UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
HISTORY
FLIGHT TO FREEDOM 1953
September of 1953, two
months after an armistice , 21 year old Lt. No Kum-Sok, a
North Korean fighter
pilot, defected to South Korea with a Russian MIG-15B
aircraft.
Some months later Kum-Sok
, now known as, Kenneth Rowe, was enrolled at the
University of Delaware,
living in Brown Hall on the Green, earning a degree in
engineering.
Before his defection he
was 'trapped' in North Korea with no choice of a career, but had
passed an exam , accepted
by the North Korean Naval Academy. He was at that time an
anti communist but there
was no way out. Here he was sent to flight school, learning to
fly the MIG-15B , at that
time the most advanced jet fighter aircraft in the world. He
was in the first class to be trained by Soviet advisers in
Manchuria, well hidden from western eyes and ears. By 1951 he was
flying over the battlegrounds bu,t as he said, not really ready
to
fly the plane.
Unknown to him, his mother
had fled to South Korea, and here he was, alone, in a most
dangerous jobs in the
world, a combat fighter pilot, flying more than 100 combat
missions
during the duration of the
war. These pilots flew until they died.
56 days after the armistice
he made his decision to defect to the west flying out of Sunan in
the top secret MIG-15B
and a 20% chance of success he did so .
At Kimpo Air Force Base
his landing caught little attention until it rode to a stop in
front
of a group of officers. He
was taken in custody , the MIG whisked aware to a hanger.
Kum-Sok received a
$100,000 reward from the U.S. Government for bringing the MIG
which he had no idea of
while in North Korea. The MIG was flown by U. S. test pilots,
Major Chuck Yeager and
Captain Tom Collins who reported the plane had some dangerous
flight characteristics and
design flaws and was not 'pilot friendly'.
No Kum-sok, now Ken
Rowe, worked a while with the American intelligence service in
Washington and traveled
by train to his New York home passing the University of
Delaware in Newark where
he enrolled in the College of Engineering earned a bachelor's
degree, continued his
education with a degree in electrical engineering degree and
became
a aeronautical engineer.
By now he was able to bring
his mother from South Korea to live with him as he worked for
duPont, Boeing,
Westinghouse, General Electric, married and built a family. While at
U of D,
Prof. John A Munroe
became friends and had Senator J. Allen Frear of Delaware have
him
declared a U. S. citizen by
President Eisenhower.
In 2000 he retired from
Embry Riddle Aeronautical University and lives near it's campus
in Daytona Florida.
Abstract: January February
2019 issue of Graybeards Magazine.
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