![]() |
|
|||||||
|
Greetings, and welcome to the World Affairs Board! The World Affairs Board is one of the premier forums for the discussion of the pressing geopolitical issues of our time. Topics include foreign & defense policy, international security, military developments, weapons proliferation, terrorism, international strategic affairs, and politics. Our membership includes many from military, defense industry, and government backgrounds with expert knowledge on a wide range of topics. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so why not register a World Affairs Board account and join our community today? |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
|
|
#136 (permalink) |
|
Banished
Patron
|
1883- Czek author Franz Kafka was born.
1905- Russian Army killed workers who went on strike. 1941- Turkish Conservatory of Republic gave her first graduates. 1962. French President de Gaulle sign the decleration which anounce independence of Algeria. 132 year French colony reached the end. 1967- Famous player of Galatasaray, Turgay Seren retired from football. 1969- Turkiye took civil control of the American bases in Turkish borders. 1971- Jim Morrison, the leader of Doors music band died on his age of 27. 1988- Fatih Sultan Mehmed Bridge began to serve. Constuction of bridge costed 887 million dolars. The bridge's length is 1090 m. and construction lasted 2,5 years. 1993- Turkiye met the word of "Tax Number". 1999- Singer Sevim Tuna died. |
|
|
|
|
|
#137 (permalink) |
|
Regular
|
Soyuz-Apollo, July 15, 1975
Russian and American astronauts shook hands in space for the first time 31 years ago, in July 1975.
In the meantime, the idea of a joint Soviet-American space mission was gaining ground. The Apollo-13 disaster made the Americans aware of the need for cooperation. The U.S. technical director of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) Dr. Glynn Lunney recalled that at that dramatic time the idea of outside help was dismissed out of hand. As an engineer he knew only too well that in the preceding years the Soviet Union and the U.S. had been designing and building their spaceships and docking devices in different ways. Brezhnev supported the idea of a joint flight, and voiced the big idea that the Soviet Union was for peaceful space exploration and for the development of devices to make it possible for spacecraft to rendezvous and dock and for crew members to work together. Soyuz-19 with astronauts Alexei Leonov and Valery Kubasov on board blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on July 15, 1975, at 3:20 p.m. Moscow time. Seven hours and a half later, Apollo followed suit from Cape Canaveral, carrying Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald Slayton. On the eve of the launch, astronaut Gene Cernan, a participant in the U.S. Moon program, told journalists that he didn't think that any member of the ASTP project had changed his political views in the course of communication. It was clear that we ought to lay emphasis not on what divides us but on the striving to understand, respect and trust each other, he said. The ASTP was a success despite involving the two competing space powers of the Cold War. For the first time in the history of space flights in the near-Earth orbit, a space system consisting of two docked spacecraft with an international crew functioned for two days. The public and prominent political figures from around the world viewed the Soviet-American Test Project as an important historical event that ushered in a new era in space research, and as a major contribution to improving Soviet-U.S. relations and the world climate as a whole. The success of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was largely the result of the long experience of both crews. Brigadier General Thomas Stafford was the Apollo commander. Prior to ASTP he had already carried out rendezvous techniques on Gemini-6 and Gemini-9 five times. Under the Moon project, Stafford's assignment was to fly around the Moon on Apollo-10, getting as close as 12.8 km from its surface in a landing module, and take photos for subsequent landings. The dress rehearsal was a great success and Neil Armstrong's crew landed on the Moon some time later. Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov was four years younger than Stafford. He had been the first man in outer space from Voskhod-2. Later, he was trained for Moon landings and to conduct five more space missions that were cancelled for various reasons. The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project required more than technical competence from all crewmembers. They had to display diplomatic skills and a sense of humor that is an absolute must in space. Not everything went smoothly, but all participants in the program eventually coped with political and technical problems and achieved complete mutual understanding. The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was designed to create in the long term a universal rescue unit, to test technical systems and methods for joint flight, and to cooperate in research and experiments as well as in rescue operations. Joint testing of the docking systems and rendezvous techniques, the docking and undocking of the two spacecraft, and the experience of joint flight control and conducting numerous scientific and technical experiments were of vast importance for the subsequent building of the International Space Station. The ASTP mission was not free of emergencies. A local TV camera collapsed on the eve of the Soyuz launch but it was not delayed. The crew were trusted to fix it themselves and they did. The Apollo crew had a more serious problem. When the astronauts splashed down, poisonous fumes from the engine permeated into the cabin and they had to use oxygen masks. Talking to journalists, Stafford said that he had 10 to 15 seconds to do this. In his whole career he had to deal with 11 emergencies that put his life at risk. http://en.rian.ru/world/20050715/40912491.html http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20050704/40838913.html |
|
|
|
|
|
#138 (permalink) |
|
Senior Contributor
|
Playboy
Oh, when was it. You all Know! Oh kakak I'm sure I can find out.
This mag next to me. Hmmm. Bugger, someone has scribbled on the cover. Not an epoch/paradigm - shift/ Chomsky moment. I'm sure many a PHD has been strung out in a liberal arts department over Norma's **** with a red background. ![]()
__________________
Where's the bloody gin? An army marches on its liver, not its ruddy stomach. |
|
|
|
|
|
#140 (permalink) |
|
Senior Contributor
|
Inspiration for Men of Honor dies
RICHMOND, Virginia (AP) -- Carl M. Brashear, the first black U.S. Navy diver who was portrayed by Cuba Gooding Jr. in the 2000 film "Men of Honor," died Tuesday. He was 75.
Brashear died at the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth of respiratory and heart failure, the medical center said. Brashear retired from the Navy in 1979 after more than 30 years of service. He was the first Navy diver to be restored to full active duty as an amputee, the result of a leg injury he sustained during a salvage operation. "The African-American community lost a great leader today in Carl Brashear," Gooding said of the man he played alongside Robert DeNiro, who was Brashear's roughneck training officer in "Men of Honor." "His impact to us as a people and all races will be felt for many decades to come." In 1966 Brashear was assigned to recover a hydrogen bomb that dropped into waters off of Spain when two U.S. Air Force planes collided. During the mission Brashear was struck below his left knee by a pipe that the crew was using to hoist the bomb out of the water. Brashear was airlifted to a naval hospital where the bottom of his left leg was amputated to avoid gangrene. It later was replaced with a prosthetic leg. The Navy was ready to retire Brashear from active duty, but he soon began a grueling training program that included diving, running and calisthenics. "Sometimes I would come back from a run, and my artificial leg would have a puddle of blood from my stump. I wouldn't go to sick bay because they would have taken me out of the program," Brashear said in 2002 when he was inducted into the Gallery of Great Black Kentuckians. "Instead, I'd go hide somewhere and soak my leg in a bucket of hot water with salt in it -- that's an old remedy I learned growing up." Brashear faced an uphill battle when he joined the Navy in 1948 at the age of 17, not long after the U.S. military desegregated. "I went to the Army office, and they weren't too friendly," Brashear said in 2002. "But the Navy recruiter was a lot nicer. Looking back, I was placed in my calling." Brashear, the son of poor sharecroppers in Sonora, Kentucky, quickly decided after boot camp that he wanted to become a deep-sea diver. "Growing up on a farm in Kentucky, I always dreamed of doing something challenging," he said. "When I saw the divers for the first time, I knew it was just what I wanted." In 1954 he was accepted and graduated from the diving program, despite daily battles with discrimination, including having hate notes left on his bunk. He went on to train for advanced diving programs before his 1966 incident. "He kept to himself personally, but his military life was an open book," said Junetta Brashear, his first wife, who lives in Portsmouth, Virginia, near Brashear's home in Virginia Beach. She said Brashear's health started to deteriorate about three years ago, but that he had experienced problems ever since the amputation. Brashear married childhood friend Junetta Wilcox in 1952 and had four children -- Shazanta, DaWayne, Phillip and Patrick -- before their divorce in 1978. He later married Hattie R. Elam and Jeanette A. Brundage. Funeral arrangements are pending. *An excellent movie I may add Rest In Peace Sir. ![]() Last edited by Dreadnought : 07-26-2006 at 11:47 AM. |
|
|
|
|
|
#141 (permalink) |
|
Moderator
|
Indira Gandhi assassinated
1984: Indian prime minister shot dead
Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister of India, has been killed by assassins in New Delhi. Mrs Gandhi was thought to have been walking through her gardens this morning when she was shot. She was taken to the All India Medical Hospital where she underwent an emergency operation to remove the bullets but died an hour and a half later. Initial reports suggest the two attackers were guards at her home who were then shot by other security officers. No exact motive is known but it is believed the pair were Sikh extremists acting in retaliation for the storming of the Sikh holy shrine of the Golden Temple in Amritsar in June. Mrs Gandhi had been receiving death threats since the attack on the temple in which 1,000 people died. The night before her death she told a political rally: "I don't mind if my life goes in the service of the nation. If I die today, every drop of my blood will invigorate the nation." Security throughout the country has been stepped up. Roads to the hospital and the home of the prime minister have been sealed off and borders around Delhi have been closed. If I die today, every drop of my blood will invigorate the nation Indira Gandhi The Indian cabinet has started an emergency meeting to choose a successor. India's High Commissioner, Prakash Mehrotra, said: "Democracy is very deep rooted in our country and the country is prepared to face any situation. A meeting is being called in Delhi, it is usual that the number two man in the cabinet takes charge for the time being," Mrs Gandhi first became prime minister in 1966 and again in 1980 and was praised for her battle against famine in rural areas. Stan Orme from the Anglo Indian Parliamentary Association said: "It is a very terrible thing. She was a very impressive person, very strong-willed. It is a real tragedy." |
|
|
|
|
|
#142 (permalink) |
|
Senior Contributor
|
Today in History that REALLY matters..
Jaques Plante of the Montreal Canadiens, became the first goalie ever to wear a mask in hockey on this date 1959...after taking a puck in the head from New York Rangers player Andy Bathgate. After getting stiches to close the wound, he returned to the game with a Mask to protect his face, and thus the Goalie mask was invented!! oh and btw, the Canadians won that game 3-1 |
|
|
|
|
|
#143 (permalink) |
|
Senior Contributor
|
Today in History that REALLY matters..
Jaques Plante became the first goalie ever to wear a mask in hockey on this date 1959...after getting a puck in the head from New York Rangers player Andy Bathgate. After getting stiches to close the wound, he returned to the game with a Mask to protect his face, and thus the Goalie mask was invented!! |
|
|
|
|
|
#144 (permalink) |
|
Contributor
|
On This day....
1993: The EC was changed to EU.
1950: Harry Truman survives an assasination attempt as two Puerto Rican nationalists shoot their way into his private residence, killing one of his guards. 1984: Rajiv Gandhi is sworn in as India's premiere. Damn...nothing much happened this day in history....what a boring day. ![]()
__________________
...If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space! |
|
|
|
|
|
#145 (permalink) |
|
Contributor
|
1953: First announcement that Pakistan will adopt Islamic law.
1947: The "Spruce Goose" flew for the first and last time. It began construction in Culver City , California in 1942 and reportedly cost appx. 40 million dollars to build. 1976: Jimmy Carter becomes President-elect with an electoral vote of 297 to Gerald Ford's 241. (Gotta be one of the saddest days in american history) 1936: The world's first high definition (405-line) TV service was inaugurated by the British Broadcasting Corporation. It served 100 TV owners, all living within a radius of 25 miles from the studio At alexandria Palace, Noth London. 1917: The possiblity of a Jewish homeland in Palestine comes one step closer when the British government issues the so-called Balfour Declaration. 1957: Elvis Presely sets an all time record with 8 songs in the UK Top 30 simultaneously. 1960: A British jury of 12 found the book, "Lady Chatterly's Lover" to be not obscene, nor liable to deprave or corrupt those who read it. 1734: Daniel Boone was born. 1913: Burt Lancaster was born. |
|
|
|
|
|
#146 (permalink) | |
|
Senior Contributor
|
On this day in 1975, the Edmund Fitzgerald sunk in Lake Superior, due to a "November Gale", also known as the Witch of November, 29 med died as a result.
November Gales are massive storms which occur during early November, as winter sets in, Arctic cold fronts rolling off the praries clash with humid Gulf air masses coming up from the States, these two masses collide over the Great Lakes whose waters are still warm from the Summer, this warm water acts as fuel for these monsterous storms. One of the greatest November gale occured in 1913, when 250 people were killed, 19 ships were lost, another 19 stranded, and countless damaged. The loss of so many merchant ships made prices for consumer goods to temporarily rise throughout North America The Edmund Fitzgerald was the last commercial Laker to be lost due to a storm, since 1975, technological advances in weather prediction and communications have nearly made it impossible for a ship to be lost in a storm. Gordon Lightfoot wrote a song about the wreck, which has cemented the lost ship into history and the minds of people forever. Here are the Lyrics. Quote:
Last edited by Canmoore : 11-10-2006 at 15:12 PM. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#148 (permalink) |
|
Contrary by nature.
Military Professional
|
On this day...
461 St Leo I ends his reign as Catholic Pope 1483 Martin Luther Eisleben, Germany, founded Protestantism is born 1674 Dutch formally cede New Netherlands (NY) to English 1770 French philosopher Fran_'__ois Voltaire, 75, uttered his famous remark: 'If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him.' 1775 US Marine Corps established by Congress 1801 Kentucky outlaws dueling 1808 Osage Treaty signed 1836 Louis Napoleon banished to America 1864 Austrian Archduke Maximilian became emperor of Mexico 1871 Stanley presumes to meet Livingston in Ujiji, Central Africa 1891 1st Woman's Christian Temperance Union meeting held (in Boston) 1898 Race riot in Wilmington NC (8 blacks killed) 1917 41 suffragists are arrested in front of the White House 1918 Independence of Poland proclaimed by Jozef Pilsudski 1919 1st observance of National Book Week 1919 American Legion's 1st national convention (Minneapolis) 1926 Vincent Massey becomes 1st Canadian minister to USA 1938 Kemal Atarok 1st President of Turkey, dies 1928 Hirohito enthroned as Emperor of Japan 1940 Pittsburgh & Philadelphia play a penalty free NFL game 1945 College football's #1 Army beats #2 Notre Dame 48-0 1945 General Enver Hoxha becomes leader of Albania 1950 Jacobo Arbenz Guzm n elected President of Guatemala 1951 1st long distance telephone call without operator assistance 1954 Iwo Jima Memorial (servicemen raising US flag) dedicated in Arlington 1954 Lt Col John Strapp travels 632 MPH in a rocket sled 1957 NFL record crowd (102,368), '49ers vs Rams in LA 1960 Senate passes landmark Civil Rights Bill 1963 Gordie Howe takes over NHL career goal lead at 545 1968 Launch of Zond 6, 2nd unmanned circumlunar & return flight 1969 "Sesame Street" premieres on PBS TV 1970 Luna 17, with unmanned self-propelled Lunokhod 1, is launched 1971 US table tennis team arrived in China 1974 2nd meeting of Giants-Jets, Jets even series at 1 with 26-20 OT win 1974 Montreal Candiens shutout Washington Capitals 11-0 1975 Ore ship Edmund Fitzgerald & crew of 29 lost in storm on Lake Superior 1975 PLO leader Yasser Arafat addresses UN in NYC 1975 UN General Assembly approves resolution equating Zionism with racism 1976 Utah Supreme Court OKs execution of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore 1977 Major Indoor Soccer League officially organized (NYC) 1978 Israel's top negotiators broke away from Middle East peace talks 1978 Yanks trade Lyle, Rajsich, McCall, Heath & Ramos to Texas for Righetti, Mirabella, Beniquez, Jemison & Griffin 1980 Dan Rather refuses to pay his cabbie, CBS pays the $12.55 fare 1982 Leonid I Brezhnev Soviet 1st sect, dies of a heart attack at 75 1984 Miami Hurricanes blows 31-0 lead in 3rd quarter lose to MD 42-40 1986 River Rhine (Germany) polluted by chemical spill 1988 China confirms earthquake death toll will rise above current 938 1988 MLB All-Star team beats Japan 3-1 in Tokyo (Game 5 of 7) 1988 NY's MTA announces it may replace tokens with credit card type passes 1988 Orel Hershiser wins NL Cy Young award unanimously 1989 Guerrillas battle with government forces in El Salvador 1989 Germans begin punching holes in the Berlin Wall 1989 Word Perfect 5.1 is shipped 1990 Lebanon releases 2 French hostages (Camille Sontag & Marcel Coudari) 1991 Marty Glickman broadcasts his 1,000th football game 2084 Transit of Earth as seen from Mars Last edited by zraver : 11-10-2006 at 18:59 PM. |
|
|
|
|
|
#149 (permalink) |
|
Moderator
|
1965: Sir Winston Churchill dies
1965: Winston Churchill dies
![]() Sir Winston Churchill has died at the age of 90 with his wife Lady Clementine Churchill and other members of the family at his bedside. He suffered a stroke 15 days ago and gradually slipped into a deep sleep from which he never awakened. Sir Winston died in his London home at Hyde Park Gate. Earlier in his illness, there had been crowds anxiously waiting for news at the top of the quiet Kensington cul-de-sac - but when the announcement finally came there was only a handful of journalists in the street. Mourning crowds News of his death was announced on the BBC shortly after 0800 GMT. Within half-an-hour, crowds began to gather near his home to pay homage to Britain's greatest wartime leader. When Sir Winston fell ill, he was visited by one of the country's leading neurologists, Lord Brain, who advised on his treatment. Since then, regular medical bulletins have been issued by Sir Winston's own doctor, Lord Moran. Sir Winston has spent the past few days lying in the downstairs room he converted to a bedroom after a fall four years ago in which he injured his back. Members of the family were summoned to his bedside at 0700 GMT. Lady Churchill and the couple's eldest surviving daughter, Mary Soames, have been with him throughout his illness. Their son, Randolph Churchill was seen arriving with his son, Winston. Soon after, Sir Winston's actress daughter, Lady Sarah Audley, looking pale and drawn, arrived with her daughter, Celia Sandys. Many television and radio programmes have been cancelled or re-scheduled to make way for tributes to Sir Winston. Sir Winston will lie in state in Westminster Hall - an honour not accorded any English statesman since Gladstone in 1898. His body will remain there for three days, before the funeral at St Paul's cathedral on Saturday. |
|
|
|
|
|
#150 (permalink) | |
|
Moderator
|
Northern Ireland: The longest tour of duty is over
Northern Ireland: The longest tour of duty is over
Quote:
__________________
In the realm of spirit, seek clarity; in the material world, seek utility. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |