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・ Peter F. Armistead, Sr., House
・ Peter F. B. Alsop
・ Peter F. Causey
・ Peter F. Christensen
・ Peter F. Collier
・ Peter F. Dailey
・ Peter F. Donnelly
・ Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management
・ Peter F. Flaherty
・ Peter F. Hamilton
・ Peter F. Hamilton bibliography
・ Peter F. Hines
・ Peter F. Hjort
・ Peter F. Krogh
・ Peter F. Leuch
Peter F. Mack, Jr.
・ Peter F. Martin
・ Peter F. Neronha
・ Peter F. Paul
・ Peter F. Romero
・ Peter F. Rothermel
・ Peter F. Schabarum
・ Peter F. Secchia
・ Peter F. Stevens
・ Peter F. Wanser
・ Peter Fabell
・ Peter Faber
・ Peter Faber (actor)
・ Peter Faber (disambiguation)
・ Peter Faber (telegraph specialist)


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Peter F. Mack, Jr. : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter F. Mack, Jr.

Peter Francis Mack, Jr. (November 1, 1916 - July 4, 1986) was a U.S. Representative from Illinois.
Born in Carlinville, Illinois, Mack attended the public schools and Blackburn College in Carlinville, Illinois, and St. Louis (Missouri) University.
Took special courses in aviation at Springfield (Illinois) Junior College and St. Louis (Missouri) University.
He engaged in the automotive sales and service business in Carlinville, Illinois.
Licensed commercial pilot.
Enlisted in United States Navy in 1942 and served four years in naval air force.
Naval Reserve officer with rank of commander.
He was nicknamed Illinois's "Flying Congressman" after piloting the single-engine "Friendship Flame" on a circumnavigational solo flight in 1951 on a good will tour. He visited 30 countries and 45 cities, logging 210 hours in the air.
==Congressional career==
Mack was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-first and to the six succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1949-January 3, 1963).
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1962 to the Eighty-eighth Congress.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for election in 1974 and in 1976 to the Ninety-fourth and Ninety-fifth Congresses.
While in Congress, Mack was a member of the House Commerce Committee and served as chairman of its Commerce and Finance Subcommittee. In 1958, after a series of lurid magazine articles and Hollywood films denouncing the switchblade knife as an accessory of youth gang culture, Mack sponsored legislation to make automatic-opening or switchblade knives illegal to purchase, sell, or import in interstate commerce, which was enacted into law as the Switchblade Knife Act of 1958.〔Switchblade Knives: Hearing, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Eighty-fifth Congress, Minutes of the Second Session, April 17, 1958〕 Mack and other congressmen supporting the legislation believed that by stopping the importation and interstate sales of automatic knives (effectively halting sales of new switchblades), the law would reduce youth gang violence by blocking access to what had become a symbolic weapon.〔〔Knife World Magazine (August 1990): Representative Sidney R. Yates of Illinois proclaimed that "minus switchblade knives and the distorted feeling of power they beget...our delinquent adolescents would be shorn of one of their most potent means of incitement to crime."〕 However, while switchblade imports and sales to lawful owners soon ended, later legislative research demonstrated that youth gang violence rates had in fact rapidly increased, as gang members turned to firearms instead of knives.〔Clark, Charles S., ''Youth Gangs Worsening Violence Prompts Crackdowns and Community Mobilization'', Congressional Quarterly 1, 11 October 1991, pp. 753-776〕

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