Saturday, May 2, 2026

Weekend Funny - 𝗔𝗻𝗱𝘆 𝗕𝗼𝗿𝗼𝘄𝗶𝘁𝘇 Nails It Again

Andy Borowitz has really been nailing these humorous articles and posts just lately.

Of course, when you have President Donald Trump and his tandem of idiots in the White House, as well as a Congress where the Republicans remain in the majority for both chambers, and where the Supreme Court still also remains firmly loyal to Trump, perhaps that is bound to happen. It will assure idiotic news to make absurd headlines. And those are fertile grounds for someone like Andy Borowitz.

This one is not an article, but an image. Yet, just the spoof headline here actually speaks volumes. Mostly, because it feels like it could be true in this day and age.

Take a look (the link to the original source is down below):




Brandon Weber Facebook page April 29, 2026  · Follow 𝗔𝗻𝗱𝘆 𝗕𝗼𝗿𝗼𝘄𝗶𝘁𝘇 for more! - link in comments

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1517640926400445&set=a.267801464717737

(1) Facebook

May 2nd: 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!



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!

The significant event in history that the website focused on for today was the first sighting of the legendary "Loch Ness Monster" in Scotland. Interesting. One of those mysteries that neither side has been able to either prove or disprove. Sometimes, it seems hard to believe, yet I guess on some level, the "monster" is on the edge of plausibility. So, it remains a controversy, and dwells in the domain of legends. Interesting that it has now been eighty years that this legend has persisted, and continues to persist to this day. Here is the link to the website, where you can check out the History Channel's website on your own, and I have also posted their brief history on it below:

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

On this day in 1194, King Richard I of England gave Portsmouth its first Royal Charter. In 1230 on this day, William de Braose, 10th Baron Abergavenny, was hanged by Prince Llywelyn the Great. John Cabot departed for North-America on this day in 1497. On this day in 1519, Leonardo da Vinci died. France and Spain signed the Peace of Vervins on this day in 1598. In 1668 on this day, the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, the first peace of Aken, was signed, ending the War of Devolution, French-Spanish war in The Netherlands. On this day in 1670, King Charles II of England granted a permanent charter to the Hudson's Bay Company, which was made up of the group of French explorers who opened the lucrative North American fur trade to London merchants. On this day in 1776 during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, France and Spain agreed to donate arms to American rebels fighting against the British. William Herschel discovered the first binary star, Xi Ursae Majoris, on this day in 1780. On this day in 1798, Haiti's General Toussaint L’Ouverture forced British troops to agree to evacuate the port of Santo Domingo. In 1808 on this day, the people of Madrid revolted against French rule under Napoleon. Napoleon defeated the Russians and the Prussians at Grossgorschen on this day in 1813. On this day in 1824, Goethe visited Ettersberg (Buchenwald). On this day in 1918 during the Great War (World War I), in a conference of Allied military leaders at Abbeville, France, the U.S., Britain and France argued over the entrance of American troops into World War I. The first modern reported sightings of the Loch Ness Monster in Scotland occurred on this day in 1933.On this day in 1945, in the final stages of the European theater of World War II, the Soviet Union announced the fall of Berlin, the capital of Nazi Germany, which surrendered to the Red Army General Zhukov. They managed to take Berlin after 12 days of fierce house-to-house fighting. The Allies also announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and parts of Austria on this same day. Approximately one million German soldiers laid down their arms as the terms of the German unconditional surrender, signed at Caserta on April 29, come into effect. On this day in 1964, the Beatles' "Beatles' 2nd Album" rose to #1 and stayed there for five weeks. This day in 1972 marked the end of an era for the FBI. After nearly five decades as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), J. Edgar Hoover died, leaving the powerful government agency without the administrator who had been largely responsible for its existence and shape. In 1982 on this day during the Falklands War, Argentina's only cruiser, the General Belgrano, was sunk by British submarine HMS  Conqueror, killing more than 350 men. On this day in 1994, Nelson Mandela claimed victory in South Africa’s first democratic, multiracial election. This election, and his ascension to power, marked the final end of white minority rule and that country's days of racial segregation. known as apartheid.


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

• On this day in 1194, King Richard I of England gave Portsmouth its first Royal Charter.

• In 1230 on this day, William de Braose, 10th Baron Abergavenny, was hanged by Prince Llywelyn the Great.


1335 - Otto the Merry, Duke of Austria, becomes Duke of Carinthia.

1345 - "Quaden Maendach" in Gent: Battles between volders & weavers

• John Cabot departed for North-America on this day in 1497.



Bust of Leonardo da Vinci

• On this day in 1519, Leonardo da Vinci died.




1526 - German evangelical monarchy joins Schmalkaldische League

1536 - King Henry VIII accused Anna Boleyn of adultery & incest

1595 - King Philip II names Albrecht of Austria land guardian of Netherlands

• France and Spain signed the Peace of Vervins on this day in 1598. 


• In 1668 on this day, the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, the first peace of Aken, was signed, ending the War of Devolution, French-Spanish war in The Netherlands.


• On this day in 1670, King Charles II of England granted a permanent charter to the Hudson's Bay Company, which was made up of the group of French explorers who opened the lucrative North American fur trade to London merchants. The charter conferred on them not only a trading monopoly but also effective control over the vast region surrounding North America's Hudson Bay.    Although contested by other English traders and the French in the region, the Hudson's Bay Company was highly successful in exploiting what would become eastern Canada. During the 18th century, the company gained an advantage over the French in the area but was also strongly criticized in Britain for its repeated failures to find a northwest passage out of Hudson Bay. After France's loss of Canada at the end of the French and Indian Wars, new competition developed with the establishment of the North West Company by Montreal merchants and Scottish traders. As both companies attempted to dominate fur potentials in central and western Canada, violence sometimes erupted, and in 1821 the two companies were amalgamated under the name of the Hudson's Bay Company. The united company ruled a vast territory extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and under the governorship of Sir George Simpson from 1821 to 1856, reached the peak of its fortunes.    After Canada was granted dominion status in 1867, the company lost its monopoly on the fur trade, but it had diversified its business ventures and remained Canada's largest corporation through the 1920s.


1672 - John Maitland becomes Duke of Lauderdale and Earl of March.

1703 - Portugal signs treaty with England to become a Great Covenant

1749 - Empress Maria Theresa signs "Haugwitzschen State reform"

1750 - Carlo Goldoni's "La Botega di Caffè," premieres in Mantua





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

• On this day in 1776 during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, France and Spain agreed to donate arms to American rebels fighting against the British.



• William Herschel discovered the first binary star, Xi Ursae Majoris, on this day in 1780.



1797 - A mutiny in the British navy spread from Spithead to the rest of the fleet.



Flag of Haiti

• On this day in 1798, Haiti's General Toussaint L’Ouverture forced British troops to agree to evacuate the port of Santo Domingo.



 In 1808 on this day, the people of Madrid revolted against French rule under Napoleon.  During the Peninsular War, a popular uprising against the French occupation of Spain begins in Madrid, culminating in a fierce battle fought out in the Puerta del Sol, Madrid's central square. The Spanish rebels were defeated, and during the night the French army under Grand Duke Joachim Murat shot hundreds of citizens along the Prado promenade in reprisal. The gruesome events of the day were depicted by Spanish artist Francisco de Goya in two well-known prints.    On February 16, 1808, under the pretext of sending reinforcements to the French army occupying Portugal, French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Spain. Thus began the Peninsular War, an important phase of the Napoleonic Wars fought between France and much of Europe between 1792 to 1815. During the first few weeks after their 1808 invasion of Spain, French forces captured Pamplona and Barcelona and on March 19 forced King Charles IV of Spain to abdicate. Four days later, the French entered Madrid under Joachim Murat. In early May, Madrid revolted, and on June 15 Napoleon's brother, Joseph, was proclaimed the new king of Spain, leading to a general anti-French revolt across the Iberian Peninsula.    In August, a British expeditionary force under Arthur Wellesley, later the Duke of Wellington, landed on the Portuguese coast to expel the French from the Iberian Peninsula. By mid 1809, the French were driven from Portugal, but Spain proved more elusive. Thus began a long series of seesaw campaigns between the French and British in Spain, where the British were aided by small bands of Spanish irregulars known as guerrillas. Finally, on June 21, 1813, allied forces under Wellesley routed the French forces of Joseph Bonaparte and Marshal Jean Jourdan at Vitoria, Spain. By October, the Iberian Peninsula was liberated, and Wellesley launched an invasion of France. The allies had penetrated France as far as Toulouse when news of Napoleon's abdication reached them in April 1814, ending the Peninsular War.





French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte



• Napoleon defeated the Russians and the Prussians at Grossgorschen on this day in 1813.




Bust of Social Philosopher Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

• On this day in 1824, Goethe visited Ettersberg (Buchenwald).



1829 - After anchoring nearby, Captain Charles Fremantle of the HMS Challenger, declares the Swan River Colony in Australia.

1833 - Czar Nicolas bans public sale of serfs

1845 - Domingo Sarmiento publishes "Civilización y Barbarie"

1847 - Sabbath famine

1853 - Franconi’s Hippodrome opened at Broadway and 23rd Street in New York City.

1863 - South defeats North in Battle of Chancellorsville, Va

1863 - Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson was wounded by his own men in the battle of Chancellorsville, VA. He died 8 days later.

1865 - U.S. President Andrew Johnson offered $100,000 reward for the capture of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

1866 - Peruvian defenders fight off Spanish fleet at the Battle of Callao.

1876 - Ross Barnes hit 1st home run in National League

1876 - The April Uprising breaks out in Bulgaria.

1878 - US stops minting 20 cent coin

1885 - The Congo Free State was established by King Leopold II of Belgium.

1885 - The magazine "Good Housekeeping" was first published.

1887 - Hannibal W. Goodwin applied for a patent on celluloid photographic film. This is the film from which movies are shown.

1887 - G Rossini's corpse transfered to Santa Croce, Florence

1889 - Abyssinian emperor Menelik II/Italy signs Treaty of Wichale

1890 - The Oklahoma Territory was organized.

1900 - George Bernard Shaws "You Never Can Tell," premieres in London

1902 - "A Trip to the Moon," the first science fiction film was released. It was created by magician George Melies.

1903 - 29th Kentucky Derby: Hal Booker aboard Judge Himes wins in 2:09

1904 - 30th Kentucky Derby: Shorty Prior aboard Elwood wins in 2:08.50

1905 - French newspapers publish lists of Jules Vernes unpublished work

1906 - 32nd Kentucky Derby: Roscoe Troxler aboard Sir Huon wins in 2:08.8

1907 - Belgium Jules baron de Trooz forms Belgian government

1908 - "Take me out to the Ball Game registered for copyright.

1909 - Honus Wagner steals his way around bases in 1st inning against Cubs

1911 - French troops occupy Fès El Bali Morocco

1915 - Old Fordham Road in Bronx renamed Landing Road

1916 - US president Wilson signs Harrison Drug Act

1916 - 2nd Ave and Bronx Terrace renamed Bronx Blvd; Seward Pl renamed Sycamore Ave; Herald Ave renamed Dickinson Ave; Monroe and Selwyn Avenue named

1917 - Cincinnati's Fred Tooney and Chicago's Hippo Vaughn pitch duel no-hitter, Vaughn gives up 2 hits and a run in 10th, so Cincinnati wins 1-0



On this day in 1918 during the Great War (World War I), in a conference of Allied military leaders at Abbeville, France, the U.S., Britain and France argued over the entrance of American troops into World War I.    On March 23, two days after the launch of a major German offensive in northern France, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George telegraphed the British ambassador in Washington, Lord Reading, urging him to explain to U.S. President Woodrow Wilson that without help from the U.S., "we cannot keep our divisions suppliedfor more than a short time at the present rate of loss.This situation is undoubtedly critical and if America delays now she may be too late." In response, Wilson agreed to send a direct order to the commander in chief of the American Expeditionary Force, General John J. Pershing, telling him that American troops already in France should join British and French divisions immediately, without waiting for enough soldiers to arrive to form brigades of their own. Pershing agreed to this on April 2, providing a boost in morale for the exhausted Allies.    The continued German offensive continued to take its toll throughout the month of April, however, as the majority of American troops in Europe—now arriving at a rate of 120,000 month—still did not see battle. In a meeting of the Supreme War Council of Allied leaders at Abbeville, near the coast of the English Channel, which began on May 1, 1918, Clemenceau, Lloyd George and General Ferdinand Foch, the recently named generalissimo of all Allied forces on the Western Front, worked to persuade Pershing to send all the existing American troops into the fray at once. Pershing resisted, reminding the group that the U.S. had entered the war "independently" of the other Allies—indeed, the U.S. would insist during and after the war on being known as an "associate" rather than a full-fledged ally—and stating "I do not suppose that the American army is to be entirely at the disposal of the French and British commands."    On May 2, the second day of the meeting, the debate continued, with Pershing holding his ground in the face of heated appeals by the other leaders. He proposed a compromise, which in the end Lloyd George and Clemenceau had no choice but to accept: the U.S. would send the 130,000 troops arriving in May, as well as another 150,000 in June, to join the Allied line directly. He would make no provision for July. This agreement meant that of the 650,000 American troops in Europe by the end of May 1918, roughly one-third would see action that summer; the other two-thirds would not join the line until they were organized, trained and ready to fight as a purely American army, which Pershing estimated would not happen until the late spring of 1919. By the time the war ended, though, on November 11, 1918, more than 2 million American soldiers had served on the battlefields of Western Europe, and some 50,000 of them had lost their lives.



1918 - General Motors acquires the Chevrolet Motor Company of Delaware.

1919 - First US air passenger service starts

1920 - First game of National Negro Baseball League played in Indianapolis

1921 - Begin third anti-German revolt in Upper-Silesia

1922 - WBAP-AM begins broadcasting from Fort Worth Texas

1923 - Senator Walter Johnson pitches his 100th shutout, beats Yanks 3-0

1924 - Netherlands refuses to recognize USSR

1925 - Kezar Stadium in SF's Golden Gate Park opens

1926 -  U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to put down a revolt and to protect U.S. interests. They did not depart until 1933.

1926 - In India, Hindu women gained the right to seek elected office.

1927 - Intl Economic Conference (52 countries including USSR) opens

1927 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Louis Bromfield (Early Autumn)

1928 - KPQ-AM in Wenatchee WA begins radio transmissions

1930 - Des Moines (Western League) defeats Wichita 13-6 to open first ballpark with permanently installed lights

1932 - Jack Benny's first radio show premieres (NBC Blue Network)

1932 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Pearl S Buck (Good Earth)

1933 - In Germany, Adolf Hitler banned trade unions


 The first modern reported sightings of the Loch Ness Monster in Scotland occurred on this day in 1933. Although accounts of an aquatic beast living in Scotland's Loch Ness date back 1,500 years, the modern legend of the Loch Ness Monster is born when a sighting makes local news on May 2, 1933. The newspaper Inverness Courier related an account of a local couple who claimed to have seen "an enormous animal rolling and plunging on the surface." The story of the "monster" (a moniker chosen by the Courier editor) became a media phenomenon, with London newspapers sending correspondents to Scotland and a circus offering a 20,000 pound sterling reward for capture of the beast.    Loch Ness, located in the Scottish Highlands, has the largest volume of fresh water in Great Britain; the body of water reaches a depth of nearly 800 feet and a length of about 23 miles. Scholars of the Loch Ness Monster find a dozen references to "Nessie" in Scottish history, dating back to around A.D. 500, when local Picts carved a strange aquatic creature into standing stones near Loch Ness. The earliest written reference to a monster in Loch Ness is a 7th-century biography of Saint Columba, the Irish missionary who introduced Christianity to Scotland. In 565, according to the biographer, Columba was on his way to visit the king of the northern Picts near Inverness when he stopped at Loch Ness to confront a beast that had been killing people in the lake. Seeing a large beast about to attack another man, Columba intervened, invoking the name of God and commanding the creature to "go back with all speed." The monster retreated and never killed another man.    In 1933, a new road was completed along Loch Ness' shore, affording drivers a clear view of the loch. After an April 1933 sighting was reported in the local paper on May 2, interest steadily grew, especially after another couple claimed to have seen the beast on land, crossing the shore road. Several British newspapers sent reporters to Scotland, including London's Daily Mail, which hired big-game hunter Marmaduke Wetherell to capture the beast. After a few days searching the loch, Wetherell reported finding footprints of a large four-legged animal. In response, the Daily Mail carried the dramatic headline: "MONSTER OF LOCH NESS IS NOT LEGEND BUT A FACT." Scores of tourists descended on Loch Ness and sat in boats or decks chairs waiting for an appearance by the beast. Plaster casts of the footprints were sent to the British Natural History Museum, which reported that the tracks were that of a hippopotamus, specifically one hippopotamus foot, probably stuffed. The hoax temporarily deflated Loch Ness Monster mania, but stories of sightings continued.    A famous 1934 photograph seemed to show a dinosaur-like creature with a long neck emerging out of the murky waters, leading some to speculate that "Nessie" was a solitary survivor of the long-extinct plesiosaurs. The aquatic plesiosaurs were thought to have died off with the rest of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Loch Ness was frozen solid during the recent ice ages, however, so this creature would have had to have made its way up the River Ness from the sea in the past 10,000 years. And the plesiosaurs, believed to be cold-blooded, would not long survive in the frigid waters of Loch Ness. More likely, others suggested, it was an archeocyte, a primitive whale with a serpentine neck that is thought to have been extinct for 18 million years. Skeptics argued that what people were seeing in Loch Ness were "seiches"--oscillations in the water surface caused by the inflow of cold river water into the slightly warmer loch.    Amateur investigators kept an almost constant vigil, and in the 1960s several British universities launched expeditions to Loch Ness, using sonar to search the deep. Nothing conclusive was found, but in each expedition the sonar operators detected large, moving underwater objects they could not explain. In 1975, Boston's Academy of Applied Science combined sonar and underwater photography in an expedition to Loch Ness. A photo resulted that, after enhancement, appeared to show the giant flipper of a plesiosaur-like creature. Further sonar expeditions in the 1980s and 1990s resulted in more tantalizing, if inconclusive, readings. Revelations in 1994 that the famous 1934 photo was a hoax hardly dampened the enthusiasm of tourists and professional and amateur investigators to the legend of the Loch Ness Monster.

1934 - Nazi-Germany begins People's court

1936 - "Peter and the Wolf" premieres in Moscow

1936 - 62nd Kentucky Derby: Ira Hanford aboard Bold Venture wins in 2:03.6








Flag of Ethiopia

The Lion of Judah Emblem of the Ethiopian Empire

1936 - Emperor Haile Selassie and family flee Abyssinia




1939 - Lou Gehrig set a new major league baseball record when he played in his 2,130th game. The streak began on June 1, 1925.  It would take another 57 years before Cal Ripken, Jr., broke it.

1941 - Hostilities broke out between British forces in Iraq and that country’s pro-German faction.

1941 - The Federal Communications Commission agreed to let regular scheduling of TV broadcasts by commercial TV stations begin on July 1, 1941. This was the start of network television.


The flag of the USSR (Soviet Union)

 On this day in 1945, in the final stages of the European theater of World War II, the Soviet Union announced the fall of Berlin, the capital of Nazi Germany, which surrendered to the Red Army General Zhukov. They managed to take Berlin after 12 days of fierce house-to-house fighting. The Allies also announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and parts of Austria on this same day. Approximately one million German soldiers laid down their arms as the terms of the German unconditional surrender, signed at Caserta on April 29, come into effect. Many Germans surrender to Japanese soldiers—Japanese Americans. Among the American tank crews that entered the northern Italian town of Biella was an all-Nisei (second-generation) infantry battalion, composed of Japanese Americans from Hawaii.    Early that same day, Russian Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov accepts the surrender of the German capital. The Red Army takes 134,000 German soldiers prisoner.




1946 - Prisoners revolted at California's Alcatraz prison.

1949 - Arthur Miller wins Pulitzer Prize for "Death of a Salesman"

1949 - Bolivian state of siege proclaimed

1949 - Don Newcombe, first start, shuts out Cincinnati on 5 hits to win 3-0

1950 - Carlo Terrons "Giuditta," premieres in Milan

1950 - Dutch first Chamber accept Laws on immigration

1950 - Dutch PM Malan recognizes South-Africa but not China PR

1952 - 1st performance of John Cage's "Water Music"

1952 - 1st scheduled jet airliner passenger service began with a BOAC Comet

1952 - Operations begin at United Suriname Workers of Netherlands which flew from London to Johannesburg carrying 36 passengers

1953 - 79th Kentucky Derby: Hank Moreno aboard Dark Star wins in 2:02

1953 - Feisal II installed as king of Iraq

1953 - Hussein I installed as king of Jordan

1954 - Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals set a new major league record when he hit 5 home runs against the New York Giants.

1955 - India poses discrimination "onaanraakbaren" punishable

1955 - Pulitzer prize awarded Tennessee Williams for (Cat on Hot Tin Roof)

1955 - WGBH TV channel 2 in Boston, MA (PBS) begins broadcasting

1956 - US Lab detects high-temperature microwave radiation from Venus

1956 - US Methodist church disallows race separation

1958 - Yanks threaten to broadcast games nationwide if NL goes ahead with plans to broadcast, games into NYC

1959 - 85th Kentucky Derby: Bill Shoemaker aboard Tomy Lee wins in 2:02.2

1960 - Caryl Chessman was executed. He was a convicted sex offender and had become a best selling author while on death row.

1960 - Harry Belafonte 2nd Carnegie Hall performance

1960 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Al Drury (Advice and Consent)

1960 - "American Bandstand's" Dick Clark

1960 - House investigating committee, looking into payola questions

1962 - Benfica wins 7th Europe Cup I

1962 - OAS strikes in Algeria 1962 - US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island

1962 - WMHT TV channel 17 in Schenectady-Alby-Tro, NY (PBS) 1st broadcast

1964 - 90th Kentucky Derby: Bill Hartack aboard Northern Dancer wins in 2:00




  

    

• On this day in 1964, the Beatles' "Beatles' 2nd Album" rose to #1 and stayed there for five weeks.





1964 - Mad Dog Vachon beats Verne Gagne in Omaha, to become NWA champ

1964 - First ascent of Shishapangma the fourteenth highest mountain in the world and the lowest of the Eight-thousanders.

1965 - "New Faces of 1965" opens at Booth Theater NYC for 52 performances

1965 - The "Early Bird" satellite goes into commercial service, was used to transmit television pictures across the Atlantic.

1966 - Pulitzer prize awarded Arthur M Schlesinger Jr (Thousand Days)

1967 - Stanley Cup: Toronto Maple Leafs beat Montreal Canadiens, 4 games to 2

1968 - 1st performance of Roger Sessions' 8th Symphony

1968 - 22nd NBA Championship: Boston Celtics beat LA Lakers, 4 games to 2

1968 - Gold reaches then record high ($39.35 per ounce) in London

1968 - Israeli television begins transmitting

1969 - The British ocean liner Queen Elizabeth II departed on her maiden voyage to New York.

1970 - Student anti-war protesters at Ohio's Kent State University burn down the campus ROTC building. The National Guard took control of the campus.

1970 - First woman jockey at Kentucky Derby (Diane Crump)

1970 - KOAI (now KNAZ) TV channel 2 in Flagstaff, AZ (NBC) 1st broadcast

1972 - Electrical fire in Sunshine Silver mine. 126 die (Kellogg Idaho)



 This day in 1972 marked the end of an era for the FBI. After nearly five decades as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), J. Edgar Hoover died, leaving the powerful government agency without the administrator who had been largely responsible for its existence and shape.    Educated as a lawyer and a librarian, Hoover joined the Department of Justice in 1917 and within two years had become special assistant to Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. Deeply anti-radical in his ideology, Hoover came to the forefront of federal law enforcement during the so-called "Red Scare" of 1919 to 1920. The former librarian set up a card index system listing every radical leader, organization, and publication in the United States and by 1921 had amassed some 450,000 files. More than 10,000 suspected communists were also arrested during this period, but the vast majority of these people were briefly questioned and then released. Although the attorney general was criticized for abusing his authority during the so-called "Palmer Raids," Hoover emerged unscathed, and on May 10, 1924, he was appointed acting director of the Bureau of Investigation, a branch of the Justice Department established in 1909.    During the 1920s, with Congress' approval, Director Hoover drastically restructured and expanded the Bureau of Investigation. He built the corruption-ridden agency into an efficient crime-fighting machine, establishing a centralized fingerprint file, a crime laboratory, and a training school for agents. In the 1930s, the Bureau of Investigation launched a dramatic battle against the epidemic of organized crime brought on by Prohibition. Notorious gangsters such as George "Machine Gun" Kelly and John Dillinger met their ends looking down the barrels of Bureau-issued guns, while others, like Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, the elusive head of Murder, Incorporated, were successfully investigated and prosecuted by Hoover's "G-men." Hoover, who had a keen eye for public relations, participated in a number of these widely publicized arrests, and the Federal Bureau of Investigations, as it was known after 1935, became highly regarded by Congress and the American public.    With the outbreak of World War II, Hoover revived the anti-espionage techniques he had developed during the first Red Scare, and domestic wiretaps and other electronic surveillance expanded dramatically. After World War II, Hoover focused on the threat of radical, especially communist, subversion. The FBI compiled files on millions of Americans suspected of dissident activity, and Hoover worked closely with the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and Senator Joseph McCarthy, the architect of America's second Red Scare.    In 1956, Hoover initiated Cointelpro, a secret counterintelligence program that initially targeted the U.S. Communist Party but later was expanded to infiltrate and disrupt any radical organization in America. During the 1960s, the immense resources of Cointelpro were used against dangerous groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, but also against African American civil rights organizations and liberal anti-war organizations. One figure especially targeted was civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., who endured systematic harassment from the FBI.    By the time Hoover entered service under his eighth president in 1969, the media, the public, and Congress had grown suspicious that the FBI might be abusing its authority. For the first time in his bureaucratic career, Hoover endured widespread criticism, and Congress responded by passing laws requiring Senate confirmation of future FBI directors and limiting their tenure to 10 years. On May 2, 1972, with the Watergate affair about to explode onto the national stage, J. Edgar Hoover died of heart disease at the age of 77. The Watergate affair subsequently revealed that the FBI had illegally protected President Richard Nixon from investigation, and the agency was thoroughly investigated by Congress. Revelations of the FBI's abuses of power and unconstitutional surveillance motivated Congress and the media to become more vigilant in future monitoring of the FBI.
1972 - Lt General Vernon A Walters, USA, becomes deputy director of CIA

1972 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1974 - Former U.S. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew was disbarred by the Maryland Court of Appeals.

1974 - The filming of "Jaws" began in Martha's Vineyard, MA

1975 - Apple records closes down

1977 - "King & I" opens at Uris Theater NYC for 719 performances

1978 - NBA championship: Portland Trailblazers win in 4 games

1979 - "Quadrophenia" premieres in London

1979 - -May 10] Vivekananda (Sri Lanka) begins nonstop ride, cycling 187 hrs, 28 min, around Vihara Maha Devi Park, Colombo, Sri Lanka

1979 - 14th Academy of Country Music Awards: Kenny Rogers and Barbara Mandrell

1980 - Joseph Dohertyand; 3 other IRA men arrested for murder

1980 - Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in Wall (Part II)" is banned in South Africa

1980 - Pope John Paul II begins African tour 1980 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1981 - 107th Kentucky Derby: Jorge Velasquez on Pleasant Colony wins in 2:02

1981 - Radio Shack re-releases Model III TRSDOS 1.3 with 2 fixes




Flag of Argentina

• In 1982 on this day during the Falklands War, Argentina's only cruiser, the General Belgrano, was sunk by British submarine HMS  Conqueror, killing more than 350 men.



1983 - 6.7 earthquake injures 487 in Coalinga Calif

1984 - "Sunday in the Park with George" opens at Booth NYC for 604 perfs

1984 - Indians' Andre Thornton ties record for most walks (6 in 16 inn)

1984 - Mattingly's single breaks up Lamarr Hoyt's perfect game bid

1984 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1985 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1986 - Dynamo Kiev wins 26th Europe Cup II

1986 - Transportation Expo 86 opens in Vancouver, BC

1987 - 113th Kentucky Derby: Chris McCarron aboard Alysheba wins in 2:03.4

1988 - Balt Orioles sign a 15 year lease to remain in Baltimore and get a new park

1988 - David Mamet's "Speed-the-Plow," premieres in NYC

1988 - Jackson Pollock's "Search" sold for $4,800,000 1988 - Reds manager Pete Rose is suspended for 30 days for pushing an ump

1990 - "Some Americans Abroad" opens at Vivian Beaumont NYC for 62 perfs

1990 - The white minority apartheid government of South Africa and the African National Congress open talks to end apartheid

1991 - Pope John Paul II's encyclical on Centesimus annus

1992 - "High Rollers Social & Pleasure Club" opens at H Hayes NYC 14 perfs

1992 - 118th Kentucky Derby: Pat Day aboard Lil E Tee wins in 2:03

1992 - Yugoslav Army seize Bosnian Pres Alija Izetbegovic

1993 - "5 Guys Named Moe" closes at Eugene O'Neill NYC after 445 perfs 1993 - "Candida" closes at Criterion Theater NYC after 45 performances

1993 - "Redwood Curtain" closes at Brooks Atkinson Theater NYC after 40 perfs

1993 - "Tango Passion" closes at Longacre Theater NYC after 5 performances

1993 - At Washington's National Gallery of Art, an exhibit of 80 paintings from the collection of Dr. Albert C. Barnes opened.

1993 - Authorities said that they had recovered the remains of David Koresh from the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, TX.






This was a picture (which I have since cropped) of the new South Africa flag of the post-apartheid era. I actually took this one at the apartheid museum, as this was the final display, if you will, of the museum, the symbol of the emergence of a "new South Africa."



Statue of Nelson Mandela in the gardens in front of the Union Building in Pretoria, South Africa

• On this day in 1994, Nelson Mandela claimed victory in South Africa’s first democratic, multiracial election. This election, and his ascension to power, marked the final end of white minority rule and that country's days of racial segregation. known as apartheid.



1994 - Bus crashes into a tree at Gdansk Poland, 32 people are killed

1994 - Dr Kervokian found innocent on assisting suicides

1994 - Michael Bolton found plagurized Isley Bros "Love is Wonderful Thing"

1995 - "Hamlet" opens at Belasco Theater NYC for 121 performances

1995 - Expos bat out of order against Mets in 6th inning

1995 - Serb missiles exploded in the heart of Zagreb, killing six

1997 - The Labour Party’s Tony Blair became Prime Minister of Britain, ending 18 years of conservative rule. At 44, he was the youngest prime minister in 185 years.

1997 - Mercury Mail announces its 1 millionth internet subscriber

1997 - Police arrest transsexual hooker Atisone Seiuli with Eddie Murphy

1997 - Republic of Texas security chief Robert Scheidt surrenders

1998 - 124th Kentucky Derby




Flag of the European Union (EU)

1998 - The European Central Bank is founded in Brussels in order to define and execute the European Union's monetary policy.




1999 - In the election in Panama, Mireya Moscoso de Grubar, of the Armulfista Party, was elected president, and became the first woman to be elected President of Panama.

2000 - Her Royal Highness Princess Margriet of the Netherlands unveils the Man With Two Hats monument in Apeldoorn and the other in Ottawa on May 11, 2000. Symbolically linking both Netherlands and Canada for their assistance throughout World War II.

2000 - President Bill Clinton announces that accurate GPS access would no longer be restricted to the United States military.

2002 - Marad massacre of eight Hindus near Palakkad in Kerala.

2004 - Yelwa massacre of more than 630 nomad Muslims by Christians in Nigeria.

2008 - Cyclone Nargis makes landfall in Myanmar killing over 130,000 people and leaving millions of people homeless.

2011 - Osama bin Laden, the suspected mastermind behind the September 11 attacks and the FBI's most wanted man is killed by the United States special forces in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

2011 - The 2011 E. coli O104:H4 outbreak strikes Europe, mostly in Germany, leaving more than 30 people dead and many others sick from the bacteria outbreak.

2012 - A pastel version of Edvard Munch's famous painting 'The Scream' sells at auction for $119,922,500   in a New York City auction. The transaction set a new world record for an auctioned piece of art.

2012 - Barcelona football player Lionel Messi breaks the European goal-scoring record with 68 goals



http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/may01.htm

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

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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Friday, May 1, 2026

"May Day" Tradition - Malicorne's "C'est le mai"

 




Yes, it's that time of the year again. 

The month of May is always a pleasure when it comes around. It is just one of those months that feels like what the most desirable weather should feel like. Winter is over, and if it has been a long and rough one, it finally has passed.

Yes, May is nice. With the excessive cold and icy winter conditions well behind, and with the excesses of the summer heat still usually some time ahead yet, May is often as ideal as you can get. Warm days and cool nights, as it should be. Those are the best kinds of days, and thus, it is always a pleasure to see May come around again.

There is a song about the month of May that I have come to appreciate and enjoy, and which has become kind of a tradition to play during this month in particular.  It is called "C'est le mai" and was performed by Malicorne many years ago, although they seem to like to play it still during their reunion shows.

So, I have come to try and play this particular song once May rolls around, as it has now, once again.

One unusual thing this year, in 2024: I am publishing this particular "May Day" Malicorne-themed blog entry from Los Angeles. I am on the tail end of a work trip, and will in fact be heading home tomorrow. This is the last day when I actually am scheduled for work while out here. Tomorrow is the flight back home, so I start off in Los Angeles, but will be flying back home. 

It seemed like a good idea to share this here, and so here are some various versions of this song, which to me is a pleasant reminder to appreciate the month of May.



 





« Le match du siècle »: 5 PSG - Bayern Munich 4

     ⚽️ ⚽️ Paris Saint-Germain5, Inter Milan 0 ⚽️  ⚽️ 








A few days ago, I saw a post on Facebook relating to PSG. This in and of itself is not unusual, since I subscribed to their Facebook page and routinely get updates and such. Mostly, what I saw was a final score of 5-4 in favor of PSG. Without really paying attention too closely, I sort of shrugged and thought, "cool," perhaps giving a thumbs up or so before quickly moving on. 

It was my brother who pointed out later on that this was no ordinary game. That this was the first match of the UEFA Champions League semifinals. And  Paris Saint-Germain had narrowly escaped with a win again Bayern Munich this past Tuesday in their home game.

What made this one different?

Some people found it so well-played, so entertaining, that already, it has been described by some as nothing less than « le match du siècle » (translated to the match of the century). My brother even said that some people were saying that this might have been the best overall game in the history of the sport. 

While I did not get to see it live - or really, at all, admittedly - my eyebrows went up and it piqued my interest once he mentioned it. 

When I looked up these two teams, there were a bunch of other articles praising the match, confirming that it had been exceptionally entertaining. 

PSG actually had a sizable lead of 5-2 early, but then had to withstand a furious comeback rally by Bayern Munich to hang onto the win. All in all, it was regarded as simply exceptional football/soccer, and stands apart from most matches.

So it felt like it was worth mentioning here. 

I added the original article on the game which my brother sent me, as well as an ESPN article, which also praises the game with the related question as to why Premier League matches cannot be equally entertaining. 

Take a look:





« Le match du siècle », « le match de notre vie », « football de demi-dieux » : la presse internationale extatique après PSG - Bayern Munich, Sébastien Buron publié le 29 avril 2026:

Les superlatifs n'ont pas manqué dans la presse internationale, unanime au sujet du match PSG - Bayern Munich disputé ce mardi soir : pour les médias, cette demi-finale aller de Ligue des champions, conclue sur le score de 5-4, a marqué l'histoire du football.

https://www.lequipe.fr/Football/Actualites/-le-match-du-siecle-le-match-de-notre-vie-football-de-demi-dieux-la-presse-internationale-extatique-apres-psg-bayern-munich/1671788

« Le match du siècle », « le match de notre vie », « football de demi-dieux » : la presse internationale extatique après PSG - Bayern Munich





Why can't Premier League, all soccer be fun like PSG vs. Bayern? play  Bill Connelly Apr 30, 2026, 01:59 PM ET

https://www.espn.com/soccer/story/_/id/48637733/psg-bayern-munich-uefa-champions-league-premier-league-analysis-tactics-fun

Why can't Premier League, all soccer be fun like PSG vs. Bayern? - ESPN


More Spring 2026 Pictures

This is a set of pictures taken earlier today, during my daily walk.

The first one is of a deer feeding just off the trail.

The ones which follow that was of a heron, which kept flying away upon my approach, but repeatedly going in the direction I was heading in. Thus, I kept getting this same poor guy at different locations.

One thing: I think he allowed me to get closer this time than I have ever gotten before. Usually, he flies away long before I get quite this close. So this felt like a bit of a privilege.

Take a look.

Enjoy. 















May 1st: 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!


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!

An interesting bit of history from over eighty years ago, that comes as we in the New York area are watching the new Freedom Tower being constructed as the centerpiece of the new World Trade Center in New York City. A little bit of history hear about the earliest days of the Empire State Building, which held the title of "World's Tallest Building" for several decades,  before the cut throat global competition rendered that virtually meaningless, as now, buildings hold that status for years, rather than decades. Plus, the Empire State Building has style. It's attractive, and historical - which is more than I can say for many of the newer buildings out there these days.

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/empire-state-building-dedicated


On this day in 305, Diocletian and Maximian retired from the office of Roman Emperor. In 408 on this day, Theodosius II succeeded to the throne of Constantinople. A supernova was observed by Chinese and Egyptians in constellation Lupus on this day in 1006. The Wars of Scottish Independence ended on this day in 1328 with the signing of the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton. With it, the Kingdom of England recognized the Kingdom of Scotland as an independent state. Ekiho, exorcised the Zen temple and it's surroundings from an old badger on this day in 1394. Troops from the Ottoman Empire occupied Hungary on this day in 1544. Louis XIV and his court inaugurated the Paris Observatory on this day in 1682. On this day in 1778 during the American Revolution, the Battle of Crooked Billet in Hatboro, Pennsylvania, started. On this day in 1786, Mozart's opera "Le nozze di Figaro" (Marriage of Figaro) premiered in Wien (Vienna), Austria. American author Joseph Heller was born on this day in 1923. On this day in 1931, the Empire State Building opened in New York City. Standing at 102 floors, it ranked as the tallest building in the world, having overtaken the nearby Chrysler Building for those honors. American President Herbert Hoover officially dedicated the Empire State Building, pressing a button from the White House that turned on the building's lights. Hoover's gesture, of course, was symbolic; while the president remained in Washington, D.C., someone else flicked the switches in New York. In 1941 on this day, Orson Welles' Citizen Kane was released. It is often regarded as the greatest movie of all time. On this day in 1958, American President Eisenhower proclaimed Law Day to honor the role of law in the creation of the United States of America. Three years later, Congress followed suit by passing a joint resolution establishing May 1 as Law Day.



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

• On this day in 305, Diocletian and Maximian retired from the office of Roman Emperor.


•  In 408 on this day, Theodosius II succeeded to the throne of Constantinople.


• A supernova was observed by Chinese and Egyptians in constellation Lupus on this day in 1006.


1048 - Bishop Bernold flees St Pieterskerk for Utrecht Neth

1308 - King Albert was murdered by his nephew John, because he refused his share of the Habsburg lands.

• The Wars of Scottish Independence ended on this day in 1328 with the signing of the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton. With it, the Kingdom of England recognized the Kingdom of Scotland as an independent state.


•  Ekiho, exorcised the Zen temple and it's surroundings from an old badger on this day in 1394.





Christopher Columbus

1486 - Christopher Columbus convinced Queen Isabella to fund an expedition to the West Indies.




1523 - Danish king Christian III arrives in Veere

1528 - Pánfilo the Narváez begins exploration to with 350 men to Florida

• Troops from the Ottoman Empire occupied Hungary on this day in 1544.

1551 - Council of Trente resumes

1598 - Jacob van Necks merchant fleet departs for Java

1625 - Portuguese and Spanish expedition recaptures Salvador (Bahia)

1625 - Prince Frederik Henry appointed viceroy of Holland


Louis XIV, the "Sun King" of France

• Louis XIV and his court inaugurated the Paris Observatory on this day in 1682.



1703 - Battle at Rultusk: Swedish army beats Russians

1704 - Boston Newsletter publishes first newspaper ad

1707 - England, Wales and Scotland form United Kingdom of Great Britain

1711 - Arch duke Karel of Austria/Hungarian rebellion sign Peace of Szatmar

1715 - Prussia declares war on Sweden

1725 - Spain andAustria sign trade treaty

1751 - First American cricket match is played

1753 - Publication of Species Plantarum by Linnaeus, and the formal start date of plant taxonomy adopted by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.

1756 - France and Austria sign alliance

1757 - Austria and France divide Prussia

1759 - British fleet occupies Guadeloupe, West-Indies, on France

1776 - Adam Weishaupt founds secret society of Illuminati

1777 - RB Sheridans "School for Scandal," premieres in London







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

•  On this day in 1778 during the American Revolution, the Battle of Crooked Billet in Hatboro, Pennsylvania, started.



1781 - Emperor Jozef II decrees protection of population

1785 - Kamehameha, the king of Hawaiʻi defeats Kalanikupule and establishes the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi




Bust of Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

• On this day in 1786, Mozart's opera "Le nozze di Figaro" (Marriage of Figaro) premiered in Wien (Vienna), Austria.  By 1786, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was probably the most experienced and accomplished 30-year-old musician the world has ever seen, with dozens of now-canonical symphonies, concertos, sonatas, chamber works and masses already behind him. He also had 18 operas to his name, but none of those that would become his most famous. Over the final five years of his life (he died in 1791), Mozart would compose four operas that are among the most important and popular in the standard repertoire. This remarkably productive period of creative, critical and popular success for Mozart began with Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro), which received its world premiere in Vienna, Austria, on May 1, 1786.    Figaro was the first collaboration between Mozart and librettist Lorenzo da Ponte, and for their source material they chose a controversial play by the French writer Beaumarchais: La folle journée, ou le Mariage de Figaro, the second part of a trilogy that began with Le Barbier de Séville (later the basis for the Rossini opera). Figaro the play was censored in Beaumarchais's native France over concern about its "subversive" plotline, which depicts the efforts of a Spanish nobleman, Count Almaviva, to seduce Suzanne, a beautiful young servant of his wife, only to be thwarted and humiliated by his wife, the Countess Rosina, working in concert with the Count's servant, Figaro, who is also Suzanne's fiancée. To the French nobility of the time, Figaro was seen as condoning class conflict, but Mozart and Lorenzo da Ponte managed to allay any concerns on the part of their patron, the Hapsburg Emperor Joseph II, by transforming the story into a light comedy. (Mozart's successful pitch for Figaro is imagined in a comic scene in the film Amadeus (1984), in which the Emperor begins by saying to Mozart, "Figaro is a bad play. It stirs up hatred between the classes... My own dear sister Antoinette writes me that she is beginning to be frightened of her own people.")    The combination of da Ponte's libretto and Mozart's score made Le nozze di Figaro an instant success and led to two further triumphant collaborations on Don Giovanni and Cosî fan tutte. There were five encores during the premiere performance of Figaro on this day in 1786, and seven during its second performance one week later, prompting the emperor himself to impose a ban on encores during future performances, in order "to prevent the excessive duration of operas, without however prejudicing the fame often sought by opera singers from the repetition of vocal pieces." 





1805 - The state of Virginia passed a law requiring all freed slaves to leave the state, or risk either imprisonment or deportation.

1822 - John Phillips becomes first mayor of Boston

1834 - Belgian parliament accept railway laws










1840 - First adhesive postage stamps ("Penny Blacks" from England) issued




1841 - First emigrant wagon train leaves Independence, Missouri for Calif

1844 - Whig convention nominates Henry Clay as presidential candidate

1846 - Ida Pfeiffer (48) begins trip around world

1848 - The Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta is founded at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania.

1850 - John Geary becomes first San Francisco  mayor

1851 - Great Exhibition opens in Chrystal Palace London

1852 - The Philippine peso is introduced into circulation.

1853 - Argentina adopts it's constitution

1854 - Amsterdam begins transferring drinking water out of the dunes

1857 - William Walker, conqueror of Nicaragua, surrenders to US Navy

1861 - Lee orders Confederate troops under T J Jackson to Harper's Ferry

1862 - Union captain David Farragut conquers New Orleans



A statue in Flemington, New Jersey, honoring veterans of the American Civil War.


1863 - Battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia. General Robert E. Lee's forces began fighting with Union troops under General Joseph Hooker. Confederate General Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded by his own soldiers in this battle. 29,000 injured or died during this batle. (May 1-4)

1863 - Battle of Port Gibson, Mississippi

1863 - Confederate "National Flag" replaces "Stars and Bars"

1863 - Confederate congress passed resolution to kill black soldiers



1864 - -8] Battle at Alexandria, Louisiana (Red River Campaign)

1864 - Atlanta campaign, Georgia begins

1864 - Wilderness campaign

1866 - American Equal Rights Association forms

1867 - Howard University chartered

1867 - Reconstruction in the South began with black voter registration.

1869 - Folies Bergere opens in Paris

1873 - First US postal card issued

1873 - Emperor Franz Jozef opens fifth World's Exposition in Vienna

1875 - 238 members of "Whiskey Ring" accused of anti-US activities

1875 - Alexandra Palace reopens after the 1873 fire burnt it down.

1877 - U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew all Federal troops from the South, ending Reconstruction.

1883 - "Buffalo Bill" Cody put on his first Wild West Show

1883 - Amsterdam World's Fair opens

1883 - Baseball returns to Philadelphia, first National League game since 1876

1883 - NY Athletic Club hires Bob Rogers as first American pro sports trainer

1884 - The construction of the first American 10-story building began in Chicago, Illinois.

1884 - Moses Walker became 1st black player in major league

1884 - Proclamation of the demand for eight-hour workday in the United States.

1885 - Maria "Goeie Mie" Swanenburg sentence to life for killing 27 in Netherlands

1886 - US general strike for 8 hour day, begins

1889 - Second International Congress calls for first International Workers Day 1st May 1890 to mark protests in Chicago in 1886

1889 - Bayer introduces aspirin in powder form (Germany)

1889 - Asa Candler published a full-page advertisement in The Atlanta Journal, proclaiming his wholesale and retail drug business as "sole proprietors of Coca-Cola ... Delicious. Refreshing. Exhilarating. Invigorating." Mr. Candler did not actually achieve sole ownership until 1891 at a cost of $2,300.

1891 - Cy Young pitches 1st game played in Cleveland's League Park Cleveland Spiders 12, Cincinnati Redlegs 3

1892 - US Quarantine Station opens on Angel Island, San Francisco Bay

1893 - World Columbian Exposition opens in Chicago

1898 - George Dewey commands, "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley" as US route Spanish fleet at Manila Bay in the Philippines.

1900 - Premature blast collapses mine tunnel killing 200 at Scofield, Utah

1900 - Roermond soccer team forms in Roermond

1901 - Herb McFarland hit first grand slam in American League

1901 - Pan-American Exposition opens in Buffalo

1905 - In New York, radium was tested as a cure for cancer.

1906 - Phillie's John Lush no-hits Bkln Dodgers, 6-0

1907 - Belgium government of De Trooz forms

1907 - Indian Mine Laws passes (concessions from Neth-Indies)

1908 - World's most intense shower (2.47" in 3 minutes) at Portobelo Panama

1909 - Netherlands begins unity with Belgium

1912 - Amsterdam-North soccer team DWV forms

1912 - Beverly Hills Hotel opens

1913 - Longacre Theater opens at 220 W 48th St NYC

1914 - China's 1st president Yuan Shikai wins dictatorial qualification

1915 - British Lusitania leaves NY, for Liverpool

1915 - German submarine sinks US ship Gulflight

1919 - Mount Kelud (Indonesia) erupts, boiling crater lake which broke through crater wall killing 5,000 people in 104 small villages

1920 - Babe Ruth's first Yankee HR and 50th of career, out of Polo Grounds

1920 - Belgian-Luxembourg toll tunnel opens

1920 - Brooklyn Dodgers tie Boston Braves, 1-1, in 26 innings

1921 - Drusian sultan Pasja al-Atrasj elected governor of Suwayda

1922 - Charlie Robertson of Chicago pitches a perfect no-hit, no-run game

 American author Joseph Heller was born on this day in 1923.  Joseph Heller, author of Catch-22, is born this day in 1923 near Coney Island in Brooklyn. His father, a Russian immigrant who drove a bakery delivery truck, died when Heller was five. Heller attended Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn and worked as a filing clerk and blacksmith's assistant before enlisting in the Army. He trained as a bombardier and flew 60 combat missions near the end of World War II. While in the military, he ran across an apparent paradox in Army regulations. A pilot could be grounded if found insane, but if the pilot requested to be grounded because of insanity, the Army considered him perfectly sane for wanting to avoid danger-and wouldn't ground him. This paradox defined his first novel, the satirical masterpiece Catch-22 (1961).    After the war, Heller attended college on the GI Bill, earning a master's degree from Columbia and studying at Oxford for a year on a Fulbright scholarship. During the next decade, he taught English at Penn State, wrote advertising copy for Time and Look magazines, and later worked as a promotions manager at McCall's. He wrote Catch 22 in his spare time, over the course of eight years. The book wasn't an overnight success, but it became increasingly popular as the anti-war protest movements of the 1960s caught fire. Catch-22 became known as the first great protest novel after World War II.    Heller's subsequent six novels, including Something Happened (1974), Good as Gold (1979), God Knows (1984), and Closing Time (1994), never achieved the popularity of Catch 22. Meanwhile, in 1982, Heller's marriage ended, and he was diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome, a potentially fatal muscular disease. He spent a year in the hospital and recuperating at home. At the end of the year, he married his nurse.    Joseph Heller died of a heart attack in December 1999. His last novel, Portrait of the Artist as an Old Man was published posthumously in 2000.  

1924 - Admiral Paul Koundouriotis becomes president of Greece

1925 - Cyprus becomes a British Crown Colony

1926 - British coal-miners go on strike

1926 - Satchel Paige makes pitching debut in Negro Southern League




German stamp from the World War II era depicting a Nazi Party rally.

1927 - Adolf Hitler held his first Nazi meeting in Berlin.

1927 - First British airliner to serve cooked meals (Imperial Airways)

1927 - Netherlands beats Belgium 3-2 in soccer match in Amsterdam

1927 - Panningen soccer team forms in Panningen

1928 - 6 children die and 10 injured by hailstones in Klausenburg, Romania

1928 - Drunken fascist Erich Wichman attacks VARA-radio transmitter

1928 - Lei Day begun (a Hawaiian celebration)

1928 - Pitcairn Airlines (later Eastern) begins service

1928 - Rotterdam soccer team Black White '28 forms

1929 - Brooklyn's Johnny Finn sets 100 yard sack race in 14.4 seconds

1929 - Farm workers strike begins in East-Groningen

1929 - Police kill 19 Mayday demonstrators in Berlin

1930 - Bradman scores 236 Aust v Worcs, his first f-class innings in Eng










Some day shots of the Empire State Building in Manhattan (above) and a picture of the iconic landmark lit up at night (below).

 On this day in 1931, the Empire State Building opened in New York City. Standing at 102 floors, it ranked as the tallest building in the world, having overtaken the nearby Chrysler Building for those honors. American President Herbert Hoover officially dedicated the Empire State Building, pressing a button from the White House that turned on the building's lights. Hoover's gesture, of course, was symbolic; while the president remained in Washington, D.C., someone else flicked the switches in New York.  The idea for the Empire State Building is said to have been born of a competition between Walter Chrysler of the Chrysler Corporation and John Jakob Raskob of General Motors, to see who could erect the taller building. Chrysler had already begun work on the famous Chrysler Building, the gleaming 1,046-foot skyscraper in midtown Manhattan. Not to be bested, Raskob assembled a group of well-known investors, including former New York Governor Alfred E. Smith. The group chose the architecture firm Shreve, Lamb and Harmon Associates to design the building. The Art-Deco plans, said to have been based in large part on the look of a pencil, were also builder-friendly: The entire building went up in just over a year, under budget (at $40 million) and well ahead of schedule. During certain periods of building, the frame grew an astonishing four-and-a-half stories a week.  At the time of its completion, the Empire State Building, at 102 stories and 1,250 feet high (1,454 feet to the top of the lightning rod), was the world's tallest skyscraper. The Depression-era construction employed as many as 3,400 workers on any single day, most of whom received an excellent pay rate, especially given the economic conditions of the time. The new building imbued New York City with a deep sense of pride, desperately needed in the depths of the Great Depression, when many city residents were unemployed and prospects looked bleak. The grip of the Depression on New York's economy was still evident a year later, however, when only 25 percent of the Empire State's offices had been rented.  In 1972, the Empire State Building lost its title as world's tallest building to New York's World Trade Center, which itself was the tallest skyscraper for but a year. Today the honor belongs to Dubai’s Burj Khalifa tower, which soars 2,717 feet into the sky.




1931 - Norway claims Peter I Island

1931 - Singer Kate Smith begins her long-running radio program on CBS

1932 - First Suriname union congress at Paramaribo

1934 - Austria signs pact with Vatican

1934 - Philippine legislature accepts US proposal for independence

1934 - Water state kingdom dismisses NSB-leader Anton Mussert

1935 - Boulder Dam completed

1935 - Canada's 1st silver dollar is circulated






Flag of Ethiopia

The Lion of Judah Emblem of the Ethiopian Empire

1936 - Emperor Haile Selassie leaves Ethiopia as Italian invades

1936 - FBI's J Edgar Hoover arrests Alvin Karpis

1937 - American President Franklin Roosevelt signed an act of neutrality, keeping the United States out of World War II.

1939 - U.S. commercial television made its official debut at the New York World’s Fair.The signal was transmitted from the Empire State Building.

1939 - Batman comics hit street

1939 - Pulitzer Prize awarded to Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (Yearling)

1940 - 140 Palestinian Jews die as German planes bomb their ship

1940 - The 1940 Olympics are cancelled

1941 - "Citizen Kane," directed and starring Orson Welles, premieres in New York

1941 - General Mills introduces Cheerios

1941 - German assault on Tobruk

 In 1941 on this day, Orson Welles' Citizen Kane was released. It is often regarded as the greatest movie of all time.  Months before its release, Orson Welles’ landmark film Citizen Kane began generating such controversy that Radio City Music Hall eventually refused to show it. Instead, Citizen Kane, now revered as one of the greatest movies in history, made its debut at the smaller RKO Palace Theater on this day in 1941.    By the time he began working on Citizen Kane, the 24-year-old Welles had already made a name for himself as Hollywood’s enfant terrible. He first found success on Broadway and on the radio; his October 1938 broadcast version of the science-fiction classic The War of the Worlds was so realistic that many listeners actually believed Martians had invaded New Jersey. Having signed a lucrative contract with RKO studios, Welles was struggling to find a subject for his first feature film when his friend, the writer Herman Mankiewicz, suggested that he base it on the life of the publishing baron William Randolph Hearst. Hearst presided over the country’s leading newspaper empire, ruling it from San Simeon, a sprawling estate perched atop a hill along California’s central coastline.    A preview of Citizen Kane in early February 1941 had drawn almost universally favorable reviews from critics. However, one viewer, the leading Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, was incensed by the film and Welles’ portrayal of its protagonist, Charles Foster Kane. She took her concerns to Hearst himself, who soon began waging a full-scale campaign against Welles and his film, barring the Hearst newspapers from running ads for it and enlisting the support of Hollywood bigwigs such as Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was said Hearst was particularly angry over the movie’s depiction of a character based on his companion, Marion Davies, a former showgirl whom he had helped become a popular Hollywood actress. For his part, Welles threatened to sue Hearst for trying to suppress the film and also to sue RKO if the company did not release the film.    When Citizen Kane finally opened in May 1941, it was a failure at the box office. Although reviews were favorable, and it was nominated for nine Academy Awards, Welles was booed at that year’s Oscar ceremony, and RKO quietly archived the film. It was only years later, when it was re-released, that Citizen Kane began to garner well-deserved accolades for its pioneering camera and sound work, as well as its complex blend of drama, black comedy, history, biography and even fake-newsreel or “mockumentary” footage that has informed hundreds of films produced since then. It consistently ranks at the top of film critics’ lists, most notably grabbing the No. 1 spot on the American Film Institute’s poll of America’s 100 Greatest Films.    After Citizen Kane, Welles’ diverse works consisted of everything from Shakespearean adaptations to documentaries. Some of his most acclaimed films included The Stranger (1946), The Lady from Shanghai (1948) and Chimes at Midnight (1966). In his later years, he narrated documentaries and appeared in commercials, and he left behind several unfinished films when he died at the age of 70 on October 10, 1985.


1942 - Radio Orange calls to defy order to wear "Jewish star"

1943 - First edition of illegal "The Free Artist" appears in Amsterdam

1943 - 69th Kentucky Derby: Johnny Longden aboard Count Fleet wins in 2:04

1943 - Food rationing begins in US

1943 - German Wehrmacht deployed in order to break Dutch strikes

1943 - German plane sinks boat loaded with Palestinian Jews bound for Malta

1943 - Rauter signs unofficial death sentence

1944 - Messerschmitt Me 262 Sturmvogel, first jet bomber, makes 1st flight

1944 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Martin Flavin (Journey in the dark)

1944 - Surprise attack on Weteringschans Amsterdam, fails

1945 - 900 occupiers of Demmin Vorpommeren, commit suicide

1945 - Martin Bormann, private secretary to Adolf Hitler, escaped from the Fuehrerbunker as the Red Army advanced on Berlin.

1945 - Admiral Karl Doenitz succeeded Hitler as leader of the Third Reich. This was one day after Hitler committed suicide. 

1945 - Australian and Dutch troops lands on Tarakan

1945 - General Belgian Labor Union (ABVV) party forms

1945 - Radio Budapest, Hungary re-enters shortwave broadcasting after WW II

1945 - Seys-Inquart flees to Flensburg

1945 - Soviet army reach Rostock

1946 - Fieldmarshal Montgomery appointed British supreme commander

1946 - Mrs Emma Clarissa Clement named "American Mother of Year"

1946 - Start of 3 year Pilbara strike of Indigenous Australians.

1946 - The Paris Peace Conference concludes that the islands of the Dodecanese should be returned to Greece by Italy.

1947 - Cleveland Indians abandon League Park to play all games at Municipal Stad

1947 - Lt General Hoyt S Vandenberg, USA, ends term as second head of CIA

1947 - Radar for commmercial and  private planes first demonstrated

1947 - Rear Admiral Roscoe H Hillenkoetter, USN, becomes 3th director of CIA

1948 - 74th Kentucky Derby: Eddie Arcaro aboard Citation wins in 2:05.4

1948 - The People's Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea) was proclaimed.

1948 - Pope Pius XII publishes encyclical Auspicia quaedam

1948 - Glenn Taylor, Idaho Senator, arrested in Birmingham Alabama for trying to enter a meeting through a door marked "for Negroes"

1949 - Gerard Kuiper discovers Nereid, (2nd satellite of Neptune)

1950 -  Gwendolyn Brooks became the first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize for her book of poetry called Annie Allen.

1950 - Mayor of Brussels reluctantly bans May Day parade

1950 - New marriage laws enforced in People's Republic China

1950 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Rodgers and Hammerstein (South Pacific)

1950 - WJIM (now WLNS) TV channel 6 in Lansing, MI (CBS) begins broadcasting

1951 - 600,000 march for peace and freedom in Germany

1951 - Dutch Reformed Church introduces new church choir

1951 - Mickey Mantle's hits his first HR

1951 - Minnie Minoso becomes the 1st black to play for the White Sox

1952 - Marines take part in an atomic explosion training in Nevada

1952 - Mr Potato Head, introduced

1952 - TWA introduces tourist class

1954 - 80th Kentucky Derby: Raymond York aboard Determine wins in 2:03

1954 - Bishops publish Mandement (member socialist org forbidden)

1954 - HSA-UWC Forms (Unification Church) (Moonies)

1954 - WAPA TV channel 4 in San Juan, PR (NBC/SFN) begins broadcasting

1956 - A doctor in Japan reports an "epidemic of an unknown disease of the central nervous system", marking the official discovery of Minamata disease.

1957 - Flevo Boys soccer team forms in Emmeloord

1957 - Larry King's first radio broadcast

1957 - US give Poland credit of $95 million

1957 - Vanguard TV-1 booster test reaches 195 km

1958 - James Van Allen reported that two radiation belts encircled Earth.

1958 - Ambonese rebellion bombed Ambon/conquer Morotai

1958 - Arturo Frondizi sworn in as president of Argentina






General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

• On this day in 1958, American President Eisenhower proclaimed Law Day to honor the role of law in the creation of the United States of America. Three years later, Congress followed suit by passing a joint resolution establishing May 1 as Law Day.    The idea of a Law Day had first been proposed by the American Bar Association in 1957. The desire to suppress the celebration of May 1, or May Day, as International Workers' Day aided in Law Day's creation. May Day had communist overtones in the minds of many Americans, because of its celebration of working people as a governing class in the Soviet Union and elsewhere.    The American Bar Association defines Law Day as: "A national day set aside to celebrate the rule of law. Law Day underscores how law and the legal process have contributed to the freedoms that all Americans share." The language of the statute ordaining May 1 calls it "a special day of celebration by the American people in appreciation of their liberties and? rededication to the ideals of equality and justice under law."    On a day that, in many parts of the world, inspires devotion to the rights of the working classes to participate in government, Law Day asks Americans to focus upon every American's rights as laid out in the fundamental documents of American democracy: the Declaration of Independence and the federal Constitution. The declaration insists that Americans "find these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal," and guarantees the rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." The Bill of Rights amended to the Constitution codifies the rights of free speech, free press and fair trial.    Law Day celebrates the legal construct for the determination of rights that the revolutionary leaders of the 1770s, hoping to prevent the sort of class warfare that went on to rack Europe from 1789 to 1917, were so eager to create.



1959 - Floyd Patterson KOs Brian London in 11 for heavyweight boxing title

1959 - West Germany introduces 5 day work

1960 - India's Bombay state split into Gujarat and Maharashtra states

1960 - Pancho Gonzalez retires from tennis

1960 - Francis Gary Powers' U-2 spy plane was shot down over Sverdlovsk, in the Soviet Union. Powers was taken prisoner.

1961 - First US airplane hijacked to Cuba

1961 - Fidel Castro announces there will be no more elections in Cuba

1961 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird)

1961 - Tanganyika granted full internal self-government by Britain

1962 - 1st French underground nuclear experiment in the Sahara

1962 - Bo Belinsky pitches a no-hitter, in his 4th start

1962 - France performs underground nuclear test at Ecker Algeria






1962 - JFK authorizes Area Redevelopment Act (ARA)




1963 - First American (James Whittaker) conquers Mount Everest

1963 - Indonesia takes control of Irian Jaya (west New Guinea) from Neth

1964 - First BASIC program runs on a computer (Dartmouth)

1965 - 91st Kentucky Derby: Bill Shoemaker on Lucky Debonair wins in 2:01.2

1965 - Stanley Cup: Montreal Canadiens beat Chicago Blackhawks, 4 games to 3

1965 - USSR launches Luna 5; later impacts on Moon

1965 - Battle of Dong-Yin, a naval conflict between ROC and PRC, takes place.






    

1966 - Last British concert by Beatles (Empire Pool in Wembley)




1966 - Radio RSA, South Africa begins shortwave transmitting

1966 - US troops shooting targets in Cambodia

1967 - Anastasio Somoza Debayle becomes president of Nicaragua

1967 - Jelle Zijlstra becomes president of Netherlands Bank

1967 - Elvis Presley and Priscilla Beaulieu wed in Las Vegas

1967 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Bernard Malamud (Fixer)

1968 - "Ben Franklin in Paris" closes at Lunt Fontanne NYC after 215 perfs

1968 - In the second day of battle, U.S. Marines, with the support of naval fire, continue their attack on a North Vietnamese Division at Dai Do.

1969 - 43 Unification church couples wed in NYC

1969 - Leonard Tose bought the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles for $16,155,000.

1969 - Pirate Radio Station 259 (England/France) begins transmitting

1970 - Students at Kent State University riot in downtown Kent, Ohio, in protest of the American invasion of Cambodia.

1971 - 97th Kentucky Derby: Gustavo Avila on Canonero II wins in 2:03.2

1971 - The National Railroad Passenger Corp. (Amtrak) went into service. It was established by the U.S. Congress to run the nation's intercity railroads.

1971 - Rolling Stones release "Brown Sugar"

1972 - "Different Times" opens at ANTA Theater NYC for 24 performances

1972 - North Vietnamese troops occupy Quang Tri Activities Committee

1972 - Pulitzer prize awarded to Wallace Stegner (Angle of Repose)

1972 - Radio's Mutual Black Network premieres

1977 - Chantal Langlace runs female world record marathon (2:35:15.4)

1977 - Empress Lilly dedicated

1977 - 36 people are killed in Taksim Square, Istanbul, during the Labour Day celebrations.

1978 - First black mayor of New Orleans (Ernest Morial) inaugurated

1978 - MVV soccer team forms in Maastricht

1978 - Naomi Uemura became first to reach North Pole overland alone

1979 - Elton John becomes first pop star to perform in Israel

1979 - Home rule introduced to Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland)

1979 - Marshall Islands (in Pacific) become self-governing

1981 - The Japanese government announced that it would limit passenger car exports to the United States over the next three years.

1981 - Billie Jean King admits to a lesbian affair with Marilyn Barnett

1981 - Harrison Williams (Sen-D-NJ) convicted on FBI Abscam charges

1982 - 1982 World's Fair in Knoxville Tennessee opens

1984 - Great Britain performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1984 - Mick Fleetwood (of Fleetwood Mac) files for bankruptcy

1985 - "Communist" bomb attack kills 2 firemen in Brussels

1985 - American president Reagan ends embargo against Nicaragua

1986 - The Tass News Agency reported the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident.

1986 - Will Stegers expedition reaches North Pole

1986 - Bill Elliott set a stock car speed record with his Ford Thunderbird in Talladega, AL. Elliott reached a speed of 212.229 mph.








Sculpture of Pope John Paul II at the Salt Mines (Kopalnia soli Wieliczka) near Krakow, Poland



Picture of a bust of Pope John Paul II taken at the Basilique Saint-Sernin in Toulouse.

1987 - Pope John Paul II beatifies Edith Stein, a Jewish born nun



1988 - IRA attack in Roermond, kills 3

1989 - US Supreme Court rules employees have legal burden to prove non- discriminatory reasons for not hiring or promoting

1989 - Disney-MGM Studios opened.  Disney movies, music and books

1991 - Angola's civil war ends

1991 - Skin-Spit-Skin featuring lesbian, homosexual and hetrosexual nude couples caressing, is seen by 5,000 in NYC

1992 - On the third day of the Los Angeles riots resulting from the Rodney King beating trial. King appeared in public to appeal for calm, he asked, "Can we all get along?"

1992 - Eric Houston kills 4 in a California HS where he failed history 4 yrs prior

1992 - LA Dodgers postpone 3 games due to racial riots due to Rodney King

1992 - NY Rangers wins their first ever 7th game of a playoff (vs NJ Devils)

1993 - Bomb attack on Sri Lankan president (26 die)

1994 - Tornado and hail storms hit Jiangxi China, 95 killed

1994 - Charles Kuralt, retires as CBS newsman (On the Road)

1995 - Croatian forces launch Operation Flash during the Croatian War of Independence.

1997 - Toni Blair elected Prime Minister of UK

1997 - Tasmania becomes the last state in Australia to decriminalize homosexuality.

1998 - Arrow Air was fined $5 million for using spare parts that lacked federal approval in the U.S.

1999 - On Mount Everest, a group of U.S. mountain climbers discovered the body of George Mallory. Mallory had died in June of 1924 while trying to become the first person to reach the summit of Everest. At the time of the discovery it was unclear whether or not Mallory had actually reached the summit.

2000 - Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo declares the existence of "a state of rebellion", hours after thousands of supporters of her arrested predecessor, Joseph Estrada, storm towards the presidential palace at the height of the EDSA III rebellion.

2000 - ABC aired the first celebrity "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire."

2001 - Chandra Levy was last seen in Washington, DC. Her remains were found in Rock Creek Park on May 22, 2002. California Congressman Gary Condit was questioned in the case due to his relationship with Levy.

2003 - Invasion of Iraq: In what becomes known as the "Mission Accomplished" speech, U.S. President George W. Bush declares that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended" on board the USS Abraham Lincoln off the coast of California.

2004 - Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia join the European Union, celebrated at the residence of the Irish President in Dublin.

2006 - The Puerto Rican government closes the Department of Education and 42 other government agencies due to significant shortages in cash flow.

2007 - The Los Angeles May Day mêlée occurs, in which the Los Angeles Police Department's response to a May Day pro-immigration rally become a matter of controversy.

2008 - The London Agreement on translation of European patents, concluded in 2000, enters into force in 14 of the 34 Contracting States to the European Patent Convention.

2009 - Same-sex marriage is legalized in Sweden.

2010 - Car bomb fails to go off in Times Square, New York City

2011 - American President Barack Obama announced that U.S. soldiers had killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

2011 - Pope John Paul II is beatified by his successor, Pope Benedict XVI.

2012 - China and Russia sign $15 billion dollar trade deal

2012 - Guggenheim Partners make the largest ever purchase of a sports franchise after buying the Los Angeles Dodgers for $2.1 billion



http://www.historyorb.com/events/april/30

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/may01.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/empire-state-building-dedicated

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory