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・ Curtis Kiser
・ Curtis Kitchen
・ Curtis Knight
・ Curtis Kulig
・ Curtis L. Brown Jr. Field
・ Curtis L. Carter
・ Curtis L. Lawson
・ Curtis L. Waller
・ Curtis Lake
・ Curtis Lake (Clark County, Washington)
・ Curtis Lampson
・ Curtis Lazar
・ Curtis Lee
・ Curtis Leeper
・ Curtis Lemansky
Curtis LeMay
・ Curtis Lepore
・ Curtis LeRoy Hansen
・ Curtis Leschyshyn
・ Curtis Lofton
・ Curtis Lovell II
・ Curtis Luckey
・ Curtis Lundy
・ Curtis Luper
・ Curtis Lynn Collier
・ Curtis Lyons
・ Curtis M. Loftis, Jr.
・ Curtis M. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
・ Curtis M. Scott
・ Curtis Macdonald


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Curtis LeMay : ウィキペディア英語版
Curtis LeMay

Curtis Emerson LeMay (November 15, 1906 – October 1, 1990) was a general in the United States Air Force and the vice presidential running mate of American Independent Party candidate George Wallace in the 1968 presidential election.
Curtis LeMay is credited with designing and implementing an effective, but also controversial, systematic strategic bombing campaign in the Pacific theater of World War II. During the war, he was known for planning and executing a massive bombing campaign against cities in Japan and a crippling minelaying campaign in Japan's internal waterways. After the war, he initiated the Berlin airlift, then reorganized the Strategic Air Command (SAC) into an effective instrument of nuclear war. He served as Chief of Staff of the U.S. Air Force from 1961 until his retirement in 1965.
==Early life and career==
LeMay was born in Columbus, Ohio, on November 15, 1906. LeMay was of French Canadian and English heritage. His father, Erving LeMay, was at times an ironworker and general handyman, but he never held a job longer than a few months. His mother, Arizona Dove (Carpenter) LeMay, did her best to hold her family together. With very limited income, his family moved around the country as his father looked for work, going as far as Montana and California. Eventually they returned to his native city of Columbus. LeMay attended Columbus public schools, graduating from Columbus South High School, and studied civil engineering at Ohio State University. Working his way through college, he graduated with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. While at Ohio State he was a member of the National Society of Pershing Rifles and the Professional Engineering Fraternity Theta Tau. He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Air Corps Reserve in October 1929. He received a regular commission in the United States Army Air Corps in January 1930. While finishing at Ohio State, he took flight training at Norton Field in Columbus, in 1931–32.〔.〕 On June 9, 1934, he married Helen E. Maitland (died 1992), with whom he had one child, Patricia Jane LeMay Lodge, known as Janie.
LeMay became a pursuit pilot and, while stationed in Hawaii, became one of the first members of the Air Corps to receive specialized training in aerial navigation. In August 1937, as navigator under pilot and commander Caleb V. Haynes on a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, he helped locate the battleship ''Utah'' despite being given the wrong coordinates by Navy personnel, in exercises held in misty conditions off California, after which the group of B-17s bombed it with water bombs. For Haynes again, in May 1938 he navigated three B-17s over of the Atlantic Ocean to intercept the Italian liner ''Rex'' to illustrate the ability of land-based airpower to defend the American coasts. In 1940 he was navigator for Haynes on the prototype Boeing XB-15 heavy bomber, flying a survey from Panama over the Galapagos islands.〔.〕 War brought rapid promotion and increased responsibility.
When his crews were not flying missions, they were subjected to relentless training, as he believed that training was the key to saving their lives. Throughout his career, LeMay was widely and fondly known among his troops as "Old Iron Pants," and the "Big Cigar".〔


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