Difference between revisions of "Looking Glass Land"
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| style="background:#d3edff;"|The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes on the launchpad during launch of STS-51-L, killing all 7 on board, including school teacher Christa McAuliffe. | | style="background:#d3edff;"|The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes on the launchpad during launch of STS-51-L, killing all 7 on board, including school teacher Christa McAuliffe. | ||
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|align=center rowspan="2"|1989||align=center rowspan="2"|24 March||''The New York Times'' publishes classified documents obtained by CIA analyst Jack Thornwell which contain numerous details on projects involving them performed by both the United States and Soviet Union. The story becomes a media sensation overnight and Thornwell is arrested within hours of publication. | |align=center rowspan="2"|1989||align=center rowspan="2"|24 March||''The New York Times'' publishes classified documents obtained by CIA analyst Jack Thornwell which contain numerous details on projects involving them performed by both the United States and Soviet Union. The story becomes a media sensation overnight and Thornwell is arrested within hours of publication. |
Revision as of 20:47, 17 February 2019
"LOOKING GLASS LAND" — SUMMARY
Contents
Introduction
Timeline
1850s
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1859 | 1 September | Austria cedes Lombardy from Lombardy-Venetia to France (Treaty of Zürich) |
France immediately cedes Lombardy to Sardinia-Piedmont (Treaty of Zürich) |
1980s
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1986 | 28 January | The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes during launch of STS-51-L, killing all 7 on board, including school teacher Christa McAuliffe. |
The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes on the launchpad during launch of STS-51-L, killing all 7 on board, including school teacher Christa McAuliffe. | ||
1989 | 24 March | The New York Times publishes classified documents obtained by CIA analyst Jack Thornwell which contain numerous details on projects involving them performed by both the United States and Soviet Union. The story becomes a media sensation overnight and Thornwell is arrested within hours of publication. |
The New York Times publishes classified documents obtained by CIA analyst Jack Thornwell which contain numerous details on projects involving them performed by both the United States and Soviet Union. The story becomes a media sensation overnight and Thornwell is arrested within hours of publication. |