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Fred Morrison launched a leisure lifestyle with his fantastic plastic flying saucer ... fighter-bombers in the skies over Europe in World War II. Morrison, a Southern California beach boy ...
World War II, however, interrupted his plans ... Walter Frederick Morrison was struck by the idea to market flying discs in 1937. "He described them as silvery or metallic, fast, and appearing ...
Walter Fredrick Morrison, whose post-World War II invention of a “flying” plastic disc became an American recreational icon known as the Frisbee, has died. He was 90. Morrison died Tuesday of ...
Did America really build a flying saucer? During World War II, the U.S. developed the Vought XF5-U, a bizarre, disc-shaped aircraft meant to change aerial combat. But why didn’t it take off?
In the popular consciousness, disc-shaped UFOs immediately bring space ... In the 1950s, rumors circulated in the media that during World War II Germany and Italy were working on disk-like craft.
Stuart Hodes had one of World War II's most dangerous jobs: flying bombing runs over Occupied Europe in a B-17 Flying Fortress. That was no big deal. He was more self-conscious with his next job.