2
Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, p. 50.
3
Associated Press dispatch, “Gunner Helps Bring Crippled Bomber Home by Holding Fuel Line Leak Till Hands Freeze,” Evening Star (Washington, DC), October 11, 1942, p. 23.
4
United Press dispatch, “Anglo-U.S. Patrols Protect Convoys,” New York Daily News, November 11, 1942, p. 22.
5
“Former Mines Student Killed,” Rapid City (South Dakota) Journal, January 27, 1943, pp. 1 and 6.
6
Paine journal entry for January 12, 1943.
7
Paine journal entry for January 14, 1943.
CHAPTER 18: DOUBLE TROUBLE
1
Paine journal entry for January 15, 1943. Also see Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, p. 55.
2
Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, p. 54.
3
Paine journal entry for January 19, 1943. Also see Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, pp. 54–55
4
Craven and Cate, Europe: Torch to Pointblank: August 1942 to December 1943, p. 102.
CHAPTER 19: NO END IN SIGHT
1
Ibid., pp. 102–3.
2
Details of the 93rd’s January 26, 1943, raid on the Messina port area are drawn from Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, p. 56.
3
Craven and Cate, Europe: Torch to Pointblank: August 1942 to December 1943, pp. 102–03; Stewart, Ted’s Travelling Circus, p. 59.
4
Ibid.
5
Atkinson, Army at Dawn, pp. 291–95.
6
Ibid.
7
Major General John W. Huston, USAF Retired, ed., American Airpower Comes of Age: General Henry H. “Hap” Arnold’s World War II Diaries (Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University Press, 2002), pp. 475–76.
8
Ibid.
CHAPTER 20: RETURN TO ENGLAND
1