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USO Canteen FReeper Style ~ Bomber Girls ~ September 24, 2002
FRiends of the USO Canteen, Snow Bunny and LindaSOG

Posted on 09/24/2002 12:26:57 AM PDT by Snow Bunny

If you know a Veteran, someone in your family,
friend of the family, neighbor, who served their
country, take a brief moment of your day to thank them.
Thank them for the sacrifice they made
for the better good of their country.

We at Free Republic, and the USO Canteen FReeper Style,
are thankful for every service member
in our military, who has served our great nation.

So, to the men and women who answered the call,
in both times of war and peace, thank you.

Message from Snow Bunny to all those who visit the Canteen.

This is how I think of the USO Canteen Freeper Style.
It is like a cottage down a road,
a place where a weary veteran can spend the night.

Since it opened, it is magical how so many
Freepers who post here, feel it too.
It has been so dear how the Freepers
kept making it a cottage - a home-type of place
that had a huge living room
for them to visit in and a dance floor, a library, etc.

Many Veterans have written to me,
saying that the Canteen is like home
to them for the first time since they served.

This is your Canteen -
a respite from our busy
and sometimes troubling world.
Make yourself at home.


Bomber Girls - The Art of Nose Art

When someone says "nose art," the term conjures up images of World War II fighter planes careening through the sky combating the Luftwaffe while sporting pin-up girls, predatory eagles or "Old Glory" -- and, in some cases, all of the above.

During World War II, pin-ups emerged from the fine airbrushed art of Alberto Vargas, whose images were the most sought-after section of the popular magazine, Esquire. With thousands of airplanes droning off to war, noseart emerged as the aviator's unique calling card.

Although the Army Air Force attempted to ban and censor noseart on several occasions, ultimately, the art would remain.

<-- Click me for a full view

It would be an understatement to call most of the clothing on pin-up girls (as they were called) "painted on". As you can see, the clothing was not meant to hide very much at all.

Many aircrews paid their artists to make sure that even this little bit of clothing was removed. Some planes were even named accordingly, "O-O Nothing!", "Off We Go", "Surprise Attack", "Over Exposed", "Tantalizing Takeoff", and dozens of others were popular double-entendres.

Click me for a full view -->

Some poster art of the era used pin-up inspired imagery of women, often in military clothes. This type of art was most often used for War Bond drives and morale-boosters on the home front. Industry often played a part, putting up posters in company cafeterias and at the clock where you got your card punched at the beginning and end of each day.

<-- Click me for a full view

The Pacific War against Japan involved long-range missions and hours of miserable heat, rain, and mud. The Hawaiian pin-up, complete with a lei, could only serve to remind the airmen and ground crews of their time back east.

Click me for a full view -->

It was no mystery why these artworks ended up in dozens of variations on so many airplanes. It reminded the airmen of home and of better times. And in a day when death could be just hours away, it gave them something else to think about.

Most were women who you could go home to, if you lived to go home at all. And that is why they formed such a central place at the frontlines of the air war. They represented hope and home. Good luck, chum, they would whisper, my dreams are riding with you.

<-- Click me for a full view

The metaphor of looking through a keyhole for a sneak peek was always popular, even if quite politically incorrect in today's day and age. Nonetheless, despite the artwork, the airmen were typically nothing short of absolute gentlemen, particularly at 8th and 9th Air Force bases around England.

Click me for a full view -->

The finest pin-ups were torn from the pages of Esquire Magazine. Each artwork was published with a poem by Phil Stack. These poems were designed to rhyme and present without much subtlety, again using the double-entendre to effect.

One went simply, "I'm learning some commando tricks. / For keeping fit, they're dandy, / And when you men come home again, / They're apt to come in handy!"

<-- Click me for a full view

A few of the pin-ups were so sexy and provocative that they could only be called bombshells. Some were Hollywood starlets, some were imaginary. Almost all of them were proportioned beyond mere genetics.

What was the ideal woman of the 1940s and 1950s wouldn't make it in the world of today's supermodels. The twiggy, overly thin look that dominates the fashion industry of the 1990s contrasts sharply with the blushing, well-proportioned female form of the war years.

Click me for a full view -->

Its value in terms of morale was unquestioned. In the end, it emerged as a defining element of the era, gracing everything from the noses of airplanes, to leather jackets, to the walls of barracks huts and O-Clubs across Europe and the Pacific.

If anything the pin-ups that inspired a generation of aviators were quite practical. Some were exotic, to be sure, but virtually all were posed in positions that seemed quite acceptable to the gentleman's view of the era.

<-- Click me for a full view

Some pin-up art retains its charm and is still in use today. The 1943 Esquire pin-up, "There'll Always Be A Christmas" is the official nose art of Virgin, one of England's largest commercial air carriers. What once graced the nose of countless 8th Air Force B-17s can now be seen on the sides of Virgin's fleet of Boeing 747s.

Click me for a full view -->

The Gulf War saw a resurgence of nose art. With hundreds of airplanes and thousands of the Air Force's best deployed to Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the Emirates, it didn't take long for nose art to reappear.

As in the past, it was allowed to stay, but only for the duration of the war. This example, painted on the side of a KC-135 at Riyahd, is typical of much of the nose art in the Gulf. Arabic numerals sit above the Air Force's own, testimony to the location and the relationship that developed with Saudi ground crews.

As Desert Shield wound down and the coalition forces in Southwest Asia prepared for the assault against Saddam's entrenched ground forces in Kuwait, thoughts of home and the holidays again entered the mind of aircrew members across the region.

This airplane was painted with a fitting holiday theme, Santa being pulled in his sleigh by his magical flying camels, err... wasn't that supposed to be reindeer?

Much of Desert Storm's nose art was based not on pin-ups but on science fiction and fantasy art. This tradition continues and grows as a new generation of artists paint based on their own influences. After all, it has been a long time since Esquire featured a pin-up as a centerfold.

This C-130 is a classic example of the new genre. While popular in the field, there are countless nose art aficionados who prefer the old, somewhat less politically correct look.

It seems fitting that Disney characters and movie influences should return to the fore. This Desert Storm C-130 is emblazoned with the ever popular Roger Rabbit -- ever popular that is, but still a close second behind his cartoon wife.
Another aerial refueler declares the very essence of pilotage -- cool as a cat, smooth as silk. You just can't beat confidence. And so much for popular influences: wasn't this the ubiquitous Frito-Lay mascot of an ad campaign from a few years back?
Another Gulf War C-130 cargo airplane boasted the nose art, "The Desert Phoenix". You could say this as much as about a military that came back from the Vietnam blues to fight and win it all as you could about nose art itself. Without the atmosphere of the Gulf, there is little question that this generation would not have seen much more than a smattering of artwork on the sides of airplanes.
Who said you had to be cute or sexy to be nose art? The popular comic book and later movie character, the Mutant Ninja Turtles made showing more than once during the Gulf War. Here, a 435 TAW C-130 is painted with the likeness of Donatello, now renamed the "Desert Ninja".

A major role of nose art is in building morale and expressing the pride and strength of the forces. Here, a bulldog chews up Saddam's Iraq, apt and very accurate foresight into the days to come.

The 5th Bombardment Wing painted a number of its aircraft, including this one which bears the name, "America's Pride". A fitting tribute to the attitude of military aviators, like all military men they remain among the most patriotic and dedicated people in the country.

You don't have to be a pirate to get the message here. From the hostage crisis with Iran to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and to dozens of terrorist actions, Americans have harbored a touch of ill will toward the two-bit dictators that rule a number of the countries in the Middle East.

This 435th TAW C-130 is ready to even the score -- finally against an enemy that is concrete, military, and spoiling for a "fair" fight. In the end, the Gulf War extracted more than its due, with over 250,000 Iraqi soldiers killed for loss of just about a hundred from the coalition forces.

Considered by many to be the finest technical example of nose art from the Gulf War, this beautifully rendered pig carries the motto, "Ol Lightnen" and the plane's tail number 0005. Painted on the side of a KC-135 refueller out of Riyahd, it is one of the classics of the era.

The B-17G Shoo Shoo Baby flew 24 combat missions in WW II with the 91st Bomb Group, known as "The Ragged Irregulars". The plane was based at Bassingbourn, England.

Its first mission was the bombing of Frankfurt, Germany, on March 24, 1944. The plane ended its combat career after taking battle damage during a mission to Posen, Poland, on May 29, 1944. Today, the plane is at Wright-Patterson AFB in the US Air Force Museum.

The Duck goes to war.... Painted on the side of a restored, flying P-51D, this nose art captures an era when Walt Disney freely offered his studio's talents to design unit patches and symbols for Americans going to war. Beyond the Vargas pin-ups, Walt Disney's art did more to define the motif of nose art than any other single source.
Yankee Lady is another restored example of a B-17G. Frequently seen at airshows around the country, it is one of the finest examples of a Flying Fortress still capable of taking to the air. If you've never heard the power of four Pratt & Whitney engines at full tilt, you're missing a real piece of history.
 
Nose art is a vital part of military aviation history that enriches the mythology of vintage bomber planes and other military aircraft. However, nose art is still alive and well.

Nose Art from Operation Enduring Freedom



TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: usocanteen
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To: SAMWolf
Fantastic graphics, Sam! Love them.



241 posted on 09/24/2002 6:18:23 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: Snow Bunny; Victoria Delsoul; coteblanche; SpookBrat; MistyCA; SassyMom; LindaSOG; souris; ...
USS ENTERPRISE (CVN 65)

A bottle of champagne shattered on the bow of the awesome new warship, USS ENTERPRISE (CVN 65), breaking the silence of an anxious crowd at Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, Newport News, Virginia. It was Sunday morning, September 24, 1960, when Mrs. William B. Franke, wife of the former Secretary of the Navy, christened the eighth USS ENTERPRISE, bringing to life the longest, tallest and mightiest warship to ever sail the seas.

At the commissioning of ENTERPRISE, the world’s first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, Secretary of the Navy John B. Connally, Jr., called it a worthy successor to the highly decorated seventh USS ENTERPRISE of World War II. “The Fighting Gray Lady, as it was called, served in such well-known battles as the raid on Tokyo and the Battle of Midway.” Secretary Connally went on to say, “The new ENTERPRISE will reign a long, long time as queen of the seas.”

ENTERPRISE made its maiden voyage under the command of Captain Vincent P. DePoix, Jan. 12, 1962.

In October 1962, ENTERPRISE was dispatched to its first international crisis. ENTERPRISE and other ships in the Second Fleet set up a “strict quarantine of all offensive military equipment under shipment to Cuba.” The blockade was put in place on October 24, and the first Soviet ship was stopped the next day. On October 28, Khrushchev agreed to remove the missiles and dismantle the missile bases on Cuba.

ENTERPRISE made its second and third deployments to the Mediterranean in 1963 and 1964. During the latter deployment, on May 13, the world’s first nuclear-powered task force was formed when USS LONG BEACH and USS BAINBRIDGE joined ENTERPRISE. On July 31, the three ships were designated Task Force One and sent on Operation SEA ORBIT, a historic 30,565-mile voyage around the world, accomplished without a single refueling or replenishment.

The Big E transferred to the Pacific’s Seventh Fleet in November 1965 and became the first nuclear-powered ship to engage in combat when it launched bomb-laden aircraft in a projection of power against the Viet Cong on December 2, 1965. Its hot decks launched 125 sorties on the first day.

In all, ENTERPRISE made six combat deployments to Southeast Asia from 1965 to 1972. Between combat tours, ENTERPRISE returned to Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in 1970 for an overhaul and refueling.

When ENTERPRISE made its seventh Western Pacific (WESTPAC) deployment in September 1974, it became the first carrier to deploy with the new Tomcat fighter plane. During the deployment, in February 1975, ENTERPRISE was called on to help in evacuation of Saigon. During Operation FREQUENT WIND, Big E aircraft flew 95 sorties.

The ship made its eighth and ninth WESTPACs in 1976 and 1978. It sailed to Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in January 1979 for a 30-month comprehensive overhaul. ENTERPRISE made its 10th, 11th, and 12th WESTPAC deployments in 1982, 1984 and 1986.

When ENTERPRISE deployed in 1986, it became the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to transit the Suez Canal. It then entered the Mediterranean for the first time in over 22 years.

In April 1988, ENTERPRISE, on its 13th deployment, was assigned to escort reflagged Kuwaiti oil tankers in the Persian Gulf. ENTERPRISE began its 14th deployment in September 1989. In early December, ENTERPRISE participated in Operation CLASSIC RESOLVE, President Bush’s response to Philippine President Corazon Aquino’s request for support during the coup attempt.

In March 1990, ENTERPRISE completed its highly successful around-the-world deployment by arriving in Norfolk, Virginia. ENTERPRISE had successfully and safely steamed more than 43,000 miles from its long-time homeport of Alameda, California. In October, ENTERPRISE moved to Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company for refueling and the Navy’s largest complex overhaul ever attempted.

ENTERPRISE returned to sea September 27, 1994, and on June 28, 1996, began its 15th deployment. The Big E enforced no-fly zones in two of the world’s most critical areas, Bosnia-Herzegovina (Operation JOINT ENDEAVOR) and Iraq (Operation SOUTHERN WATCH).

Following a four and a half month maintenance period at Newport News Shipbuilding and a comprehensive work-up cycle, the ship departed for its 16th deployment in November 1998. From December 16-20, 1998, Big E and Carrier Air Wing THREE participated in Operation DESERT FOX, expending more than 725,000 pounds of ordnance against military targets in Iraq.

The battle group also conducted operations in the Adriatic Sea and prepared for possible NATO military intervention in the Yugoslavian province of Kosovo. The ship returned to Norfolk in May 1999 and completed a six-month ESRA.

ENTERPRISE and Carrier Air Wing EIGHT deployed in April 2001, marking the ship’s 17th overseas deployment. Team ENTERPRISE participated in several multi-national maritime exercises between port visits to Spain, France, Italy, England, Portugal, and Greece. Subsequently, the ship spent two months in the Arabian Gulf in support of Operation SOUTHERN WATCH and Maritime Interdiction Operations. ENTERPRISE aborted her transit home after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 and steamed overnight to the North Arabian Sea in direct support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM. Big E once again took her place in history by becoming one of the first units to respond in a crisis with her awesome striking power. Big E expended more than 800,000 pounds of ordnance during the operation. ENTERPRISE returned to her homeport at Naval Station Norfolk, November 10, 2001.

On January 7, 2002 ENTERPRISE entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for a scheduled one-year EDSRA.

USS Enterprise (CVN 65) celebrates the carrier's 40th anniversary with a re-creation of the famous 1960's photo. Enterprise recently completed it's 17th overseas deployment and is currently in a one year extended docking ship's restrictive availability (EDSRA) in the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. (U.S. Navy photo)

242 posted on 09/24/2002 6:19:30 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Victoria Delsoul
I haven't seen your what? TFPA!!!
243 posted on 09/24/2002 6:20:27 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Victoria Delsoul
You gotta love Nose Art. Too bad PC killed most of it off.
244 posted on 09/24/2002 6:21:12 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Kathy in Alaska
Hi Kathy. See you tonight, I hope.


245 posted on 09/24/2002 6:23:34 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: SAMWolf
<
246 posted on 09/24/2002 6:27:13 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: SAMWolf
You gotta love Nose Art.

I do.



247 posted on 09/24/2002 6:28:34 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: Victoria Delsoul
LOL! Good Cote gave that to you.
248 posted on 09/24/2002 6:30:50 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Victoria Delsoul
LOL! Good thing Cote gave that to you.
249 posted on 09/24/2002 6:30:54 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: SAMWolf
Oh wow, Sam. You're working overtime tonight. ;-)



250 posted on 09/24/2002 6:31:37 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: SpookBrat
Thanks for that, I love that old Texas swing. I love any music that is authentic.
251 posted on 09/24/2002 6:34:52 PM PDT by Dakmar
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To: Victoria Delsoul
Nope. Just real busy during my "lunch".
252 posted on 09/24/2002 6:35:28 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Victoria Delsoul
Being upside-down like that makes your boobies look perkier, lol.
253 posted on 09/24/2002 6:36:27 PM PDT by Dakmar
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To: SAMWolf
Yep, it's very useful.


254 posted on 09/24/2002 6:36:51 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: tomkow6
Please thank your "kitty-katz" for me. Does it come with instructions? And those little premeasured packets? I must admit, it's cute.


255 posted on 09/24/2002 6:39:20 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
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To: Dakmar
LOL, you haven't seen me standing on my head, hehehe.


That's not me btw, hahaha.

256 posted on 09/24/2002 6:41:27 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: SAMWolf
Hmmm, what big lunch!
257 posted on 09/24/2002 6:42:39 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: Victoria Delsoul
I can believe that.
258 posted on 09/24/2002 6:45:11 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: Victoria Delsoul
Hurray for hand stands!
259 posted on 09/24/2002 6:45:52 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: AntiJen
Jen, thanks for posting the Heroes song every day, for our troops, past and present are surely that: OUR HEROES! And that baby is so precious.


260 posted on 09/24/2002 6:47:51 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
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