Diggers of the Channel Tunnel or "Chunnel" meets under the English Channel connecting Folkestone, England with Calais, France
2007-01-29 02:13:25
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answer #1
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answered by momwithabat 6
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Agricultural Engineering - Dedication
Rain Bird Sprinkler - The invention of the Impact Sprinkler Head by Orton Englehardt in Glendora, CA, in 1933 contributed greatly to the expansion of sprinkler irrigation. Commemorative plaques, dedicated in 1990, are located at Glendora's Heritage Park (near the original Englehard shed where the sprinkler was invented) and at the corporate office of Rain Bird, who commercialized the development. Dedicated October 30, 1990.
;-D
2007-01-29 02:15:36
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answer #2
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answered by sophia 4
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interesting anniversary.
What happened on this day in history.
OCTOBER 30th
On this day in history in 1979, died Barnes Wallace.
Wallace was a scientist who developed the bouncing bomb, which was effectively used by 'The Dambusters' in the Second World War.
Wallis was born on 26th September 1887, at Ripley, Derbyshire. He was educated at Christ’s Hospital School, Horsham and left, aged 16, to train as a marine engineer, in a shipyard. In 1913, he joined Vickers Shipyards, for whom he worked, including successor companies, until his retirement in 1971.
Wallis first worked on airships until the Hindenburg tragedy led to the abandonment of airships as a method of mass transportation. Wallis was transferred to the aircraft department, and was involved in the design and building of the Wellington bomber, which was to prove an effective weapon in the Second World War.
When war broke out in 1939, Wallis meticulously studied the variety of methods that could bring about victory. He became convinced that the only way to overcome Germany and its allies was bombing on a mass scale. He wrote a paper, A Note on a Method of Attacking the Axis Powers, stating that if the enemy’s power supplies were curtailed, then they would be incapable of continuing the war. Wallis was taken seriously by the War Ministry, and allowed to make suggestions for the prosecution of the war. His first proposal was an outsize bomb weighing in at ten tons, but unfortunately, there was no current aircraft that could carry such a weight. This led Wallis to suggest a plane that could take this burden, the Victory Bomber, but the Ministry turned down the idea as infeasible.
Wallis then suggested a spherical bomb which he called the Surface Torpedo. The principal was that the bomb would skip across the surface of a reservoir, like a stone when skimmed across a stretch of water, and explode only when it sank to the base of the dam wall. The device had two great advantages in that it caused a massive explosion for a comparatively light weight, and the skipping effect meant that the delivering aircraft need not venture close to the dam which was powerfully defended by the enemy. The War Ministry tried the bomb out as an experiment, not seriously believing that it would prove effective. The RAF undertook a mission to attack the Möhne and Eder dams in Germany's industrial Ruhr area. The operation was an astounding success, destroying the dams, reducing power supplies, and producing heavy floods that slowed industrial production. The operation was immortalized by Paul Brickhill in his 1951 book The Dam Busters and the 1954 film of the same name.
After this success, Wallis was entrusted with the production of gigantic bombs. He made the Tallboy, weighing 6 tons, and the 10 ton Grand Slam, which destroyed the German warship Tirpitz, the V1 rocket launch sites, and much of Germany's railway system.
After the Second World War, Wallis designed an aircraft that could fly five times the speed of sound and needed a runway of only 300 yards. He became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1954, and was knighted in 1968.
Wallis died at Leatherhead, Surrey on 30th October 1979 and is buried in Effingham. [St Lawrence Church, Church Street, Effingham, Surrey, KT24 5LX]
2007-01-29 05:56:33
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answer #3
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answered by Retired 7
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10/30/1990 - England-France complete "Chunnel"
* 10/30/1990 - Craig Russell, female impersonator, dies of an AIDS-stroke at 42
* 10/30/1990 - Henry Lauter, actor (Tarzan's Fight), dies
2007-01-29 02:13:38
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answer #4
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answered by GreatWhiteNinja 2
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First, I was at a friend's house for one last 'girls night' before the baby was born. I had been having contractions on & off all day but nothing major. I get up to go to the bathroom and lost my plug. Then contractions became really regular and way more intense. So around 9pm, I call hubby to come & get me - we gotta go! He calls me back like 30 minutes later and ACTUALLY says to me: "Are you in a hurry?". UMMM... HELLO!?!?!? Just having a baby here!!! He wanted to be sure he had enough time to go pickup a buddy of his to drive my car home so it wouldn't be sitting for 3 days at my friends' house. Second, when we got to the hospital my husband tried kicking the anesthesiologist out of the room (because he was going to put a needle in my spine...). As much pain as I was in, I threatened to leave my hubby for the anesthesiologist if he didn't let the man stick that needle in my spine. Then doc comes in and I'm all set & ready to push... he didn't even have gloves on yet - just his white DR coat. He says "Well, let's see where you're at"... and tells me to give him one push. As everyone is standing at least 5 feet away (with the exception of one nurse) I gave a push... and heard a cry. Doc's face went pale... he's like "Well, I guess I should put gloves on, huh?". WELL DUH!!!! :-) One more push & out she came!
2016-03-19 02:50:19
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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