A nuclear bomb that is either lost, stolen, or accidentally launched that causes a nuclear accident. Though broken arrows made great movie plots throughout the Cold War, the most serious real-life broken arrow occurred on January 17, 1966 when a U.S. B-52 crashed off the coast of Spain. Though all four of the nuclear bombs aboard the B-52 were eventually recovered, radioactive material contaminated large areas around the crash site.
a directionless arrow, and even Young himself seems to be wandering on this album
a lost thermo-nuclear device - oops
an accidental event that involves nuclear weapons or nuclear components but does not create the risk of nuclear war
a nuclear weapon that has been accidentally lost, launched, or ignited
Codename for a nuclear accident. lt is much more serious than a Bent Spear. See also Dull Sword.
An unexpected and unplanned event, involving nuclear weapons, such as: accidents in launching, firing, detonating, theft and loss of the weapon.
Broken Arrow was a Western series which told a fictionalized account of the historical relationship between Indian agent Tom Jeffords (played by John Lupton) and the Chiricahua Apache chief Cochise (played by Michael Ansara). It was based on the novel Blood Brother by Elliott Arnold, which was made into the movie Broken Arrow in 1950.
Broken Arrow was the name of a western released in 1950. It was directed by Delmer Daves and starred James Stewart and Jeff Chandler. The film was nominated for three Academy Awards, and won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding.
Broken Arrow is a 1996 album by Neil Young and Crazy Horse. The first three songs are in the form of long, structured jams, evoking the style of previous Crazy Horse collaborations Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, Zuma and Ragged Glory. The final track is a live take of a Jimmy Reed song that was recorded on a small audience microphone at a small "secret" gig in California, giving it a bootleg feel.
"Broken Arrow" is a song written by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young and recorded by Buffalo Springfield on their 1967 album Buffalo Springfield Again. It was recorded in August and September 1967 at Columbia Recording Studios and Sunset Sound Recorders. It incorporates musical ideas from "Down Down Down," a demo Young recorded with Buffalo Springfield (and now available on the box set).