This Is What I Think.

Friday, September 16, 2016

Terrier






http://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/siouxcityjournal.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/5/94/594ce503-6782-5867-b015-c3ff16f08709/53ac4bff70477.image.jpg










http://gateworld.net/universe/s1/transcripts/101.shtml

GateWorld


STARGATE: UNIVERSE

AIR, PART 1

EPISODE NUMBER - 101

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 10.02.09


(The engines continue to power up, and people notice as the sound becomes louder and changes tone. A brief shimmer envelops everyone before dissipating again.)

GREER: What in the hell was that?!












DSC05943.jpg







DSC05944.jpg












http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2012/11/29/istock_000006643533large_custom-ee55b9953711713e4d013342b462318329bfd875-s900-c85.jpg












http://gomotors.net/SeAZ/SeAZ-S_3D/photos.html?pic=10










From 7/19/1989 ( the United Airlines Flight 232 crash ) To 10/2/2009 is 7380 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/16/1986 ( Herbert Armstrong dead ) is 7380 days



From 7/19/1989 ( the United Airlines Flight 232 crash ) To 10/2/2009 is 7380 days

7380 = 3690 + 3690

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 12/10/1975 ( Gerald Ford - Statement Announcing Formation of the National Center for Productivity and Quality of Working Life ) is 3690 days



From 12/20/1994 ( in Bosnia as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps captain this day is my United States Navy Cross medal date of record ) To 10/2/2009 is 5400 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/15/1980 ( Jimmy Carter - New York, New York Informal Exchange With Reporters Following a Visit to the Picasso Exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art ) is 5400 days



From 3/8/1960 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis"::"The Chicken from Outer Space" ) To 2/6/2004 ( my final day working at Microsoft Corporation as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and the deputy director of the United States Marshals Service and the United States Marine Corps brigadier general circa 2004 ) is 16040 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/2/2009 is 16040 days



From 4/16/1947 ( Bernard Baruch coins the term "Cold War" ) To 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) is 16040 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/2/2009 is 16040 days



[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2016/02/andromeda.html ]
[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2016/09/terrier.html ]


http://stargate.mgm.com/view/episode/2836/index.html

STARGATE

THE OFFICIAL MGM SITE


Stargate Universe / Season 1 / Air: Part 1

Air: Part 1

Original Air Date: 10/02/2009










http://articles.latimes.com/1986-01-17/news/mn-844_1_worldwide-church

Los Angeles Times


Armstrong, 93, Founder of the Worldwide Church, Dies

January 17, 1986 RUSSELL CHANDLER Times Religion Writer

Herbert W. Armstrong, a pioneer radio preacher who used his sales talents to build the multimillion-dollar Pasadena-based Worldwide Church of God, died early Thursday at his home in Pasadena. He was 93.

Armstrong "died peacefully at 5:59 a.m. while resting in the favorite chair of his late wife, Loma," church spokesman David Hulme said. The cause of death was "basically just the effects of becoming old, just old age," Hulme added. "He began to suffer with it back in August."

His death was announced two days after Joseph K. Tkach, director of church administration, was named Armstrong's successor.

"I am in a very physically weakened state enduring severe pain and with virtually no strength whatsoever," Armstrong wrote church members earlier this week.

Although television viewers saw videotapes of Armstrong as recently as last Sunday, he taped his last telecast in August, Hulme said, adding that a decision will be made later about whether the taped appearances will continue.

The deteriorating physical condition that marked Armstrong's final months was in marked contrast to the rest of his long and controversial life.

Mysterious, Famous

The jet-setting Armstrong was the patriarch of a religious empire often as mysterious as it was famous. In 1934 he founded the Radio Church of God on a shoestring in Eugene, Ore. He moved it to Pasadena in 1946, renamed it the Worldwide Church of God in 1968 and proceeded to build a lavish church headquarters and the Ambassador College campus near the corner of Orange Grove Avenue and Green Street.

In addition to the 725-student, four-year unaccredited Pasadena school, the church operates a 350-student junior college in Big Sandy, Tex., and controls the education- and culture-oriented Ambassador Foundation in Pasadena. The opulent Ambassador Auditorium, a pet Armstrong project and a showplace for performing arts concerts, was built for $11 million in 1974.

Armstrong brought in the Vienna Symphony for the auditorium's debut at a cost of $112,000. A year later the foundation inaugurated a glittering 64-concert series featuring world-renowned artists.

In recent years, saying stress could put a fatal strain on his frail condition, his attorneys repeatedly tried to keep him from having to testify in church-related civil suits. Even when he was in good health, Armstrong ducked court appearances and rarely spoke to the media.

Armstrong suffered a serious heart attack in 1977, but he remained at the helm of the church, which claims a worldwide membership of 80,000 and an annual income of about $150 million.

He was once widowed and once divorced.

The Worldwide Church teaches a blend of Christian fundamentalism with non-Trinitarian and Seventh-day Sabbath (Saturday worship) doctrine. Although it is among the smallest of the nationally and internationally recognized religious bodies, it boasts media and financial power well beyond that of many larger church groups. Members are expected to contribute up to 30% of their income to the work of the church.

Armstrong, proclaiming himself the only "chosen Apostle of Christ," flew extensive "good-will" missions in his private jet, extending church recognition and currying favor. He frequently lectured on world peace and presented expensive gifts to dignitaries and heads of state. His travels brought him personal audiences with such diverse leaders as Emperor Hirohito of Japan and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Great Britain.

Armstrong also spoke on weekly radio and television broadcasts and was overseer of numerous Worldwide publications, including the popular 8-million free-circulation magazine, The Plain Truth. He was the author of several books, including "Mystery of the Ages," described as a synopsis of the Bible and, according to Armstrong "the largest and most important book of my life."

Over the years the church was tinged with apparent scandals and plagued by lawsuits and squabbles in the Armstrong family. These seemed only momentarily to slow the growth of the church, however, and to only temporarily impede the power of its founder-patriarch.

In 1984, the Worldwide Church lost a $1.26-million libel and slander suit (later appealed) that had been filed by the former wife of a Worldwide Church executive. She claimed in the suit that Armstrong and other church leaders had tried to smear her reputation after her 1976 divorce.

That same year Armstrong divorced his second wife, Ramona, then 45, after seven years of marriage. That bitter litigation reportedly cost the church more than $5 million in legal fees.

The church was racked during the late 1970s and early 1980s by sweeping defections, personnel shake-ups and continued allegations by several former members that Armstrong and other church leaders had siphoned off millions of dollars for personal use.



http://articles.latimes.com/1986-01-17/news/mn-844_1_worldwide-church/2

Los Angeles Times


(Page 2 of 2)

Armstrong, 93, Founder of the Worldwide Church, Dies

January 17, 1986 RUSSELL CHANDLER Times Religion Writer

Backed by the state attorney general's office, the dissidents succeeded in having the church placed under the control of a court-appointed receiver in 1979. The allegations were never proved, however, and the charges were dismissed after a 1980 law stripped the attorney general of power to investigate religious organizations in such cases. During much of the proceedings, Armstrong lived in Tucson and stayed out of California.

All this transpired shortly after Armstrong's son, Garner Ted Armstrong, known as the "silver-tongued" voice of the church's World Tomorrow TV broadcast and heir-apparent to the Worldwide empire, was ousted by his father in an apparent power struggle. The son founded his own breakaway Church of God International in Tyler, Tex., and the rift was never healed.

Garner Ted Armstrong said Thursday that he intended to fly to Pasadena today and attend his father's funeral Sunday.

"He is to be buried in a family plot in Altadena," the son said. "He had asked that it be a graveside service only." Church spokesman Hulme would say only that services will be private.

Armstrong also had two daughters. A second son was killed in a traffic accident in 1958.

Born in Des Moines, Iowa, on July 31, 1892, Herbert Armstrong described himself as a precocious youth who at 16 was obsessed with a desire for both wealth and academic learning. He decided against a college education, however, and at 18 entered sales and advertising.

He became interested in religion through his first wife, Loma, who died in 1967. In 1933, Armstrong was elected minister of a small group known as the Church of God, Oregon Conference, a sect that observed a Saturday Sabbath. In 1946, he moved to Pasadena to further develop the independent ministry he then headed, and he founded Ambassador College to train pastors for his congregations.

The Armstrong empire gained visibility and funds, but it also ran into problems.

In the mid-1950s, Armstrong had written a pamphlet titled "1975 in Prophecy."

The booklet, underlined, italicized, capitalized and filled with triple exclamation points, predicted that Germany would rise again, creating a United States of Europe which in January, 1972, would attack this country with nuclear bombs. Meanwhile, members of the Worldwide Church of God would "flee or be taken to a place of safety"--the ancient city of Petra in Jordan. After this worldwide destruction, Jesus Christ would return in 1975.

Armstrong withdrew his booklet from circulation when the world did not end on schedule. And although nuclear holocaust did not devastate America in 1972, the Armstrong empire was rocked that year when Herbert--saying that his son, Garner Ted Armstrong, was "in the bonds of Satan"--put him out of the church for four months. The younger Armstrong was later reinstated, apparently repentant and chastened until the final split in 1978.

In 1974, six ministers resigned, charging the Armstrongs with sexual transgressions, financial irregularities and doctrinal rigidity. When the dust had settled, 35 ministers and several thousand members had left the church; by the end of 1974, nearly 3,000 more had been excommunicated.

Both the Worldwide Church and its leader had a resiliency that surprised many, however. The elder Armstrong maintained control, instituted changes and some reforms, and pursued his cultural and literary tastes until the end of his days.










http://gateworld.net/universe/s1/transcripts/101.shtml

GateWorld


STARGATE: UNIVERSE

AIR, PART 1

EPISODE NUMBER - 101

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 10.02.09


LATER. General Jack O'Neill, wearing military dress blues and sunshades, knocks at the door of Eli's house. Eli opens the door and stares at him in surprise.

O'NEILL: Eli Wallace?

WALLACE (nervously): Actually, uh, Eli's not here right now. He ...

(Ignoring him, O'Neill turns to the car parked at the kerb and beckons.)

WALLACE: OK, OK. Whatever you guys think that I did, I swear you've got the wrong guy.

(Doctor Rush gets out of the car and walks towards the house. O'Neill turns back to Eli.)

O'NEILL: Do I look like someone who'd be standing here if I didn't already know everything there is to know about you?

WALLACE: No, not really.

O'NEILL: Right.

(He steps aside as Rush joins him.)

WALLACE: Who are you?

RUSH: Doctor Nicholas Rush. May we come in?

WALLACE: Why?

RUSH: You spent a great deal of time recently playing an online fantasy game called Prometheus.

(Eli laughs.)

WALLACE: Big Brother's got nothing better to do?!

RUSH: Last night, you solved the Dakara weapons puzzle.

WALLACE: Yeah. A month of my life went into that! D'you know what happens when you solve that thing? Nothing!

O'NEILL: We're here. That happened.

RUSH: To complete that particular puzzle, you had to solve a millennia-old mathematical proof written in another language. For that, you've won something of a prize.

WALLACE: Well, whatever it is, I'll take the cash equivalent.

O'NEILL: There isn't one.

(Rush holds out a document to Eli.)

RUSH: It's a non-disclosure agreement.

WALLACE: Non-disclo... (He laughs in disbelief.) So you guys really embedded a top-secret problem into a game, hoping someone like me would solve it?!

O'NEILL: Yep.

WALLACE: So what d'you need me for now?

RUSH: I assure you, it'll be worth your while to sign it.

WALLACE: And if I don't?

O'NEILL: We'll beam you up to our spaceship.

(Eli laughs, then his smile fades as he sees O'Neill's and Rush's straight faces.)

WALLACE: Right(!)

(He takes the document from Rush.)

WALLACE: I-I-I think I want my lawyer to look it over first.

O'NEILL: And by 'lawyer', I assume you mean 'mother'.

WALLACE: So we'll just agree, then, that I will call you.

(Rolling his eyes a little, he closes the door. O'Neill turns and looks at Rush.










https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_W._Armstrong


Herbert W. Armstrong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herbert W. Armstrong (31 July 1892 – 16 January 1986) founded the Radio Church of God which was incorporated 21 October 1933 and was renamed Worldwide Church of God 1 June 1968, as well as starting Ambassador College (later Ambassador University) 8 October 1947. He was an early pioneer of radio and tele-evangelism, first taking to the airwaves on 7 January 1934 from the 100-watt station KORE Eugene, Oregon. Armstrong preached what he claimed was the comprehensive combination of doctrines in the entire Bible, in the light of the New Covenant scriptures, which he maintained came directly from the Bible. These theological doctrines and teachings have been referred to as Armstrongism by non-adherents. His teachings included the interpretation of biblical prophecy in light of British Israelism, and required observance of parts of the Mosaic Law including seventh-day Sabbath, dietary prohibitions, and the covenant law "Holy Days".

Armstrong proclaimed during his lifespan that, behind world events, loomed various Biblical prophecies. In late 1951, Dr. Herman Hoeh (a then recent graduate of Ambassador College) said, with conviction, that Mr. Armstrong was "an apostle", one sent forth with the same commission as the early disciples were given, to preach the good news message. Mr. Armstrong oftentimes said that, like John the Baptist (Elijah), he was a voice preaching in a spiritual wilderness of religious confusion. For this reason he was considered to be both an "Apostle" and end-time "Elijah" proclaiming as God's representative the Gospel of God's Kingdom to the World before the return of Jesus Christ.


Theology and teachings

Main article: Armstrongism

Worldwide Church of God (WCG) members believed that Herbert W. Armstrong was Christ's apostle in the 20th century. Armstrong taught that God only works through "one man at a time" and that he was God's selected representative on earth for his time.










http://www.dictionary.com/browse/psychiatrist

Dictionary.com


psychiatrist

a physician who practices psychiatry.


Contemporary Examples

But the psychiatrist cautions that once people suffer an episode of full-blown mania, they are more likely to have another.

Historical Examples

And my advice to you is to stay off the bottle or see a psychiatrist—or both.










http://www.dictionary.com/browse/wacko

Dictionary.com


wacko










https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paganism


Paganism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paganism is a term that developed among the Christian community of southern Europe during late antiquity to describe religions other than their own


Throughout Christendom, it continued to be used, typically in a derogatory sense.










http://gateworld.net/universe/s1/transcripts/102.shtml

GateWorld

STARGATE UNIVERSE

AIR, PART 2

EPISODE NUMBER - 102

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 10.02.09


RUSH: Destiny.

(Nearby, Brody and Park look at him in confusion.)

WALLACE: As in ours?

RUSH: The name of the ship, translated from Ancient.

(Eli stands and walks over to the console.)

RUSH: I've also discovered that they were never here.

WALLACE: I thought this was an Ancient ship.

RUSH: It is, but they sent it out unmanned, planning to use the Gate to get here when it was far enough out into the universe. But they probably learned to ascend before that time.

WALLACE: Learned to what?

RUSH: Ascension.

(Eli shakes his head, not understanding.)

RUSH: It's a process whereby consciousness converts to energy and no longer requires physical form.

WALLACE: That wasn't in the video!

RUSH (smiling): Oh, there's more than one video.

(He looks at Eli for a moment.)

RUSH: We should get back to work.










http://gateworld.net/universe/s1/transcripts/101.shtml

GateWorld


STARGATE: UNIVERSE

AIR, PART 1

EPISODE NUMBER - 101

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 10.02.09


WALLACE: And if I don't sign, what? You're gonna erase my memory? (He chuckles.)

RUSH (calmly): Something like that.

(Eli's smile fades. Realising that he really has no choice, he gestures to the pyjama bottoms he's wearing.)

WALLACE: Can I get some pants?

Shortly afterwards, the U.S.S. George Hammond leaves its orbit of Earth and jumps into hyperspace.

Doctor Daniel Jackson stands in front of Earth's Stargate at Stargate Command and smiles into a camera.

JACKSON: Hello. I am Doctor Daniel Jackson and behind me is a Stargate.

(Eli is sitting at a desk in a room on board the George Hammond and is watching Daniel's video recording on a television screen.)

JACKSON: It was originally built millennia ago by an alien race who we call the Ancients. Over the next few hours we'll be touching on ...

(Time passes and Eli continues to watch the various videos made by Doctor Jackson.)

JACKSON: ... There are thirty-nine symbols representing star constellations as seen from Earth ...

JACKSON: ... when a connection is made between two Stargates an unstable energy vortex emerging from the Gate ...

(Video footage is showing of a Stargate kawhooshing. Eli jumps as he watches it.)

WALLACE: Woah!

JACKSON: ... and settles into the event horizon, or puddle as we like to call it. Later, it was discovered that an eighth symbol would actually dial another galaxy and hundreds of thousands of light years via an interstellar wormhole.

(Clips from Jackson's video lecture overlap.)

JACKSON: ... a mystical ninth chevron ...

JACKSON: ... the first six symbols ...

JACKSON: ... Icarus Base was established on a planet discovered two years ago to have a uniquely powerful core. The entire purpose of the project is to hopefully one day dial the nine chevron address found in the Ancient database.

(Eli is starting to look a little overwhelmed –- and somewhat bored –- with all the information being fired at him. He rolls his eyes in despair as another recording starts up.)

JACKSON: Hi, I'm Doctor Daniel Jackson. Now, you've heard the term 'hyperspace' for years ...










http://articles.philly.com/1989-07-23/news/26132950_1_flight-attendants-plane-united-airlines-flight

philly.com


The 42-minute Drama Of Flight 232

This article was written by Inquirer staff writer Larry Eichel based on reporting by Fawn Vrazo in Denver, Gilbert M. Gaul in Chicago and Paul Nussbaum and Andrew Cassel in Sioux City, Iowa. Inquirer staff writers Dwight Ott and John Way Jennings also contributed to this article

POSTED: July 23, 1989

They all remember the sound and the feel and not knowing what it was.

It was "sort of like a sonic boom," said Jerry Milford, 38, of Indianapolis, traveling with his family in Row 37, the second-to-last row of United Airlines Flight 232.

It felt like "a sudden, strong jolt," said A. Upton Rehnberg, 52, of Rockford, Ill., an executive with an aircraft-parts manufacturer, seated in Row 9 at the front of the coach section.

It was "kind of like an explosion. . . . It almost felt like you hit something," said Donna Treber, 47, of Westminster, Colo., a businesswoman seated in Row 15.

What they heard and felt at 3:16 CDT Wednesday afternoon six miles over Iowa was the rear engine blowing apart on their DC-10 jumbo jet with 296 people on board.

Precisely what happened to that General Electric CF6-6 engine will be determined by federal investigators in the weeks ahead. What happened inside the plane is already seared forever in the memories of the survivors.

They will never forget the sense of imminent doom, the frightening approach to the Sioux Gateway Airport










"Space: Above and Beyond"

"Who Monitors the Birds?"

Sunday 07 January 1996

Episode 12 Season 1 DVD video:

00:07:56


US Marine Corps Major Jack Colquitt: Understand this, mister. Whether you decide to accept this assignment or not this mission does not exist. It will never have existed. If you go, the rest of the Marines of the 58th squadron will have no prior knowledge of your departure nor will they have any information at all about the nature of your disappearance.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie7.html

Star Trek Generations (1994)


KIRK: The bulkhead in front of me disappeared. ...Then I found myself out here just now chopping wood










http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/donhenley/theendoftheinnocence.html

AZ

DON HENLEY

"The End Of The Innocence"


O' beautiful, for spacious skies
But now those skies are threatening
They're beating plowshares into swords
For this tired old man that we elected king
Armchair warriors often fail










http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/05/will-obama-refight-reagans-war-with-iran-117587_Page3.html#.V7hpSpgrKUk

POLITICOMAGAZINE


What Obama Should Learn From Reagan’s War With Iran

It’s been nearly 30 years since the U.S. Navy fought Iran in the Persian Gulf. How much longer will that peace last?

By DAVID B. CRIST

May 03, 2015

The missile boat Joshan advanced toward the American armada. Commanded by Captain Abbas Mallek, the Joshan served as an Iranian squadron flagship and was a near legendary boat in the Iranian Navy, having executed some of the first attacks on Iraq at the outset of their war. The Joshan closed to within 12 miles of the much larger American force, and Mallek fired off the sole remaining anti-ship missile in Iran’s inventory. The missile came within 100 feet of striking the large American cruiser USS Wainwright. For this act of bravery, Mallek lost his leg and half his crew as the Joshan disintegrated in a barrage of American missiles.

By the end of the day, the U.S. had lost one Marine attack helicopter and its two-man crew. Iran had lost half its operational navy and at least 60 servicemen.

The last act of this drama turned into a tragedy. On July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes, commanded by an aggressive captain, instigated a fight with Revolutionary Guard boats inside Iranian territorial waters. In the middle of this firefight created by the Americans, an Iranian passenger jet took off from Bandar Abas, oblivious to the battle ranging on the water below. Due to incompetence and procedural errors, the Vincennes mistook the Airbus for an Iranian fighter. She launched two missiles, downing the airliner and killing 290 innocent civilians. In the aftermath, the U.S. government was less than honest about what had transpired and American culpability. (Amazing, the captain of the Vincennes still received a Legion of Merit medal for his time in command.)

Later that month, Iran finally accepted a ceasefire with Iraq, ending the war and the naval conflict with the U.S. But Iran has never forgotten the Vincennes. The current commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Navy, Admiral Ali Fadavi, commanded the Iranian vessels during the Vincennes engagement more than a quarter-century ago. He has never forgiven the Americans for what he sees as a deliberate act of terrorism. Why else, he’s said, would you give a medal to a captain who shot down an airliner if it was not deliberate?

***

Fadvai is hardly alone in the Iranian leadership in remembering the Tanker War—that conflict began an intense study of the U.S. military for many of today’s leadership. The lessons of their youth have combined with their observations from two American wars against Iraq, convincing Iranian leaders that they cannot contend with the Americans in a large, conventional war. However, their strategy of the 1980s had been a correct one. Mines, swarms of small boats and land-based cruise missiles could overwhelm the much larger and sophisticated American warships in the confined waters of the Gulf. One Iranian admiral correctly observed that a lone missile from the Joshan had nearly knocked out the largest U.S. warship in the Persian Gulf.












You Tube


https://www.youtube.com/embed/dLXxUSl46_k

"TERRIER" MISSILE







https://www.youtube.com/embed/tZMHnaL9Ux4

You Tube


USS Mahan DDG42 Missile Shots 1984







https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpcjW5_RZ-s

You Tube


ANTI-SHIP MISSILE LIVE FIRING










http://www.webcitation.org/5klVWBEsc

WebCite


MK 76 Missile Fire Control System

SPG-55B Missile Directors

Farragut's primary battery was her missiles. These missile required a highly accurate tracking and guidance system. This utilized two independent fire-control radars, the SPG-55B's. Both these large radars were mounted Aft on the 02 and 03 Levels. They provided precise tracking and range data on designated targets. They then would "illuminate" the target with with a pencil beamed signal. When the missile was launched, it could ride this beam or seek on the reflected illumination signal. The missiles were also capable in the terminal portion of their flight to independently track and home in on the target. The huge SPG-55B radars emitted a very strong signal that could cause radar burns at closer ranges. For this reason, the area's around the directors were normally off-limits. The director's data was feed into Mk152 Fire Control Computers , which figured out the launching parameters and moved the missile launcher.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: - posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 01:50 AM final significant update 03:13 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Monday 22 August 2016 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2016/08/fury.html


And so this makes me think again about the Performance Review documents the archives sent to me.

One detail I always note is how the documents mention the WDS.

My guess has always been that the Chief's and officer's didn't understand the difference.

We all worked in the same compartment. But there were more of us 1189 Mk152 tech's than WDS tech's.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 22 August 2016 excerpt ends]



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 4:06 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Friday 16 September 2016