Popular posts from this blog
London crime walk: bankjobs and blowjobs
London crime walk: bankjobs and blowjobs Posted at 9:15 am, June 24, 2012 in Fun London From Oxford Circus to Shepherd Market, the great city crime walk promises to give you a taste of the seedier history of the West End this weekend. This walk takes the Eastcastle Street hold-up as its starting point, then heads down through Mayfair, where money, crime and sleaze have always been bedfellows. Just north-east of Oxford Circus, Eastcastle Street is now full of art galleries, but in 1952 it was a quiet backstreet of offices and warehouses. At 4am on May 21, a Post Office van was held up there and robbed of £287,000, equivalent to more than £6 million today. Prime Minister Winston Churchill put 1,000 police officers on the case, but no money was ever recovered. The raid was planned by Billy Hill, who ran various rackets in the West End, and it w...
Op Jiu Jitsu
Op Jiu Jitsu To successfully bomb targets in the Soviet Union, USAF SAC aircraft would have had to fly at high altitude and possibly in bad weather or at night, making it virtually impossible to identify targets visually. Navigation beacons could not go far into the USSR, so in order to correctly identify their targets, the navigators had to be able to recognise them from the radar images they created. Radar portrayed large towns and geographical features quite clearly, but it was difficult to predict how a radar picture of features like factories and missiles sites would actually appear. For guaranteed accuracy it was important that bombardiers should be provided with photographs of the radar images of their targets. The head of SAC, Gen Curtis LeMay, wanted to send SAC reconnaissance aircraft over the Soviet Union to obtain radar photographs, but was prevented by President Truman. Without this crucial target information, air planners could not accurately determine the enemy's v...



Comments
Post a Comment