AdamsFlying Tiger gets medal—32 years lateBy JAMES P.THEKRIEN ADAMS—“We got in trouble when we came back, for not saluting,” says World War II airman BrunoTrzcinski.At Atlantic City after the war, They kept stopping us for not saluting,” he says, Then they d find out we were with the Flying Tigersand let us go.”••You didn’t salute anybody over there,” Mr. Trzcinski said, referring to mainland China, where the 14th Air Force of Lt. Gen. Claire Lee Chennault made a name for itself during the war.A taUgunner .in a B-25 bomber, Mr. Trzcinski flew more lhan 50 missions over China between 1344 and the end of the war.For his efforts, the former airman, now an employe'of General Electric Co. living at 22 Leonard St., received an unusual medal this summer from the government of the Republic of China.The K’ang Chan Nien Chang decoration, which Mr. Trzcinski received from the commander's widow, Anna Chennaull at a 14th Air Force reu-• nion this summer, is known as the Lost Decoration of World War f 1.According to a 14th Air Force news release, the Lost Medal, which was awarded posthumously to Chennaull, was authorized in 1945 hy the Chinese government. However, confusion reigned after defeat of the Japanese, mainly caused by the civil war that led to a Communist• takeover in 1949, and resulted in disappearance of the medal's authorization.Only a determined effort by a member of the I4tfi Air Force resulted In distribution of the medal, which commemorates service in China.Uraman Kidd, a Florida resident who served with the ^ in China^ eventually tracked down documMtatioflfortten^ala^wniacted the Chinese embassy through Mrs. Cbennauit. It took him 29 years.The medal, which was noted on a few discharge papers ar.d service records, was “generally considered a myth, according to the newsS'ciMaulfs Flying Tiger, were easily one of Ihe most roniantlcM of the war — and not without reason. The commander entered war against Japan as a volunteer before the regular United States Air Force arrived. He formed a squadron called the American Volunteer Group, commonly known as the Flying Tigers^This group formed the nucleus of the 14th Air Force, which was horn In 1943 The Flying Tigers earned a reputation in China of_ reckless bravery, which endeared it to the Chinese, and also one of independent, non-regulation attitudes which upset the Air Force establishment.Mr. Trzcinski says Chennault, who sometimes briefed his bomber squad after a mission, told his men to forget salutes and oiher formalregulations and “act like me.” [f,.. „Among Mr. Trzcinski’s many records and photographs of China and the Flying Tigers Is a sketch in a Hth Air Force Assn. booklet. An apparent reprint from a Chinese newspaper, it depicts two simple peasants walking along a beach past the ancient wreck of a F-38 Flying Tiger.The caption says in effect: 1 don't know what it is, but they say if you touch it, it will somehow keep away the evil spirit.