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・ Some Other Sucker's Parade
・ Some Other Time (album)
・ Some People
・ Some People (Belouis Some song)
・ Some People (film)
・ Some People (LeAnn Rimes song)
・ Some People Can Do What They Like
・ Some People Change
・ Some People Change (song)
・ Some People Have Real Problems
・ Some People With Jokes
・ Some People's Lives
・ Some Place Simple
・ Some Postman
・ Some Prefer Nettles
Some Punkins
・ Some Racing, Some Stopping
・ Some Rainy Morning
・ Some Recent Attacks
・ Some Records
・ Some Remarks on Logical Form
・ Some Reulis and Cautelis to be observit and eschewit in Scottis poesie
・ Some Say
・ Some Say I So I Say Light
・ Some Say No
・ Some Sevit
・ Some Small History
・ Some Small Things You Can't Defend
・ Some Songs
・ Some Spirits Heal, Others Only Dance


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Some Punkins : ウィキペディア英語版
Some Punkins
''Some Punkins'' was the name of a B-29 Superfortress (B-29-36-MO 44-27296, Victor number 84) modified to carry the atomic bomb in World War II.
==Airplane history==
Assigned to the 393d Bomb Squadron, 509th Composite Group, it was one of 15 Silverplate B-29s used by the 509th, ''Some Punkins'' was built at the Glenn L. Martin Aircraft Plant at Omaha, Nebraska, as a Block 35 aircraft. It was one of 10 modified as a Silverplate and re-designated "Block 36". Delivered on March 19, 1945, to the USAAF, it was assigned to Crew B-7 (Capt. James N. Price, Jr., aircraft commander) and flown to Wendover Army Air Field, Utah.
It left Wendover on June 8, 1945, for Tinian and arrived at North Field, Tinian, on June 14. It was originally assigned the Victor (unit-assigned identification) number 4 but on August 1 was given the large 'A' tail markings of the 497th Bomb Group as a security measure and had its Victor changed to 84 to avoid misidentification with actual 497th BG aircraft. It was named ''Some Punkins'' and its nose art applied after the atomic bomb missions. While a number of sources attribute the name to a 1930s comic strip, the nose art suggests a possible reference to the "pumpkin bomb" missions the 509th Composite Group flew as combat rehearsal for the atomic bomb operations.
While on Tinian it was used on 13 training and practice missions and five combat missions to drop pumpkin bombs on industrial targets on Toyama, Ōgaki, Shimoda, Yokkaichi, and Nagoya. ''Some Punkins'' was the only B-29 of the 393d BS flown exclusively by its assigned crew on all operational missions, and is cited by Joseph Baugher as possibly dropping the last bomb of World War II in its attack on Nagoya on August 14, 1945.
In November 1945 it returned with the 509th to Roswell Army Air Field, New Mexico. On March 1, 1946, while at Kirtland Army Air Field in preparation for assignment to Operation Crossroads, it was struck while parked by a taxiing B-29, incurring severe damage to its forward fuselage. The airplane was transferred to the 428th Base Unit at Kirtland in April 1946 and declared damaged beyond economical repair. In August it was deliberately set afire as part of firefighting training and totally destroyed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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