MILITARY HALL OF FAME
Milt Hanks
U.S. Air Force
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Well, where do I start?
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Born, Montpelier, Idaho. That’s where Butch Cassidy made his first bank robbery. We left 3 days later to return to Alaska where the family was living.
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Family arrived in the US in 1623 as indentured servants in the Plymouth Colony. Great great great grandpa fought in the revolutionary war. He received a land grant near Mansfield, Ohio in lieu of pay. Until my part of the family moved west that was home.
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My family settled in southern Idaho in 1851. My great grandmother was the first English speaking child born in southern Idaho. I am a 4th generation cattle rancher. And still maintain ranching operations in Utah, Idaho and Wyoming.
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Most famous relatives; Abraham Lincoln (mother, Nancy Hanks) Tom Hanks, actor.
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I attended Longfellow Elementary (7-8). Best friends were John Stamatakos and Larry Holloway. (Both CW grads) Greatest sports thrill at Longfellow was beating Brown in the Championship (Byron Lewis & Dick Scott, CW grads). Larry scored 12 points and I had a foul shot. We won 13-12! Fast break all the way!
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I have wanted to be an artist at least since 6 years of age. I will always be grateful to Bing Davis and Tom Bradrick as my heroes and mentors. I did attend classes at the Dayton Art Institute. That wasn’t tough as we lived next door. There almost isn’t a day that I don’t think about those two great men and teachers. Tom’s soap box he would drag out when he wanted to vent about something or the fabulous art talent and music Bing would play during class, Miles Davis, Blues etc.
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I remember art as fun but pretty easy for me. One of the best learning experiences of my life came when I got a B from Tom. I was VERY upset because my project for the term was better than the others. Tom told me, “yes, but it wasn’t A work for you”. Thanks Tom! Every time I approach the easel I ask myself, “is this my A work?” I remember fondly doing scenery for all of the plays and musicals. Most fondly because it got me out of the other classes! Do you remember that Papa Cougar, Mr. Whitworth was at EVERYTHING! He must have never slept. Did we have a great faculty or what?
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After CW I went to Brigham Young University. I also studied at Art Students League, NY and Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. I walked on as a punter/kicker/defensive back and also played rugby at BYU. I also served as a missionary to the Guatemalan Indians between 1965-68. I speak Spanish and Mayan. I have been back many times since. I’m currently writing a book on the Maya.
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I married a girl from Huber Heights in 1969. We have 7 wonderful children. I can now enjoy lots of grand children. The marriage ended after 38 years. We had just grown completely apart. It is not something I’m real proud of.
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I spent the next few years after college in the Air Force. I zigged when I should have zagged and they told me they didn’t want me any more. Finding few options I became the art director at BYU for a few years. A growing family forced me to look for more income. You could say I screwed my self out of being an artist. I spent the next 35 years in business. I had the good fortune of finding a friend who was a genius at acquisitions and mergers and poor enough taste to want me to keep him company. I’m not sure that my input helped, but we enjoyed true success more often than disaster. And I retired several years ago.
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After my marriage died I did the adult thing and spent the next 2 years sailing the Caribbean on my boat. I found my true calling as a reclusive boat bum. I decided I needed to be closer to the kids so I moved back to Utah last year. I live in a mining ghost town in central Utah. Eureka has about 650 residents. Slightly down from the boom days when the population was about 7500. I love it. My home/studio is the old bath house and moonshine still. Yep, the old moonshine still was hidden in the coal bin where my studio is. (Rock wall in the background of the picture) I heat it with a pot bellied stove out of a caboose. Fun stuff.
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I have always painted. Even when I was in business I kept up a small gallery following. It has been fun to paint full time again without worrying about paying the bills. I am the only one that apparently can stand my company so I remain a reclusive bum. I hope you enjoy a few of my works. I have been lucky enough to find my painting in many collections and a few museums.
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Since BYU has a cougar as a mascot, I have always been and remain a cougar at heart.
GO COUGARS!!
Bill Wells
U.S. Air Force
Bill (William) Wells enlisted in the U. S. Air Force in April 1966 and discharged March 1970. His area of expertise and service was as a communications specialist (Communications Center Supervisor and Cryptographic Specialist). During his enlistment, Bill spent two years at Battle Creek Michigan (a NORAD base) and one year overseas (‘68-’69) at the 1876 Tactical Air Command Ton Son Nhut, in Saigon, RVN. Bill was stationed at the 2046 Communications Squadron at Wright Patterson Air Force Base for his last year of formal military service. Following his military career, his graduate and post graduate degrees prepared him to continue his service to military men and women as a professional counselor and official mentor in helping them manage issues concerning re-entry into civilian life. (He also served the civilian community who had unique needs for functioning well in general society.)
Richard "Rick" Sykes
U.S. Army
Rick served in the U. S. Army following high school. His service included a tour of duty in Vietnam from December 1965 to February 1967. He was trained as a military policeman. His first assignment was a mission that patrolled a main road from Qui Nohn east to An Khe and Pleiku west. He was then assigned to a detachment of the 1st Air Cavalry Division looking for NVA presence. Following that, he was assigned as a body guard for Bob Hope, Vic Damone, Phyllis Diller, Miss World (India), General Westmoreland, and General Abrams. From these experiences he learned discipline, determination, sensitivity, insight into the behaviors of mankind, and what incidences motivated political changes in the U.S., as well as having learned significant, personal life lessons.
Dave Annis
U.S. Air Force
Dave served in the USAF for 12 years, including a tour of duty in Viet Nam for a year (Nov 1966-Nov 1967).
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During his twelve years' service Annis worked on the flight line and later became Crew Chief. He was stationed at Luke AFB (AZ), Lackland AFB (TX), Myrtle Beach AFB (SC), Soesterberg AFB (Holland), Pease AFB (NH), Bitburg AFB (Germany), and George AFB (CA). He was married to Jackie Winkler at the time, and they had three children. He is now remarried.
Bob Veninga
U.S. Army
I BEGAN WORK AT McCALL'S CORP. ON JUNE 5, 1964 , JUST A FEW DAYS AFTER OUR COMMENCEMENT. SOMETIME IN JANUARY 1968 (THE EXACT DATE ESCAPES ME NOW) I RECEIVED AN INVITATION FROM UNCLE SAM, TO BE HIS VALENTINE. I WAS DRAFTED INTO THE ARMY FEB. 14, 1968.
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WHEN WE GOT DOWN TO THE CINCINNATI INDUCTION CENTER , WE WERE TOLD TO "LINE UP & COUNT OFF BY FOURS". I WAS A NUMBER THREE. THEN THEY TOLD ALL NUMBER FOURS TO "TAKE ONE STEP FORWARD" & SAID, "CONGRATULATIONS YOU ARE NOW UNITED STATES MARINES" !! WHEW !!! IMAGINE I WAS ONE NUMBER FROM BEING A JARHEAD'. HA ! HA! (A LITTLE INTER-SERVICE HUMOR THERE !)
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WE WERE SENT TO FORT BENNING , GA. FOR BASIC TRAINING AT THE SAND HILL TRAINING CAMP. THE SAND HILL COMPLEX HAD NOT AT THAT TIME, BEEN USED SINCE THE KOREAN WAR. THE PLATOON STYLE BARRACKS WERE COAL HEATED. IMAGINE HAVING TO FACE WHITE GLOVE INSPECTIONS WITH ALL THAT COAL DUST ALL OVER EVERYTHING. I TURNED 22 IN BASIC & WAS LITERALLY THE 'OLD MAN' OF THE COMPANY. EVEN THOUGH I LOST 5-DAYS OF BASIC WHILE HOSPITALIZED WITH PNEUMONIA, I MANAGED TO GRADUATE WITH MY CYCLE & WE BY VIRTUE OF OUR P.T.SCORES AND I.Q.TESTING WERE HONOR COMPANY AND LED THE BATTALION ON THE GRADUATION PARADE DAY.
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AFTER BASIC I AND SOME OF MY OTHER CYCLE MATES WERE SENT DIRECTLY TO FORT ORD , CA. FOR ADVANCED TRAINING. (IN OUR CASE INFANTRY TRAINING.) BY NOW, I WAS PRETTY MUCH CONVINCED I WAS VIET NAM BOUND UNLESS; I COULD SCORE HIGH ENOUGH ON TESTING TO CREATE ANOTHER OUTCOME. A LOT OF COLONEL WHITE TEACHERS WOULD BE PROUD TO KNOW, THAT EVEN THOUGH MY GRADES DIDN'T REFLECT IT, WHAT THEY TAUGHT SUNK IN! MY PLATOON AND WHOLE COMPANY WAS HONOR COMPANY OF OUR GRADUATING TRAINING BRIGADE & WE MARCHED IN THE FRONT OF THE GRADUATION PARADE AGAIN AT FORT ORD.
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MY SCORES WERE HIGH ENOUGH THAT THEY KEPT PUSHING ME TO GO TO O.C.S. ( OFFICERS CANDIDATE SCHOOL ). I SAID "OK AS LONG AS I STILL GET OUT IN 2- YEARS". THERE WAS EVEN TALK ABOUT GETTING TONY HALL (I BELIEVE HE WAS OUR CONGRESSMAN AT THAT TIME) TO NOMINATE ME FOR WEST POINT, BUT I NIXED THAT TOO, BECAUSE IT MEANT STAYING IN FOR 4 YEARS ACTIVE DUTY ALSO.
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SO, THEY DID THE NEXT BEST THING THEY COULD DO FOR ME AND SENT ME TO FT. MYER , VA. HOME OF "THE OLD GUARD" 3rd INFANTRY 1st BATTALION. IN CASE YOU HAVEN'T HEARD OF IT (I HADN'T), IT SURROUNDS ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY (NORTH POST ON ONE SIDE SOUTH POST ON THE OTHER). "THE OLD GUARD" IS THE PRESIDENTIAL GUARD FOR OUR NATIONS CAPITOL. WHILE IN "THE OLD GUARD" I PERFORMED AS PART OF THE WORLD WAR ONE DRILL TEAM' EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT AT THE JEFFERSON (MY OLD GRADE SCHOOL 7th & 8th GRADES) MEMORIAL. OTHER MEMORABLE EVENTS I WAS INVOLVED IN WERE TORCHLIGHT TATTOO' AT THE FT. MYER GYM, EISENHOWER'S FUNERAL (CORDON), GENERAL WESTMORELANDS RETIREMENT PARADE, NIXONS INAUGURATION (REAR GUARD), AND MANY LESSER PARADES AND EVENTS AT ARLINGTON CEMETERY TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION.
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DURING THE WAR & RACE RIOTS OF 1969 I WAS ONE OF ONLY 3 MACHINE GUN TEAMS SENT TO BE EMBEDDED AROUND THE WHITE HOUSE FOR INTERNAL PROTECTION. WE WERE TRAINED SPECIFICALLY FOR FIRING THE M-60 MCHINE GUN UNDER THE ARM ON THE RUN ALA 'RAMBO' STYLE. THE WHOLE WHITE HOUSE WAS SURROUNDED BY D.C. CITY BUSES PARKED BUMPER TO BUMPER WITH D.C. RIOT POLICE INSIDE OF THAT. ON THE OUTSIDE OF THE BUSES WERE MARINES FROM QUANTICO , VA. AND LINE TROOPS FROM "THE OLD GUARD" IN FULL RIOT GEAR. NEEDLESS TO SAY THOSE WERE SOME OF THE HARDEST DAYS OUR NATION FACED, UNTIL' 9-11'.
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WHEN IT CAME TIME FOR ME TO BE RELEASED FROM ACTIVE DUTY IN FEB.1970, TO CLEAR POST, YOU HAD TO HAVE YOUR PAPERS SIGNED BY NUMEROUS PEOPLE AND ARMY DEPTS. SO, WHEN IT CAME TIME FOR ME TO SEE THE RE-ENLISTMENT NCO, HE SAID "BOB I KNOW HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT THIS MAN'S ARMY BUT, I HAVE TO ASK YOU AS A FORMALITY. HAVE YOU THOUGHT ABOUT RE-ENLISTMENT?" AND SO I SAID "YEAH SARGE, I THOUGHT ABOUT IT, LAUGHED ABOUT IT, & FORGOT ABOUT IT !! " (TRUE STORY)! BACK THEN AS AN E-4 I WAS ONLY GROSSING $220 A MONTH & COULD BRING HOME THAT MUCH ON MY JOB BACK HOME PER WEEK. BUT WITH HINDSIGHT BEING 20-20 I CAN SEE HOW FOOLISH I WAS TO PASS UP OPPORTUNITY KNOCKING ON MY DOOR. IF I HAD STAYED IN I COULD HAVE RETIRED IN 1988 WITH 20 YEARS OR WITH FULL BENEFITS IN 1998 WITH 30 YEARS.
Jack H. Bader
U.S. Navy Reserves
This is a picture of me on the left and my brother Michael on the right celebrating Octoberfest in Munich Germany October 2001.
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I joined the Navy Reserve on my 17th birthday 10 FEB 1963 . A recruiter that came to Colonel White recruited me. I drilled every Tuesday night at the reserve center on Gettysburg Avenue .
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I went to boot camp at Great Lakes , Ill from June until September 1963. I got home just in time for school. They were taking senior pictures alphabetically so I was towards the front of the list. My mother talked to someone and got him or her to put me at the end of the list to give my hair time to grow out a little bit.
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I was stationed at Patuxent River Naval Air Station from 1968 until 1970 as a 3rd class electronics technician.
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I was the Officer Recruiting Officer for Atlanta , Columbus and Macon , Georgia and Chattanooga , Tennessee from 1986 until 1988.
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I was stationed at Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) in Washington , DC from 1998 until 2002. I came back to active duty to work on the Y2K problem with the Navy's computers on board ships and planes. I was awarded the NAVY AND MARINE CORPS COMMENDATION MEDAL for my work on the NAVSEA Y2K Project from 30 NOV 98 to 30 MAR 00 .
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I retired in 2004 as a Lieutenant Commander after 26 years in the Navy Reserve.
Jim Ashby
U.S. Army
I served in the US Army from Aug 65 to Aug 69. I served 18 months in Vietnam as a company clerk, Cam Rahn Bay, Da Nang, and Phan Rang. I came home in 67 and was station in Fort Polk LA as an Specialist 5th class (E-5).
Ben Holeman
U.S. Navy
US NAVY 1967 - 1971
Aerographers Mate 2nd Class
1968 - 1970 Guam/Vietnam -- VW1 Squadron (Typhoon Trackers
1970 - 1971 Fleet Weather Facility, Suitland , MD
Connie Patton
U.S. Navy
US Navy 1965-1967
Recruit Training Instructor Bainbridge, Maryland (Drill Sgt) to anyone else not in Navy; Yeoman 4th Class Third Naval District, New York, NY; Staff of Admiral John McCain; U.S Naval Representative to the U.N. father of Senator John McCain who was a POW when I served under Admiral McCain.
Jim Spires
U.S. Air Force
July 29 1965 - July 31 1986
AF Msgt Retired
Medical Corpman, Cardiopulmonary Lab Technician. I retired from Wright-Patterson AFB 31 July 1986.
Daryl Shank
U.S. Army
I was drafted into the Army in March of 1969. This was soon after I graduated from Ohio State University with a degree in microbiology in the spring of 1968 and married my wife Sue the same month. The notice for my induction physical was in the mail box when we got back from our honeymoon.
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I entered graduate school that fall but Uncle Sam's paper work caught up with me in March of 1969. I was shipped off to Fort Dix New Jersey for training where it was decided for me that I should be in the infantry. (During the Vietnam era there was always a need for more cannon fodder.) After completing training and by a quirk of fate I was assigned to Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland . There I assisted a psychology research group which was studying biological and medical aspects of stress on monkeys and on groups of human volunteers. This also involved cleaning a lot of monkey cages!
From there I was shipped overseas to Korea where I was assigned to the 2nd Infantry Division which was guarding a section of the DMZ. By another quirk of fate I ended up serving the rest of my tour of duty in the 2nd Medical Battalion at Camp Irwin . For you M*A*S*H aficionados this was the "battalion aid station" Radar refers to in the TV series. We were just a few miles (as the helicopter flies) from the 44th Surgical Hospital on which the MASH 4077th was based. (It was no longer mobile) There I worked in the clinical laboratory performing lab tests on the troops coming in on "sick call" from the DMZ units. Being a peace time occupying force the biggest medical threat for the troops was VD (gonorrhea and syphilis). There was also a 20-bed ward for the patients who were really sick. This proved to be a valuable experience for me. After completing my 2-year obligation to Uncle Sam, I returned to graduate school, earned my Masters degree in microbiology and spent the next several years working in clinical hospital laboratories.
Paul Logan
U.S. Navy
I served in the US Navy from 1965 to 1968. Spent one year at the Printing and Publications Center at the Naval Air Test Facility in Patuxent River Maryland and two years in charge of the print shop on board the aircraft carrier USS Randolph (CVS 15). Married my wife (Nancy Weaver) also a 64 graduate of CW and had our first son while stationed at Norfolk, Virginia.