史上今日:May 18
British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin: agreement of "historicsignificance"
1950: US and Europe agree NATO aims
England have
Almost exactly a year after signing the North Atlantic Treaty, 12 nations
have agreed a permanent organisation for the defence of the United States and
Europe.
The final meeting of the fourth session of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation, or Nato as it has become known, was held in front of cameras at
Lancaster House in London.
The 12 foreign ministers sat around a horseshoe table, with the United
States Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, at the centre. A large audience of
newspaper and newsreel correspondents, cameramen and photographers broadcast
their speeches around the world.
"This business of building for peace is a very grim business, and it has to
be worked for day in and day out." UK Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin said.
During negotiations over the past few days, the ministers have reached
agreement over a communique outlining the aims of the Organisation, and setting
out a six-point plan for strengthening ties between their countries.
Key among these was the establishment of a council of deputies, with a
permanent chairman and a full-time staff, to put the objectives of the Treaty
into action.
Opening the meeting, Mr Acheson thanked all his colleagues for their
"tireless efforts" and said that "genuine progress" had been made.
"Throughout its deliberations, the council has recognised that only through
coordinated plans and effort could its great objectives be achieved," he
said.
He then went on to read the communique which spoke of the principles behind
Nato and outlined the objectives the organisation is working towards.
It stressed the importance of seeking a diplomatic solution before military
force is used, but where some nations are not willing to cooperate, it said,
"the maintenance of peace and the defence of freedom require the organisation of
adequate military defence."
The communique also includes directives on defence, finance and economics,
and establishes a North Atlantic planning board for shipping.
The British Foreign Minister, Ernest Bevin, called the agreement one of
"historic significance".
"I'm afraid we cannot arrive at sensational decisions," he told the
meeting. "This business of building for peace is a very grim business, and it
has to be worked for day in and day out.
"We must never give up faith in its ultimate trials."
Helen Sharman won a place in space history after answering an advert for a
trainee cosmonaut
1991: Sharman becomes first Briton in space
Artificially 1969:
The
Britain's first astronaut, 27-year-old Helen Sharman from Sheffield, has
blasted into orbit.
The Soviet Soyuz TM-12 space capsule made a textbook launch from the
Bakonur cosmodrome in the Soviet republic of Kazakhstan at 1350 BST carrying
Miss Sharman and fellow cosmonauts Anatoly Artebartsky and Sergei Krikalyov.
Astronaut wanted. No experience necessary
Her parents and sister watched from a viewing stand one kilometre away and
saw their daughter smile and wave to the onboard camera.
She carries with her a photograph of the Queen, a butterfly brooch given to
her by her father and a "space passport" in case her spacecraft is forced to
land outside the Soviet Union.
Woman from Mars
Miss Sharman, a former chemist for the Mars chocolate company, had won her
place in space in 1989 after answering an advertisement she heard on the car
radio - "Astronaut wanted. No experience necessary."
She was eventually selected from over 13,000 applicants to be the British
member of the Russian scientific space mission, Project Juno.
The USSR has already taken a Mongolian, an Afghan, a Cuban, a Syrian and a
Japanese journalist to space.
She spent 18 gruelling months training in Star City, 30km north-east of
Moscow and now speaks fluent Russian. She has become known among her comrades
for her remarkably calm and unruffled nature. She has trained alongside her
British back-up Major Tim Mace.
Tomorrow, the Soyuz is due to dock with the Mir space station which has
been occupied by two crew members for the last six months.
The British element of the Juno project has had trouble raising funds and
the only sponsors to come forward are Interflora, a watch manufacturer and a
cassette tape company.
During her eight days in space, Miss Sharman will carry out a series of
medical and agricultural experiments.
She will also take part in a radio-ham test with British schools, take
photos of the British Isles and see how pansies grow in weightless
conditions.
Vocabulary:
newsreel: 新闻影片
cosmodrome: 人造卫星发射基地
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