Tag Archives: Legion Magazine

Identify this: NASA launches UFO study

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Stephen J thorne

Department of Defense via AP

Identify this: NASA launches UFO study

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration has launched a nine-month study into UFOs or, as the world’s leader in space exploration calls them, UAPs (unidentified aerial phenomena).

The 16-member team includes professors, scientists, an oceanographer and others who study space—former NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and science journalist Nadia Drake among them. Their work began on Oct. 24 with an eye to the future.

“The independent study team will lay the groundwork for future study on the nature of UAPs for NASA and other organizations,” the agency said in a statement.

“To do this, the team will identify how data gathered by civilian government entities, commercial data, and data from other sources can potentially be analyzed to shed light on UAPs. It will then recommend a roadmap for potential UAP data analysis by the agency going forward.”

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200 Greatest Canadians
Military Milestones
Daughters of the King now mothers of Canada

Getarchive.net

Overcoming mines and weather, Allied forces take back Walcheren

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

In September 1944, the Allies captured the port of Antwerp, Belgium, which was vital to supplying arms and materiel to the Allied forces moving from Normandy, France, to Germany.

However, Germans controlled the three islands at the mouth of the 80-kilometre Scheldt estuary in the Netherlands that lead to Antwerp. An unrelenting Hitler had seeded the river and all approaches with more than 2,000 mines and lined the riverbanks with bunkers and large gun batteries. He was determined to deny Antwerp to the Allies.

Thus followed the Battle of the Scheldt, which endured until Nov. 8, 1944.

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Home Equity

Archeologists uncover hospital artifacts at notorious PoW camp

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Stephen J thorne

Danielk Frymark/Central Museum of Prisioners of War

Archeologists uncover hospital artifacts at notorious PoW camp

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Archeologists have uncovered a rare set of artifacts from a former hospital at the site of a notorious prisoner-of-war camp where more than 40,000 Allied captives, including Canadians, died during the Second World War.

The dig was conducted in an overgrown area of what was once the Lamsdorf PoW camp—specifically, the principal subcamp of Stalag VIII known as Stalag VIIIB in what is now Łambinowice, Poland. The archeologists uncovered syringes, a razor fragment, underwear and uniform buttons, utensils and remnants of a heating stove.

“It was a part of the camp that had never before been the subject of field research,” said the project’s head, Dawid Kobiałka of the University of Łódź Institute of Archaeology in central Poland.

“Even the precise location of its individual buildings and their present state of preservation was unknown.”

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200 Greatest Canadians
Military Milestones
Daughters of the King now mothers of Canada

Imperial War Museums- wikipedia.org

Trainbusting Canadians busting records in Korea

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

In late-October 1952, during the Korean War, HMCS Crusader joined the Trainbusters Club in Korea. Within six months, Crusader garnered the club’s championship for Canada.

The club was an informal competition between ships in the conflict which took out adversary trains.

“We had some of the finest gunners in the Canadian navy,” said Irving Larson of Crusader.

It began in July 1952 after an American destroyer, the USS Orleck, demolished two trains in two weeks. It was declared trainbusting champion and a challenge was issued to beat the score.

A ship could only claim trains if they destroyed the engine, regardless of how many rail cars were obliterated.

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Home Equity

‘Come dive with us:’ The politics of archeology

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Stephen J thorne

Russian Ministry of Defence, Mil.ru

‘Come dive with us:’ The politics of archeology

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

On April 22, 2022, locked in an epic struggle for its very existence, the government in Kyiv took the seemingly incongruous step of declaring the recently sunken Russian warship Moskva a Ukrainian underwater cultural object.

Moskva had been hit nine days earlier by two Neptune anti-ship missiles fired from somewhere south of Odessa.

The sinking was particularly satisfying to Ukrainians, not only because the 39-year-old missile cruiser was the flagship of Russia’s Black Sea fleet or that it was in the vanguard of Russia’s invasion of their country, but because it was Moskva that had ordered Ukrainian troops garrisoned on Snake Island to surrender, only to be told: “Russian warship, go fuck yourself!”

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200 Greatest Canadians
200 Greatest Canadians
Military Milestones
Daughters of the King now mothers of Canada

Daughters of the King now mothers of Canada

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

In the mid-1660s, King Louis XIV of France had a problem.

He wanted to establish a strong and profitable colony in North America. But male workers who finished their contracts and soldiers who left the army did not stay on in New France. It was no way to build a colony.

An incentive was needed to keep them in Canada. The king’s advisor Jean-Baptiste Colbert had a solution.

Women. And in short order, children.

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