Sunday, September 22, 2024

TheList 6957


The List 6957     TGB

To All,

Good Sunday Morning September 22. 2024. The sky is clearing now and the temps will climb to 83 today.

Regards,

skip

Make it a good Day

 

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This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)

Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.   Go here to see the director's corner for all 83 H-Grams 

Today in Naval and Marine Corps History

September 22

1861 Commodore William W. McKean assumes command of the Gulf Blockading Squadron.

1863 During the Civil War, USS De Soto, commanded by Capt. W. M. Walker, recaptures the Army tug Leviathan in the Gulf of Mexico, some 40 miles off shore. She had been captured by the Confederates earlier in the day.

1944 USS Yukon (AF 9) is hit in her starboard side by a torpedo fired by German submarine U-979, about 43 miles west of Reykjavik, Iceland. Damaged, she steams at three knots until her SOS is responded to by tugs from Reykjavik.

1952 During the Korean War, enemy guns fire on Sosari. HMS Cardigan Bay (PF) and USS Bradford (DD 545) provide direct counter battery fire, silencing the guns.

1959 USS Patrick Henry (SSBN 599) is launched. In 1982, her ballistic missile tubes are disabled, and she is reclassified as an attack submarine.

1979 USNS Catawba (T-ATF 168) is christened and launched at Marinette marine Corp, Marinette, Wisc. The fleet ocean tug, provides towing, diving and standby submarine rescue services to the Navys numbered fleet commanders.

1989 After Hurricane Hugo, Sailors and Marines provide assistance to Charleston, S.C. through Oct. 10.

1990 USNS Kanawha (T-AO 196) is christened and launched at the Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, Chester, Penn. The Henry J. Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler provides underway replenishment of fuel, fleet cargo and stores to the Navy through the Military Sealift Command.

2012 USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) is commissioned in Galveston, Texas. The littoral combat ship is the first US Navy warship to be named after the fifth largest city in Texas.

 

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This day in World History

 

September 22

1656 The General Provincial Court in session at Patuxent, Maryland, impanels the first all-woman jury in the Colonies to hear evidence against Judith Catchpole, who is accused of murdering her child. The jury acquits her after hearing her defense of never having been pregnant.

1711 The Tuscarora Indian War begins with a massacre of settlers in North Carolina, following white encroachment that included the enslaving of Indian children.

1776 American Captain Nathan Hale is hanged as a spy by the British in New York City; his last words are reputed to have been, "I only regret that I have but one life to give for my country."

1789 Russian forces under Aleksandr Suvorov drive the Turkish army under Yusuf Pasha from the Rymnik River, upsetting the Turkish invasion of Russia.

1862 President Abraham Lincoln issues a proclamation calling for all slaves within the rebel states to be freed on January 1, a political move that helps keep the British from intervening on the side of the South.

1864 Union General Philip Sheridan defeats Confederate General Jubal Early's troops at the Battle of Fisher's Hill in Virginia.

1869 The Cincinnati Red Stockings, the first professional baseball team, arrive in San Francisco after a rollicking, barnstorming tour of the West.

1893 Bicycle makers Charles and Frank Duryea show off the first American automobile produced for sale to the public by taking it on a maiden run through the streets of Springfield, Massachusetts.

1906 Race riots in Atlanta, Georgia leave 21 people dead.

1914 The German cruiser Emden shells Madras, India, destroying 346,000 gallons of fuel and killing only five civilians.

1915 Xavier University, the first African-American Catholic college, opens in New Orleans, Louisiana.

1918 General Allenby leads the British army against the Turks, taking Haifa and Nazareth, Palestine.

1919 President Woodrow Wilson abandons his national tour to support the League of Nations when he suffers a case of nervous exhaustion.

1929 Communist and Nazi factions clash in Berlin.

1945 President Harry Truman accepts U.S. Secretary of War Stimson's recommendation to designate the war World War II.

1947 A Douglas C-54 Skymaster makes the first automatic pilot flight over the Atlantic.

1961 President John Kennedy signs a congressional act establishing the Peace Corps.

1969 Willie Mays of the San Francisco Giants becomes the first baseball player since Babe Ruth to hit 600 home runs.

1970 President Richard M. Nixon signs a bill giving the District of Columbia representation in the U.S. Congress.

1975 Sara Jane Moore attempts to assassinate US President Gerald Ford, the second attempt on his life in less than three weeks.

1980 The Iran-Iraq War begins as Iraq invades Iran; lasting until August 1988, it was the longest conventional war of the 20th century.

1991 Huntington Library makes the Dead Sea Scrolls available to the public for the first time.

 

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Thanks to the Bear

 

Skip… For "The List" for the week of 16 September 2024…. Bear

 

BEAR SENDS… OPERATION COMMANDO HUNT (1968-1972) From the archives of rollingthunderremembered.com… This post concludes the inclusion of Rolling Thunder and Commando Hunt reposts in "The List." For the past 44-weeks, I have provided access to archive entries covering Commando Hunt operations for the period November 1968 through mid-September 1969. These posts are permanently available at the following link.

 

https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/commando-hunt-post-list/

 

The RTR website is the domain and property of author Dan Heller and reflects his dedication and commitment to extending the site and archive into the future. The Yankee Air Pirates of Rolling Thunder and Commando Hunt and their 1965-1972 fight with North Vietnam will NOT be forgotten, thanks to Dan's assumption of this task. The RTR site is now world class and in great hands…

 

It has been my honor and duty to create and turnover this journal of our air war in North Vietnam to Dan Heller. It has also been a pleasure to repost the history of both Rolling Thunder and Commando Hunt ops in Skip Leonard's incomparable daily post and history lesson for the last three years. It was Skip's extraordinary commitment of twenty-years to his daily history lesson that inspired me to create Rolling Thunder Remembered in 2016… Skip goes on. I'm done… Glory gained and duty done, I now retire to my cave on Mount Ogden to contemplate my navel… Bear

 

 (Please note the eye-watering ongoing revamp of the RTR website by Webmaster/Author Dan Heller, who has inherited the site from originators RADM Bear Taylor, USN, Retired, and Angie Morse, "Mighty Thunder")…

To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and can read what happened each day to the aircraft and its crew. .Micro is the one also that goes into the archives and finds these inputs and sends them to me for incorporation in the List. It is a lot of work and our thanks goes out to him for his effort.

From Vietnam Air Losses site for "for 22 September  

22-Sep:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=3017

 

 Vietnam Air Losses

Access Chris Hobson and Dave Lovelady's work at:  https://www.VietnamAirLosses.com.

 

This is a list of all Helicopter Pilots Who Died in the Vietnam War . Listed by last name and has other info 

https://www.vhpa.org/KIA/KIAINDEX.HTM

 

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Wall of Faces Now Includes Photos of All Service members Killed in the Vietnam War

By: Kipp Hanley

AUGUST 15, 2022

 

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From the archives

Thanks to Dr. Rich…

... NON POLITICAL TRUTHS

And on the 8th day, God created seniors. Most seniors never get enough exercise. In His wisdom, God decreed that seniors become forgetful so they would have to search for their eyeglasses, keys, and other things, thus doing more walking. And God looked down and saw that it was good.

Then God saw there was another need. In His wisdom He made seniors  lose coordination so they would drop things, requiring them to bend, reach, and stretch more. And God looked down and saw that it was good.

Then God considered the function of bladders and decided seniors would have additional calls of nature, requiring more trips to the bathroom, thus providing more exercise. God looked down and saw that it was good.

So if you find, as you age, you are getting up and down a lot more  times, remember it's God's will. It is all in your best interest even though you mutter under your breath.

Nine Important Facts to Remember as We Grow Older:

#9 Death is the number 1 killer in the world.

#8 Life is sexually transmitted.

#7 Good health is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.

#6 Men have two motivations: hunger and sex, and they can't tell them…apart. If you see a gleam in his eyes, make him a sandwich.

#5 Give a person a fish and you feed them for a day. Teach a person to  use the Internet and they won't bother you for weeks, months, maybe they won't bother you for years.

#4 Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in the hospital, dying of nothing.

#3 All of us could take a lesson from the weather. It pays no   attention to criticism.

#2 In the 60's, people took LSD to make the world weird. Now the world  is weird, and people take Prozac to make it normal.

#1 Life is like a jar of jalapeno peppers. What you do today may be a burning issue tomorrow.

That is why you always have ice cream for desert

 

Please share this wisdom with others; I would do it now but I need to   go to the bathroom.

 

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Thanks to YP

I found this while cleaning out files

Sundowner Memories--

A Conversation

Remember, the old friend said, putting down his coffee cup, they wouldn't let us

hit the SAM sites while they were being built. When they started shooting down

our airplanes, we could hit them.

Yessir. I remember. Then it was a hairy ass scramble to try and find them. Lost

lots of airplanes.

They launched four of us, four F-8's under a 600 foot overcast. He was speaking

of his fleet squadron, the Sundowners of VF-111. He named names I didn't

know, which didn't include another ensign with that bunch then that became a

friend later. I looked down, and we were going 600 knots! How the hell are you

going to find a SAM site that low and going 600 knots?

I didn't know. We were doing the same thing in Scoots substantially slower.

Anyway, he continued, the guy I was flying wing on got hit. The call was just

that, and he said the cockpit was lit up like a Christmas tree. In those days, if

both flight hydraulic systems were hit and bled pressure, which was usual, the

slab unit horizontal tails would slam fail to the full dive position. It occurred right

quickly. That's what happened. A 600 knot negative G pushover from 600 feet

didn't take long.

I'da given anything if I knew then to tell him to get on his back. Get on your

back! He would have gone up, probably ejected. He'd a been a POW, but he'd

probably have made it. We learned about this later, but going into combat, why

didn't they tell us before?

Don't know.

Ida given anything to tell him to get on his back.

Crazy Horse knew about it a little later on, I said. He got hit, rolled on his back,

and at the top of the negative g loop, punched out. He tole me that.

Knowing stuff like that certainly would have been better if it got passed around

sooner.

We both talked about the later fix where a lock lever could be pulled back and

latched before all the pressure bled off, trapping the UHT's nose up, and the

utility system could power the rudder. Made things better.

Not waiting for SAM sites to become active would have been better, too.

But we knew about them all the time.

The Best and the Brightest had a plan, we hoped.

How little did we know.

YP

 

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Thanks to Interesting Facts

The Color of Your Bread Tag Has an Important Meaning

Ever wonder why the tags used to seal loaves of bread come in different colors? Far from arbitrary, the color-coded system indicates which day of the week the bread was baked. The color system is even alphabetical: Monday is blue, Tuesday is green, Thursday is red, Friday is white, and Saturday is yellow. (Traditionally, bread wasn't delivered on Wednesday or Sunday.)

Because bread rarely remains on the shelf for more than a few days, this system is more for internal use among employees than it is for customers looking to get the freshest sourdough possible. But if you favor a local bakery and get to know their system, you could either snag the best deals or the fluffiest dinner rolls in town.

 

Philadelphia Cream Cheese Isn't Actually From Philadelphia

The City of Brotherly Love has clear-cut claims on many food origins — cheesesteaks, stromboli, and even root beer. But one thing's for sure: Despite the name, Philadelphia Cream Cheese is definitely not from Philly. The iconic dairy brand secured its misleading name (and gold-standard status) thanks to a marketing ploy that's been working for more than 150 years … and it's all because of Pennsylvania's reputation for impeccable dairy. Small Pennsylvania dairies of the 18th and early 19th centuries were known for using full-fat milk and cream to make rich cheeses — in contrast to New York dairies, which mostly used skim milk — and because the perishables couldn't be easily transported, they gained a reputation as expensive luxury foods.

 

So when upstate New York entrepreneur William Lawrence began making his skim milk and (for richness) lard-based cream cheese in the 1870s, he needed a name that would entice customers and convey quality despite it being made in Chester, New York, and not Philadelphia. Together with cheese broker and marketing mastermind Alvah Reynolds, Lawrence's cheese was branded under the Philadelphia name in 1880, which boosted sales and promoted its popularity with home cooks well into the early 1900s.

 

The First Smartphone Debuted in 1992

On January 9, 2007, Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed the iPhone to the world. Since then, Apple's pricey slab of glass stuffed with technology has become more or less synonymous with the word "smartphone" (sorry, Android fans). But smartphones predate the iPhone by more than a decade. To pinpoint the smartphone's true birthdate, look back to November 23, 1992, and the introduction of IBM's Simon at a trade show in Las Vegas. Today, IBM is best known for supercomputers, IT solutions, and enterprise software, but in the '80s and early '90s the company was a leader in consumer electronics — a position it hoped to solidify with Simon.

 

Simon was a smartphone in every sense of the word. It was completely wireless and had a digital assistant, touchscreen, built-in programs (calculator, to-do list, calendar, sketch pad, and more), and third-party apps, something even the original iPhone didn't have. The idea was so ahead of its time, there wasn't even a word for it yet — "smartphone" wasn't coined for another three years. Instead, its full name when it debuted to the larger public in 1993 was the Simon Personal Communicator, or IBM Simon for short. But there's a reason there isn't a Simon in everyone's pocket today. For one thing, the phone had only one hour of battery life. Once it died, it was just a $900 brick (technology had a long way to go before smartphones became pocket-sized; Simon was 8 inches long by 2.5 inches wide). Cell networks were still in their infancy, so reception was spotty at best, which is why the Simon came with a port for plugging into standard phone jacks. In the mid-aughts, increases in carrier capacity and the shrinking of electronic components created the perfect conditions for the smartphones of today. Unfortunately for Simon, it was too late.

 

Before Erasers, People Used Bread To Rub Out Pencil Marks

The very first pencils arrived around the dawn of the 17th century, after graphite (the real name for the mineral that forms a pencil's "lead") was discovered in England's Lake District. But the eraser didn't show up until the 1770s, at the tail end of the Enlightenment. So what filled the roughly 170-year-long gap? Look no further than the bread on your table. Back in the day, artists, scientists, government officials, and anyone else prone to making mistakes would wad up a small piece of bread and moisten it ever so slightly. The resulting ball of dough erased pencil marks on paper almost as well as those pink creations found on the end of No. 2 pencils today.

But in 1770, English chemist Joseph Priestly (best known for discovering oxygen) wrote about "a substance excellently adapted to the purpose of wiping from paper the marks of a black lead pencil." This substance, then known as caoutchouc, was so perfect for "rubbing" out pencil marks that it soon became known simply as "rubber." Even today, people in the U.K. still refer to erasers as "rubbers." (The name "lead-eater" never quite caught on.)

 

Canned Food Was Invented Before the Can Opener

On January 5, 1858, Ezra J. Warner of Connecticut invented the can opener. The device was a long time coming: Frenchman Nicolas Appert had developed the canning process in the early 1800s in response to a 12,000-franc prize the French government offered to anyone who could come up with a practical method of preserving food for Napoleon's army. Appert devised a process for sterilizing food by half-cooking it, storing it in glass bottles, and immersing the bottles in boiling water, and he claimed the award in 1810. Later the same year, Englishman Peter Durand received the first patent for preserving food in actual tin cans — which is to say, canned food predates the can opener by nearly half a century.

Though he didn't initially know why his method of storing food in glass jars and heating them worked, years of experimentation led Appert to rightly conclude that "the absolute deprivation from contact with the exterior air" and "application of the heat in the water-bath" were key. He later switched to working with cans himself. Before Warner's invention, cans were opened with a hammer and chisel — a far more time-consuming approach than the gadgets we're used to. Warner's tool (employed by soldiers during the Civil War) wasn't a perfect replacement, however: It used a series of blades to puncture and then saw off the top of a can, leaving a dangerously jagged edge. As for the hand-crank can opener most commonly used today, that wasn't invented until 1925.

 

How many of you still have a P-38?....Skip I still have one on one of my Key rings

 

The Stick Has Been Inducted Into the National Toy Hall of Fame

From teddy bears to train sets, classic playthings of youth often conjure memories of a gleaming toy store, holidays, or birthdays. So curators at the Strong National Museum of Play branched out when they added the stick to their collection of all-time beloved toys. Among the most versatile amusements, sticks have inspired central equipment in several sports, including baseball, hockey, lacrosse, fencing, cricket, fishing, and pool. Humble twigs are also ready-made for fetch, slingshots, toasting marshmallows, and boundless make-believe.

 

Located in Rochester, New York — about 70 miles northeast of Fisher-Price's headquarters — the Strong acquired the fledgling National Toy Hall of Fame in 2002. (It was previously located in the Gilbert House Children's Museum in Salem, Oregon.) To date, 74 toys have been inducted, including Crayola Crayons, Duncan Yo-Yos, and bicycles. The stick was added in 2008, three years after another quintessential source of cheap childhood delight: the cardboard box.

 

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5 Fascinating Facts From Behind the Iron Curtain

 

KHRUSHCHEV & HOXHA, 1961

In the wake of World War II, new ideological borders were drawn across the European continent. Vast cultural and economic differences formed a deep divide between the democratic nations of Western Europe and the communist regimes of the Soviet Union and its allies in the East. Throughout the Cold War era, these two distinct factions were separated by a symbolic boundary that cut through the continent, known as the Iron Curtain. The term "Iron Curtain" was first used in reference to the Cold War in 1946; nations that were considered "behind" the Iron Curtain were those under Soviet and communist influence, as those regimes maintained a firm grasp on power. As time progressed, cracks formed in the Iron Curtain as former communist nations embraced democracy, ultimately leading to the political reunification of Europe. But for as long as it existed, the Iron Curtain served as a philosophical barrier between two vastly different worlds. Here are five fascinating facts from behind the Iron Curtain.

 

The Term "Iron Curtain" Was Popularized by Winston Churchill

Long before the term "Iron Curtain" was coined in reference to the Cold War, the words referred to a fireproof safety mechanism that separated the audience from the stage in theatrical productions. In 1945, author Alexander Campbell borrowed the term in his book It's Your Empire to describe censorship related to World War II-era Japanese conquests. "Iron Curtain" was first used in the context of communist Europe during a speech by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill on March 5, 1946. Appearing with President Harry Truman at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, Churchill stated, "From Stettin in the Baltic, to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the continent." Churchill sought to warn the audience of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, and the term "Iron Curtain" resonated, remaining popular for decades after. Around the same time as Churchill's speech, another great wordsmith used the phrase "Cold War" for the first time — author George Orwell in his 1945 essay "You and the Atom Bomb." Two years later, Truman adviser Bernard Baruch formally coined the term "Cold War" to describe the cooling relationship between the United States and Soviet Union.

 

Poland Was the First Eastern Bloc Country to Hold Democratic Elections

For decades, communist regimes maintained uninterrupted power over the many nations of the Eastern Bloc, a group of communist states largely located in Central and Eastern Europe and parts of Asia. Dictators ruled with an iron fist thanks to the lack of fair and free elections within the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and the other countries that fell behind the Iron Curtain. That trend continued until 1989, when Poland held its first democratic elections since the Cold War began. Tadeusz Mazowiecki emerged as Eastern Europe's first noncommunist leader in decades, representing a pro-labor party known as Solidarity. Mazowiecki embraced Western ideology such as a free-market economy, and though he was replaced as prime minister two years later, the election remains a historic event. Other former communist nations soon followed Poland's lead; Czechoslovakia and Hungary both held their first fair multiparty elections in 1990. Not long after, the Iron Curtain disintegrated as the Soviet Union collapsed.

 

Albania Escaped Soviet Control and Aligned Itself With China

Albania may be firmly located in Europe, but during the Cold War it found an unlikely anti-Soviet ally in China. Beginning in 1949, Albania aligned itself with the Soviet Union, which was then still ruled by Joseph Stalin. But after Stalin's death in 1953, Soviet-Albanian relations began to strain, as Albanian leader Enver Hoxha was much less fond of incoming Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev denounced Stalin's ideology, which rubbed Hoxha and the Albanian people the wrong way and eventually led to the formal termination of Soviet-Albanian relations in 1961. Around the same time, the U.S.S.R. and China had a falling-out of their own, as Chinese leader Mao Zedong also decried the Soviet Union's revisionism. Given their similar pro-Stalin views, Albania and China found unlikely allies in one another, with China informally providing support to the tiny Balkan country. These strange bedfellows remained on the same page until Richard Nixon visited China in 1972, forcing Albania to reevaluate the relationship. The allyship between Albania and China came to an end in 1978.

 

Jazz Music Was Used as Propaganda by the West

Since its creation, jazz has represented the American identity, in part as a symbol of freedom of expression. That's what made jazz music such a useful propaganda tool for the West to reach nations behind the Iron Curtain. Underground American radio transmissions brought jazz to residents of Eastern Bloc nations beginning in 1955 in an effort to appeal to those repressed societies. Programs such as Willis Conover's Music USA: Jazz Hour earned cult followings within these pro-Soviet countries, as the U.S. sought to win the ideological war over its Eastern European rivals. The United States hoped that free-flowing jazz music could open the minds of citizens who were used to more formal operas and ballets, and in turn make those individuals more receptive to Western culture. Barriers were broken down even further in 1958 when jazz pianist Dave Brubeck traveled to Poland to perform a landmark concert series. These efforts extended into the Middle East, Asia, and Africa around the same time, as the U.S. spread its jazz music around the world.

 

The Fall of the Berlin Wall Was Partly Due to a Misinformed Spokesperson

On November 9, 1989, a gaffe uttered by East German spokesperson Günter Schabowski accelerated the fall of the Berlin Wall. After decades of difficult and dangerous travel between East and West Germany, East German officials sought to loosen restrictions while still maintaining control over the visa application process. However, Schabowski,  a spokesperson for East Germany's politbüro, misinterpreted the notes he was given at a press conference and claimed that travel between the two sides could begin without delay. Shortly after the televised slipup, massive crowds gathered at the Berlin Wall, though these groups of travelers initially were held back by guards who were given no specific instructions. Eventually, East Berliners outnumbered the guards to a significant degree, leaving officials no choice but to let people through. Every one of the checkpoints opened by midnight, as people from the East freely traveled into West Berlin for the first time since the wall was erected in 1961. The feeling of independence and celebration was palpable, as East Berliners climbed the wall, destroyed it with hammers, and reunited with their neighbors in West Berlin.

 

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Thanks to the Crusader Association

 

Fallen Comrades

Steve Lambert  Last Charlie 27 Mar 2024.

I am Steve's daughter, Ashley. Dick Evert informed me you'd like to post the link to the invitation of the celebration of life so the F8s can see it. You have my permission to do so!

The invite can be found here: http://evite.me/1FedwMEhTp

Please let me know if you need anything else from me.

Ashley

Link to obit: https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/legacyremembers/steve-lambert-obituary?id=56281660

==============================

My name is Kevin O'Neill, son of James Patrick O'Neill. My dad passed away last Monday August 19 in his sleep after a difficult battle with dementia. He got incredible love and care from his daughter, Erin, over the last several years at his home in San Diego.   He cherished his friends, family and fellow sailors and aviators.

 

Funeral  services and military honors for Jim are

Saturday October 12 10am Glenn Abbey Memorial Park

 

With a celebration of life following at the family home in Pacific Beach. We would love to see you and honor his memory if you're able to attend.

This has been a particularly hard year for our family. Our mother, Louise O'Neill, died in December of last year and was committed at Glenn Abbey where her parents and granddad are also buried.

With love,

Kevin O'Neill  206-605-8617

 

=====================================

This past Friday morning, 13 September 2024, Capt. Phillip J. "PJ" Smith, USNR (Ret), Crusader driver, died peacefully with his wife, Lynda, at his bedside.  No services are planned.  Throw a nickle on the grass.

 

Rod Dorr

 

======================================

 

Ed. note:  Bull Durham who has been the GatorGram purveyor for many years is temporarily sidelined.  He hopes to be back in the saddle in the near future.  Meanwhile, please bear with the B-team on these missives.

Ed note 2:  Several years ago a friend noted that when older guys got together their conversation seemed to devolve into discussing ailments, medications and  bowel status.  I guess we're older guys now.  If we are going to cover those topics, let it be about the times our ailments were caused by too many g's, our medications were the kind we used after a hairy hop, and our bowel troubles be those where we scared the crap out of ourselves.  Got any of those to share?

 

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Thanks to Trending Subjects

Hunter's Help Law Enforcement After Famous Buck Killed

By Mark Stevens -September 9, 2024

Talk about a self-inflicted downfall. A Virginia hunter, Jason Walters, is facing some serious consequences after illegally killing the "Hollywood Buck," a well-known deer that had become a beloved figure at the historic Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond.

 

Walters, along with another hunter, Alan Proffitt, thought they could brag about their illegal catch, but it turns out that boasting on social media isn't the best strategy when you've broken the law.

 

Walters, who pleaded guilty to 20 misdemeanors, is set to serve four months in jail and will face over $13,000 in fines and restitution. To add to that, he's lost his hunting license for the next 25 years, with another 75 years suspended—meaning that if he steps out of line again, that suspension could easily become permanent.

 

His partner in crime, Proffitt, is also facing penalties, albeit lighter, with a $250 fine, a five-month suspended jail sentence, and a six-year hunting license revocation.

 

The story blew up after Walters posted about his so-called "accomplishment" on a popular Facebook page, Star City Whitetails, where Virginia hunters share their catches. Walters proudly uploaded a photo of the 29-point buck, captioning it with the boast of bagging the "biggest buck of my LIFE."

 

But the internet is a small world, and it wasn't long before wildlife enthusiasts recognized the deer as the famous "Hollywood Buck." The distinctive antlers gave it away, and soon enough, the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources was on the case.

 

Wildlife photographer photos, social media sleuths, and the sharp eyes of local hunters helped identify the buck, leading to Walters' downfall.

 

The irony? Walters exposed himself by posting his illegal kill on a public forum, completely unaware that he was handing law enforcement all the evidence they needed to track him down.

 

The Hollywood Buck had been a peaceful resident of the cemetery for years, admired by locals for its massive antlers and quiet presence. Living in an area where hunting is strictly prohibited, the deer was able to grow to a legendary size—until Walters and Proffitt decided to take matters into their own hands.

 

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This Day in U S Military History

September 22

Feast Day of St. Maurice, Patron Saint of Infantry: Maurice was an officer of the Theban Legion of Emperor Maximian Herculius' army, which was composed of Christians from Upper Egypt. He and his fellow legionnaires refused to sacrifice to the gods as ordered by the Emperor to insure victory over rebelling Bagaudae. When they refused to obey repeated orders to do so and withdrew from the army encamped at Octodurum (Martigny) near Lake Geneva to Agaunum (St. Maurice-en-Valais), Maximian had the entire Legion of over six thousand men put to death. To the end they were encouraged in their constancy by Maurice and two fellow officers, Exuperius and Candidus. Also executed was Victor (October 10th), who refused to accept any of the belongings of the dead soldiers. In a follow-up action, other Christians put to death were Ursus and another Victor at Solothurin (September 30th); Alexander at Bergamo; Octavius, Innocent, Adventor, and Solutar at Turin; and Gereon (October 10th) at Cologne.

1554 – Spanish explorer Francisco Vásquez, his health badly deteriorated from injuries and the toll of his strenuous travels, dies. He never found the fabled cities of gold that he had sought for decades. A quarter-century earlier Coronado had explored much of the southwestern United States, leading his force of 300 Spaniards and 800 Indians northward from Mexico in search of the Seven Cities of Cíbola that were rumored to have walls made of gold and treasure houses filled with priceless gems. Arriving in the region that today straddles the border between New Mexico and Arizona, Coronado did actually find Cíbola. But after winning a brief battle against the native defenders, Coronado discovered he had conquered only a modest Zuni village built with walls of adobe mud, not gold. Discouraged, Coronado considered abandoning his search. But while exploring the Rio Grande one of his lieutenants had acquired a slave, a man the Spaniards called "the Turk," who boasted that in his homeland of Quivara, far to the northeast, Coronado could find all the treasures after which he lusted. Coronado set off in search of Quivara in the spring of 1541, eventually traveling across the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles and up into Kansas. But when he finally made contact with the Quivara Indians, Coronado was once again disappointed to find that they were living in simple huts and had no more gold and silver than the Zunis. After strangling the Turk for having lied to him, Coronado gave up and returned to Mexico where he faced a government furious that he had not brought back the wealth he had promised. Coronado never again mounted another exploratory mission and died believing that he had been a shameful failure. But while he never found the golden cities he sought, Coronado did succeed in giving the Spanish and the rest of the world their first fairly accurate understanding of the inhabitants and geography of the southern half of the present United States.

1776 – In New York City, Nathan Hale, a Connecticut schoolteacher and captain in the Continental Army, is executed by the British for spying. A graduate of Yale University, Hale joined a Connecticut regiment in 1775 and served in the successful siege of British-occupied Boston. In the summer of 1776, he crossed behind British lines on Long Island in civilian clothes to spy on the British. While returning with the intelligence information, British soldiers captured Hale near the American lines and charged him with espionage. Taken to New York, he was hanged without trial the next day. Before being executed, legend holds that Hale said, "I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country." There is no historical record to prove that Hale actually made this statement, but if he did he may have been inspired by the lines in English author Joseph Addison's 1713 play Cato: "What a pity it is/That we can die but once to serve our country."

1862 – Motivated by his growing concern for the inhumanity of slavery as well as practical political concerns, President Abraham Lincoln changes the course of the war and American history by issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. Announced a week after the nominal Union victory at the Battle of Antietam (Sharpsburg), this measure did not technically free any slaves, but it redefined the Union's war aim from reunification to the abolition of slavery. The proclamation announced that all slaves in territory that was still in rebellion as of January 1,

1863, would be free. Lincoln used vacated congressional seats to determine the areas still in rebellion, as some parts of the South had already been recaptured and representatives returned to Congress under Union supervision. Since it freed slaves only in Rebel areas that were beyond Union occupation, the Emancipation Proclamation really freed no one. But the measure was still one of the most important acts in American history, as it meant slavery would end when those areas were recaptured. In addition, the proclamation effectively sabotaged Confederate attempts to secure recognition by foreign governments, especially Great Britain. When reunification was the goal of the North, foreigners could view the Confederates as freedom fighters being held against their will by the Union. But after the Emancipation Proclamation, the Southern cause was now viewed as the defense of slavery. The proclamation was a shrewd maneuver by Lincoln to brand the Confederate States as a slave nation and render foreign aid impossible. The measure was met by a good deal of opposition, because many Northerners were unwilling to fight for the freedom of blacks. But it spelled the death knell for slavery, and it had the effect on British opinion that Lincoln had desired. Antislavery Britain could no longer recognize the Confederacy, and Union sentiment swelled in Britain. With this measure, Lincoln effectively isolated the Confederacy and killed the institution that was the root of sectional differences.

 

2006 – The U.S. military officially retires the F-14 Tomcat having been supplanted by the Boeing F/A-18E and F Super Hornets. The Grumman F-14 Tomcat is a fourth-generation, supersonic, twinjet, two-seat, variable-sweep wing fighter aircraft. The Tomcat was developed for the United States Navy's Naval Fighter Experimental (VFX) program following the collapse of the F-111B project. The F-14 was the first of the American teen-series fighters, which were designed incorporating the experience of air combat against MiG fighters during the Vietnam War. The F-14 first flew in December 1970 and made its first deployment in 1974 with the U.S. Navy aboard USS Enterprise (CVN-65), replacing the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II. The F-14 served as the U.S. Navy's primary maritime air superiority fighter, fleet defense interceptor and tactical reconnaissance platform. In the 1990s, it added the Low Altitude Navigation and Targeting Infrared for Night (LANTIRN) pod system and began performing precision ground-attack missions. As of 2014, the F-14 was in service with only the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, having been exported to Iran in 1976, when the U.S. had amicable diplomatic relations with Iran.

 

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

 

BLOCH, ORVILLE EMIL

Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Company E, 338th Infantry, 85th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Firenzuola, Italy, 22 September 1944. Entered service at: Streeter, N. Dak. Birth: Big Falls, Wis. G.O. No.: 9, 10 February 1945. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of duty. 1st Lt. Bloch undertook the task of wiping out 5 enemy machinegun nests that had held up the advance in that particular sector for 1 day. Gathering 3 volunteers from his platoon, the patrol snaked their way to a big rock, behind which a group of 3 buildings and 5 machinegun nests were located. Leaving the 3 men behind the rock, he attacked the first machinegun nest alone charging into furious automatic fire, kicking over the machinegun, and capturing the machinegun crew of 5. Pulling the pin from a grenade, he held it ready in his hand and dashed into the face of withering automatic fire toward this second enemy machinegun nest located at the corner of an adjacent building 15 yards distant. When within 20 feet of the machinegun he hurled the grenade, wounding the machinegunner, the other 2 members of the crew fleeing into a door of the house. Calling one of his volunteer group to accompany him, they advanced to the opposite end of the house, there contacting a machinegun crew of 5 running toward this house. 1st Lt Bloch and his men opened fire on the enemy crew, forcing them to abandon this machinegun and ammunition and flee into the same house. Without a moment's hesitation, 1st Lt. Bloch, unassisted, rushed through the door into a hail of small-arms fire, firing his carbine from the hip, and captured the 7 occupants, wounding 3 of them. 1st Lt. Bloch with his men then proceeded to a third house where they discovered an abandoned enemy machinegun and detected another enemy machinegun nest at the next corner of the building. The crew of 6 spotted 1st Lt. Bloch the instant he saw them. Without a moment's hesitation he dashed toward them. The enemy fired pistols wildly in his direction and vanished through a door of the house, 1st Lt. Bloch following them through the door, firing his carbine from the hip, wounding 2 of the enemy and capturing 6. Altogether 1st Lt. Bloch had single-handedly captured 19 prisoners, wounding 6 of them and eliminating a total of 5 enemy machinegun nests. His gallant and heroic actions saved his company many casualties and permitted them to continue the attack with new inspiration and vigor.

 

CHILDERS, ERNEST

Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, U.S. Army, 45th Infantry Division. Place and date: At Oliveto, Italy, 22 September 1943. Entered service at: Tulsa, Okla. Birth: Broken Arrow, Okla. G.O. No.: 30, 8 April 1944. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of duty in action on 22 September 1943, at Oliveto, Italy. Although 2d Lt. Childers previously had just suffered a fractured instep he, with 8 enlisted men, advanced up a hill toward enemy machinegun nests. The group advanced to a rock wall overlooking a cornfield and 2d Lt. Childers ordered a base of fire laid across the field so that he could advance. When he was fired upon by 2 enemy snipers from a nearby house he killed both of them. He moved behind the machinegun nests and killed all occupants of the nearer one. He continued toward the second one and threw rocks into it. When the 2 occupants of the nest raised up, he shot 1. The other was killed by 1 of the 8 enlisted men. 2d Lt. Childers continued his advance toward a house farther up the hill, and single-handed, captured an enemy mortar observer. The exceptional leadership, initiative, calmness under fire, and conspicuous gallantry displayed by 2d Lt. Childers were an inspiration to his men.

 

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Seattle Times

September 17, 2013

After Long Wait, Seattle Man Gets Highest Military Honor

Seattle resident and former Army Capt. William Swenson is to receive, belatedly, the Medal of Honor, the nation?s top military award, for gallantry in Afghanistan in 2009. For reasons not entirely clear, the military lost his original nomination papers.

By Lesley Clark, McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — President Obama next month will bestow the nation's highest military award for gallantry to former Army Capt. William Swenson for valor he displayed during a six-hour battle in eastern Afghanistan in 2009.

Swenson, who lives in Seattle, will become the sixth living recipient to be awarded the Medal of Honor for actions in Iraq or Afghanistan.

He couldn't be reached for comment Monday, but an Army release quoted him as saying, after receiving word directly from Obama: "It's a monumental event for me, for my family and for my teammates. This day also means lot to those I served with."

A White House official said that Swenson and his family will join Obama at the White House on Oct. 15 "to commemorate his example of selfless service."

Swenson's nomination had been stalled since at least last summer, prompting a California congressman in January to ask the Army and the Defense Department to explain the delay. Obama awarded then-Marine Cpl. Dakota Meyer the Medal of Honor in September 2011 for heroism in the same battle for which Swenson was nominated.

Swenson is the first living Army officer nominated for the Medal of Honor in four decades. He resigned from the service in February 2011.

He was nominated for gallantry in the Sept. 8, 2009, battle of the Ganjgal Valley, one of the most extraordinary military confrontations of the post-9/11 wars, a six-hour clash that erupted when some 50 to 60 Taliban-led insurgents ambushed a contingent of Afghan troops, border police and U.S. trainers.

Five American and nine Afghan service personnel and an Afghan translator died; 24 Afghans and four Americans, including Swenson and Meyer, were wounded. In addition to the two Medal of Honor nominations, participants received a slew of other commendations. Moreover, two Army officers received reprimands for dereliction of duty for spurning calls by Swenson and others for artillery and air support.

According to a draft Army narrative obtained by McClatchy Newspapers, Swenson — an adviser to the Afghan Border Police — was cited for helping to extricate the force despite the lack of air or artillery support. He repeatedly drove back to the ambush site under heavy fire to recover Afghan and U.S. casualties. He was joined by Meyer, two other Marines and an Afghan translator in a final foray to retrieve the bodies of three Marines and a Navy corpsman.

Swenson was first nominated on Dec. 18, 2009. However, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Marine Gen. John Allen, had to resubmit Swenson's papers in July 2011 after they were "lost" in what the Army later claimed was a bureaucratic foul-up partly due to high staff turnover at U.S. Forces-Afghanistan, or USFOR-A, the American contingent in NATO's International Security and Assistance Force.

A McClatchy investigation published Aug. 6, 2012, found that an internal U.S. military probe uncovered U.S. Army PowerPoint briefing slides showing that Swenson's nomination was improperly downgraded to a Distinguished Service Cross after his papers arrived at USFOR-A headquarters in Kabul on May 19, 2010. That nomination then was sent for approval to U.S. Central Command, in Tampa, Fla., according to the slides.

Moreover, military investigators failed to find any trace of Swenson's Medal of Honor packet — typically comprising a draft citation, a draft narrative and dozens of digitized documents supporting the nomination "or any other award" for Swenson — on any computers except for a tiny excerpt on a classified computer network.

The period in which the slides showed the downgrade taking place corresponded with the second month of now-retired Army Gen. David Petraeus' stint as the commander of ISAF and USFOR-A. Petraeus, who resigned as CIA director on Nov. 9, told McClatchy in August that he had "no recollection of seeing this packet."

The White House noted Swenson's military decorations include: Bronze Star Medal with Two Bronze Oak Leaf Clusters, Purple Heart, Army Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal with One Campaign Star, Iraq Campaign Medal with Two Campaign Stars, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon, Combat Infantryman Badge, Ranger Tab and Parachutist Badge.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for September 22,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

 

22 September

1943: Due to heavy losses in daylight raids, Eighth Air Force B-17s flew in a night raid on Germany with the RAF for the first time. (21)

1944: The last shuttle mission between UK and Soviet Union, with return through Italy, ended when 84 B-17s and 51 P-51s returned to the UK. (4)

1947: A USAF C-54 flew 2,400 miles from Stephenville, Newfoundland, to London on the first transatlantic robot-controlled flight. (24)

1949: Convair's T-29 Flying Schoolroom made its first flight. It provided navigator training at 14 stations. (12)

1950: Operation FOX ABLE FOUR. Col David C. Schilling completed the first nonstop flight of the Atlantic by jet when he landed his Republic F-84E Thunderjet at Limestone AFB. He flew 3,300 miles from England in 10 hours 1 minute. His wingman, Lt Col William Ritchie, bailed out over Newfoundland and was rescued. This operation tested probe and drogue refueling from a B-29 as a method to increase the range of fighters. (18) (21) KOREAN WAR. With N. Korean resistance crumbling all along the Pusan perimeter, Lt George W. Nelson, a T-6 Mosquito pilot, dropped a note to 200 enemy troops near Kunsan demanding their surrender. They moved to a designated hill and were captured by nearby UN ground troops. B-29s dropped flares over rail lines, allowing B-26s to attack enemy trains at night. (28)

1980: Exercise BUSY PRAIRIE. 1980: Earlier in the year, SAC formed a Strategic Projection Force (SPF) with B-52H, KC-135, U-2, SR-71, RC-135, EC-135, and E-3A aircraft for the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force. Through 25 September, SAC used the SPF for the first time in an exercise. To prepare the SPF units for this mission, SAC initiated a no-notice exercise in late September 1980. In the exercise, Minot deployed its B-52Hs to a forward operating base at Whiteman AFB and forward operations were simulated at Grand Forks AFB. Mobility teams were quick to establish a "bare bones" support base at Whiteman. Support crews subsequently launched sixty-eight sorties in three nights. The objective was to attack three simulated airfields on the Red Flag range near Nellis AFB, Nev. The crews used low-altitude penetration to bomb targets while under simulated attack by various ground threats and aggressor aircraft. (Image of BP II)

1986: Two C-5s carried a record of 174,185 pounds of cargo to the Philippines. (16)

1987: A F-14 of Navy VF-74, based on the USS Saratoga, accidentally shot down an USAF RF-4C from the 26 TRW at Zweibrucken AB, Germany, during NATO exercise Display Determination over the Mediterranean. The Navy believed this was the first time that a Navy jet had shot down a friendly aircraft.

1993: The first B-2 (#80329), called ACC-1 and later Spirit of Missouri, made its first flight from Palmdale. (15)

2005: From Vandenberg AFB, a Minotaur rocket carried a 920-pound DARPA military research satellite into a year long orbit to gather information about the Earth's environment in low orbit. The Minotaur rocket was made from decommissioned first and second stages of a Minuteman II missile. (AFNEWS Article, "Research Rocket Lights Up Sky," 23 September 2005)

 Night launches at Vandenberg were very exciting. They were not done very often and when one blew up it was spectacular….Skip

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