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Here\s the story of how a handful of young Americans, fighting with
improvised equipment, commanded the air against superior enemy
forces and won! Written by a radio operator who served as a member
of the AVG (American Volunteer Group) throughout their existence,
this fascinating, intimate story of General Claire Lee Chennault\s
"Flying Tigers" is loaded with original photographs and numerous
first-hand accounts from the author\s personal diary. It\s all here
- the whole story of how the AVG shot down over 650 Japanese plane
using obsolete P-40s and a communications network that covered
China with a protective "umbrella." This ground based radio network
(in which the author operated) kept the pilots so well-informed of
enemy air activity that they were seldom surprised by Japanese
attacks. Enjoyable to read, this memoir will give you a taste of
the "local flavor" of life in China while under Japanese attack.
You\ll find a musing anecdotes and accurate descriptions of the
author\s duty as a radio operator as well as the wartime activities
of other AVG member. Now, the complete story of the AVG - the
deadliest, most efficient group of fighter pilots and support
personnel ever assembled - is brought to life again through
original photographs and behind the scenes descriptions! Robert M.
Smith was a sergeant-air mechanic first class for the U.S. Air
Force when the recruiters arrived on base looking for volunteers
for the Chinese Air Force. He was discharged from the Air Force and
went to China to join the American Volunteer Group, "THe Flying
Tigers." When the AVG disbanded in July, 1942 he re-enlisted as a
technical sergeant and retured to China with the Army Airways
Communications System. Presently he is the treasurer and on the
executive committee of the American Volunteer Group Association.
Over the past twenty five years the Commission on Equilibrium Data
of the Analytical Division of the International Union of Pure and
Applied Chemistry has been sponsoring a noncritical compilation of
metal complex formation constants and related equilibrium
constants. This work was extensive in scope and resulted in
publication of two large volumes of Stability Constants by the
Chemical Society (London). The first volume, edited by L. G. Sillen
(for inorganic ligands) and by A. E. Martell (for organic ligands),
was published in 1964 and covered the literature through 1962. The
second volume, subtitled Supplement No. 1, edited by L. G. Sillen
and E. Hogfeldt (for inorganic ligands), and A. E. Martell and R.
M. Smith (for organic ligands), was published in 1971 and covered
the literature up to 1969. These two large compilations attempted
to cover all papers in the field related to metal complex
equilibria (heats, entropies, and free energies). Most recently a
noncritical compilation of organic ligands by D. D. Perrin
(Pergamon Press) extended coverage of the literature through 1973
and a similar volume for inorganic ligands by E. Hogfeldt covered
through 1974. Since it was the policy of the Commission during that
period to avoid decisions concerning the quality and reliability of
the published work, th~ compilation would frequently contain from
ten to twenty values for a single equilibrium constant.
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