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The True Story of The Miracle Pilot and His 120 MPH Water Landing
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The True Story of Flying Tiger 923 s Miraculous Water Landing
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He knew something : The 1962 flight of Army Rangers that vanished into thin air
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The March 15, 1962, night shift started like any other aboard the Standard Oil super tanker Lenzen.
The ship and its crew were cutting through the waters between Guam and the Philippines. It was calm on the seas and in the skies. Above, scattered clouds floated pale across the inky blackness. About 1:30 a.m., the night watchman spotted what looked like a vapor trail high above him. When he spoke later to investigators, he said it appeared to be moving in an east-west direction. He tracked it until it passed behind a cloud. Then, something exploded.
New monument honors Elbridge soldier, others lost on flight 59 years ago
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Two fatal airplane crashes gripped the mill-town of Selleck in April 1953. They happened just days apart. The first, on April 14
th saw a DC-3 carrying 22 soldiers and three crew members come down during snow flurries, in the upper Cedar River basin about 10 miles east of Selleck. Seven ultimately died after one engine failed and the plane fell to the forest below. More than 200 rescue workers and town folk were involved in that rescue and recovery. Just nine days later, on April 23, an American Air Transport C-46 went down on a nearby ridge misidentified as Cedar Mountain. While the DC-3 crash received extensive newspaper coverage, the C-46 downing received almost none.