Www.tributes.com/show/Jack-Arnett-87354465 Until her last hint, nearly 50 years after her son's wounded bomber plunged into the Pacific Ocean, Dessie Arnett Amick clung to the faintest of hopes that her babe-faced airman would someday return from World War II. On Tuesday, he finally did. The remains of 2nd Lt. Jack S. Arnett, missing since Sept. 1, 1944, when his B-24 Liberator and 10-man crew were shot out of the sky by Japanese artillery, arrived at Orlando International Airport with an Army escort. "He will be where he belongs now — among his brothers and those who loved him," said Carolyn Arnett Rocchio, 77, of Boynton Shore, who described her cousin as handsome and smart, a mischievous boy who liked to shoot the blossoms off their grandmother's flowers with a BB gun. An Army honor guard greeted the soldier's remains Tuesday, and the Orlando Fire Department fired water cannons over the plane, but no family members were waiting at the...