Group of Zulus in Zululand, South Africa
British vintage postcard
18 notes
·
View notes
ZULUS, ZUURBEKOM
aantal Zoeloes is vandag in Durban en ander stede te vinde.
ZULUS
ZUURBEKOM
Numeri Zuli hodie Durban et aliae urbes inveniuntur.
0 notes
Zulu royal bride, Shiyiwe Mantfombi Dlamini, South Africa
563 notes
·
View notes
Sthenjwa Luthuli — Positive Fear (hand carved wood & paint, 2020)
413 notes
·
View notes
Nondumiso Zulu (@ ndumie__z)
171 notes
·
View notes
Zulus boys enjoying their dinner, South Africa
British vintage postcard, mailed to England
5 notes
·
View notes
"ZULU WOMAN" by sly megida on INPRNT
269 notes
·
View notes
people have been calling malevelon creek robot Vietnam, but I have to disagree with that
the Vietnam war was a war in which the main threat were guerilla tactics used by a technologically inferior foe
the automatons are the technologically superior ones here, they move in the open, rarely seeking shelter, our armies may be of similar size on the battlefield, but their numbers and ability to replace losess is incomparably greater than ours
if anything, malevelon creek is most alike to the Zulu war, and we're the Zulus
the only question is, have the british already shown their machine gun, or are their capabilaties even greater than we thought
150 notes
·
View notes
R.I.P. Maj General Joe Henry Engle (1932-2024)
On July 10, 2024 USAF test pilot & NASA astronaut Maj Gen Joe H. Engle passed away aged 91.
Engle earned his pilot wings in 1958 and it was Charles "Chuck" Yeager who recommended Engle for the USAF Test Pilot School and the Aerospace Research Pilot School. Joe Engle was part of the hypersonic X-15 flight research program (16 flights) and flew the rocket aircraft three times above 80 Km earning him USAF astronaut wings.
Selected a NASA astronaut in 1966 (group 5), Engle was support member for Apollo 10, backup member for the Apollo 14 and was planned as LMP for Apollo 17 but replaced by geologist Harrison Schmitt. Engle flew on space shuttle orbiters "Columbia (STS-2) and "Discovery (51-L) the first to wear the NASA-issued Omega Speedmaster Alaska III chronogaphs in space.
Holder of numerous awards & honors, Joe Engle logged 15500 hours flight time of which 9000 hours in jet aircraft.
(Photos: NASA)
86 notes
·
View notes