June 22, 1925

UNITED STATES AIR FORCES

U. S. ARMY AIR SERVICE

N. Y. U. Aero Course Endowed

Aircraft and the Hawaiian Maneuvers

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UNITED STATES AIR FORCES

U. S. ARMY AIR SERVICE

On June 8, Flight Lieut. H. G. B. DeKruyff Van Dorssen, of the Netherlands Air Force, a student in the Parachute Course, Air Service Technical School, safely accmplished a live parachute jump from the cockpit of an airplane, height 2,000 ft.
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N. Y. U. Aero Course Endowed

Daniel Guggenheim Gives a Half Million Dollars to Construct Buildings and Support a School of Aeronautics at New York University
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Aircraft and the Hawaiian Maneuvers

Results Showed the Importance of Aircraft and the Availability of Aircraft Brought near the Scene of Action in Crates
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LIGHT PLANES AND GLIDERS

The Building of a Glider

The M.I.T. glider discussed in the last article is a cantilever monoplane. In its modified form it appears below. Its span is 30 ft., its overall length 16 ft. and its aspect ratio, 6.38. The area is 141 sq. ft. and the total weight of the glider, 95 lb.

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Curtiss Building New Commercial Ship

New Machine Using the OX5 Engine Embodies the Accumulated Experience of Years
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Publisher’s News Letter

Several times in the past, attention has been called to the dangers of exaggerated publicity in connection with aviation. When, however, instead of giving to the public a true statement of aerial progress, the presentation of facts is left to the imagination and fanciful distortions of the average newspaper headline writer, it becomes not only harmful but dangerous to the sound progress of air development.
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AIRPORTS AND AIRWAYS

Kansas City, Mo.

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The Naval Air Battle of the Future

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Editorials

Feeder Lines

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AIRPORTS AND AIRWAYS

Boston, Mass.

June 151925 June 291925