Posted on 11/03/2003 12:00:27 AM PST by SAMWolf
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![]() are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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Yeah, winter isn't a good time to be looking for construction work, High_Tech is hurting too, especially if you're an old mainframe programmer.
Legendary fighter ace inspires young troops during Kunsan visit By Franklin Fisher, Stars and Stripes Pacific edition, Monday, September 29, 2003
OSAN AIR BASE, South Korea An American fighter ace who downed 17 enemy planes in two wars was in Korea last week to spend time with the Air Force fighter wing he once commanded. Robin Olds, a retired brigadier general, now 81, came to Kunsan Air Base for a three-day visit with the 8th Fighter Wing, which regards him as a living legend. He talked to airmen, fielded questions, dined and played golf. During World War II, Olds shot down 13 German planes and destroyed another 11 on the ground. In Vietnam, he shot down four communist North Vietnamese MiG jet fighters. The wing, known as the Wolf Pack, traces its nickname to Olds and the Vietnam War. We invited Gen. Olds here so our young warriors could be inspired by a living legend, Col. Robin Rand, the 8ths commander, said in an Air Force news release. Though now designated the 8th Fighter Wing, the unit was called the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing when Olds, then a colonel, served as commander from September 1966 to September 1967 at Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand. Thats when he masterminded Operation Bolo, a fighter sweep that lured communist North Vietnamese MiG-21 fighter jets into a trap: 8th TFW F-4 Phantom jets jumped them and downed seven MiGs with no U.S. losses. Olds recognized that U.S. Air Force F-105 Thunderchiefs routinely used the same call signs, routes and altitudes in flights over North Vietnam, and that the North Vietnamese deemed the F-105s more vulnerable than the F-4s. So he conceived a ruse: Hed lead a big formation of F-4s over the North, but theyd use the same call signs and flight paths of the F-105s, hoping the MiGs would attack what they thought to be Thunderchiefs. On January 2, 1967, the Phantoms took off. The MiGs showed up, the Phantoms pounced and shot seven MiGs out of the skies. After Bolo, Olds was called to Saigon, where he fielded reporters questions about the successful mission. They asked me to describe it, and I dont remember the exact words, Olds said in a telephone interview Friday. But I remember saying something like We lured them up, they took the bait, we fought, and they lost. In the final briefing before the mission, Olds recalled saying, OK, you Wolf Pack, lets go! It was a whoop-and-a-holler, and away we went. And to this day, the 8th Fighter Wing uses the name, Wolf Pack. Olds took the name from the World War II-era 56th Fighter Group, a unit that boasted many fighter aces. So 22 years later I purloined the term, he said. Olds returned to the United States in December 1967 and became commandant of cadets at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.. He held that post until January 1971 and retired from the Air Force in 1973. Capt. Chris Penningroth, an F-16 fighter pilot with Kunsans 35th Fighter Squadron, got to hear the 6-foot-2-inch Olds speak to wing members Thursday. Hes a physically big man, said Penningroth. Listening to him talk, you get a strong sense of his integrity. So from a moral standpoint, Id say, strength. Hes an American, almost stereotypical fighter pilot, as it were, warrior. Airman 1st Class Oscar Alicea, a personnel clerk with the 8th Mission Support Squadron, was also impressed. I think hes a hero, he said. Hes an ace fighter pilot were all very proud here of the Wolf Pack, and its been an honor really to have him here. |
Greetings to all! It was another beautiful day here on the farm, with Dad continuing to get lots and lots of rest. Tony, Linda and I continue to help Mom out around the house, as well as team up to keep Dad from trying to do too much, too soon. He had a couple of visits and phone calls, but is having trouble keeping them short and not over doing it, but being the consummate politician he doesn't want to be rude to his guests (and the stubborn side of him wants to get better RIGHT NOW!). Despite the limited contact with the outside world, he continues to enjoy reading all your well wishes via email.
Although we had hoped that he'd be a little more ready for visitors by today, we may have to try and hold off a couple of more days to better ensure that he doesn't push himself too much. However, I know there isn't anything any of us will be able to do to keep him from wanting some visitors and phone calls for his birthday this coming Friday (when he turns 29, yet again ! ).
Thanks,
Mike, Tony, Linda, Ruthie and most of all Tony
Linda and I continue to help Mom out around the house, as well as team up to keep Dad from trying to do too much, too soon.
LOL! I have exactly the same problem with my dad, he's the worlds' worst patient.
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