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Shot down by 37mm flak and abandoned in the jungle with a broken arm and no boots, Bud Day crawled 25 miles on shredded feet ...
Clarence “Bud” Anderson, America’s last surviving World War II triple ace pilot, has died at 102. Anderson logged 116 combat missions and more than 480 hours in the sky. NBC’s Joe Fryer ...
Brigadier General Clarence E. “Bud” Anderson, a storied aviator and the last surviving triple ace pilot from World War II, passed away peacefully in his sleep on May 17 at the age of 102. Anderson’s ...
Clarence E. "Bud" Anderson Jr., a military pilot whose aerial derring-do spanned from World War II, when he personally shot down 16 German planes in dogfights over occupied Europe, to experimental ...
Brigadier General Clarence E. Anderson, better known as "Bud," died peacefully in his sleep on May 17, his family said in a statement on his website.
CALIFORNIA, USA — The last surviving World War II triple ace pilot died at age 102 this week, more than 75 years after serving in the U.S. Air Force and flying missions over Europe, the ...
The last surviving World War II triple ace pilot died at age 102 this week, more than 75 years after serving in the U.S. Air Force and flying missions over Europe, the Washington Post reported ...
Brig. Gen. Clarence “Bud” Anderson, the last American “triple ace” of World War II, died Friday at his California home at 102 years old.
Clarence E. “Bud” Anderson Jr., the last surviving triple ace pilot from World War II, died May 17. He was 102. Anderson died at his home in Auburn, California, The Washington Post reported ...