With the pandemic and the shelter at home or shelter in place order. I keep wondering, and i will start with you mike, what kind of things do you think will be permanent that will never change back after this is over . Have you thought of one thing . Well, you know what . I think the whole Restaurant Industry will change. The layout, i think that is one. I got in the mail today and i have not seen the changes firsthand but when it comes to flying, airlines and i got an email from united that says when you fly again, whenever that may be, we are not using the middle seat and we will start at the back of the plane and the boarding process will not be 20 minutes, it will take about 40 minutes. I think those, especially when in the air and in the tight space, i think the Airline Industry will change. I agree with you 100 . I know so many people who had trips booked in the summer and wondering on a refund or credit and they say look its need hundred dollars and i need the cash. Something i
Clandestine radio operators had one of the most dangerous jobs of World War 2. Those in Nazi-occupied Europe for the SOE, MI6 and the OSS had a life-expectancy of just six weeks. In the Gilbert Islands the Japanese decapitated 17 New Zealand ‘Coastwatchers’.
These ‘behind the lines’ highly skilled agents’ main tasks were to maintain regular contact with their home base and pass vital intelligence back. As this meticulously researched book reveals, many operators did more than that. Norwegian Odd Starheim hi-jacked a ship and sailed it to the Shetlands. In the Solomon Islands Jack Read and Paul Mason warned the defenders of Guadalcanal about incoming enemy air raids giving American fighters a chance to inflict irreversible damage on the Japanese Air Force. In 1944 Arthur Brown was central to Operation Jedburgh’s success delaying the arrival of the SS Das Reich armoured division at the Normandy beach-heads. The author also explains in layman’s terms the technology of 194