Word: morgan
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Leverett E-32 KIR 1420 Miller, R. W. '46, Winthrop E-24 ELI 1029 Mitchell, E. A. '44, Dunster K-42 TRO 7681 Moir, A. K. '46, Leverett H-43 KIR 4768 Montgomery, R. H. '45, Leverett A-24 KIR 2096 Moore, A. '46, Eliot B-12 ELI 0864 Morgan, J. A. '44, Adams B-16 TRO 9387 Morgan, R. W., Jr., '46, Eliot H-21 TRO 2491 Morgan, W. H. SS, Wigglesworth A-31 KIR 5746 Morley, J. '43, Leverett B-51 TRO 1439 Moseley, D. B. '45, Eliot E-32 TRO 1569 Moser, H. '46, Winthrop...
...handles a bomber as another man would handle a pursuit, was in the pilot's seat. We were in the air with bombers and fighters strung out behind us. Haynes's second in command and copilot was Major William E. Basye. Black-haired, poker-playing Butch Morgan, longtime associate of Haynes's, was in the bombardier's compartment. This was a tough mission and Haynes was putting his best...
...gave way to hills and around about their bases lapped greyish yellow waters. The Yangtze is in flood and we are drawing near our target, I thought. I crawled through the tunnel under the pilot's seat and came out in the glassed bombardier's compartment. Butch Morgan sat in the very nose of the ship, peering down his bombsight. I sat in the seat directly behind him with my knees in his back, peering down below and watching the yellow snake of the Yangtze drawing closer. Over to the right high up on a mountain, appeared...
...Morgan pulled at the switch. On the bomb board lights flashed off and on. Our plane swerved and dipped sharply down to the left. Morgan craned his neck far out over the bombsight, pressed his nose against the glass of the compartment and looked down. I peered out of the side. Below was the green, mucky lake and black smoke was rising from it. "That's damn poor bombing," said Morgan. But as the plane swerved further we saw flowers of smoke issuing from the heart of the railway station...
...back to Sabby, from a fairly interesting opening three months ago, the band has become a Boston sensation. Sparked by Al Morgan's wonderful bass playing, Jackie Field's allotting, Sabby recently won the Fitch Bandwagon Contest for the best local band. You may be startled when you see only eight musicians, but you'll be even more startled when they play. Due to clever and exciting orchestrations, the band sounds twice as big. If it's true that Joe Thomas, who is a fine trumpeter, is joining Sabby, the band may easily become the biggest thing since Basic...