Bosnia, Europe. Bosnia is at war, and NATO forces wish to stop the two sides from bombing each other. To do this, they have set up a No-Fly zone over Bosnia, and patrol the sky's, shooting down anyone who flies in it. USAF Pilot, Scott O'Grady and his partner are on patrol, flying in F-16Fighting Falcons. The Serbian Military manage to shoot Scott down, and he must now survive and be rescued, before the Serb's reach him.
A routine flight from Israel to Paris carrying 258 passengers becomes the target for a gang of international terrorists in June of 1976. They hijack the flight and redirect it to Entebbe in Uganda. There they issue their demands: release 58 prisoners from around the world or the hostages die. It quickly becomes clear Israel is the real target of this attack. Conditions deteriorate and time is running out for the hostages. As the final deadline approaches will Israel cooperate with the terrorists? Is Uganda too far to launch a rescue mission? Will the terrorists begin executing their prisoners? With the lives of so many hanging in the balance the world watches breathlessly, waiting to see how the story will unfold.
Adolf Hitler left no offspring when he died in his bunker in 1945. But he wasn't the last of the Hitler line. He had a nephew, William Patrick Hitler, who grew up in England, moved to America and had three sons. This documentary called The Last Of The Hitlers, tells the story of the brothers, their amazing darkly unique heritage as the last known living relatives of the murderous tyrant and their bizarre pact with each other to never have children in order to sever that bloodline of their most infamous relative. This covers many unanswered questions about the Hitler line.
Examines the claims of Professor Martin Bernal who questions the assumption of the “Europeaness” of our civilization placing instead the “black” Egyptians and Phoenicians at the center of the West’s origins. Black Athena examines Cornell Professor Martin Bernal’s iconoclastic study of the African origins of Greek civilization and the explosive academic debate it provoked. This film offers a balanced, scholarly introduction to the disputes surrounding multiculturalism, “political correctness” and Afrocentric curricula sweeping college campuses today.
In 1989 Forbes magazine estimated Escobar to be the seventh-richest man in the world with a personal wealth of close to $25 billion, while his Medellín cartel controlled 80% of the global cocaine market. While seen as an enemy of the United States and Colombian governments, Escobar was a hero to many in Medellín (especially the poor people); he was a natural at public relations and he worked to create goodwill among the poor people of Colombia. A lifelong sports fan, he was credited with building football fields and multi-sports courts, as well as sponsoring little league football teams.
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