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Halloween History Lesson...

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Rufus - 30 Oct 2004 02:03 GMT
I've mentioned before an office mate of mine whom is a Viet Nam
Vet...one tour enlisted, and one as a back seater in F4s.  Today we all
got into the Halloween spirit at work and had a pot luck.

Well...this guy put on his Viet Nam "party bag" - a custom flight suit
that the guys made for partying at the Club, etc...yes - it still fits
him...well.

...but the amazing thing was that he also brought in the chops from the
ONC's that he used during combat over Southeast Asia - his bullseye plot
from Hanoi, and the area between Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and the
Pacific.  Sent chills up my spine to think I was not only looking at the
real-deal, but also talking to the guy that did the job...and lived to
tell about it.  All the hand drawn plots of the tanker tracks, diverts,
TACANs, etc.  Living history...when he talks, I listen.

I won't even try to tell any of his stories - I told him he should write
a book.  I can relate that he is a veteran of the USAF 421st FS; and
that he is definately one of those guys that was then - and will always
be - a fighter pilot.

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     - Rufus

Jim Atkins - 30 Oct 2004 05:46 GMT
That's pretty impressive- BTW (re fighter pilot books) if any of you haven't
read When Thunder Rolled by Ed Rasimus, do so RIGHT NOW. That book is so
good it kept my mind off my mom's lung cancer surgery last summer-

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Jim Atkins
Twentynine Palms, CA USA

Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend.
Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.
-Groucho Marx

Bill Woodier - 30 Oct 2004 12:52 GMT
Not really a "Halloween" history lesson, but interesting history just the same.


Let me tell you a little about another combat veteran.  Just the other day I
was talking to this rather interesting gentleman (I speak with him frequently)
and I thought I might relate a bit about him.  

He is a "plank-holder" in the 502nd PIR.  He made the D-Day and Market Garden
jumps and was at Bastogne.  He was wounded twice and won the Purple Heart and
Silver Star.  He was injured in a parachute jump late in the war and medivac'd
to the states.  

After the war, he ended up being assigned to the 7th Inf Div on occupation duty
in Japan and in Sep of 1950, made the Inchon landing with them.  After fighting
their way through Seoul they were withdrawn (along with the 1st Marine Div) and
sent around to the other side of Korea where they made the landing at Hamhung
and marched up to the Chosin Reservoir.  He was the Adjutant for LTC Don Faith
who commanded 1/32 as part of Task Force MacLean as they moved to the east side
of the Chosin on 27 Nov 50.  

After COL MacLean was captured and died, Faith took over the Task Force (now
renamed "Faith" and, after Maj Crosby Miller was wounded, Jones (a
newly-promored Maj at this time) took over the Battalion and as "Exec" of the
TF.  He and LTC Faith led the TF in the withdrawal from the P'ungnyuri Inlet,
and when LTC Faith was killed, Jones assumed command of the TF and got them
safely to Hagaru-ri.  He continued to lead them all the way down to Hamhung,
where they were evacuated.  During this fighting, he earned another Purple
Heart and Silver Star.  He also won a Distinguished Service Cross (some say he
should have been awarded LTC Faith's Medal of Honor).

That wasn't enough for him and he stayed in the Army and served two tours in
Vietnam, one as advisor to the Vietnamese National Police.  He was close to,
and unsuccessfully tried to stop, Vietnamese Chief of Police BG Nguyen Ngoc
Loan, who shot the Viet Cong prisoner in the head during the Tet offensive
(captured in a much-published photos and on video).  

He continues to remain active in the 101st Association and has made a couple
trips to Kosovo during the 101st deployments to boost their spirits.  He is a
terrific gentleman and, if you look up hero in the dictionary, you should find
his picture there.  He's my dear friend, COL (ret) Robert Jones.    

-- -- -- -- --
"We sleep safe in our beds because rough men stand ready
in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm."
         George Orwell

My Home Page:  http://www.bill-woodier.com/home.htm
TimeTraveler658 - 31 Oct 2004 06:52 GMT
>if any of you haven't read When Thunder Rolled by Ed Rasimus, do so RIGHT
NOW...>>

Saw that on the shelves the other day; I think I'll pick it up.   Another
excellent read, oddly enough about Thuds again, is "Pak Six" by retired Air
Force Lt. Colonel G. I. Basil.  I was never really interested in, or knew
anything about Thuds until I read this book, now I have three kits.  I would
love to build his, "Terrible Tina" and send it to him, if he's still alive
(hopefully).  I find it hard to believe there would be a decal set for it, so I
really don't know what to do about it.

When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your
eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to
return.   --Leonardo Da Vinci
EAA # 729686
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