The Canadian-founded worldwide Greenpeace environmentalist and anti-war organization launched its flagship, Rainbow Warrior after purchasing and remodeling the British government trawler Sir William Hardy.
The first use of an electronic messaging system to send an unsolicited message to a large number of recipients for the purpose of commercial advertising, now commonly called spamming, was made when a representative of Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), Gary Thuerk, sent the same message, simultaneously, to 393 users of ARPANET, the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network.[2] The message informed all recipients that "Digital will be giving a product presentation of the newest members of the DECsystem-2020 family," and inviting them to attend sessions on May 9 and May 11 at hotel lobbies in Los Angeles and San Mateo, and inviting them to "please fell free to contact the nearest DEC Office for more information about the exciting DECsystem-2020 family."[2] The ARPANET manager responded by noting that the advertisement was "a flagrant violation of the use of ARPANET as the network is to be used for official U.S. government business only," and adding that "appropriate action is being taken to preclude its occurrence again."
The successful stage musicalAnnie, which had been running in the U.S. on Broadway since April 21, 1977, premiered on London's West End at the Victoria Palace Theatre for the first of 1,485 performances. Andrea McArdle, who had opened the title role on Broadway, appeared for the first 40 performances on the West End before being succeeded by Briton Ann Marie Gwatkin.
Died:Roberto Pineda, 25, Mexican horse racing jockey, was killed while competing in the U.S. at a racetrack in Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, when a horse ridden by another jockey, Rudy Turcotte, broke her foreleg and caused a chain reaction with two other horses. Pineda was riding the horse "Easter Bunny Mine" in the second race of the day when the Turcotte's horse, Easy Edith, collapsed. Pineda was thrown head first from Easter Bunny Mine, and two other horses went down in a pileup. Pineda had severe head injuries and died at a nearby hospital.[3]
May 4, 1978 (Thursday)
The South African Defence Force (SADF) invaded Angola as the first part of Operation Reindeer against SWAPO, the Namibian independence guerrilla movement. The first phase, the Battle of Cassinga, started as an airborne assault on SWAPO positions. Angola's government reported that 624 civilians and combatants were killed, of whom 298 were teenagers and children.[4]
In the Netherlands, Ajax Amsterdam and AZ Alkmaar, who had finished in second and third place, respectively, in the Eredivisie, the highest level of the Dutch soccer football, faced each other before 50,000 spectators at the Olympic Stadium in Amsterdam in the finals of the KNVB Cup. Alkmaar won, 1 to 0.[6]
Born:Ismael El Massoudi, Moroccan-born French professional boxer and WBA welterweight champion 2011 to 2012[7]
May 6, 1978 (Saturday)
Born: Tony Estanguet, French slalom canoeist and winner of three Olympic gold medals for the men's canoe slalom in 2000, 2004 and 2012; in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques departement
Died: Ethelda Bleibtrey, 76, American Olympic swimmer, winner of 3 gold medals in the 1920 Olympics, later inducted to the International Swimming Hall of Fame[8]
May 7, 1978 (Sunday)
Former Italian Premier Aldo Moro was informed by his kidnappers that, since the Italian government had refused their final demands to release 13 prisoners, he was going to be killed. Moro was allowed to send a final letter to his wife and wrote " “They have told me that they are going to kill me in a little while, I kiss you for the last time."[9]
The first episode of the long-running Philippine television variety program GMA Supershow, hosted by German Moreno, was broadcast at noon on the GMA Network. GMA Supershow would run for 978 episodes over more than 18 years before concluding on January 26, 1997.
In Rome, the body of former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro, who had been kidnapped by the Red Brigades terrorist organization on March 16, was found in a car parked on Rome's Via Michelangelo Caetani after the Italian government refused to negotiate or to meet the demand that 16 jailed prisoners be released. Moro, 61, had served as prime minister twice, from 1963 to 1968 and from 1974 to 1976.
In Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo, rebels occupied the city of Kolwezi, the mining center of the province of Shaba. The Zairean government asked the U.S., France and Belgium to restore order.
Born:
Hossein Rezazadeh, Iranian weightlifter, winner of Olympic gold medals in 2000 and 2004, and four world championships in 2002, 2003, 2005 and 2006 in the 105 kilograms (231 lb) category; in Ardabil
A group of mercenaries, led by Bob Denard, ousted President Ali Soilih in the Comoros; ten local soldiers were killed and Denard formed a new government.
Born:Barry Zito, American Major League Baseball pitcher and 2002 winner of the AL Cy Young Award; in Las Vegas[16]
Died:
Sisavang Vatthana, 70, the last King of Laos, who reigned from 1959 until his forced abdication in 1975, reportedly died of malaria while imprisoned in Xam Neua by the ruling Communist government.[17] The only surviving member of the royal family, Sisavang's son Sauryavong Savang, became the pretender to the throne until his own death in 2018.
Died: Armin T. Wegner, 91, German human rights activist, known for documenting the Armenian genocide while stationed in the Ottoman Empire during World War One, and later for being jailed in 1933 for publicly denouncing Nazi Germany's persecution of Jews.
May 18, 1978 (Thursday)
Soviet dissident Yuri Orlov was sentenced to 7 years' hard labor, for distributing 'counterrevolutionary material'.
Died: Selwyn Lloyd, 73, English politician who served as Speaker of the House of Commons from 1971 to 1976, and previously as Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1963-1964, and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1955-1960
U.S. National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski met privately in Beijing with Huang Hua, Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China, and announced that he was authorized by U.S. President Jimmy Carter to accept the three conditions set by Beijing for normalization of diplomatic relations, specifically for the U.S. to sever its relationship with Taiwan, including the withdrawal of U.S. troops and severing its diplomatic and military pacts with the Taiwanese government, provided that the U.S. would be able to announce that China would resolve its issues with Taiwan peacefully.[27]
In the Soviet Union, the Republican Party of Georgia (Sakartvelos Respublikuri Partia) was founded clandestinely by four independence activists in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Vakhtang Dzabiradze, Vakhtang Shonia, Levan Berdzenishvili and David Berdzenishvili with a goal of an independent Georgian nation with guarantees of human rights and a free market economy. The four Georgians would be arrested and jailed in 1983 for anti-Soviet activity, then released in time to participate in the first free elections of the Republic of Georgia.
Katie Price (stage name for Katrina Infield), English supermodel known as "Jordan", singer, children's book author and television personality; in Brighton, East Sussex[28][29]
Joseph Colombo, 54, American gangster who was boss of the Colombo crime family of New York and was paralyzed in 1971 after an assassination attempt, died of a cardiac arrest.[31]
U.S. Navy Admiral Aubrey Fitch, 94, former Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy[32]
An airplane crash killed Kenya's former Minister of Agriculture, Bruce MacKenzie, along with the pilot and two other people, after MacKenzie had left a meeting with Uganda's President Idi Amin. A bomb exploded on the twin-engine Piper Aztec 23 airplane as it was flying back to the Kenyan capital of Nairobi after departing from the airport at Entebbe.[33][34][35]
The hijacking of a helicopter in an attempt to free two inmates of the U.S. federal penitentiary near Marion, Illinois was thwarted after the hijacker, Barbara Ann Oswald, was shot and killed by her hostage, Allen Barklage. Oswald had been attempting to free her friend, Garrett Brock Trapnell, from incarceration by seizing a charter helicopter at an airport near St. Louis and ordering Barklage to land inside the prison yard to pick up Trapnell. Barklage landed the helicopter inside the yard, wrestled the gun away from Oswald, and then shot her as she attempted to flee.
May 25, 1978 (Thursday)
The first attack of the Unabomber took place when a mail bomb exploded at campus police building of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, injuring a security guard. Over the next 17 years, 26 people would be injured, three of them fatally, by the Unabomber until he was arrested and identified as former University of California mathematics professor Ted Kaczynski.
The first legal gambling casino in the eastern United States, opened in Atlantic City, New Jersey, with the debut of the new Resorts International hotel.
In West Berlin, two members of the 2 June Movement in West Germany, Inge Viett and and Nabil Harb helped terrorist Till Meyer escape from the medium security Moabit Correctional Facility, and the three escaped by train to East Berlin and then through East Germany to Bulgaria. Although it was a Communist nation like East Germany, Bulgaria allowed West German officials to arrest Meyer and then allowed for his extradition back to West Germany for trial.[36]
The price of mailing a letter in the U.S. increased from 13 cents to 15 cents.[37]
Born: Jake Johnson (stage name for Mark Weinberger), American comedian and TV and film actor known for being the co-star of New Girl for seven seasons on Fox; in Evanston, Illinois[38]
May 29, 1978 (Monday)
Born: Sébastien Grosjean, French professional tennis player who was ranked fourth-best in the world in 2002, but never advanced further than the semi-finals in a Grand Slam tournament; in Marseilles[39]
May 30, 1978 (Tuesday)
Former Comoros President Ali Soilih was found dead in the Comoros, allegedly shot when trying to escape.
Born: Lyoto Machida, Brazilian mixed martial artist, UFC Light Heavyweight champion from 2009 to 2010; in Salvador, Bahia state [40]