Final Report, June 28, 1946


Book Description

"Report on the Committee's wartime activities, and on the present status of minority group workers ... the Committee shall investigate, make findings and recommendations, and report to the President with respect to discrimination in industries engaged in work contributing to the production of military supplies or to the effective transition to a peacetime economy. The Committee's first report, published in June, 1945, covered in detail the major part of its wartime experience. In its present final report the Committee has endeavored to draw together its entire five years' experience, in the belief that it will serve as a guide to the solution of the continuing problem of employment discrimination."--Page v.
















Annual Report


Book Description







L-15 Scout


Book Description

As World War II drew to a close, Boeing, realizing that its huge Wichita factory would be out of work at war's end, began working on a light personal airplane. It nabbed the contract for what became the L-15 Scout despite the plane's third-place finish in a 1946 U.S. military liaison aircraft competition. Although the aircraft ultimately was not mass produced, Boeing's engineers created proposals for both military and civilian follow-ups. This book tells for the first time the full story of the L-15--the competition and the competitors, the evolution of Boeing's entry into the prototype XL-15, the plane's specifications, the rivalry between the U.S. Army and Air Force, and the government's decision to adopt a different plane instead.