There’s a Star Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere/The Hobo
and the Puppy (Challenge 612) was issued
on 1960, just a year after Tommy’s only hit, Three Stars. There’s a
Star Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere tells
the story of Francis Gary Powers – usually referred to as Gary Powers –an
American pilot who was shot down while flying a U-2 spy plane for the CIA in
Soviet Union airspace. The former USAF U-2 was equipped with a state-of-the-art
camera designed to take high-resolution photos from the edge of the
stratosphere over hostile countries, including the Soviet Union; Power’s
mission was to photograph military installations and other important sites.
He was shot down by a surface-to-air missile over
Sverdlovsk. Powers was captured and taken to Lubyanka Prison in Moscow. When
the U.S. government learned of Powers' disappearance they issued a cover
statement claiming a ‘weather plane’ had strayed off course after its pilot had
‘difficulties with his oxygen equipment’. CIA officials did not know that the
plane crashed almost fully intact, and the Soviets recovered its equipment.
Powers was interrogated extensively by the KGB for months before he made a
confession and a public apology for his part in espionage. His trial began on
August 17 1960, before the military division of the Supreme Court of the USSR.
Members of his family were present, as were attorneys provided by the CIA. Two
days later Powers was convicted of espionage and sentenced to ten years
confinement, three in prison, the remainder in a labour camp. On February 10
1962, Powers was exchanged, along with American student Frederic Pryor, in a
well-publicised spy swap at the Glienicke Bridge in Berlin. The exchange was
for Soviet KGB Colonel Vilyam Fisher, known as Rudolf Abel, who had been caught
by the FBI and tried and jailed for espionage.
Powers died in August 1977. He had been working as a helicopter
traffic pilot reporter for KNBC News Channel 4 when he was forced to make an
emergency landing as the helicopter was running out of fuel. As he descended he
noticed children playing in the area, and directed the helicopter elsewhere to
avoid landing on them. If not for the last-second deviation he might have
landed safely. The ‘copter crashed and Powers died instantly.
Our next disc was released by Tommy in February 1967. Roger,
Ed And Gus (America's Astronaut Heroes) is
a tribute to the astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee, who had
been killed during testing for the Apollo 1 mission at Cape Kennedy, Florida.
The men died after fire swept through the spacecraft, designed for a manned
flight to the Moon. It was thought an electrical spark started in the area
holding oxygen supplies and other support systems which quickly spread in the
oxygen-filled atmosphere of the capsule, killing the crew within seconds.
The autopsy report confirmed that the primary cause of death
for all three astronauts was cardiac arrest caused by high concentrations of
carbon monoxide. The third degree burns suffered by the crew were not believed
to be major factors, and it was concluded that most of those had occurred
postmortem. Asphyxiation happened after the fire melted the astronauts' suits
and oxygen tubes, exposing them to the lethal atmosphere of the cabin. An
Apollo 1 mission patch was left on the Moon's surface by Apollo 11 crew members
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, and the Apollo 15 mission left a tiny memorial
statue, Fallen Astronaut, on the surface of the Moon along with a plaque
containing the names of the Apollo 1 astronauts.
Blimey, our Tommy sure knew how to pick ‘em!
I have also included the B-side, School For Fools, a rarity in as much as (instead of simply narrating) Tommy attempts to sing,
affecting a not unpleasant Johnny Cash-like lilt.
Enjoy!
Worlds Worst Dirty Book? - https://ww.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01JKQ1QU2
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