DocumentCode
970185
Title
Remembering Pearl Harbor: You don´t know Jack
Author
Causer, Craig
Author_Institution
managing editor of IEEE Potentials
Volume
27
Issue
6
fYear
2008
Firstpage
6
Lastpage
9
Abstract
As dusk takes its last breath, the sun settles beneath a line of crooked pitch pine trees, guarding each side of a darkened two-lane road. With the impending darkness, whitetail deer emerge from the woods and clop across Route 530 in search of grazing areas while battalions of bloodsucking greenhead flies plunge between the scant number of vehicles on the road. The few local businesses still open at 8 o\´clock in the evening¿the witching hour in Whiting, New Jersey¿are quiet and underpopulated, due in part to the town\´s high concentration of retirement communities. Welcome to the Pinelands. For the younger generation, the Pinelands, or Pine Barrens, is widely known as the birthplace of the legendary New Jersey Devil and the depository of "whacked" remains for Tony Soprano\´s crew. The truth is, the Pinelands has been in the munitions business long before the mafia¿ its 1.1 million acres were mined for bog ore that was used to construct weapons for both the American Revolution and the War of 1812. It is also the final resting place of an engineering marvel, the German airship the Hindenburg, which was engulfed by fire and crashed at Lakehurst Naval Air Station on 6 May 1937. Two years later, German aggression set World War II into motion and on 7 December 1941 with the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the United States entered the fray.
Keywords
Airborne radar; Aircraft; Ash; Lifting equipment; Radar imaging; Radar tracking; Retirement; Roads; Sun; Weapons;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Potentials, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-6648
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MPOT.2008.930479
Filename
4663262
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