Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2007-05-06
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[edit]64.229.16.19 00:20, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Friedel's law, named after Georges Friedel, is a property of Fourier transforms of real functions. Given a real function , its Fourier transform :
satisfies the following property: Where is the complex conjugate of . Centrosymmetric points are called Friedel's pairs. The square amplitude () is centrosymmetric: The phase of is antisymmetric:
Sources[edit]G. Friedel, Comptes Rendus, Acad. Sci. (Paris) 157, 1533-1536 (1913). 71.198.42.13 00:51, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Born in Canada she grew up as a normal girl. Last seen she was in Ethiopia at the age of four. No one knows of her where abouts at this time. Although she has not been seen for almost ten years she is still talked about but many people beleive she never existed Sources[edit]
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Sources[edit]Offical Website http://www.maxi-m.ru/ (russian)
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I wish to nominate SCO-Linux controversies for Wikipedia:peer review in preparation for submission as a good article candidate.
69.140.164.142 05:58, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply] That's nice, try posting on the peer review pages. Good luck with that. Hersfold (talk/work) 20:30, 3 July 2007 (UTC)[reply] |
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Sources[edit]60.240.112.138 06:11, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Jimmy Valentine's distinguished radio and television career literally began on the drawing board. A conversation with engineers on a remote radio broadcast in 1937 led to a job as a draftsman at KSTP Minneapolis/Saint Paul, making drawings of the station's new transmitter. Encouraged and tutored by KSTP announcers who had heard his deep voice (which Cedric Adams later said he envied), he practiced reading news wire reports and advertising copy. He landed a job as an announcer with WDGY Minneapolis/Saint Paul in 1938, then worked three years at a Grand Forks, North Dakota, radio station before returning to KSTP, this time as an announcer, in 1941. In 1948 he moved to KSTP TV Minneapolis/Saint Paul, where he hosted "Riddle Griddle," the area's first children's TV show. He later created, produced, and hosted the popular "Jimmy's Junior Jamboree." The show brought out his great talent for improvisation; he once did an entire show using a chalkboard and pantomime when the audio failed. He also did news and weather, hosted "Dialing for Dollars" and many other shows, and pioneered the use of automation audio carts in television. He retired in 1986, and died in 2002.
Sources[edit]76.101.130.199 07:45, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Kracht http://www.christiankracht.com 84.150.213.20 07:48, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Jimmy Valentine's distinguished radio and television career literally began on the drawing board. A conversation with engineers on a remote radio broadcast in 1937 led to a job as a draftsman at KSTP Minneapolis/Saint Paul, making drawings of the station's new transmitter. Encouraged and tutored by KSTP announcers who had heard his deep voice (which Cedric Adams later said he envied), he practiced reading news wire reports and advertising copy. He landed a job as an announcer with WDGY Minneapolis/Saint Paul in 1938, then worked three years at a Grand Forks, North Dakota, radio station before returning to KSTP, this time as an announcer, in 1941. In 1948 he moved to KSTP TV Minneapolis/Saint Paul, where he hosted "Riddle Griddle," the area's first children's TV show. He later created, produced, and hosted the popular "Jimmy's Junior Jamboree." The show brought out his great talent for improvisation; he once did an entire show using a chalkboard and pantomime when the audio failed. He also did news and weather, hosted "Dialing for Dollars" and many other shows, and pioneered the use of automation audio carts in television. He retired in 1986, and died in 2002. Sources[edit]http://www.pavekmuseum.org/Valentine.htm 76.101.130.199 07:58, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]Any maths source (someone else can do a better job than me but I still want to put this in) 220.239.48.168 08:48, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit]www.mbialjaber.com/business/AJWA.shtml
Aljaberererer 11:09, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Play[edit]Gain help[edit]
Sources[edit]85.228.114.80 11:16, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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(copyright violation deleted) 221.128.135.82 13:29, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply] Declined. Wikipedia is not an advertising service. The text also appeared to be copied directly from a Web site, which is an infringement of copyright. Please rewrite the article in your own words and in from a neutral point of view. Thank you. --///Jrothwell (talk)/// 15:20, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply] |
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X Common Lisp (XCL) is a Free implementation of Common Lisp. It has been developed in secret by Peter Graves, the author or ABCL. It's main features are small C++ kernel for bootstrapping, its own native code compiler, compact code, native threads on both Linux and Microsoft Windows. It'a aim is to be as compliant and portable as possible, be easily embeddable as ECL, fast as SBCL, compact and clean. External links[edit]
80.92.100.69 13:42, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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The Band[edit]Sel'm was originally thought up of in 2001 by drummer, MANJ", who was working as a roadie for Dir en grey alongside bassist Takuma. He had an image of the band that he wanted but, despite trying to succeed, he had no success. Takuma, despite not originally being able to play the bass, joined MANJ" as the bassist and built his skills up from there. At the time, MANJ" was also friends with guitarist Tsubaki, a roadie of Kagerou; Tsubaki decided to join and, despite the fact the members were constantly changing, the band was proceeding slowly. All instrumental positions had been filled, however Sel'm were stil searching for a vocalist. It was at the last live of Tora, the vocalist of the band Girugamesh, that MANJ" decided who the vocalist of Sel'm should be and Tora joined almost instantly afterwards. Their first release -DEVASTATION- was distributed to fans on 4th April 2005 and the band's name slowly but surely grew as they performed alongside bands such as Phantasmagoria, D, 12012 and KuRt during EDISIDE ~DEEP~ presented by Like an Edison; however, their popularity was still low. Their first single Choushou no Tsuki was released in November 2005 shortly followed by maxi single Anthology released only a month later. After numerous lives alongside other bands, Sel'm held their first one-man live resisted VIII places Madness of the birth in Meguro Rokumeikan. Discography[edit]Singles[edit]
Albums[edit]
References & External Links[edit]
Category:Japanese rock music groups
Decline - sources do not establish notability. --Haemo 07:09, 20 July 2007 (UTC)[reply] |
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Robert Downey Jnr http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000375/
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In the game, you control a bean-like character called "Count Lars", who per his father's request has to rid his county from monsters. References[edit]
Category:Flash games
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Killnoise earplugs, kill the noise - not the sound. Company who develops and sells consumer adopted earplugs as protection against tinnitus. Sources[edit]www.killnoise.com 83.252.106.206 15:49, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Internet Video Magazine features great new videos and online movies from web sites, video producers and independent movie makers throughout the world. It also features hundreds of how to do it sections which provide lessons, tutorials and reviews to help newbies, video hobbyists and professionals develop, create and post their own internet masterpieces. http://www.internetvideomag.com Sources[edit]How to become an Internet pro in 60 seconds Chicago Tribune, United States - Nov 24, 2006 ... three sites. If, however, you prefer the wisdom of editors to the wisdom of crowds, check out Internet Video Magazine. Their weekly ...http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/columnists/chi-0611240016nov24,1,6914708.column?coll=chi-technologyreviews-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true Point Place resident profits from sharing video of pet project The Toledo Blade - Nov 08, 2006 Everybody poops, but Wombat the cat gets paid for it. Mark Shapiro, editor-in-chief of Internet Video Magazine, said streaming video could be the savior of advertising on the Web, with the potential for commercials before, after, or embedded inside videos.http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061108/ART16/61108007
YouTube at forefront of amateur Web video craze San Antonio Express , TX - Aug 31, 2006 ... the last year how much this has exploded with YouTube and Grouper and all those other sites," says Mark Shapiro, managing editor of Internet Video Magazine. ... http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/stories/MYSA20060901.01P.NZ.State.You_Tube0901.1995286.html
How to Make Home Videos - and Share Them With the World by Mark Shapiro, Internet Video Magazine http://hometoys.com/article.php4?displayid=771 TMCNET.com - No more bad videos - http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2006/08/02/1766921.htm
24.30.157.72 15:56, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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The name MTServers wasn't exactly the best choice of name for the website, though that wasn't really important as it wasn't for huge audience. 2006/07
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D-Day World War 2
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The Battle of Normandy was fought in 1944 between Nazi Germany in Western Europe and the invading Allied forces as part of the larger conflict of World War II. Operation Overlord was the codename for the Allied invasion of northwest Europe, which began on June 6, 1944, and ended on August 19, 1944, when the Allies crossed the River Seine. Over sixty years later, the Normandy invasion still remains the largest sea borne invasion in history, involving almost three million troops crossing the English Channel from England to Normandy. Operation Neptune was the codename given to the initial assualt phase of Operation Overlord; its mission, to gain a foothold on the continent, started on June 6, 1944 (most commonly known by the name D-Day) and ended on June 30, 1944. The primary Allied formations that saw combat in Normandy came from the United States of America, United Kingdom and Canada. Substantial Free French and Polish forces also participated in the battle after the assault phase, and there were also contingents from Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Greece, the Netherlands, and Norway.[8] The Normandy invasion began with overnight parachute and glider landings, massive air attacks, naval bombardments, and an early morning amphibious phase began on June 6. The “D-Day” forces deployed from bases along the south coast of England, the most important of these being Portsmouth. The battle for Normandy continued for more than two months, with campaigns to establish, expand, and eventually break out of the Allied beachheads, and concluded with the liberation of Paris and the fall of the Falaise pocket in late August 1944. The Battle of Normandy was described thus by Adolf Hitler: “In the East, the vastness of space will... permit a loss of territory... without suffering a mortal blow to Germany’s chance for survival. Not so in the West! If the enemy here succeeds… consequences of staggering proportions will follow within a short time.”[9] Allied preparations[edit]After the 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa), the Soviets had done the bulk of the fighting against Germany on the European mainland. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill had committed the United States and the United Kingdom to opening up a “second front” in Europe to aid in the Soviet advance on Germany, initially in 1942, and again in spring 1943. The British, under Churchill, wished to avoid the costly frontal assaults of World War I. Churchill and the British staff favoured a course of allowing the insurgency work of the Special Operations Executive to come to widespread fruition, while themselves making a main Allied thrust from the Mediterranean to Vienna and into Germany from the south. Such an approach was also believed to offer the advantage of creating a barrier to limit the Soviet advance into Europe. However, the U.S. believed from the onset that the optimum approach was the shortest route to Germany emanating from the strongest Allied power base. They were adamant in their view and made it clear that it was the only option they would support in the long term. Two preliminary proposals were drawn up: Operation Sledgehammer, for an invasion in 1942, and Operation Roundup, for a larger attack in 1943, which was adopted and became Operation Overlord, although it was delayed until 1944. The planning process was started in earnest in March 1943 by British Chief of Staff of Supreme Allied Commander (COSSAC), Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick Morgan with the aid of his American deputy, Maj. Gen. Ray W. Barker. The plan was later adopted and refined starting in January 1944 by SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force), led by General Dwight David Eisenhower. The short operating range of Allied fighters, including the British Spitfire and Typhoon, from UK airfields greatly limited the choices of amphibious landing sites. Geography reduced the choices further to two sites: the Pas de Calais and the Normandy coast. Because the Pas de Calais offered the shortest distance to the European mainland from the UK, the best landing beaches, and the most direct overland route to Germany, it was the most heavily fortified and defended landing site. Consequently, the Allies chose Normandy for the invasion. In part because of lessons learned by Allied troops in the raid on Dieppe of 19 August 1942, the Allies decided not to assault a French seaport directly in their first landings. Landings in force on a broad front in Normandy would permit simultaneous threats against the port of Cherbourg, coastal ports further west in Bretagne, and an overland attack towards Paris and towards the border with Germany. Normandy was a less-defended coast and an unexpected but strategic jumping-off point, with the potential to confuse and scatter the German defending forces. It was not until November 1943 [1] that General Dwight David Eisenhower was appointed Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, giving him overall charge of the Allied forces in Western Europe. In January 1944, General Sir Bernard Montgomery was named as commander of the 21st Army Group, to which all of the invasion ground forces belonged, and was also given charge of developing the invasion plan.[10] At that stage the COSSAC plan proposed a landing from the sea by three divisions, with two brigades landed by air. Montgomery quickly increased the scale of the initial attack to five divisions by sea and three by air, reflected in the plans for an additional assault at Utah Beach. (He initially requested landings by four Airborne Divisions, but available transport aircraft was only enough to land three divisions.) In total, 47 divisions would be committed to the Battle of Normandy: 19 British, five Canadian and one Polish divisions under overall British command, and 21 American divisions with one Free French division, totaling 140,000 troops. On 7 April and 15 May Montgomery presented his strategy for the invasion at St Paul’s School. He envisaged a ninety day battle, ending when all the forces reached the Seine, pivoting on an Allied-held Caen, with British and Canadian armies forming a shoulder and the U.S. armies wheeling to the right. About 6,900 vessels would be involved in the invasion, under the command of Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay (who had been directly involved in the North African and Italian landings), including 4,100 landing craft. A total of 12,000 aircraft under Air Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory were to support the landings, including 1,000 transports to fly in the parachute troops; 10,000 tons of bombs would be dropped against the German defences, and 14,000 attack sorties would be flown. The objective for the first 40 days was to create a lodgement that would include the cities of Caen and Cherbourg (especially Cherbourg, for its deep-water port). Subsequently, there would be a break out from the lodgement to liberate Brittany and its Atlantic ports, and to advance to a line roughly 125 miles (190 km) to the southwest of Paris, from Le Havre through Le Mans to Tours, so that after ninety days the allies would control a zone bounded by the rivers Loire in the south and Seine in the northeast. Deception[edit]In the months leading up to the invasion, the Allies conducted a deception operation, Operation Bodyguard, designed to persuade the Germans that other points would be threatened as well as northern France (such as the Balkans and the south of France). Then, in the weeks leading up to the invasion, in order to persuade the Germans that the main invasion would really be coming to the Pas de Calais, as well as to lead them to expect an invasion of Norway, the Allies prepared a massive deception plan, called Operation Fortitude. Operation Fortitude North would lead the Axis to expect an attack on Norway; the much more vital Operation Fortitude South was designed to lead the Germans to expect the main invasion at the Pas de Calais, and to hold back forces to guard against this threat rather than rushing them to Normandy. An entirely fictitious First U.S. Army Group (“FUSAG”), supposedly located in southeastern England under the command of General Lesley J. McNair and General George S. Patton, Jr., was created in German minds by the use of double agents and fake radio traffic. The Germans had an extensive network of agents operating in England. Unfortunately for them, every single one reporting about FUSAG had been “turned” by the Allies as part of the Double Cross System, and appropriate agents were dutifully sending back messages “confirming” the existence and location of FUSAG and the Pas de Calais as the likely main attack point. Dummy tanks (some inflatable), trucks, and landing craft, as well as troop camp facades (constructed from scaffolding and canvas) were placed in ports on the eastern and southeastern coasts of Britain, and the Luftwaffe was allowed to photograph them. In aid of Operation Fortitude North, Operation Skye was mounted from Scotland using radio traffic, designed to convince German traffic analysts that an invasion would also be mounted into Norway. Against this phantom threat, German units that otherwise could have been moved into France were instead kept in Norway. The last part of the deception occurred on the night before the invasion: a small group of SAS operators deployed dummy paratroopers over Le Havre and Isigny. These dummies led the Germans to believe that an additional airborne assault had occurred; this tied up reinforcing troops and kept the true situation unclear. Special equipment[edit]Some of the more unusual Allied preparations included armoured vehicles specially adapted for the assault. Developed under the leadership of Major-General Percy Hobart (Montgomery’s brother-in-law), these vehicles (called Hobart’s Funnies) included “swimming” Duplex Drive Sherman tanks, the Churchill Crocodile flame throwing tank, mine-clearing tanks, bridge-laying tanks and road-laying tanks and the Armoured Vehicle, Royal Engineers (AVRE) - equipped with a large-caliber mortar for destroying concrete emplacements. Some prior testing of these vehicles had been undertaken at Kirkham Priory in Yorkshire, England. The majority would be operated by small teams of the British 79th Armoured Division attached to the various formations. The invasion plan also called for the construction of two artificial Mulberry Harbours in order to get vital supplies to the invading forces in the first few weeks of the battle in the absence of deep-water ports, and Operation PLUTO (Pipe Line Under The Ocean), a series of submarine pipes that would deliver fuel from Britain to the invading forces. Rehearsals and security[edit]Allied forces rehearsed their roles for D-Day months before the invasion. On April 28, 1944, in south Devon on the English coast, 749 U.S. soldiers and sailors were killed when German torpedo boats surprised one of these landing exercises, Exercise Tiger. The effectiveness of the deception operations was increased by a news blackout from Britain. Travel to and from the Irish Free State was banned, and movements within several miles of the coasts restricted. The German embassies and consulates in neutral countries were flooded with all sorts of misleading information, in the well-founded hope that any genuine information on the landings would be ignored with all the confusing chaff. In the weeks before the invasion it was noticed that the crossword of the British Daily Telegraph newspaper contained a surprisingly large number of words which were codewords relating to the invasion. MI-5 (the Security Service) first thought this was a coincidence, but when the word Mulberry was one of the crossword answers, MI-5 then interviewed the compiler — a schoolmaster — and were convinced of his innocence. According to National Geographic[2], in 1984 a former student of the compiler claimed that he had picked up the words while eavesdropping on soldiers' conversations around the army camps and suggested their use in the puzzles. This assertion has not been independently verified, and Marc Romano, author of the book Crossworld: One Man's Journey into America's Crossword Obsession, gives a number of reasons for why the story is implausible. There were several leaks on or before D-Day, and one such leak is of major interest. It involved General de Gaulle’s radio message after D-Day. He, unlike all the other leaders, stated that this invasion was the real invasion. This had the potential to ruin the Allied deceptions Fortitude North and Fortitude South. For example, Eisenhower referred to the landings as the initial invasion. The Germans did not believe de Gaulle and waited too long to move in extra units against the Allies. The Allied invasion plan[edit]The order of battle was approximately as follows, east to west: British sector (Second Army)[edit]
U.S. Sector (First Army)[edit]
Naval participants[edit]The Invasion Fleet was drawn from 8 different navies, comprising 6,938 vessels: 1,213 warships, 4,125 transport vessels (landing ships and landing craft) and 1,600 support vessels which included a number of merchant vessels. The overall commander of the Allied Naval Expeditionary Force, providing close protection and bombardment at the beaches, was Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay. The Allied Naval Expeditionary Force was divided into two Naval Task Forces: Western (Rear-Admiral Alan G Kirk) and Eastern (Rear-Admiral Sir Philip Vian). The warships provided cover for the transports against the enemy whether in the form of surface warships, submarines or as an aerial attack and give support to the landings through shore bombardment. These ships included the Allied Task Force "O".
Codenames[edit]The Allies assigned codenames to the various operations involved in the invasion. Overlord was the name assigned to the establishment of a large-scale lodgement on the Continent. The first phase, the establishment of a secure foothold, was codenamed Neptune, according to the D-day museum[3]:
The Defenders[edit]German preparations[edit]In late 1943, the obvious Allied buildup in Britain prompted the German Commander-in-Chief in the West, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, to request reinforcements. In addition to fresh units, von Rundstedt also received a new subordinate, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. Rommel originally intended only to make a tour of inspection of the Atlantic Wall. After reporting to Hitler, Rommel requested command of the defenders of northern France, Belgium and the Netherlands. These were organised as Army Group B in February 1944. (The German forces in southern France were designated as Army Group G, under General Johannes Blaskowitz). Rommel had recognised that for all their propaganda value, the Atlantic Wall fortifications covered only the ports themselves. The beaches between were barely defended, and the Allies could land there and capture the ports from inland. He revitalised the defenders, who laboured to improve the defences of the entire coastline. Steel obstacles were laid at the high-water mark on the beaches, concrete bunkers and pillboxes constructed, low-lying areas flooded and booby-trapped stakes known as Rommelspargel (Rommel's asparagus) set up on likely landing grounds to deter airborne landings. These works were not fully completed, especially in the vital Normandy sector, partly because Allied bombing of the French railway system interfered with the movement of the necessary materials, and also because the Germans were convinced by the Allied deception measures and their own preconceptions that the landings would take place in the Pas de Calais, and concentrated their efforts there. Hitler was especially intransigent in his conviction that an Allied attack would come through Pas de Calais and overruled Rommel - who strongly believed all along that, if he were in Eisenhower's shoes, he would invade through Normandy. Rommel's defensive measures were also frustrated by a dispute over armoured doctrine. In addition to his two army groups, von Rundstedt also commanded the headquarters of Panzer Group West under General Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg (usually referred to as von Geyr). This formation was nominally an administrative HQ for von Rundstedt's armoured and mobile formations, but it was to be renamed Fifth Panzer Army and brought into the line in Normandy. Von Geyr and Rommel disagreed over the deployment and use of the vital Panzer divisions. Rommel recognised that the Allies would possess air superiority, and would be able to harass his movements from the air. He therefore proposed that the armoured formations be deployed close to the invasion beaches. In his words, it was better to have one Panzer division facing the invaders on the first day, than three Panzer divisions three days later when the allies would already have established a firm beachhead. Von Geyr argued for the standard doctrine that the Panzer formations should be concentrated in a central position around Paris and Rouen, and deployed en masse against the main Allied beachhead when this had been identified. The argument went all the way up to Hitler, who characteristically imposed an unworkable compromise solution. Three Panzer divisions were given to Rommel, too few to cover all the threatened sectors, and three to von Geyr, not enough for a decisive intervention. (Four others were dispersed in Southern France and the Netherlands, under the tactical control of neither commander). Also, Hitler reserved to himself the authority to move most of these divisions, or commit them to action. On June 6, many Panzer division commanders were unable to move, as Hitler had not given the necessary authorisation, and his staff refused to wake him upon news of the invasion. German defenses[edit]The Germans had extensively fortified the foreshore area as part of their Atlantic Wall defenses (including tank top turrets and extensive barbed wire), believing that the forthcoming landings would be timed for high tide (this caused the landings to be timed for low tide). The sector which was attacked was guarded by four divisions, of which only one (352nd) was of high quality. The other defending troops included Germans (who were not considered fit for active duty on the Eastern Front, usually for medical reasons) and various other nationalities such as conscripted Poles and former Soviet prisoners-of-war who had agreed to fight for the Germans rather than endure the harsh conditions of German POW camps. These "Ost" units were provided with German leadership to stiffen them. Divisional Areas[edit]
Adjacent Divisional Areas[edit]Other divisions occupied the areas around the landing zones, including:
Mobile Reserves[edit]The 21st Panzer Division (Generalmajor Edgar Feuchtinger) was deployed near Caen as a mobile striking force. It was so close to the coastal defenses that, under standing orders in case of invasion, several of its infantry and anti-aircraft units would come under the orders of the fortress divisions on the coast, reducing the effective strength of the division. The 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend (Brigadeführer Fritz de Witt) was stationed to the southeast. Its officers and NCOs were long-serving veterans, but the junior soldiers had all been recruited directly from the Hitler Youth movement at the age of seventeen in 1943. It was to acquire a reputation for ferocity and war crimes in the coming battle. Further to the southwest was the Panzerlehrdivision (General major Fritz Bayerlein), an elite unit originally formed by amalgamating the instructing staff at various training establishments. Not only were its personnel of high quality, but the division also had unusually high numbers of the latest and most capable armored vehicles. The landings[edit]Weather Forecast[edit]The final factor in determining the date of the landing was the anticipated weather. By this stage of the war, the German U-Boats had largely been driven from the Atlantic and their weather stations in Greenland had been closed down. The Allies possessed an advantage in knowledge of conditions in the Atlantic which was to prove decisive. A full moon was required both for light for the aircraft pilots and for the spring tide, limiting the window of opportunity for mounting the invasion to only a few days in each month. Eisenhower had tentatively selected June 5 as the date for the assault. Most of May had seen fine weather, but this deteriorated in early June. On June 4, conditions were clearly unsuitable for a landing; wind and high seas would make it impossible to launch landing craft and low cloud would prevent aircraft finding their targets. The Allied troop convoys already at sea were forced to take shelter in bays and inlets on the south coast of Britain. It seemed possible that everything would have to be cancelled and the troops returned to their camps (a vast undertaking, as the enormous movement of follow-up formations was already proceeding). The next full moon period would be nearly a month away. At a vital meeting on June 5, Eisenhower's chief meteorologist (Group Captain J.M. Stagg) forecast a brief improvement for June 6. Montgomery and Eisenhower's Chief of Staff (General Walter Bedell Smith) were keen to proceed with the invasion. Leigh Mallory was doubtful, but Admiral Ramsay believed that conditions would be marginally favourable. On the strength of Stagg's forecast, Eisenhower ordered the invasion to proceed. The Germans meanwhile took comfort from the existing poor conditions, and believed no invasion would be possible for several days. Some troops stood down, and many senior officers were absent. Rommel, for example, took a few days' leave with his wife and family, while dozens of division, regimental, and battalion commanders were away from their posts at war games. The French Resistance[edit]The various factions and circuits of the French Resistance (also known as the Maquis) were included in the plan for Overlord. The British Special Operations Executive would orchestrate a massive campaign of sabotage tasking the various Groups with attacking railway lines, ambushing roads, or destroying telephone exchanges or electricity sub-stations. They were to be alerted to carry out these tasks by means of the messages personnels, transmitted by the BBC in its French service from London. Several hundreds of these were regularly transmitted, masking the few of them that were really significant. One famous pair of these messages is often mistakenly stated to be a general call to arms by the Resistance. A few days before D-Day, the (slightly misquoted) first line of Verlaine's poem, "Chanson d'Automne", was transmitted. "Les sanglots longs des violons de l'automne"[11] (Long sobs of autumn violins) alerted resistants of the "Ventriloquist" network in the Orléans region to attack rail targets within the next few days. The second line, "Blessent mon coeur d'une langueur monotone" (wound my heart with a monotonous languor), transmitted late on June 5, meant that the attack was to be mounted immediately. Other famous words broadcast by the BBC at 21:00 CET on June 5, were the messages Les carottes sont cuites (The carrots are cooked) and Les dés sont jetés (The dice have been thrown).[12] Josef Götz, the head of the signals section of the German intelligence service (the SD) in Paris, had discovered the meaning of the second line of Verlaine's poem, and no less than fourteen other executive orders they heard late on June 5. His section rightly interpreted them to mean that invasion was imminent or underway, and they alerted their superiors, and all Army commanders in France. Unfortunately for them, they had issued a similar warning a month before, when the Allies had begun invasion preparations and alerted the Resistance, but then stood down because of a forecast of bad weather. The SD having given this false alarm, their genuine alarm was ignored or treated as merely routine. In addition to the tasks given to the Resistance as part of the invasion effort, the Special Operations Executive planned to reinforce the Resistance with three-man liaison parties, under Operation Jedburgh. The Jedburgh parties would coordinate and arrange supply drops to the Maquis groups in the German rear areas. Also operating far behind German lines and frequently working closely with the Resistance, although not under SOE, were larger parties from the British, French and Belgian units of the Special Air Service brigade. Airborne landings[edit]The success of the amphibious landings depended on the establishment of a secure lodgment from which to expand the beachhead to allow the build up of a well-supplied force capable of breaking out. The amphibious forces were especially vulnerable to strong enemy counter-attacks before the build up of sufficient forces in the beachhead could be accomplished. To slow or eliminate the enemy's ability to organise and launch counter-attacks during this critical period, airborne landings were utilised to seize key objectives, such as bridges, road crossings, and terrain features, particularly on the eastern and western flanks of the landing areas. The airborne landings some distance behind the beaches were also intended to ease the egress of the amphibious forces off the beaches and in some cases to neutralise German coastal defence batteries, and more quickly expand the area of the beachhead. The U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions were assigned to objectives west of Utah Beach. The British 6th Airborne Division was assigned to similar objectives on the eastern flank. British Airborne landings[edit]
The tactical objectives of the British 6th Airborne Division were (a) to capture intact the bridges of the Bénouville-Ranville crossing, (b) to defend the crossing against the inevitable armoured counter-attacks, (c)to destroy German artillery at the Merville battery, which threatened Sword Beach, and (d) to destroy five bridges over the Dives River to further restrict movement of ground forces from the east. Airborne troops, mostly paratroopers of the 3rd and 5th Parachute Brigades, began landing after midnight, June 6 and immediately encountered elements of the German 716th Infantry Division. At dawn, the Battle Group von Luck of the 21st Panzer Division counter-attacked from the south on both sides of the Orne River. By this time the paratroopers had established a defensive perimeter surrounding the bridgehead. Casualties were heavy on both sides but the airborne troops held. Shortly after noon, they were reinforced by commandos of the 1st Special Service Brigade. By the end of D-Day, 6th Airborne had accomplished each of its objectives. For several days, both British and German forces took heavy casualties as they struggled for positions around the Orne bridgehead. For example, the German 346th Infantry Division broke through the eastern edge of the defensive line on June 10. Finally, British paratroopers overwhelmed entrenched panzergrenadiers in the Battle of Bréville on June 12. The Germans did not seriously threaten the bridgehead again. 6th Airborne remained in the line until it was evacuated in early September. American Airborne landings[edit]The U.S. 82nd (Operation Detroit) and 101st Airborne Divisions (Operation Chicago) were less fortunate in quickly completing their main objectives. Partly owing to unmarked landing zones, radio silence, poor weather and difficult terrain, many units were widely scattered and unable to rally. Efforts of the early wave of pathfinder teams to mark the landing zones were largely ineffective. Some paratroopers drowned when they landed in the sea or in areas deliberately flooded by the Germans. After 24 hours, only 2,500 of the 6,000 men in 101st had assembled. The dispersal of the American airborne troops, however, had the effect of confusing the Germans and fragmenting their response. In addition, the Germans' defensive flooding, in the early stages, also helped to protect the Americans' southern flank. Many continued to roam and fight behind enemy lines for days. Most Sword Beach[edit]
The assault on Sword Beach began at about 0300 hrs with an aerial bombardment of the German coastal defences and artillery sites. The naval bombardment began a few hours later. At 0730 hrs, the first units reached the beach. These were the DD tanks of 13th/18th Hussars followed closely by the infantry of 8th Brigade. On Sword Beach, the regular British infantry got ashore with light casualties. They had advanced about five miles (8 km) by the end of the day but failed to make some of the deliberately ambitious targets set by Montgomery. In particular, Caen, a major objective, was still in German hands by the end of D-Day. 1st Special Service Brigade, under the command of Brigadier The Lord Lovat DSO and MC, went ashore in the second wave led by No.4 Commando with the two French Troops first, as agreed amongst themselves. The 1st Special Service Brigade's landing is famous for having been led by Piper Bill Millin. The British and French of No.4 Commando had separate targets in Ouistreham: the French a blockhouse and the Casino, and the British two batteries which overlooked the beach. The blockhouse proved too strong for the Commandos' PIAT (Projector Infantry Anti Tank) weapons, but the Casino was taken with the aid of a Centaur tank. The British Commandos achieved both battery objectives only to find the gun mounts empty and the guns removed. Leaving the mopping-up procedure to the infantry, the Commandos withdrew from Ouistreham to join the other units of their brigade (Nos.3, 6 and 45), moving inland to join-up with the 6th Airborne Division. Juno Beach[edit]
The Canadian forces that landed on Juno Beach faced 11 heavy batteries of 155 mm guns and 9 medium batteries of 75 mm guns, as well as machine-gun nests, pillboxes, other concrete fortifications, and a seawall twice the height of the one at Omaha Beach. The first wave suffered 50% casualties, the second highest of the five D-Day beachheads. The use of armour was successful at Juno, in some instances actually landing ahead of the infantry as intended and helping clear a path inland.[13] Despite the obstacles, within hours the Canadians were off the beach and beginning their advance inland. The 6th Canadian Armoured Regiment (1st Hussars) and The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada achieved their June 6 objectives, when they crossed the Caen–Bayeux highway over nine miles (15 km) inland.[14] The Canadians were the only units to reach their D-Day objectives, although most units fell back a few kilometers to stronger defensive positions. In particular, the Douvres Radar Station was still in German hands, and no link had been established with Sword Beach.By the end of D-Day, 15,000 Canadians had been successfully landed, and the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division had penetrated further into France than any other Allied force, despite having faced strong resistance at the water's edge and later counter-attacks on the beachhead by elements of the German 21st and 12th SS Hitlerjugend Panzer divisions on June 7 and 8. Gold Beach[edit]
At Gold Beach, the casualties were also quite heavy, partly because the swimming Sherman DD tanks were delayed, and the Germans had strongly fortified a village on the beach. However, the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division overcame these difficulties and advanced almost to the outskirts of Bayeux by the end of the day. With the exception of the Canadians at Juno Beach, no division came closer to its objectives than the 50th. No.47 (RM) Commando was the last British Commando unit to land and came ashore on Gold east of Le Hamel. Their task was to proceed inland then turn right (west) and make a ten-mile (16 km) march through enemy territory to attack the coastal harbour of Port en Bessin from the rear. This small port, on the British extreme right, was well sheltered in the chalk cliffs and significant in that it was to be a prime early harbour for supplies to be brought in including fuel by underwater pipe from tankers moored offshore. Omaha Beach[edit]
Omaha Beach was the bloodiest landing beach on D-Day. Elements of the 1st Infantry Division and 29th Infantry Division faced the German 352nd Infantry Division, one of the best trained on the beaches. Allied intelligence failed to realise that the relatively low-quality 716th Infantry Division (static) had been replaced by the 352nd a few days before the invasion. Omaha was also the most heavily fortified beach, and the pre-landing aerial and naval bombardment of the bunkers proved to be ineffective. On the Eastern sector, 27 of the 32 Sherman DD tanks deployed never reached the beach. On the Western sector the Sherman DDs were landed directly on the beach, but suffered heavy losses due to German artillery defending the beach. The official record stated that "within 10 minutes of the ramps being lowered, [the leading] company had become inert, leaderless and almost incapable of action. Every officer and sergeant had been killed or wounded [...] It had become a struggle for survival and rescue". There were about 2,400 casualties on Omaha on D-day, most in the first few hours. Commanders considered abandoning the beachhead, but small units, often forming ad hoc groups, eventually took the beach and pressed inland. Pointe du Hoc[edit]
The massive, concrete cliff-top gun emplacement at Pointe du Hoc was the target of the 2nd Ranger battalion, commanded by James Earl Rudder. The task was to scale the 100 foot (30 metre) cliffs under enemy fire with ropes and ladders, and then attack and destroy the guns, which were thought to command the Omaha and Utah landing areas. The Ranger commanders knew that the guns had been moved prior to the attack, but the fortification itself was still a vital target since a single artillery forward observer based there could have called down accurate fire on the US beaches. The Rangers captured the fortification and destroyed the nearby guns. Utah Beach[edit]
Casualties on Utah Beach, the westernmost landing zone, were the lightest of any beach with 197 out of roughly 23,000 troops landed. The 4th Infantry Division troops landing at Utah Beach found themselves in the wrong positions due to a current that pushed their landing craft to the southeast. Instead of landing at Tare Green and Uncle Red sectors, they came ashore at Victor sector, which was lightly defended. Relatively little German opposition was encountered. The 4th Infantry Division was able to press inland relatively easily over beach exits that had been seized from the inland side by the 502nd and 506th Parachute Infantry Regiments of the 101st Airborne Division. This was partially by accident, as their planned landing was further down the beach (Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr, the Asst. Commander of 4th Division, was famous for stating "We'll start the war from right here.") . By early afternoon the 4th Infantry Division had succeeded in linking up with elements of the 101st. American casualties were light, and the troops were able to press inward much faster than expected, making it a near complete success. After the landings[edit]Once the beachhead was established, two artificial Mulberry Harbours were towed across the English Channel in segments and made operational around D+3 (9 June). One was constructed at Arromanches by British forces, the other at Omaha Beach by American forces. By the 19 June, when severe storms interrupted the landing of supplies for several days and destroyed the Omaha harbour, the British had landed 314,547 men, 54,000 vehicles, and 102,000 tons of supplies, while the Americans put ashore 314,504 men, 41,000 vehicles, and 116,000 tons of supplies.[15] Around 9,000 tons of materiel was landed daily at the Arromanches harbour until the end of August 1944, by which time the port of Cherbourg had been secured by the Allies, and had begun to return to service. The German defenders positioned on the beaches put up relatively light resistance, being ill-trained and short on transport and equipment, and having been subject to a week of intense bombardment. An exception was the 352nd Infantry division, moved earlier by Rommel from St. Lo, which defended Omaha beach. The tenacity of the 352nd's defence, and perhaps also the indication by Allied intelligence that there would be only two 2 battalions of the 716th Division there, was responsible for Omaha's high casualty rate. Other German commanders took several hours to be sure that the reports they were receiving indicated a landing in force, rather than a series of raids. Their communication difficulties were made worse by the absence of several key commanders. The scattering of the American parachutists also added to the confusion, as reports were coming in of Allied troops all over northern Normandy. Despite this the German 21st Panzer division mounted a concerted counterattack, between Sword and Juno beaches, and succeeded in reaching the sea. Stiff resistance by anti-tank gunners and fear of being cut off caused them to withdraw before the end of 6 June. According to some reports the sighting of a wave of airborne troops flying over them was instrumental in the decision to retreat. The Allied invasion plans had called for the capture of Carentan, St. Lô, Caen and Bayeux on the first day, with all the beaches linked except Utah, and Sword (the last linked with paratroopers) and a front line six to ten miles (10 to 16 km) from the beaches. In practice none of these had been achieved. However, overall the casualties had not been as heavy as some had feared (around 10,000 compared to the 20,000 Churchill feared), and the bridgeheads had withstood the expected counterattacks. The German 12th SS (Hitler Youth) Panzer division assaulted the Canadians on June 7 and June 8, and inflicted heavy losses, but was unable to break through. Meanwhile, the beaches were being linked: Sword on June 7, Omaha June 10, Utah by June 13. The Allies were actually reinforcing the front faster than the Germans. Although the Allies had to land everything on the beaches, Allied air superiority and the destruction of the French rail system made every German troop movement slow and dangerous. The resulting disposition of Allied forces within the bridgehead was then the U.S. First Army in the west and the British Second Army in the east. Cherbourg[edit]
In the western part of the lodgement, U.S. troops were to occupy the Cotentin Peninsula, especially Cherbourg, which would provide the allies with a deep water harbour. The country behind Utah and Omaha beaches was characterised by bocage; ancient banks and hedgerows, up to three metres thick, spread one to two hundred metres apart, and so both being impervious to tanks, gunfire, and vision, and making ideal defensive positions. The U.S. infantry made slow progress, and suffered heavy casualties, as they pressed towards Cherbourg. The airborne troops were called on again and again to restart a stalled advance. The far side of the peninsula was reached on 18 June. Hitler prevented German forces from retreating to the strong Atlantic Wall fortifications in Cherbourg, and after initially offering stiff resistance the Cherbourg commander, Lieutenant General von Schlieben, capitulated on June 26 after destroying most of the facilities, making the harbor inoperable until the middle of August. Caen[edit]
Believing Caen to be the "crucible" of the battle, Montgomery made it the target of a series of attritional attacks. The first was Operation Perch, which attempted to turn the Germans' flank at Villers-Bocage, which was halted at the Battle of Villers-Bocage. After a delay owing to the difficulty of supply because of storms from the 17 until the 23 June, a German counterattack (which was known through Ultra intelligence) was pre-empted with Operation Epsom. Caen was severely bombed and then occupied north of the River Orne in Operation Charnwood from 7 July until the 9 July. A major offensive in the Caen area followed under General Dempsey with all three British armoured divisions, codenamed Operation Goodwood from the 18 July until the 21 July that captured the remainder of Caen and the high ground to the south at a high cost. A further operation, Operation Spring, from the 25 July until 28 July by the Canadians secured limited gains at a high cost. The Breakout from the Beachhead[edit]
An important element of Montgomery's strategy was to cause the Germans to commit their reserves to the eastern part of the theatre to allow an easier breakout from the west. By the end of Goodwood the Germans had committed the last of their reserve divisions there so now there were six and a half Panzer divisions facing the British and Canadian forces compared to one and a half facing the United States armies. Operation Cobra, was launched on July 24 by the U.S. First Army, and was extremely successful with the advance guard of VIII Corps entering Coutances at the western end of the Cotentin Peninsula, on July 28, after a penetration through the German lines. On August 1, VIII Corps became part of Lieutenant General George S. Patton's newly arrived U.S. Third Army. On August 4, Montgomery altered the invasion plan by detaching only a corps to occupy Brittany and hem the German troops there into enclaves around the ports while the rest of the Third Army continued south. The U.S. First Army turned the German front at its western end. Because of the concentration of German forces south of Caen, Montgomery moved the British armour west and launched Operation Bluecoat from 30 July until 7 August to add to the pressure from the United States armies. This drew the German forces to the west, allowing the launch of Operation Totalize south from Caen on the 7 August. The Falaise Gap[edit]
At the beginning of August more German reserves became available with the realisation that no landings were going to take place near Calais. The German forces were being encircled, and the German High Command wanted these reserves to help an orderly retreat to the Seine. However, they were overruled by Hitler who demanded an attack at Mortain at the western end of the pocket on the August 7. The attack was repelled by the Allies, who again had advance warning from Ultra. The original Allied plan was for a wide encirclement as far as the Loire valley, but Bradley realised that many of the German forces in Normandy were not capable of manoeuvre by this stage, and obtained Montgomery's agreement by telephone on August 8 for a "short hook" further north to encircle German forces. This was left to Patton to effect, moving nearly unopposed through Normandy via Le Mans, and then back north again towards Alençon. The Germans were then left in a pocket with its jaws near Chambois. Fierce German defence and the diversion of some American troops for a thrust by Patton towards the Seine at Mantes prevented the jaws closing until August 21, trapping 50,000 German troops. Whether this could have been achieved earlier and more prisoners taken has been a matter of some controversy. Patton's thrust prevented the Germans from establishing the Seine as a defensive line, and the Canadian First and British Second Armies both advanced there, bringing the war in Normandy in their sector to a close, and meeting the projected schedule set by Montgomery with time to spare. The liberation of Paris followed shortly afterwards. The French Resistance in Paris rose against the Germans on 19 August; and the French 2nd Armoured Division under General Philippe Leclerc, along with the U.S. 4th Infantry Division pressing forward from Normandy, received the surrender of the German forces there and liberated Paris on August 25. Chronology[edit]
Political considerations[edit]The Normandy landings were long foreshadowed by a considerable amount of political maneuvering amongst the Allies. There was much disagreement about timing, appointments of command, and where exactly the landings were to take place. The opening of a second front had been long postponed and a particular source of strain between the Allies. Stalin had been pressing the Western Allies to launch a "second front" since 1942, but Churchill had argued for delay until victory could be assured, preferring to attack Italy and North Africa first. The appointment of Bernard Montgomery was questioned by some Americans, who would have preferred the urbane Harold Alexander to have commanded the land forces. Montgomery, in turn, had doubts about the appointment of Dwight D. Eisenhower. In the end, however, Montgomery and Eisenhower cooperated to excellent effect in Normandy: their well-known disagreements came much later. Normandy presented serious logistical problems, not the least of which being that the only viable port in the area, Cherbourg, was heavily defended and many among the higher echelons of command argued that the Pas de Calais would make a more suitable landing area on these grounds alone. Campaign close[edit]The campaign in Normandy is considered by historians to end either at midnight on 24/25 July 1944 (the start of Operation Cobra on the American front) or 25 August 1944 (the advance to the Seine). The original Overlord plan anticipated a ninety day campaign in Normandy with the ultimate goal of reaching the Seine; this goal was met with time to spare. The Americans were able to end the campaign on their front early with the massive breakout of Operation Cobra. The US official history describes the fighting beginning on 25 July as the "Northern France" campaign, and includes the fighting to close the Falaise Gap, which the British/Canadians/Poles consider to be part of the Battle of Normandy. SHAEF, back in England, and the governments were very nervous of stagnation, and there were reports of Eisenhower requesting Montgomery's replacement in July. The lack of forward progress is often attributed to the nature of the terrain in which much of the post-landing fighting in the US and parts of the British sectors took place, the bocage (small farm fields separated by high earth banks covered in dense shrubbery, well suited for defence), as well as the usual difficulties of opposed landings. However, as at El Alamein, Montgomery kept to his original attritional strategy, reaching the objectives within his original ninety day target. Victory in Normandy was followed by a pursuit to the French border in short order, and Germany was forced once again to reinforce the Western Front with manpower and resources from the Soviet and Italian fronts. Assessment of the battle[edit]The Normandy landings were the first successful opposed landings across the English Channel for nine centuries. They were costly in terms of men, but the defeat inflicted on the Germans was one of the largest of the war. Strategically, the campaign led to the loss of the German position in most of France and the secure establishment of a major new front. By September, Allied forces of seven field armies (two of which came through southern France in Operation Dragoon) were approaching the German frontier. Allied material weight told heavily in Normandy, as did intelligence and deception plans. The general Allied concept of the battle was sound, drawing on the strengths of both Britain and the United States. German dispositions and leadership was often faulty, despite a credible showing on the ground by many German units. In larger context the Normandy landings helped the Soviets on the Eastern front, who were facing the bulk of the German forces, and, to a certain extent, contributed to the shortening of the conflict there. Noteworthy, the fact that significant German forces were tied on the Eastern Front contributed to the success of the Normandy landing. Allied logistics, intelligence, morale and air power[edit]Victory in Normandy was due to several factors. The Allies ensured material superiority at the critical point (concentration of force) and logistical innovations like the PLUTO pipelines and Mulberry harbors enhanced the flow of troops, equipment, and essentials such as fuel and ammunition. Movement of cargo over the open beaches exceeded Allied planners' expectations, even after the destruction of the US Mulberry in the channel storm in mid-June. By the end of July 1944, 1 million American, British, Canadian, French, and Polish troops, hundreds of thousands of vehicles, and adequate supplies in most categories were ashore in Normandy. Although there was a shortage of artillery ammunition, at no time were the Allies critically short of any necessity. This was a remarkable achievement considering they did not hold a port until Cherbourg fell. By the time of the breakout the Allies also enjoyed a considerable superiority in numbers of troops (approximately 3.5-1) and armored vehicles (approximately 4-1) which helped overcome the natural advantages the terrain gave to the German defenders. Allied Intelligence and counterintelligence efforts were successful beyond expectations. The Operation Fortitude deception plan before the invasion kept German attention focused on the Pas-de-Calais, and indeed high-quality German forces were kept in this area, away from Normandy, until July. Prior to the invasion, few German reconnaissance flights took place over Britain, and those that did saw only the dummy staging areas. Ultra decrypts of German communications had been helpful as well, exposing German dispositions and revealing their plans such as the Mortain counterattack. Allied air operations also contributed significantly to the invasion, via close tactical support, interdiction of German lines of communication (preventing movement of supplies and reinforcements- particularly the critical Panzer units), and rendering the Luftwaffe as practically useless in Normandy. Although the impact upon armoured vehicles was less than expected, air activity intimidated these units and cut their supplies. German naval units were largely ineffective. "Carpet-bombing" raids by fleets of Allied heavy bombers on sections of the German lines helped ensure breakthroughs at critical points. Despite initial heavy losses in the assault phase, Allied morale remained high. Casualty rates among all the armies were tremendous, and the Commonwealth forces had to create a new category - Double Intense - to be able to describe them. Manpower problems would plague the British and Canadians for the remainder of the war. Britain disbanded an entire division (the 59th) in Normandy and would later downgrade several more to non combat roles. Canada would bring about conscription for overseas service in November 1944, due to the losses in Normandy and later operations in the Low Countries (eg Battle of the Scheldt). German leadership[edit]Faulty German dispositions and decisions also contributed to Allied victory. German commanders at all levels failed to react to the assault phase in a timely manner. Communications problems exacerbated the difficulties caused by Allied air and naval firepower. Local commanders also seemed unequal to the task of fighting an aggressive defence on the beach, as Rommel envisioned. For example, the commander of the German 352nd Infantry Division failed to capitalise on American difficulty at Omaha, committing his reserves elsewhere when they might have been more profitably used against the American beachhead. The German High Command remained fixated on the Calais area, and von Rundstedt was not permitted to commit the armored reserve. When it was finally released late in the day, success was immeasurably more difficult, and even the 21st Panzer Division, which was able to counterattack a bit earlier, was stymied by strong opposition that had been allowed to build at the beaches. The Germans generally fought with their customary energy and skill, despite uneven performance by some units. The Panzer units faced withering air interdiction that reduced their effectiveness, yet they offered glimpses of what might have been possible in way of counterattack, had additional mobile forces like the 12th SS Panzer Division and the Panzer Lehr Division been committed earlier into the battle. Despite considerable Allied material superiority, the Germans kept the Allies bottled up in a small bridgehead for nearly two months. Although there were several well-known disputes among the Allied commanders, their tactics and strategy were essentially determined by agreement between the main commanders. By contrast, the German leaders were constantly bullied and their decisions interfered with by Hitler, controlling the battle from a distance with little knowledge of local conditions. Field Marshals von Rundstedt and Rommel repeatedly asked Hitler for more discretion, but were refused. Von Rundstedt was sacked on June 29 after he bluntly told the Chief of Staff at Hitler's Armed Forces HQ (Field Marshal Keitel) to "Make peace, you idiots!" Rommel was severely injured by Allied aircraft on July 16. Field Marshal von Kluge, who took over the posts held by both von Rundstedt and Rommel, was compromised by his association with some of the military plotters against Hitler, and refused to disobey or argue with Hitler for fear of arrest. As a result, the German armies in Normandy were placed in deadly peril by Hitler's insistence on counter-attack rather than retreat after the American breakthrough. Kluge was relieved on August 15, and took his own life shortly afterwards. The more independent Field Marshal Model took over when the Germans in Normandy were already in the midst of defeat. The German commanders also suffered in the quality of the available troops. One in six were conscripted prisoners of war from all over Europe. These "Ost" units were notoriously unreliable and most surrendered at the first available opportunity. Most units hadn't trained in months at Rommel's order; he had prioritised construction of obstacles and defences over training. Most were terribly demoralised and frightened by the airborne landings and the naval and air bombardments, and fled their posts on the beaches. Allied leadership[edit]Much has been written about the Allied delay at taking Caen as the battle developed. Pre-invasion schedules were rarely fulfilled as planned. The Land Forces Commander, British General Bernard Montgomery, maintained mastery of the developing battle. His concept that Caen would be a "pivot", upon which the front would turn, was accurate, and as the battle of Normandy developed, the British and Canadian armies faced the bulk of German armour in the theatre. While US forces faced fewer German armored divisions, their own armor was severely limited by both the close-in terrain of the bocage and the large number and variety of German anti-tank weapons deployed all along the front. The open terrain on the British front on the eastern flank left the Germans little choice but to concentrate their armor there. Eventually this played into Allied hands when the breakout took place, not in the east as the Germans feared, but in the west in Operation Cobra. Normandy and the Eastern front[edit]The lodgement established at Normandy was vital for the Allies to bring pressure on German armies in western Europe. By this time the Soviet forces had the capacity to crush Germany in Europe on their own, and therefore a western invasion was not strictly required to defeat the German Reich. The military forces at the disposal of Nazi Germany, moreover, steadily declined from 1943 onwards. On D-Day, the Red Army was steadily advancing towards Germany and engaging four-fifths of all German land forces. In France, and Italy, the western Allies faced the remaining 20% of the German army. Some historians, such as Richard Overy, have thus concluded that Normandy was not very important for the outcome of the war. Since the Germans suffered 93% of their casualties on the Eastern front, the battle of Normandy only shortened the war in the view of these writers. The third front in France nevertheless diverted German resources and attention from the Eastern Front and thereby aided the Soviets substantially. The Germans had long expected an Allied invasion of France and had been required to garrison the country as well as divert manpower and materials to coastal fortifications along many hundreds of miles of shore. Hitler's thinking is documented in his Führer Directive 51, of November 1943, which stressed that the Western approaches to the Reich were to be strengthened even at the expense of those in the East. In addition, Hitler was anxious to hold on to the Belgian and northern French coasts as bases for the "V" weapons to be launched against England. Hitler maintained his "West first" focus after the landings in Normandy and all efforts were made to contain Allied forces within the lodgement area; in fact as the fighting in Normandy increased in tempo, Hitler accepted the annihilation of an entire German Army Group on the Russian front. Hitler would continue to redeploy desperately needed units from the East against the Western Allies, with this practice peaking in December 1944 in the Ardennes Offensive. Given the Soviets' later domination of Eastern Europe, if the Normandy invasion had not occurred there might conceivably have been a complete occupation of northern and western Europe by communist forces After the war Hitler's foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop presented three main reasons for German's defeat:
War memorials and tourism[edit]The visitor will find many reminders of June 6, 1944. Most noticeable are the beaches, which are still referred to on maps and signposts by their invasion codenames. Then come the vast cemeteries. The American cemetery, in Colleville-sur-Mer, contains row upon row of identical white crosses and Stars of David, immaculately kept, commemorating the American dead. Commonwealth graves, in many locations, use white headstones engraved with the person's religious symbol and their unit insignia. The largest cemetery in Normandy is the German one at La Cambe, which features granite stones almost flush with the ground and groups of low-set crosses. There is also a Polish cemetery. Streets near the beaches are still named after the units that fought there, and occasional markers commemorate notable incidents. At significant points, such as Pointe du Hoc and Pegasus Bridge, there are plaques, memorials or small museums. The Mulberry harbour still sits in the sea at Arromanches. In Sainte-Mère-Église, a dummy paratrooper hangs from the church spire. On Juno Beach, the Canadian government has built the Juno Beach Information Centre, commemorating one of the most significant events in Canadian military history. In Caen is a large Museum for Peace, which is dedicated to peace generally, rather than to the battle itself. Every year on June 6, American cartoonist and World War II veteran Charles M. Schulz (1922–2000) reserved his Peanuts comic strip to memorialise his comrades who fell at Normandy. In 1994, for the 50th anniversary, the French issued a commemorative medal which depicted General Charles de Gaulle leading a heroic charge of French troops on an un-named beach. The medal was hastily withdrawn after it was pointed out that de Gaulle did not set foot upon French soil until 14 June. Documentaries[edit]
Dramatisations[edit]
See also[edit]Break Out From the Hedgerows: A Lesson in Ingenuity
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Sources[edit]
Bibliography[edit]
Who won World War II?,Konstantin RozhnovRichard Overy, BBC News, 2005
Category:Invasions Category:Operation Overlord Category:History of Normandy Category:World War II operations and battles of Europe
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Sources[edit]http://www.peterstuart-fans.com/
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Sources[edit]www.WedgeRadio.net www.myspace.com/WedgeRadio www.titanradio.org www.myspace.com/theharbingervondoom www.pirateradio.com 75.85.25.182 17:26, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply] null Will (is it can be time for messages now plz?) 21:34, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply] |
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Hayley Wright (1971) Is a local British playwright known for her "Oh m'..." plays. She frequently uses the phrase "One must" in her plays, to portray the contemporary woman in theatre, who's main aim is to "Guffaw". This "Guffawing" is really a metaphor. The feminine hero in the play(s) "Guffaws" not for the amusement of the audience (as usualy thought), but merely to pass through life with as much laughter as possible. The main themes in Wright's work are; Alcohol, Sobriety, sports (most notibly trampolining) and homosexuality. Wright's latest work "Oh m' postman" will be published independantly later this year. In this play, Wright once again uses her traditional "One must" phrase to scrutiny the sexual refrences in this play where... "One must push one's post through one's flap". This playing on sexual refrences is typical to Wright's work. Wright's work contains one play "Oh m' Heart" in which the feminine hero "Guffaws" so much that she suffers a heart attack. Sources[edit]Finchley Theatre Journal March Edition 2007 www.adproductionsfilms.com Blackwater Local Newspaper Thursday April 19th Danielewicz 17:45, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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* Brezhnev, Leonid Ilich * Grigorenko, Peter Grigorievich * Intelligentsia * Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich * Medvedev, Roy Alexandrovich * Nationalism in the Soviet Union * Sakharov, Andrei Dmitrievich * Samizdat * Solzhenitsyn, Alexander Isayevich Individuals and informal groups opposed to Communist Party rule. This movement comprised an informal, loosely organized conglomeration of individual and group-based dissidents in the decades following the death of Josef Stalin in March 1953 through the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s. They opposed their posttotalitarian regimes, accepting, as punishment, exile, imprisonment, and sometimes even death. The dissidents subjected their fellow citizens to moral triage. By the year 1991, they helped to bring down the regimes in Europe, which, for a number of reasons, had already embarked upon a political modernization and democratization process. Dissidents were less successful in the East and Southeast Asian countries of the communist bloc. It may be ironic that with the reversion to authoritarian practices in such former Soviet republics as the Russian Federation, Belarus, and the Ukraine by the turn of the twenty-first century, dissidents have reappeared in the 2000s as individuals, or, at most, small groups, but not as a movement. Definitions The most precise historical usage dates from the late 1960s. The term "dissident" (in Russian, inakomysliachii for men or inakomysliachaia for women) was first applied to intellectuals opposing the regime in the Soviet Union. Then, in the late 1970s, it spread to Soviet-dominated East Central and Southeast Europe, which was also known as Eastern Europe. Most broadly, a dissident may be defined as an outspoken political and social noncomformist. The classic definition of dissent in the East Central European context is that by Vaclav Havel, a leading dissident himself and later president of the Czechoslovak and Czech Republics, from December 1989 until his resignation February 2, 2003. Wrote Havel: "[Dissent] is a natural and inevitable consequence of the present historical phase of the [Communist dictatorship - Y.B.] system it is haunting. It was born at a time, when this system, for a thousand reasons, can no longer base itself on the unadulterated, brutal, and arbitrary application of power, eliminating all expressions of nonconformity. What is more, the system has become so ossified politically that there is practically no way for such nonconformity to be implemented within its official structures" (Havel, 1985, p. 23). Havel thus places dissent into the post-Stalinist or posttotalitarian phase of the communist system. The semi-ironic concept of dissent also implies that its practitioners, the dissidents, differed in their thinking from the majority of their fellow citizens and were thus doomed to failure. By making, however, common cause with the party reformers in the governing structures, the dissidents, including Havel, prevailed for good in Eastern Europe, and at least temporarily in the Russian Federation, Belarus, and the Ukraine. Soviet Leaders and Leading Dissidents The party reformer Nikita Khrushchev, who after Stalin's death headed the Soviet regime from March 1953 to October 1964, was committed to building communism in the Soviet Union, in Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe and throughout the world. Paradoxically, he ended by laying the political and legal foundations for the dissident movement. That movement flourished under Khrushchev's long-term successor Leonid Brezhnev (October 1964 - November 1982). Being more conservative, Brezhnev wanted to restore Stalinism, but failed, partly because of the opposition from dissidents. After the brief tenure of two interim leaders - the tough reformer Yuri Andropov (November 1982 - February 1984) and the conservative Konstantin Chernenko (February 1984 - March 1985) - power was assumed by Andropov's young protégé, the ambitious modernizer Mikhail Gorbachev (March 1985 - December 1991). Like Khrushchev, Gorbachev both fought and encouraged the dissident movement. Ultimately, he failed all around. By December 1991, the Soviet Union withdrew from its outer empire in Eastern Europe and saw the collapse of its inner empire. It ceased to exist, and Gorbachev resigned from the presidency December 25, 1991. The most outstanding ideological leaders of the Soviet dissidents were, from the Left to the Right, Roy Medvedev (Medvedev, 1971), Peter Grigorenko (Grigorenko, 1982), Andrei Sakharov (Sakharov, 1968, 1992), and Alexander Solzhenitsyn (Solzhenitsyn: 1963, 1974 - 1978). The more radical Andrei Amalrik (Amalrik, 1970) cannot be easily classified: he dared to forecast the breakup of the Soviet Union, but he also wrote one of the first critical analyses of the movement. Very noteworthy are Edward Kuznetsov (Kuznetsov, 1975), a representative of the Zionist dissent; Yuri Orlov (Alexeyeva, 1985), the political master strategist of the Helsinki Watch Committees; and Tatyana Mamonova (Mamonova, 1984), the leader of Russian feminists. A Marxist socialist historian leaning toward democracy, Medvedev helped Khrushchev in his attempt to denounce Stalin personally for killing Communist Party members in the 1930s (Medvedev, 1971). Medvedev also provided intellectual underpinning for Khrushchev's drawing of sharp distinctions between a benevolent Vladimir Lenin and a psychopathic Stalin, between a fundamentally sound Leninist party rank-and-file and the excesses of the Stalinists in the secret police and in the party apparatus. This was better politics than history. Major General Peter Grigorenko, who was of Ukrainian peasant origin, shared with Roy Medvedev the initial conviction that Stalin had deviated from true Leninism and with Roy's brother Zhores Medvedev, who had protested against the regime's mistreatment of fellow biologists, the wrongful treatment in Soviet asylums and foreign exile. As a dissident, Grigorenko was more straightforward. As early as 1961, he began to criticize Khrushchev's authoritarian tendencies, and under Brezhnev he became a public advocate of the Crimean Tatars' return to the Crimea. He also joined the elite Sakharov - Yelena Bonner circle within the Helsinki Watch Committees movement, having been a charter member of both the Moscow Group since May 1976 and the Ukrainian Group since November 1976 (Reich, 1979; Grigorenko, 1982). Through his double advocacy of the Crimean Tatars and his fellow Ukrainians, Grigorenko helped to sensitize the liberal Russian leaders in the dissident movement to the importance of a correct nationality policy and also of the restructuring of the Soviet federation. Academician Sakharov, a nuclear physicist, the "father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb," and an ethnic Russian, was one of the foremost moral and intellectual leaders of the Soviet dissident movement, the other being his antipode, the writer and ethnic Russian Solzhenitsyn. Unlike the Slavophile and Russian conservative Solzhenitsyn, who had expressed nostalgia for the authoritarian Russian past and had been critical of the West, Sakharov belonged to the liberal Westernizing tradition in Russian history and wanted to transform the Soviet Union in accordance with liberal Western ideas (Sakharov 1974, Solzhenitsyn 1974). As a political leader of the dissident movement, Sakharov practiced what he preached, especially after marrying the Armenian-Jewish physician Bonner, whose family had been victimized by the regime. He became active in individual human rights cases or acts of conscience, and thus set examples of civic courage. So long as the dissenter observed nonviolence, Sakharov publicly defended persecuted fellow scientists; Russian poets and politicians; and Crimean Tatars, who wanted to return to their homeland in the Crimea. He even spoke up for persecuted Ukrainian nationalist Valentyn Moroz, whose politics was more rightist than liberal. In 1970, Sakharov had also defended the former Russian-Jewish dissident turned alienated Zionist Kuznetsov, who was initially sentenced to death for attempting to hijack a Soviet plane to emigrate to Israel. To his death in December 1989, Sakharov remained the liberal conscience of Russia. Dissident Groups, Their Actions, and Soviet Counteractions As to the different groups and newsletters in the Soviet movement, David Kowalewski has counted and categorized as many as forty-three, of which six were religious. Of the thirty-seven secular groups, eleven were general, or multipurpose defenders of rights, nine were ethnic with all-Union membership or aims, seven were political, three each were socialeconomic and social, and one each was economic, artistic, intellectual, and cultural-religious. The inclusion of more regionally based and oriented groups from the Baltic States, Transcaucasia, and the Ukraine would increase the number of ethnic groups by at least four. According to first secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine Volodymyr V. Sherbytsky, on May 16, 1989, there were about fifteen anti-Socialist groupings in Ukraine. What did the Soviet dissidents actually do? How did the regime react? What did the dissidents accomplish? Almost two thousand dissidents openly signed various appeals before 1968 (Ruben-stein 1985, p. 125) Over time, hundreds took part in public demonstrations during Soviet Constitution Day (December 10), and on special occasions, such as the protest of seven against the USSR-led Warsaw Pact forces marching into Czechoslovakia in August 1968. Poets and writers surreptitiously published their works, which like much of nineteenth-century Russian literature carried a political and social message, in the post-Stalinist Soviet Union (the so-called samizdat, or self-publishing), or even abroad (tamizdat in Russian, meaning literally "published there"). Some of the poems would also be read publicly, in a political demonstration. The documentarists among the dissidents meticulously recorded facts, especially in The Chronicle of Current Events. They worked hand in glove with the legalists, who insisted that the regime observe its own laws and the explicit norms of the Stalin Constitution of 1936. In October 1977, Brezhnev had a more factual constitution passed, but it was too late to defeat the legalists. Hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jews insisted on their right to leave the country altogether, and so did tens of thousands of Soviet Germans. Baltic dissidents protested both the current discriminatory policies of the regime and their countries having been forcibly included in the Soviet Union after the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939. Ukrainian dissidents insisted that the linguistic Russification was unconstitutional and that the regime's policies in economics foreshadowed the abolition of Soviet republics and the merger of the Ukrainian people with the ethnic Russians. The movement was partly self-financed in that professionals donated their services free and the more successful authors of tamizdat such as Solzhenitsyn remitted their earnings to fellow dissidents in the USSR, especially to those that were imprisoned by the regime. Some of the funds were channeled from abroad: They were donations either by private foreign citizens, or by foreign governments. By a stroke of political genius, in 1976 ethnic Russian Orlov brought the disparate sections of the dissident movement together in the Helsinki Watch Committees. Brezhnev wanted to legitimize his hold over Eastern Europe in the Helsinki accords, and the United States, Canada, and Western Germany insisted on the inclusion of human rights provisions. Taking a leaf from the legalists, Orlov, Bonner, and Sakharov insisted that the regime should be publicly aided in observing its new commitments toward its own citizens. Moreover, Orlov persuaded sympathetic American congresspersons and senators, such as the late Mrs. Millicent Fenwick, that with the support of the U.S. government, the Helsinki Review Process would work. It would advance the global cause of human rights and, on a regional level, would help Yuri Orlov's fellow Soviet citizens and also benefit Mrs. Fenwick's political constituents, who wanted their relatives to be allowed to emigrate to the West and to Israel. What was the reaction of the Soviet government? At the very least, Brezhnev and his security chief and eventual successor Andropov ordered the disruption of public demonstrations by the dissidents by hiring a brass band or having thugs beat them up. The names of all the petitioners would be recorded and the more persistent letter signers would be talked to by the secret police, stripped of privileges such as foreign travel, and eventually dismissed from their jobs. The next step could be exile from Moscow, such as that of Sakharov from January 1880 to December 1986. Others, as for instance the famous tamizdat authors Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel, would be formally tried, sentenced to long terms in prison camps, and expelled abroad after serving their sentences. The show trials led to further protests by dissidents and criticisms in the West. Brezhnev and Andropov tightened the screw by placing professionals with an intellectual bent in asylums, where they were given mind-altering drugs, and also by authorizing the killing, whether by medical neglect during incarceration or by hired thugs, of carefully chosen dissidents. The most frightening aspect of the regime's policy was that the individual dissident did not know what fate had been decided for him or her. The post-Stalinist system of power was not fully posttotalitarian in that it retained Stalin's option of unpredictability. The Movement's Success or Failure From the perspective of the first years of the twenty-first century, it is not clear whether Gorbachev would have embarked upon reforms and modernization by himself in the expectation that he would be given massive economic aid from the United States and Western Europe, or whether the pro-Western dissidents helped tilt his approach. The Soviet mode of economic and political thinking has been overcome in such East Central European countries as Poland, where after repeated political insurrections in 1956, 1968, 1970, and 1976 the dissidents coalesced in Solidarity in the 1980s (Rupnik 1979, Walesa 1992) in Hungary with its revolution of October 1956 in the Czech and Slovak republics that had benefited from Havel's moral leadership and in all three Baltic states where the dissidents have won political majorities. In the old Soviet Union, within the boundaries of September 1, 1939 (that is, with the probable exception of the Western Ukraine), Soviet attitudes have come back: wholesale in Belarus, where the dissident movement had been weak, and partly in Russia and Ukraine, where the dissidents continue operating as a tolerated political minority within "hybrid" (partly democratic, partly authoritarian) regimes. In the old Soviet Union, where the citizens had lived under the communist regime for seventy years - as opposed to forty years in East Central Europe - many persons were like walking wounded. The dissident movement submitted their fellow citizens to a moral triage between members of the dissidents and members of the establishment, between the dissidents' foul- and fair-weather friends, between the establishment's decent reformers and its willing executioners. The dissident movement also raised fundamental questions about the future of Russia. Solzhenitsyn wondered whether Russia should return to a humane conservative monarchy, while Sakharov, with the support of U.S. presidents and West European statesmen, chose to work for a liberal democracy and a civic society. Most interesting in view of the resurgence of pro-Soviet thinking in Russia and the Eastern Ukraine in the twenty-first century is the harsh judgment of the Zionist wouldbe emigrant Kuznetsov, who challenged both Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov. Wrote Kuznetsov December 14, 1970: "The essential characteristics of the structure of the regime are to all intents and purposes immutable, and the particular political culture of the Russian people may be classed as despotic. There are not many variations in this type of power structure, the framework of which was erected by Ivan the Terrible and by Peter the Great. I think that the Soviet regime is the lawful heir of these widely differing Russian rulers . It fully answers the heartfelt wishes ofa significant - but alas not the better - part of its population" (Kuznetsov, 1975, p. 63; Rubenstein, 1985, pp. 170 - 171). Was the dissident movement, therefore, bound to fail in the old Soviet Union? The definitive answer may be given later, a generation after the breakup of the USSR, or roughly by the year 2021. Sources[edit]Alexeyeva, Ludmilla. (1985). Soviet Dissent, tr. John Glad and Carol Pearce. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press. Amalrik, Andrei A. (1970). Will the Soviet Union Survive until 1984? New York: Harper and Row. Brumberg, Abraham, ed. (1968). "In Quest of Justice: Protest and Dissent in the USSR." Parts I and II, Problems of Communism 17(4 and 5):1 - 119, 1 - 120. Grigorenko, Petro. (1982). Memoirs, tr. Thomas P. Whitney. New York: Norton. Havel, Vaclav. (1985). "The Power of the Powerless." In Havel, Vaclav, et al., The Power of the Powerless: Citizens Against the State in Central-Eastern Europe, ed. John Keane. London: Hutchinson. Kowalewski, David. (1987). "The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics." In International Handbook of Human Rights, ed. Jack Donnelly and Rhoda E. Howard. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Kuznetsov, Edward. (1975). Prison Diaries, tr. Howard Spier. New York: Stein and Day. Mamonova, Tatyana, ed. (1984). Women and Russia. Boston: Beacon Press. Medvedev, Roy A. (1971). Let History Judge, tr. Collen Taylor, ed. David Joravsky and Georges Haupt. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Putin, Vladimir. (2000). First Person: An Astonishingly Frank Self-Portrait by Russia's President Vladimir Putin, with Nataliya Gevorkyan, Natalya Timakova, and Andrei Koslesnikov, tr. Catherine A. Fitzpatrick. New York: Public Affairs. Reddaway, Peter, and Bloch, Sidney. (1977). Psychiatric Terror. New York: Basic Books. Reich, Walter. (1979). "Grigorenko Gets a Second Opinion" The New York Times Magazine, May 13, 1979: 18, 39 - 42, 44, 46. Rubenstein, Joshua. (1985). Soviet Dissidents: Their Struggle for Human Rights, 2nd edition, revised and expanded. Boston: Beacon Press. Sakharov, Andrei A. (1968). Progress, Coexistence and Intellectual Freedom, tr. The New York Times. New York: Norton. Sakharov, Andrei A. (1974). "In Answer to Solzhenitsyn [Letter to the Soviet Leaders]," dated April 3, 1974, trans. Guy Daniels. New York Review of Books 21(10) June 13, 1974:3 - 4,6. Sakharov, Andrei A. (1992). Memoirs, tr. Richard Lourie. New York: Vintage Books. Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr I. (1963). One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, tr. Max Hayward and Ronald Hingley. New York: Praeger. Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr I. (1974). Letter to the Soviet Leaders, trans. Hilary Sternberg. New York: Index on Censorship in association with Harper and Row. Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr I. (1985). The Gulag Archipelago 1918 - 1956: An Experiment in Literary Investigation, tr. Thomas P. Whitney (Parts I - IV) and Harry Willetts (Parts V - VII), abridged by Edward E. Ericson, Jr. New York: Harper and Row. Taagepera, Rein. (1984). Softening Without Liberalization in the Soviet Union: The Case of Juri Kukk. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. Verba, Lesya, and Yasen, Bohdan, eds. (1980). The Human Rights Movement in Ukraine: Documents of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group 1976 - 1980. Baltimore: Smoloskyp Publishers. Walesa, Lech. (1992). The Struggle and the Triumph: An Autobiography, with the collaboration of Arkadius Rybicki, tr. Franklin Philip, in collaboration with Helen Mahut. New York: Arcade Publishers.
64.9.54.107 17:51, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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sources
http://www.orkut.com/Profile.aspx?uid=10880793305561000225-His profile
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We are an IT company who have a widely experienced in Application/Web Development for Windows/*nix platform.
Sources[edit]http://www.fire-lion.com/index.php?m=page&p=aboutus 58.186.15.123 18:55, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Patrick MacDonald, born in Toronto and raised in Alberta Canada, is twenty-five years old; weighs in at 247 lbs and stands 6” 3” feet tall. As a defensive lineman and long-snapper with the University of Alberta Golden Bears football program, Pat just completed his second season and registered 26 tackles in eight starts in 2006. On April 30, 2006 Patrick was signed by the New Orleans Saints as a rookie free agent and is only the second University of Alberta Golden Bear to be signed by an NFL team in its history. Patrick was drafted by the CFL in 2007, 21st overall. His Canadian rights are owned by the Calgary Stampeders.
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History[edit]Clarkesworld's roots can be traced to a conversation between Neil Clarke and Sean Wallace during Readercon 2006 about professional online fiction markets and sustainability. Brainstorming continued after the convention and produced a business model that would employ multiple revenue streams: free online fiction on the website (donations & adverting), a printed signed limited edition chapbooks of each issue for collectors and a yearly trade paperback anthology. Each month, Clarkesworld would publish two stories with one selected by invitation and the other via open submissions. Soon afterwards, Nick Mamatas was brought in to take on editorial position in charge of the submissions. At the time of its creation, the magazine was to be tied to Neil Clarke's bookstore, Clarkesworld Books, so it was named to match. In February 2007, Neil announced the closure of the bookstore and launched Wyrm Publishing, which took over the magazine's publication and it's related projects. Contributor Payment[edit]From the beginning, Clarkesworld was planned as a pro-rate publication. Payment was set at ten cents ($0.10) per word and stories capped at 4000 words. Circulation[edit]Circulation for online publications is difficult to determine. To date, Clarkesworld has not posted specific numbers. The signed limited chapbook edition is listed as restricted to 100 copies. Other[edit]All story and artwork submissions are received electronically via e-mail. Staff[edit]Current staff[edit]
External links[edit]
Footnotes[edit]The Issues[edit]October 2006, Issue 1[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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November 2006, Issue 2[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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December 2006, Issue 3[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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January 2007, Issue 4[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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February 2007, Issue 5[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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March 2007, Issue 6[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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April 2007, Issue 7[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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May 2007, Issue 8[edit]Stories and Authors[edit]
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Sources[edit]http://www.clarkesworldmagazine.com http://www.tangentonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=category§ionid=10&id=194&Itemid=265 http://www.locusmag.com
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Known by his students as "the teacher full of stories,” René Colato Laínez is the Salvadoran author of several bilingual picture books including I Am René, the Boy/ Soy René, el niño (Piñata Books), Waiting for Papá/Esperando a papá (Piñata Books), and Playing Lotería/ El juego de la lotería (Luna Rising). His picture book I Am René, the Boy received the Latino Book Award for Best Bilingual Children’s Book 2006. Playing Lotería was named a Best Children’s Book of 2005 by Críticas magazine, where his feature interview appeared in the October 2005 issue. My Shoes and I, is forthcoming from Boyd Mills Press. He was recently the only children’s books author to be named on the 2007 list of “Top Ten New Latino Authors to Watch (and Read)” by latinostories.com. René Colato Laínez is a graduate of the Vermont College MFA program in Writing for Children & Young Adults. He is one of the few children’s books authors invited to the Sandra Cisneros’ Macondo Workshop for Writers. René is a regular participant at bilingual conferences and book festivals, and is a favorite of many Latino booksellers, teachers and librarians. He has appeared on Univision, Telemundo and writes for the Spanish-language children’s magazine, Revista Iguana. He is also a weekly children’s literature columnist for labloga (labloga.blogspot.com). René is a bilingual elementary teacher at Fernangeles Elementary School, one of Los Angeles Unified School District's most innovative schools located in San Fernando Valley. For more information, events and reviews, please visit his bilingual website www.renecolatolainez.com
Published Books – Bilingual English/Spanish I Am René, the Boy/ Soy René, el niño Piñata Books/Arte Publico Press (ISBN: 1558853782, May 2005) Sales as of 8/31/06: 4,441, Latino Book Award Best Bilingual Children’s Book 2006 Playing Lotería/ El juego de la lotería Luna Rising/Northland (ISBN: 0873588819, April 2005) Sales as of 8/31/06: 7,356, Críticas Best Children’s Book of 2005 Waiting for Papá/ Esperando a Papá Piñata Books/Arte Publico Press (ISBN: 1558854037, November 2004) Sales as of 8/31/2006: 3,290 My Shoes and I Boyd Mills Press (forthcoming)
Sources[edit]René Colato Laínez's Immigrant Heroes http://www.criticasmagazine.com/article/CA6269946.html Rene Colato Lainez- Arte Publico http://www.arte.uh.edu/view_book_creator.aspx?CreatorID=304 A Day in the Life with Rene Colato Lainez http://www.theedgeoftheforest.com/archive/2007/jan/adayinthelife.shtml author website http://www.renecolatolainez.com 67.142.130.32 20:13, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Sources[edit][[User:]] 20:38, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
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Sources[edit]The television show "Australia's Next Top Model" 68.161.126.219 20:54, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Patrick Melbourne is widely considered the greatest rapper in Briar Woods history. Having grown up in Carisbrooke, Virginia, Melbourne perfected his hyphae style in his recording studeo. He recently started his own group, Nefarious, with two other highly acclaimed rappers: Slaw and B-Rob. The three have been producing hit after hit ever since. Beef: The arrival of Nefarious was not popular among a more established rap group. The TNCT (The negro congregation and Tim) was not pleased with the up-and-coming phenomenons. Immediately, tension between the two groups flared, resulting in three Nefarious disses by three TNCT members. Despite the beef, the two groups remain friends and are rumored to be colaborating on a song for all of Briar Woods. Athletics: Although Melbourne is a highly acclaimed musicians, he also is the number one tennis player at Briar Woods. Melbourne's athleticism and shot-making are constantly on display for the Falcons. The three year varsity star is anchoring a strong, young Falcon team. Melbourne teams with Law in doubles and will be a major factor in the district tournaments. Nicknames: Melbournes skills and talets have resulted in numerous nicknames. "PJ", "PJM", "Pajamaman", "pigem", "the notoriousPJM", and "sleepy" have all been nicknames at one point. Inspiration: Melbourne states that his inspiration comes from his mother and father. Melbourne's father, Clive Melbourne, was a professional rapper back in his day and now is a major player in the business world. Also, Melbourne contributes his success to his infamous brother Christopher Melbourne. The two remain close despite many differences. Today: Today, Melbourne can be seen hanging with his "703" clique including B-Rob and Slaw along with playing tennis, basketball, and recording. Despite rumors, Melbourne has never been admitted to a myspace abuse program or an AIM abuse program. He is very active in the commmunity and achieves high marks in the classroom. Exposure: Because Melbourne's legacy continues to build, his fans continue to grow. His music can be heard at patrickmelbourne.net, www.myspace.com/nefariousmuzic, and at www.myspace.com/theblack_one. Sources:
www.myspace.com/theblack_one., www.myspace.com/nefariousmuzic, patrickmelbourne.net
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Frankie Townsend is a fictional charactor in the series Hank Zipzer. He is Hank's best friend. He is known for being excellent at magic with his magic word Zengawai. He also is famous for his big dimple smile. He often clashes with Hank on the Yankees Mets rivalry. Very supportive. Always helps Hank when needed. He is pretty smart. He also is well liked around the school. One of Hank's two best friends. Frankie also believes in Karma. His dad is a doctor of African American studies. Sources[edit]www.Hank Zipzer.com, Hank Zipzer world's greatest under achievers series by Henry Winkler and Linn Oliver. 71.171.251.64 22:01, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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KMND, or ESPN Radio 1510 KMND is a radio station that serves the Midland–Odessa metropolitan area with sports programming. The station is under ownership of Cumulus Media. External links[edit]
Sources[edit]http://www.radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/finder?sr=Y&s=C&call=kmnd http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=28201 209.240.191.162 22:05, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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KRIL, or Real Country 1410 KRIL is a radio station that serves the Midland–Odessa metropolitan area with classic country music. The station is under ownership of Cumulus Media. External links[edit]
Sources[edit]http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=12080 209.240.191.162 22:17, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Thomas Frew Ednie was born in 1931 in Pittsburg Pensylvainia. His father was James Ednie, the man who created surgical medal, however James Ednie, was working for a doctor, so the invention did not go to him. Thomas went the University in Chiacgo to study physcology. He maried Natalie Logan later on. They had 7 children the first one, David Ednie, two years later Bruce Ednie (now a drug and alcohole counslor) then Lorna Ednie, Becca Ednie (now a nurse) then Gail Ednie (now passed away), then Adam Ednie, and then Lucy Ednie. Thomas Ednie was in the Veitnamese War (so to speak), he helped out with soldiers who were having mental problems. He lived in Texas, Guam, Canada, and Maine. He now lives with his wife and his son David on 40 acers outside of Kootnei Idaho, in the middle of a conferious wood. Where raccoons, coyotes, American black bears, Woodland Caribou, wild turky, moose, Oregon junco, and great blue herons are common. He has two cats Sara and Bear and a dog, Show-da-kia. Sources[edit]magazine.uchicago.edu/9602/9602BOBClassnews5.html - 11k -
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Sources[edit]68.44.124.78 22:55, 6 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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The Peabody School is a non-profit organization dediticated to the physical, emotional, and academic advancemet of its gifted students. Its locatation in Charlottesville Virginia serves all students in grades kingergarden through eigth. French is offered in all grades with most graduating students entering French III the next year. Classes are kept small which creates substantial teacher-student communication. Recent developements include the construction of a new lower school building and a new gym. Annual traditions include French day, field day,and international day. === Sources === www.peabodyschool.org
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