Thursday, November 13, 2025

TheList 7353


The List 7353

To All.

Good Wednesday Morning November 12, 2025 . We woke to cloudy skies and 63 and it is supposed to hit 74 by 1 but cloudy all day.. We found a place to drop off many things yesterday and have the back of the truck loaded up for another one this morning. I am also waiting for the trash trucks to come to see if I can get another double drop for basic trash and leaves and weeds. Every green can is full and 4 old grey trash can are standing by.

Regards,

skip

Make it a GREAT Day .

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.HAGD 

 

For all you Tail Hookers out there remember that we have a gathering at the Tail Hook office on Friday starting around 4.. Last year was great and this year promises to be the same.

 

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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 93 H-Grams. 

Today in Naval and Marine Corps History .

 Nov. 12

1912—Lt. Theodore Ellyson makes the first successful launch of an airplane (A-3) by catapult at the Washington Navy Yard.

1940—Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Harold R. Stark, submits the memorandum to Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox with four war plans if the United States enters World War II. Stark recommends the fourth war plan, "Plan Dog," calling for a strong offensive in the Atlantic and defense in the Pacific.

1942—The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal begins with Japanese air attacks on U.S. ships bringing reinforcements to the embattled island. Over the next four days, Japan loses the battleships Hiei and Kirishima, heavy cruiser Kinugasa, three destroyers and many valuable transports. Two U.S. light cruisers, Atlanta and Juneau, and seven destroyers are sunk. Japan's losses weaken their ability to strengthen their garrison on Guadalcanal, enabling the U.S. to shift from the defensive to the offensive in this campaign.

1942—Lt. Cmdr. Bruce McCandless displays superb initiative by assuming command of the USS San Francisco (CA 38) during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal after all other personnel on the navigating and signal bridges were rendered unconscious, killed, or wounded. McCandless boldly continues to engage the enemy, leading the San Francisco to victory. He is later awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions.

1943—President Franklin D. Roosevelt embarks on USS Iowa (BB 61) to attend the Allied conferences at Tehran, Iran, and Cairo.

1943—PB4Y-1 (VB-103) sinks German submarine U-508 in the Bay of Biscay. Prior to this, U-508 sank 14 Allied vessels, including the American merchant SS Nathaniel Hawthorne Nov. 7, 1942. 

 

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Today in World History November 12

1035    King Canute of Norway dies.

1276    Suspicious of the intentions of Llywelyn ap Gruffydd, the Prince of Wales, English King Edward I resolves to invade Wales.

1859    The first flying-trapeze circus act is performed by Jules Leotard at the Circus Napoleon.

1863    Confederate General James Longstreet arrives at Loudon, Tennessee, to assist the attack on Union General Ambrose Burnside's troops at Knoxville.

1867    Mount Vesuvius erupts.

1903    The Lebaudy brothers of France set an air-travel distance record of 34 miles in a dirigible.

1923    Adolf Hitler is arrested for his attempted German coup.

1927    Canada is admitted to the League of Nations.

1928    The ocean liner Vestris sinks off the Virginia cape with 328 aboard, killing 111.

1938    Mexico agrees to compensate the United States for land seizures.

1941    Madame Lillian Evanti and Mary Cardwell Dawson establish the National Negro Opera Company.

1944    U.S. fighters wipe out a Japanese convoy near Leyte, consisting of six destroyers, four transports and 8,000 troops.

1944    The German battleship Tirpitz is sunk in a Norwegian fjord.

1948    Hikedi Tojo, Japanese prime minister, and seven others are sentenced to hang by an international tribunal.

1951    The U.S. Eighth Army in Korea is ordered to cease offensive operations and begin an active defense.

1960    The satellite Discoverer XVII is launched into orbit from California's Vandenberg AFB.

1968    The U.S. Supreme Court voids an Arkansas law banning the teaching of evolution in public schools.

1971    President Richard Nixon announces the withdrawal of about 45,000 U.S. troops from Vietnam by February.

1987    Boris Yeltsin is fired as head of Moscow's Communist Party for criticizing the slow pace of reform.

1990    Crown Prince Akihito is formally installed as Emperor Akihito of Japan.

1990    Sir Timothy John "Tim" Berners-Lee, a British computer scientist, publishes a formal proposal for the creation of the World Wide Web.

1996    A Saudi Arabian Airlines Boeing 747 collides with a Kazakh Illyushin II-76 cargo plane near New Delhi, killing 349. It is the deadliest mid-air collision to date (2013) and third-deadliest aircraft accident.

1997    Ramzi Yousef convicted of masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

2003    The first Italians to die in the Iraq War are among 23 fatalities from a suicide bomb attack on an Italian police base in Nasiriya, iraq.

2003    Shanghai Transrapid sets a new world speed record (311 mph or 501 kph) for commercial railway systems

 

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Thanks to the Bear. We will always have the url for you to search items in Rolling Thunder

OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER …

. rollingthunderremembered.com .

 

Thanks to Micro

From Vietnam Air Losses site for ..November 12  

12-Nov:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=330

 

This following work accounts for every fixed wing loss of the Vietnam War and you can use it to read more about the losses in The Bear's Daily account. Even better it allows you to add your updated information to the work to update for history…skip

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

 

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

The site works, find anyone you knew in "search" feature.

 

  https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/ )

 

https://www.moaa.org/content/publications-and-media/news-articles/2022-news-articles/wall-of-faces-now-includes-photos-of-all-servicemembers-killed-in-the-vietnam-war/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=TMNsend&utm_content=Y84UVhi4Z1MAMHJh1eJHNA==+MD+AFHRM+1+Ret+L+NC

By: Kipp Hanley

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. From the archives

: The Story Behind "My Way"

Thanks to Micro and to Cowboy for finding the url This has been around before, but it's worth a second look.

Please read the story below before you watch the video

While Canadian singer-songwriter legend from Ottawa, Paul Anka, has left a long trail of hits over his 60-year career, he admits that, early on, he was terrified to pen a tune for Frank Sinatra.

"He'd always tease me, 'hey kid, when are you going to write me a song?'" Anka remembers. "But I couldn't. I was scared to death. I was writing all this teen stuff."

Of course, there are few music lovers today who aren't familiar with the poignant ballad Anka eventually crafted for Sinatra, "My Way". Some dub it the most powerful of Anka's many earworms, which also include classics like "Puppy Love", "Put Your Head on My Shoulder" and even Johnny Carson's theme song for "The Tonight Show".

Anka didn't think twice 55 years ago when Sinatra called him out of the blue and declared, "kid, we're going to dinner". When Sinatra says "we're going to dinner, you drop everything and you go to dinner", recalls Paul, who, as a budding Vegas headliner in the 1960s, had a friendly tie with the Rat Pack. During the meal, Sinatra dropped a stunning surprise: He was about to quit showbiz.

"He said, 'I've had it. I'm fed up. But I'm doing one more album," Anka remembers. "He said, 'and you never wrote me that song".  Anka felt the pressure. Still reeling over the news at 1 am in his apartment, he found himself toying with lyrics to a melody he had heard in France. "I thought, 'What would Frank do with this melody, if he were a writer?'" Anka says. "And all of a sudden, it just came to me: 'And now the end is near, and so I face the final curtain'".

He finished the song at 5 am and called Sinatra on the spot, promising him a song for his final album. "I knew I had something I wouldn't be afraid to give him", Anka says. The next day, he recorded a demo of the song and flew to Las Vegas, where Sinatra lived. "I played him the song and he looked at me and said, 'I'm doing it'".

Two months later, Sinatra called Anka again. This time, with better news. "He says, 'kid, listen to this,' and puts the phone up to the speaker", Anka remembers. "I heard 'My Way' playing for the first time, and I started to cry".  Paul Anka never knew what a legacy he had created when, at the request of Ol' Blue Eyes, he wrote this song for Frank's (presumed) retirement.

Frank Sinatra had a mega-smash hit with it, followed by the Three Tenors, Pavarotti, and numerous other big stars who covered the song over the years.

In this video, 10 superb voices, an amazing orchestra, plus piano, saxophone, electric guitar, and extra choral support go well beyond doing justice to Anka's composition. The singers are Dutch, and you will notice that the majority of the orchestra are women. The performance is fantastic.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FDOAz_6OQk

 

 

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From the archives

. TAPS bugle call history and unofficial lyrics

 

Echo from Tam

May you find a day of true peace and be honored by this grateful nation on this Veterans Day.

From this military family to yours

Tam

 

https://www.usmemorialday.org/taps

 

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Thanks to History Facts

 It took the Oxford English Dictionary editors five years just to reach the word "ant."

. The Oxford English Dictionary, also known as simply the OED, is a massive reference book containing not just words — including obsolete ones — and their definitions, but also detailed information on the words' history and usage. The project was born in 1857, when the Philological Society of London, a group dedicated to the history of literature and words, established a committee to collect words that didn't appear in existing dictionaries at the time. Their goal was to document the English language going back to Anglo-Saxon times, which ended around 1000 CE — so quite a lot of territory to cover.

 

Work started in earnest in 1879, after Oxford University Press signed on to finance and publish the dictionary, at the time called the New English Dictionary (NED). The staff buckled down and got to work reading and researching; editor James Murray estimated the dictionary would take about 10 years to compile. In 1884, after working on the dictionary for five years, the first fascicle (meaning a part of a book) came out. It only covered the words "a" through "ant."

 

The project was clearly more ambitious than the Philological Society had originally imagined. Murray started working on the dictionary full time, and over the next several years he was joined by another editor and two co-editors. The last fascicle was published on April 19, 1928, nearly 50 years after work began. The original plan was for the dictionary to contain 6,400 pages over four volumes; ultimately, the first edition of the NED contained 12 volumes with 15,487 pages, covering a whopping 414,825 words. Today, the OED continues to document the growing English language, and includes more than 600,000 entries, with new words and meanings added regularly.

 

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Thanks to Brett

Daily Memo: Pacifying Gaza

Plans are shaping up for the international stabilization force.

By Geopolitical Futures

 

November 11, 2025

The U.S. in Israel. The United States plans to build a military base in Israel along the border with the Gaza Strip, according to Ynet news. It will house several thousand American troops who will be tasked with maintaining the ceasefire in the region. The base – which is reportedly the result of a negotiated agreement between the U.S. and Israel – is expected to cost half a billion dollars. Some experts note this decision violates traditional Israeli policy that limits international intervention in the region.

 

Turkey deploys? Turkey is preparing to deploy approximately 2,000 troops to the Gaza Strip without U.S. approval and without consent from Israel, the Middle East Eye reported. If it goes through, the deployment will be part of the international stabilization force meant to keep the peace after the Israel-Hamas war.

 

America's newest ally? Following a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa said bilateral relations have entered a new era and Syria is now a geopolitical ally in which U.S. companies can invest. Within a week of the president's return, the government in Damascus is expected to hold a new round of talks with the Syrian Democratic Forces on how to incorporate its military leaders (and Kurdish forces) into the new government. The U.S. is expected to participate in the talks.

 

Force majeure in Iraq. Russian energy giant Lukoil has declared force majeure at the Iraqi oil field of West Qurna-2. (Invoking force majeure releases certain parties from fulfilling their contractual obligations due to unforeseen circumstances.) The declaration follows the imposition of U.S. sanctions, which forced Baghdad to halt all payments to Lukoil. If the situation is not resolved within six months, Lukoil will cease production and completely withdraw from the project.

 

Iranian crude boom. In September, Iran's crude oil exports rose to more than 2 million barrels per day, according to tanker tracking company TankerTrackers. This is the highest level of crude oil exports since 2018, indicating an increase in supplies despite U.S. sanctions.

 

China (sort of) honors its promise. China is developing a new "verified end user" system that would allow Beijing to issue rare earth export licenses to civilian firms while excluding those with ties to the U.S. military. Sources familiar with the plan say the system will allow China to fulfill its obligations to facilitate the export of rare earths to the U.S. without giving American defense contractors a leg up in the industry.

 

African extraction. Turkey has officially inaugurated its first foreign state-backed mining venture in Niger that will extract gold and expand Ankara's global footprint. Elsewhere, the military junta in Guinea has brought online the world's largest iron ore mine – a project 30 years in the making. The mine will be operated by Chinese-Singaporean Winning Consortium Simandou and is set to provide a significant boost to Chinese stocks of iron ore and steel. The new mine will have a significant impact on global supplies of iron ore and challenge Australia's market dominance.

 

Kazakhstan warms to Russia. The night before his visit to Russia, Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev published an article in a Russian daily praising all the interests his country shares with Russia, noting in particular the importance of their strategic partnership as the backbone of Eurasian security. The article also said Russia and Kazakhstan plan to sign an agreement that puts bilateral ties on the level of a comprehensive strategic partnership and alliance.

 

China and Morocco. More than 170 companies from China's Hunan province – mostly firms in industrial equipment manufacturing, automobiles, electronics, renewable energy, biotechnology, construction and agricultural technologies – met with Moroccan businessmen representing companies in food industries, construction materials, textiles, logistics and consulting services. The event was meant to enhance bilateral economic ties and explore new opportunities for trade and investment.

 

Tensions in Southeast Asia. The Thai government said it would suspend implementation of an expanded ceasefire agreement with Cambodia signed last month in the presence of U.S. President Donald Trump. Tensions between Bangkok and Phnom Penh escalated after four Thai soldiers were injured in a mine explosion on Nov. 10. The Thai military accused Cambodia of planting landmines. The Cambodian government denied the accusation.

 

India and Russia. A delegation of Indian exporters is set to visit Russia as part of New Delhi's efforts to expand into new export markets following U.S. President Donald Trump's sharp tariff increases. The delegation will include more than 20 representatives from the machinery and tools sectors, which together account for nearly one-fifth of India's total goods exports. The head of the delegation noted that India's machinery exports to Russia are expected to reach $1.75 billion this year. Meanwhile, India's machinery exports to the U.S. dropped 9.4 percent year-on-year in September to $1.4 billion, with total exports to the U.S. falling to $5.4 billion from $6.9 billion in August.

 

 

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Thanks to 1440

House Shutdown Vote

The House reconvenes today and is expected to vote on a Senate bill to reopen the government. The vote comes on the 43rd day of the US' longest shutdown.

Seven Democrats and one independent joined 52 Republicans to pass the Senate bill, which would fund much of the government through January. The Agriculture Department—which facilitates SNAP food benefits to 42 million Americans—would be funded through September 2026. The bill does not extend COVID-era healthcare subsidies for 24 million people who purchase plans under the Affordable Care Act. Democratic leaders had sought to make reopening the government conditional on extending those subsidies, due to expire Dec. 31. ACA marketplace premiums are projected to rise up to 30%, from 18%, without an extension. Federal health subsidies cost an estimated $1.8T in 2023, roughly 7% of the US gross domestic product.

Separately, airlines canceled an estimated 6% of flights at 40 of the US' busiest airports yesterday amid ongoing air traffic controller shortages.

 

 

Early Winter Blast

An Arctic blast swept across the eastern half of the US this week, driving temperatures 15 to 25 degrees below average and affecting over 190 million people. The first major winter storm of the 2025-26 season was fueled by a sharp dip in the jet stream that pulled polar air from Canada nearly three weeks before meteorological winter officially begins Dec. 1.

The winter storm set record daily lows from Alabama to Tennessee and brought rare freezes to the Deep South. Snowfall reached as much as 18 inches in Michigan, while parts of Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin saw more than a foot of lake-effect snow. About 7.5 inches of snow was reported in the Smoky Mountains, with some snow reported as far south as northern Georgia. Florida experienced wind chills in the 30s, triggering warnings as stunned iguanas fell from trees, paralyzed by the cold.

Temperatures are expected to begin rebounding today as the system shifts farther east. See photos here.

 

 

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Thanks to Nice News

Meet the Trailblazer Taking on a Record-Breaking, Solo Antarctic Crossing

 

 

"FINISH LINE!!! I did it!" Colin O'Brady wrote in 2018 after completing the first solo, unsupported, and unaided crossing of Antarctica, covering 932 miles in 54 days. Now, seven years later, the adventurer is pushing that finish line even farther, embarking imminently on an unprecedented 1,780-mile journey across the continent over 110 days — adding on the Ross and Filchner ice shelves in addition to the Antarctic landmass between them.

 

"I'm really curious if I can go back and push myself not just farther in distance … but in a spiritual context — mind, body, soul," he told NBC News. "And to me, there's no better proving ground for that than Antarctica." Should he succeed, O'Brady will have another notch on his trailblazing belt, becoming the first individual to traverse the entire continent on foot, traveling solo and without any external support, from one ice shelf to the other.

 

The journey ahead will be anything but easy: He will face temperatures as low as minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit, hauling a 500-pound sled loaded with all his supplies while wearing just a single set of clothes.

 

If you think this sounds like the stuff of an adventure documentary, you'd be right. Netflix is following O'Brady for an upcoming doc, offering viewers a front-row look at what's sure to be quite a ride. As O'Brady puts it, it's a reminder to push one's limits despite fear: "I'm definitely afraid of dying. I'm not trying to take some crazy risk or something like that. But when I really put my head on the pillow at night, what I'm more afraid of is not fully living." Learn more about the trek — and how you can track O'Brady in real time

 

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This Day in U S Military History

 

1912 – Robert Scott's diary and dead body were found in Antarctica.

 

1912 – LT Theodore Ellyson makes first successful launching of an airplane (A-3) by catapult at the Washington Navy Yard.

 

1940 – CNO Admiral Stark submits memorandum to Secretary of the Navy on 4 plans if U.S. enters war. He favors the fourth one, Plan Dog, calling for strong offensive in the Atlantic and defense in the Pacific.

 

1942 – The World War II naval Battle of Guadalcanal began. A large American convoy carrying supplies and reinforcements retreats upon the approach of a large Japanese naval force. The Japanese carry out air attacks on the American land positions as well as their shipping.

 

1943 – The Japanese carrier aircraft stationed at Rabaul on New Britain are withdrawn. Of the 173 planes committed, 121 have been lost, with many pilots.

 

1948 – An international war crimes tribunal in Tokyo passes death sentences on seven Japanese military and government officials, including General Hideki Tojo, who served as premier of Japan from 1941 to 1944. Eight days before, the trial ended after 30 months with all 25 Japanese defendants being found guilty of breaching the laws and customs of war. In addition to the death sentences imposed on Tojo and others principals, such as Iwane Matsui, who organized the Rape of Nanking, and Heitaro Kimura, who brutalized Allied prisoners of war, 16 others were sentenced to life imprisonment. The remaining two of the 25 defendants were sentenced to lesser terms in prison. Unlike the Nuremberg trial of German war criminals, where there were four chief prosecutors representing Great Britain, France, the United States, and the USSR, the Tokyo trial featured only one chief prosecutor–American Joseph B. Keenan, a former assistant to the U.S. attorney general. However, other nations, especially China, contributed to the proceedings, and Australian judge William Flood Webb presided. In addition to the central Tokyo trial, various tribunals sitting outside Japan judged some 5,000 Japanese guilty of war crimes, of whom more than 900 were executed.

 

1980 – The U.S. space probe Voyager 1 came within 77,000 miles of Saturn. More than three years after its launch, the U.S. planetary probe Voyager 1 edges within 77,000 miles of Saturn, the second-largest planet in the solar system. The photos, beamed 950 million miles back to California, stunned scientists. The high-resolution images showed a world that seemed to confound all known laws of physics. Saturn had not six, but hundreds of rings. The rings appeared to dance, buckle, and interlock in ways never thought possible. Two rings were intertwined, or "braided," and pictures showed dark radial "spokes" moving inside the rings in the direction of rotation. Voyager 2, a sister spacecraft, arrived at Saturn in August 1981. The Voyagers also discovered three new moons around Saturn and a substantial atmosphere around Titan, Saturn's largest moon. Voyager 1 was preceded to Saturn by Pioneer 11, a smaller and less sophisticated U.S. spacecraft that flew by the gas giant in September 1979. The Voyager spacecrafts were equipped with high-resolution television cameras that sent back more than 30,000 images of Saturn, its rings, and satellite. Voyager 1 was actually launched 16 days after Voyager 2, but its trajectory followed a quicker path to the outer planets. Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter in March 1979, followed by Voyager 2 four months later. Both spacecraft then continued on to Saturn, with Voyager 1 arriving in November 1980 and Voyager 2 in August 1981. Voyager 2 was then diverted to the remaining gas giants, arriving at Uranus in January 1986 and Neptune in August 1989. Voyager 1, meanwhile, studied interplanetary space and continued on to the edge of the solar system. In February 1998, Voyager 1 became the most distant man-made object from the sun, surpassing the distance of Pioneer 10. Voyager 2 is also traveling out of the solar system but at a slower pace. Both Voyager spacecrafts contain a gold-plated copper disk that has on it recorded sounds and images of Earth. Along with 115 analog images, the disk features sound selections that include greetings in 55 languages, 35 natural and man-made sounds, and portions of 27 musical pieces. The Voyagers are expected to remain operable until about the year 2020, periodically sending back data on the edge of the solar system.

 

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

 

EVERHART, FORREST E.

Rank and organization: Technical Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company H, 359th Infantry, 90th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Kerling, France, 12 November 1944. Entered service at: Texas City, Tex. Birth: Bainbridge, Ohio. G.O. No.: 77, 10 September 1945. Citation: He commanded a platoon that bore the brunt of a desperate enemy counterattack near Korling, France, before dawn on 12 November 1944. When German tanks and self-propelled guns penetrated his left flank and overwhelming infantry forces threatened to overrun the 1 remaining machinegun in that section, he ran 400 yards through woods churned by artillery and mortar concentrations to strengthen the defense. With the 1 remaining gunner, he directed furious fire into the advancing hordes until they swarmed close to the position. He left the gun, boldly charged the attackers and, after a 15-minute exchange of hand grenades, forced them to withdraw leaving 30 dead behind. He re-crossed the fire-swept terrain to his then threatened right flank, exhorted his men and directed murderous fire from the single machinegun at that position. There, in the light of bursting mortar shells, he again closed with the enemy in a hand grenade duel and, after a fierce 30-minute battle, forced the Germans to withdraw leaving another 20 dead. The gallantry and intrepidity of T/Sgt. Everhart in rallying his men and refusing to fall back in the face of terrible odds were highly instrumental in repelling the fanatical enemy counterattack directed at the American bridgehead across the Moselle River.

 

*SAYERS, FOSTER J.

Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army, Company L, 357th Infantry, 90th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Thionville, France, 12 November 1944. Entered service at: Howard, Pa. Birth: Marsh Creek, Pa. G.O. No.: 89, 19 October 1945. Citation: He displayed conspicuous gallantry above and beyond the call of duty in combat on 12 November 1944, near Thionville, France. During an attack on strong hostile forces entrenched on a hill he fearlessly ran up the steep approach toward his objective and set up his machinegun 20 yards from the enemy. Realizing it would be necessary to attract full attention of the dug-in Germans while his company crossed an open area and flanked the enemy, he picked up his gun, charged through withering machinegun and rifle fire to the very edge of the emplacement, and there killed 12 German soldiers with devastating close-range fire. He took up a position behind a log and engaged the hostile infantry from the flank in an heroic attempt to distract their attention while his comrades attained their objective at the crest of the hill. He was killed by the very heavy concentration of return fire; but his fearless assault enabled his company to sweep the hill with minimum of casualties, killing or capturing every enemy soldier on it. Pfc. Sayers' indomitable fighting spirit, aggressiveness, and supreme devotion to duty live on as an example of the highest traditions of the military service.

 

*BARNES, JOHN ANDREW III

Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army, Company C, 1st Battalion, 503d Infantry 173d Airborne Brigade. Place and date: Dak To, Republic of Vietnam, 12 November 1967. Entered service at: Boston, Mass. Born: 16 April 1945, Boston, Mass. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. Pfc. Barnes distinguished himself by exceptional heroism while engaged in combat against hostile forces. Pfc. Barnes was serving as a grenadier when his unit was attacked by a North Vietnamese force, estimated to be a battalion. Upon seeing the crew of a machine gun team killed, Pfc. Barnes, without hesitation, dashed through the bullet swept area, manned the machine gun, and killed 9 enemy soldiers as they assaulted his position. While pausing just long enough to retrieve more ammunition, Pfc. Barnes observed an enemy grenade thrown into the midst of some severely wounded personnel close to his position. Realizing that the grenade could further injure or kill the majority of the wounded personnel, he sacrificed his life by throwing himself directly onto the hand grenade as it exploded. Through his indomitable courage, complete disregard for his own safety, and profound concern for his fellow soldiers, he averted a probable loss of life and injury to the wounded members of his unit. Pfc. Barnes' extraordinary heroism, and intrepidity at the cost of his life, above and beyond the call of duty, are in the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the U.S. Army.

 

*DIAS, RALPH E.

Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Marine Corps, 3d Platoon, Company D, 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division (Rein) FMF. Place and date: Que Son Mountains, Republic of Vietnam, 12 November 1969. Entered service at: Pittsburgh, Pa. Born: 15 July 1950, Shelocta, Indiana County, Pa. Citation: As a member of a reaction force which was pinned down by enemy fire while assisting a platoon in the same circumstance, Pfc. Dias, observing that both units were sustaining casualties, initiated an aggressive assault against an enemy machine gun bunker which was the principal source of hostile fire. Severely wounded by enemy snipers while charging across the open area, he pulled himself to the shelter of a nearby rock. Braving enemy fire for a second time, Pfc. Dias was again wounded. Unable to walk, he crawled 15 meters to the protection of a rock located near his objective and, repeatedly exposing himself to intense hostile fire, unsuccessfully threw several hand grenades at the machine gun emplacement. Still determined to destroy the emplacement, Pfc. Dias again moved into the open and was wounded a third time by sniper fire. As he threw a last grenade which destroyed the enemy position, he was mortally wounded by another enemy round. Pfc. Dias' indomitable courage, dynamic initiative, and selfless devotion to duty upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life in the service to his country.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for November 12,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

 12 November

1909: Wanamaker's Department Store in Philadelphia advertised "Flying Machines for Sale." The ad offered a Bleriot plane, a duplicate of the one that flew the English Channel, for $5,000 in connection with an exhibit of the Bleriot. (24)

1912: Lt Theodore G. Ellyson made the second and successful catapult launching in a Curtiss seaplane from a float at the Washington Navy Yard. (21)

1921: FIRST AIR-TO-AIR REFUELING. Wesley May, with a 5-gallon can of gasoline strapped to his back, stepped from the wing of a Lincoln Standard to the wing skid of a JN-4 and climbed to the engine to pour gas into the tank. Frank Hawks flew the Lincoln and Earl S. Daugherty the JN-4. (18) (24)

1941: First launching of an experimental GB-8 Glide Bomb with radio controls. (24)

1942: Under the leadership of Lt Gen Lewis H. Brereton, Ninth Air Force started combat operations in Egypt to support British efforts in North Africa. (21) (24)

1944: The largest air and ground cooperative effort to date occurred as over 4,000 Allied planes dropped more than 10,000 tons of bombs on enemy targets.

1950: Pan American World Airways finished a global radiotelephone communications system. The system had 19,687 miles of voice radio link and 32 high frequency radio ground stations on 16 islands and continents. (24)

1952: KOREAN WAR. Through 13 November, six B-29s from the 98th Bombardment Wing knocked four spans out of Pyongyang's restored railway bridges. (28)

1956: A USMC twin-engine Sikorsky S-56 helicopter set a 162.7 MPH speed record at Stratford. (24)

1960: To launch the Discoverer XVII into polar orbit from Vandenberg AFB, the USAF used a restartable Agena B in combination with a Thor rocket. This marked the first successful flight of a restartable rocket. (24)

1965: Last QF-80 drone in the USAF shot down at Holloman AFB. The USAF picked eight aerospace research pilots for assignment to the Manned Orbiting Laboratory Program. (16)

1970: At Edwards AFB, a Boeing 747-B set a world record with a gross takeoff weight of 820,700 pounds to better the C-5A's 14 October 1969 unofficial record of 798,000 pounds. (3)

1980: Exercise BRIGHT STAR. Through 25 November, elements of the new Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force participated in its first joint overseas exercise. Eight A-7s from the 150 TFG at Kirtland AFB deployed to Cairo West, Egypt. (4) (26) For the first time, USAFE tasked an entire wing, the 50 TFW at Hahn AB, Germany, to exercise its full wartime mission in a chemical environment for a sustained period. (26)

1997: The Boeing Phantom Works (formerly McDonnell-Douglas in St. Louis) X-36 Tailless Fighter Agility Research Aircraft successfully completed its flight research program for NASA at Edwards AFB. (3)

1998: Operation PHOENIX SCORPION III. After Saddam Hussein expelled UN weapons inspectors from Iraq, the DoD ordered more US forces to Southwest Asia using AMC airlifters through 15 November. The Clinton administration accepted Iraq's peace overtures on 14 November to end the deployment. During the four-day effort, AMC completed 257 airlift and tanker missions to move more than 3,000 passengers and 2,700 short tons of cargo. Tankers refueled 90 aircraft, offloading 9.3 million pounds of fuel. (22)

 

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