Canadian tightrope walker Jay Cochrane, who set two world records, including one in 1972 for walking back and forth 4km above the Canadian National Exhibition, has died, according to his Web site.
Cochrane died on Wednesday in Niagara Falls, Ontario, at age 69 of pancreatic cancer, according to a tribute to Cochrane dubbed “The Prince of the Air.”
Cochrane’s greatest achievement was in 1995, when he walked more than 640m over the Yangtze River in China from a height of 411m. The event, before a crowd of 200,000 people, made Cochrane a legend in China. His likeness appeared on a Chinese stamp and a school was named in his honor.
Photo: AFP
Cochrane was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, in 1944 and grew up in the northern Ontario towns of North Bay and Sudbury. The tribute, written by friend Shane Peacock, says Cochrane became enamored by tightrope walking at the age of eight and ran away from home at 14 to begin his long career.
However, that career began painfully, when in 1965, a tightrope 27m high at Varsity Stadium in Toronto collapsed and he suffered a broken pelvis, two broken legs and other fractures and was told he would never walk again.
However, Cochrane had recovered by 1970, and ascended his first “skywire” 40 stories high between two skyscrapers to help mark the opening of the Hudson Bay Centre tower in Toronto.
Two years later, Cochrane set a world record when he walked back and forth for 4km on a 91m-long wire 36m above ground at the Canadian National Exhibition, also in Toronto.
In 1981, Cochrane set a second world record by living on a high wire for 21 days in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
In recent years, Cochrane performed several high-wire acts in Niagara Falls, including a 228m high walk on a tightrope last year at the age of 68.
Russia and Ukraine have exchanged prisoners of war in the latest such swap that saw the release of hundreds of captives and was brokered with the help of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), officials said on Monday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that 189 Ukrainian prisoners, including military personnel, border guards and national guards — along with two civilians — were freed. He thanked the UAE for helping negotiate the exchange. The Russian Ministry of Defense said that 150 Russian troops were freed from captivity as part of the exchange in which each side released 150 people. The reason for the discrepancy in numbers
A shark attack off Egypt’s Red Sea coast killed a tourist and injured another, authorities said on Sunday, with an Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs source identifying both as Italian nationals. “Two foreigners were attacked by a shark in the northern Marsa Alam area, which led to the injury of one and the death of the other,” the Egyptian Ministry of Environment said in a statement. A source at the Italian foreign ministry said that the man killed was a 48-year-old resident of Rome. The injured man was 69 years old. They were both taken to hospital in Port Ghalib, about 50km north
‘MAGA CIVIL WAR’: Former Trump strategist Bannon said the H1-B program created ‘indentured servants,’ but Musk said that he was willing ‘to go to war on this issue’ US president-elect Donald Trump on Saturday weighed in on a bitter debate dividing his traditional supporters and tech barons such as Elon Musk, saying that he backs a special visa program that helps highly skilled workers enter the country. “I’ve always liked the [H1-B] visas, I have always been in favor of the visas, that’s why we have them” at Trump-owned facilities, he told the New York Post in his first public comments on the matter since it flared up this week. An angry back-and-forth, largely between Silicon Valley’s Musk and traditional anti-immigration Trump backers, has erupted in fiery fashion, with Musk
The foreign ministers of Germany, France and Poland on Tuesday expressed concern about “the political crisis” in Georgia, two days after Mikheil Kavelashvili was formally inaugurated as president of the South Caucasus nation, cementing the ruling party’s grip in what the opposition calls a blow to the country’s EU aspirations and a victory for former imperial ruler Russia. “We strongly condemn last week’s violence against peaceful protesters, media and opposition leaders, and recall Georgian authorities’ responsibility to respect human rights and protect fundamental freedoms, including the freedom to assembly and media freedom,” the three ministers wrote in a joint statement. In reaction