Tasty!
Thanks for posting them. They’re interesting!
Rob / Kansan
Who is Will Young? :confused:
A Jazz musician, M’Lud, of some notoriety.
(Originally uttered by Rumpole in answer to the beak’s question “Who are the Rolling Stones”?)
WoW!
This is interesting – keep up the good work. When you get time, post some more! 😀
Rob / Kansan
Hi Kukri
Very nice pictures – don’t ever appologise – you take fine pics and these are different to those we usually see here.
Regards
John P
Kukri
I second (or third or whatever) this sentiment. Perfectly fine pictures. Thanks for taking some of us to places where we’ve never been and may never go.
Rob / Kansan
I know the book – could the cover photo be a black and white Charles E. Brown photo which was wrongly colourised (or tinted, for the non-digital era)?
Also – DP845 was the (first?) prototype for the Mark XII (having been the Mark IV or something prototype – this is where we need Mark12’s touch) so the theatre markings etc may not have been standard. (?)
Rob / Kansan
Not World War II, but you may want to check this out:
CBC News Online Updated November 17, 2004
Go-pills, bombs & friendly fire
http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/friendlyfire/gopills.html
Rob / Kansan
I remember reading that ecstasy was originally developed for keeping soldiers alert in the trenches by one side or the other, although I don’t know whether it was used in WWII.
Librarian Alert!! It’s a quiet Monday morning here 😀
Back on Wkipedia we find: (My highlights in bold)
MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine), most commonly known today by the street name ecstasy, is a synthetic entactogen of the phenethylamine family whose primary effect is to stimulate the secretion of large amounts of serotonin as well as dopamine and noradrenaline in the brain, causing a general sense of openness, empathy, energy, euphoria, and well-being. Tactile sensations are enhanced for some users, making general physical contact with others more pleasurable, but contrary to popular mythology, it generally does not have aphrodisiac effects. Its ability to facilitate self-examination with reduced fear has proven useful in some therapeutic settings, leading to its 2001 approval by the United States FDA for testing in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder.
A patent for MDMA was originally filed on Christmas eve 1912 by the German pharmaceutical company Merck, and granted two years later (to the day.) At the time, MDMA was not known to be a drug in its own right; rather, it was patented as an intermediate chemical used in the synthesis of a styptic (a drug intended to control bleeding from wounds.) Over half a century would pass before the first known ingestion of MDMA by humans.
Contrary to many rumours, the drug was never used as an appetite suppressant or as a stimulant for armed forces during wartime. (This was in fact methamphetamine.) The U.S. Army did, however, do lethal dose studies of it and several other compounds in the mid-1950’s. It was given the name EA-1475, with the EA standing for Edgewood Arsenal. The results of these studies were not declassified until 1969. MDMA was first brought to public attention through Dr. Alexander Shulgin in the 1960s who recommended it for use in certain therapy sessions, naming the drug ‘window’ (he discovered it while searching for compounds that might have a similar psychoactive effect as other compounds contained in nutmeg). It was widely used therapeutically by US psychotherapists (especially on the West Coast) because of its empathogenic effects until its criminalization in the late 1980s. The drug was hailed as a miracle by therapists and counselors who claimed couples could have six months worth of progress in one use of the drug, and soldiers returning from the Vietnam war could overcome their PTSD sometimes more effectively than talk or group therapy. A small number of therapists continue to use it in their practices today. (See below for 2001 FDA approval and DEA licensing for use in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder.)
Until 1985, MDMA was not illegal in the United States. Recreationally, it first came into prominence in certain trendy yuppie bars in the Dallas area, then in gay dance clubs. From there, use spread to rave clubs, and then to mainstream society. During the 1990s, along with the growing popularity of the rave subculture, MDMA use became increasingly popular among young adults in universities and later in high schools. It rapidly became one of the four most widely used illegal drugs in the US, along with cocaine, heroin and marijuana.
Rob / Kansan
Haven’t heard about drugging up WW2 pilots, but i know in WW1 LSD (or something like that, surprisingly enough for a teenager i don’t know much about drugs!) was given to British Soldiers to cheer them up after the depressing sights of the trenches, but this was soon abandoned as it made them to happy and cheery to want to kill the enemy!
Not LSD in WWI – Also from our old friend Wikipedia:
“LSD” is an abbreviation of the German chemical name of the compound, Lysergsäure-diäthylamid. It was first synthesized in 1938 by Swiss chemist Dr. Albert Hofmann at the Sandoz Laboratories in Basel as part of a large research program searching for medically useful ergot alkaloid derivatives. Its psychedelic properties were unknown until 5 years later, when Hofmann, acting on a hunch, returned to work on the chemical. He attributed the discovery of the compound’s psychoactive effects to the accidental absorption of a tiny amount through his skin on April 16, which led to him testing a larger amount on himself for psychoactivity.
Rob / Kansan
Wakey-wakey pills were issued to bomber crews, and were sometimes hoarded for spells of leave!
I’ve also seen references to “Bennys”, so perhaps our crews were given Benzedrine, too?
Benzedrine “is” an Amphetamine (Amphetmanine is the generic term) so there’s no difference. I have seen references to it in RAF memoirs too, Al.
Rob / Kansan
Benzedrine and Amphetamine are not actually different substances: This is from Wikipedia:
Benzedrine is a racemic variant of amphetamine (dl-amphetamine) marketed under this brand in the USA by Smith, Kline and French in inhaler containers from 1928 forth. Benzedrine was used to enlarge nasal and bronchial passages and it is closely related to the substance named Ritalin® (methylphenidate).
As a side effect, physicians discovered that the amphetamine part of Benzedrine could help in treating narcolepsy. This led to Benzedrine being produced in tablet form as a stimulant. Even though this drug was supposed to be inhaled, many people cracked the containers open and swallowed the paper drenched in Benzedrine that was contained inside, often with coffee or alcohol.
In the 1940s and 1950s reports began to emerge about the abuse of Benzedrine containers, and in 1949, doctors began to move patients from Benzedrine to the weaker stimulant propylhexedrine. In 1959, the FDA made it a prescription drug in the United States.
Benzedrine should not be confused with the fundamentally different substance Benzphetamine.
A couple of RCAF memoirs on the web mention “Wakey-Wakey” pills for aircrew in the context of the Escape Kit:
http://www.airmuseum.ca/mag/exag0106.html
http://web.mala.bc.ca/davies/letters.images/Memoirs/Forman.memoir.htm
It might be worth looking at “The Eighth Passenger” and some other Bomber Command memoirs (in print and on the web) to get a clearer picture. The Luftwaffe’s use of stimulants is a complete mystery to me.
Rob / Kansan
This is fun! I’m there!
Elwyn – PM me if you’re only 90+ miles away!!
Rob / Kansan
On you, old boy!
Phil,
Missed ya! :diablo: :diablo: :diablo:
Don’t let them grind you down 😀
Rob / Kansan
And I’m not sure if I remembered the bit about the Coronados correctly either – by the look of this:
http://www.kotfsc.com/aviation/pb2y.htm
Ten of the aircraft, designated PB2Y-3B, were supplied to the RAF and based initially at Beaumaris, Anglesey, intended for service with Coastal Command. Their stay there was only brief, for they were transferred to No. 231 Squadron of Transport Command and used from June 1944 to operate freight services.
Rob / Kansan
I’m afraid her web bio doesn’t hold out much hope;
Chirpy Cockney junior accounts clerk who appeared, aged 15, on Double Your Money as a contestant, winning £8 answering questions on Famous Women. Hughie Green asked her back to become a hostess on the show and the subsequent The Sky’s the Limit. Sadly, Rose committed suicide some years later.
Ooooh dear. Wish I hadn’t said that now. 😮
Rob / Kansan
Ok, if anyone can solve the following for me I will be eternally grateful (and it will help me immensely with the collection of RAF videotapes I am currently cataloguing)
1) Any clue what PMP stands for in relation to the RAF? All I have so far is footage of paratroopers practicing jumping out of aircraft over Salisbury Plain. It has been suggested that PMP stands for ‘Practice Makes Perfect’, but if anyone has got evidence/further ideas, please help!
If anyone can solve the above I will be eternally grateful 😀
It isn’t Personal Media Player then, or the Filipino Workers Party (Partido ng Manggagawang Pilipino, PMP) or the World Federation Of Scientists Permanent Monitoring Panel.
What’s the context apart from being military/RAF? These are all real:
Project Management Plan
Project Management Professional (Certification)
Performance Measurement Procedures (from a Canadian military website)
Permanent Military Professor
Protective Mobilization Plan (US Army WWII)
Proletarian Military Policy (invented by Leon Trotsky therefore unlikely)
BTW Cataloguing. Do you mean cataloguing as in MARC21-type Cataloguing (AACR and all that stuff?)
Rob / Kansan