Re: Dark Earth Timeline Discussion
Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2023 4:23 am
July
July 1: British marriage rates reach their highest totals yet in the 20th century, at 15.4 per thousand people, with just over 2 million marriages occurring in the previous year. Divorces increases to 72,000, reflecting some of the expected issues involved with the large scale return of troops from wartime service in the Far East, whilst the total fertility rate seems to have ceased its natural decline from the post Second World War peak of 3.75 in 1967, holding steady at 3.2.
July 2: The race for the Democratic nomination for US President is effectively wrapped up for Hubert Humphrey after he wins a number of key primaries including Ohio, Michigan and Illinois thanks to his advantage in the labour union vote; his chief competitor, Senator Henry Jackson, now cannot win enough delegates to overcome Humphrey unless he were to somehow gain all of those pledged to Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
July 3: IBM begins sales of 5.25” ‘floppy disks’ in the United States for use in business, educational and personal home microcomputing engines, adopting the standard size pioneered by a number of British computing engine manufacturing companies; the latter are known to be engaging in experimental research on the potential utilisation of specialised variants of video laserdiscs for microcomputers.
July 4: A live telecast of the Orion 6 space mission, currently in deep space between the orbits of Jupiter and Saturn en route to Uranus and Neptune, is carried by all five major television networks in the United States. Mission Commander Colonel Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin, USAF and Deputy Commander Captain James Lovell, USN conduct a tour of the command, engineering and habitation modules and the hangar deck of the Orion spacecraft; careful observers note the presence of four USSF space fighters in the latter area.
July 5: President Kennedy signs the Universal National Medicare System Act of 1972 at a ceremony in the White House, establishing a universal national health care system across the United States, and hailing it as a strategic victory in the war against sickness, want and ignorance across society and a great measure befitting a great nation.
July 6: The Victorian Football League announces its largest expansion since 1925, with the VFA clubs Werribee, Sandringham, Port Melbourne and Coburg to be elevated for the 1975 VFL season for a total of 16 teams. Further prospects for expansion into a national competition is to be studied, with the strength of the SANFL, WAFL, QAFL and NSWFL providing both opportunity and challenges.
July 7: A secret CIA report on Project MKUltra recommends that successful programmes be continued with appropriate oversight, whilst a review of previous test subjects is to be commenced in order to appraise the longer term effects.
July 8: The Soviet Union reaches an agreement with the Imperial Wheat Board to buy £250 million worth of British Commonwealth grain and meat to cover regional shortfalls in the last year’s harvest.
July 9: Military officials from the U.S. Department of Defense and British Ministry of Defence meeting in Bermuda sign an agreement for coordination of the cooperative development of new cruise missiles for use by USN and RN warships, based on the existing Lionheart and Regulus missile families. A separate agreement in principle for licensed production of a British version of the AGM-102 air launched strategic cruise missile for deployment on RAF heavy bombers; deployment of USAF ground launched cruise missiles in the United Kingdom and other parts of the British Empire; and for cooperative development and fielding of new specialised missile launcher ground vehicles and long range cruise missile for the British and U.S. Armies was already reached at the end of June.
July 10: Commissioning of the 12th and final vessel in the Enterprise class of nuclear aircraft carriers, USS Franklin, bringing the USN once again to an active strength of 28 fleet aircraft carriers, along with 10 anti submarine light aircraft carriers and 10 escort carriers. Four new CVANs of the successor Ticonderoga class (Shiloh, Bunker Hill, Valley Forge and Ticonderoga) are under construction with a further four ordered (Philippine Sea, Antietam, Khe Sanh and Leyte Gulf) ordered, with Ticonderoga due to commission in November. The Ticonderogas are larger than their older sisters, carry a range of new missile and gun systems as well as increased ammunition stocks and field the world’s largest carrier air groups.
July 11: The World Chess Championship between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer begins in Reykjavik, Iceland, with the clash between the Soviet and America, the two youngest grandmasters in history, being a highly anticipated measure of Cold War superiority, with there having not been a non-Soviet world champion in quarter of a century.
July 12: 5 inches of rain fall in Death Valley, California, in less than 24 hours, in an accidental deployment of new experimental weather control enchantments, causing considerable flooding and the formation of ephemeral lakes. The event does give rise to a novel idea, which is referred to the Presidential Scientific Advisory Committee Sub-Group on Arcane-Scientific Innovation, chaired by Dr. Henry Strangelove and also consisting of Dr. Emmett Brown, Professor John Frink, Dr. Crawford Tillinghast Jr. and Dr. Julius Kelp.
July 13: The Democratic National Convention is held in Metropolis, Delaware, with Senator Hubert Humphrey winning the Democratic nomination for President with Senator Henry Jackson of Washington as his running mate. There is something of a subdued atmosphere for the first part of the convention prior to the arrival of President Kennedy, who gives a characteristically well-received speech rallying the party faithful and urging them to get behind Humphrey for the national poll in November; even so, there is a certain sense that with the passing of universal health care, the party's well of political capital may at last be running dry.
July 14: France unveils a range of new military hardware at the Bastille Day Parade in Paris, lead by the new AMX-32 main battle tank and followed by the 27 ton AMX-10 mechanised infantry fighting vehicle, new self propelled 155mm, 194mm, 220mm, 240mm and 320mm artillery systems, the Pluton SRBM, the swift Peugeot jeep replacement, the rugged Renault ERC 8x8 armoured car and the formidable Panhard VRBC 12x12 armoured reconnaissance tank destroyer/assault gun.
July 15: A team of academics, archaeologists, historians and wizards lead by Professor J.R.R. Tolkien, former Minister of Magic, excavating the Skalunda Barrow in Lidköping, Västragötaland, Sweden uncover the long lost burial mound of Beowulf, King of the Geats and greatest hero of the Northern World in the age of the Great Winter and the War Against Darkness. There in the centuries untouched mound is the fabled treasure of the dragonslayer - gold, silver, gems and wonders almost without measure ; Nægling, the sword that was broken (marked mysteriously with seven stars and a crescent moon); a fabulous green gem set in a silver broach; a ring of two intertwined silver serpents with eyes of emerald; a coat of shining mithrium mail; what appears to be a codex from Mesoamerica alongside a golden sun medallion; and a luminous stone that catches the eye like a globe with a thousand facets.
July 16: Production of the US Army’s new family of Mechanised Infantry Fighting Vehicles begins, with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle to be produced in Infantry Fighting Vehicle, Cavalry Fighting Vehicle, Battlefield Command Vehicle, Battlefield Air Defense, Engineer Fighting Vehicle, Combat Fire Support Vehicle, Anti Tank Missile Vehicle and Armoured Personnel Carrier variants. The main IFV is a 32 ton vehicle protected by advanced armour capable of carrying up to 12 infantrymen at a top speed of 55mph and is armed with 40mm automatic cannon, TOW missiles and a heavy machine gun; the CSFV assault gun version armed with a 105mm gun is intended to augment the Army’s tank and tank destroyer arms.
July 17: The USN destroyer USS Corry is damaged by a rogue mine whilst on patrol off South Vietnam in what is described by naval officials as a ‘one in a million’ accident. After the immediate danger of sinking is abated due to the swift and professional action of the damage control crew, Corry is taken under tow by the guided missile light cruiser Wilmington and shepherded towards the USN base at Cam Ranh Bay for repairs.
July 18: A 12 strong SAS training team attached to the Omani Army is attacked by communist rebel guerrillas of the Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf at a fort in Mirbat, suppressing the rebel assaults with machine guns, grenade launchers, rockets, automatic mortars, missiles and a 25pdr infantry gun before the arrival of a QRF commando company from RAF Thumrait and air support from the ready flight of Harrier supersonic jump jets.
July 19: A military crackdown at the University of El Salvador, involving hundreds of troops supported by tanks, triggers several days of widespread unrest across San Salvador and leading to the establishment of a unified umbrella group of several revolutionist and guerilla movements, the Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional.
July 20: The US Department of Defense begins talks with Britain and Egypt over American employment of certain inactive British Commonwealth air and land bases in Egypt for logistical use for its planned expansion of Middle Eastern Command. Existing American facilities in Southern Israel are faced with certain hard limitations on their scope for future expansion.
July 21: 15 year old American girl Lynne Cox swims the Channel in 9 hours and 36 minutes, breaking the record time for one of such tender years and of the fairer sex.
July 22: Chinese and Japanese diplomats begin a series of meetings in Geneva with the aim of completing the ongoing process of full normalisation of postwar ties and establishment of ordinary diplomatic relations.
July 23: Coronation of King Gustav VII Adolf of Sweden in Uppsala Cathedral by the Archbishop of Uppsala and high prelate of the Church of Sweden, who crowns the young king and invests him with the sceptre, orb and Sword of Vasa. In attendance are the former King, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, King Olav of Norway, King Eric of Denmark, King Louis of France, King Carl II of Finland, King Baldwin of Belgium and Queen Beatrice of the Netherlands, Kaiser Wilhelm IV of Germany, Kaiser Otto of Austria-Hungary, King Juan III of Spain, Tsar Sergei and the other crowned heads of Europe and South America.
July 24: The US Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts that, on current trends, American workers will enjoy up to four weeks of annual leave by the end of the 1980s, in addition to the federal public holidays of New Year's Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Victory Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Thanksgiving, Veteran's Day and Christmas Day, whilst earning increased salaries through the effects of productivity growth, technological improvements and decreased industrial strife.
July 25: The French Army completes the first phase of modernisation and renovation of certain ouvrages of the Maginot Line as part of the general increase in its conventional defences along the eastern borders of France. Whilst some military thinkers have described the fortifications as completely obsolete in the atomic age, they have been given a new lease of life with adapted roles as hardened underground headquarters, communications facilities, logistical centres and reinforcement bases for the Grande Armee in Western Germany.
July 26: Beginning of Exercise Red Flag I, an air combat training exercise for the fighter forces of Tactical Air Command held at Nellis AFB, close to the ‘convention city’ of Las Vegas. Previous international fighter exercises and the similar 'Top Gun' training establishment created by the USN's fighter forces at NAS Miramar in California have been driven by the 1970 and 1971 symposiums on the air combat lessons of the Vietnam War for US and Western fighter forces. Red Flag 1 is statistically notable for the participation of the USAF's 1st Fighter Wing, equipped with the new F-15A Eagles, and the new F-4S Phantoms of the 990th Fighter Wing, representing a mixture of the old and the new.
July 27: Virginia Piper, the wife of millionaire Minneapolis investor Harry Piper, is kidnapped whilst gardening at their house in Orono. Her horrified husband immediately sends to telegrams, one to Amy Amanda Allen, a Los Angeles journalist and the other to Reverend Elvis Presley in Tennessee.
July 28: The Israeli Army begins the gradual activation of a further two regular divisions gears utilising its latest delivery of Commonwealth armaments aid from Britain and Canada and new aid and purchases from the United States. Current expansion plans also call for formation of two armoured cavalry regiments, a brigade of ranger/mountain troops to augment other commando formations and formal establishment of the Border Guard as a distinct arm of service.
July 29: NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey complete the initial programme of launches of Earth Resources Technology Satellites with a twelfth satellite launched from Cape Canaveral to provide for full observation capacity across the Western Hemisphere.
July 30: Belgian and Dutch officials begin discussions on a proposed timetable for full fiscal union of the Benelux states, seen as the penultimate step before the putative political reunification of the Low Countries as the restored United Kingdom of the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg.
July 31: The Ministry of Munitions issues a new directive on monthly artillery shell production quotas to the Royal Arsenal Woolwich and the Imperial Arsenal Nottingham; the National Factories at Gretna, Stirling, Mullingar, Elenydd and Banbrow; Royal Ordnance; and the principle private manufacturing firms, outlining a expected shift in total capacity to two million units of field calibre and above in ordinary operations.
July 1: British marriage rates reach their highest totals yet in the 20th century, at 15.4 per thousand people, with just over 2 million marriages occurring in the previous year. Divorces increases to 72,000, reflecting some of the expected issues involved with the large scale return of troops from wartime service in the Far East, whilst the total fertility rate seems to have ceased its natural decline from the post Second World War peak of 3.75 in 1967, holding steady at 3.2.
July 2: The race for the Democratic nomination for US President is effectively wrapped up for Hubert Humphrey after he wins a number of key primaries including Ohio, Michigan and Illinois thanks to his advantage in the labour union vote; his chief competitor, Senator Henry Jackson, now cannot win enough delegates to overcome Humphrey unless he were to somehow gain all of those pledged to Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
July 3: IBM begins sales of 5.25” ‘floppy disks’ in the United States for use in business, educational and personal home microcomputing engines, adopting the standard size pioneered by a number of British computing engine manufacturing companies; the latter are known to be engaging in experimental research on the potential utilisation of specialised variants of video laserdiscs for microcomputers.
July 4: A live telecast of the Orion 6 space mission, currently in deep space between the orbits of Jupiter and Saturn en route to Uranus and Neptune, is carried by all five major television networks in the United States. Mission Commander Colonel Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin, USAF and Deputy Commander Captain James Lovell, USN conduct a tour of the command, engineering and habitation modules and the hangar deck of the Orion spacecraft; careful observers note the presence of four USSF space fighters in the latter area.
July 5: President Kennedy signs the Universal National Medicare System Act of 1972 at a ceremony in the White House, establishing a universal national health care system across the United States, and hailing it as a strategic victory in the war against sickness, want and ignorance across society and a great measure befitting a great nation.
July 6: The Victorian Football League announces its largest expansion since 1925, with the VFA clubs Werribee, Sandringham, Port Melbourne and Coburg to be elevated for the 1975 VFL season for a total of 16 teams. Further prospects for expansion into a national competition is to be studied, with the strength of the SANFL, WAFL, QAFL and NSWFL providing both opportunity and challenges.
July 7: A secret CIA report on Project MKUltra recommends that successful programmes be continued with appropriate oversight, whilst a review of previous test subjects is to be commenced in order to appraise the longer term effects.
July 8: The Soviet Union reaches an agreement with the Imperial Wheat Board to buy £250 million worth of British Commonwealth grain and meat to cover regional shortfalls in the last year’s harvest.
July 9: Military officials from the U.S. Department of Defense and British Ministry of Defence meeting in Bermuda sign an agreement for coordination of the cooperative development of new cruise missiles for use by USN and RN warships, based on the existing Lionheart and Regulus missile families. A separate agreement in principle for licensed production of a British version of the AGM-102 air launched strategic cruise missile for deployment on RAF heavy bombers; deployment of USAF ground launched cruise missiles in the United Kingdom and other parts of the British Empire; and for cooperative development and fielding of new specialised missile launcher ground vehicles and long range cruise missile for the British and U.S. Armies was already reached at the end of June.
July 10: Commissioning of the 12th and final vessel in the Enterprise class of nuclear aircraft carriers, USS Franklin, bringing the USN once again to an active strength of 28 fleet aircraft carriers, along with 10 anti submarine light aircraft carriers and 10 escort carriers. Four new CVANs of the successor Ticonderoga class (Shiloh, Bunker Hill, Valley Forge and Ticonderoga) are under construction with a further four ordered (Philippine Sea, Antietam, Khe Sanh and Leyte Gulf) ordered, with Ticonderoga due to commission in November. The Ticonderogas are larger than their older sisters, carry a range of new missile and gun systems as well as increased ammunition stocks and field the world’s largest carrier air groups.
July 11: The World Chess Championship between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer begins in Reykjavik, Iceland, with the clash between the Soviet and America, the two youngest grandmasters in history, being a highly anticipated measure of Cold War superiority, with there having not been a non-Soviet world champion in quarter of a century.
July 12: 5 inches of rain fall in Death Valley, California, in less than 24 hours, in an accidental deployment of new experimental weather control enchantments, causing considerable flooding and the formation of ephemeral lakes. The event does give rise to a novel idea, which is referred to the Presidential Scientific Advisory Committee Sub-Group on Arcane-Scientific Innovation, chaired by Dr. Henry Strangelove and also consisting of Dr. Emmett Brown, Professor John Frink, Dr. Crawford Tillinghast Jr. and Dr. Julius Kelp.
July 13: The Democratic National Convention is held in Metropolis, Delaware, with Senator Hubert Humphrey winning the Democratic nomination for President with Senator Henry Jackson of Washington as his running mate. There is something of a subdued atmosphere for the first part of the convention prior to the arrival of President Kennedy, who gives a characteristically well-received speech rallying the party faithful and urging them to get behind Humphrey for the national poll in November; even so, there is a certain sense that with the passing of universal health care, the party's well of political capital may at last be running dry.
July 14: France unveils a range of new military hardware at the Bastille Day Parade in Paris, lead by the new AMX-32 main battle tank and followed by the 27 ton AMX-10 mechanised infantry fighting vehicle, new self propelled 155mm, 194mm, 220mm, 240mm and 320mm artillery systems, the Pluton SRBM, the swift Peugeot jeep replacement, the rugged Renault ERC 8x8 armoured car and the formidable Panhard VRBC 12x12 armoured reconnaissance tank destroyer/assault gun.
July 15: A team of academics, archaeologists, historians and wizards lead by Professor J.R.R. Tolkien, former Minister of Magic, excavating the Skalunda Barrow in Lidköping, Västragötaland, Sweden uncover the long lost burial mound of Beowulf, King of the Geats and greatest hero of the Northern World in the age of the Great Winter and the War Against Darkness. There in the centuries untouched mound is the fabled treasure of the dragonslayer - gold, silver, gems and wonders almost without measure ; Nægling, the sword that was broken (marked mysteriously with seven stars and a crescent moon); a fabulous green gem set in a silver broach; a ring of two intertwined silver serpents with eyes of emerald; a coat of shining mithrium mail; what appears to be a codex from Mesoamerica alongside a golden sun medallion; and a luminous stone that catches the eye like a globe with a thousand facets.
July 16: Production of the US Army’s new family of Mechanised Infantry Fighting Vehicles begins, with the Bradley Fighting Vehicle to be produced in Infantry Fighting Vehicle, Cavalry Fighting Vehicle, Battlefield Command Vehicle, Battlefield Air Defense, Engineer Fighting Vehicle, Combat Fire Support Vehicle, Anti Tank Missile Vehicle and Armoured Personnel Carrier variants. The main IFV is a 32 ton vehicle protected by advanced armour capable of carrying up to 12 infantrymen at a top speed of 55mph and is armed with 40mm automatic cannon, TOW missiles and a heavy machine gun; the CSFV assault gun version armed with a 105mm gun is intended to augment the Army’s tank and tank destroyer arms.
July 17: The USN destroyer USS Corry is damaged by a rogue mine whilst on patrol off South Vietnam in what is described by naval officials as a ‘one in a million’ accident. After the immediate danger of sinking is abated due to the swift and professional action of the damage control crew, Corry is taken under tow by the guided missile light cruiser Wilmington and shepherded towards the USN base at Cam Ranh Bay for repairs.
July 18: A 12 strong SAS training team attached to the Omani Army is attacked by communist rebel guerrillas of the Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf at a fort in Mirbat, suppressing the rebel assaults with machine guns, grenade launchers, rockets, automatic mortars, missiles and a 25pdr infantry gun before the arrival of a QRF commando company from RAF Thumrait and air support from the ready flight of Harrier supersonic jump jets.
July 19: A military crackdown at the University of El Salvador, involving hundreds of troops supported by tanks, triggers several days of widespread unrest across San Salvador and leading to the establishment of a unified umbrella group of several revolutionist and guerilla movements, the Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional.
July 20: The US Department of Defense begins talks with Britain and Egypt over American employment of certain inactive British Commonwealth air and land bases in Egypt for logistical use for its planned expansion of Middle Eastern Command. Existing American facilities in Southern Israel are faced with certain hard limitations on their scope for future expansion.
July 21: 15 year old American girl Lynne Cox swims the Channel in 9 hours and 36 minutes, breaking the record time for one of such tender years and of the fairer sex.
July 22: Chinese and Japanese diplomats begin a series of meetings in Geneva with the aim of completing the ongoing process of full normalisation of postwar ties and establishment of ordinary diplomatic relations.
July 23: Coronation of King Gustav VII Adolf of Sweden in Uppsala Cathedral by the Archbishop of Uppsala and high prelate of the Church of Sweden, who crowns the young king and invests him with the sceptre, orb and Sword of Vasa. In attendance are the former King, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, King Olav of Norway, King Eric of Denmark, King Louis of France, King Carl II of Finland, King Baldwin of Belgium and Queen Beatrice of the Netherlands, Kaiser Wilhelm IV of Germany, Kaiser Otto of Austria-Hungary, King Juan III of Spain, Tsar Sergei and the other crowned heads of Europe and South America.
July 24: The US Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts that, on current trends, American workers will enjoy up to four weeks of annual leave by the end of the 1980s, in addition to the federal public holidays of New Year's Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Victory Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Thanksgiving, Veteran's Day and Christmas Day, whilst earning increased salaries through the effects of productivity growth, technological improvements and decreased industrial strife.
July 25: The French Army completes the first phase of modernisation and renovation of certain ouvrages of the Maginot Line as part of the general increase in its conventional defences along the eastern borders of France. Whilst some military thinkers have described the fortifications as completely obsolete in the atomic age, they have been given a new lease of life with adapted roles as hardened underground headquarters, communications facilities, logistical centres and reinforcement bases for the Grande Armee in Western Germany.
July 26: Beginning of Exercise Red Flag I, an air combat training exercise for the fighter forces of Tactical Air Command held at Nellis AFB, close to the ‘convention city’ of Las Vegas. Previous international fighter exercises and the similar 'Top Gun' training establishment created by the USN's fighter forces at NAS Miramar in California have been driven by the 1970 and 1971 symposiums on the air combat lessons of the Vietnam War for US and Western fighter forces. Red Flag 1 is statistically notable for the participation of the USAF's 1st Fighter Wing, equipped with the new F-15A Eagles, and the new F-4S Phantoms of the 990th Fighter Wing, representing a mixture of the old and the new.
July 27: Virginia Piper, the wife of millionaire Minneapolis investor Harry Piper, is kidnapped whilst gardening at their house in Orono. Her horrified husband immediately sends to telegrams, one to Amy Amanda Allen, a Los Angeles journalist and the other to Reverend Elvis Presley in Tennessee.
July 28: The Israeli Army begins the gradual activation of a further two regular divisions gears utilising its latest delivery of Commonwealth armaments aid from Britain and Canada and new aid and purchases from the United States. Current expansion plans also call for formation of two armoured cavalry regiments, a brigade of ranger/mountain troops to augment other commando formations and formal establishment of the Border Guard as a distinct arm of service.
July 29: NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey complete the initial programme of launches of Earth Resources Technology Satellites with a twelfth satellite launched from Cape Canaveral to provide for full observation capacity across the Western Hemisphere.
July 30: Belgian and Dutch officials begin discussions on a proposed timetable for full fiscal union of the Benelux states, seen as the penultimate step before the putative political reunification of the Low Countries as the restored United Kingdom of the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg.
July 31: The Ministry of Munitions issues a new directive on monthly artillery shell production quotas to the Royal Arsenal Woolwich and the Imperial Arsenal Nottingham; the National Factories at Gretna, Stirling, Mullingar, Elenydd and Banbrow; Royal Ordnance; and the principle private manufacturing firms, outlining a expected shift in total capacity to two million units of field calibre and above in ordinary operations.