When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fairchild K-20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_K-20

    The K-20 is an aerial photography camera used during World War II, famously from the Enola Gay's tail gunner position to photograph the nuclear mushroom cloud over Hiroshima. [1] Designed by Fairchild Camera and Instrument , approximately 15,000 were manufactured under licence for military contract by Folmer Graflex Corporation in Rochester ...

  3. Schools at War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schools_at_War

    The American Schools at War program was a program during World War II run by the U.S. Treasury Department, in which schoolchildren set goals to sell stamps and bonds to help the war effort. The program was also administered by the U.S. Office of Education , the Federal government agency that interfaced with the nation's school systems and its ...

  4. Fairchild Camera and Instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_Camera_and...

    In 1944, Fairchild changed the company name from Fairchild Aviation to Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corporation. Its product portfolio expanded during World War II from aerial photography equipment to include machine gun cameras, x-ray cameras, radar cameras, gun synchronizers, and radio compasses.

  5. Aerial reconnaissance in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_reconnaissance_in...

    Cotton pioneered (for the British) the trimetrogon mount and the important innovation of heated cameras, fogging being the bane of high-altitude photography. [6] However, a multi-lens trimetrogon had been used in the 1919 U.S. Bagley mapping camera, and Germany had heated optics during the Great War. [7]

  6. Benson-Lehner Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benson-Lehner_Corporation

    Benson-Lehner Corporation was an early digital technology company that initially made plotters and other input-output devices that were purchased by branches of the U.S. government during the Cold War. It later marketed high-speed precision cameras used for similar military applications, including nuclear bomb and missile testing.

  7. Bell & Howell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_&_Howell

    Historically, Bell & Howell Co. was an important supplier of many different media technologies, and it produced products such as: Newsreel and amateur film cameras such as the Filmo (end of 1923) and Eyemo (1925), and Autoload EE (1956) Military Gun sight TYPE N-8 [8] Regular-8 and Super-8 film cameras and projectors (all models)

  8. AOL Mail

    mail.aol.com

    You can find instant answers on our AOL Mail help page. Should you need additional assistance we have experts available around the clock at 800-730-2563. Should you need additional assistance we have experts available around the clock at 800-730-2563.

  9. Argus (camera company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argus_(camera_company)

    Argus introduced the Argus Model 21 in 1947, a metal-bodied camera and the company’s first model with an automatic shutter cocking to prevent double exposure and a hot shoe for flash. [3] By the end of World War II, Argus had won the Army-Navy “E” award five times for “excellence in design and manufacture of war-related material".