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USO Canteen FReeper Style ~ Dear Soldier: You don't know me, but... ~ October 6 2003
Canteen Co-Captain LindaSOG and A Grateful American

Posted on 10/05/2003 10:31:57 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub

 
 
For the freedom you enjoyed yesterday...
Thank the Veterans who served in
The United States Armed Forces.
 
 
Looking forward to tomorrow's freedom?
Support The United States Armed Forces Today!
 
 
 

Dear Soldier:
   
    You don’t know me, but I know you.  You were the boy next door, the kid who delivered my paper, the skinny girl in my daughter’s gymnastics class.  You played ball with my son and worked summers at my favorite burger joint.  We have probably never met, but I know you.
Cpl. James Carmichael, 24, of Huntsville, Ala., Staff Sgt. Raymond Holley, 27, of Palm Bay, Fla., Staff Sgt. Broderick Smith, 23, of Huntsville, Ala. and Staff Sgt. Vincent Robinson, 34, of Atlanta, Ga., all of the 1st Battalion of the101st Airborne Division, walk along a sand berm at the end of another day of waiting and training in the Kuwaiti desert Saturday at Camp Pennsylvania.
   
Marine Capt. Christopher Niemann, with the VMFA-323 “Death Rattlers” squadron, flies his F/A-18 Hornet over Kuwait on Thursday as he returns to the aircraft carrier Constellation.
You are a brother, sister, favorite niece or nephew, and someone’s best friend.  You are the child of parents who love you more than they can explain, feel pride words can’t carry, and bear a weight of worry they never dreamed possible.
   
  There are probably a thousand things you’d rather be doing than what is before you now or what may be asked of you soon.  Combat is always possible when one wears the uniform, yet you donned it with full knowledge of the risks.  Not everyone would do it; I, for instance, did not.  Perhaps I’d make a different choice today but this time the decision was yours.  You chose to serve.
Maj. Mike Shenk, with the 332nd Air Expeditionary Squadron, takes a big drink of water before taking off in an A-10 fighter Wednesday.
   
Marines with India Co., 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, provide cover fire as other Marines advance on the headquarters of the Fedayeen in Baghdad on Wednesday.
  The type of people we consider heroes is kind of odd when you think about it:  athletes chasing records, movie stars and musicians, some of whom likely adorn posters in your old room back home.  Yet these folks rarely sacrifice more than time and effort, pursuing ambitions that profit only themselves. 

  There’s nothing wrong with that in itself; it’s what most of us do in some form or another.  It’s just not the stuff of heroes.

  You, on the other hand, hazard your life for a wage that has many military families on food stamps.  You wager it for an ideal and a way of life, not wealth or fame.  If the chips fall wrong, the price you pay is for others. 

   
  Who’s the hero?  We’ll probably never know your name; I suspect you don’t care.  My own children are just short of military age but I have raised them to do what is right because it is right, not for gain, glory, or even gratitude.  If these things come, so much the better.  If not, your success is no less because personal reward wasn’t the object in the first place. 
Combat life savers with battery M, 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division practice a mass casualty drill during an artillery training exercise Saturday afternoon at Logistics Support Area 7 in northern Kuwait.
   
Navy corpsmen and Marines with battery M and headquarters battery, 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment work on a lance corporal who was shot in the shoulder during a patrol mission Wednesday.
  Despite a few noisy voices, history shows the price of freedom is nothing less than blood.  It is not bought so much as leased, a fact some have forgotten after years of relative peace and the increasingly unrestrained license that has come to pass for liberty.  I admit some of us thought your generation might be the first to lose sight of that altogether.  We were wrong, and I’m glad.
   
 I’d have written sooner but I’ve been pretty busy. If that sounds shallow, I suppose it is.  At least it finally occurred to me I have the luxury of busyness with career and family because you and hundreds of thousands like you are willing suit up, ship out, and take your chances. 

Seeing your young face on television, a face I have seen at the playground and on the high school volleyball team and in the grocery store, drives home how very much you have on the line. 

The least I can do is drop a note to say thanks. 
A soldier gestures while on patrol near burning oil fields in southern Iraq on Thursday.
   
Lance Cpl. Kurt Danielson, 20, with battery M, 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division from Pontiac, Mich., pulls rear security for the artillery position with an M-2 machine gun during an artillery training exercise Saturday at Logistics Support Area 7 in northern Kuwait.
  I do know you, and I know your family.  I know how anxious they are and how much they want for your future.  I understand how tremendously proud they are.  The rest of us are too, even if we’re too wrapped up enjoying the freedoms you protect to remember to say it.
   
     Please look after yourself and be as careful as you can. 

I will be praying for you and your family.  We all want you home safe.

   A Grateful American
Crewmembers aboard an HH-60G Pavehawk helicopter from the 301st Rescue Squadron prepare for a mission Tuesday at a forward location in southern Iraq.
   
   
 

 


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KEYWORDS: canlsog; letters; michaeldobbs; supportourtroops
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To: LindaSOG
Happy Yom Kippur, Linda! Time to make up for the meals you missed.


161 posted on 10/06/2003 6:30:50 PM PDT by LaDivaLoca (There can be no triumph w/o loss, no victory w/o suffering, no freedom w/o sacrifice. THANK U TROOPS)
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Comment #162 Removed by Moderator

To: tomkow6
Red Sox 0   A's 1
 
End  of 5

163 posted on 10/06/2003 6:33:03 PM PDT by Radix (Red Sox win tonight, then the Yankees, and then, the Cubs, again!)
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To: Radix
Home Run
 
Red Sox 1  A's 1

164 posted on 10/06/2003 6:37:31 PM PDT by Radix (Red Sox win tonight, then the Yankees, and then, the Cubs, again!)
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To: All

Woman dies, man is missing after capsize

A North Bend woman died and a local man remains missing today after their boat capsized in rough conditions Sunday morning near the Rogue River bar.

A spokesman for the Curry County Sheriff's Office confirmed today that Jackie Milbourne, no age listed, died after the 19-foot pleasure craft she was in overturned shortly before 7:20 a.m. on Sunday.

Milbourne and a man, who police believe to be Joseph Birt, no age, also of North Bend, were attempting to cross rough surf on the Rogue River bar, a Sheriff's Office spokesman said. The man has not been found and the Sheriff's Office could not confirm his identity. Indications are that the two should have been together, the spokesman said.

According to the U.S. Coast Guard, the two were attempting to cross the bar under overcast skies and 10-foot seas with winds blowing at 5 knots from the north. The Coast Guard reported water temperatures at 52 degrees.

Sunday morning, witnesses reported seeing the two in the water near the accident site, waving their arms for help.
The Coast Guard sent two rescue boats from Station Chetco River (Station Chetco River is located approximately seven miles north of the Oregon-California border)
and a rescue helicopter from the Group Air Station North Bend.


The helicopter spotted and recovered the woman in the water and brought her to emergency medical personnel on shore. She was then taken to Curry General Hospital in Gold Beach, where she was declared dead.

The search for the man was discontinued by the Coast Guard shortly at about 5:30 p.m. Sunday.
Neither person was wearing a life vest, according to the Coast Guard.

 

165 posted on 10/06/2003 6:37:33 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (THANK YOU TROOPS, PAST AND PRESENT)
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To: Fawnn; MoJo2001
You ladies are coming up with some really awesome and creative coloring projects. Cool!
166 posted on 10/06/2003 6:39:43 PM PDT by LaDivaLoca (There can be no triumph w/o loss, no victory w/o suffering, no freedom w/o sacrifice. THANK U TROOPS)
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To: bentfeather
That is so wonderful Bentfeather. I love how you put your poems together with graphics. Great to see you.

Wild Thing

167 posted on 10/06/2003 6:39:57 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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To: tomkow6; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Congratulations on the Cubs !

Wild Thing

168 posted on 10/06/2003 6:40:58 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; M1911A1; M0sby
M1911A1 & M0sby

Thank you M1911A1 for your service to our country ! It means so very much to me, to America, to all of us.

Wild Thing

169 posted on 10/06/2003 6:42:54 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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Comment #170 Removed by Moderator

To: Fawnn
Hi Fawnn I love your graphics ! And the one for Tonkin is adorable!

Wild Thing

171 posted on 10/06/2003 6:44:16 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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To: MoJo2001
Hi MoJo I love your post #123 and also the dolls you are making they are so good.
Great to see you MoJo.

Wild Thing

172 posted on 10/06/2003 6:49:12 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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To: M1911A1; mosby
I am an old man by military standards, and watching those young servicemen do the outstanding job they did, and continue to do, makes me confident in the future of our nation. If you could see these steely eyed killers with hearts of gold in action, you would be as choked up as I am right now just thinking about them.

THANK YOU and to all our TROOPS, for your dedication and service to our country. THANK YOU for protecting us and for all of your sacrifices. You are always in our prayers. God bless you and a big HUG from a very grateful American.

WELCOME HOME, M1911A1.

173 posted on 10/06/2003 6:49:32 PM PDT by LaDivaLoca (There can be no triumph w/o loss, no victory w/o suffering, no freedom w/o sacrifice. THANK U TROOPS)
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To: LindaSOG
Home Run Manny
 
Red Sox 4   A's 1

174 posted on 10/06/2003 6:50:04 PM PDT by Radix (Red Sox win tonight, then the Yankees, and then, the Cubs, again!)
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To: LindaSOG
4-1!! Top of the 6th!!
175 posted on 10/06/2003 6:50:59 PM PDT by RaceBannon (It is perfectly fine to kill people when you are defending yourself)
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To: Kathy in Alaska; MoJo2001; LindaSOG; All
I've met him during Helo Ops exercises.

Local Coast Guard rescuer to be honored Tuesday

For his rescue efforts last December that saved a man on a sunken tugboat off the coast near Florence, Petty Officer 2nd Class Roman Baligad from Group/Air Station North Bend will receive a special award in Washington, D.C. World Photo by Lou Sennick
   
 

The words came calmly and almost unemotionally from Roman Baligad, his brown hair closely cropped, as the U.S. Coast Guard petty officer described the night he put his life at risk to save that of a seaman caught in the storm-wracked Pacific Ocean.

Two and a half hours into the morning of Dec. 30, 2002, the 34-year-old Baligad recalled Friday at Group/Air Station North Bend, he and the three other members of a Coast Guard helicopter rescue team - the pilot, Lt. Robert Decoopman; co-pilot, Lt. Michael MacMillian; and flight mechanic, Michael Chynoweth - were aroused from their bunks at Air Facility Newport, where they were serving their one day of the week on call.

Barely awake, the men were given their mission: to fly southwest over the Pacific Ocean, into sheets of rain and wind, and locate the Primo Brusco, a tugboat pulling a barge crammed with a million board-feet of logs to California from its home port in Longview, Wash.

Twenty-five miles southwest of Florence, the ocean was beginning to swallow the Primo Brusco - and threatened to devour its five crewmen.

Traveling into the teeth of a winter storm, the Primo Brusco was caught in a vise of 20-foot-high waves and 60-knot wind gusts. The waves quickly overwhelmed the 100-foot-long tug, and at 2:30 a.m. Capt. Dennis Cooley radioed the Coast Guard to report the vessel taking on water.

Despite the distress call, and the biting wind and rain, Baligad still thought in terms of salvaging the stricken boat as well as its crew as he and his crewmates boarded an orange-painted HH-65 Dolphin helicopter, its hoist cable mounted in a pod above the right-side hatch.

"As we pulled the helicopter out of the hangar, we put in a de-watering pump so that we could de-water the vessel and bail it out," said Baligad, a 13-year Coast Guardsman and a rescue swimmer since 1992. But while the helicopter was in the air, the four men received chilling news over the two-way radio: at 3 a.m., a half-hour after the captain's distress call, the tugboat's electronic radio beacon had come into contact with the Pacific's waters and activated.

The Primo Brusco had slipped beneath the waves; there would be no vessel to de-water, only five men trapped in roiling seas. All that was left for the Coast Guardsmen was to find and retrieve the seamen - and somehow survive the attempt.

ppppp

About 3:15 a.m., Baligad and his crew arrived at the tugboat's last location - to discover another Coast Guard helicopter, from Air Station North Bend, hovering over the log barge the Primo Brusco had been towing. Three times the North Bend helicopter lowered itself trying to find survivors aboard; three times the torrential rain and hampered visibility frustrated the crew's efforts.

Decoopman, piloting Baligad's helicopter, hovered closer to the barge and finally got a better view: no people hanging onto the vessel or its cargo of logs. Meanwhile, the first helicopter crew at the scene discovered a life raft nearby, with Dooley, the tug captain, and two seamen inside. Baligad's crew turned its attention back to the ocean waters, looking for the two sailors still missing: specifically, for the flashing strobe lights attached to wet suits, life rings and other ship's gear.

"We saw three flashing strobes a half-mile apart," Baligad said. Mounting himself on the helicopter's hoist hook, he lowered himself toward the water to the first strobe: the electronic beacon, but no sign of a person. Retracting Baligad's hoist, the crew hovered toward the second flashing light and again lowered him, only to find an empty light ring.

One strobe remained and the Coast Guard crew moved toward it. Clad in a blue neoprene suit with a 15 pound backpack of first-aid supplies over his shoulders, Baligad once more was lowered on the hoist, the violent winds now tossing him about like a tetherball on a rope.

Waiting below the hoist was a fourth seaman from the Primo Brusco, Mike Jensen, hanging onto another life ring but quickly being overcome by cold and fatigue, even in his wet suit.

Though he was putting his life on the line to retrieve Jensen, Baligad remembered his mind being on automatic pilot, having no thought but to follow the tenets he had learned years earlier, training at Coast Guard rescue schools in North Carolina and Florida.

"The training kicked in and the fear wasn't there," he said. "We train for this kind of thing every week."

Dangling from his hoist hook a few feet from the ocean's surface, Baligad tried time and again to reach for Jensen, only to have wind and waves lash his body and drive him away. Twenty minutes went by as the helicopter crew tried to deliver him to the seaman, to no avail.

"It wasn't a rescue by the book," he remembered; "usually we're taught to stay on the hook, but this time the wind kept blowing me away from him." Time - and the helicopter's fuel supply - were running short; the crew had not only to pull Jensen to safety, but to return him to land. Only one option was left: to let go of the hoist, drop into the frigid waters and retrieve Jensen before the bone-chilling 52-degree waters overcame him.

Baligad made his choice; he unhooked himself from the cable and moved toward the seaman. Above, in the Coast Guard helicopter, MacMillian and Chynoweth hastily rigged a "rescue basket," a cage-like stretcher, onto the hoist hook and lowered it to the surface. Within minutes, both men were pulled aboard the helicopter, first Jensen inside the basket and then Baligad.

The helicopter's fuel tank running almost dry, Decoopman was forced to find the nearest airstrip, where he would have but one chance to land in the driving rainstorm. He brought the aircraft down at Florence Municipal Airport, with barely 20 minutes' worth of fuel left in the tank and an ambulance waiting to whisk Jensen to a hospital.

Late that morning, the three survivors aboard the life raft were rescued by the crew of a Coast Guard motor lifeboat from the Umpqua River Coast Guard Station. Seven Coast Guard air and sea units, from as far afield as Sacramento, Calif. and Kodiak, Alaska, continued to comb the Pacific for 36 hours in search of the fifth member of the Primo Brusco's crew.

Their search ended the afternoon of New Year's Eve when the body of Monte Nelson, 44, of Oroville, Wash., was discovered. The strobe light attached to his wet suit had malfunctioned and he succumbed to hypothermia, the Coos County medical examiner later ruled.

ppppp

More than nine months after he pulled Mike Jensen out of the Pacific to safety, Roman Baligad will be honored in Washington by a subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives.

On Tuesday evening, the Association for Rescue at Sea will present Baligad with the AFRAS Gold Medal, awarded annually to an enlisted Coast Guard member for an act of extraordinary bravery during a sea rescue.

"I'm overwhelmed by it," he said, adding his only wish is that he could share the honor with Decoopman, MacMillian and Chynoweth, his crewmates during those two harrowing hours. "I wasn't alone; it took the whole crew to pull off that rescue. Without any one of them I couldn't have done what I did."

Indeed, Baligad remembered, all the crewmen were astonished, when it was over, to realize how far they had pushed their equipment - and themselves - beyond their limits.

"When we got back," he said, "we couldn't believe what we did. It was one of the most extreme and dangerous rescues I've been through."

Even the award ceremony on Tuesday, however, pales in Baligad's mind to a private honor he received in February: from Mike Jensen, the man he rescued. He, his wife and his grandmother wrote letters of thanks to him and the other guardsmen, then visited them later that month to Air Station North Bend.

"It was right before the new year," Baligad remembered, "and Mike thanked me for giving him the chance to see another new year."

 


176 posted on 10/06/2003 6:51:36 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (THANK YOU TROOPS, PAST AND PRESENT)
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To: RaceBannon; Radix
Go Red Sox's!
177 posted on 10/06/2003 6:52:58 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (THANK YOU TROOPS, PAST AND PRESENT)
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To: LindaSOG
The Florida Marlins are so impressive.
 

178 posted on 10/06/2003 6:54:16 PM PDT by Radix (Red Sox win tonight, then the Yankees, and then, the Cubs, again!)
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To: LindaSOG; 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
I love this thread. Thank you so much for today's thread it is very special.

Wild Thing

179 posted on 10/06/2003 6:56:45 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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To: LaDivaLoca
Hi LaDiva good to see you.

Wild Thing

180 posted on 10/06/2003 7:01:47 PM PDT by Wild Thing (Support our troops and the IDF. They ALL ROCK !)
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