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Birthers in the Tea Party Movement? Where?

224
NJDhockeyfan5/17/2010 8:07:17 am PDT

re: #216 pingjockey

Did you see the episode where they had the simulated fighter cockpit? The fighter pilot had no trouble, the other poor guy they put in, blew his lunch and couldn’t walk!

Speaking of fighter pilots…

Celebrated World War II flying ace dies in Calif.

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. – Walker “Bud” Mahurin, a fighter pilot who shot down two dozen planes in two wars and was regarded as one of America’s top aces ever, has died, his wife said Sunday. He was 91.

Joan Mahurin said Bud Mahurin died of natural causes at his home in Newport Beach on Tuesday.

She said her husband kept flying small planes — and kept receiving fan mail — for most of his life.

“He would get letters from teenagers to old war veterans,” Joan Mahurin said.

Doug Lantry, a historian at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Ohio, said Mahurin’s name is familiar to all in the Air Force.

“Bud Mahurin was the only Air Force pilot to shoot down enemy aircraft in the European theater of operations and the Pacific and in Korea,” Lantry told the Los Angeles Times. “He was known as a very courageous, skilled and tenacious fighter pilot.”

Mahurin was shot down himself, twice during World War II and once in the Korean War, which led to his capture and 16 traumatic months in a prison camp.

A native of Benton Harbor, Mich., Mahurin studied engineering at Purdue University then joined the Army Air Forces in September 1941 — three months before Pearl Harbor.

He went by the call sign “Honest John,” a title he’d later adopt for his memoirs.

A true American hero. RIP.