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The FReeper Foxhole Revisits "Little Friends" - USAAF Fighter Escorts - April 3rd, 2004
http://www.cebudanderson.com/europe.htm ^ | Scott Richardson

Posted on 04/02/2004 9:05:34 PM PST by snippy_about_it



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The FReeper Foxhole Revisits


Excerpts from
Scott Richardson's Thesis
"A History of Eighth Air Force Fighter Operations 1942 to 1945"



* In early 1944 an event of historic importance took place - the release of fighters from the close escort policy and the establishment of a relay escort pattern,. General James H. Doolittle replaced General Eaker as head of the Eighth Air Force on 5 January 1944. Doolittle was a fighter pilot at heart and understood the frustrations caused by the close escort policy. He often came to Fighter Command operations and listened to the radio chatter of his fighter pilots in combat. Sitting in a chair with eyes closed and ear phones on, he stayed until the last of his fighter pilots returned to their bases.

Doolittle changed the close escort policy after his arrival when he ordered General Kepner to "flush them (Luftwaffe fighter aircraft) out in the air and beat them up on the ground on the way home. Your first priority is to take the offensive." He told Kepner to tear down a sign posted in Eighth Fighter Command Headquarters that read "THE FIRST DUTY OF THE EIGHTH AIR FORCE FIGHTERS IS TO BRING THE BOMBERS BACK ALIVE" and replace it with one that read " THE FIRST DUTY OF THE EIGHTH AIR FORCE FIGHTERS IS TO DESTROY GERMAN FIGHTERS." General Kepner was overjoyed at this order and tore the sign down as Doolittle walked out the door.



The death of the close escort policy resulted in a modification of the relay system. Instead of flying to a rendezvous point, Eighth fighter groups now patrolled predetermined areas along the bomber's route to the target. Thunderbolts groups patrolled the shallow and medium range distances with the most experienced groups flying where enemy opposition was expected. Target area support was assigned to the P-38s and P-51s because of their long range.

Lightning groups took over escort from the P-47s and handed the bombers over to the Mustang groups about 100-150 miles from the target. Major Thomas Hayes of the 357th Fighter Group remembers his group: "...provided area support ahead of the bombers and five to ten miles laterally. The group leader would continue ahead of the bombers plus or minus thirty to forty miles with a squadron on each side, the high squadron usually on the right side, then execute a 180 degree turn in a race track pattern bringing the group over the lead bomber to repeat the pattern."

The North American P-51 Mustang was designed, built, and flown in 102 days. It languished on RAF and USAAF air fields as a result of being under powered until the British put a Rolls Royce Merlin engine in the air frame. The results were dramatic, transforming the once scorned Mustang into the best overall fighter of the war. Carrying four fifty caliber machine-guns in the B Model and six fifty caliber machine guns in the D Model, the Mustang was equal to the Me 109 in maneuverability and more maneuverable than the FW 190. It had a top speed of 445 mile per hour at 24,000 feet and a service ceiling of 40,000 feet. "Traffic pattern air speeds were 115 to 120 miles per hour on final approach with touch down around 100 to 90 miles per hour." A low fuel consumption rate of one gallon a minute at cruise speed, combined with a fuel capacity of 485 gallons allowed Mustang pilots to fly to any target within 2,120 miles from base.

*Another piece of equipment that gave the Eighth fighter pilot an advantage over his Luftwaffe counterpart was the G-suit. Standard flight gear of an American fighter pilot consisted of a helmet, sloping goggles, a white silk scarf, a gabardine flight suit, an A-2 leather jacket, leather gloves, and fur lined boots. This outfit kept the pilot warm at high altitude, but failed to keep the pilot from blacking out during high-G maneuvers. The G-suit was designed to solve this problem.

Two types of G-suits were tested by Eighth fighter groups. The British suit used water and was tested by the 357th, while the 4th Fighter Group tested the American design that used air. the British suit, known as the "Frank suite," resembled fishing waders. It was made of rubber and came up to the pilots armpits. Major Thomas Hayes remembers, "...the suit was very stiff and cumbersome and the ground crew filled it with water while the pilot stood. Once filled, the ground crew helped the pilot into the cockpit. Cumbersome as it was, the suit was effective in delaying the black outs. However, the 357th did not think the tradeoff was worth the fatigue on the pilot."

The American suit, know as the "Berger suit," had a tight fitting band around each calf and thigh as well as the stomach. It was pressurized from the positive side of the vacuum pump through a valve that opened when the pilot experienced G-load maneuvers. The suit, when pressurized, tightened up and squeezed the pilot so the blood did not drain from his brain and cause a black out. Eighth fighter pilots agreed the Berger suit was superior to the Frank suit and were equipped with the American version during the summer.



*A second development arrived later in the summer of 1944 in the form of a new gun sight. Eighth fighter aircraft were equipped with a fixed sight, called the N-3 and later N-9 gun sight,. Both sights were optical with a ring and dot of light called the "pipper," which projected onto the clear glass in front of the sight. The pilot looked at his target through the gun sight, putting the pipper on the target only when there was no angle off involved, which is from directly ahead or directly behind. To make a deflection shot, he estimated the angle off to the target and then placed the pipper ahead to get proper lead.

The new K-14 gyroscopic gun sight solved this problem for the pilot. the pilot used the k-14 much like the N-3 or N-9, but with a few exceptions. The K-14 had a dial attached to the throttle, which enabled the pilot to set a ring of diamonds around the target's wing span. Once the target's wing span was selected, the pilot placed the ring and pipper on the aircraft and maneuvered his fighter to keep the target centered for a brief second. The K-14 computed the range and angle of the target in relation to the attacking fighter, and moved the pipper to the proper aim point. The fighter pilot then moved the nose of his aircraft to center the pipper. Once this was accomplished, he could open fire on the target.

The K-14 was not too popular at first, due to its mounting in the cockpit. Mounted right on top of the instrument panel, the new gun sight extended back to within inches of the pilot's face. this blocked the pilot's vision and created a serious hazard if he was forced to belly land his fighter. This problem was solved by a sergeant in the 357th Fighter Group.

Sergeant Idalo E. Auguliaro solved the problem by cutting a hoe out of the glare shield and moving the sight forward. The group's pilots were pleased with this modification and sent the specifications to the Air Corps engineering center at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio. The engineering center rejected the improvement and ordered the 357th to place the sight back in it's original position. The Yoxford Boys ignored the order, remounted the rest of their sights in the same fashion, and shared their discovery with the rest of the Mustang equipped groups., This resulted the the North American factory retooling their assembly line to mount the gun sight as the 357th had discovered. Sergeant Auguliaro received the Bronze Star for his efforts.

*Strafing airfields was particularly dangerous due to the numerous antiaircraft guns. German flak-towers lined the fields and were usually the first guns attacked by strafing aircraft. A flak tower consisted of a concrete pillar sixteen to twenty feet high with a circular platform mounted on top. the platform averaged six feet in diameter and had a five foot wall. Usually, these towers had a twenty millimeter or forty millimeter gun mounted on top.

Because of the placement of these flak-towers, no two strafing attacks were the same. Ideally, Eighth fighter pilots would fly high over the field as if they had o interest in the target below. The would pick out landmarks to help them line up their attack run and then dive to tree top level. Racing along at 400 miles per hour, they would pop up over the trees, line up on gun emplacements or aircraft, and open fire,. The first wave usually caught Luftwaffe ground personnel and antiaircraft gunners by surprise, while the succeeding waves of strafing aircraft flew through a hail storm of antiaircraft fire. Several leading Eighth Air Force pilots would become prisoners of war as a result of ground fire.

Conclusion:






The vital role Eighth Air Force fighter pilots played in defeating Nazi Germany extended beyond protecting the bombers. Descending to tree top altitude, Eighth fighter pilots severely hampered the German transportation system by strafing locomotives, rolling stock, barges and road vehicles. These marauding fighter aircraft also destroyed large numbers of German transport aircraft in addition to the bombers and fighters parked on air fields and by the side of the rode.

The fighter-bomber capability enabled Eighth fighter pilots to play a tactical role on or behind the battlefield by blasting enemy strongholds, supply dumps, tanks, troop concentrations, and gun emplacements. Their ground attack capability enabled them to isolate the enemy by destroying bridges, tunnel entrances, and crossroads.

Eighth fighter pilots also played havoc with the Luftwaffe's pilot training program. Young, inexperienced pilots soon found themselves unable to learn the basic fundamentals of flying without interference from Eighth fighter pilots, As a result, new Luftwaffe pilots failed to get the experience they needed before being posted to operational fighter units. This had the effect of weakening Luftwaffe fighter units, which also weakened the ferocity of their attacks on B-17s and B-24s.

Eighth Air Force fighter pilots were the reason for the bomber's success. Their presence provided security to the bombers, and torment to Luftwaffe fighter pilots. Without the presence of the Eighth fighter pilot, Luftwaffe forces could possibly have stopped the daylight strategic bombing campaign just as they had done against the RAF.



The Eighth's fighter pilots forced Luftwaffe commanders to transfer desperately needed day fighter units from the Eastern and Mediterranean fronts. This had a detrimental effect, especially on the Eastern Front, where Luftwaffe fighter pilots were out numbered two to one at the Battle of Kursk in early July 1943. History records the engagement at Kursk as the largest tank battle of the Second World War, but fails to mention it marked the decline of the Luftwaffe fighter strength on the Eastern Front. Eighth fighter pilots were not deterred by the increased strength of Luftwaffe day figher units in Germany and the Western Front in 1943. In stead, they threw themselves at the enemy, and not only won air superiority, but achieved air supremacy.

This supremacy removed the threat of the Luftwaffe's ground attack capability. Therefore, Eighth fighter pilots helped the Normandy invasion to succeed on 6 June 1944., because of their operations during the previous twenty-two months. Without them, a healthy German Air Force could possibly have repulsed the Normandy invasion. This point was acknowledged by General Eisenhower, a week after the successful invasion, when his son pointed out the vehicles moving bumper to bumper from the landing craft to the roads violated West Point textbook doctrine. "You'd never get away with this if you didn't have air supremacy," remarked Second Lieutenant John Eisenhower. His dad replied, "If I didn't have air supremacy, I wouldn't be here."

There is no question of the important role Eighth fighter pilots played for the heavy bomber crews. Bomber crews loved their "Little Friends" and hated to fly any mission without them. This love and admiration persists fifty-one years later, when a B-24 crewman wrote the author, "Little Friend, My Friend. One of the prettiest sights I ever saw was the P-51, the P-47, or the P-38 flying with our group., I still say an occasional prayer for those fighter pilots."






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TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: airforce; fighters; freeperfoxhole; littlefriends; wwii
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A WORD ABOUT OUR LITTLE FRIENDS

The pilots who flew the Republic P-47 “Jug” in WW II think their airplane has had a bad rap. Saddled with the reputation of being all brawn and no brains, Thunderbolts were often portrayed as a big dumb jock that got through the war on the equivalent of a football scholarship. The real American fighter of WW Two as most of the revisionist historians explain, was North American’s P-5 1 Mustang.< /sarcasm>

Lockheed P-38 Lightning



When the P-38 entered service in late summer 1941, it's twin-engined, twin-boom design and tricyle landing gear were considered somewhat radical. The Lightning combined long range performance with heavy armament. Just over 10,000 were built.

Speed: 414 mph
Service Ceiling: 44,000 ft
Range: 450 mi
Armament: 1x20mm cannon and 4x50cal MGs
Plus 3,200 lbs of bombs

Republic P-47 Thunderbolt



Unofficially known as the "Jug," the P-47 entered service in late 1942. Unable to match the agility and climb rate of it's German opposition, it nonetheless excelled in the dive and possesed good high altitude performance and the ability to absorb damage. Over 15,000 of this type were produced.

Speed: 433 mph
Service Ceiling: 42,000 ft
Range: 480 mi
Armament: 8x50cal MGs
Plus 500 lbs of bombs

North American P-51 Mustang



Considered by many to be the best all-around fighter to emerge from WWII, the P-51 was actually built in response to a British requirement. Ultimately equipped with the British Rolls-Royce Merlin engine, the Mustang proved to be the ideal long-range fighter escort. Nearly 15,000 examples were built and the P-51D model went on to see service in Korea.

Speed: 437 mph
Service Ceiling: 40,000 ft
Range: 1,650 mi
Armament: 6x50cal MGs
Plus 2,000 lbs of bombs




Today's Educational Sources and suggestions for further reading:
www.cebudanderson.com
1 posted on 04/02/2004 9:05:35 PM PST by snippy_about_it
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To: All
The P-51 "Little Friends" in Action, April 8, 1944
The 4th Fighter Group Sets a Record




On April 8, 1944, the Eighth Air Force dispatched 664 B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator heavy bombers to bomb ten targets in Germany. Another 780 P-38 Lightnings, P-47 Thunderbolts, and P-51 Mustangs were assigned escort duties for the bombers that day. Among the escorts were the red-nosed P-51s of the 4th Fighter Group, including several American Eagle pilots who had flown with the RAF. Their assignment was to link up with some 200 B-24s targeting German aircraft manufacturing facilities at Brunswick.

The 4th was led by Colonel Don Blakeslee, who had become a P-51 devotee while serving with the 354th Group. Blakeslee was a legend in his time. An Ohio native, he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in order to fly. He was sent to England, but was booted from his squadron for refusing to march his men to church. The Eagle (133) Squadron was his next military home, but entertaining women after hours in his quarters got him reassigned to the U.S.A.A.F. By that time, he already was credited with two kills and one probable, and became an ace flying P-47s in May 1943.

Blakeslee used all his influence to ensure that every unit in his command would be equipped with the Mustang fighter. He was successful. In February they replaced their P-47s with the hot new fighters. In the month between February 28 and March 30, the 4th chalked up 120 Luftwaffe kills, firmly demonstrating the prowess of their nimble warbird.

Captain Don Gentile

The 4th Fighter Group rendezvoused with the B-24s near Ruhrberg just as the Luftwaffe appeared. Blakeslee radioed his unit, "Horseback to Horseback aircraft. One-hundred-plus approaching at 11 o’clock." Immediately, the P-51s set up for action, dropping their auxiliary fuel tanks and heading straight for the German swarm.

Among the pilots in the 4th was Captain Don Gentile, who had 27 enemy planes to his credit that morning. Gentile was leading Shirtblue squadron and had been flying on the right side of the bombers. The Germans opted for a head-on attack against the Liberators and six of the mighty bombers fell nearly at once. As the enemy fighters finished their pass and tried to re-form, Gentile and his 336th Fighter Squadron swept down upon them, breaking up the attack.

Gentile reported that some of the Germans began a dogfight and, as he closed in to tangle with one enemy fighter, he was bounced by several Focke-Wulf Fw-190s. He broke away, selected another 190 and scored several hits from up to 300 yards. The German began to smoke and spiraled down from 16,000 feet.

Gentile spotted another 190 attacking a P-51, but before he could help, the Mustang went down. It was one of four that were to be lost that day. Gentile engaged the Focke-Wulf at 22,000 feet and they fought each other down to 8,000 feet. The 190 tried to break for altitude but Gentile was ready for him: he nailed the enemy plane with a deflection shot from his .50 caliber machine guns and forced the German to bail out.

Gentile selected yet another Fw-190. This one turned into his P-51 and made several passes, guns blazing. Their dogfight lasted ten grueling minutes before the American pilot finally got the advantageous position behind the German plane and drew smoke. The plane crashed. Gentile’s three victories that day raised his total to 30 enemy planes destroyed.

Major Louis "Red Dog" Norley

Gentile had a counterpart in the 4th Fighter Group that April 8: "Red Dog" Norley (nick-named for his fondness for the poker game) already had proved himself to be a threat to German aircraft. He was a hot fighter pilot with two kills in his belt. No sooner had Gentile’s Mustang entered the fray than Norley spotted a Fw-190 beneath his own plane. Their battle began at 3,000 feet and the German pilot tried mightily to elude the P-51 on his tail. The German tried to dive even lower, but Norley nailed the plane with two short bursts and the pilot bailed out.

Climbing away, Norley spotted another 190, chased it for a mile, blasted it with a short burst, and witnessed another bail out. Turning away, the P-51 pilot went after a third 190 about a half-mile away. The dogfight was brief, the German downed, and "Red Dog" had a total of five kills for the day and ace status.

Captain Willard W. "Millie" Millikan

Iowan "Millie" Millikan flew with the 4th Fighter Group for a year, and a total of 52 missions, before ever scoring a kill. Then, flying P-47s, Millikan scored three enemy aircraft downed in the next five months before switching to the Mustang. Two more kills in the P-51 and he was an ace, heading for the rendezvous with the Brunswick-bound B-24s the morning of April 8, 1944.

Like Gentile, Milliken joined the battle as the German fighters were re-grouping from their frontal pass that downed six Liberators. He tucked beneath a gaggle of Bf-109s climbing for another attack and shot down the last plane in the formation with a deflection shot. Spotting another Mustang trying to evade a German attacker, Milliken fired a spray of .50 slugs, perforating the enemy’s fuselage from engine to tail. The Messerschmitt flamed and dropped like a rock into the forest below.

A third Bf-109 caught his eye as it skillfully evaded several other Mustangs doing battle with it. The German came at Milliken’s red-nosed P-51, but the American dove and turned away. Milliken came around for a deflection shot as the German spun out of a flaps-down turn. The P-51 scored hits from 150 yards. The German pilot bailed out at 800 feet and the fighter crashed. "Millie" Milliken joined "Red Dog" Norley and Don Gentile in the triple-kill category on what began as a routine escort mission.

Counting the Toll

Four Mustangs were lost from the 4th Fighter Group that day, but the Luftwaffe counted 31 planes missing after the battle. The 190 B-24s that got through to Brunswick laid about 623 tons of high explosive on the aircraft factories.

The 4th Fighter Group set a new record for fighter engagements in the European Theater of Operations. The day’s achievements underscored the growing might of the Eighth Air Force, thanks to the long-range protection afforded by the P-51 Mustang. The war had indeed come home to the German Fatherland.

2 posted on 04/02/2004 9:06:01 PM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: All


A NEW FEATURE ~ The Foxhole Revisits...

The Foxhole will be updating some of our earlier threads with new graphics and some new content for our Saturday threads in this, our second year of the Foxhole. We lost many of our graphic links and this is our way of restoring them along with revising the thread content where needed with new and additional information not available in the original threads.

A Link to the Original Thread;

The FReeper Foxhole Remembers "Little Friends" - USAAF Fighter Escorts - Dec. 11th, 2002




3 posted on 04/02/2004 9:07:22 PM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: All
Rank Location Receipts Donors/Avg Freepers/Avg Monthlies
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Thanks for donating to Free Republic!

Move your locale up the leaderboard!

4 posted on 04/02/2004 9:07:47 PM PST by Support Free Republic (Hi Mom! Hi Dad!)
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To: All


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5 posted on 04/02/2004 9:08:26 PM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: Don W; Poundstone; Wumpus Hunter; StayAt HomeMother; Ragtime Cowgirl; bulldogs; baltodog; ...



FALL IN to the FReeper Foxhole!



Good Saturday Morning Everyone

If you would like added to our ping list let us know.

6 posted on 04/02/2004 9:09:14 PM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it
Howdy, Snippy...MUD
7 posted on 04/02/2004 9:11:50 PM PST by Mudboy Slim (Become a monthly donor...it's an excellent investment in the future of OUR C ountry!!)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; radu; Matthew Paul; PhilDragoo; Professional Engineer; All

Good morning everyone in The FOXHOLE!!

8 posted on 04/02/2004 9:12:54 PM PST by Soaring Feather (~The Dragon Flies' Lair~ Poetry and Prose~)
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To: Mudboy Slim
Howdy Mud!!
9 posted on 04/02/2004 9:13:37 PM PST by Soaring Feather (~The Dragon Flies' Lair~ Poetry and Prose~)
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To: bentfeather
Howdy, ma'am...MUD
10 posted on 04/02/2004 9:20:27 PM PST by Mudboy Slim (Become a monthly donor...it's an excellent investment in the future of OUR C ountry!!)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf
Still aimin' high bump!
11 posted on 04/02/2004 9:22:37 PM PST by Jen
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To: Mudboy Slim
Hi Mud.
12 posted on 04/02/2004 9:25:42 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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To: bentfeather
Hi Feather. As soon as Snippy gets her Internet Access(Sunday Afternoon) we'll get back to our normal Foxhole schedule.
13 posted on 04/02/2004 9:26:32 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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To: Jen
Evening Jen. How's things going?
14 posted on 04/02/2004 9:27:11 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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To: SAMWolf
Howdy, Sam...

"Ring Dem Bells"
(To be sung to Bob Dylan's "Ring Them Bells")

Ring Dem bells, you heathens with yer Big Guv'ment schemes...
Ring Dem bells from yer sanctuaries where Vile Lib'rals preach!!
"Re-Impeach!!" Mudboy cried...
"We got Truth on our side...
"bil Klinton's Power's FRactured...Sweet Justice Be Thine!!"

Ring Dem bells, good FReepers, let yer OUTRAGE show!!
Ring Dem bells...make yer righteous stand, so John Ashcroft will know!!
Folks, it's Rush Hour now...
Help US FReep 'Gainst RATS' Power!!
GoodLord, the sun is settin' down upon Left's sacred cows!!

Ring Dem bells, Sweet Justice, tell yer Congressman...
Ring Dem bells so the World will know McAuliffe's SCUM!!
Folks, the Networks are asleep...
But OUR Power is to FReep...
'Cuz the Country's still filled with lost sheep.

Ring Dem bells...fer Left's Blind Ignorance!!
Ring Dem bells for those morally-bereft!!
Ring Dem bells for Left's chosen few...
Who would judge the many...
Yet say, "Slick is KEWL!!"
Ring Dem bells for RATS' Chi-Com SPIES...
For the kids that died...
When innocents FRIED!!

Ring Dem bells, brave Patriots, Shan't Let Tyranny Bloom!!
Ring Dem bells for OUR Sailors whom Slick Willie entombed!!
List of crimes is long...
And Bold FReepers are Strong...
'Cuz we're breakin' down resistance to Rightin' Wrongs!!

Mudboy Slim

15 posted on 04/02/2004 9:31:42 PM PST by Mudboy Slim (Become a monthly donor...it's an excellent investment in the future of OUR C ountry!!)
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To: SAMWolf
Hey Sam! Life is good for me! How about you?
16 posted on 04/02/2004 9:33:20 PM PST by Jen
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To: SAMWolf
Well, Sam, it's not been too bad the entire time, I don't think.

Sunday is just around the corner. I did miss you guys though. :-)
17 posted on 04/02/2004 9:34:19 PM PST by Soaring Feather (~The Dragon Flies' Lair~ Poetry and Prose~)
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To: Mudboy Slim
GoodLord, the sun is settin' down upon Left's sacred cows!!

I sure hope so, and I sure wish it's set faster. :-)

18 posted on 04/02/2004 9:42:41 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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To: Jen
I'm getting by.
19 posted on 04/02/2004 9:43:12 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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To: bentfeather
I did miss you guys though

AWWWW. Snippy and I both missed being able to be here too.

20 posted on 04/02/2004 9:44:26 PM PST by SAMWolf (Please God! Not ANOTHER learning experience!)
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