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Difference between revisions of "May 2"

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[[Category:Days in May|02]] [[Category:Days of year|May 02]]
 
[[Category:Days in May|02]] [[Category:Days of year|May 02]]
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Latest revision as of 17:15, 8 March 2011

May 2 is the 2nd day in May.

Events[edit]

1519 — Renaissance polymath Leonardo Da Vinci dies, Cloux, France.

1551 — William Camden (Britannia, 1586), lives, London. Chief historian and antiquarian of Elizabethan times

1668 — Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, ends War of Devolution.

1670 — England: Hudson Bay Company chartered by King Charles II, giving them ownership of "Rupert's Land," which comprises much of central and western Canada.

1772 — Novalis (pseudonym) lives (1772 — 1801). Early German Romantic poet, who influenced later Romantic thought. The central image of his visions, a blue flower, became a symbol of longing among Romantics. [1]

1780 — William Herschel discovers first binary star, Xi Ursae Majoris.

1859 — Jerome K. Jerome lives, Staffordshire, England.

1863 — United States of America: Confederate General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson was accidentally — and fatally — shot by his own troops. He dies 8 days from now.

1879 — Spain: Social Democratic Party founded in a Madrid tavern.

1881 — Canadian writer Mary Maclane lives, Winnipeg, Manitoba.

1886 — Gottfried Benn, lives, Mansfeld.

1886 — United States of America: Twenty-five hundred workers march in Milwaukee for the 8-hour day. Demonstrators carry red Socialist flags and the tricolor banners of the Eight Hour League. In response, the Governor Jeremiah Rusk supplies the Milwaukee National Guard headquarters with increased ammunition and the entire city police force with four companies of infantry and artillery. Despite the threat, the workers parade and this threatened violence.

1895 — Italy: In Florence, the trial of Oreste Lucchesi and Amerigo Franchi begins. They are on trial (-May 22) for assassinating Giuseppe Bandi, editor of "Il Telegrafo," on 1894 July 1. His articles resulted in the repression and arrest of numerous anarchists. [2]

1895 — Mécislas Charrier lives.

1896 — Nicaragua: US Marines landed at Corrinto, to "protect" US interests.

1897 — Italy: Demonstration in Rome after the anarchist Romeo Frezzi is found dead in a prison cell, believed murdered by his police guards.

1911 — United States of America: First worker compensation law in US enacted, in Wisconsin.

1911 — United States of America: Passage of the Illinois Workman's Compensation Law, which Dr. Alice Hamilton helped to get passed.

1915 — England: This month the "International Anarchist Manifesto on the War" is issued from [London]]; Emma Goldman is among over 30 anarchist signatories from the United States of America, Italy, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Russia. Emma lectures on the war, drama (see her The Social Significance of the Modern Drama), birth control, and sexuality in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, St. Paul, and Denver. Topics include "Jealousy, Its Cause and Possible Cure," the Modern School, and feminism. She finds audiences are most receptive to her lectures on war and birth control, although Catholic socialists harass her in Washington, D.C.

1918 — Amilcare Cipriani dies.

1919 — United States of America: Benjamin Spock pediatrician/author, lives. "There are only two things a child will share willingly — communicable diseases and his motherʼs age." [3] [4]

1919 — Gustav Landauer murdered by soldiers.

1919 — Brazil: Beginning of a General Strike which eventually includes 50,000 workers of all trades and unions in Sao Paulo.

1919 — Pierre Chardon (Maurice Charron; 1892 — 1919) dies.

1920 — United States of America: Boston radicals, including Sacco, Vanzetti, Mario Buda (aka Mike Boda), Aldino Felicani, and others meet to discuss support for Roberto Elia and Andrea Salsedo and to plan a protest against their illegal imprisonment. Salsedo is killed in custody tomorrow.

1921 — Russia: Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman begin receiving visits from many foreign delegates, during this month, for the International Congress of the Third International. Visitors include Americans "Big" Bill Haywood, Agnes Smedley, Bob Robins, Mary Heaton Vorse, Ella Reeve Bloor, William Z. Foster, and Robert Minor. Emma is disparaging of Haywoodʼs flight from the US, comparing his action to a "captain leaving the ship," for abandoning fellow IWW members who remain imprisoned.

1921 — India: Filmmaker Satyajit Ray lives, Calcutta. Director, writer (World of Apu, Adversary). Daily Bleed Saint, April 23. [5]

1921 — Paul Wulf lives (1921 — 1999).

1921 — France: Roger Boussinot lives (1921 — 2001). Humaniste libertaire, écrivain, scénariste, et historien du cinéma. "LIBERTE. Principe fondamental de l'anarchie, opposé de façon irréductible au principe d'autorité…" [6]

1924 — United States of America: Supreme Court upholds the involuntary sterilization of mentally retarded persons.

1924 — Theodore Bikel lives, Wien. American folk singer, actor (The Russians Are Coming). [Source: Robert Braunwart]

1932 — Premiere of Jack Benny program on radio.

1933 — Germany: Adolf Hitler abolishes all labor unions.

1935 — Canada: Telegrams of tribute greet Emma Goldman at a farewell event hosted by Rabbi Stern of Montreal. On May 4—14 Emma sails from Canada to Le Havre, France; she reaches Paris on May 15. On May 18 is back homein St. Tropez in time to celebrate the anniversary of Alexander Berkmanʼs release from prison in 1906; Emma finds him in better health than she expected.

1936 — Edna St. Vincent Millayʼs manuscript of Conversation at Midnight is destroyed in a hotel fire in Florida. [7]

1936 — The "Sterilizers of Bordeaux" trial in France. In 1935 April, lacking specific laws against voluntary vasectomies, the government charged Dr. Norbert Bartosek, an anarchist Austrian, and others (among them Aristide Lapeyre and both Andrée Prevotel and André Prévotel) with the "crime of castration" and "aggravated assault." Charges against Andrée are dropped; Bartosek received three years in prison and the others 16 months.

1936 — Spain: First edition of Mujeres Libres appears.

1937 — Spain: Friends of Durruti rally at the Goya Theater, where the film 19 de julio is screened to comments from Jaume Bali. United States of America: there are speeches by Liberto Callejas and Francisco Carreño as well. Anarchist militants from the C.N.T. also interrupt a telephone conversation between Companys and Azana. [Source: Agustin Guillamón, AK Press]

1938 — At the beginning of the month, Emma Goldman is reading George Orwellʼs Homage to Catalonia and writing "Trotsky Protests Too Much," a reply to two articles on the Kronstadt rebellion that appeared in the New York Trotskyist journal "New International" (Trotsky was responsible for the infamous slaughter at Kronstadt, "the butcher of Kronstadt and murderer of anarchists"). Also, Herrera announces his intention to leave his position as secretary of the General Council of the S.I.A. (International Antifascist Solidarity); his replacement is Lucia Sanchez Saornil, the Spanish poet and artist, and founder of Mujeres Libres.

1945 — Colette becomes first female member of the Académie Goncourt, high tribute for literary merit in France.

1945 — Bianca Perez Morena de Macias lives, Nicaragua. Model, Mick Jaggerʼs one-time wife, Amnesty International activist. [Source: Robert Braunwart]

1945 — United States of America: James F. Byrnes lives. US secretary of state (D, 1945-57), US senator, US Supreme Court judge, governor of South Carolina. He once declared that SC would abolish the stateʼs school system rather than abolish school segregation. [Source: Robert Braunwart]

1945 — Mexico: Jorge Prieto Laurens lives. SLP, Zapatista, anticommunist propagandist. [Source: Robert Braunwart]

1948 — United States of America: 75th Birthday Anniversary Celebration of Rudolf Rocker. May 2, 1948. Amalgamated Center. Contributions from F.W. Roman, A.E. Briggs, W.E. Holloway. (Chicago, Rudolf Rocker 75th Jubilee Committee, 48 pages). [I donʼt know if this was the date of the celebration, or date of publication. — ed.]

1954 — First commercial jet plane, BOAC Comet, goes into service. Soon grounded, for the structural defeat of exploding in the air, coming down like a comet.

1955 — India: Parliament forbids discrimination based on caste.

1956 — For the first time in Billboard history, five records appear in both the pop and RandB Top 10. They are: Elvis Presleyʼs "Heartbreak Hotel" , Carl Perkinʼs "Blue Suede Shoes", Little Richardʼs "Long Tall Sally", the Platters' "Magic Touch" and Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' "Why Do Fools Fall in Love." Presleyʼs and Perkins' hits are also in the country and western Top Ten at #1 and #2 respectively. I was goin' pretty fast, I looked behind, a'here come the devil doin' ninety-nine. — From "Race With the Devil" by Gene Vincent

1957 — United States of America: Joseph McCarthy Commie-hunting senator, dies at 47. About 40 years to late. "I killed more people tonight than I have fingers on my hands. I shot them in cold blood and enjoyed every minute of it . . . They were commies, Lee. They were red sons of bitches who should have died long ago . . . They never thought that there were people like me in this country. They figured us all to be soft as horse manure and just as stupid." — Mickey Spillane, Atlas Shrugged [8]

1958 — Philippines: Ernesto Nazareno, anti-nuclear activist, arrested and tortured.

1960 — United States of America: Despite international protests, California fries Caryl Chessman.

1963 — United States of America: In the American citadel of freedom and Christianity, Birmingham, Alabama jails 958 children. Tomorrow those not jailed get free showers and doggies, courtesy of "Bull" Connors.

1967 — United States of America: Armed Black Panther contingent marches into California State Assembly in Sacramento in protest against a bill that would ban the carrying of unconcealed weapons.

1967 — Ernst Friedrich (1894 — 1967), founder of the Berlin Peace Museum, anarchist pacifist, dies. His book War Against War presents his demand for militant struggle against war and militarism. [9]

1968 — France: Protest at University of Nanterre escalates into French student strike. By May 20 six million workers are on strike; within a few days the number is up to ten or eleven million. 2 mai 68 Pompidou part pour l'Iran et l'Afghanistan / Prime Minister Georges Pompidou leaves for official visits to Iran and Afghanistan. Courses at the faculty of letters are suspended at Nanterre after incidents there. Les cours sont suspendus à la faculté de Nanterre. "The largest general strike that ever stopped the economy of an advanced industrial country, and the first wildcat general strike in history; revolutionary occupations and the beginnings of direct democracy; the increasingly complete collapse of state power for nearly two weeks; the resounding verification of the revolutionary theory of our time and even here and there the first steps toward putting it into practice; the most important experience of the modern proletarian movement that is in the process of constituting itself in its fully developed form in all countries, and the example it must now go beyond — this is what the French May 1968 movement was essentially, and this in itself already constitutes its essential victory." — “The Beginning of an Era,” translated by Ken Knabb [10]

1968 — United States of America: Despite the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr., his Poor Peoples' March on Washington, D.C. begins, led by successor Ralph Abernathy. 3,000 erect Resurrection City, a tent city on the Mall until the 17th.

1970 — United States of America: First woman jockey at Kentucky Derby (Diane Crump). Talk radio never the same. Ditto Blue Grass.

1970 — United States of America: ROTC building burns down at Kent State University in Ohio.

1971 — United States of America: Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland address a "G.I. Anti-War Rally" in Tacoma. Tacoma, near Fort Lewis, had one of the countryʼs early and active G.I. Coffee houses, involving, among many others, Auntie Daveʼs long-time acquaintance, Stan Anderson.

1971 — United States of America: The last surviving member of the Pioneer Aid and Support Society, Irving Abrams, presents the deed to the Haymarket monument to the Illinois Labor History Society. Every year on the Sunday closest to May 4, and the anniversary of Black Friday, November 11th, labor organizations come to this monument to pay tribute to these anarchist heroes by stressing their labor activism and ignoring their anarchist ideas.

1972 — United States of America: Paranoid long-time Federal Bureau of Investigations honcho J. Edgar Hoover dies, Washington DC.

1972 — Stone the Crow lead guitar player Les Harvey is electrocuted on stage at a show in Swansea, Wales. The 25 year old was tossed into the air after touching a poorly connected microphone.

1974 — United States of America: Former Vice-President (during Nixonʼs 'Lawn Order' administration) Spiro Agnew is disbarred by the Maryland Court of Appeals. While Dick M proclaimed he was not a crook, Spiro never did. But then Dick M also claimed to be a pacifist. Spiro never did. "It is difficult to feel compassion," said the Court in its unanimous opinion, "for an attorney who is so morally obtuse that he consciously cheats…that government that he has sworn to serve."

1980 — Pink Floydʼs hit single "Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)", with its chorus of kids chanting "We donʼt need no education", is banned by the South African government. Black children, upset about inferior education, adopt the song as their anthem. The government says the song is "prejudicial to the safety of the state."

1982 — High Seas: British Navy kills 368 in sinking of Argentinean ship General Belgrano, South Atlantic.

1984 — Germany: 33,000 West German metalworkers strike for 35-hour week.

1985 — United States of America: Crime Pays. E.F. Hutton, one of the USʼs largest brokerage companies, pleaded guilty to 2,000 federal charges related to the manipulation of its checking accounts. The company agreed to pay $2 million in fines and to pay back up to $8 million to banks it had defrauded. E.F. Hutton sez "Prison is Hell," and when E.F. speaks…

1985 — United States of America: Senate votes to limit Pentagon spending to 85 levels, adjusted for inflation.

1986 — United States of America: 38 anarchists gathered in Chicago to commemorate victims of the Haymarket Massacre arrested and charged with the high crime of "Mob Action." See Mob Action Against the State: Haymarket Remembered…An Anarchist Convention, a broad ranging collection of essays from 70 anonymous contributors, with graphics and photographs, [11]

1989 — Hungary: Dismantling of the 150-mile-long fence on Austrian-Hungarian border begins.

1991 — Paul Lapeyre (1910 — 1991) dies following a car accident.

1997 — Brazil: Paulo Freire (1921 — 1997), Brazilian philosopher and educator, dies of heart failure in Sao Paulo. [12] [13]

2002 — Grinderʼs Stand premiers, Nevada City, Nevada. Play by Oakley Hall III, the brilliant and charismatic founder of the Lexington Conservatory Theater. [14] [15]

External link[edit]