingham Golf Classic

1975 - John Lennon appears on "Tonight" & Ringo Starr on "Smother Brothers"

1975 - South-Vietnam Gen Duong Van Minh sworn in as president till April 30
1977 - Christopher Boyce convicted for selling secrets
1977 - Andreas Baader & members of Baader-Meinhoff jailed for life after a trial lasting nearly 2 years in Stuttgart, Germany

1977 - The Budapest Treaty on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Microorganisms for the Purposes of Patent Procedure is signed.

1980 - Cyrus Vance, Carter's Secretary of State, resigns
1980 - Reunion Arena in Dallas opens
1981 - Galician current Statute of Autonomy.




Flag of Argentina

 1983 - Argentine government declares all 15-30,000 missing persons dead



1983 - Bruins 4-Isles 1-Wales Conference Championship-Series tied 1-1
1983 - NASA launches Geos-F
1984 - "La Tragedie de Carmen" closes at Beaumont Theater NYC after 187 perfs
1985 - Alice Miller wins LPGA S&H Golf Classic
1985 - Billy Martin named NY Yankee manager for 4th time
1985 - Fernando Valenzuela sets record of 41 scoreless inn to start season
1986 - Chernobyl, USSR site of world's worst nuclear power plant disaster

1987 - NBA announces expansion to Charlotte NC & Miami Fla in 1988 & Minneapolis Minn & Orlando Fla in 1989
1987 - American engineer Ben Linder is killed in an ambush by U.S.-funded Contras in northern Nicaragua.
1988 - "Chess" opens at Imperial Theater NYC for 68 performances
1988 - Aloha Airlines Boeing 737 roof tears off in flight; kills stewardess
1988 - Baltimore Orioles lose AL record 21 games in a row
1988 - NJ Devils set all time playoff mark for penalty minutes






Flag of South Africa during the apartheid era

1989 - Mobil announced that they were divesting from South Africa because congressional restrictions were too costly.




1989 - Argentina, hit by rocketing inflation, runs out of money




Salman Rushdie's controversial novel, "The Satanic Verses

1989 - Iran protests sale of "Satanic Verses" by Salman Rushdie





1990 - "Chorus Line" closes at Shubert Theater NYC after 6,137 performances
1990 - Boston Celtics score most points in a playoff, beat NY Knicks 157-128
1990 - Firestone World Bowling Tournament of Champions won by Dave Ferraro

1990 - Last issue of Dutch communist daily De Waarheid (The Truth)

1991 - "Gypsy" opens at Marquis Theater NYC for 105 performances
1991 - "Taking Steps" closes at Circle in Sq Theater NYC after 78 perfs

1991 - Space Shuttle STS 39 (Discovery 12) launched

1992 - Brewers beat Blue Jays 22-2 with AL record 31 hits in 9 innings
1992 - Italian President Francesco Cossiga formally resigns
1993 - "Tango Passion" opens at Longacre Theater NYC for 5 performances
1993 - Carlo Ciampi forms Italian government with ex-communists
1993 - Zambian plane crashes at Libreville, Gabon, 30 soccer players die
1993 - NY Islanders beat Wash Caps 4 to 1 in playoffs, Caps Dale Hunter attacks Pierre Turgeon after scoring, in hockey's worst cheap shot
1994 - 1st multi-racial election in South Africa ends [3 days]
1994 - Aldrich Ames, former CIA officer & wife Rosario plead guilty to spying
1994 - Freddy Thielemans sworn in as mayor of Brussels Belgium
1995 - Gas explosion in South Korean metro, 103 die
1995 - Sri Lankaan BAE748 crashes at Palaly, 52 die
1996 - "Big" opens at Shubert Theater NYC for 193 performances
1996 - Martin Bryant shoots & kills 35 in Port Arthur Tasmania
1996 - Meg Mallon wins LPGA Sara Lee Golf Classic
1997 - "Jekyll & Hyde" opens at Plymouth Theater NYC
2001 - Millionaire Dennis Tito becomes the world's first space tourist.
2005 - The Patent Law Treaty goes into effect.
2012 - Tent collapse in St Louis, Missouri, kills one and injures 110 people
2013 - 8 people are killed and dozens are injured after Taliban attacks on election candidates in Pakistan

2013 - 3 people are killed and 14 are injured after a gas explosions causes a building to collapse in Reims, France








0357 - Constantius II visited Rome for the first time.   1282 - Villagers in Palermo led a revolt against French rule in Sicily.   1635 - Virginia Governor John Harvey was accused of treason and removed from office.   1686 - The first volume of Isaac Newton's "Principia Mathamatic" was published.   1788 - Maryland became the seventh state to ratify the U.S. constitution.   1789 - A mutiny on the British ship Bounty took place when a rebel crew took the ship and set sail to Pitcairn Island. The mutineers left Captain W. Bligh and 18 sailors adrift.   1818 - U.S. President James Monroe proclaimed naval disarmament on the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain.   1896 - The Addressograph was patented by J.S. Duncan.   1902 - A revolution broke out in the Dominican Republic.   1910 - First night air flight was performed by Claude Grahame-White in England.   1914 - W.H. Carrier patented the design of his air conditioner.   1916 - The British declared martial law throughout Ireland.   1919 - The League of Nations was founded.   1920 - Azerbaijan joined the USSR.   1930 - The first organized night baseball game was played in Independence, Kansas.   1932 - The yellow fever vaccine for humans was announced.   1937 - The first animated-cartoon electric sign was displayed on a building on Broadway in New York City. It was created by Douglas Leight.     1946 - The Allies indicted Tojo with 55 counts of war crimes.   1947 - Norwegian anthropologist Thor Heyerdahl and five others set out in a balsa wood craft known as Kon Tiki to prove that Peruvian Indians could have settled in Polynesia. The trip began in Peru and took 101 days to complete the crossing of the Pacific Ocean.   1952 - The U.S. occupation of Japan officially ended when a treaty with the U.S. and 47 other countries went into effect.   1953 - French troops evacuated northern Laos.   1957 - Mike Wallace was seen on TV for the first time. He was the host of "Mike Wallace Interviews."   1959 - Arthur Godfrey was seen for the last time in the final broadcast of "Arthur Godfrey and His Friends" on CBS-TV.   1965 - The U.S. Army and Marines invaded the Dominican Republic to evacuate Americans.   1967 - Muhammad Ali refused induction into the U.S. Army and was stripped of boxing title. He cited religious grounds for his refusal.     1969 - In Santa Rosa, CA, Charles M. Schulz's Redwood Empire Ice Arena opened.   1974 - The last Americans were evacuated from Saigon.   1977 - Christopher Boyce was convicted of selling U.S. secrets.   1985 - The largest sand castle in the world was completed near St. Petersburg, FL. It was four stories tall.   1988 - In Maui, HI, one flight attendant was killed when the fuselage of a Boeing 737 ripped open in mid-flight.      1992 - The U.S. Agriculture Department unveiled a pyramid-shaped recommended-diet chart.   1994 - Former CIA official Aldrich Ames, who had given U.S. secrets to the Soviet Union and then Russia, pled guilty to espionage and tax evasion. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.   1996 - U.S. President Clinton gave a 4 1/2 hour videotaped testimony as a defense witness in the criminal trial of his former Whitewater business partners.   1997 - A worldwide treaty to ban chemical weapons took effect. Russia and other countries such as Iraq and North Korea did not sign.   1999 - The U.S. House of Representatives rejected (on a tie vote of 213-213) a measure expressing support for NATO's five-week-old air campaign in Yugoslavia. The House also voted to limit the president's authority to use ground forces in Yugoslavia.   2000 - Jay Leno received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.   2001 - A Russian rocket launched from Central Asia with the first space tourist aboard. The crew consisted of California businessman Dennis Tito and two cosmonauts. The destination was the international space station.   




1788 Maryland became the 7th state in the United States. 1789 Fletcher Christian led the mutiny aboard the British ship Bounty against Captain William Bligh. 1945 Benito Mussolini was executed. 1947 Thor Heyerdahl and five others began their Pacific Ocean crossing on the raft, Kon-Tiki. 1967 Boxing champion Muhammad Ali refused to be inducted into the Army. 1992 The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture unveiled its first “food pyramid.” 2001 Dennis Tito became the first space tourist. 2004 The Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal first comes to light when graphic photos of U.S. soldiers physically abusing and humiliating Iraqi prisoners were shown on CBS's 60 Minutes II.  


The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:


http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/apr28.htm







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!

So, this little bit of history is interesting, and focuses on the capture and execution of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. His fate was known by Hitler, and it scared him to death - literally. Trapped in the secret underground bunker in Berlin under the Reichstag, Hitler would take his own life, and had arranged to have his body burned. Mussolini, who had been dictator of Italy for over two decades, and Hitler's closest foreign ally, was captured, shot, and had his body hung upside down and beaten publicly. The end of the war in Europe was fast approaching.   http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

On this day in 1945, "Il Duce," Benito Mussolini, and his mistress, Clara Petacci, are shot by Italian partisans who had captured the couple as they attempted to flee to Switzerland.  

The 61-year-old deposed former dictator of Italy was established by his German allies as the figurehead of a puppet government in northern Italy during the German occupation toward the close of the war. As the Allies fought their way up the Italian peninsula, defeat of the Axis powers all but certain, Mussolini considered his options. Not wanting to fall into the hands of either the British or the Americans, and knowing that the communist partisans, who had been fighting the remnants of roving Italian fascist soldiers and thugs in the north, would try him as a war criminal, he settled on escape to a neutral country.  

He and his mistress made it to the Swiss border, only to discover that the guards had crossed over to the partisan side. Knowing they would not let him pass, he disguised himself in a Luftwaffe coat and helmet, hoping to slip into Austria with some German soldiers. His subterfuge proved incompetent, and he and Petacci were discovered by partisans and shot, their bodies then transported by truck to Milan, where they were hung upside down and displayed publicly for revilement by the masses.

357 - Emperor Constantius II visited Rome for the first time.

585 - War between Lydia & Media ended by solar eclipse

1192 - Assassination of Conrad of Montferrat (Conrad I), King of Jerusalem, in Tyre, two days after his title to the throne confirmed by election. Killing carried out by Hashshashin.

1202 - King Philip II throws out John without Country, from France

1253 - -May 7th) Utrecht destroyed by fire

1253 - Nichiren, a Japanese Buddhist monk, propounds Nam Myoho Renge Kyo for the first time and declares it to be the essence of Buddhism, in effect founding Nichiren Buddhism.

1282 - Villagers in Palermo led a revolt against French rule in Sicily.

1376 - English parliament demands supervision on royal outlay

1503 - Battle at Cerignalo: Spanish army under G Cordoba beats France

1521 - Treaty of Worms: Emperor Charles names his brother Ferdinand Arch duke of Neth-Austria

1550 - Powers of Dutch inquisition extends

1611 - Establishment of the Pontifical and Royal University of Santo Tomas, The Catholic University of the Philippines, the oldest existing university in Asia and the largest Catholic university in the world.

1635 - Virginia Gov John Harvey accused of treason & removed from office

1655 - English admiral Blake beats Tunen pirate fleet

1686 - First volume of Isaac Newton's "Principia" published

1770 - Captain James Cook, aboard Endeavor, landed at Botany Bay in Australia

1788 - Maryland becomes seventh state to ratify constitution

1789 - Fletcher Christian leads a mutiny on the British ship HMS Bounty took place when a rebel crew took the ship and set sail to Pitcairn Island. The mutineers left Captain W. Bligh and 18 sailors adrift.

1796 - Cease fire of Cherasco

1804 - 31 English ships sail Suriname river demanding transition colony from the Dutch

1818 - American President James Monroe proclaimed naval disarmament on the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain.

1829 - Dutch parliament accepts new press laws

1847 - George B Vashon becomes 1st black to enter NY State Bar

1848 - Free last slaves in French colonies

1855 - 1st veterinary college in US incorporated in Boston

1865 - Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera "L'Africaine," premieres in Paris

1892 - 1st performance of Antonin Dvorák's overture "Carneval"

1901 - 1st soccer game between Belgium (8) & Netherlands (0)

1901 - Cleveland's Bock Baker gives up a record 23 singles as White Sox beat Blues (Cleveland Blues!) 13-1

1902 - Using the ISO 8601 standard Year Zero definition for the Gregorian calendar preceded by the Julian calendar, the one billionth minute since the start of January 1, Year Zero occurs at 10:40 AM on this date.

1910 - 1st night air flight (Claude Grahame-White, England)

1914 - 181 die in coal mine collapse at Eccles WV

1914 - W H Carrier patented the design of his air conditioner

1916 - The British declared martial law throughout Ireland, following the Easter Rebellion.

1919 - The League of Nations (predecessor to the United Nations) was founded.

1919 - First jump with Army Air Corp (rip-cord type) parachute (Les Irvin)

1920 - Azerbaijan SSR joined USSR (first time)

1922 - WOI (Ames, Iowa) country's 1st licensed educational radio station

1923 - Wembley Stadium opens-Bolton Wanderers vs West Ham United (FA Cup)

1924 - 119 die in Benwood West Virginia coal mine disaster

1925 - Kurd rebels surrender to Turkish army

1925 - Netherlands & Great Britain return to gold standard

1930 - 1st night organized baseball game (Independence KS)

1931 - Program for woman athletes approved for 1932 Olympics track & field

1932 - The yellow fever vaccine for humans was announced.

1932 - 1st broadcast of "One Man's Family" on NBC-radio 1932 - Yellow fever vaccine for humans announced

1934 - FDR signs Home Owners Loan Act

1934 - Soccer team Blue White '34 forms 1934 - Spanish government of Samper forms

1934 - Tigers' Goose Goslin grounds into 4 straight double plays

1935 - Moscow underground opens (81 km long)

1937 - The first animated-cartoon electric sign was displayed on a building on Broadway in New York City. It was created by Douglas Leight.

1937 - 1st commercial flight across Pacific, Pan Am

1939 - Hitler claims German-Polish non-attack treaty still in effect

1940 - Glenn Miller records "Pennsylvania 6-5000"

1940 - Rudolf Hess becomes commandant of concentration camp Auschwitz

1941 - Last British troops in Greece surrenders

1942 - "WW II" titled so, as result of Gallup Poll

1942 - Nightly "dim-out" begins along East Coast

1943 - 1st performance of Marc Blitzstein's "Freedom Morning"

1943 - German-Italian counter offensive in North-Africa

1943 - US 34th Division occupies Djebel el Hara North Tunisia

1944 - Stalin meets Polish/US priest S Orlemanski

1944 - Exercise "Tiger" ends with 750 US soldiers dead in D-Day rehearsal after their convoy ships were attacked by German torpedo boats

1945 - British commands attack Elbe & occupies Lauenburg

1945 - Benito Mussolini and his mistress Clara Petacci were executed by Italian partisans as they attempted to flee the country.

1945 - US 5th army reaches Swiss border

1946 - The Allies indicted Tojo with 55 counts of war crimes.

1947 - Thor Heyerdahl & "Kon-Tiki" sail from Peru to Polynesia

1949 - Former Philippine First Lady Aurora Quezon, 61, is assassinated while en route to dedicate a hospital in memory of her late husband; her daughter and 10 others are also killed.

1952 - Patty Berg wins LPGA Richmond Golf Open

1952 - St Louis Browns lend 2 black minor leaguers to Hankyu Braves of Japan

1952 - WW II Pacific peace treaty takes effect. The U.S. occupation of Japan officially ended when a treaty with the U.S. and 47 other countries went into effect.

1952 - Dwight D. Eisenhower resigns as Supreme Commander of NATO.

1953 - French troops evacuated northern Laos.

1955 - WBIQ TV channel 10 in Birmingham, AL (PBS) begins broadcasting

1956 - Last French troop leave Vietnam

1956 - Reds Frank Robinson hits his 1st of 586 HRs

1957 - Patty Berg wins LPGA Western Golf Open

1957 - WSOC TV channel 9 in Charlotte, NC (ABC) begins broadcasting

1958 - Great Britain performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island

1958 - Vanguard TV-5 launched for Earth orbit (failed)

1958 - Vice Pres Richard Nixon begins goodwill tour of Latin America

1959 - KLOE TV channel 10 in Goodland, KS (CBS) begins broadcasting

1959 - KPLR TV channel 11 in Saint Louis, MO (IND) begins broadcasting

1960 - "Christine" opens at 46th St Theater NYC for 12 performances

1960 - WIPM TV channel 3 in Mayaguez, PR (PBS) begins broadcasting

1961 - Lt Col Gueorgui Mossolov takes E-66A to 34,714 m altitude

1964 - Japan joins OECO 1965 - Barbra Streisand stars on "My Name is Barbra" special on CBS

1965 - Lindsey Nelson broadcasts game at Astrodome from a hanging gondola

1965 - Richard Helms replaces Marshall S Carter as deputy director of CIA

1965 - US marines invade Dominican Republic, stay until October 1966

1965 - William F Raborn Jr replaces John A McCone as 7th head of CIA

1967 - Muhammad Ali refuses induction into army & stripped of boxing title

1968 - 11 year-old Mary Bell strangles 4 year-old

1969 - Charles de Gaulle resigns as president of France

1969 - King Crismson with Greg Lake & Ian McDonald debuts

1971 - Dutch social democratic party/D'66/DS'70 win parliamentary election

1971 - Samuel Lee Gravely Jr becomes 1st black admiral in US Navy

1972 - Courts awarded Kentucky Derby prize money to 2nd place winner because winner was given drugs before race

1973 - Over 6000 Mk. 82 500 pound bombs detonate over the course of 18 hours in a railyard in northern California. 5500 structures are damaged, and the town of Antelope, California ceases to exist, with every building being reduced to the foundation. This accident leads to the passing of the Transportation Safety Act of 1974 which makes the NTSB an independent agency.

1974 - The last Americans were evacuated from Saigon.

1975 - John Lennon appears on "Tonight" & Ringo on "Smother Brothers"

1975 - South-Vietnam Gen Duong Van Minh sworn in as president till April 30

1977 - Christopher Boyce convicted for selling secrets

1977 - Andreas Baader & members of Baader-Meinhoff jailed for life after a trial lasting nearly 2 years in Stuttgart, Germany

1977 - The Budapest Treaty on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Microorganisms for the Purposes of Patent Procedure is signed.

1980 - Cyrus Vance, Carter's Secretary of State, resigns

1981 - Galician current Statute of Autonomy.

1983 - Argentine government declares all 15-30,000 missing persons dead

1983 - NASA launches Geos-F

1985 - Billy Martin named NY Yankee manager for 4th time

1985 - Fernando Valenzuela sets record of 41 scoreless inn to start season

1985 - The largest sand castle in the world was completed near St. Petersburg, FL. It was four stories tall.

1986 - Chernobyl, USSR site of world's worst nuclear power plant disaster

1987 - NBA announces expansion to Charlotte NC & Miami Fla in 1988 & Minneapolis Minn & Orlando Fla in 1989

1987 - American engineer Ben Linder is killed in an ambush by U.S.-funded Contras in northern Nicaragua.

1988 - Aloha Airlines Boeing 737 roof tears off in flight; kills stewardess 1988 - Baltimore Orioles lose AL record 21 games in a row

1988 - NJ Devils set all time playoff mark for penalty minutes

1989 - Argentina, hit by rocketing inflation, runs out of money

1989 - Iran protests sale of "Satanic Verses" by Salman Rushdie

1990 - "Chorus Line" closes at Shubert Theater NYC after 6,137 performances

1990 - Boston Celtics score most points in a playoff, beat NY Knicks 157-128

1990 - Last issue of Dutch communist daily De Waarheid (The Truth)

1991 - "Taking Steps" closes at Circle in Sq Theater NYC after 78 perfs 1991 - Space Shuttle STS 39 (Discovery 12) launched

1992 - The Milwaukee Brewers defeat the eventual World Series champion Toronto Blue Jays 22-2 with AL record 31 hits in 9 innings

1992 - Italian President Francesco Cossiga formally resigns

1993 - Carlo Ciampi forms Italian government with ex-communists 1993 - Zambian plane crashes at Libreville, Gabon, 30 soccer players die

1993 - NY Islanders beat Washington Capitals 4 to 1 in playoffs, Caps Dale Hunter attacks Pierre Turgeon after scoring, in hockey's worst cheap shot

1994 - First multi-racial election in South Africa ends [3 days]

1994 - Aldrich Ames, former CIA officer & wife Rosario plead guilty to spying

1994 - Freddy Thielemans sworn in as mayor of Brussels Belgium 1995 - Gas explosion in South Korean metro, 103 die 1995 - Sri Lankaan BAE748 crashes at Palaly, 52 die

1996 - Martin Bryant shoots & kills 35 in Port Arthur Tasmania

1996 - American President Clinton gave a 4 1/2 hour videotaped testimony as a defense witness in the criminal trial of his former Whitewater business partners.

1997 - A worldwide treaty to ban chemical weapons took effect. Russia and other countries such as Iraq and North Korea did not sign.

1999 - The U.S. House of Representatives rejected (on a tie vote of 213-213) a measure expressing support for NATO's five-week-old air campaign in Yugoslavia. The House also voted to limit the president's authority to use ground forces in Yugoslavia.

2001 -A Russian rocket launched from Central Asia with the first space tourist aboard. The crew consisted of California businessman Dennis Tito and two cosmonauts. The destination was the international space station.

2004 - The Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal first comes to light when graphic photos of U.S. soldiers physically abusing and humiliating Iraqi prisoners were shown on CBS's 60 Minutes II.

2005 - The Patent Law Treaty goes into effect.

2012 - Tent collapse in St Louis, Missouri, kills one and injures 110 people


http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/apr28.htm

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

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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory