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USO Canteen FReeper Style....FReeper FRiday.... July 12,2002
Larry Johnson , AntiJen , Cotelanche and Snow Bunny
Posted on 07/12/2002 12:48:22 AM PDT by Snow Bunny
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The USO Canteen Honors FReepers who have served, or are now serving their country.
Today's Honoree
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You may have a loved one who has served in the past. We at the FReeper USO Canteen would like to honor each and every one.
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Welcome to the USO Canteen FReeper Style
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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...............................................................................................................................................................................
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In 1998 Larry Johnson became a FReeper.
He retired to Maine in 1996 to be near his grandkids. Jay is on his back in the first picture.
It was Maine where he first heard Rush and Mary Matalin and got on WebTV to view Drudge, whom he thinks led him to Free Republic.
The road to Maine is etched on his t-shirt, LAAFB. For Larry is a retired USAF Officer, who served 22 years, 13 active in Los Angeles and another 14 under contract to the AF space agencies based there.
"I spent WWII in Baltimore, in uniform whenever I could get one. The sailor suit picture is my favorite.
But as you can see from the picture me with my older brother Carl and our Dad, we were given Army things.
At the rail yard, we raided freight cars for helmets and belts and shell casings."
The picture of Larry and Carl in AF blue was when Larry was at Gettysburg College. In the next picture he and fellow senior ROTC cadets are appointed Distinguished Graduates.
After a year's AF assignment at NYU graduate school, Larry and his college sweetheart, Darby, were married.
The couple posed with his mom and dad who performed the ceremony.
The next 10 years Larry was a weather officer, forecasting for global SAC and recon missions using the new satellites that tracked his career.
He returned to graduate school at the University of Michigan.
"I went to LA to be the staff weather officer to the classified space programs, now credited to the National Recon Organization (NRO).
They needed support for launch of course, but on orbit weather and recovery weather scouted by weather satellites was my specialty. The launch experience was very valuable to my later career. The Manned Orbiting Laboratory was a fun program since we had our own military astronauts. When that program fell to the VietNam budget, those guys, test pilots all who flew into LAAFB, did very well, many flying the Shuttle."
Larry volunteered to go to Vietnam to run a classified weather satellite site at Tan Son Nhut.
The picture is of Site VI and the group picture shows those site troops who are not on shift. These are mostly electronic techs trained for this job at Keesler AFB.
Larry says he grew a mustache to look older as a supervisor. And he is the one wearing California sandals.
In Vietnam the weather satellite data was real time sent down to 7th AF HQ where it was briefed for the day's sorties.
"Two other favorite pastimes were frequent trips to the post office where I am standing in this picture and on my day off to find quiet places in Saigon like the Continental Palace beer garden where I sit in this picture".
This was Larry's last job as a weather officer.
He then returned to LAAFB.
"My first job as an engineer was in the Titan Launch vehicle program in the same building where MOL had been.
NASA was buying Titans for their interplanetary missions. I was to make NASA happy (see picture of me and the Viking and launch vehicle directors) and to manage the launch facilities changes and Titan engineering to integrate NASA's Centaur upper stage.
At the same time I was helping the Air Force Public Affairs remind the public that the Titan and the Launch pad were Air Force contributions.
The success of the Viking missions stands out as one of them landed on Mars on THE FOURTH OF JULY 1976 !"
Larry says his family saw him a little more when he was in the space launch business than when he was in Vietnam.
There were social things that wives just love as in this picture of Larry and Darby in formal gear (always white in LA).
But Larry traveled to Cape Canaveral AFS which NASA kept calling Kennedy, hundreds of times. Larry stayed in LA so long that both of his kids went K-12 in Manhattan Beach schools.
After Titan he had a Vandenberg AFB Shuttle launch pad planning job and was a safety standard officer for satellite tracking stations.
"My last assignments in the USAF were as both engineering and operations directors of the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP).
This was the program that first launched when I started supporting global weather forecasts."
The last official picture of Larry is the only one he didn't shave for because he was retiring. Then he tells me he shaved off the mustache, this time to look younger to get a civilian job.
I worked as a contractor for 14 years consulting to the Air Force on integration of military payloads on launch vehicles.
The best part of the job was reporting to younger Air Force men and women who were dedicated to making every launch a success because the Warriors are now getting many more of the space payload products directly"
TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: usocanteen
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To: larryjohnson; Victoria Delsoul; Snow Bunny; whoever; COB1; Billie; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; ...
To: Snow Bunny
Shipyard prepares for submarine's keel laying
The Virginia class submarine boasts the most
sophisticated technology in U.S. submarine history,
designed with the flexibility to carry out multiple
missions. Artist rendering
NEWPORT NEWS -- They call it a ``keel laying.'' But the stealthy, sleek Texas -- the second in the Virginia class of submarines -- has no keel to lay. Its bottom is smooth, lacking the keel that runs the length of a traditional ship's underbelly to guide and steady it. Today the Texas appears in pieces, huge steel tubular sections and their elaborate innards, in the outfitting areas of Northrop Grumman Newport News and its partner shipyard, Electric Boat Corp., in Groton, Conn. One of those pieces, the 34-foot-wide steel stern, stands as a near-finished milestone in the seven-year construction of a sub that will be 377 feet long when it's delivered to the Navy in 2005. Continue
42
posted on
07/12/2002 4:22:22 AM PDT
by
Ligeia
To: Snow Bunny
Good morning, Snow! Miss you TOO!
Do you have an escort for Satyrday night?
43
posted on
07/12/2002 4:24:05 AM PDT
by
tomkow6
Comment #44 Removed by Moderator
To: larryjohnson
SALUTE! And THANK YOU!
45
posted on
07/12/2002 4:32:06 AM PDT
by
tomkow6
To: Snow Bunny; All
Good morning, EVERYBODY!
HAPPY FRIDAY!
46
posted on
07/12/2002 4:33:16 AM PDT
by
tomkow6
To: All
Today's feeble attempt at humor:
It was visitor's day at the lunatic asylum. All the inmates were standing in the courtyard and singing "Ave Maria." They were singing it beautifully. Oddly, each of them was holding a red apple in one hand and tapping it rhythmically with a pencil. A visitor listened in wonder to the performance and then approached the choir.
"I am a retired choir director," he said. "This is one of the best choirs I have ever heard."
"Yes, I'm very proud of them," said the conductor.
"You should take them on tour," said the visitor, "what are they called?"
"Surely that's obvious," replied the conductor... "They're the Moron Tapanapple Choir."
47
posted on
07/12/2002 4:34:16 AM PDT
by
tomkow6
Comment #48 Removed by Moderator
To: MistyCA
Wow! Mind if I ride in your car? You don't mind, do you Coti?
To: Snow Bunny
Morning, Snow Bunny.
You, and your posts are cool.
50
posted on
07/12/2002 4:50:13 AM PDT
by
freedom9
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; Snow Bunny; larryjohnson; All
Good morning all! Wanted to say thank you for your dedication to this wonderful daily thread.
Larry, thank you for your service and thanks to your family for their sacrifices.
51
posted on
07/12/2002 4:52:57 AM PDT
by
McLynnan
To: larryjohnson
Good morning, Sir.
Thank you for serving our country. I salute you.
To: Aeronaut
Morning, friend
To: MistyCA
Good morning to you, too =^)
To: Snow Bunny
Good Morning, Snow!
55
posted on
07/12/2002 5:09:15 AM PDT
by
Pippin
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Good Morning, Tonkin!
56
posted on
07/12/2002 5:10:31 AM PDT
by
Pippin
To: JohnHuang2
Good Morning,John!
57
posted on
07/12/2002 5:11:57 AM PDT
by
Pippin
To: MeeknMing
Good Morning, Meek!
58
posted on
07/12/2002 5:12:56 AM PDT
by
Pippin
To: larryjohnson
Thank you for your service Larry. I was quite interested in the writeup that you did a lot of meteorology stuff. My son is currently in the Air Force ROTC at the University of Oklahoma majoring in meteorology. Right now he's at Lackland AFB doing his four weeks of field training. Out of about 30 cadets starting out majoring in meteorology in his class, there are only two left.
59
posted on
07/12/2002 5:13:09 AM PDT
by
kneezles
To: ClaraSuzanne
Good morning to you, friend =^)
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