Earth systems YEAR 1943 1944 1945
.... analysis of ATMOSPHERE air plane BATTLES
.... DATABASE translated by Herb Zinser
Herb Zinser provides some data about Nature's SYMBOL MACHINE comprised of nouns, verbs, concepts, math equations, flowcharts, etc. The ideas found in math and basic science high school and college textbooks are part of the SYMBOL MACHINE.
Using Galileo's suggestions of " 2 CHIEF WORLD SYSTEMS" we now perceive Sartre existentialism as partitioned into 2 or more data spaces....... the 2 CHIEF existential entities.
1) physical reality of objects: concrete highways, iron automobiles, cellulose trees, humanoids, etc.
2) The world of symbols, concepts, process control system flowcharts, biochemistry diagrams, math and physics equations, etc.
Language in Thought and Action, S.I. Hayakawa.
Maps and Territories - Rijnlandmodel
Chapter 2 Symbols Maps and Territories
There is a sense in which we all live in two worlds
1) physical reality of objects: concrete highways, iron automobiles, cellulose trees, humanoids, etc.
2) The world of symbols, concepts, process control system flowcharts, biochemistry diagrams, math and physics equations, etc.
Language in Thought and Action, S.I. Hayakawa.
Maps and Territories - Rijnlandmodel
Chapter 2 Symbols Maps and Territories
There is a sense in which we all live in two worlds
1943
- January 21 – Pan Am Flight 1104, a Martin M-130 nicknamed the Philippine Clipper, crashes into a mountain near Boonville, California, United States, due to pilot error; all 19 occupants are killed, including Rear Admiral Robert H. English, the serving submarine commander of the US Pacific Fleet.
- June 1 – BOAC Flight 777, a Douglas DC-3 flying from Lisbon in Portugal, to Bristol, England, is shot down by Luftwaffe fighter aircraft over the Bay of Biscay, killing all 17 people on board, including film actor Leslie Howard.
- July 28 – American Airlines Flight 63, a Douglas DC-3 nicknamed the Flagship Ohio, crashes near Trammel, Kentucky, United States, after the crew loses control due to severe turbulence and violent downdrafts; 20 of the 22 people on board are killed.
- October 15 – American Airlines Flight 63, a Douglas DC-3 nicknamed the Flagship Missouri, crashes near Centerville, Tennessee, United States, after ice forms on its wings and propellers; all eight passengers and three crew members die.
1944
- February 10 – American Airlines Flight 2, a Douglas DC-3, crashes into the Mississippi River between Arkansas and Tennessee, United States, for reasons unknown, killing all 24 occupants (21 passengers and three crew members).
- June 20 – TWA Flight 277, a Douglas C-54 Skymaster, crashes into Fort Mountain, Maine, United States, in severe weather, killing all seven passengers and crew on board.
1945
- January 8 – The China Clipper, a Pan Am Martin M-130 flying boat operating an airmail service from Miami, Florida, United States, to Leopoldville in the Belgian Congo, crashes in Port of Spain, Trinidad, killing all 25 people on board.
- January 31 – The Tokana, a Stinson operated by Australian National Airways, crashes near Tooborac, about 50 miles (80 km) north of Melbourne, Victoria, as the result of a fatigue crack in a wing spar; all 10 people on board are killed.
- July 12 – Eastern Air Lines Flight 45, a Douglas DC-3A, collides with a Douglas A-26 Invader over Florence, South Carolina, United States; one of the 24 on board the DC-3 and two of the three on board the A-26 die.
- October 5 – National Airlines Flight 16, a Lockheed L-18 Lodestar operating a multi-leg domestic flight in Florida, United States, overshoots the runway after landing at the new municipal airport in south Lakeland, killing two of the 15 people on board.
- November 3 – The Honolulu Clipper, Boeing's 314 prototype, makes a forced landing in the Pacific Ocean 650 miles (1,050 km) east of Oahu due to double engine failure; all 37 on board survive the incident; the aircraft is deliberately sunk when salvage is deemed impractical.
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