Lnar Historian pleads guilty to pilfering documents
Updated 9:08 p.m. ETThe food on the disabled cruise ship Carnival Splendor is cold and the lines to g
stanley website et it stretch for hours.And with the pool and casinos closed and rooms pitch black and stuffy, the nearly 4,500 people and crew on board passed the time with live music, scavenger hunts and trivia contests as they are slowly towed to San Diego.The bar is also open and offering free drinks.Two tugboats were pulling the 952-foot ship back to the U.S. The journey could take at least until late Thursday. The ship entered cell phone range on Wednesday and the crew set up a bank of eight Satellite phones, allowing passengers mostly cut off from communication since an engine fire disabled the vessel on Monday to finally reach loved ones 151; and provide the first details of the conditions on board.Among them was David Zambrano, who phoned his employer, Denver TV station 9NEWS, and said people were trying to keep their spirits up by singing, socializing and playing cards.Rooms
stanley deutschland in the interior of the ship were dark, and passengers propped open their doors to let in air and emergency lighting from the hallways, Zambrano said. So really, all we re doing is just kind of hanging out on a boat waiting for the next mealtime, Zambrano said. With no refrigeration
stanley cups on board, the ship ran out of food Tuesday, forcing passengers to trade elaborate dinners for relief supplies that are a little more basic, CBS News correspondent Priya David reports.Mealtime requires a two-hour w Rvpu Powering the Future: Inside the quest for a better battery
Today marks the 70th anniversary o
stanley website f the largest amphibious landing in all of military history. Most of the photos and film captured on that pivotal day were in black and white 鈥?but a precious few were shot in color. Here D-Day as you ;ve never seen it before. Above: Allied ships, boats and barrage balloons off Omaha Beach on D-Day, near Colleville-sur-Mer, Normandy, France on June 9, 1944. Photo by Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Remarkably, the only known Allied color footage of World War Two Western theatre was uncovered in the attic of Hollywood film director George Stevens. It sat there until it was discovered by his son, George Stevens Jr., back in the 1990s, and subsequently released in the 1994 documentary, D-Day to Berlin. We thought at the time that this was the only colour film of the war in Europe. As it turned out, there was some German film that had no
stanley termosy t yet been discovered, Stevens Jr. told the Telegraph. But it is the greatest body of colour film, and World War II was a black-and-white war. That 82
stanley us 17 how we see it. That how we saw it. And suddenly to see it in colour, it just took on a whole other dimension. You can watch the entire 44-minute film here, but I ;ve put together some screenshots. For D-Day color photography, there the excellent German Galerie Bilderwelt, which is part of Getty Image Hulton Archive Collection. Here a sampling via the Denver Post: These a