Posts Tagged ‘50th anniversary’

Half a Century with Paddington Bear

Posted on 10/13/08

He would hardly appear out-of-place in any group of 50-year-old males: a little gnarled, anachronistically dressed, and clinging on to accessories which have seen better days. But what marks out Paddington bear, who celebrates his half-century today, is that he has always looked like this.

It is 50 years since the first story featuring Paddington, the iconic bear found at his namesake West London station and beloved of many an English schoolchild, was published by former BBC radio engineer and cameraman Michael Bond.

The first Paddington story, entitled A Bear Called Paddington was released on 13 October 1958. The book described the bear’s first year in Britain, from his discovery at Paddington station by his owners Mr and Mrs Brown, through the trauma of his first experience of bathing, and concluded with the anniversary of his fortuitous discovery.

Mr Bond describes how a pang of sympathy for a neglected toy bear in a London shop inspired him to write the children’s stories which have since been translated into 30 languages, and sold more than 30 million copies around the world: “I bought a small toy bear on Christmas Eve 1956. I saw it left on a shelf in a London store and felt sorry for it. I took it home as a present for my wife Brenda and named it Paddington as we were living near Paddington Station at the time. I wrote some stories about the bear, more for fun than with the idea of having them published. After ten days I found that I had a book on my hands. It wasn’t written specifically for children, but I think I put into it the kind things I liked reading about when I was young.”

To celebrate the marmite-loving bear’s 50th, search engine Google has adorned the logo on its homepage with a picture of Paddington carrying his trademark battered suitcase and standing at a fictional crossroads between his native Peru and London.

INDEPENDENT.CO.UK
Date: 2008-10-13

NASA Celebrates The Big 5-0

Posted on 10/01/08

Fifty years. Depending on your views that could be a lifetime, or merely a fraction of it. For NASA, it’s just the beginning. Today they proudly celebrate the anniversary of their operations, which began in 1958. What started as an attempt to keep ahead of the Soviet Union in terms of technology and science has become an organization dedicated to “exploring the universe and searching for life; to inspire the next generation of explorers.”

When it began NASA was essentially four laboratories and 80 employees, formerly of the research agency NACA (the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics). The earliest programs involved research into human spaceflight, spurred onward by the Space Race between the United States and the USSR.

The next decade would be fueled by the challenge for both countries. After the success with Sputnik, Russia quickly pulled ahead of the game by becoming the first country to hit the moon with a man-made object, the first to orbit the moon and photograph its far side, both events occurring in 1959. By 1963 they had sent both a man (Yuri Gagarin in 1961) and a woman (Valentina Tereshkova) into space. They were the first to have a cosmonaut leave an orbiting spacecraft with Alexei Leonov in 1965. The next year they landed a probe on the moon which transmitted data back to Earth, and by 1971 they were the first to place a manned space station into orbit.

NASA, while knowing that accomplishing these same tasks would be a step in the right direction, were determined to get ahead of Russia, and so their ultimate goal was to put a man on the moon before the Soviet Union. Starting with the Mercury Seven, NASA focused on getting man in orbit and within ten years worked up to their dreams.

On 4:18pm, EDT of July 20, 1969 those famous first words were spoken from the surface of the moon- “Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.” Within seven hours Neil Armstrong made his fateful stride across the lunar surface, becoming not only the first American, but the first human on the moon.

The American space program has done very well for itself in the past fifty years, though it’s not without it’s setbacks. Of the 121 shuttle missions there have been two failures. The Challenger and Columbia disasters, which claimed the lives of 14 astronauts, have caused delays as well as prompted national concern over the dangers of space travel. Of course, since the 1950s, NASA has expanded it’s dreams beyond just getting man into space. The journeys of Pioneers 10 and 11 marked the beginning of extra-solar exploration, and to this day we continue to receive information from both Voyagers that were launched in the 1970s.

The future goals of NASA include plans for a permanent moon base, which they hope to begin construction by 2020 with plans for completion within four years. Should the project be successful it will be a fully functioning base that allows for crew rotations similar to the International Space Station. NASA administrator Michael D Griffin also hopes that an American will be on Mars by 2037, proving that even though the Space Race has long since ended, America still continues running.