"On the morning of June 19, 1944, as U.S. troops were battling Japanese forces on Saipan in the Mariana Islands in the Pacific, American pilots based on aircraft carriers offshore rushed to their planes to protect their fleet from an enemy attack from the air. Calling the mission a once-in-a-lifetime fighter pilot's dream when he spotted a large mass of enemy planes bearing down on the U.S. ships, one navy pilot from Indiana, Alex Vraciu, flying a Hellcat fighter from the USS Lexington, pounced on the Japanese and shot down six dive bombers in just eight minutes. Written by award-winning biographer Ray E. Boomhower, Fighter Pilot: The World War II Career of Alex Vraciu, the sixth volume in the Indiana Historical Society Press's youth biography series, examines the daring exploits of the Hoosier flier during his wartime career. A graduate of DePauw University, Vraciu learned to fly during his college years through a government program and joined the navy before America was thrust into the war following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Possessed with keen eyesight, quick reflexes, excellent shooting instincts, and a knack for finding his opponent's weak spot, Vraciu became skilled in the deadly game of destroying the enemy in the skies over the Pacific Ocean. For a period of four months in 1944, Vraciu stood as the leading ace in the U.S. Navy. He shot down nineteen enemy airplanes in the air, destroyed an additional twenty-one on the ground, and sank a large Japanese merchant ship with a well-placed bomb hit. Vraciu's luck, however, finally ran out on December 14, 1944, during a strafing run against a Japanese airfield before the American invasion to retake the Philippines. Luckily he was almost immediately rushed to safety by a small group of U.S. Army in the Far East guerrillas, who had been battling the Japanese in the area for the past few years. The navy pilot spent the next five weeks with the guerrillas, receiving the honorary rank of brevet major while with them. Vraci finally marched into an American camp carrying with him a captured Japanese Luger pistol and sword."--Amazon.com
USA Gregory ' Pappy ' Boyington : Black Sheep Leader T. The leading exponent of the Corsair – which On 17 December 1943 , Boyington led the by the autumn of 1943 equipped all the first Allied fighter sweep over the Japanese USMC's ...
Keith's Story: Flight Lieutenant Roy Keith Morris
Red Markers: Close Air Support for the Vietnamese Airborne, 1962-1975
morning to drive out to Whiting Field with a lunch I'd packed . As soon as he left , I'd flop onto the sofa and doze and groan my way through the day . I felt somewhat better by June , when we left for another phase of flight training ...
"Air force pilot Sam Brody's posting at Holloman AFB is a new start-- and a brutal reminder that he'll never fly again.
Karen Zeinert. Inspection of WASP detachment by Jacqueline Cochran and Brigadier General Stearley at Camp Davis Army Air Field, North Carolina. A. L o Ml © © A Story of World War. General Hap Arnold hands out silver wings to the last ...
Profiles the training and career of Major Rex Bailey, who tests military airplanes for the United States Air Force at Edwards Air Force Base in California.
The other was his director of operations , a Brunei of Chinese extraction named Han Chou . “ Miss Souzou first , ” said Mack . He smiled at Han , who was offended by the fact that a woman was given priority . “ Beauty before brains .
And in her heart, Malin realises that this is a man she can't walk away from, even if it costs her everything... No Surrender -- Sara Arden Sean Dryden -- the superhot all-American golden boy -- has always gotten under Kentucky Lee's skin.
... 517 radio operators: 492 reconnaissance: 503 standardized v. flexible approaches: 498 standards: 505–506 Training Standard 20–2–1: 488, 492 unit training, three-phase: 493–497 Stratemeyer, George E.: 322,436,470 Stratton, ...