A loader is a heavy equipment machine (often used in construction) that is primarily used to "load" material (asphalt, demolition debris, dirt, feed, gravel, logs, raw minerals, recycled material, rock, sand, wood chips, etc.
Oklahoma! is the first musical written by composer Richard Rodgers and librettist Oscar Hammerstein II. The musical is based on Lynn Riggs' 1931 play, Green Grow the Lilacs.
a state in south central United States
A state in the southwestern central US, north of Texas; pop. 3,450,654; capital, Oklahoma City; statehood, Nov. 16, 1907 (46). In 1803, most of it was acquired from the French as part of the Louisiana Purchase
Oklahoma is a 1979 independent 16mm film by James Benning, an instructor at the California Institute of the Arts.
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Kellogg Field, Battle Creek, Michigan
On August 28 were left for Kellogg Field, Battle Creek, Michigan, where we went into full training.
In the evenings I volunteered to push the high bombing practice rolling stands around the hangar floor directed by the bombardiers who were enclosed in the top of the stands.
The targets were painted on the floor, it was very interesting.
It was at this field where I got the chance to fly on practice missions, checking the guns out and training the radio gunners.
Most of the time I flew with Barry Townsend who was a great pilot.
Later when we went to Atterbury, Indiana, we had a practice bombing run with small paper bags of flour.
I was flying in the tail position.
We were to find an infantry unit from Fort Cluster that was bivouacked at an unknown location and bomb them.
We passed directly over their camouflaged position – however, we kept going further.
When we finally turned back we passed over them but this time the bombardiers dropped the flour bags.
We hit them!
Later when we landed I found out from the pilot that they had just picked a logical location for bivouac!
At this time, I first found out that I was colour blind.
I could see the camouflage.
The story of this flour sack mission was in the Post newspaper Stars and Stripes.
One morning while we were preparing an aircraft for bombing practice with flour sacks, an Assistant Crew Chief arrived in a Jeep.
He said he had to rev the right engine, therefore, we moved away from the aircraft and took a break close to another plane nearby.
We heard him rev up the engine to high RPM when all of a sudden the brake on the right wheel cut loose.
The plane did a complete turn around to its left and the right propeller ate up the Jeep and completely shredded our armourer’s tent dispersing pieces in every directions for many yards.
Fortunately no one was hurt, but we never saw the Assistant Crew Chief again.
In December we were told by Colonel Hall that we were going to England.