L. Welch Pogue

Lloyd Welch Pogue (October 21, 1899 - May 10, 2003) was a pioneering aviation attorney and Chairman of the old Civil Aeronautics Board. Born in Iowa, Pogue eventually attended Harvard Law School, where noted law Professor and later United States Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter took him in as a protege. As a lawyer, Pogue was entranced by Charles Lindbergh's Trans-Atlantic flight and decided to focus his law career mainly on the "skies". Pogue joined the Civil Aeronautics Board in 1938, and four years later was appointed Chairman by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Pogue served until 1946. During his tenure Pogue helped strike down a plan for a single world airline, and later resumed his law practice before retiring in 1981, after a career of nearly 60 years. In 1994 Aviation Week & Space Technology established the L. Welch Pogue Award for Aviation Achievement, naming Pogue its first recipient. Pogue, L. Welch Pogue, L. Welch Pogue, L. Welch

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
arnold zweig
yakushima island
uss columbus (1819)
national hot rod association
royal armouries
e. l. doctorow
henry mintzberg
peter muhlenberg
fake
stratification (botany)
germination
jack welch
joachim neander
sadruddhin aga khan
seedbed
goth metal
septum
employee research
black velvet
milan vukcevich
robert stack
operation crossroads
humphry clinker
ripley, derbyshire
miles "tails" prower
amber valley
hornet
uss skate (ssn 578)
uss skate (ss 305)
the pleasure garden
vespid
magna
stale seed bed
ftl games
indigenous
methodological individualism
edward harcourt
astro creep: 2000 songs of love, destruction and other synthetic delusions of the electric head
economic equilibrium
coordinatorism
pet lamb
wildlife gardening
no war but the class war
radical transparency