Attack atlanta olympic games nasa


















The Olympic Park bombing sobered giddy Atlantans and injected the inconvenience of reality into the surreal atmosphere of the world spotlight. Feeling frustration with the eyes of the world watching, law enforcement and the press alike subjected Richard Jewell, an attentive security guard who averted a much larger tragedy when he moved crowds away from the suspicious package, to investigations, repeated searches, and unfounded accusations that he planted the bomb himself.

Years later, the pipe bomb materials were linked definitively to Eric Rudolph, the elusive wilderness survivor who dodged a massive FBI man-hunt for nearly five and one-half years. It took only one rogue to remind the historically image-conscious city that the identity of an urban metropolis cannot be managed or controlled.

Perhaps some good came from the hand-wringing over how Atlanta might be perceived leading up to the Olympics. The Atlanta community participated in an informal self-examination that primed the city for welcoming the world for the Games and subsequently in more permanent ways. Ultimately, the Olympics yielded a lot more than a two-week photo-op: the games provided an enormous engine for growth. A surging population is the most obvious marker of Atlanta's post-Olympic transformation. If you drive up Peachtree Street, the city's main artery, just north of the annual meeting's hotels you will pass an antiquated electronic marquee that tracks metro Atlanta's population.

In the early s it hovered close to the two million mark. By the Games the metro population had reached three million, and today the marquee flashes 4,, Winning the Olympic bid marked a turning point that put Atlanta on the world's radar screen. Atlanta has attracted an enormous immigrant population because of its airport, its educational institutions, and the metro area's flourishing economy. Atlanta's international population represents every corner of the globe.

Her refugee agency in Italy randomly placed her on a flight to Atlanta where she has remained and prospered. Many of Sudan's former "Lost Boys" make their homes here and attend Georgia Perimeter College, the state's third largest in student enrollment. Most of the critical flight operations will be conducted in "uncontrolled" air space outside Atlanta's radar coverage area close to noise-sensitive communities, hence the need for predetermined flight pathways.

While flying over concrete highways on the ground, selected helicopters will fly electronic "highways in the sky," allowing precision navigation with routes represented on a computerized map of the Atlanta area. This airborne map will be generated onboard the helicopter using a database replicating the image seen on ground consoles.

Position updates are based on information from the Global Positioning Satellite GPS system transmitted to the ground monitoring stations and other aircraft via digital radio data links. The pilots see their highways in the sky, other traffic on those highways, active and inactive Olympic venues and real time graphical weather.

This technology effort will aid participating pilots in the safe and efficient conduct of their missions - while at the same time aiding ground personnel by indicating the precise location of aircraft.

This will facilitate timely deployment of aircraft to satisfy high priority transportation needs and emergency response actions during the Olympics.

This touch screen data entry device will be used for voiceless air-ground communications via digital data-link. The AGATE-equipped helicopters will demonstrate how airborne avionics called ADS for automatic dependent surveillance and ground monitoring stations can be used to track aircraft, using the GPS navigation system coupled with the air-ground data link, as an alternative to radar. Pre-Olympic flight tests represented the first time that GPS and ADS technology had been combined and publicly demonstrated with multiple aircraft simultaneously.

Enhanced navigation systems will enable pilots to see traffic information including other aircraft positions as well as airports and hazards to navigation. This will further enhance safety of flight. But SSB were quick to respond with an equalizer in the 15th minute through Bikash Lakra's goal and ended up taking a lead in the 24th minute when Francis Toppo struck a fine field goal.

Both teams dropped the tempo in the 3rd quarter as they played rather defensively. But Odisha found a golden opportunity in the 45th minute when their forward line created space in the attacking circle making way for Janerious Tirkey to convert his second goal and equalize The last quarter was most thrilling as SSB overcame the setback to score back-to-back goals in the 49th and 54th minute through Joychandra Lisham and Agandeep Singh respectively.

This lead by SSB hardly put the Odisha Police, who won third place in the previous edition, under the pump as they stayed calm to create a scoring opportunity with Naveen Kumar. He scored a fine double in the 58th and 60th minute to end the match in a draw and splitting the points. Naveen Kumar Tirkey starred in this match scoring two goals in the 44th and 50th minute while Amarbir Singh 9' , Kanwarpal Singh 34' and Kamaljit Singh 54' scored a goal each.



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