Vasili Alexandrovich Arkhipov (Arkhipov)
Vasili Alexandrovich was born in a peasant family on January 30 1926 in Olovo, Moscow Oblast Russian Soviet union where he went to caspian higher naval school.
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Born January 30, 1926. In Olovo, Moscow Oblast, Russian. He was in the Family of the Moscow for a very long time . He was educated in the higher education School that wasnt for a normal average person . He later participated in the Soviet- Japanese War in in the Russian navy August of 1945, serving aboard a minesweeper. He transferred to the Naval School is where he graduated in 1947. After graduating in 1947. He served in the submarine service aboard boats in the black sea and was in the Northern and Baltic Fleets. He advanced up the ranks of the navy as his skill and training advanced as no one has really achieved before but he has done so .
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Went to school at high Naval School and then become a Participated. Soviet-Japanese War in Russian. In August around 1945. Then the captain took his boat to the Northern Black Sea.
In July 1961. He was in office of the new Hotel-class ballistic missile submarine K-19. After a few days of conducting exercises off the coast of Greenland the submarine developed a bad leak in its reactor coolant system. The leak led to failure of the cooling system This was a horrible crisis event for the crew and possibly the world. Radio communications were also affected because was unable to make contact with Moscow or
Therefore, was accepted into the Air Force academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado in which he excelled from the start. He was selected as one out of a dozen other freshman trainees to train fly gliders. (A skill that very well may have come in handy decades later when his engines failed) By the end of that year, he had been chosen as an instructor pilot. He served in the U.S. Air Force as a fighter pilot for seven years in the time of 1973 to 1980. He flew Vietnam-era F-4 Phantom II jets. He was a training officer and flight leader, he also acquired the rank of captain whilst he was training at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada. He was a commander in red flag exercises. (Red Flag exercises are a form of training where pilots receive advanced aerial combat training.) He also took part in the aircraft accident investigation
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov was born in the small seaport of Taganrog, Ukraine on January 17th in the year 1860. Today he is remembered as a playwright and one of the masters of the modern short story. He was the son of a grocer and the grandson of a serf who had bought his freedom, that and that his
Eldred Hosea Moye Sr. enlisted in the United States Navy in October 1984 at Military Entrance Processing station, Fort Jackson, South Carolina. He attended Operations Specialist “A” School in Damneck, VA, where he was meritoriously advanced to Operations Specialist Seaman Apprentice. He quickly rose through the enlisted ranks and would become a United States Chief Petty Officer in 7 years, which is a great achievement for this sailor because is usually takes 10 or more years to get promoted to that rank.
His father was in World War II, a Marine in the Third Marine Division. He fought the Japanese in the Pacific.
when the ship was hit by two out of six torpedoes fired by the I-58, a japanese submarine. He
During that summer he took many different back strengthening exercises, and in September he was accepted by the Navy. In March 1943, as a lieutenant he took command of a PT (torpedo) boat in the Solomon Islands. On the night of August 2, his boat was cruising west of New Georgia it was rammed and sunk by a Japanese destroyer. He rallied the survivors and managed to get them to an island after being thrown across the deck onto his back. He then towed a wounded man three miles through a rough journey through different seas. He was a very brave man, for several days he risked his life repeatedly, swimming into dangerous waters hoping to find a rescue ship. He finally met up with two friendly islanders and sent them for aid with a message that he carved on a coconut. Back home he received the Navy and Marine Corps Medal, and the Purple Heart, but his earlier back injury had been aggravated, and unfortunately he contracted malaria. After an operation on his back, he was discharged early in 1945.
His parents Foma Nijinsky and Eleonora Bereda. They owned touring dance company. His father teach Vaslav how to dance.
He served 7 years as a naval officer and rose to the rank of Lieutenant.
He attended West Point and graduated from there in 1915. He served in a variety of training duties during World War I. He was promoted to Promoted Major in 1920.(Dupuy, Johnson, Bongard 236) He graduated from the top of his class at the Command and General Staff School. He served under General Douglas McArthur in the office of the chief of staff in the Philippines. He was promoted to Major General in December of 1944. He was the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces during D-Day in 1944. He commanded until the
At the age of nine he started training at the Imperial School in St. Petersburg. He rarely saw his family because they lived far away and he became the ward of Grigory Grigorevich, who was in charge of the school. There Balanchine
service as supreme allied commander in Europe in World War II to his death in 1969, but
He was later assigned to the U.S. Pacific Fleet aboard the La Vallette. Assigned duties of assistant torpedo officer, commissary, supply, and watch officer. Soon became one of the Commander’s favorites who noted his hard work, efficiency, and commitment to his studies. Soon the Commander assigned him to engineer. He learned to inspect and check his subordinates after “the chief machinist’s mate reported a crack in a condenser tube that would take a few hours to repair. He discovered the “crack” was only a heavy pencil mark: the men tried to take advantage of his inexperience to get a few hours of sleep.” (Duncan20) Rickover served aboard the La Vallette from September 1922 to Dec. 1924. Next Rickover served aboard the battleship Nevada. Rickover served aboard the Nevada from June 1925 to April 1927. Rickover’s mind turned to aviation training but he failed the physical exam. It was then when Rickover considered engineering. Rickover applied for postgraduate teaching in electrical engineering. In the postgraduate program he would return to Annapolis to the Naval Academy and then continue to study at a major school engineering school in his case Columbia University. Rickover had completed the first part of his postgraduate program at the Naval Academy by June 26 1928 and was very excited to attend a major university. Rickover next attended Columbia University where he had a great experience and education. Rickover started thinking about his naval career after the university. Aviation duty was out due to medical exam so he applied to submarine duty. In May 1929 Hyman Rickover had graduated with honors and a master’s degree in engineering. Rickover then served aboard the S-9 submarine for a short time from October 1929 to January 1930 with no special duties. After that Rickover attended submarine school from January to June 1930. After school he served as the
Eugene Bennett Fluckey was born on October 5th, 1913 in Washington, D.C. (Schudel). After completing high school at Western High School in Washington, D.C. at the young age of 15, he attended Mercersburg Academy in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania and Columbian Preparatory School in Washington, D.C. prior to graduating from the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland and commissioning as an Ensign in the United States Navy on June 6th, 1935 (Schudel). Fluckey was originally assigned to the battleship USS Nevada (BB-36) before being reassigned to the destroyer USS McCormick (DD-223). He then attended the Submarine School in New London, Connecticut and upon completion was first assigned to the submarine USS S-42 (SS-153) and was second assigned
Georgi Zhukov was the Soviet Union 's most prominent military leader during World War II. He was enrolled into the Imperial Army, serving well enough to merit a promotion to the rank of non-commissioned officer. During World War Two, he was the most successful Russian general. He was born in 1896 in Strelkovka, Russia. One of his famous battles was the battle of Khalkhin-Gol (also known as Nomonhan Incident in Japan).
From September of 1850 to May of 1859, Tchaikovsky attended the School of Jurisprudence. At this boarding school in St. Petersburg, he received an excellent education and further pursued his interest in music. During this time,