FDR opens World's Fair, Osama bin Laden killed: News Journal archives, week of April 28

Ben Mace
Delaware News Journal

“Pages of history” features excerpts from The News Journal archives including the Wilmington Morning News and the Evening Journal.

April 29, 1986, The Morning News

Soviet nuclear reactor leaks; radiation spreads

The Soviet Union said Monday that a nuclear accident damaged an atomic reactor at the Chernobyl power plant in the Ukraine. Radiation reported up to 10 times above normal swept across Finland, Denmark and Sweden, more than 750 miles away.

Front page of The Morning News from April 29, 1986.

Budapest Radio in Hungary reported early today that there were injuries from the accident, and noted that the power plant was at the conjunction of two rivers, near the reservoir that supplies Kiev, a city of 2.4 million people and the capital of the Ukraine.

The official Soviet new agency, Tass, said only that people “affected” were being aided, but did not say whether there were injuries or deaths….

Recent news on Ukraine:Biden signs $95 billion Ukraine, Israel aid bill that includes TikTok sell-or-ban law

April 30, 1992, The News Journal

L.A. officers acquitted in Rodney King beating

Four white Los Angeles police officers were acquitted of all but one assault charge Wednesday in the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King.

Violence, including looting and fires, broke out on the largely black south side of Los Angeles a few hours after the verdict. As the violence spread across the residential and business areas, Mayor Tom Bradley asked Gov. Pete Wilson to send in the National Guard….

Front page of The News Journal from April 30, 1992.

The verdict, in the seventh day of deliberations, came after a year of political uproar sparked by the graphic videotape of a black man being beaten by white officers, denounced in many quarters as brutality. The backlash brought down the Los Angeles police chief.

“My client and I are just outraged,” said King’s lawyer, Steve Lerman. “It sends a bad message. It says it’s OK to go ahead and beat somebody when they’re down and kick the crap out of them.”

Bradley blasted the jury’s decision….

Several hours after the verdicts were announced, several hundred demonstrators rushed the main doors at the police department’s Parker Center headquarters in downtown Los Angeles. They backed off as helmeted officers blocked the doors….

May 1, 1939, Wilmington Morning News

President Roosevelt opens World’s Fair

President Franklin Roosevelt officially opened the New York World’s Fair yesterday by pledging the nation anew to a policy of peace and international good will….

He made no reference to German Chancellor Adolf Hitler’s rejection of peace guarantee proposals submitted by him to Berlin and Rome two weeks ago….

Front page of the Wilmington Morning News from May 1, 1939.

A parade of more than 25,000 artisans, officials and representatives of the foreign exhibitors in their colorful dress led off the day’s events….

At 6 p.m., the fair’s president announced that more than 600,000 persons had passed through the gates….

The exhibit area with its wide, asphalt-paved avenues, clipped cedar hedges, lawns and fountains was about 90 percent complete. Some pavilions owned by the 60 foreign nations participating lagged behind, but this was said to be due to the unsettled European conditions.

The pavilion of Czechoslovakia will be manned by Czech officials who refused to surrender it when their country was occupied by Germany….

Twenty-eight warships of the Atlantic squadron stood in New York Harbor on opening day and 11 others were to arrive next week….

May 3, 1898, The Morning News

Dewey in hot battle with the Spanish at Manila

On the basis of press dispatches and advices from Ambassador Hay in London, President McKinley and Secretary Long are confident that Commodore Dewey won a great victory in Manila harbor, totally destroying the usefulness of the Spanish fleet….

Front page of The Morning News from May 3, 1898.

The Laffan News Bureau reported that the American fleet under command of Commodore Dewey anchored in the Manila bay at 5 o’clock Sunday morning….

Dewey then ordered his squadron to close in and delivered an awful cannonade, using guns of all calibers for 30 minutes. Both fleets were soon at it, while the forts took a hand in the melee, keeping up a steady fire at the American ships. Dewey maneuvered his ships continuously, thus rendering the marksmanship of the Spanish gunners less effective….

Dewey’s fleet then withdrew beyond the range of the smaller guns and poured shells from his big guns upon the Spaniards, inflicting hideous damage….

The Spanish squadron was practically annihilated and all the forts were silenced. Three of the Spanish warships were on fire, one had sunk and the others were riddled and helpless….

Catch up on history:First Super Bowl, hostages freed from Iran: The News Journal archives, week of Jan. 15

May 3, 2011, The News Journal

How U.S. got enemy No. 1

After nearly a decade of anger and fear, America rejoiced Monday at the demise of Osama bin Laden, the terrorist mastermind behind the horrific 9/11 attacks. Navy SEALs who killed the world’s most-wanted terrorist seized a trove of al-Qaida documents to pore over, and President Barack Obama laid plans to visit New York’s ground zero.

Front page of The News Journal from May 3, 2011.

Killed in an intense firefight in a daring raid at his fortified hideout in Pakistan, bin Laden was hunted down based on information first gleaned years ago from detainees at secret CIA prison sites in Eastern Europe, officials disclosed.

His body was quickly taken away for burial at sea, but not before a DNA match was done to prove his identity.

A U.S. official said there also were photos showing bin Laden with the fatal wound above his left eye, a gunshot that tore away part of his skull….

Reach reporter Ben Mace at rmace@gannett.com.