Thursday, July 16, 2026

TheList 7596

7596

Good Thursday morning July 15 2026 .The Heat wave is here and heating up 90 by 1 and staying into the high 80s until 5 or so.
Take care of yourselves where ever you are.
Cool  Regards,
skip


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This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History July 16

This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)
Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.  Go here to see the director’s corner for all 100 H-Grams

July 16
July 16

1862 Congress establishes the rank of Rear Admiral, with David G. Farragut named as the first Rear Admiral.
1863 The screw sloop of war USS Wyoming, commanded by Capt. D. McDougal, is fired on by shore batteries and Japanese ships of the Prince of Nagoya. During this action, Wyoming became the first foreign warship to take the offensive to uphold treaty rights in Japan.

1915 The first Navy ships, the battleships USS Ohio (BB 12), USS Missouri (BB 11), and USS Wisconsin (BB 9) transit the Panama Canal, steaming from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

1945 The first atomic bomb test, Trinity, is detonated at Alamogordo, N.M.

1957 An F8U 1P Crusader (Bu#144608), piloted by Maj. John H. Glenn, Jr., USMC, breaks the transcontinental speed record by crossing the country from Los Alamitos, Calif., to Floyd Bennett Field, N.Y., in three hours and 22 min., 50.5 sec. for an average speed of 723.517 mph. This is the first upper atmosphere supersonic flight from the West Coast to the East Coast.
Unfortunately the aircraft now lies on the bottom of the Tonkin Gulf as a result of a ramp strike on USS Oriskany in 1972.It had a nice bronze plaque on the side comerating the event and it already had a spot in the National Air Museum

1987 Republic of Korea Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Choe Sang-Hwa gives a model of the Korean Turtle "Kobuksan" to Secretary of the Navy James Webb Jr. as a symbol of the partnership between the two nations.

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Today in World History
July 16
1765    English Prime Minister Lord Grenville resigns and is replaced by Lord Rockingham.
1774    Russia and the Ottoman Empire sign the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainardji, ending their six-year war.
1779    American troops under General Anthony Wayne capture Stony Point, N.Y.
1861    The first battle of Bull Run
1875    The new French constitution is finalized.
1882    Mary Todd Lincoln, the widow of Abraham Lincoln, dies of a stroke.
1940    Adolf Hitler orders preparations for the invasion of England.
1944    Soviet troops occupy Vilnius, Lithuania, in their drive towards Germany.
1945    The United States detonates the first atomic bomb in a test at Alamogordo, N. M.
1969    Apollo 11 blasts off from Cape Kennedy, Florida, heading for a landing on the moon.
1999    A private plane piloted by John F. Kennedy Jr. is lost over the waters off Martha’s Vineyard, Mass.


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Rollingthunderremembered.com .

July 16
Thanks to Dan Heller and the Bear
Links to all content can now be found right on the homepage http://www.rollingthunderremembered.com. If you scroll down from the banner and featured content you will find "Today in Rolling Thunder Remembered History" which highlights events in the Vietnam war that occurred on the date the page is visited. Below that are links to browse or search all content. You may search by keyword(s), date, or date range.
An item of importance is the recent incorporation of Task Force Omega (TFO) MIA summaries. There is a link on the homepage and you can also visit directly via https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/task-force-omega/. There are 60 summaries posted thus far, with about 940 to go (not a typo—TFO has over 1,000 individual case files).
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Thanks to Micro
To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and get what happened each day to the crew of the aircraft. ……Skip

For Thursday July 16


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From the archives
Thanks to Wigs. A couple years ago He told me he had sent something special. He was correct. Please watch this one…..Skip


. Peter van Uhm: Why I chose a gun
http://www.ted.com Peter van Uhm is the Netherlands' chief of defense, but that does not mean he is pro-war. At TEDxAmsterdam he explains how his career is one shaped by a love of peace, not a desire for bloodshed -- and why we need armies if we want peace. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED ...
www.youtube.com

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Thanks to Brett


July 15, 2026   

    As Iran Declines, Turkey Advances
Ankara is leveraging Tehran’s weakening position to extend its reach across the Fertile Crescent and beyond.
By: Kamran Bokhari

For all the attention paid to the conflict in Iran, the broader changes in the Middle East have gone largely ignored, particularly with regard to Turkey. Egyptian Defense Minister Lt. Gen. Ashraf Salem Zaher arrived in Ankara on July 12 at the head of a high-level delegation for talks on expanding bilateral military cooperation. The visit came just two weeks after Turkish Chief of the General Staff Gen. Selcuk Bayraktaroglu led a senior military delegation to Cairo. Earlier, on July 10, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul, where he called for elevating bilateral ties to a “strategic partnership” at a moment when Beirut, squeezed between Israeli military pressure and Hezbollah’s resistance to disarmament, is seeking external leverage. Meanwhile, Turkish intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalin held high-level security consultations in Baghdad on June 30 with President Nizar Amedi, Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi and other senior officials before traveling to Irbil, Sulaimaniyah and Kirkuk for meetings with Kurdistan Regional Government leaders Masoud Barzani and Bafel Talabani.

Taken together, these developments build on the momentum generated by the NATO summit in Ankara on July 7-8, which reinforced Turkey’s standing as an emerging geopolitical power and provided the backdrop for Turkish-backed Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Washington’s strategy for the Middle East rests on two pillars: to weaken Iran and to foster a new geopolitical order anchored by Turkey, Arab states and Pakistan. The approach reflects Washington’s broader desire to offload security responsibilities to regional allies and partners as it seeks to reduces its military and economic exposure in the Eastern Hemisphere. Turkey is a linchpin to its plans, as Turkish influence in Syria could shape political and security outcomes in both Lebanon and Iraq. The underlying objective is to prevent Tehran from reclaiming the dominant position it has enjoyed in those countries for decades, even as it preserves a favorable and cheaper balance of power.

For now, Turkish and U.S. interests align. For more than a millennium, the northern rim of the Middle East has been an arena for geopolitical competition between Turkic and Persian powers. In the modern era, Iran’s contiguous arc of influence had obstructed Turkey’s ambitions to revive its influence along its southern flank – that is, until war broke out after the Oct. 7 attacks.

The response to those attacks severely weakened Iran and its regional proxy, Hezbollah, and thus created an unprecedented strategic opening for Ankara.

Turkey moved swiftly to capitalize on this opening war, backing Ahmed al-Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham movement in its successful effort to overthrow the Syrian regime in December 2024. The collapse of the Syrian government was a watershed moment in the modern history of the Middle East. It transformed Syria from a central pillar of Iranian influence into a springboard for Turkish regional ambitions. In this way, Ankara regained a major foothold in the Levant for the first time since the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

Strategically, containing Iran requires Turkey to work with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Central to this effort is Saudi cooperation, given Riyadh’s close ties with Islamabad. Thus, a strategic, if informal, triumvirate has emerged (with secondary support from Egypt and Qatar). Still, the principal driver of this new alignment remains Turkey, whose geographic position and expanding regional footprint make it uniquely able to contest Iranian influence. Unlike the other actors, Ankara possesses the strategic depth and proximity necessary to keep Tehran from reconstituting itself in the Fertile Crescent.

Turkey is trying to parlay its position in Syria into a bigger footprint in Iraq and Lebanon. Demographics are the challenge in both countries; Shiites represent a majority in Iraq and a plurality in Lebanon, and the political principals of these communities are tightly linked to the Iranian government. Ankara would need the assistance of Syria to influence its eastern and western neighbors. The problem is that the al-Sharaa government has yet to consolidate enough power to look beyond its borders.

Even so, the weakening of Iran and Hezbollah means that Turkey’s time is now. Ankara will need to deepen its engagement with the Lebanese state, especially with the country’s Sunni, Christian and Druze constituencies, all of whom require a powerful regional patron if they are to reclaim political space previously held by Hezbollah. For these Lebanese actors, the challenge includes navigating an increasingly volatile domestic balance of power between Israeli military pressure and Hezbollah's entrenched dominance – a balance made even more precarious by Turkey’s role as a potential counterweight to Israel. Put simply, this means Lebanon and Syria are long-term arenas of competing Turkish and Israeli interests.

Meanwhile, in Iraq, Turkey faces a different kind of competition. Unlike in Lebanon, in Iraq it has the benefit of a direct border. A Sunni-dominated government in Syria could aid the political revival of the Sunni minority concentrated in western Iraq and extending through the north and the center.

Over the past two decades, Ankara has also cultivated a close relationship with the Kurdistan Democratic Party, led by the Barzani clan, that controls the Kurdish-majority areas in northern Iraq along the Turkish border. Turkey is also leveraging Iraq's oil export crisis, in the wake of the Iranian disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, to press Baghdad into a deeper energy partnership.

An additional advantage for Turkey lies in the willingness of Baghdad’s new Shiite-led government to work closely with Washington to rein in Iraq’s powerful Shiite militias, an issue that figured prominently in the July 14 meeting between Trump and Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi. Iran’s weakening position and its protracted internal crisis are likely compelling Iraq’s Shiite political forces to reassess the influence Tehran has exercised over their country during the past two decades. Even if change comes, it will be slow and complicated, given the intense factionalism that characterizes Iraq’s Shiite political landscape and the varying degrees of dependence on Iran among its competing actors. From Ankara’s perspective, it is not necessary to displace Iranian influence; the emergence of even a handful of Shiite factions seeking to balance between Iran and Turkey would constitute a meaningful strategic gain.
Iran, however, is unlikely to relinquish its regional position without a fight, particularly because Iraq continues to serve as a strategic buffer at a moment of pronounced vulnerability. Although Syria’s alignment with Turkey has complicated Tehran’s ability to sustain Hezbollah, Iran maintains considerable influence in Iraq. This much was underscored by the decision to route Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's funeral procession through Najaf and Karbala – the two holiest cities for Shiite Islam in southern Iraq – before his final burial in Iran on July 9. Iraq, then, is poised to reemerge as the principal arena of geopolitical competition between Turkey and Iran, echoing the centuries-long struggle for dominance over Iraq and the broader region.   


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Thanks to Billy
Date: July 15, 2026 at 1:48:16 PM MDT

Bison 1  Tourist 0

In case who haven't seen the news video of a tourist intruding into a Buffalo’s territory…


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Thanks to Dutch

From the net...courtesy of Mike and Rich...and JC

Hi to all -
7-14-2026  Next Up
Happy Bastille Day!
South Carolina
To fill the vacancy left by the passing of Lindsey Graham, the state has selected his sister, Darline Graham Nordone, to carry on until a new election can be held.  Lindsey himself recommended her some time back as a most capable successor for his job.
Texas
They have instituted a kind of Bible study as part of classroom work.  Not to preach to students, but as a cultural and historical context for our modern laws and life. The founders in particular were very astute students of the Bible, and many of our laws and customs come from that book.  Back then, every home had a Bible, and it was a primary source for learning, and for learning to read, in most households.  In the early days of the republic, Bible studies were part of congress, and in fact, the congress hired and paid preachers of many faiths to come and speak in the halls of congress.  Congress even paid 'missionaries' to travel and teach, especially to the native populations.
All this is very offensive to the left.  After all, they rejected God and religion long ago, and codified this at the 2012 DNC convention, when they demanded, three times (in exactly the ancient tradition of Israel - where the high priest would ask the people in an annual meeting if they would accept God and follow His laws.  This was repeated three times, to ensure that there was no confusion or doubt) to remove God from their platform.  Since then, the left has embraced every kind of perversion, every kind of nasty behavior, and even murder (including political assassination) as normal and acceptable.  So, what happens next?  Read your Bible, and history.  In the course of time, all those who turned against their God ended up on the wrong side of conflict, and suffered badly for it.
International Courts
Trump has limited their control over the US by insisting that we are a sovereign nation, and not subject to their arbitrary rules. That will gripe the EU leaders and all the other globalists.
Democratic Socialists
They are searching for a candidate to oppose Trump in 2028.  They see AOC as their best hope.  She is the one that Senator Kennedy described as 'the reason why shampoo bottles need instructions'.
NYC
Just a couple of years ago, the state had 12.7% of all millionaires in the nation.  Today, that number has dropped to 8.7% - a loss of one third - and continues to fall as these folks move elsewhere to escape the high taxes and bad business environment.  So, who will be left to pay for all that FREE STUFF that Comrade Mamdani wants to give away?
Maine
Anti-ICE agitators (read:  Antifa and other democrat sponsored shock troops) have targeted Susan Collins, who now stands to gain from the loss of Platner in the coming election.  This is political violence - treason - by the left.  The Supreme Court Justices just testified before congress on how they have all been threatened by the left, and how security is now their first priority.  At some point, we will have to act against these 'protesters'.
Iran
Another night of air strikes, and also attacks from Iran on shipping.  A couple of tankers from Emirates were hit.  Two more carrier battle groups are on the way there, and the blockade has been re-established.  Until we cut off their supply lines, and target their leaders, this will go on.  There is no negotiating or reasoning with unreasonable people.  Their new leader, Mojtaba Khamenei vows 'revenge' against the US for hitting them back.  We might start with him, and those around him.
UK
The murder of Ann Widdecombe is now being portrayed as a terrorist attack, to silence her voice.  The local leftists are cheering her death, just as our own version cheers for the death of our own martyrs, like Charlie Kirk.  All part of the same plan and playbook.  The problem is that killing people does not silence them - it makes their words even more powerful.
VW
They are looking at laying off 100,000 people across several companies and nations over the next three years.  This will not only affect the VW line, but also Porsche, Audi, Seat and Skoda.
Canada
A gay couple hired a surrogate mother, but when sonograms showed the baby had a cleft lip, they demanded that the mother abort the child.  She refused, and they are suing her for 'damages' and expenses.  You cannot make this stuff up.
Paramount - Warner Brothers
The DoJ has approved this merger, but blue states are very angry.  It is not the business model they object to, but the loss of control over content that they fear. These were major propaganda tools for the left, and that will be lost in the merger, and people might, just might, get a less biased approach to their entertainment.
The movie 'Supergirl' was the most massive flop since the 'Catwoman' movie of 2004.  The left cannot sell its propaganda.  Losing control of the tools will make this even worse for them.
Rich


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From the Archives
Thanks to Peter via Ken and Dr. Rich
Navy Aviators Medal of Honor Awardees

There may be some other of Ward’s clips available….skip

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Thanks to Carl
Tucker: The Car Company Big Auto Murdered
July 15, 2023


Preston Tucker’s Speed Shop Explains the Genius Behind an American Tragedy
Published: 30 Apr 2022

Sean and Mike Tucker are identical twins who happen to be the great-grandsons of Preston Tucker. In collaboration with a noted collector and historian, they have embarked on a quest to preserve the legacy of Preston and the eponymous Tucker ’48.

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. ‘Thanks to Dr.Rich

That time a Marine mechanic stole an A-4M Skyhawk attack aircraft for a joyride

theaviationgeekclub.com

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. Thanks to Interesting Facts
I learned to use chop sticks when I started going to the orient in 1968. Still use them on occasion ..skip
As common eating utensils, chopsticks in Asia are about 2,000 years older than the fork in Europe.

By the time most people in Europe started eating with forks, chopsticks had already been around in Asia for millennia. The versatile utensil is believed to have been invented in China roughly 5,000 years ago, although it was initially little more than twigs used for cooking rather than eating (compared to human fingers, chopsticks were a much safer way to grab food from boiling water). None other than Confucius is credited with helping to make chopsticks popular as eating utensils sometime after 400 BCE. A man who espoused nonviolence, the philosopher believed that knives evoked bloodshed and the “honorable and upright man … allows no knives on his table.” (Chopsticks, then, were a more peaceful way to pick up food compared to spearing it with a knife.)

Chopsticks gradually made their way beyond China’s borders and were the utensil of choice in other Asian countries such as Japan and Vietnam by 500 CE. Forks, meanwhile, slowly gained popularity throughout Europe after initially being used in their two-tined form by the ancient Greeks and Egyptians for cooking. Around the 11th century, they were introduced as eating utensils in Italy and France, after having initially been used in the Byzantine Empire — still in two-pronged form — but were widely frowned upon for centuries as unnecessarily luxurious or effeminate. Medieval Europe ate mostly with rounds of stale bread used as a platform for meat and vegetables, as well as with knives and spoons, which had been ubiquitous since ancient times. It wasn’t until around the 18th century that the use of forks — finally with three and four tines — became commonplace in much of Europe, in a slow process befitting their status as a late-to-the-party addition to the table.

Numbers Don’t Lie
Muscles involved in the use of chopsticks
50
Different parts of a fork
7
Disposable chopsticks used in China every year
45 billion
Kinds of forks in existence
35

National Chopsticks Day is celebrated on February 6.

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..
From the archives for my Phantom friends
THANKS TO NEWELL
I read with interest “Fantoomery” and Eagle’s F-4 Flaws Assessment in today’s THE LIST.  Having spent my entire operational career in that wonderfully ugly beautiful beast (F-4B through F-4S), I am submitting the following for your posting in THE LIST.  (Or, if you choose, THE BUBBAS.)

Scorpio
To:  All Yesteryear Navy F-4 Jocks
From:  CDR Newell Tarrant, USN (Ret.)
SUBJECT:  HOMAGE TO THE PHANTOM
I received a widely shared email titled, “Phantom Farewell” in the winter of 2006.  It was originally written as a tribute to the F-4 when the aging bird passed from our operational fighter inventory.  Additionally, it appeared that this farewell had been written years prior to its 2006 email-recirculation, and by 2006 no one knew who had originally penned it.  Although attribution-credit was not established, I judged from its content (and some specifically mentioned Squadron and Pilot-RIO callsigns) that it was likely written by an east-coast-based Navy fighter pilot.
Little matter from which American coast it came, because it was a fighter jock’s heartfelt lament regarding the Phantom’s passing.  And for years it remained archived in my computer’s “NAVAIR” folder.
A 2014 reunion of VF-161 “Rock River” squadron-mates hosted by Rear-Admiral Ted “Slapshot” Carter at the Naval War College prompted memories of our F-4’s distinguished history, and tugged my attention back to that old “Phantom Farewell” document.  But upon rereading it, I thought that more ought to be said.  So, with a sincere tip-of-the-cap to its unknown original author, and consonant with the collaborative spirit of the Phantom’s Stick-and-Scope cockpits, I rewrote it.  My intentions were to include additional historical detail and to make it more generally inclusive of the whole bygone Navy F-4 community rather than highlight any individual Sticks or Scopes.  No self-promotional agenda intended.  This rewrite sought only to expand on the original writer’s goals ― pen a meaningful tribute to our long-retired fighter, and voice a fond recall of how flying the Phantom from carrier flight decks profoundly affected our lives.
Many Navy fighter pilots transitioned to the initial F-4 squadrons from our F-8 Crusader community.  Years later, many F-4 jocks transitioned from Phantoms to our newer F-14 Tomcats.  And, later yet, to F/A-18 Hornets.  Respect for those friendly-rival Navy fighter communities still abounds.  This farewell tribute, however, only addresses the Phantom.  Thus, submitted in remembrance as a toast to all long-ago, Navy F-4 brethren, “Phantom Reminiscence” follows this explanation of its origin.
F-4’s and Dinosaurs Forever,
Scorpio
PHANTOM REMINISCENCE

There’s no use in stonewalling this any longer.  It’s way past time to bid farewell to a once mighty, but bygone, warhorse.  A farewell written as if a eulogy, because even the solicitation mailers for those large coffee-table books, whose words and pictures chronicled our stallions’ service, have stopped arriving.  In truth, those coffee-table book solicitations stopped arriving decades ago.  A tacit proof that our formerly famous fighter is now nearly forgotten.  Or if not quite forgotten, our metal-steed is, at best, relegated to our memories of the 20th Century.
Young once, we aged together.  So, even these many years removed, I feel it is appropriate to voice an overdue homage, and to acknowledge belatedly that one of the most capable Navy fighter aircraft to dominate contested skies flies no more.
The F-4 Phantom.
Big.
Ugly.
Beautiful.
Beast.
Our Navy’s Phantoms enjoyed a thirty-six-year operational run, bookended by combat in the Vietnam War and Operation Desert Storm.  Few airplanes in the history of aviation have adapted so well to warfare’s changing tactical landscape.
The Phantom’s departure ordained our loss of variable jet-intakes, of sawtooth-wing leading edges, of positive-dihedral wingtips, of negative-dihedral slatted-stabilators, and a high of 2.2 Mach topping a fighter cockpit Mach-number gauge.  Departing F-4’s also carried away a large chunk of what made my life fulfilling.
In retrospective, the plane was designed in the 1950’s by the McDonnell Aircraft Company as a fighter-interceptor.  A successor to the Navy’s underpowered F-3 Demon, the new F-4 needed to be a more robust aerial platform, thrust by strong engines to power aloft an advanced, air-to-air, radar missile system.  Bottom line, the Phantom was originally designed to engage high-and-fast inbound Bandits.
Which meant that initially the F-4 launched from Navy flight decks as a long-range air-superiority fighter designed to extend the horizons of fleet defense.  The earliest Phantom missions were flown chiefly as fighter-interceptors flying Combat Air Patrol for the Carrier Task Group (CTG), and launching also to fly shotgun on the long-range Soviet “Bear” and “Badger” bombers seeking out the CTG.  Then the Vietnam War exploded, and the F-4’s missions expanded.  Phantoms now carried bombs under their wings and proved they were capable of beating up the dirt as effectively as their A-4 and A-7 attack-aircraft brethren.  Flying sorties into North Vietnam, the Phantoms were often tasked to speed ahead, and to strike the lethal SAM sites and anti-aircraft batteries before our slower attack-aircraft arrived over the target.  Thus, for many years the Phantom, sporting a two-man crew and a sophisticated radar-system wedded to its high-speed strike-fighter capabilities, became the air-superiority platform of choice for any high-threat environment.
Time never sleeps, and the Phantom's decades-long superiority eventually ended.
My emotions still churn in the face of this reality, because we served and matured together. Thousands of hours of my adult life were spent strapped into the cockpit of that brutish fighter.  It was there that combat was flown, life-long friendships were forged, and America's will, enforced.  Airborne, from that lofty perch, I had gazed up star-struck at the heavens and had also looked down warily on hostile lands.  I didn't always realize it then (youth, of course, being wasted on the young), but each F-4 sortie flown was a gift.  Likewise, the time spent in the company of so many exceptional squadron-mates.
Phantom Phlyers.
Phantom Pherrets.
Phantom Phixers.
I remember the tie-down-chain laden Plane Captains and the hard-working Maintenance Technicians who respected the airplanes as much as we aircrews did.  I recall the maintenance Chief Petty Officers who taught young nuggets like me not only how the Phantom’s innards worked, but how to better acquit myself as an officer and a leader.  Paid neither enough nor near their worth, our Phantom Phixers demanded little in return except for the opportunities to earn our flight-crews’ respect for their professional contributions, and to serve our squadron well.  Etched in the tired creases of their faces at the close of each demanding day, though, I read the depth of my commissioned leadership responsibilities.
As I flip through the yellowed pages of my tattered flight-logbooks and see the officers’ names recorded there, I recall the requisite aircrew skills shared between the Phantom’s two cockpits ― Pilot and Radar Officer, Stick and Scope, Phantom Phlyer and Phantom Pherret.  The complementary teamwork between our front and rear cockpits was one of the unique qualities that made flying the F-4 so rewarding.  Phantom Stick-Scope collaboration and operating from carrier flight decks were two of the most dynamic and defining characteristics of my aviation life.  I know few things as surely as I know that U.S. Navy carrier-based aviators are the best in the world.  It feels good to reassert that fact, even decades removed from the rigors of the experience, because it is not braggadocio if performance exceeds swagger.
And what about the down times between our carrier sorties?  I remember living shipboard with fellow junior officers in our six- or eight-man bunkrooms, where all manner of JO issues (be it work or play) were discussed and resolved.  That tight comradeship reinforced mutual trust; it also taught me the worth of true friendship.  My squadron-mates partnered with me in the long deployments at sea and in the dangers of combat.  Moreover, in that shared performance crucible, I learned that I would weather well the unknown future ordeals of my life, because anything that I might do after my Navy flight career would, in comparison, be so much easier.
If via fond memories I hustle top-side from my below-decks JO bunk room to those yesteryear carrier flight decks, I can close my eyes and almost hear the clack-clack-clack of the catapult’s shuttle as it moves aft to a ready-position for the next aircraft’s launch.  Then thundering jet engine roar soon eclipses all other sound.
My recall now freshly triggered, vivid recollections of Phantom flight-deck prelaunch dynamics gush forth.  The Air Boss in Pri-Fly orders, “Start engines!”  Jet exhaust stings our nostrils until we lower our canopies, shutting out the burnt JP-5 fumes.  In a planned starting sequence, a “huffer” lights our Phantom to life.  Our engines spool up and start.  Our aircraft systems power on.  Preflight checks are performed with our brown-shirted Plane Captain and our white-shirted Troubleshooters.  Then comes a release of our aircraft tie-down chains.  Pull our chocks.  Taxi the deck.  Soon we're spotted just behind the catapult, awaiting our turn for launch.  We signal the green-shirted Weight-Board Bearer:  thumbs-up on our bird’s 56,000 pounds of launch-weight.  56,000 pounds.  28 tons of deadly fighter.  Grasp that, if you can.
The plane in front of us launches, leaving wisps of steam whistling aft from the catapult track.  The jet-blast deflector comes down, and, splitting the slotted cat track with our two nose-strut tires, we taxi over the shuttle and onto the catapult.  We spread our folded wingtips.  Then, despite years of this same prelaunch routine, our anticipation starts to spike as we whisk through the regimen unique to the Phantom’s launch.  The nose strut extends, granting our fighter the nose-high attitude of a predator preparing to leap into the air.  The shuttle’s launch-bridle is attached to our fuselage’s twin belly-hooks located at the forward wing-roots.  The shuttle slides forward, taking up the bridle-cable slack and tensioning our bridled bird against the holdback-fitting.  Our hands are then held high, held visibly away from any cockpit switches as our squadron’s red-shirted Ordnance-men scramble beneath the F-4 to pull our missiles’ safety-pins and arm our weapons.
Our ordnance now fully armed and our flaps lowered, the yellow-shirted Catapult Officer signals us for engine run up.  The bird’s throttles are pushed forward to military power and controls cycled:  stick forward, then aft, then left and right.  Rudder, deflected left and right.
"You ready, Scope?”
“Right behind you, Stick."
The yellow-jersey clad Catapult Officer signals for full afterburner.
The throttles are pushed all the way forward into their AB detent.  Gauges checked a final time.  We’re good to go.
We position our heads supportively back against the top of our ejection seats because it’s going to be one helluva terrific kick in the ass when the holdback breaks and the steam catapult hurls us off the flight deck.
The Catapult Officer returns the F-4 pilot’s salute.  Then he points forward, reaches down and touches the deck to signal, “Shoot ‘em.” to the green-jersey-clad Catapult Crew stationed in the flight deck’s catwalk.
One potato, two potato, and we’re roaring down the cat.
Sweet shot.  1.2 seconds later (and in less than 300 feet of travel) 56,000 pounds of Phantom and two stoked flyers are airborne.  Rotate the nose up a few degrees.  Raise the landing gear and flaps.  Come out of ‘burner.  Climb.  Sweet bird.
And for the next couple of hours we stand ready to use this glorious Phantom, this mighty machine of American know-how, for whatever our aerial mission demands.  Or perhaps today is not our day to save the world, so we barrier-patrol for our Carrier Task Group while running air-intercepts against our wingman.  Later, our mission flown and fuel permitting, as we vector back for home-plate, we might honor one of the CTG picket-ships’ request for a high-speed low-level fly-by.  Or vaporize some hoarded fuel in a few minutes of post-patrol turn-and-burn dogfight head-to-head against our wingman.  Or fly tail-chase together among the clouds.  Or fly through a low-altitude rain squall a couple of times just to fresh-water wash our birds.  Or push up the throttles and punch through the sound barrier for the same reason that a dog licks his balls … just because he can.
We are flying the Phantom.  The finest aerial champion of its era.
Alas, these are recollections of days long past.  Because all that remains of this once great fighter, a plane that gave my professional life its purpose, is now generally found as an empty-shell static-display bird in either aviation museums, or mounted outside in front of air-station main gates across America.  In a thirty-six-year blink of an eye the Phantom became obsolete.  Me too.  Because I have become that balding, wrinkly-faced gent, who you might see wearing a weathered squadron ball cap and an ill-fitting old flight jacket.  That garrulous elderly warrior who bores anyone within earshot with his tales of last-century fighter derring-do.
1960 through 1996 marked the halcyon years of the Navy’s Phantom fighter squadrons ― the Chargers, Pacemakers, Silver Kings, Vigilantes, Fighting Falcons, Jolly Rogers, Pukin' Dogs, Grim Reapers, Top Hatters, Red Rippers, Sundowners, Freelancers, Tomcatters, Screaming Eagles, Aardvarks and Black Knights to name but a few of the many.  Moreover, the Phantom thrilled airshow audiences worldwide during its five-year tenure as the thundering glossy bird of the Navy’s Blue Angels.
Nowadays I hear assurances of a bright future for the Navy’s newest strike-fighter, the F-35 Lightning, but my time in the arena was spent with the Phantom.  And when an airplane possesses that much character and longevity, it ceases to be inanimate for those who strapped into it on a regular basis.  We who knew it well miss its strength and raw power.  In its day, it bowed to no other fighter.

Very Respectfully,
      Scorpio
PS:  For all of us who revered the Phantom, war-correspondent Ernest Hemingway’s poetic words ― quoted from a 1944 Collier’s Magazine article that he wrote while posting stories from London during WWII ― might best describe our sentiments.


“You love a lot of things if you live around them,
but there isn’t any woman and there isn’t any horse,
not any before, nor any after,
that is as lovely as a great airplane.
And men who love them are faithful to them
even though they leave them for others.
A man has only one virginity to lose in fighters,
and if it is a lovely plane he loses it to,
there his heart will ever be.”

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Thanks tgo American Facts
. The Empire State Building may be an immense structure that's hard to miss, but its history holds events, quirks, and surprising facts that most people have never heard! From lightning constantly striking it to water invading from below, let's uncover 10 things no one ever told you about this iconic American skyscraper.


25 times a year
Its tall, elegant steel structure is definitely captivating; no wonder thousands of photographers, painters, and filmmakers have chosen the Empire State Building as the backdrop for their work. However, that imposing height comes with something a little scary: it's estimated that the building is struck by lightning about 25 times a year! Fortunately, it was designed to handle these strikes, so it's completely safe.


Really fast
There are buildings that took decades to complete. But this is not the case with the Empire State Building. In fact, this is one of the fastest skyscrapers ever built: It took only one year and 45 days to erect such an architectural masterpiece. That means it was built at a rate of an incredible 4.5 floors per week!
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Unlikely survivor
It was 1945 when the Empire State Building was accidentally struck by a B-25 Mitchell bomber due to the thick fog that covered NYC. A worker named Betty Lou Oliver was on the 80th floor when the plane crashed into the 79th. She was severely injured, but incredibly, she survived. Hours later, while being rescued in an elevator, the damaged cables gave way, and Betty fell 75 floors to the basement. She survived that too!


40 million dollars
A tremendous building like the Empire State couldn't be built on a shoestring budget. When it was constructed —in the midst of the Great Depression, no less— it cost about $41 million. That's a hefty sum, even today! Adjusted for inflation, that would be around $600 to $700 million in 2025. Wow!


Secret floor
If you are afraid of heights, be prepared: the Empire State Building has two public observation decks, one on the 86th floor and another on the 102nd. But there's another one, and it's even higher! It's located on the 103rd floor, but it's not open to the public and is mostly used for VIPs or special occasions.


High security
Although an incredible 4 million people visit the building each year on average, getting in isn't easy. Many visitors say it feels like going through airport security, with X-ray machines and metal detectors everywhere. Visitors must also pass through a security checkpoint before reaching the observation decks, and the building is constantly monitored by cameras and security guards.
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King Kong
We all remember the iconic scene of the imposing King Kong climbing the towering mast of the Empire State Building. And while that image lives on in our minds, there's one detail many people overlook: When the original King Kong movie premiered in 1933, the Empire State Building was less than two years old! Plus, at the time, the building still held the title of tallest in the world, making King Kong's climb even more epic.
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Underground waterways
Beneath what is now NYC, there was a network of streams and rivers that flowed freely before Manhattan and other boroughs covered them. The land below the Empire State Building is no exception, and these old underground waterways still occasionally cause complications. For example, during heavy rains, water can rise and seep into the building's wind tunnels, sometimes flooding areas with up to two feet of water.


The original plans
The Empire State Building was originally supposed to have a dirigible anchor! That's right; the mast at the top of the building was meant to serve as a mooring post for dirigibles, with a docking platform and a door for passengers to disembark. However, due to the extreme height, high winds, and overall potential danger, the idea was discarded. Today, the mast is used for antennas and other communications equipment.


Green building
This iconic building that defines New York's skyline is considered a "green building." And no, it has nothing to do with the color of its walls; it's about something much more meaningful. The sustainability modifications that the Empire State has undergone over the years have made it one of the most energy-efficient buildings of its size, minimizing its environmental impact and earning it the title of "green building."

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This Day in U S Military History…….July 16
1769 – Father Juñpero Serra, a Spanish Franciscan missionary, founds the first Catholic mission in California on the site of present-day San Diego. After Serra blessed his new outpost of Christianity in a high mass, the royal standard of Spain was unfurled over the mission, which he named San Diego de Alcala. Serra came to Spanish America in 1750 and served in the Sierra Gorda missions and then in south-central Mexico. A successful missionary, he was appointed a member of the second Spanish land expedition to Alta California in 1769. When the party reached San Diego, Serra remained with a few followers to found California’s first mission. The rest of the expedition continued on in search of Monterrey harbor, which had been previously used by Spanish sailors. Although the explorers failed in their aim, Serra succeeded in finding Monterrey in 1770, and there he founded his second mission–San Carlos Barromeo. Appointed president of the Alta California presidios, Serra eventually founded a total of nine missions, stretching from San Diego to present-day San Francisco. The Franciscan fathers built large communities around their missions, teaching Christianized Native Americans to farm and tend cattle, and directing their work. These agricultural communities enjoyed a considerable autonomy from first the Spanish colonial authorities and then the Mexican government, but with the coming of the Americans in the mid-19th century most were abandoned.
1916 – Captain Raynal Bolling commanded the 1st Aero Squadron, New York National Guard, when it was mobilized during the Mexican Border Crisis. Using a variety of privately owned aircraft the 1st was the first flying unit organized in the Guard. Though the unit was not deployed to the border before being released from active duty in November 1916, a large number of its members, including Bolling, joined the Signal Corps Reserve (then controlling all Army aviation) prior to the U.S. entry into World War I. During the war Bolling, now a colonel, was a leading planner of American air strategy. For instance, he determined and got approved the use of British DeHaviland’s for observation and daylight bombing missions and British Bristol’s and French Spads as America’s lead fighters. While riding in a staff car near the front at Amiens, France on March 26, 1918, he was surprised by advancing German troops. Bolling and his driver, coming under enemy fire, jumped into a ditch, where Bolling returned fire with his pistol (the only weapon either man had). He killed a German officer and almost immediately was killed himself by another officer. His had to be one of the few pistol fights to have occurred in World War I! Bolling was posthumously awarded the French Legion of Honor and the American Distinguished Service Medal for his bold leadership and far-reaching vision of the role air power would come to play on the battlefield.
1940 – Hitler issues his Directive 16. It begins, “I have decided to begin to prepare for, and if necessary to carry out, an invasion of England.” It goes on to explain the importance of the air battles for the achievement of this aim. At this stage in the planning the German army’s views are dominant. They wish the Channel crossing to take place on a wide front with landings all along the south coast of Britain. They envisage that the force to be employed will be at least 25 and perhaps 40 divisions. They hope that the crossing can be protected by the Luftwaffe and mines on its flanks. This is not a very realistic plan.
1945 – The United States conducts the first test of the atomic bomb at its research facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico. The terrifying new weapon would quickly become a focal point in the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. The official U.S. development of the atomic bomb began with the establishment of the Manhattan Project in August 1942. The project brought together scientists from the United States, Great Britain, and Canada to study the feasibility of building an atomic bomb capable of unimaginable destructive power. The project proceeded with no small degree of urgency, since the American government had been warned that Nazi Germany had also embarked on a program to develop an atomic weapon. By July 1945, a prototype weapon was ready for testing. Although Germany had surrendered months earlier, the war against Japan was still raging. On July 16, the first atomic bomb was detonated in the desert near the Los Alamos research facility. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, director of the project, watched the mushroom cloud rise into the Nevada sky. “Now I am become death, destroyer of worlds,” he uttered, reciting a passage from an ancient Hindu text. News of the successful test was relayed to President Harry S. Truman, who was meeting with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin in Potsdam to discuss the postwar world. Observers at the meeting noted that the news “tremendously pepped up” the president, and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill believed that Truman almost immediately adopted a more aggressive tone in dealing with Stalin. Truman and many other U.S. officials hoped that possession of the atomic bomb would be America’s trump card in dealing with the Soviets after the war. Use of the weapon against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 demonstrated the destructive force of the atomic bomb. The American atomic monopoly did not last long, though. By 1949, the Soviets had developed their own atomic bomb, marking the beginning of the nuclear arms race.
1945 – Cruiser Indianapolis left SF with an atom bomb.
1946 – US court martial in Dachau condemned 46 SS to hang for the Malmedy massacre of disarmed GIs.
1950 – U.S. Army Chaplain Herman G. Felhoelter became the first chaplain to earn an award for heroism and the first to lose his life in the Korean War. Voluntarily remaining behind with several critically wounded soldiers, he and his group was overwhelmed and killed by the communists. Chaplain Felhoelter was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.

1969 – At 9:32 a.m. EDT, Apollo 11, the first U.S. lunar landing mission, is launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on a historic journey to the surface of the moon. After traveling 240,000 miles in 76 hours, Apollo 11 entered into a lunar orbit on July 19. The next day, at 1:46 p.m., the lunar module Eagle, manned by astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, separated from the command module, where a third astronaut, Michael Collins, remained. Two hours later, the Eagle began its descent to the lunar surface, and at 4:18 p.m. the craft touched down on the southwestern edge of the Sea of Tranquility. Armstrong immediately radioed to Mission Control in Houston a famous message, “The Eagle has landed.” At 10:39 p.m., five hours ahead of the original schedule, Armstrong opened the hatch of the lunar module. Seventeen minutes later, at 10:56 p.m., Armstrong spoke the following words to millions listening at home: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” A moment later, he stepped off the lunar module’s ladder, becoming the first human to walk on the surface of the moon. Aldrin joined him on the moon’s surface at 11:11 p.m., and together they took photographs of the terrain, planted a U.S. flag, ran a few simple scientific tests, and spoke with President Richard M. Nixon via Houston. By 1:11 a.m. on July 21, both astronauts were back in the lunar module, and the hatch was closed. The two men slept that night on the surface of the moon, and at 1:54 p.m. the Eagle began its ascent back to the command module. Among the items left on the surface of the moon was a plaque that read: “Here men from the planet Earth first set foot on the moon–July 1969 A.D.–We came in peace for all mankind.” At 5:35 p.m., Armstrong and Aldrin successfully docked and rejoined Collins, and at 12:56 a.m. on July 22 Apollo 11 began its journey home, safely splashing down in the Pacific Ocean at 12:51 p.m. on July 24. There would be five more successful lunar landing missions, and one unplanned lunar swing-by, Apollo 13. The last men to walk on the moon, astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt of the Apollo 17 mission, left the lunar surface on December 14, 1972. The Apollo program was a costly and labor intensive endeavor, involving an estimated 400,000 engineers, technicians, and scientists, and costing $24 billion (close to $100 billion in today’s dollars). The expense was justified by President John F. Kennedy’s 1961 mandate to beat the Soviets to the moon, and after the feat was accomplished, ongoing missions lost their viability.
Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day
COSTELLO, JOHN
Rank and organization: Ordinary Seaman, U.S. Navy. Born: 1850, Rouses Point, N.Y. Accredited to: New York. G.O. No.: 214, 27 July 1876. Citation: On board the U.S.S. Hartford, Philadelphia, Pa., 16 July 1876. Showing gallantry, Costello rescued from drowning a landsman of that vessel.
FORBECK, ANDREW P.
Rank and organization: Seaman, U.S. Navy. Born: 29 August 18,9, New York. Accredited to: New York. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: For distinguished conduct in the presence of the enemy during the battle of Katbalogan, Samar, Philippine Islands, 16 July 1900.
STOLTENBERG, ANDREW V.
Rank and organization: Gunner’s Mate Second Class, U.S. Navy. Born: Boto, Norway. Accredited to: California. G.O. No.: 55, 29 July 1899. Citation: For distinguished conduct in the presence of the enemy in battle at Katbalogan, Samar, Philippine Islands, 16 July 1900.
DAHLGREN, JOHN OLOF
Rank and organization: Corporal, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 14 September 1872, Kahliwar, Sweden. Accredited to: California. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle of Peking, China, 20 June to 16 July 1900, Dahlgren distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
*FISHER, HARRY
Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 20 October 1874, McKeesport, Pa. Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: Served in the presence of the enemy at the battle of Peking, China, 20 June to 16 July 1900. Assisting in the erection of barricades during the action, Fisher was killed by the heavy fire of the enemy.
HUNT, MARTIN
Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 9 July 1873, County of Mayo, Ireland. Accredited to: Massachusetts. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle of Peking, China, 20 June to 16 July 1900, Hunt distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
WALKER, EDWARD ALEXANDER
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 2 October 1864, Huntley, Scotland. Accredited to: New York. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle of Peking, China, 20 June to 16 July 1900. Throughout this period, Walker distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
YOUNG, FRANK ALBERT
Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 22 June 1876, Milwaukee, Wis. Accredited to: Wisconsin. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle of Pehng, China, 20 June to 16 July 1900. Throughout this period, Young distmguished himself by meritorious conduct.

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for July 16,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD “PHIL” MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

16 July
1917: The Aircraft Manufacturers Association formed to solve aircraft patent problems facing US military aviation as war for America neared.
1940: First bombardier training in Air Corps Schools began at Lowry Field with the first class of bombardier instructors. (24)
1945: The world's first nuclear explosion occurred on July 16, 1945, when a plutonium implosion device was tested at a site located 210 miles south of Los Alamos, New Mexico, on the plains of the Alamogordo Bombing Range, known as the Jornada del Muerto. The code name for the test was "Trinity."

Hoisted atop a 100-foot tower, a plutonium device, called "Gadget," detonated at precisely 5:30 am over the New Mexico desert, releasing 18.6 kilotons of power, instantly vaporizing the tower and turning the surrounding asphalt and sand into green glass, called "trinitite." Seconds after the explosion, an enormous blast sent searing heat across the desert, knocking observers to the ground.

A U.S. Navy pilot flying at 10,000 feet near Albuquerque, New Mexico, said it lit up the cockpit of his plane and was like the sun rising in the south. When he radioed Albuquerque Air Traffic Control for an explanation, he was simply told, “Don’t fly south.”  After the test, the Alamogordo Air Base issued a press release that stated simply, “A remotely located ammunition magazine containing a considerable amount of high explosives and pyrotechnics exploded, but there was no loss of life or limb to anyone.”  The actual cause of the blast was not disclosed until after the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6. The success of the Trinity test meant an atomic bomb could be used by the U.S. military and it marked the start of the Atomic Age. (Text and Image from a Department of Energy article)

1953: Lt Col William F. Barnes flew a F-86D Sabre over a 3-kilometer (1.86 miles) course at Salton Sea, Calif., to a world speed record of 715.74 MPH. (24) In a Cessna L-19B at Wichita, Kans., William Thompson set a world altitude record of 37,063 feet for light planes. (24)
1957: Maj John H. Glenn, Jr. (USMC) used a F8U-1P Crusader to break the cross-county speed record. He flew from Los Alamitos, Calif., to Long Island in 3 hours 22 minutes 50 seconds at 723.51 MPH. He also completed the first upper atmosphere supersonic, west coast-to-east coast flight. (9)
1964: The US Army’s XV-5A, a “lift-fan” VTOL aircraft, made by General Electric and Ryan Aeronautical, made its first vertical takeoff and landing at Edwards AFB.
1965: Rockwell’s OV-10A counterinsurgency aircraft flew its first test flight at company plant in Columbus. (12)
1969: APOLLO XI/FIRST LUNAR LANDING. From Kennedy Space Center, the Apollo XI manned lunar landing mission began for Astronauts Michael Collins, Neil A. Armstrong, and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, Jr. On 20 July, Aldrin and Armstrong flew the lunar module Eagle to the Sea of Tranquility, where Armstrong took the first step on the moon. On 21 July, after 21 hours 36 minutes on the moon the module lifted off; 4 hours later it docked with the command module to return home. On 24 July, the module splashed down in mid-Pacific, 195 hours 19 minutes after launch. The astronauts set FAI records for greatest mass landed on the moon with 16,153 pounds and greatest mass lifted into lunar orbit from the moon with 5,928.6 pounds. For the USAF, Colonels Aldrin and Collins set two records—Aldrin became the second man to step on the moon, while Collins established a record of 59 hours 27 minutes 55 seconds in lunar orbit. (9) (16)
1999. Lockheed Martin Corporation of Marietta received a $370 million contract to produce seven more C-130J aircraft, including four for the ANG. (32)
Thanks to Brett
Apollo/Soyuz

1975: Astronauts Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand, and Donald “Deke” Slayton launched from Cape Canaveral in a Saturn 1B rocket to meet up with the Soyuz 19 cosmonauts that had launched from Kazakhstan. Mr. Slayton, at 51, became the oldest man to fly in space at that time. He was also one of the original seven astronauts. This Apollo mission, when it ended on 24 July, was the last US manned space mission until the first space shuttle launch in 1981. (NASA Images)
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Wednesday, July 15, 2026

TheList 7595

7595

Good Wednesday morning July 15 2026 .The Heat wave is here and all across the USA .CLEAR AND HEATING UP TO 91 BY 1 and staying that high until 4 or 5.
Take care of yourselves where ever you are.
Cool  Regards,
skip


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This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History:July 15

This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)
Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.  Go here to see the director’s corner for all 100 H-Grams

July 15 
1862  While CSS Arkansas makes her way down the Yazoo River, she encounters the Union gunboats USS Carondelet, USS Tyler, and USS Queen of the West. In the ensuing battle, CSS Arkansas damages the first two vessels and makes her way into the Mississippi River, where she boldly fights through the Federal fleet to find refuge at the Confederate batteries at Vicksburg, Miss.
1896  USS Oregon (BB 3) is commissioned.
1942  USS Grunion (SS 216) sinks the Japanese submarine chasers (25 and 26) off Kiska, Aleutian Islands.
1942  USS Terror (CM 5), the first minelayer built as such, is commissioned. During World War II she participates in Operation Torch, the Battle for Iwo Jima, and the Okinawa Invasion, where she is struck by a kamikaze on May 1, 1945.
1943  TBF aircraft from (VC 29) from USS Santee (CVE 29) sinks German submarine (U 509) south of the Azores.
1943  PBY (VP 92) and British destroyer HMS Rochester and frigates HMS Mignonette and HMS Balsam sink German submarine (U 135) west of the Canary Islands. Previously, (U 135) sank 3 and damaged 1 Allied vessels, none from the United States.
2017  The guided-missile destroyer USS John Finn (DDG 113) is commissioned in a ceremony at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii.  The ship honors Chief Aviation Ordnanceman John Finn, who received the Medal of Honor for heroism during the first attack by Japanese airplanes at Pearl Harbor.

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Thanks to  Admiral Cox
H-Gram 98  (99 is still inwork)
Since this is not a year that ends in 0 or 5 for the Battle of Midway (4–7 June 1942), I thought I would recycle my H-gram in commemoration of the D-Day landings on the Normandy beaches in June 1944. Today, most American accounts about D-Day focus on the actions of the U.S. Army, and the heroic actions of the Army troops that went ashore Utah and Omaha Beaches, some of the most courageous actions in the annals of military history. However, few know that prior to the Army establishing a headquarters on the beaches late in the afternoon of 6 June, the D-Day landings were under Navy command and control and designated Operation Neptune. This H-gram is about the Navy’s role in the amphibious landing phase of the overarching Operation Overlord, more commonly known as D-Day.

I am also recycling a second piece on Exercise Tiger, which occurred in April 1944 and was the full-scale rehearsal for the landings at Utah Beach. The trial was a disaster due to a horrific friendly fire incident on the beach, when troops were accidentally shelled by naval vessels due to timing errors. That was followed by a devastating attack on a convoy of US tank landing ships (LSTs) by German S-boats, which sank two LSTs and damaged others, resulting in the loss of more than 600 US Army and Navy lives—significantly more than would be lost during the actual landing at Utah Beach on 6 June 1944. Omaha Beach was another story.

Overview

By H-Hour on Omaha Beach (0630, 6 June 1944), pretty much everything had already gone to hell. Of the 64 amphibious tanks that were supposed to land on the beach five minutes before the first infantry assault wave, 27 were on the bottom of the ocean, having sunk due to heavy seas. Four more amphibious tanks were destroyed when LCT-607 struck a mine and sank. Twenty-eight tanks made it ashore because Lieutenant Dean Rockwell, USN, commander of LCT Flotilla 12, assessed the seas as too rough and, on his own initiative, chose to take the tanks all the way to the beach at great risk to the eight LCTs under his command (LCT-607 was lost on the way in). Another three tanks reached the beach because Ensign Henry Sullivan, in command of LCT-600, stopped launching tanks after the first one sank and took the rest of them all the way to the beach, also on his own initiative. Of the 28 tanks launched into the water from the other seven LCTs (which didn’t receive Rockwell’s order), only two made the swim of 2–3 miles to the beach; the rest tragically sank with most of their crews.

The loss of the tanks, mostly due to sea conditions and not the enemy, wasn’t all that went wrong. The shore bombardment was only 30 minutes long, inadequate time to take out most of the heavily fortified and well-concealed German gun positions, which the Navy knew based on its experience with Japanese islands. However, the need to minimize the amount of time for the German reserve forces to react to the landing was considered by the Army to be of overriding importance. The strikes by 450 B-24 heavy bombers just before the landing missed the beach due to overcast, and 13,000 bombs went long and did nothing except add to the din. Then eight LCT(R) “rocket ships” fired 1,080 rockets each, and almost all of them fell short of the beach. Instead of the expected understrength German garrison division, the beach was defended by the first-line 352nd Infantry Division, which had just arrived to defend a coastline that was ideally suited for defense.

The first US troops to land at Omaha Beach were slaughtered by the hundreds. Some landing craft never made it to the beach; in others that did, no one got off alive. Navy coxswains whose craft were disabled wound up fighting as infantrymen, using weapons from the dead. Navy combat demolition units were in the second wave to blow beach obstacles; most did not make it ashore. The same was true for the Navy beach battalions, beachmasters, and naval shore fire control teams. Navy physicians and corpsmen who went ashore in the first waves suffered high casualties, but were noted afterward to be “the bravest of the brave.” By 0830, Omaha Beach was so littered with destroyed and damaged landing craft, tanks, vehicles, uncleared German obstacles (most of them mined), and hundreds of dead on the beach and in the rising tide that the senior surviving Navy beachmaster called a halt to any further landings of other than assault troops.

Although the Germans fought ferociously at the other four Normandy beaches, those landings went relatively well. But at Omaha, the Germans were winning, when several US destroyers, acting on their own initiative, closed to within 800–1,000 yards of the beach (one to 400 yards, close enough to be hit by rifle fire) and found innovative ways to provide fire support to troops without the benefit of shore spotting (most of the troops’ radios had been lost in the surf). By 0950, all of the US destroyers, plus three British destroyers, were ordered to close the beach, risking mines, shore battery fire, and the likelihood of running aground in the shallows. As the fire from the destroyers finally began to take a serious toll on the German defenders, in one of the most extraordinary acts of mass courage in the history of the U.S. Army, with many of their leaders dead, the surviving soldiers fought their way up the 100-foot bluffs backing the beach. It was this epic bravery by U.S. soldiers that carried the day at bloody Omaha Beach, and their extraordinary valor should never be forgotten. However, in the words of the chief of staff of the 1st Infantry Division, Colonel Stanhope Mason, “Without that gunfire (from the destroyers), we positively could not have crossed the beaches,” or perhaps in the words of the V Corps commander, Major General Leonard Gerow, after he finally got ashore: “Thank God for the U.S. Navy.”

There are no comprehensive figures for U.S. Navy casualties on D-Day that I can find, although one footnote in a medical report gives numbers of 363 dead and 2,020 wounded. During the dedication of the Navy Memorial at Normandy in 2008, the figure of 1,068 Navy dead was cited, but not from an authoritative source, and that number would certainly include losses in the weeks before and after D-Day. In almost every account of D-Day, Navy losses are just rolled into overall Allied losses, generally considered to be about 10,000 casualties, of which 2,500 died (although recent research suggests a significantly higher toll of about 4,500 dead, mostly on Omaha Beach). Navy personnel climbed Pointe du Hoc with the Army Rangers, parachuted in with the airborne troops, manned the landing craft (along with many U.S. Coast Guard coxswains), and served in numerous roles in the first waves of the landing, suffering high casualties; as a result, determining exactly how many of those men died is a challenge.

The Navy did of course keep an accurate count of how many warships were lost, and in that regard, the week after D-Day was much more costly to the Navy than D-Day itself. The largest U.S. Navy ship lost on D-Day was the destroyer USS Corry (DD-463), which was hit by German shore fire and then probably succumbed to a mine in the opening moments of the bombardment of Utah Beach. Additionally, the minesweeper USS Osprey (AM-56), and numerous amphibious craft, including nine LCIs and 26 LCTs, were also lost at sea. But in the days that followed, the destroyers USS Glennon (DD-620) and USS Meredith (DD-726), destroyer escort USS Rich (DE-695), the minesweeper USS Tide (AM-125), five LSTs, and the troop transport Susan B. Anthony (AP-72) were sunk by the Germans, mostly by mines, as they protected the vital flow of more troops and supplies into the Normandy beachhead.

Although the great majority of ships involved in the invasion were British Royal Navy vessels, and the ground troops of the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada deserve the credit for defeating the Germans ashore, the U.S. Navy played an absolutely critical part in what the Supreme Allied Commander, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, termed “the great crusade” to defeat Germany and rid the world of Nazi tyranny.

Please see H-Gram 031, attachment H-031-1, for more detail on Operation Neptune.


Photo #: 80-G-250062 Rear Admiral Don P. Moon, USN
Rear Admiral Donald P. Moon, USN, as commander, of XI Amphibious Force, Group II, at the amphibious training base, Algiers, Algeria. Photo is dated 24 March 1944, but may have been taken earlier (NHHC 80-G-250062).

The Exercise Tiger Debacle, 28 April 1944

On 5 August 1944, Rear Admiral Donald Pardee Moon committed suicide on board his flagship USS Bayfield (APA-33) in the Bay of Naples. Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal announced that Moon’s death was the result of combat fatigue. Other reports indicate Moon suffered a serious head injury during darkened ship, resulting in constant severe headaches that impaired his judgment, which were described in Moon’s suicide note. Some suggested that the stress of planning for the rushed impending landings in southern France (Operation Dragoon, 15 August 1944) contributed. Others believed that a sense of guilt over what happened during Exercise Tiger was a motivating factor, or at least a concern that a court of inquiry might be convened.

Exercise Tiger was intended to be a full-dress rehearsal for the landings on Utah Beach. Instead, the rehearsal cost more lives (over 650) than the actual landings at Utah Beach on D-Day and served as an example of what could have occurred on D-Day were it not for Adolf Hitler’s shortsighted Navy policies, which left the Germans with a paltry naval capability to defend the Normandy beaches. Nevertheless, on the night of 27–28 April, nine German S-boats (the Allies called them E-boats) got in among a convoy of eight fully loaded LSTs en route to the practice landing and hit three of them with torpedoes, sinking two (one going down in only six minutes) and blowing the stern off the third, with heavy loss of U.S. Army (at least 441) and US Navy (198) lives. There was no known damage suffered by the S-boats from Allied fire.

The LST convoy was part of a much larger “Assault Force U,” which was under the command of Rear Admiral Moon. Moon was an officer of stellar reputation, and the reality was that there was not much of anything he could have done that would have made a big difference in the outcome. Nevertheless, presiding over such a debacle weighed heavily on him. Other senior officers held him responsible, at least in an informal sense, and the fact that the first rehearsal landings were a succession of foul-ups didn’t help (including reported deaths by “friendly fire”). Moon, however, put those lessons to good use, and the actual landings on Utah Beach under his command were executed significantly better than on any of the other beaches, for which he is a hero and his untimely death a tragedy.

The fact that the D-Day landings didn’t suffer the same fate as Exercise Tiger was due to several factors. The principal one was Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s bold decision to launch the invasion in the face of adverse weather forecasts; the S-boats were in port as the Allied invasion fleet crossed the English Channel since the Germans assumed that no one in their right mind would invade in that weather. Second, even if they had come out, there were nowhere near enough S-boats to make more than a dent in the massive Allied invasion fleet. Third, the extraordinary Allied deception effort had the Germans, including what naval forces they had, expecting the invasion in the wrong place.

For more on Exercise Tiger, please see H-Gram 029, attachment H-029-1.

As always, feel free to share H-grams widely. Previous H-grams may be found here.

Published: Mon Jun 22 11:38:02 EDT 2026

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Today in World History July 15
1099 Jerusalem falls to the Crusaders.
1410 Poles and Lithuanians defeat the Teutonic knights at Tannenberg, Prussia.
1685 The Duke of Monmouth is executed in Tower Hill in England.
1789 The electors of Paris set up a "Commune" to live without the authority of the government.
1806 Lieutenant Zebulon Pike begins his western expedition from Fort Belle Fontaine.
1813 Napoleon Bonaparte's representatives meet with the Allies in Prague to discuss peace terms.
1834 Lord Napier of England arrives at Macao, China, as the first chief superintendent of trade.
1863 Confederate raider Bill Anderson and his Bushwhackers attack Huntsville, Missouri, stealing $45,000 from the local bank.
1895 Ex-prime minister of Bulgaria, Stepfan Stambolov, is murdered by Macedonian rebels.
1901 Over 74,000 Pittsburgh steel workers go on strike.
1942 The first supply flight from India to China over the 'Hump' is flown.
1958 President Dwight Eisenhower sends 5,000 Marines to Lebanon to keep the peace.
1960 John F. Kennedy accepts the Democratic nomination for president.

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Rollingthunderremembered.com .

July 15
Thanks to Dan Heller and the Bear
Links to all content can now be found right on the homepage http://www.rollingthunderremembered.com. If you scroll down from the banner and featured content you will find "Today in Rolling Thunder Remembered History" which highlights events in the Vietnam war that occurred on the date the page is visited. Below that are links to browse or search all content. You may search by keyword(s), date, or date range.
An item of importance is the recent incorporation of Task Force Omega (TFO) MIA summaries. There is a link on the homepage and you can also visit directly via https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/task-force-omega/. There are 60 summaries posted thus far, with about 940 to go (not a typo—TFO has over 1,000 individual case files).
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Thanks to Micro
To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and get what happened each day to the crew of the aircraft. ……Skip

For Wednesday July 15


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. Thanks to Interesting Facts
You can hear the roar of Africa’s Victoria Falls from up to 25 miles away.

Sandwiched along the border of Zambia and Zimbabwe in Africa is one of the greatest natural wonders of the world (literally). Nearly twice as tall as Niagara Falls, Victoria Falls plunges some 350 feet down into the basin of a vast gorge below. The steady stream of water is so powerful, it’s created a rainforestlike microclimate, because its voluminous spray blankets the surrounding area continuously. Although the world largely knows this wonder as Victoria Falls (after Queen Victoria, naturally), locals have traditionally called it Mosi-oa-Tunya, meaning “The Smoke that Thunders.” The name is arguably a better fit, as the “thunder” of this massive waterfall can be heard from 25 miles away, and its “smoke” (aka water plume) can be seen even farther.
Victoria Falls is actually several waterfalls in one. On the Zimbabwe side, there’s Devil's Cataract, Main Falls, Rainbow Falls, and Horseshoe Falls, and on the Zambia side lies the Eastern Cataract. If you want to see the waterfall at its most dramatic, visit between February and May when the summer rains, and by extension Victoria Falls itself, are at their highest volume. However, other times of year have plenty to offer, too. Between mid-August and mid-December, daring adventurers can take a dip in Devil’s Pool, a swimming hole that brings those unburdened by acrophobia — fear of heights — to the very edge of the Fall’s dizzying plunge.

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. Thanks to History Facts
"Take Me Out to the Ball Game" has a feminist twist.

Baseball is known as “America's pastime,” a tradition so embedded in U.S. culture that the songwriters who penned “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” in 1908 did so even though they had never actually seen a game themselves. The song’s familiar chorus about snacking on Cracker Jack and rooting for the home team is often sung during the seventh-inning stretch at baseball games, but the tune’s lesser-known verses have a surprisingly feminist twist.

The song tells the tale of a baseball-loving woman named Katie Casey, described in the lyrics as “mad” for the sport. Katie saw every game, knew all the players, and was confident enough in her knowledge of the rules to “[tell] the umpire he was wrong.” The portrayal of a passionate female sports fan was progressive for its time, but it was not exactly factual. Instead, the lyrics are believed to have been inspired by actress and activist Trixie Friganza, who songwriter Jack Norworth was believed to be having an affair with at the time. Friganza was involved in New York’s suffrage movement, and was reportedly a fan of the New York Giants. Her image also appeared on two early editions of sheet music for the song. In 1927, long after his alleged affair with Friganza had ended and seven years after women won the right to vote, Norworth slightly reimagined some of the lyrics to the famous song. He did keep his female protagonist, but inexplicably changed Katie Casey’s name to Nelly Kelly.

By the Numbers

Earliest known use of the word “feminist”
1852
Amount of the largest free-agent contract in MLB history
$700 million

Years the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League existed (1943-1954)
12
Baseball cards in the National Baseball Hall of Fame collection
140,000

DID YOU KNOW?
“Happy Birthday” was originally known as “Good Morning to All.”

Along with “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” “Happy Birthday” is one of the most recognizable songs in history, sung in many different languages all around the world. Written in 1893 by Patty Smith Hill, a director at the Louisville Experimental Kindergarten School in Kentucky, and her sister Mildred J. Hill, an educator and musician, the song originally appeared in a book of music titled Song Stories for the Kindergarten — at least, the melody did. The tune was actually titled “Good Morning to All,” and it was meant as a cheerful classroom greeting for young children, with the lyrics: “Good morning to you/Good morning to you/Good morning, dear children/Good morning to all.” By March 1924, the melody appeared in a songbook with altered lyrics opening the second verse: “Happy birthday to you.” It was published with incremental lyrical changes over the years, and by 1933, 40 years after its inception, the song was widely known as “Happy Birthday to You.”

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Thanks to Thomas W.Smith
. This Week in American Military History

July 11, 1864:  Confederate Army forces under the command of Lt. Gen. Jubal Early reach the outskirts of Washington, D.C.
Brief skirmishing follows. Artillery fire is exchanged. But a previous delay at nearby Monocacy Junction, Maryland, caused by a sizeable, but numerically inferior Union Army force under the command of Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace (future author of Ben Hur) buys time for Union defenders to strengthen their positions around the nation’s capital.
Early will withdraw the following day, commenting to one of his officers, “Major, we haven't taken Washington, but we scared Abe Lincoln like hell.”
The New York Times will refer to Early’s drive toward D.C., “the boldest, and probably the most successful of all the rebel raids.”

July 11, 1955: The first U.S. Air Force Academy class begins with 306 cadets at the Academy’s temporary site, Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, Colorado. The Academy will be moved to its permanent site at Colorado Springs in 1958.
I remember  going  through one of the Labs on Lowry where the Cadets were staying with myh 8th grade class and they were doing experiments with lasers…very cool….skip
July 11, 1798: The U.S. Marine Corps – born as the Continental Marines Nov.
10, 1775 (the official birthday of the Corps) and disbanded at the conclusion of the American Revolution – is reestablished by an act of Congress.

July 12, 1862: The U.S. Army version of the Medal of Honor – the nation’s highest award for valor in combat – is signed into law, stipulating that the decoration be awarded “to such noncommissioned officers and privates as shall most distinguish themselves by their gallantry in action, and other soldierlike qualities, during the present insurrection.”
The Navy version (awarded to both sailors and Marines) had become law more than six months earlier, on Dec. 21, 1861.

July 14, 1813: Lt. (future Lt. Col.) John M. Gamble becomes the first – and thus far only – U.S. Marine to command a ship in action. Gamble’s vessel, the captured British whaler Greenwich, captures the British whaler Seringapatam.
Gamble – a Lieutenant (though several reputable sources say, captain) of Marines aboard USS Essex – had been awarded command of Greenwich by U.S.
Navy Captain (future commodore) David Porter, who was the father of the Civil War’s famous Admiral David Dixon Porter.
Gamble’s exploits will become legendary, though few know of him outside Marine Corps circles.

July 16, 1862: The U.S. Congress establishes the rank of rear admiral for David G. Farragut, who will become best known for purportedly uttering the command, “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!,” or the more likely command, “Damn the torpedoes! "Four bells. Captain [Percival] Drayton, go ahead! [Lt. Commander James] Jouett, full speed!” during the 1864 Battle of Mobile Bay, Alabama.
Farragut (destined to become admiral) is the nation’s first rear admiral

July 17, 1898: Spanish forces under the command of Gen. José Toral surrender Cuba to U.S. forces under Gen. William R. Shafter during the Spanish American War.

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Thanks to the California Fly Overf

WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 2026

Good Morning! On this day in 1929, the Oakland Airport Inn opened as the nation's first airport hotel, with 37 rooms, a restaurant, and a barbershop. Amelia Earhart later became one of its regular guests.

You never know what the tide might bring in, but this definitely wasn't a seashell. As we report below, a decades-old military relic washed up on a Southern California beach, triggering a temporary beach closure and a careful response from authorities.

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Anaheim ☀️ 92°/70° | Bakersfield ☀️ 103°/75° | Death Valley ☀️ 114°/93° | Eureka ☀️ 62°/53° | Fresno ☀️ 103°/73° | Huntington Beach ☀️ 81°/71° | Lake Tahoe ☀️ 78°/54° | Los Angeles ☀️ 90°/71° | Palm Springs ☀️ 111°/88° | Redding ☀️ 104°/70° | Riverside ☀️ 102°/72° | Sacramento ☀️ 102°/65° | San Diego ☀️ 80°/68° | San Francisco ☀️ 70°/56° | San Jose ☀️ 88°/59° | San Luis Obispo ☀️ 87°/59°

Oakland Approves $125M Coliseum Sale
Oakland's City Council approved a revised $125 million deal to sell the city's stake in the Coliseum complex to the Oakland Acquisition Company.
The buyer will pay $50 million at closing, with the balance paid over time with interest. The city will also receive 6% of future ticket fees generated at the site.
The purchasing group includes the African American Sports and Entertainment Group, which has been working to redevelop the site. The agreement also recognizes a $5 million deposit already paid.
Mayor Barbara Lee said the deal would "bring in city revenue, create good paying jobs and drive real economic opportunities for our residents."
The agreement replaces a 2024 sale arrangement that was delayed and ultimately restructured after years of negotiations over the site's future.
Sierra Mining Revives Amid Metals Push
Blue Moon Metals is developing the Blue Moon Mine at a preexisting underground mine site near Hornitos in Mariposa County, focused on critical metals including silver, copper, and zinc.
CEO Christian Kargl-Simard said the company has spent more than $20 million, with a crew of about 25 now developing an underground tunnel. He expects the mine to be fully operational by 2029.
The ore would ship to the company’s Nevada processing facility, and the project is expected to generate $50 million in free cash flow each year for about a decade.
A second firm, Lode Gold, is working the historic Fremont Mine nearby. President Trump designated Mariposa an Opportunity Zone and signed an executive order intended to help fast-track mining permits.
The environmental group Earthworks criticized the order, saying it removes protections for communities and the environment.

Surgeons Perform First Gorilla Mastoid Surgery
Surgeons at UC San Diego Health operated on the infected mastoid bone behind the ear of a 12-year-old gorilla at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, in what is believed to be the first reported such procedure on a gorilla.
The gorilla, named Mizani, had developed sinusitis and a bone infection called mastoiditis. A CT scan confirmed the diagnosis.
Keepers first noticed trouble in March, when Mizani began holding his head, squinting, and eating less.
Doctors Jeffrey Harris and Krish Suresh adapted human microsurgery techniques, with the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance finding no record of the procedure ever being performed on a gorilla.
Mizani has recovered well. The condition appears to have predated his arrival at the park in November 2024.

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➤ Oakland: Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 179 on Monday at a Chinatown affordable-housing site, enacting finance reforms the state estimates will cut the cost of building each affordable unit by $60,000 to $70,000. The measure also adds $900 million for homeless-housing programs.

➤ Sonoma County: Crews downgraded evacuation orders to a warning after stopping the 17-acre Ledson Fire near Santa Rosa. The blaze started Monday near Kenwood in the burn scars of the 2017 Nuns and 2020 Glass fires. No structures were damaged.

➤ Napa County: Meanwhile, crews held the Hardin Fire to 79 acres of grassland in rural Pope Valley on Monday, reaching 60% containment by nightfall with no structures damaged. No evacuations were ordered.

➤ Santa Clara County: Officials are going door-to-door to recover more than 1,000 Costco grapevines that may carry the invasive glassy-winged sharpshooter, which spreads Pierce's disease. The plants were sold this spring, and crews are racing to protect local vineyards and farms.

➤ San Francisco: Sweet Joanna's Cafe, a fixture at the University of San Francisco's downtown campus for nearly 35 years, faces closure after the school declined to renew its lease. Owner Joseph Abughosh rallied regulars with protest posters but struck a more hopeful tone after a call from USF's president.

➤ Modesto: Federal prosecutors indicted Samian Sivansay, 27, on a felon-in-possession charge after alleging he posted photos and videos of guns on Instagram in June. Officers tracked him from Arizona, and after a brief chase found nine firearms in his abandoned car.

➤ Stanislaus County: The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is accepting applications through Aug. 3 for 11 limited deer-hunting permits at the Los Banos and North Grasslands wildlife areas for the final week of A Zone deer season, Sept. 16-20. Winners will be selected Aug. 4.

➤ Fresno: A judge ruled Monday that Stewart Coleman must stand trial for murder in the August shooting death of Carl Johnson, who had come to Coleman's northwest Fresno home to look at fishing gear. Coleman has pleaded not guilty.

➤ Farmersville: The city council endorsed the bipartisan Dignity Act, becoming the sixth Central Valley city to back the bill, which would grant eligible immigrants a renewable seven-year legal status and work authorization. Some speakers criticized its $1,000 annual fee and lack of a path to citizenship.

➤ San Luis Obispo County: Caltrans began full overnight closures of ramps along Highway 1 and US 101 on Monday, from 7:30 p.m. to 7 a.m. through Aug. 7, as crews remove existing striping and install updated lane delineation.

➤ San Bernardino: A procession Monday brought home Lt. Col. Gabriel Estrella, 39, one of eight people killed when a B-52 bomber crashed shortly after takeoff from Edwards Air Force Base on June 15. Firefighters saluted from freeway overpasses as the motorcade traveled along the 10 Freeway.

➤ Southern California: Triple-digit heat, active wildfires, and peak king tides are creating hazardous conditions this week. Temperatures could reach 110 degrees inland as officials warn of elevated fire danger, coastal flooding, and dangerous beach conditions.

➤ Ventura County: An unexploded 1950s-era Super Bazooka round washed ashore at Mugu State Beach and was detonated in place after authorities determined it was too dangerous to move. The beach and a stretch of Pacific Coast Highway were briefly closed, and officials urged the public to leave any suspected military ordnance alone and call 911.

➤ Los Angeles: The police department let its agreement with license-plate-camera vendor Flock Safety expire as it works to rewrite the contract after a watchdog raised concerns about privacy and civil liberties. The report also credited the department's automatic license plate readers with recovering 337 stolen cars over two months.

➤ Mojave Desert: Search crews are looking for Julie Goforth, 63, of Long Beach, who disappeared Friday morning while dirt biking with a friend at the El Mirage off-highway recreation area near Adelanto. The two became separated, and ground and air searches have found no trace.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 2026

Thanks to the Flyover

Good Morning! On this day in 2006, Twitter launched publicly. The idea emerged from a brainstorming session: an SMS service for sharing brief "status" updates, inspired by birds' chirps.
We've all been there: someone greets you warmly by name, and your mind goes completely blank. Turns out there's a science to why faces stick, but names slip away, plus a few tricks to fix it in today's Wisdom Wednesday. Are you good with names, or hopeless like the rest of us? Hit reply and let us know.

Trump Notifies Congress of Resumed Iran War
President Trump notified Congress that the United States has resumed war against Iran, invoking the War Powers Act and restarting a 60-day clock for congressional approval after a ceasefire collapsed over attacks on commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

U.S. forces have struck Iranian missile sites, air defenses, and naval assets for three straight nights.

On Tuesday, Trump also scrapped a proposed 20% toll on cargo transiting the strait, opting instead for trade and investment deals with Gulf states, while pressing ahead with a blockade targeting only Iranian ships. Oil climbed to a one-month high on the news.

Trump hosted Iraq's prime minister at the White House Tuesday, who said after that all U.S. forces would leave Iraq by Sept. 30, part of a pivot from military ties to energy and trade.
130 Million Americans Under Heat Wave Alerts

A massive heat wave stretching from Los Angeles to Boston is putting more than 130 million Americans under heat alerts this week, with temperatures running 20 to 30 degrees above normal across the northern Plains and the Northeast.
Records are already falling. Salt Lake City hit a preliminary 109 degrees Sunday, topping a 107-degree mark first set in 1960, while Billings, Montana, reached 111.
More heat is coming. It will peak in the Northeast on Wednesday, with heat indices near 105 in Washington and 100 in New York City. Meanwhile, parts of Texas are expected to receive 10 to 15 inches of rain and face flash flood threats this week.

List: Per-Person Healthcare Spending by State
Americans spent an average of $9,717 per person on health care in 2024, but the figure varies widely by state, from $7,233 in Utah to $14,044 in Alaska, according to new Bureau of Economic Analysis data.

The top five spenders, on an average per-person basis, were Alaska ($14,044), Washington, D.C. ($13,865), South Dakota ($12,451), New York, and West Virginia.
The lowest per-person averages were Utah, Nevada ($7,536), South Carolina, Texas, and Alabama. The lowest spending was clustered across the Mountain West and South.
Analysts say prices and geography, more than how often people receive care, drive the gap. Hospital and physician costs, provider wages, and local demographics are the key factors.

➤ Hearing specialists say once hearing fades, it's gone for good, making a few simple habits the only way to protect it.

➤ Newly released records show a former special counsel's team accessed texts from dozens of lawmakers in both parties, drawing constitutional accusations.

➤ A state just cleared the way for seniors in assisted living to raise a glass together, no liquor license required.

➤ President Trump announced that he'll deliver a prime-time address to the nation Thursday at 9 p.m. ET, expected to cover the resumed fighting with Iran and his push for the SAVE America Act voter ID legislation.

➤ The House on Tuesday passed the Sunshine Protection Act in a bipartisan 308-117 vote, which would make daylight saving time permanent nationwide, though states could opt out. The bill moves now to the Senate.

➤ Supreme Court Justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett urged Congress to boost court security funding in a rare appearance on Capitol Hill, citing an anticipated rise of 38% in threats and what Barrett described as a recent "swatting" incident at her home.

➤ Health and Human Services officials reported $5.56 billion in expected fraud recoveries and projected savings over six months, returning $12.70 for every dollar spent on healthcare fraud enforcement.


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Thanks to Interesting Facts
. Pizza And Other Bizarre Things We Have Sent Into Space

NASA has strict rules about non-essential items. And yet, over the decades, astronauts have managed to bring along all sorts of odd objects in their Personal Preference Kits. Sure, some may have been marketing stunts—like the time Pizza Hut delivered a meal to the International Space Station—but others were personal caprices, like David Walker’s gorilla suit smuggled onboard in 1984. Read on to discover the full list!
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A gorilla suit
Space can get boring. It got a little more entertaining for astronaut Scott Kelly in 2016, when his twin brother, Mark Kelly, sent him a vacuum-sealed gorilla suit all the way to the ISS for his birthday.

Kelly’s crewmates didn’t know about it, so he had fun pranking them by suddenly appearing in the suit aboard the station. One of the prank videos went viral. As Kelly put it: "How can you not like space gorilla?"


Dirt from Yankee Stadium
Astronaut Garrett Reisman, a lifelong Yankees fan, of course, took a little piece of the Bronx to orbit. In 2008, aboard Space Shuttle Endeavour on mission STS-123, he brought a vial of dirt from Yankee Stadium’s pitcher’s mound—along with other Yankees memorabilia, including items autographed by players.


Amelia Earhart’s watch
In 2010, astronaut Shannon Walker brought Amelia Earhart’s watch to the International Space Station. The legendary aviator had worn it during two transatlantic flights, and it traveled to space on the 82nd anniversary of her first historic solo flight across the Atlantic.
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Pizza
Space pizza finally became a reality in 2001, when Pizza Hut paid millions to deliver a vacuum-sealed pizza to the International Space Station.

It was, quite literally, a publicity stunt out of this world. The pizza—topped with salami to withstand space conditions—was eaten by Russian cosmonaut Yuri Usachov aboard the ISS.


Pieces of the Wright Brothers’ first plane
Tucked into Neil Armstrong’s spacesuit was a small piece of fabric and a fragment of wood from the Wright Brothers' 1903 Flyer—carried all the way from Kitty Hawk to the Sea of Tranquility. He took them with him as he became the first person to step onto the Moon in 1969.


A set of instruments to play "Jingle Bells"
Just before Christmas in 1965, astronauts Wally Schirra and Tom Stafford pulled off a surprise serenade in space.

They had smuggled a harmonica and a set of sleigh bells aboard their Gemini 6A mission and played "Jingle Bells" for Mission Control—creating the first musical performance ever in space. The instruments are now on display at the Smithsonian Institution.


Several LEGO pieces
NASA's collaboration with LEGO took a literal leap when, in 2011, sets of LEGO bricks were sent to the International Space Station aboard mission STS-133.

Astronauts assembled models—such as the Hubble Space Telescope—in microgravity, engaging students around the world in STEM education.


A Buzz Lightyear toy
Buzz Lightyear truly went "to infinity and beyond" when a 12-inch action figure flew aboard Space Shuttle Discovery in 2008. Spending 15 months on the International Space Station, Buzz was part of NASA’s educational outreach efforts.

Upon return, he was honored with a parade at Disney World and now resides in the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum.

A lightsaber
In a nod to sci-fi fandom, a lightsaber prop used by Mark Hamill in Return of the Jedi journeyed to space aboard Space Shuttle Discovery in 2007.

The initiative celebrated the 30th anniversary of Star Wars, symbolizing the intersection of science fiction and real-world space exploration.


Dinosaur bones
In 1985, during NASA's SpaceLab 2 mission, astronaut Loren Acton brought aboard a fossilized bone and a piece of eggshell from Maiasaura peeblesorum, a dinosaur species known for nurturing its young.

These fossils, discovered in Montana, were sent to space to symbolize the connection between Earth’s prehistoric life and space exploration.

Communion bread and wine
In a very profound gesture, Buzz Aldrin privately took Christian communion aboard Apollo 11. As a Presbyterian elder, he carried a tiny wafer and a small pouch of wine, blessing them while orbiting the Moon shortly after the lunar landing.
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Golf clubs (and golf balls)
During Apollo 14, Alan Shepard secretly packed a makeshift 6-iron—a golf club head duct-taped to a lunar tool—and two golf balls.

On live TV, he took a couple of awkward, one-handed swings while wearing his stiff spacesuit. The first ball flopped; the second soared "miles and miles," Shepard joked. It actually traveled about 40 yards, which is quite impressive in lunar terms.


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This Day in U S Military History…….July 15
1941 – Master spy Juan Pujol Garcia, nicknamed “Garbo,” sends his first communique to Germany from Britain. The question was: Who was he spying for? Juan Garcia, a Spaniard, ran an elaborate multiethnic spy network that included a Dutch airline steward, a British censor for the Ministry of Information, a Cabinet office clerk, a U.S. soldier in England, and a Welshman sympathetic to fascism. All were engaged in gathering secret information on the British-Allied war effort, which was then transmitted back to Berlin. Garcia was in the pay of the Nazis. The Germans knew him as “Arabel,” whereas the English knew him as Garbo. The English knew a lot more about him, in fact, than the Germans, as Garcia was a British double agent. None of Garcia’s spies were real, and the disinformation he transmitted to Germany was fabricated-phony military “secrets” that the British wanted planted with the Germans to divert them from genuine military preparations and plans. Among the most effective of Garcia’s deceptions took place in June 1944, when he managed to convince Hitler that the D-Day invasion of Normandy was just a “diversionary maneuver designed to draw off enemy reserves in order to make a decisive attack in another place”-playing right into the mindset of German intelligence, which had already suspected that this might be the case. (Of course, it wasn’t.) Among the “agents” that Garcia employed in gathering this “intelligence” was Donny, leader of the World Aryan Order; Dick, an “Indian fanatic”; and Dorick, a civilian who lived at a North Sea port. All these men were inventions of Garcia’s imagination, but they leant authenticity to his reports back to Berlin–so much so that Hitler, while visiting occupied France, awarded Garcia the Iron Cross for his service to the fatherland. That same year, 1944, Garcia received his true reward, the title of MBE-Member of the British Empire–for his service to the England and the Allied cause. This ingenious Spaniard had proved to be one of the Allies’ most successful counterintelligence tools.

1942 – The first supply flight from India to China over the ‘Hump’ was flown to help China’s war effort.

1943 – General Griswold replaces General Hester in command of operation in New Georgia. There is an air battle over Rendova in which the Americans lose 3 aircraft and claim to shoot down more than 40 Japanese planes.

1945 – American naval vessels bombard Muroran, the second biggest steel center in Japan, lying in Volcano Bay on the east side of the island of Hokkaido. Three battleships bombarded the Muroran and some 1000 carrier planes bombed the cities of Hakodati, Otaru, Abashiri, Kushiro, Asahigawa and Obihiro, all on Hokkaido.

1945 – American B-29 Superfortress bombers, based in the Marianna Islands, raided an oil refinery at Kudamatsu on Honshu Island while fighters and bombers from Okinawa attacked objectives on Kyushu and southern Honshu.

1950 – F-80s accounted for 85 percent of the enemy’s losses to air attack. Far East Air Forces Commander, Lieutenant General George E. Stratemeyer, stated that he wouldn’t trade the F-80 for all the F-47s and F-51s he could get. “It does a wonderful job in ground support and can take care of the top-side job if enemy jets appear.”

1953 – U.S. Air Force Captain James Jabara, 4th Fighter-Interceptor Wing, qualified as the second and last “triple ace” of the war — 15 kills. He also was the second ranking jet ace of the war.

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

MORRISON, JOHN G.
Rank and organization: Coxswain, U.S. Navy. Entered service at: Lansingburg, N.Y. Born: 3 November 1842, Ireland G.O. No.: 59, 22 June 1865. Citation: Serving as coxswain on board the U.S.S. Carondelet, Morrison was commended for meritorious conduct in general and especially for his heroic conduct and his inspiring example to the crew in the engagement with the rebel ram Arkansas, Yazoo River, 15 July 1862. When the Carondelet was badly cut up, several of her crew killed, many wounded and others almost suffocated from the effects of escaped steam, Morrison was the leader when boarders were called on deck, and the first to return to the guns and give the ram a broadside as she passed. His presence of mind in time of battle or trial is reported as always conspicuous and encouraging.

ROBINSON, THOMAS
Rank and organizarion: Captain of the Afterguard, U.S. Navy. Born: 17 May 1837, Norway. Accredited to: New York. G.O. No.: 77, 1 August 1866. Citation: For heroic efforts to save from drowning Wellington Brocar, landsman, of the Tallapoosa, off New Orleans, 15 July 1866.

BUCHANAN, DAVID M.
Rank and organization: Apprentice, U.S. Navy. Born: 1862, Philadelphia, Pa. Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 246, 22 July 1879. Citation: On board the U.S.S. Saratoga off Battery, New York Harbor, 15 July 1879. On the morning of this date, Robert Lee Robey, apprentice, fell overboard from the after part of the ship into the tide which was running strong ebb at the time and, not being an expert swimmer, was in danger of drowning. Instantly springing over the rail after him, Buchanan never hesitated for an instant to remove even a portion of his clothing. Both men were picked up by the ship’s boat following this act of heroism.

HAYDEN, JOHN
Rank and organization: Apprentice, U.S. Navy. Born: 1863, Washington, D.C. Accredited to: Washington, D.C. G.O. No.: 246, 22 July 1879. Citation: On board the U.S. Training Ship Saratoga. On the morning of 15 July 1879, while the Saratoga was anchored off the Battery, in New York Harbor, R. L. Robey, apprentice, fell overboard. As the tide was running strong ebb, the man, not being an expert swimmer, was in danger of drowning. David M. Buchanan, apprentice, instantly, without removing any of his clothing, jumped after him. Stripping himself, Hayden stood coolly watching the 2 in the water, and when he thought his services were required, made a dive from the rail and came up alongside them and rendered assistance until all 3 were picked up by a boat from the ship.

HAYS, GEORGE PRICE
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army 10th Field Artillery, 3d Division. Place and date: Near Greves Farm, France, 14-15 July 1918. Entered service at: Okarche, Oklahoma. Born: 27 September 1892, China. G.O. No.: 34, W.D., 1919. Citation: At the very outset of the unprecedented artillery bombardment by the enemy, his line of communication was destroyed beyond repair. Despite the hazard attached to the mission of runner, he immediately set out to establish contact with the neighboring post of command and further establish liaison with 2 French batteries, visiting their position so frequently that he was mainly responsible for the accurate fire therefrom. While thus engaged, 7 horses were shot under him and he was severely wounded. His activity under most severe fire was an important factor in checking the advance of the enemy.

Another Nise
*OTANI, KAZUO
Staff Sergeant Kazuo Otani distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism in action on 15 July 1944, near Pieve Di S. Luce, Italy. Advancing to attack a hill objective, Staff Sergeant Otani’s platoon became pinned down in a wheat field by concentrated fire from enemy machine gun and sniper positions. Realizing the danger confronting his platoon, Staff Sergeant Otani left his cover and shot and killed a sniper who was firing with deadly effect upon the platoon. Followed by a steady stream of machine gun bullets, Staff Sergeant Otani then dashed across the open wheat field toward the foot of a cliff, and directed his men to crawl to the cover of the cliff. When the movement of the platoon drew heavy enemy fire, he dashed along the cliff toward the left flank, exposing himself to enemy fire. By attracting the attention of the enemy, he enabled the men closest to the cliff to reach cover. Organizing these men to guard against possible enemy counterattack, Staff Sergeant Otani again made his way across the open field, shouting instructions to the stranded men while continuing to draw enemy fire. Reaching the rear of the platoon position, he took partial cover in a shallow ditch and directed covering fire for the men who had begun to move forward. At this point, one of his men became seriously wounded. Ordering his men to remain under cover, Staff Sergeant Otani crawled to the wounded soldier who was lying on open ground in full view of the enemy. Dragging the wounded soldier to a shallow ditch, Staff Sergeant Otani proceeded to render first aid treatment, but was mortally wounded by machine gun fire. Staff Sergeant Otani’s extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty are in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit on him, his unit, and the United States Army.

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for July 15, FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD “PHIL” MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

15 July

1920: KEY EVENT. Capt St. Clair Street led a flight of four DH-4s from Mitchel Field, New York, to Nome, Alaska, and back to Mitchel Field, covering 8,690 miles in 110 flying hours. (U.S. Air Service, “To Nome and Back,” Clifford A. Tinker, Vol 3, No. 5) 1925: Dr. A. Hamilton Rice’s Expedition, with Lt Walter Hinton piloting the Curtiss Seagull plane, returned from the Amazon after discovering the headwaters of the Amazon River. Rice’s expedition was the first to use a plane for exploring. (24)

1933: Through 22 July, Wiley Post completed the first solo global flight in a Lockheed Vega, the “Winnie Mae.” He flew the 15,596 miles in 7 days 18 hours 49 minutes at an average speed of 134.5 MPH. (9) (20)

1950: KOREAN WAR. The 51 FS (Provisional) at Taegu flew the first F-51 Mustang combat missions in Korea. Fifth Air Force assigned the “Mosquito” call signs to airborne controllers in T-6 aircraft. This name later became the aircraft’s identifier. (28)

1952: KOREAN WAR. Fifth Air Force fighter-bombers flew approximately 175 sorties against the Sungho-ri cement plant and a nearby locomotive repair facility. (28)

1954: The first jet-powered transport built in the US, the Boeing 707, the prototype for the KC-135 Stratotanker and the commercial Stratoliner, underwent flight testing near Seattle. (16) (24)

1958: Operation BLUE BAT. After the Iraqi government fell, tensions increased in Lebanon. This strain led Lebanon’s President to seek US security assistance. TAC dispatched its Composite Air Strike Force BRAVO to the Middle East in 12 hours. By the 8 September end of the crisis, MATS aircraft had moved 5,500 passengers and 5,500 tons of cargo in 314 missions to support the strike force. (2) (24) 1961: The 341 SMW activated at Malmstrom AFB as SAC’s first silo-based Minuteman wing. (1) (6)

1965: The Air Force awarded the first Minuteman III R&D contract to Boeing. (6)

1968: Commercial air service between the US and USSR began when an Ilyushin-62 aircraft of the Soviet flag carrier Aeroflot left Moscow. The aircraft landed at Kennedy IAP on 16 July after a 13-hour, 17-minute flight via Montreal. Pan American World Airways, the US flag carrier, flew two Boeing 707s from New York on 16 July to Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport via Copenhagen.

1970: Deputy SECDEF David Packard approved the Subsonic Cruise Aircraft Decoy (SCAD) for development. (6)

1973: LAST SEA COMBAT MISSION/VIETNAM SUMMARY. All US bombing in Cambodia ended after eight years of conventional operations in SEA. An A-7D from 354 TFW flew the last combat mission in SEA. Altogether, the USAF flew 5.25 million sorties over South Vietnam, North Vietnam, northern and southern Laos, and Cambodia. The USAF lost 2,251 planes—1,737 to hostile action and 514 for operational reasons—at a cost of $3,129,948,000. During the Vietnam War, tactical or intratheater airlift carried 7 million tons of passengers and cargo between 1962-1973. The Air Force Reserve made valuable contributions to strategic airlift operation. By October 1972, reserve aircrews had made 1,294 trips to Vietnam, delivering 30,434 tons of cargo and 3,600 personnel. Between 1964 and mid-August 1973, air rescue operations in Southeast Asia saved 3,883 lives. And from 9 June 1964 through 15 August 1973, KC-135s flew 194,687 sorties to supply 8,964 million pounds of fuel during 813,878 refuelings. They also routinely airlifted people, equipment, and aircraft parts between the US, forward bases, and bases in the Far East and Southeast Asia. (16) (26)

1975: Apollo XVIII. Astronauts Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand, and Donald “Deke” Slayton launched from Cape Canaveral to meet up with the Soyuz 19 cosmonauts. Mr. Slayton, at 51, became the oldest man to fly in space. He was also one of the original seven astronauts. This Apollo mission, when it ended on 24 July, was the last US manned space mission until the first space shuttle launch in 1981. (8: Jul 90)

1976: Mather AFB started interservice navigator training for Navy and Marine personnel. (16) (26)

1981: The first TR-1, a high-altitude tactical reconnaissance aircraft rolled out at Lockheed's plant in Palmdale. (12)

1982: SAC launched its 1,500th missile from Vandenberg AFB. (16) (26)

1985: Exercise READEX 85-2. Two B-52s from the 42 BMW simulated Harpoon launches as part of this US Atlantic Command exercise. The event marked the first Full Operational Test and Evaluation (FOT&E) of the Harpoon anti-ship missile. (16) (26)

1998: Raytheon Aircraft Company’s first T-6A Texan II aircraft, or the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System (JPATS), successfully completed its initial flight at Wichita, Kan. To meet Air Force and Navy primary aircraft training needs, the DoD decided to buy 740 T-6A aircraft, along with the accompanying JPATS Ground Based Training System. (AFNEWS Article 981039, 17 Jul 98)

2000: Whiteman AFB received the final B-2A from Northrop Grumman. It was the first test vehicle (AV-1 or Tail No. 82-1066), named Fatal Beauty. With its assignment to the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman AFB, the aircraft received a new name, Spirit of America. (21)

2002: The first production C-17 (P-86), fitted with the Block 13 software upgrade, arrived at McChord AFB. The Block 13 upgrade included a state-of-the-art Terrain Awareness Warning System (TAWS) and improved Station Keeping Equipment (SKE). The TAWS featured a terrain map to help aircrews detect and avoid terrain, while the upgraded SKE had a multi-functional display that enabled 18 aircraft to fly in formation within 10 nautical miles and up to 100 aircraft to fly in formation within 100 nautical miles. The new SKEs also allowed C-17 aircrews to perform formation airdrops in nearly all types of weather. (22)

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