Word: fla
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Jackson, Jr. '43, Madison, Wis.; Kenneth D. Johanson '43, Everett, Wash.; Robert L. Judell '42, Milwaukee, Wis.; Harold Katz '43, Terre Haute, Ind.; William F. Ketchum '41, Evanston, III.; Frank R. Lacy, Jr. '43, Dubuque, Ia.; Newbold R. Landon '42, Baltimore, Md.; Walter J. Lear '43, Miami Beach, Fla.; Robert W. Levin '42, Portland, Ore.; Walter S. Long, Jr. '43, Mayfield, Ky.; Horace G. Lunt, 2d. '41, Denver, Colo.; James B. McCandless '42, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Charles M. McCroskey '43, Kansas City, Kans.; Donald F. McDonald '43, Davenport...
...Portland, Ore.; Gilbert N. Piass '41, Cleveland, O.; Ralph H. Potter, Jr. '43, East Grand Raplds, Mich.; John F. Prudden '42, Fostoria, O.; James A. Rafferty '43, Louisville, Ky.; Donald M. Reynolds '42, Manette, Wash.; Kay T. Rogers '42, Appleton, Wis.; William L. Roney, Jr. '42, Winter Park, Fla.; Charles C. Royer '43, Beliefentalne, O.; Reinhold S. Schumann '41, Dusseldorf, Germany; Carl B. Sellgman, '43, Dinuba, Calif.; Judson T. Shaplin '42, Reading, Pa.; Morris V. Sholanski '43, Philadelphia, Pa.; Wheeler Smith '41, Minneapolis, Minn...
...with their new station, not only because it is within easy range of the U. S.'s maritime frontier, the Caribbean, but because it gives the Navy another training field for pilots. Rushed to completion to take some of the pressure off the big training base at Pensacola, Fla., Jacksonville will double the Navy's output of aviators. The Navy to day has only a few more than 3,000 pilots, a training capacity (at Pensacola) of 150 a month. Its goal of planes is 15,000, which will require 18,000 pilots. The Jacksonville base, at first...
...adventurous life was a prisoner of Jesse James, knew the Irish Patriot Sir Roger Casement, Explorer Henry M. Stanley and Missionary David Livingstone, saw his own brother eaten by a crocodile in the Congo and wrote a book about it all (African Drums, 1930); in Daytona Beach, Fla. His last request: that his death be noted in TIME...
...Japanese-U. S. relations is the scrap-iron trade. But this time the scrap issue was dead. Burying it were a flock of Japanese, Greek and miscellaneous tramp steamers feverishly filling up with their last loads of U. S. scrap before the embargo took effect Oct. 16. At Jacksonville (Fla.). not ordinarily a big scrap port, two Greek tramps loaded about $102,000 of scrap while the town went wild, the city fathers passed an ordinance against such trade...