If you knew or served with this Airman and have additional information or photos to support this Page,
please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s)
HERE
After retiring in Oct. 1988 I took advantage of the GI Bill and went back to school full time to finish up my degree. Graduated from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington with a BS in Business Management. Worked for Exide Electronics for 10 years as a Quality Assurance Inspector until they shipped the factory to Mexico. Thanks NAFTA! Worked for a short time for Chloride Electronics as a Lab Technician.(QA & Design/Testing) After that I went to Corning as a Shift Tech. Maintained, Repaired and Modified equipment that produced Optical Fiber. Decided to go to work for myself so I got my Real Estate Brokers license. That was fun and profitable until the bottom fell out. Now I am enjoying my retirement and doing all those little things I didn't have time for before. Fishing, scouring the beach with a metal detector, puttering around the house, and sitting in front of this %#&* computer.
Other Comments:
Married to the same wonderful woman for 44 years, four kids, two boys and two girls. Livining in Wilmington, NC. close to the beach where I can persue my favorite pastimes, fishing and bikini watching. My home town of Charleston, SC is a few hours down the road and Myrtle Beach is only an hour away.
AFSC/MOS 30352-Aircraft Control and Warning Radar Repairman
Base, Station or City
North Charleston AFS
State/Country
South Carolina
Patch
792nd Radar Squadron Details
792nd Squadron Emblem
A white circular radar screen with edge and markings in black,
centered is a black eagle’s head, beak is AF golden yellow,
the tongue and eyeball are red, the pupil of the eye is black,
rim of the eye and edge of upper eyelid are white.
MOTTO
On an AF golden yellow scroll, edged and inscribed in black
VIGILES SUMUS,
We Are Alert
SIGNIFICANCE
The emblem symbolizes the primary mission, the operation
of an Air Defense Direction Center controlling interceptor
aircraft against unknown targets penetrating the Eastern Coastline.
The black and white radar screen indicates radar operations and
the eagle symbolizes the continually alert and watchful personnel
scanning the skies to protect the United States against hostile attack.