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On This Day: May 5

Updated May 4, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On May 5, 1961, astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became America’s first space traveler as he made a 15-minute suborbital flight in a capsule launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

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On May 5, 1864, Nellie Bly, the American newspaper writer who challenged herself in an around-the-world race, was born. Following her death on Jan. 27, 1922, her obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1818 Political philosopher Karl Marx was born in Prussia.
1821 Napoleon Bonaparte died in exile on the island of St. Helena.
1891 Carnegie Hall (then named Music Hall) opened in New York City.
1892 Congress extended the Chinese Exclusion Act for 10 years.
1893 Panic hit the New York Stock Exchange; by year’s end, the country was in the throes of a severe depression.
1904 Cy Young of the Boston Americans pitched the first perfect game in modern major league baseball history in a 3-0 victory over the Philadelphia Athletics.
1925 John T. Scopes was arrested in Tennessee for teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution.
1955 West Germany became a sovereign state.
1981 Irish Republican Army hunger-striker Bobby Sands died in prison in Northern Ireland on his 66th day without food.
1985 President Ronald Reagan attended a wreath-laying ceremony at a military cemetery in Bitburg, West Germany. The visit drew worldwide condemnation because 49 members of the Waffen SS were buried there.
2002 French President Jacques Chirac was re-elected in a landslide victory over extreme-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen.
2010 Preliminary plans for a mosque and cultural center near ground zero in New York were unveiled, setting off a national debate over whether the project was disrespectful to 9/11 victims and whether opposition to it exposed anti-Muslim biases.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Adele, Soul singer

Soul singer Adele turns 24 years old today.

AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill

Brian Williams, NBC News anchor

NBC News anchor Brian Williams turns 53 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

1927 Pat Carroll, Actress, turns 85
1934 John Sweeney, Former AFL-CIO president, turns 78
1943 Michael Palin, Actor, comedian (Monty Python), turns 69
1944 Roger Rees, Actor, director, turns 68
1944 John Rhys-Davies, Actor, turns 68
1945 Kurt Loder, Music journalist (MTV), turns 67
1958 John Miller, Assistant FBI director, former journalist, turns 54
1970 Kyan Douglas, TV personality (“Queer Eye for the Straight Guy”), turns 42
1973 Tina Yothers, Actress (“Family Ties”), turns 39
1979 Vincent Kartheiser, Actor (“Mad Men”), turns 33
1981 Craig David, Rock singer, turns 31
1989 Chris Brown, R&B singer, turns 23

 

Historic Birthdays

Nellie Bly 5/5/1864 – 1/27/1922 American journalist and adventurer.Go to obituary »
77 Arthur L. Schawlow 5/5/1921 – 4/28/1999
American Nobel Prize-winning physicist (1981)
44 Leopold II 5/5/1747 – 3/1/1792
Holy Roman emperor (1790-92)
79 Frederick Barnard 5/5/1809 – 4/27/1889
American president of Columbia College (1864-1889)
42 Soren Kierkegaard 5/5/1813 – 11/11/1855
Danish religious philosopher
64 Karl Marx 5/5/1818 – 3/14/1883
German political philosopher and economist; wrote “The Communist Manifesto”
85 Hubert Howe Bancroft 5/5/1832 – 3/2/1918
American historian of the American West
60 Peter Cooper Hewitt 5/5/1861 – 8/25/1921
American electrical engineer; invented the mercury-vapor lamp
66 Christopher Morley 5/5/1890 – 3/28/1957
American novelist and columnist for the Saturday Review (1924-41)
76 Dorothy Garrod 5/5/1892 – 12/18/1968
English archaeologist
82 Sir Gordon Richards 5/5/1904 – 11/10/1986
English jockey and racehorse trainer
44 Tyrone Power 5/5/1914 – 11/15/1958
American motion-picture and stage actor

 

 

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May 05

MORNING

“We dwell in him.”
1 John 4:13

Do you want a house for your soul? Do you ask, “What is the purchase?” It is something less than proud human nature will like to give. It is without money and without price. Ah! you would like to pay a respectable rent! You would love to do something to win Christ? Then you cannot have the house, for it is “without price.” Will you take my Master’s house on a lease for all eternity, with nothing to pay for it, nothing but the ground-rent of loving and serving him forever? Will you take Jesus and “dwell in him?” See, this house is furnished with all you want, it is filled with riches more than you will spend as long as you live. Here you can have intimate communion with Christ and feast on his love; here are tables well-stored with food for you to live on forever; in it, when weary, you can find rest with Jesus; and from it you can look out and see heaven itself. Will you have the house? Ah! if you are houseless, you will say, “I should like to have the house; but may I have it?” Yes; there is the key–the key is, “Come to Jesus.” “But,” you say, “I am too shabby for such a house.” Never mind; there are garments inside. If you feel guilty and condemned, come; and though the house is too good for you, Christ will make you good enough for the house by-and-by. He will wash you and cleanse you, and you will yet be able to sing, “We dwell in him.” Believer: thrice happy art thou to have such a dwelling-place! Greatly privileged thou art, for thou hast a “strong habitation” in which thou art ever safe. And “dwelling in him,” thou hast not only a perfect and secure house, but an everlasting one. When this world shall have melted like a dream, our house shall live, and stand more imperishable than marble, more solid than granite, self-existent as God, for it is God himself–“We dwell in him.”

EVENING

“All the days of my appointed time will I wait.”
Job 14:14

A little stay on earth will make heaven more heavenly. Nothing makes rest so sweet as toil; nothing renders security so pleasant as exposure to alarms. The bitter quassia cups of earth will give a relish to the new wine which sparkles in the golden bowls of glory. Our battered armour and scarred countenances will render more illustrious our victory above, when we are welcomed to the seats of those who have overcome the world. We should not have full fellowship with Christ if we did not for awhile sojourn below, for he was baptized with a baptism of suffering among men, and we must be baptized with the same if we would share his kingdom. Fellowship with Christ is so honourable that the sorest sorrow is a light price by which to procure it. Another reason for our lingering here is for the good of others. We would not wish to enter heaven till our work is done, and it may be that we are yet ordained to minister light to souls benighted in the wilderness of sin. Our prolonged stay here is doubtless for God’s glory. A tried saint, like a well-cut diamond, glitters much in the King’s crown. Nothing reflects so much honour on a workman as a protracted and severe trial of his work, and its triumphant endurance of the ordeal without giving way in any part. We are God’s workmanship, in whom he will be glorified by our afflictions. It is for the honour of Jesus that we endure the trial of our faith with sacred joy. Let each man surrender his own longings to the glory of Jesus, and feel, “If my lying in the dust would elevate my Lord by so much as an inch, let me still lie among the pots of earth. If to live on earth forever would make my Lord more glorious, it should be my heaven to be shut out of heaven.” Our time is fixed and settled by eternal decree. Let us not be anxious about it, but wait with patience till the gates of pearl shall open.