Cuba
- Museo del Aire (Cuba), Havana
- Museo de la Revolución, Havana
- Museo Giron, Matanzas
Read more about this topic: List Of Aerospace Museums
Other articles related to "cuba":
... The National Holiday Tree for 2005 was harvested from the Santa Fe National Forest near Cuba ...
... Cuba 356. 1.225 5. 2.800 3 ... Netherlands 3 – 1 Romania 25-22, 25-19, 27-29, 25-16 Egypt 0 – 3 Canada 9-25, 23-25, 12-25 Cuba 2 – 3 South Korea 20-25, 25-18, 25-20, 21-25, 12-15 31 August Netherlands 3 – 0 ...
... The Battle of Dos Ríos was fought in Cuba during its war of independence from Spain ... royalist army in the first skirmish in Cuba's struggle for independence from Spain (see History of Cuba) ... Cuban forces buried José Martí on May 27, 1895 in Santiago de Cuba This article about a battle in Spanish history is a stub ...
... it in the Yucatán Peninsula or were inspired by the design of similar shirts sold in Cuba ... during the era of trade routes through the Caribbean that the Mexican shirts got to Cuba, and were taken to the Philippines by the Spaniards, where the evolution of ... the singular nickname for those who lived near the Yayabo River in Cuba ...
... Cuba 277. 0.975 5. 1.400 3 ... Greece 247. 0.794 9. 0.111 6 September Cuba 3 – 1 Greece 19-25, 25-21, 25-15, 25-18 Italy 2 – 3 Russia 18-25, 26-24, 17-25, 25-21, 13-15 7 September Greece 0 – 3 ...
Famous quotes containing the word cuba:
“Bernstein: Girls delightful in Cuba stop. Could send you prose poems about scenery but dont feel right spending your money stop. There is no war in Cuba. Signed Wheeler. Any answer?
Charles Foster Kane: YesDear Wheeler, You provide the prose poems, Ill provide the war.”
—Orson Welles (19151985)
“Warmest climes but nurse the cruelest fangs: the tiger of Bengal crouches in spiced groves of ceaseless verdure. Skies the most effulgent but basket the deadliest thunders: gorgeous Cuba knows tornadoes that never swept tame northern lands.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)
“Education is a necessity, it helps to understand life. Like that compagnero in Cuba who talked about politics, back when they were on strike. He knew many things, that hijo de puta, and he unraveled the most confusing situations in a marvelous way. You could see each point in front of you on the line of his reasoning like rinsed laundry set up to dry; he explained things to you so clearly that you could grasp it like a good hunk of bread with your hand.”
—Jacques Roumain (19071945)