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| Family | Military | NASA | Atomic | Area 51 | Business |
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50th Wedding Anniversary March 2005, Las Vegas |
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| Thornton (T.D.) Barnes Born: Dalhart, Texas |
Doris W. Barnes
Born: Eakly,Okla |
| Deborah G. Born: Carnegie, Okla |
Tamera R
Born: El Paso, Texas |
| Jay
C. Born: Hobart, Okla |
Heather R.
Born: Hobart, Okla |
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| Trace A. Born: Lawton, OK. 1998 |
Dustin A. Born: Henderson, NV. 2003 |
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| Kynlee 2007 |
Trace
& Kynlee 2007 |
Trace
& Kynlee 2007 |
Hayden Born: Henderson, NV 2006 |
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| Dustin
& Hayden 2007 |
Jose |

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| T.D. | Doris | Debbie | Tammy |
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| TD in Korea | Doris while TD was in Korea | Germany
1961 |
Doris' Band in Beatty 1964 |
| Deployment of the 6/52d HAWK |
Early
in 1961, the USSR was flexing
its muscles in
Berlin just prior to the construction of the Berlin Wall. The Soviets
were also moving
missiles and troops into Cuba. At the time, my husband was stationed at
Fort
Bliss, Texas and involved in air defense missile ECM and ECCM with some
secret
"Agency" to whom he'd been "loaned." His battalion received deployment
orders
with the destination classified secret. According to rumors, some of
the
ADA units at Fort Bliss were being deployed to Key West, Florida to
defend the United States from a USSR missile attack originating in
Cuba.
Other of the ADA battalions at Fort Bliss were supposedly being
deployed
to Leghorn, Italy for the defense of our European allies.
At the time, military dependants were restricted from accompanying
service personnel
overseas unless they could prove availability of off-post housing.
While
personnel in my husband's battalion were scrambling to establish living
quarters
in Italy, my husband had learned from his Agency associates that his
unit was being deployed
to the Czechoslovakia border in the Wurtzburg/Bamberg region of West
Germany.
With a bit of assistance from his "no-name" associates, my husband
established an off-post residence
near Bamberg and applied for concurrent dependant travel. As I recall,
our two daughters
and I were the only American military dependants onboard the USS
Buckner
when it set sail with my husband and his missile battalion.
Upon arrival at Bamberg,
we managed to locate a small upstairs apartment in a small German
village
about 30 kilometers from my husband's missile unit. Though we were able
to
ship our automobile and household goods on the ship with us, they did
not
arrive at Bamberg until a couple weeks later. The day following our
arrival,
we moved into the apartment and my husband left to go to his unit with
the
intention of arranging for basic needs such as bedding, army cots, pots
and
pans, etc. until ours arrived. A couple hours later, the mess sergeant
arrived
with basic Army-issue bowls, serving trays, and some food. That is when
I
learned that the Soviets were acting up and my husband couldn't leave
the
missile battery until another battery was online to cover that sector
of
the world. I didn't see my husband for three weeks during which time
our
children and I lived in a foreign country, unable to speak the
language,
with no automobile or means of communicating with my husband except
through
unit personnel sent by him to check on us. During this time, the only
thing
I had to read was an international drivers manual that my husband had
delivered
to me. Needless to say, when I took the driver's test, I maxed that
sucker.
FINALLY, I
received word that my husband was getting some time off. My joy quickly
turned
to dismay when he roared in with a couple jeeps loaded with buddies
that
he'd brought with him for some home cooking. They'd brought chicken and
various
cooking ingredients from the mess hall, but no cooking utensils.
Somehow,
I managed to cook a chicken, make mashed potatoes, and gravy for the
family
and six guests, all of it cooked in a coffee pot on a coal-fired stove
and
served in OD-colored bowls and serving trays of the U.S. Army. Did
I mention that at the time, I was only 21 years old with two children,
ages 2 and 5?
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