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The FReeper Foxhole Profiles Lt Frank Luke Jr. Part 2 Oct. 21, 2005
Compiled by Iris7 | See Educational Resources

Posted on 10/20/2005 7:49:25 PM PDT by alfa6



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

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Lt Frank Luke Jr. Ballon Buster Part 2




September 12th, 1918. 0500 hours.

The St.-Mihiel Offensive begins.

It had been raining for days, and did not stop.

That morning Frank Luke and Joe Wehner took off together into the mist, rain, and fog. It is unlikely that Lieutenant Grant knew about it.

Wehner spotted a drachen near Montsec and approaching from behind and put 100 rounds into it. The balloon’s crew began winching it down rapidly, and considering the ceiling (no more than 800 meters at that time and day) the job couldn't have taken very long. Joe made another turn but the drachen was already in its nest. Though it never burned Joe requested confirmation of a balloon kill when he returned to base.Luke reported spotting three enemy aircraft near Lavigneville and that he flew east after them toward Pont-A-Mousson, where they disappeared toward Metz. Luke was now out of his sector. According to his flight report it was at this moment that Luke spotted a draken near Marieulles.

Frank came in shooting and closed to yards of the balloon before pulling off. The thing wasn’t burning. He throttled back and swung around again, flying his Spad dangerously close to the draken before firing. Nothing. A third time, with the frantic ground crew winching their draken down as fast as humanly possible, Frank Luke flew through the antiaircraft cannon and massed machine-gun fire and gave the Draken one last, long, frustrated burst. Both guns jammed, and Luke broke left to reduce the stoppage while simultaneously wheeling around for another pass.

But the partially deflated balloon had started to burn, and the flames now spread rapidly. In an instant - at exactly 8:09 a.m.- it exploded in a red ball, the flaming bag dropping the short distance to the ground to consume both the Draken and the winch crew.



Almost no one had believed he had shot down the Albatros on Aug. 16th. Rather than turn his Spad back toward Rembercourt, Frank put down near an American observation balloon on our side of the lines at Dieulouard. American infantrymen rose up out of their trenches as the wheels of Luke's Spad splashed through the French mud and hustled Luke into the trenches before his Spad attracted artillery fire. But, hey, no draken, no artillery fire!

The Americans in the trenches were most pleased to see the Draken destroyed. Wounded waiting in the front line trenches could be carried back to the doctors at 9:00 AM that day instead having to wait for dark to make the long muddy trip. Water, food, and ammunition could be brought up.



Luke had several of the officers write affidavits that Luke had indeed shot down the Drachen.

COMBAT REPORT - September 12, 1918

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

Saw three E. A. (enemy aircraft) near Lavigneville and gave chase, following them directly east towards Pont- a-Mousson where they disappeared towards Metz. Saw enemy balloon at Marieulles. Destroyed it after three passes at it. Each within a few yards of the balloon. The third pass was made when the balloon was very near the ground.

Both guns stopped, so pulled off to one side. Fixed left gun and turned about to make one final effort to burn it. The next instant it burst into great flames and dropped on the winch, destroying it.

There was a good field near our balloons, so landed for confirmation. The observer, Joseph M. Fox, who saw the burning, said he thought everal were killed when it burst into flames so near the ground. Left field and started back when my motor began cutting out. Returned to same field and there found out my motor could not be fixed, so returned by motor cycle. Attached you will find confirmation from Lieutenant Fox and Lieutenant Smith. Both saw burning.


Luke’s Spad was picked up that night. The squadron head mechanic inspected Luke’s Spad and said:

"Lieutenant, I've seen a lot of planes come in. But when they come in this way, the bird that drives 'em gets it and he gets it fast."

Luke grinned.

"They can't get me. Look at that!" - inserting a finger in the hole through the seat - "Why didn't that one hit me?"

Patrols on the 13th yielded no results.

The 14th was another successful day for the young Arizonan.

COMBAT REPORT - September 14, 1918 [Morning Patrol]

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

Left formation at Abaucourt and attacked an enemy balloon near Boinville. Dove at it six times at close range. Had two stoppages with left gun which carried incendiary bullets and, after fixing both, continued the attack. After about seventy-five rounds being left in right gun, I attacked an Archie battery at the base of the balloon. Am sure that my fire took effect as the crews scattered.



After my first attack on the balloon the observer jumped after he shot at me. The last I saw of the balloon, it was on the ground in a very flabby condition.Confirmation requested.


Compare Luke's report to Lt. Dawson's:

I [Dawson] left the formation over Moranville and attacked an enemy balloon near Boinville, diving at it three times and emptying both guns. Tracers entered it in great numbers. The observer jumped and the balloon was hauled down in a very flabby condition. White flaming balls were fired at me. Lt. Luke was below the balloon firing at the Archie battery. I left after the balloon had struck the ground it was not sent up again, at the time I left, twenty minutes later. From what I could observe it was very badly shot up.



And Lt. Lennon's version:

Followed Lt. Luke and Dawson. Saw them attack enemy ballon in vicinity of Boinville. Observed that the observer jumped and enemy archie began to burst. The balloon flattened out and went to the ground. I dove on it and fired 50 round from each gun. The last I saw of balloon it was on the ground in a very flabby condition.

That afternoon the 27th was ordered to attack another draken over Buzy. When Hartney briefed his officers (the now Captain Grant, Lt. Lawson, Lt. Clapp, and Lt. Lennon) on the plan Clapp suggested the unwelcome Luke be given the hazardous assignment. If he succeeded, fine. If he failed he would ship out. If he died they wouldn't lose much sleep over it. Luke would dart out of the formation to be the "shooter;" and only Joe Wehner would cover him.

September 14, 1918 [Afternoon Patrol]

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

I and Lieutenant Wehner were to leave with formation to attack enemy balloon by order of C. O. On arriving at Buzy, left formation and brought down enemy balloon in flames. While fixing my guns so I could attack another balloon near by, eight enemy Fokkers dropped down on me. Pulled away from them. They scored several good shots on my plane. I saw Lieutenant Wehner dive through enemy formation and attack two enemy planes on my tail; but, as my guns were jammed, did not turn, as I was not sure it was an Allied plane until he joined me later. You will find attached confirmation of balloon.




Lieutenant Wehner had been flying high cover for Lieutenant Luke. He had saved Frank from death, and neither for the first nor the last time.

With two confirmed balloons to his credit the other pilots could no longer call Luke a liar. Mad, maybe, arrogant certainly, a jerk, an ass, whatever, but not a liar.

According to Hartney Luke tried to go up on an unauthorized third patrol at dusk in another pilot's plane and was massively chewed out by Captain Grant. Major Hartney persuaded him to fill out his combat reports and accept Grant's orders. Joe Wehner did fly that evening; and while a French flier beat him to the balloon, he shot down two Fokker D-VII's (although not confirmed).

By the evening of the 14th the legend of Frank Luke had begun to take shape. He was no longer dismissed as only a flake. Perhaps he was boastful and unpopular but he and Wehner had "the right stuff". They had destroyed three balloons and fought off defending German fighters. To Mitchell, Hartney, and other American commanders, the 27th seemed to be the unit to tackle the heavily defended "sausages." With Luke and Wehner on the sharp end.



The next morning, the pattern continued. As specifically noted in Frank's combat report, he was ordered to leave formation and attack the gasbags at Boinville and Bois d'Hingry

COMBAT REPORT - September 15, 1918 [Morning Patrol]

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

I left formation and attacked an enemy balloon at Boinville in accordance with instructions and destroyed it. I fired 125 rounds. I then attacked another balloon near Bois d'Hingry and fired fifty rounds into it. Two confirmations requested.

Wehner kept pace with his deadly friend, burning two balloons and shooting down two Fokkers that tried to get on Luke's tail. A very nice piece of teamwork by our two youngsters.



Luke had noticed that the German fighters left the draken in time to land in the late dusk while there was still some light. The draken were therefore without air cover during the late evening. A Spad could fly low across no man’s land at part throttle and not be noticed from the balloon against the dark ground while the Draken could be seen against the sky glow of late dusk. With luck, the draken installation would not realize they were under attack until the Spad was perhaps a mile away. The Spad at full throttle then climbed and fired into the German balloon. Starting from a four mile distance the Spad could complete an attack run within the four minutes. Seems a short time, hey? Four minutes is the time it took Frank Luke to flame one Draken and then another one four miles away on the evening of September 16th, as is described by Edward Rickenbacker below. Luke proposed to rely on a lit-up airfield to land safely, and pure cussedness for navigation.

His evening patrol report follows:

COMBAT REPORT - September 15, 1918 [Evening Patrol]

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

Patrolled to observe enemy activity. Left a little after formation, expecting to find it on the lines. On arriving there I could not find formation but saw artillery firing on both sides. Also saw a light at about 500 meters. At first I thought it was an observation machine but on nearing it I found that it was a Hun balloon, so I attacked and destroyed it. I was Archied with white fire, and machine guns were very active. Returned very low. Saw thousands of small lights in woods north of Verdun. On account of darkness coming on I lost my way and landed in a French wheat field at Agers about twenty-one hours thirty. Balloon went down in flames at nineteen hours fifty.


Records from German Balloon Company Eighteen of Balloon Battalion Thirty- three confirmed these victories.



Wehner had shot down two balloons and three combat planes in three days, and Luke had killed six draken. Most likely the other pilots of the 27th sucked it up a bit. One likes to see the good guys win.Lieutenants Luke and Wehner became celebrities. Congratulations came in from other units and reporters asked for interviews. Newspapers back home carried the story. I don’t like this vulgar display forced on such men but the media are like bedbugs or lice, ubiquitous and grotesque even then.

On the morning of September 16 Luke and Wehner again patrolled the front. The German balloon line had become wary. Twice they sighted German balloons, and twice the bags were hastily landed before they could be attacked. Not terribly hard to see why, hey.

The very dangerous balloon attacks became entertainment that evening when Hartney invited Col. Billy Mitchell to watch the show.
v In the late afternoon Mitchell and sundry brass arrived in a Mercedes auto. Luke and Wehner did a show and tell, a song and dance, and then it was getting to be time for the show itself. Some American artillery began to fire and the German balloons rose up a bit to get a better view of the muzzle flashes.

As dusk deepened Luke and Wehner left Major Hartney’s headquarters and walked to their machines. Luke pointed to the two plainly visible German observation balloons to the east of the field, suspended in the sky about two miles back of the German lines and perhaps four miles apart.

From Captain Edward Rickenbacker:

“Keep your eyes on these two balloons”, said Frank as he passed us. "You will see that first one there go up in flames exactly at 7:15 and the other will do likewise at 7:19."

We had little idea he would really get either of them, but we all gathered together out in the open as the time grew near and kept our eyes glued to the distant specks in the sky. Suddenly, Major Hartney exclaimed, 'There goes the first one!' It was true! A tremendous flare of flame lighted up the horizon. We all glanced at our watches. It was exactly 7:15 on the dot!

"The intensity of our gaze towards the location of the second Hun balloon may be imagined. It had grown too dusk to distinguish the balloon itself, but we well knew the exact point in the horizon were it hung. Not a word was spoken as we alternately glanced at the second-hands of our watches and then at the eastern skyline. Almost upon the second our watching group yelled simultaneously. A small blaze first lit up the point at which we were gazing. Almost instantaneously another gigantic burst of flames announced to us that the second balloon had been destroyed. It was a most spectacular exhibition."



COMBAT REPORT - September 16, 1918

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

Patrol to strafe balloons. Everything very carefully arranged. Lt Wehner and I left airdrome passing over Verdun. We attacked balloon in vicinity of Reville at 19 h 03. Both Lt. Wehner and I shot a burst into it. It burst into flames and fell on observer who had jumped a few seconds before. We started for another balloon in vicinity of Romagne. I attacked and destroyed it. It burst into flames on the ground, burning winch. The anti-aircraft guns were very active scoring several good hits on my plane. The last I saw of Lt. Wehner he was going in a south-easterly direction after the first balloon went down. I shot at supply trains on my way back. Two confirmations requested.

COMBAT REPORT - September 16, 1918

Lieutenant J. F. Wehner reports:

Patrol to strafe balloons. Flew north-east passing over Verdun and attacked balloon in vicinity of Reville with Lt. Luke at 19 h 05. We each fired one burst when I observed that it instantly caught fire. The observer jumped but was burned to death by the flaming balloon before reaching the ground. I headed towards the Meuse river trying to pick up another balloon; could not locate one so headed towards Verdun. On the way back saw a fire in the vicinity of Romagne which evidently was Lt. Luke's second balloon. While waiting for Lt. Luke near Verdun saw red flare over Mangiennes. Thinking it our prearranged signal from Lt. Luke, I headed in that direction. Saw balloon just above the tree tops near Mangiennes and brought it down in flames with one burst at 19 h 35. Anti-aircraft very active. Two confirmations requested.



Three Draken destroyed the 16th.

September 17 - no reported combat

September 18 - Joe Wehner was killed. The two men destroyed two draken over Labeuville and were attacked by several German fighters. Wehner was killed and Luke shot down three.

COMBAT REPORT - September 18, 1918

Lieutenant Frank Luke reports:

Lieutenant Wehner and I left the airdrome at 16 h 00 to spot enemy balloons. Over St. Mihiel we saw two German balloons near Labeuville. Maneuvered in the clouds and dropped down, burning both. We were then attacked by a number of E.A. (enemy aircraft), the main formation attacking Lieutenant Wehner, who was above and on one side. I started climbing to join the fight when two E. A. attacked me from the rear. I turned on them, opening both guns on the leader. We came head on until within a few yards of each other when my opponent turned to one side in a nose dive and I saw him crash to the ground.

I then turned on the second, shot a short burst, and he turned and went into a dive. I saw a number of E. A. above but could not find Lieutenant Wehner, so turned and made for our lines. The above fight occurred in the vicinity of St. Hilaire. On reaching our balloon line, flew east. Saw Archie on our side, flew toward it, and found an enemy observation machine. I gave chase with some other Spads and got (cut) him off from his lines. After a short encounter he crashed within our lines, southeast of Verdun. Lieutenant Wehner is entitled to share in the victories over both the balloons. Confirmations requested, two balloons and three planes


Frank Luke was now the leading American ace with four planes and ten balloons destroyed. Of these fourteen thirteen had been destroyed in one week during which he had flown on five days.

This photo was taken the next day, showing Luke standing in front of the wreckage of the observation aircraft he had destroyed the previous evening:



A newsman put Luke in front of the September 18th Halberstadt and took this photo. I believe I can see that Luke finds this fellow vulgar. Notice the strain showing around the eyes. Lieutenant Luke is twenty-one years and four months old.






FReeper Foxhole Armed Services Links




TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: frankluke; freeperfoxhole; history; wwi
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To: texianyankee

Good morning. How's it going?


21 posted on 10/21/2005 5:11:19 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: alfa6

My pleasure.


22 posted on 10/21/2005 5:14:38 AM PDT by Jet Jaguar
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To: E.G.C.

It's going well this morning. I have the day off, so a long weekend for me.
Hope all is well with you & yours.....


23 posted on 10/21/2005 5:18:04 AM PDT by texianyankee
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To: texianyankee
Long weekend for the kids here in Oklahoma with school out for teacher's meeting in Tulsa. Dad's having a birthday tommorow. He turns 83.

Also OU homecoming tommorow with their game vs. Baylor at 6 tommorow night on Fox Sports Net.

24 posted on 10/21/2005 5:36:47 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: alfa6; snippy_about_it; bentfeather; Samwise; Peanut Gallery; Wneighbor; Valin; Iris7; SAMWolf; ...
Good morning ladies and gents. Flag-o-Gram.

Combat colors
BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan -- (From left) Staff Sgt. Stephen Manley, Senior Airman Robert Welch, Tech. Sgt. Xavier Sanford and Senior Airman Gary McCormick present the colors during a change of command ceremony here May 15. Sergeant Sanford is assigned to the 455th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron, and Sergeant Manley and Airmen Welch and McCormick are assigned to the 455th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt. Mark D. Gibson)

Check the thread count on the flag size.

25 posted on 10/21/2005 5:37:51 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (Yes, the world does revolve around us. We picked the coordinate system.)
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To: bentfeather

Hi miss Feather.

TGIF! Two whole working days without phone calls until Monday.


26 posted on 10/21/2005 5:42:23 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (Yes, the world does revolve around us. We picked the coordinate system.)
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To: E.G.C.

That game with Baylor ought to be a good one - Baylor aint a pushover this season.

Best wishes to your Dad.


27 posted on 10/21/2005 5:50:12 AM PDT by texianyankee
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To: Professional Engineer

Howdy PE!!

Today is Friday, I knew it would come around sooner or later. LOL


28 posted on 10/21/2005 5:50:42 AM PDT by Soaring Feather (If down is up, is up, down. Feathers in the wind.)
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To: Iris7; alfa6; snippy_about_it

27th Aero Squadron insignia from Lt. Frank Luke's SPAD XIII.


29 posted on 10/21/2005 6:38:52 AM PDT by SAMWolf (The cost of feathers has risen, now even down is up)
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To: Victoria Delsoul

It took long enough getting here. ;-)


30 posted on 10/21/2005 6:39:36 AM PDT by SAMWolf (The cost of feathers has risen, now even down is up)
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To: Professional Engineer
Check the thread count on the flag size.

LOL! I do like seeing the Warthog. :-)

31 posted on 10/21/2005 6:42:15 AM PDT by SAMWolf (The cost of feathers has risen, now even down is up)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: alfa6

On This Day In History


Birthdates which occurred on October 21:
1760 Katsushika Hokusai (d.1849), Japanese printmaker,
born. Hokusai was a master designer of color woodblock prints. His paintings included 36 views of Mt. Fuji.
1772 Samuel Taylor Coleridge England, poet (Rime of the Ancient Mariner)
1803 George Wright Brig General (Union volunteers), died in 1865
1833 Alfred Bernhard Nobel Stockholm, created dynamite & Peace Prizes
1912 Sir Georg Solti Budapest Hungary, conductor (Fidelio)
1914 Martin Gardner Scientific American math & puzzles columnist
1917 Dizzy Gillespie trumpeter, a creator of Bee Bop
1925 Joyce Randolph Detroit Mich, actress (Trixie-Honeymooners)
1928 Edward "Whitey" Ford hall of fame pitcher (NY Yankees)
1929 Ursula LeGuin American writer (Lathe of Heaven)
1933 Georgia Brown actress (Study in Terror, The Fixer)
1940 Frances FitzGerald NYC, journalist/author (Fire in the Lake)
1940 Manfred Mann rocker (The Mighty Quinn)
1940 Osamu Watanabe Japan, featherweight (Olympic-gold-1964)
1942 Elvin Bishop Okla, rocker/Blues guitarist, National Merit Scholar, Paul Butterfield Blues Band
1943 Paula Kelly Jacksonville Fla, dancer/actress (Liz-Night Court)
1949 Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli prime minister
1950 Ronald E McNair Lake City SC, astr(STS 41B, 51L-Challenger disaster)
1953 Charlotte Caffey singer (GoGos-Our Lips are Sealed)
1956 Carrie Fisher Beverly Hills, actress (Star Wars-Princess Lelia)



Deaths which occurred on October 21:
1422 Charles VI, King of France (1380-1422), dies at 54
1439 Traversari Ambrosius (53), Italian humanist and leader, died
1805 Adm Horatio Nelson dies in the Battle of Trafalgar
The Nelson Society
http://www.nelson-society.org.uk/
1831 Nat Turner 19 associates, hung
1966 Gertrude Hoffman actress (Mrs Odetts-My Little Margie), dies at 95
1967 Ejnar Hertzsprung Danish astrophysicist, dies at 94
1969 Jack Kerouac (47), Beat Generation chronicler, dies of alcoholism in St. Petersburg, Fla. ("On the Road", "Dharma Bums.")
1984 Francois Truffaut director, dies at 52 of brain cancer
(Fahrenheit 451 (1966) (screenplay)
1992 Jackson Weaver, voice of Smokey the Bear, dies of diabetes
1992 Jim Garrison, Louisiana DA (investigate JFK assassination), dies at 70
1992 Shirley Booth, actress (Hazel), dies at 94
1995 Maxene Andrews, vocalist (Andrews Sister), dies of heart attack at 79


Take A Moment To Remember
GWOT Casualties

Iraq
21-Oct-2003 1 | US: 1 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Private 1st Class Paul J. Bueche Balad - Salah ad Din Non-hostile - maintenance accident



Afghanistan
10/21/04 Samek, Jesse M. Airman 1st Class 21 Air Force 66th Rescue Squadron Helicopter crash 106 mi. E. of Shindand


http://icasualties.org/oif/
Data research by Pat Kneisler
Designed and maintained by Michael White
//////////
Go here and I'll stop nagging.
http://www.amillionthanks.org/


On this day...
2137 BC 1st recorded total eclipse of the sun China
0310 St Eusebius ends his reign as Catholic Pope
0335 Constantinople emperor (Constantine the Great) enacted rules against Jews.
0686 Conon begins his reign as Catholic Pope
1096 Sultan Kilidj Arslan of Nicea defeats 1st Crusaders
1520 Magellan entered the strait which bears his name
(Ok, Name the strait. the 4th correct answer will win a valuable prize. Did I say valuable? I really meant invaluable...copacetic...meritorious...one might almost say keen. Oh your friends and neighbor will turn green with envy, and I can't say I blame them. So submit your entry along with $5.00 to cover S&H
Notice: all answers are property of Valin and/or "bunco."
"Remember at bunco you get what you pay for"
1529 The Pope names Henry VIII of England Defender of the Faith after defending the seven sacraments against Luther
1790 The Tricolor is chosen as the official flag of France.
(That would be white..off-white..eggshell white)

1797 US Navy frigate Constitution, Old Ironsides, launched in Boston
(SUPER FRIGATES - AMERICA'S HIGH TECH WEAPONS OF THE 1790's
http://www.geocities.com/Broadway/Alley/5443/supfrig.htm)

1805 Battle of Trafalgar, Adm Nelson defeats French & Spanish fleet & dies
1824 Joseph Aspdin patents Portland cement
1861 Battle of Balls Bluff, Va. Defeat sparks Congressional investigations
1867 Many leaders of the Kiowa, Comanche and Kiowa-Apache sign a peace treaty at Medicine Lodge, Kan. Comanche Chief Quanah Parker refused to accept the treaty terms.
1871 1st US amateur outdoor athletic games (NY)
1879 Thomas Edison perfects the carbonized cotton filament light bulb
1897 Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago is dedicated
1915 1st transatlantic radiotelephone message, Arlington, Va to Paris
1916 US Army forms Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC)

1917 1st Americans to see action on the front lines of WW I. First Division of the U.S. Army enters the front lines at Sommervillier under French command

1918 Margaret Owen sets world typing speed record of 170 wpm for 1 min
1923 Deutsches Museum, Munchen, 1st Walther Bauersfeld Zeiss Planetarium
1935 Hank Greenberg selected AL MVP unanimously
1944 During WWII, US troops capture Aachen, 1st large German city to fall
1945 Women in France allowed to vote for 1st time
1948 Beersheba liberated by the Israeli army
1948 Facsimile high-speed radio transmission demonstrated (Washington DC)
1950 Chinese forces occupy Tibet
1950 Tom Powers of Duke scores 6 touchdowns
1957 “Jailhouse Rock” starring Elvis Presley opened
1959 Dr. Werner Von Braun starts work at NASA.
1960 JFK & Nixon clashed in 4th & final presidential debate (NYC)
1966 144 die as a coal waste landslide engulfs a school in S Wales
1967 Thousands opposing Vietnam War try to storm the Pentagon
1969 Bloodless coup in Somalia (National Day)
1970 777 Unification church couples wed in Korea
1971 Nixon nominates Lewis F Powell & William H Rehnquist to US Supreme Court, following resignations of Justices Hugo Black & John Harlan
1973 A's manager Dick Williams quits after A's beat Mets in 70th World Series
1975 Venera 9, first craft to orbit the planet Venus launched
1976 American Saul Bellow wins Nobel Prize for Literature
1976 Cin Reds sweep NY Yankees, in 73rd World Series
1976 NY Knicks retire 1st number, # 19, Willis Reed
1977 US recalls William Bowdler, ambassador to South Africa
1979 Greta Waitz wins woman participation in NYC marathon (02:27:33)
1980 1st (& only) time Phillies win the World Series (in 98 years) (World Series #77)
1984 Steve Jones runs Chicago Marathon in world record 2:08:05
1987 Senate debate begins rejecting Robert Bork's Supreme Ct nomination
1988 Ferdinand & Imelda Marcos indicted on racketeering charges
1989 Buck Helm found alive after being buried 4 days, in SF earthquake
1989 Houston becomes 1st major college team to gain 1000 yards in a game
1989 1st black owners (Betram Lee & Peter Bynoe) to own a major sports team, purchasing Denver Nuggets for $65m
1991 US hostage Jesse Turner released from 5 years in captivity in Beirut
1991 Former California Governor Jerry "Governor Moonbeam" Brown announced his presidential candidacy.
1992 New York protesters upset with Sinead O'Connor for ripping up a photo of Pope John Paul II on "Saturday Night Live" use a steamroller to crush dozens of the Irish singer's CDs, records and tapes.
1993 Military coup by Burundi Pres Ndadaye/525,000 Hutu's flee
1996 Mayor of Algiers, Ali Boucetta, killed by a stray bullet in fighting between security forces and terrorists in Algiers.
1997 Reversing months of strong opposition, the Clinton administration endorsed a revised Republican bill to restructure the Internal Revenue Service and shift the burden of proof from the taxpayer to the government in contested court cases.
1997 Pictures of the Antennae galaxies, two intermeshed colliding galaxies, were taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in 1996 and revealed to the public for the first time
1999 A French-led expedition chopped clear the fully preserved carcass of a 20 thousand-year-old woolly mammoth, the "Jarkov Mammoth," from the permafrost of Siberia at Khatanga, Russia.
2002 Pres. Bush said he would try diplomacy "one more time," but did not think Saddam Hussein would disarm, even if doing so would allow him to remain in power.
2003 Pope John Paul II added 30 names to the list of his possible successors, installing a diverse collection of cardinals.
2004 Negotiations between the Sudanese government and the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), an umbrella organization for opposition groups from around Sudan, opened in Cairo under the auspices of Egypt.



Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

England : Trafalgar Day (1805)
Hondurous : Army Day (1956)
Hong Kong : Kite Flying Festival
Laos : Full Moon Holiday
Somali/Sudan : Revolution Day (1964)
National Business Women's Week (Day 6)
National Shampoo Week Ends
National Babbling Day (So I guess that means a person is supposed to babble today, but what happens to you if you don't babble? I mean will the government come and arrest you for felony nonbabbling? It's my opinion the the government has much more important things....OOOHHH look a bright sparkly thing! I really like sparkly things, the way the light reflects off it when you put it in the sun light. We don't have any sun light here today the sky is a nice calming shade of gray...almost a zone V so if you are in Mpls you could go out and calabrate your camera to make sure the light meter is correct....gosh I sure hope it doesn't rain because it's friday and I hate rain on friday, although if it rains late at night when people are asleep I guess it ok.......
(For more on Professional babbling send $10.00 Valin @ Bunco. Remember at Bunco you get what you pay for)
Count Your Buttons Day
National Clock Month
Spinal Health Month
National Sarcastics' Awareness Month


Religious Observances
RC : Commemoration of St Hilarion, abbot, ascetic, lover of solitude
RC : Commemoration of St Ursula, virgin, patron of brides


Religious History
1532 German reformer Martin Luther declared: 'For some years now I have read through the Bible twice every year. If you picture the Bible to be a mighty tree and every word a little branch, I have shaken every one of these branches because I wanted to know what it was and what it meant.'
1692 William Penn was deposed as Governor of Pennsylvania. His overtures of gratefulness to James II for permitting religious freedom for dissenters of the Church of England led William and Mary to charge Penn with being a papist.
1751 The first Baptist association in the American South was organized at Charleston, SC. It was formed under the initiative of Oliver Hart, who had left the Philadelphia area to become pastor of the Charleston Baptist Church in 1749.
1808 Birth of American Baptist clergyman Samuel Francis Smith. Credited with writing over 100 hymns, Smith is best remembered as the author of "America" ("My Country, 'Tis of Thee"), written at age 23, while a student at Andover Seminary.
1892 Birth of James L Kelso, American Presbyterian archaeologist. He participated in digs at the biblical sites of Debir, Bethel and Jericho, and authored the text "Ceramic Vocabulary of the O.T."

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.


Car Ticketed With Dead Body at the Wheel

Oct 21, 6:26 AM (ET)


SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - A traffic warden slapped a parking ticket on a car which had its dead driver slumped at the wheel outside an Australian shopping mall, an official said Friday.

The body of the 71-year-old man, whose identity was not immediately released, was discovered Thursday in a parking lot in the southern city of Melbourne, The Age newspaper reported Friday.
The man had been reported missing nine days earlier and was known to be seriously ill, the newspaper said.

Nevertheless, a parking officer who inspected the vehicle failed to notice the man inside and issued the parking fine two days before his body was discovered.

Paul Denham, the mayor of Maroondah council, where the man was found, said the parking officer was "distressed" to learn that the dead man had been inside the car.
"Our local laws officer checked and wrote out the ticket at the rear of the vehicle and placed the ticket from the passenger side on the windscreen," Denham said in a statement. "The local laws officer did not notice anything unusual regarding the vehicle, and is extremely distressed to have learned of the situation."


Thought for the day :
"Second to agriculture, humbug is the biggest industry of our age."
Alfred Nobel


32 posted on 10/21/2005 6:48:10 AM PDT by Valin (The right to do something does not mean that doing it is right.)
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To: Valin
1956 Carrie Fisher Beverly Hills, actress (Star Wars-Princess Lelia)

Regards

alfa6 ;>}

33 posted on 10/21/2005 7:13:17 AM PDT by alfa6 (Work....the curse of the drinking class.)
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To: Valin
1959 Dr. Werner Von Braun starts work at NASA.

Tom Lehrer
Wernher von Braun

Gather 'round while I sing you of Wernher von Braun,
A man whose allegiance
Is ruled by expedience.
Call him a Nazi, he won't even frown,
"Ha, Nazi, Schmazi," says Wernher von Braun.

Don't say that he's hypocritical,
Say rather that he's apolitical.
"Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down?
That's not my department," says Wernher von Braun.

Some have harsh words for this man of renown,
But some think our attitude
Should be one of gratitude,
Like the widows and cripples in old London town,
Who owe their large pensions to Wernher von Braun.**

You too may be a big hero,
Once you've learned to count backwards to zero.
"In German oder English I know how to count down,
Und I'm learning Chinese!" says Wernher von Braun.

Regards

alfa6 ;>}

34 posted on 10/21/2005 7:22:18 AM PDT by alfa6 (Work....the curse of the drinking class.)
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To: alfa6

Tom Lehrer, when the left had a sense of humor. I remember when this song came out...I was shocked. "That Was The Week That Was" played his stuff alot (as I recall)


35 posted on 10/21/2005 7:39:00 AM PDT by Valin (The right to do something does not mean that doing it is right.)
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To: Valin
1797 US Navy frigate Constitution, Old Ironsides, launched in Boston
(SUPER FRIGATES - AMERICA'S HIGH TECH WEAPONS OF THE 1790's


36 posted on 10/21/2005 8:15:26 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (Yes, the world does revolve around us. We picked the coordinate system.)
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To: Valin

Tom Lehrer would have been a liberal in the Hubert Humphrey mold I would guess. I have all three of his albums on cassette somewhere, what a hoot.

I actually had the "honor" of getting to shake Sen Humphrey's hand while in high school during the 1968 election campaign.

IIRC one of the teachers had connections with the Democratic party in the St. Louis area and convinced the Humphrey campaign that it would be a good Photo op for ol Hubert to be seen at a local military school there in St Louis.

While I did not support his candidacy I've on occasion wondered what things would have been like had he been elected.

ANother for the what if file, eh?


37 posted on 10/21/2005 8:20:08 AM PDT by alfa6 (Work....the curse of the drinking class.)
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To: Valin; alfa6
1959 Dr. Werner Von Braun starts work at NASA.

Picture on my desk.


38 posted on 10/21/2005 8:27:49 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (Yes, the world does revolve around us. We picked the coordinate system.)
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To: Professional Engineer

LOL. So you know about thread count 'eh?


39 posted on 10/21/2005 1:59:26 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: Iris7
(Have three daughters, always evaluating available material!)

LOL. I'd bet that you are a hard sell!

40 posted on 10/21/2005 2:01:11 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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