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Disaster at Xichang
An American's eyewitness account of the 1996 rocket accident at China's Xichang spaceport, which killed six people and injured 57:
"What Campbell witnessed over the next few days has haunted him ever since. Like most veterans of the Intelsat-708 launch, he hasn’t discussed the event in public. I got to know him while gathering material for a book on the Russian space program, and during one of our many conversations, Campbell mentioned his participation in the 1996 launch. Then he went on to tell the whole story. When I asked why he was willing to talk about it now, he answered, 'The truth shall set you free.'
"The night of the launch, Campbell and his colleagues at the hotel boarded vans and headed to the satellite processing building. As they passed the center’s main gate, they saw a crowd gathering outside to watch the liftoff. 'Everybody was dressed in his or her best clothes,' he recalls. 'It was a party atmosphere. There were many dozens, if not hundreds, of people there.' Despite the previous accidents, it seemed to Campbell that these people must have been accustomed to gathering at this spot to watch launches."
"What Campbell witnessed over the next few days has haunted him ever since. Like most veterans of the Intelsat-708 launch, he hasn’t discussed the event in public. I got to know him while gathering material for a book on the Russian space program, and during one of our many conversations, Campbell mentioned his participation in the 1996 launch. Then he went on to tell the whole story. When I asked why he was willing to talk about it now, he answered, 'The truth shall set you free.'
"The night of the launch, Campbell and his colleagues at the hotel boarded vans and headed to the satellite processing building. As they passed the center’s main gate, they saw a crowd gathering outside to watch the liftoff. 'Everybody was dressed in his or her best clothes,' he recalls. 'It was a party atmosphere. There were many dozens, if not hundreds, of people there.' Despite the previous accidents, it seemed to Campbell that these people must have been accustomed to gathering at this spot to watch launches."
AUTHOR:Anatoly Zak
SOURCE:Air & Space
PUBLISHED: Feb. 12, 2013
LENGTH: 11 minutes (2880 words)
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The pre-Raphaelites: behind the scenes at a modern blockbuster
Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian avant garde: the paintings being installed at Tate Britain. Photograph: Sophia Evans In a huge house in a mysterious part of London, a tall, energetic man called Rupert…
AUTHOR:Rachel Cooke
SOURCE:www.guardian.co.uk
PUBLISHED: Aug. 19, 2012
LENGTH: 14 minutes (3691 words)
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The Secret Footballer: undercover in the Premier League
The secret footballer: 'For the record, I never thought I’d be this old. My career has flown by; there have been unbelievable highs and terrible lows.' Photograph: Jay Brooks A few years ago, I…
AUTHOR:The Secret Footballer
SOURCE:www.guardian.co.uk
PUBLISHED: Aug. 10, 2012
LENGTH: 13 minutes (3392 words)
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Why even Robert Nozick, the philosophical father of libertarianism, gave up on the movement he inspired.
Recently, I overheard a fellow Amtraker back off a conversation on politics. "You know, it's because I'm a libertarian," he said, sounding like a vegetarian politely declining offal. Later that afternoon, in the otherwise quite groovy loft I sometimes crash at in SoHo, where one might once have expected, say, Of Grammatology or at least a back issue of Elle Decor, there sat not one but two copies of something called The Libertarian Reader. "Libertarianism" places one—so believes the libertarian—not on the political spectrum but slightly above it, and this accounts for its appeal to both the tricorne fringe and owners of premium real estate.
AUTHOR:Stephen Metcalf
SOURCE:Slate
PUBLISHED: June 20, 2011
LENGTH: 18 minutes (4651 words)
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