Missing WWII Airmen are Identified

I don’t remember reading about this in the news, but I found this amazing. Ten soldiers whose plane crashed in 1944 were identified and returned to their families for burial.

IMMEDIATE RELEASE
No. 399-07

April 09, 2007
Ten Missing WWII Airmen are Identified

The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office announced today that the remains of ten U.S. servicemen, missing in action from World War II, have been identified and will be returned to their families for burial with full military honors.

They are 2nd Lt. Raymond A. Cooley, of Leary, Texas; 2nd Lt. Dudley R. Ives, of Ingleside, Texas; 2nd Lt. George E. Archer, of Cushing, Okla.; 2nd Lt. Donald F. Grady, of Harrisburg, Pa.; Tech. Sgt. Richard R. Sargent, of North Girard, Pa.; Tech. Sgt. Steve Zayac, of Cleveland, Ohio; Staff Sgt. Joseph M. King, of Detroit, Mich.; Staff Sgt. Thomas G. Knight, of Brookfield, Ill.; Staff Sgt. Norman L. Nell, of Tarkio, Mo.; and Staff Sgt. Blair W. Smith, of Nu Mine, Pa.; all U.S. Army Air Forces. The dates and locations of the funerals are being set by their families.

Representatives from the Army met with the next-of-kin of these men in their hometowns to explain the recovery and identification process and to coordinate interment with military honors on behalf of the secretary of the Army.

On April 16, 1944, a B-24 Liberator crewed by these airmen was returning to the aerodrome at Nadzab, New Guinea, after bombing enemy targets near Hollandia. The aircraft was altering course due to bad weather and was proceeding to the aerodrome at Saidor, but it never returned to friendly lines.

In late 2001, the U.S. Embassy in Papua New Guinea notified the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command that wreckage of a World War II bomber had been found in Morobe Province. Early the next year, a JPAC team surveyed the site and found aircraft wreckage and remains. They also collected more remains and Grady’s identification tag from local villagers who had found the items at the crash site.

Later in 2002, a JPAC team began excavating the crash site and recovered remains and crew-related items, including identification tags for Knight and Smith. The team was unable to complete the recovery, and another JPAC team re-visited the site two weeks later to complete the excavation. The team found additional remains and identification tags for Sargent and King.
Among dental records, other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from the JPAC and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory also used mitochondrial DNA in the identification of the remains.

For additional information on the Defense Department’s mission to account for missing Americans, visit the DPMO Web site at http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo or call (703) 699-1169.

My Brain Feels All Mushy

After spending 7.5 hours looking at a computer screen to watch video training about computer hardware, my brain feels rather numb. I’m having to sort through the stuff I already picked up from working my job and the new information I could really use for my job.

Needless to say, the process involves listening to quite a bit of remedial information, which I suppose is good.
Today, I learned about voltage, tools for detecting hardware problems and the history of bus interfaces. I revisited some DOS commands, task manager and file permissions (Zzzz..).
I have two super-huge books to go through, a handy new piece of luggage to carry them in, a hardware repair kit and a multimeter (which I have no idea how to use yet).
I’m motivated to get one certification. After that, maybe more. If Microsoft would only stop upgrading operating systems.

Does This Tongue Make Me Look Wierd?

The Humunga Tongue is the funniest dog toy ever, and dogs seem to love it. It’s a strong rubber ball with a long rubber tongue on it.
I think of it as a good way to get even with your dog for all the silly stuff it does. You know, the tracking of the mud into the house, rolling in wet grass, flinging dog food all over the place… It’s a good chance for your dog to look like the silly dog it is.

When my retriever went to visit her friend Zoey, Zoey had this toy. It was hilarious to see them walking around with it in their mouths.

You can get one for your goofy dog at DogToys.com
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Beat the Heck Out of Your Dip Worm


We went to the lake today to fish from the dock. The dock is a sad place to fish from. How many catfish come by the dock? Not too many biting ones that we found.

When we approached the dock, a man was slapping his hook against the water. I wondered why he would do that when it was probably scaring the fish.

We fished with catfish dip, a really stinky bait. It goes onto something called a dip worm; generally a 2-inch long plastic worm with ridges and holes. You stick the dip worm in your bucket of dip bait, then use a stick to smear the bait onto it.

The bait sticks to the dip worm like glue. I noticed the only time it didn’t was when it hit the water.

So, to clean your dip worm, you have to beat it against the water.

No, we didn’t catch anything. Everyone and their kids were on the dock. The fish probably just had a hard time choosing which hook to bite. 🙂

Cheesy Potatoes

CHEESY POTATOES

1 24 oz pkg. frozen hash browns
1/2 pt. half and half
4 oz. sharp Cheddar cheese
4 oz. Velveeta cheese
1 stick butter

Thaw hash browns in 9 x 13 pan. Melt the cheeses, half & half and butter over medium heat. Pour cheese mixture over hash browns and let set for one hour. Bake one hour at 350 degrees.

I’ve made the potatoes in advance, so all I have to do is pop them in the oven when I get hom

Why Did the Turkey Cross the Road?

Because it wanted to see what the loud rolling things (motorcycles) would do if it did. The answer was “slow down and prepare to stop while the turkey kept on walkin'”. It’s the 12 second rule. Always look 12 seconds ahead of where you’re gonna be riding next.

Still, it was a big bird, and seeing it from a motorcycle was probably to everyone’s benefit, really. Someone driving car might not have seen it in time. With a motorcycle, your field of vision is larger due to no metal surrounding you.

While riding, I was thinking about why motorcycle riding is a good thing for me to do. When you’re riding a motorcycle, your wits have to be about you, so to speak. You’re living in the “here and now”, which removes focus from any anxiety a person might be feeling. When you’re focused on “right this minute”, it’s difficult to obsess about the future.

A trick I learned from “The Power of Now” that was especially useful, mid-anxiety, was to ask the question, “What is lacking from this moment?” The answer, devoid of any immediate danger to one’s life, is usually “nothing”.

I tried this today, while I was wondering how much of the $4,000 I was billed for my MRI that the insurance company would pay (holy crap). “What is lacking from this moment” forced me to look around at my environment, hear the water splashing, the kids laughing, the birds chirping, and think, “nothing”.

Day Off Number 5

was spent basking in the sun at the local pool, while The Little Kid took a swim in it. I did jump into the pool. Once. It was DARN cold! Just yesterday, it was only in the low 70’s. The fact that today was 86 degrees didn’t make too much of a difference to 12-foot-deep water.

TLK practiced her swimming strokes around the edge of the pool, only reaching for the pool every 10 feet or so, which is a great improvement.

By the end of 2 hours, she got the guts to go down the big water slide. The slide empties out into 12 feet of water. It’s sink or swim time.

After telling her not to go flying down the slide… just go easy and land in the water and then come up for air and swim back to the ladder… she did it. It was great. I mean, she was needing assistance to swim just a few months ago. Now she is swimming 10 feet along without help in 12-foot-deep water. And, by the way, very unafraid of the big slide.

Also, I would like to mention that my SPF50 sunblock allowed me to get a reddish suntan. It doesn’t burn. But isn’t that wierd? I mean, I shouldn’t tan with SPF50… or should I? Did one of the factory workers forget a little something in the sunblock?

The Dog Park



Omaha has a new dog park called Hefflinger Park. It’s divided into two sections: one for small dogs and one for everyone else. If you ever thought a dog park would be a waste of space, like I admittedly did, the dogs LOVE it so much.

It’s a good time to socialize and just RUN LIKE CRAZY.

Camper – 0 Fishing Boat – 1

Yesterday, we swapped the camper my FIL gave us for a small fishing boat. We figure it’s better to not go on short trips that are pretty much like a small house move, and get something where we could catch our own food. Mmm… Fresh catfish.

We set it out on the dam site yesterday evening, just to make sure we could get the boat in the water, and back out of it.

Everything went fine.
For a short time, The Little Kid thought she was driving the boat.

And, yes, of course, we have all the necessary safety gear, to all those querisome grandpa’s and grandma’s out there.
You know who you are.
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