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The FReeper Foxhole Profiles The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III   - April 16th,  2004
see educational sources
Posted on 04/16/2004 12:02:21 AM PDT by snippy_about_it
  
   
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                     Lord, 
                     Keep our Troops forever in Your care 
 
                     Give them victory over the enemy... 
 
 
                     Grant them a safe and swift return... 
 
                     Bless those who mourn the lost. .
 
                     FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer for all those serving their country at this time.
 
 
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     | The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III:
 
 
  The New Global Airlift Standard
 
 The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III is designed to fulfill military airlift needs well into the 21st century. A high-wing, four-engine, T-tailed aircraft with a rear-loading ramp, the C-17 can carry large combat equipment and troops or humanitarian aid across international distances directly to small austere airfields anywhere in the world.
 
 In August 2002, the U.S. Air Force extended its total C-17 order to 180, by committing to an additional 60 C-17s. This order means Boeing will design, build and deliver C-17s through at least 2008. By Mid-January 2004, 117 C-17s had been delivered, 112 to the U.S. Air Force, one to the Mississippi Air National Guard and four to the United Kingdom Royal Air Force.
 
 The U.S. Air Force declared the first C-17 squadron operational in January 1995. Since then the fleet has amassed nearly 600,000 flying hours. The C-17 has been involved in numerous contingency operations, including flying troops and equipment to Operation Joint Endeavor to support peacekeeping in Bosnia, Allied Force Operation in Kosovo, Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom.
 
 
   
 In Afghanistan, C-17s have flown more than 230 humanitarian missions, airdropping more than 2.4 million ration packages to refugees as well as landing bulk foods and blankets. In addition, C-17s continue to fly daily missions carrying troops, supplies and heavy equipment into austere fields in Afghanistan and into airfields in neighboring countries.
 
 In 1998, eight C-17s completed the longest paratrooper airdrop mission in history, flying more than 8,000 nautical miles from the United States to Central Asia, dropping troops and equipment after more than 19 hours in the air, a feat repeated in 2000.
 
 
   
 A cockpit crew of two and one loadmaster operates the C-17, which can be refueled in flight. This cost-effective flight crew complement is made possible through the use of an advanced digital avionics system and advanced cargo systems.
 
 In the cargo compartment the C-17 can carry Army wheeled vehicles in two side-by-side rows. Three Bradley infantry-fighting vehicles comprise one deployment load. Similarly, the Army's newest main battle tank, the M-1, can be carried.
 
 
   
 The four engines are Pratt & Whitney PW2040 series turbofans, designated as F117-PW-100 by the Air Force, each producing 40,440 pounds of thrust. The engines are equipped with directed-flow thrust reversers capable of deployment in flight. On the ground, a fully loaded aircraft, using engine reversers, can back up a two-percent slope.
 
 With a payload of 160,000 pounds, the C-17 can take off from a 7,600-foot airfield, fly 2,400 nautical miles, and land on a small, austere airfield in 3,000 feet or less. The C-17 is equipped with an externally blown flap system that allows a steep, low-speed final approach and low-landing speeds for routine short-field landings.
 
 C-17s have set 33 world records  more than any other airlifter in history  including payload to altitude, time-to-climb, and short-takeoff-and-landing marks in which the C-17 took off in less than 1,400 feet, carried a payload of 44,000 pounds to altitude, and landed in less than 1,400 feet. These records were set during flight-testing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., in 2001.
 
 
   
 In 1995, the C-17 received the prestigious Collier Trophy, symbolizing the top aeronautical achievement of 1994. In 1999, President Bill Clinton presented the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award to Boeing Airlift and Tanker Programs, maker of the C-17, for business excellence. In 2002, the C-17s assembly facility in Long Beach, Calif., was recognized by Industry Weeks Best Plants award, for being one of the top 10 in the North America. In December 2002, the C-17 Program  and its Aerospace Support unit  won the U.S. Senates Productivity Award for Performance Excellence. And, in April 2003, the C-17 Program won the first ever Best of the Best California Governors Award for Performance Excellence.
 
 C-17s are based at Charleston Air Force Base, S.C.; McChord Air Force Base, Wash.; and Altus Air Force Base, Okla., where initial aircrew training occurs. The Air National Guard Base at Jackson, Miss., received its first of eight C-17s on Dec. 18, 2003. Between now and 2007, other new C-17 units will be established at McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., and March Air Reserve Base,Calif. Additional domestic basing locations will be announced by the Air Force in the near future.
 
 
 
 
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KEYWORDS: c17; freeperfoxhole; globemasteriii; militarytransport; samsdayoff; usairforce; veterans
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   C-17 GLOBEMASTER III TACTICAL TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT, USA 
    
 The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III military airlift aircraft is capable of carrying payloads up to 169,000lb, and has an international range and the ability to land on small airfields. A fully integrated electronic cockpit and advanced cargo systems allow a crew of three; the pilot, copilot and loadmaster, to operate all systems on any type of mission. Since it entered service in January 1995, over 116 aircraft have been delivered to the US Air Force with 64 more on order. The UK Royal Air Force has leased four aircraft, delivered by August 2001, under a seven-year agreement, which also has an end-of-lease purchase option.
   
    The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III military airlift aircraft is capable of carrying payloads up to 169,000lb, and has an international range and the ability to land on small airfields. A fully integrated electronic cockpit and advanced cargo systems allow a crew of three; the pilot, copilot and loadmaster, to operate all systems on any type of mission. Since it entered service in January 1995, over 116 aircraft have been delivered to the US Air Force with 64 more on order. The UK Royal Air Force has leased four aircraft, delivered by August 2001, under a seven-year agreement, which also has an end-of-lease purchase option. 
    
DESIGN
    
     
    
     A propulsive lift system allows the C-17 to achieve safe landings on short runways. The C-17 is capable of landing a full payload in less than 3,000ft. The propulsive lift system uses engine exhaust to generate lift: the engine exhaust is directed onto large flaps, which extend into the exhaust stream, allowing the aircraft to fly a steep approach at a relatively low landing speed. 
    
 The aircraft is capable of turning in a small radius and can complete a 180-degree star turn in 80ft. The aircraft can also carry out routine backing. A fully loaded aircraft is capable of backing up a 2% gradient slope using the directed flow thrust reversers. 
    
COCKPIT
    
     
    
     The C-17 cockpit accommodates pilot, co-pilot and two observer positions. The digital avionics system has four Honeywell multi-function cathode-ray tube displays, two full-capability HUDs, or Head-Up Displays, plus cargo systems. The quadruple-redundant electronic flight control system also has a mechanically-actuated backup system. There are two Lockheed Martin central processing computers, one Hamilton Sundstrand data management computer and two Honeywell air data computers. 
    
 A program to upgrade the C-17A avionics includes new mission computers and displays, new software for the warning and caution system, being provided by Northrop Grumman Navigation Systems. The automatic flight control system will be upgraded with BAE Systems Controls CsLEOS real-time operating system and will be certified for GATM (Global Air Traffic Management) system requirements. First deliveries are planned for 2005. 
    
CARGO SYSTEMS
    
    
 Impressive Equipment Mix, prepares to load aboard a new C-17 Globemaster III transport at the U.S. Army's Fort Hood, Texas, home of the III Corps. Two HUMVEES (forward) are followed by an M110A2 self-propelled howitzer, weighing 62,500 pounds, a 2.5 ton truck and trailer and (at right) a 10-ton Oshkosh truck. 
    
     The design of the cargo compartment allows the C-17 to carry a wide range of vehicles, palleted cargo, paratroops, air-drop loads and aeromedical evacuees. The cargo compartment has a sufficiently large cross-section to transport large wheeled and tracked vehicles, tanks, helicopters (such as the AH-64 Apache), artillery, and weapons such as the Patriot Missile System. Three Bradley armoured vehicles comprise one deployment load on the C-17. The US Army M1A1 main battle tank can be carried with other vehicles. 
    
 The maximum payload is 170,900lb (77,519kg) with 18 pallet positions, including four on the ramp. Airdrop capabilities include: single load of up to 60,000lb (27,216kg), sequential loads of up to 110,000lb (49,895kg), Container Delivery System (CDS) airdrop up to 40 containers, 2,350lb (1,066kg) each; up to 102 paratroops. The aircraft is equipped for LAPES (Low Altitude Parachute Extraction System) drops. For Medevac, the C-17 can transport up to 36 litter and 54 ambulatory patients and attendants. 
    
    
 COUNTERMEASURES
    
    COUNTERMEASURES
     The C-17 is equipped with BAE Systems Integrated Defense Solutions (formerly Tracor) AN/ALE-47 countermeasure flare dispensers and the ATK AN/AAR-47 missile warning system. AN/AAR-47 has a suite of surface-mounted thermal sensors around the aircraft, which detect the thermal signature of the missile exhaust plume. Frequency selection and signal processing techniques are used to minimise the false alarm rate. The system provides a warning to the crew via the cockpit indicator unit of the presence and direction of the missile threat. A signal is automatically sent to the ALE-47 dispenser. 
    
 AN/ALE-47 is capable of carrying a mix of expendable countermeasures, including jammers. The system interfaces to the C-17 aircraft's sensors. The aircrew can select the mode of operation of the dispenser for fully automatic, semi-automatic or manual operation. The cockpit control unit can be used to input mission data, together with the numbers and types of expendable countermeasures systems loaded into the ALE-47. The cockpit controller updates and displays the status of the dispenser and the numbers and types of countermeasures remaining. The ALE-47 is capable of dispensing the new-generation active expendable decoys, POET and GEN-X, in addition to the conventional chaff and flare decoys that are compatible with the previous-generation ALE-40 and ALE-39 dispensers. 
    
 The USAF has selected the Northrop Grumman Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) system to equip its C-17 aircraft. LAIRCM is based on the AN/AAQ-24(V) NEMESIS and entered low-rate initial production in August 2002. The system is scheduled to enter service in 2007, but 12 Air Mobility Command C-17s will have a single transmitter configuration (BOSS) by 2004. 
    
    
 ENGINES
    
    ENGINES
    
     
    
     The four Pratt and Whitney PW2040 turbofan engines are integrated in the wings. Engine thrust reversers, which are operable in flight, and speedbrakes enable the aircraft to carry out rapid deceleration and descent manoeuvres. 
    
 The cruise speed is between 0.74 and 0.77 Mach. The range without in-flight refuelling, and with a payload of 160,000lb, is 2,400 nautical miles. Aerial refuelling provides an intercontinental non-stop range. 
    
C-17 Airframe Specifications
    
     GENERAL DESCRIPTION:
    
    GENERAL DESCRIPTION: The C-17 Globemaster III is a high-wing, four-engine, T-tailed military transport. 
    
EXTERNAL DIMENSIONS 
    
     
    
     Wingspan to winglet tip - 169.8 feet (51.76 m) 
    
 Length - 174 feet (53.04 m) 
    
 Height at tail - 55.1 feet (16.79 m) 
    
 Fuselage diameter - 22.5 feet (6.86 m) 
    
ENGINES
     Four Pratt & Whitney PW2040 (military designation F117-PW-100) 40,440 pounds thrust each 
    
CARGO COMPARTMENT
     Cargo compartment crew - One loadmaster 
    
 Cargo floor length - 68.2 feet (20.78 m) 
    
 Ramp length - 19.8 feet (6.04 m) 
    
 Loadable width - 18 feet (5.49 m) 
    
 Loadable height - 12.3 feet (3.76m) under wingbox, 14.8 feet (4.50m) aft of wingbox 
    
 Ramp to ground angle - 9 degrees 
    
 Ramp capacity - 40,000 lbs. (18,144 kg) 
    
    
 
    
     Aerial delivery system capacity: 
 Pallets - Eleven 463L pallets (including 2 on ramp) 
    
 Single load airdrop - 60,000 pound platform (27,216 kg) 
    
 Sequential loads airdrop - 110,000 pounds (49,895 kg), (60 feet of platforms) (18.29 m) 
    
 Cargo handling system - Eighteen 463L Pallets (including 4 on ramp) 
    
 Combat offload - All pallets from aerial delivery or cargo handling systems 
    
SEATING
     Sidewall (permanently installed) - 54 (27 each side, 18 inches wide, 24 inch spacing center to center) 
    
 Centerline (stored on board) - 48 (8 sets of six back-to-back) 
    
 Palletized (10-passenger pallets) - 90 on 9 pallets, plus 54 passengers on sidewall seats 
    
AEROMEDICAL EVACUATION 
     Litter stations (onboard) - Three (3 litters each) 
    
 Litter stations (additional kit) - Nine 
    
 Total capability (contingency) - 36 litters, 102 ambulatory 
    
COCKPIT 
     Flight crew - 2 pilots 
    
 Observer positions - 2 
    
 Instrument displays - 2 full-time, all-function, head-up displays (HUD), 4 multi-function cathode-ray tube displays plus conventional instruments as backup 
    
 Navigation system - Digital electronics 
    
 Communication - Integrated radio management system 
    
 Flight controls system - Quad-redundant electronic flight control with mechanical actuated backup system 
    
WING
     Area - 3,800 sq. ft. (353.03 sq. m) 
    
 Aspect Radio - 7.165 
    
 Wing sweep angle - 25 degrees 
    
 Airfoil type - Supercritical 
    
 Flaps - Fixed-vane, double-slotted, simple-hinged 
    
WINGLET
     Height - 8.92 feet (2.72 m) 
    
 Span - 9.21 feet (2.81 m) 
    
 Area - 35.85 sq. ft. (3.33 m) 
    
 Sweep - 30 degrees 
    
 Angle - 15 degrees from vertical 
    
    
 HORIZONTAL TAIL
    
    HORIZONTAL TAIL
     Area - 845 sq. ft. (78.50 sq. m) 
    
 Span - 65 feet (19.81 m) 
    
 Aspect ratio - 5.0 
    
 Sweep - 27 degrees 
    
LANDING GEAR
     Main, type - Twin-strut tandem per side of aircraft, three wheels each strut 
    
 Width (outside to outside) - 33.7 feet (10.27 m) 
    
 Tires - 50x21-20 
    
 Nose, type - Single strut, steerable with dual wheels 
    
 Tires - 40 x 16 - 14 
    
 Wheelbase - 65.8 feet (20.06 m) 
    
  
   Today's Educational Sources and suggestions for further reading: 
  
 www.airforce-technology.com/projects/c17/
 www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/c17/c17_back.htm
 
To: All
2
posted on 
04/16/2004 12:04:03 AM PDT
by 
snippy_about_it
(Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
 
To: CarolinaScout; Tax-chick; Don W; Poundstone; Wumpus Hunter; StayAt HomeMother; Ragtime Cowgirl; ...
    
   
   
FALL IN to the FReeper Foxhole!
   

   
It's Friday Good Morning Everyone.
    
 If you would like added to our ping list let us know.
 
3
posted on 
04/16/2004 12:04:57 AM PDT
by 
snippy_about_it
(Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
 
To: snippy_about_it
    Good Morning Snippy. 
 
4
posted on 
04/16/2004 12:06:05 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: SAMWolf
    Good night Sam.
5
posted on 
04/16/2004 12:06:27 AM PDT
by 
snippy_about_it
(Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
 
To: snippy_about_it
    Is that pic of 8 C-17's for real??
wow
6
posted on 
04/16/2004 12:32:03 AM PDT
by 
GeronL
(I wore my chair out. I now use a plastic lawn chair.)
 
To: snippy_about_it
    "The USAF has selected the Northrop Grumman Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) system to equip its C-17 aircraft. LAIRCM is based on the AN/AAQ-24(V) NEMESIS and entered low-rate initial production in August 2002. The system is scheduled to enter service in 2007, but 12 Air Mobility Command C-17s will have a single transmitter configuration (BOSS) by 2004." Until I saw this paragraph I was unhappy. NEMESIS is excellent gear. Have to look up LAIRCM. Very fine to go to expedited installation.
 
 Notice the Pratt engines. Somebody has very good taste. 44,440 pound thrust turbofans, real high bypass, excellent.
 
 Very cool fully loaded short landing capability. Puts the engines up out of the way of sucked in debris, too.
 
 Boeing is showing off here, making Antonov look clumsy. Excellent, also. Not to knock Antonov, very fine stuff is coming from them these days.
7
posted on 
04/16/2004 1:37:50 AM PDT
by 
Iris7
(If "Iris7" upsets or intrigues you, see my Freeper home page for a nice explanatory essay.)
 
To: snippy_about_it
    Good morning, snippy and everyone at the Freeper Foxhole.
8
posted on 
04/16/2004 3:04:07 AM PDT
by 
E.G.C.
 
To: snippy_about_it; First_Salute
    That's a big mutha!
9
posted on 
04/16/2004 3:33:00 AM PDT
by 
snopercod
(When the people are ready, a master will appear.)
 
To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; All
    Submit to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you.  James 4:7 
 
  
 
 
  
To defeat Satan, surrender to Christ. 
 
10
posted on 
04/16/2004 5:08:45 AM PDT
by 
The Mayor
(Death separates us for a time; Christ will reunite us forever.)
 
To: bentfeather
    G;morning miss Feather. Here's the follow on to the 15star/15strip flag from yesterday. The single most famous flag in the world.
 
11
posted on 
04/16/2004 5:24:18 AM PDT
by 
Professional Engineer
(Descendant of a bunch of dead white guys..........who conquered the world.)
 
To: snippy_about_it
    Good Morning everyone. Fantastic post for an incredible American aircraft! Great pics and information. 
 
Best regards for a beautiful, blessed day. 
 
12
posted on 
04/16/2004 5:51:51 AM PDT
by 
tomball
 
To: snippy_about_it
    On this Day In History 
 
 
Birthdates which occurred on April 16: 
1652 Clement XII [Lorenzo Corsini], Italy, Pope (1730-40) 
1660 Hans Sloane England, physician/naturalist; founded British Museum 
1682 John Hadley mathematician/inventor (1st reflecting telescope) 
1696 Giovanni Battista Tupolo Italian painter 
1808 Caleb Blood Smith Secretary of Interior (Union), died in 1864 
1816 Edward "Old Allegheny" Johnson Major General (Confederate Army) 
1821 Ford Maddox Brown painter 
1823 Mother Joseph [Esther Pariseau] religious leader (US capital) 
1823 Orlando Bolivar Wilcox Brevet Major General (Union Army), died in 1907 
1867 Wilbur Wright of aeronautical fame (Wright Brothers) 
1871 John Millington Synge Ireland, dramatist/poet (Riders to the Sea) 
1889 Charlie Chaplin [The Little Tramp] Lambeth London England, comedian/actor/director (City Lights) 
1897 John B Glubb British commandant/writer (A soldier with the Arabs) 
1898 Marian Jordan Peoria IL, radio comedienne (Fibber McGee & Molly) 
1900 Polly Adler Russia, bordello proprieter/author (House is not a Home) 
1904 Clifford Case (Senator-Republican-NJ) 
1906 Pigmeat Markham Durham NC, comedian (Here Comes da Judge-Laugh In) 
1911 Christine McIntyre actress (3 Stooges movies) 
1918 Spike Milligan Ahmed Nagar India, actor/comedian (Digby, 3 Musketeers) 
1919 Merce Cunningham choreographer (Acrobat in Every Soul is a Circus) 
1920 John William Farr Detroit MI, bank robber (FBI Most Wanted List) 
1921 Peter Ustinov London England, actor (Death on Nile, Logan's Run, Billy Budd) 
1922 Kingsley Amis London England, novelist (Lucky Jim, The James Bond Dossier) 
1924 Henry Mancini Cleveland OH, composer/conductor (Pink Panther) 
1928 Dick [Night Train] Lane NFL defensive back (St Louis Rams, Arizona Cardinals, Detroit Lions) 
1929 Roy Hamilton singer (You'll Never Walk Alone) 
1930 Herbie Mann Brooklyn NY, jazz flute/sax (Just Wallin') 
1931 Edie Adams [Elizabeth Edith Enke] Kingston PA, actress/Mrs Ernie Kovacs (Ernie Kovacs Show, It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World) 
1935 Bobby Vinton Pittsburgh PA, singer (Roses are Red, Blue on Blue) 
1935 Haskell "Cool Papa" Sadler blues singer/guitarist 
1939 Dusty Springfield [Mary Isabel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien] Hampstead London England, rock vocalist (Growing Pains) 
1945 Goran Antunac Yugoslavia, International Chess Master (1975) 
1947 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar [Lew Alcindor] NBA center (Milwaukee Bucks, Los Angeles Lakers) 
1955 Ellen Barkin Bronx NY, actress (Big Easy, Sea of Love, Switch) 
1963 Jimmy Osmond Ogden UT, singer (Donnie & Marie) 
1965 Jon Cryer actor (Pretty in Pink, Superman IV) 
1971 Selena [Quintanilla Perez] Lake Jackson TX, tejano singer (Grammy-1994) 
 
Deaths which occurred on April 16: 
1115 Svjatopolk II great monarch of Kiev, dies [or 1113] 
1687 George Villiers 2nd duke of Buckingham dies at 59 
1756 Jacques Cassini French astronomer (Discover rings of Saturn), dies at 79 
1760 Laurence 4th Earl Ferrers, executed for murder of his steward 
1865 Robert C Tyler US Confederate Brigadier-General, dies in battle 
1879 Bernadette saint/(saw Virgin Mary at Lourdes), dies in Nevers France 
1948 Babe Ruth baseball legend, dies 
1955 Abdullah Seif el-Islam brother of Yemenite king Ahmed, beheaded 
1978 Lucius D Clay General/Governor US zone West Germany (airlift), dies at 80 
1988 Khalil al-Wazir PLO military commander, assassinated by Israeli commandos 
1991 David Lean director (2 Academy Awards-Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia), dies of pneumonia at 83 
1992 Neville Brand actor (Stalag 17), dies of emphysema at 71 
1994 Ralph Waldo Ellison US writer (Invisible Man), dies at 80 
1997 Mae Boren Axton mother of Hoyt Axton, song writer (Heartbreak Hotel), dies at 82 
 
Reported: MISSING in ACTION 
 
1966 CHESLEY LARRY J.---BURLEY ID. 
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE AND WELL 98] 
1966 JOHNSON SAMUEL R.---DALLAS TX. 
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE AND WELL 98] 
1969 KONYU WILLIAM M.---PHILLIPSBURG NJ. 
1970 AYERS RICHARD L.---WATERLOO IA. 
1970 RAUSCH ROBERT E.---HICKSVILLE NY. 
1972 JONES ORVIN C. JR.---NEWPORT NEWS VA. 
1972 MATEJA ALAN P.---LOUISVILLE KY. 
 
POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by 
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA. 
 
On this day... 
0556 Pelagius I begins his reign as Catholic Pope 
1346 King Stefanus IX of Serbia proclaims himself czar of Greece 
1509 French army under Louis XII enters Alps 
1521 Martin Luther arrives at Diet of Worms 
1705 Queen Anne of England knights Isaac Newton at Trinity College 
1746 Battle at Culloden Troops of "James VIII & III" defeat Charles Stuart 
1777 Battle of Bennington-New England's Green Mountain Boys rout British 
1787 1st American comedy, "The Contrast", makes its debut in NYC 
1789 George Washington heads for 1st presidential inauguration 
1818 Senate ratifies Rush-Bagot amendment (unarmed US-Canada border) 
1854 San Salvador destroyed by earthquake 
1854 Steamer "Long Beach" sinks off Long Beach NY, 311 die 
1854 Franz Liszt's "Mazeppa", premieres 
1861 US President Abraham Lincoln outlaws business with confederate states 
1862 Confederate President Jefferson Davis approves conscription act for white males between 18-35 
1862 Slavery abolished in District of Columbia 
1865 Battle of Columbus & West Point GA (Fort Tyler) 
1866 Nitroglycerine at Wells Fargo & Company office explodes 
1866 Karakozov attempts to assassinate Tsar Alexander II of Russia 
1868 Louisiana voters approve new constitution 
1869 Ebenezer Bassett, 1st US Negro diplomat, begins service in Haiti 
1871 German Empire ends all anti-Jewish civil restrictions 
1874 Dr David Livingstones corpse arrives in Southampton 
1883 Paul Kruger chosen President of Transvaal 
1900 US Post Office issues 1st books of postage stamps 
1908 Natural Bridges National Monument established (Lake Powell UT) 
1912 Pittsburgh Pirates turn a rare 5-3-7 doubleplay (left fielder covers 2nd base) 
1917 Lenin returns to Russia to start Bolshevik Revolution 
1922 Annie Oakley sets record by breaking 100 clay targets in a row 
1926 Book of the Month Club sends out its 1st selections "Lolly Willowes" & "Loving Huntsman" by Sylvia Townsend Warner 
1929 New York Yankees become 1st team to use numbers on uniforms 
1935 1st radio broadcast of "Fibber McGee & Molly" 
1938 Great-Britain recognizes Italian annexation of Abyssinia 
1939 Stalin requests British, French & Russian anti-nazi pact 
1940 1st televised baseball game, WGN-TV, (White Sox vs Cubs exhibition) 
1940 Cleveland Indian Bob Feller hurls an opening day no-hitter vs Chicago, 1-0 
1945 Red Army begins Battle of Berlin 
1945 US troops land on He Shima Okinawa 
1946 1st US launch of captured V-2 rocket, White Sands NM; 8 km altitude 
1947 Lens to provide zoom effects demonstrated (New York NY) 
1947 Financier and presidential confidant Bernard M. Baruch said in a speech at the South Carolina statehouse: "Let us not be deceived _ we are today in the midst of a cold war." 
1947 Massive explosion & fire kills 500 in Texas City TX 
1948 Organization for European Economic Cooperation (EEC) forms in Paris France 
1953 WAND TV channel 17 in Decatur IL (ABC) begins broadcasting 
1954 KVAL TV channel 13 in Eugene OR (CBS) begins broadcasting 
1956 1st solar powered radios go on sale 
1958 French government of Gaillard falls due to Tunisia crisis 
1962 Walter Cronkite begins anchoring CBS Evening News 
1962 Brazil nationalizes US businesses 
1964 9 men sentenced 25-30 years for Britain's 1963 "Great Train Robbery" 
1965 Test flight of heavy Saturn S-1C-rocket 
1966 Rhodesian PM Ian Smith breaks diplomatic relations with Britain 
1972 2 giants pandas (Ling-Ling and Hsing-Hsing) arrive in the US, from China 
1972 Apollo 16 launched; 5th manned lunar landing (Decartes Highlands) 
1974 200,000 attend rock concert California Jam I in Ontario CA 
1975 Cambodian Red Khmer occupy Phnom Penh 
1977 Alex Haley finds his Roots in Juffure, Gambia 
1979 Failed Palestinian attack on Zaventem Airport in Belgium 
1980 Arthur Ashe retires from professional tennis 
1982 Queen Elizabeth proclaims Canada's new constitution 
1986 To dispel rumors he's dead, Moammar Qadhafi appears on TV 
1987 Michael Jordan, becomes 2nd NBA to score 3000 points in a season 
1990 Supreme Court rejects appeal from retarded man, Dalton Prejean, condemned to death for murdering a Louisiana state trooper in 1977 
1992 The House ethics committee listed 303 current and former lawmakers who had overdrawn their House bank accounts, ending an inquiry into the House bank scandal 
1992 Afghánistán President Najibullah resigns 
1993 Jury reaches guilty verdict in Federal case against cop who beat Rodney King, but the verdict is not read until April 17th 
1997 Police in Israel recommended indicting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for breach of trust in an influence-trading scandal. 
 
Holidays 
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week" 
 
Cuba : Militiamen Day 
Denmark : Queen Margrethe's Birthday 
Puerto Rico : José De Diego's Birthday (1867) 
USA] National Garden Week Week (Day 6) 
Mathematics Education Month 
 
Religious Observances 
Roman Catholic : Commemoration of St Bernadette Soubirous of Lourdes 
 
Religious History 
1521 German reformer Martin Luther, 34, arrived at the Diet of Worms, where he afterward defended his "Ninety-Five Theses," first advanced in 1517. At the Diet, Luther refused to recant his ideas 'unless overcome by Scripture.' 
1772 Anglican clergyman and hymnwriter John Newton wrote in a letter: 'I think there is a scriptural distinction between faith and feeling, grace and comfort.... The degree of the one is not often the just measure of the other.' 
1829 Death of Carl G. Glaser, 45, German choral master and composer of the hymn tune AZMON, to which we today sing, "O For a Thousand Tongues." 
1904 Birth of Merrill C. Tenney, American N.T. scholar. In addition to his many scholarly writings, Tenney was dean of the Wheaton College Graduate School in Illinois from 1947-71. 
1948 Christians in Action was incorporated in Compton, CA. Founded by Rev. Lee Shelley, this interdenominational overseas mission helps establish national churches in nearly two dozen overseas countries. 
 
Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987. 
 
Thought for the day : 
"God never imposes a duty without giving time to do it." 
 
What a Difference 30 Years Makes... 
1970: Rolling Stones. 
2000: Kidney stones. 
 
New State Slogans... 
Alaska: We're bigger than Texas! nyah ha! 
 
Female Language Patterns... 
"Let's paint the kitchen." REALLY MEANS, 
"You paint the kitchen. I'm going to the store. 
Don't get paint on the kids." 
 
Male Language Patterns... 
"Have you lost weight?" REALLY MEANS, 
"I've just spent our last $30 on a cordless drill."
13
posted on 
04/16/2004 6:40:17 AM PDT
by 
Valin
(Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
 
To: GeronL
    Morning GeronL. As far as I know it's a legit picture.
14
posted on 
04/16/2004 6:58:50 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: Iris7
    Snippy and I saw a program on the History Channel about military transports, a large part of which was covered the C-17. Impressive plane!
15
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:01:09 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: E.G.C.
    Good Morning E.G.C. Looks like it's trying to clear up here.
16
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:01:46 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: snopercod
    Morning Snopercod.
17
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:02:15 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: The Mayor
    Good Morning Mayor.
18
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:02:40 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: Professional Engineer
    Morning PE. Fort McHenry Flag?
19
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:03:56 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
To: tomball
    Good Morning tomball. Heck of a plane!
20
posted on 
04/16/2004 7:04:44 AM PDT
by 
SAMWolf
(Puns are bad, but poetry is verse.)
 
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