548th Reconnaissance Technical Group
Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii
The Recce Rag 548th RTG Association Newsletter
Edition 1, 3rd Quarter 2009
Anywhere, no Preference, or no response: 12/0
Other suggested locations (You may email me if you want to change your vote to one of these locations):
D.C. Area: 1/0
Date of the reunion:
May: 6
July: 8
Either date,, no preference, or no response: 15
Other suggested dates:
4th of July: 1
3 July: 1
June or Early July: 1
November or December 2010: 1
Early August: 1
Winter: 1
Number of members who will not attend a reunion if held at:
Name for the Hospitality Room:
10th Puka: 1
Recce-roll Hall of Fame: 1
Recce Pit: 3
Behind the 548th Green Door: 1
Other suggestions/comments:
- Hope you can pull this off! We'd be good-to-go for
- I cant afford to go to
- I vote for something in the summer so that school is out and it is easier for people to plan around
- If we have a reunion, I'll be there. It would be great to catch up with the great group of folks!
- Love to go to Hickam but the money is just not there
- I visited Bill, Sherry, and Shelly Janssen last week in
- Great idea to have a 548 Association--long time in coming! Remember many names and interesting stories. Will be great to meet old friends again.
- I plan to visit
- If San Antonio turns out to be the winner for reunion location, I'm happy to help out in reunion planning as much as I can since I'm only 1.5 hrs away!,
- This has been a great idea - if help is needed, let me know.
-
As you can see
Reunion Planning: After 15 December 2009, we will compile the final votes and select a potential site and date for the reunion. In January 2010, either myself or someone living in the area, will survey possible hotels/sites for the reunion, dinner, banquet, and golf tournament and select the locations for each. The dates may change based on getting the best rates at the hotel and room availability. The reunion will be held on a Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, with the golf and other activities on Friday, and the membership meeting Saturday morning (late morning) and the banquet Saturday night. Once a site and dates have been selected, we will then determine the costs of the reunion and send out a reservation form for the reunion, asking for a check to cover the banquet, dinner, golf, and costs for the hospitality room. By this time, I will also have established the association as a non-profit organization and opened a checking account for the reunion funds. At the reunion membership meeting, we will elect officers (I only wish to be webmaster!!), adopt bylaws (I will use the 67th RTS Association bylaws as a template for a draft), and vote on dues and our next reunion. Any suggestions about how to go about all of this will be gladly accepted!
Website Update: The 548th RTG website is now one month old and we are now at 29 members, hoping to reach 100 by December, please help to get the word out. After more than a few glitches, the site is up and running smoothly, it has been crawled by the major search engines and is showing up at the top of most search results. As I get the membership applications, I am entering them in a member database. There have been a few glitches in the database, like half the people being MSgt for a few days, including Lt Flap (Cecil Brown), but I have that fixed now. If you would like to see other information in the website or find errors, email me.
Pictures: If anyone has any pictures of our days at the 548th, please send them by email. Also, if you can identify any of the individuals in the group pictures already posted, send them to the same email address, when we get enough ID’s, we will add them to the photo, right now, between myself and Garnett Howard, we have a few ID’ed, but not enough to publish, too many dead brain cells I suspect.
This Issue’s Significant Event in the History of the 548th, The Holoholo:
In December 1978, the 548th Photo Lab processed a number of missions flown by a U-2 aircraft deployed from
Ted Murphy, left, Bob Rocheleau and Joyce Miller placed maile leis on a memorial to the missing crewmembers of the research ship Holoholo during rededication ceremonies Friday at the University of Hawaii Marine Sciences Building. 
Garden honors 3
UH scientists lost at sea
it takes the place of an older
one dedicated to the 1978 loss
of those aboard the Holoholo
Niemeyer, 31; Harvey, 39; and Allen, 29, were described as enthusiastic and dedicated to the university, their research and the sea. Meteorology Department Chairman Tom Schroeder read a letter from Niemeyer's wife, Susan, who said her husband felt so lucky because he loved his job and was part of a team doing research "to solve real problems." UH marine scientists placed three gold trees and a plaque next to the
The new memorial, designed by Janet Gilmar and funded by donations, was dedicated by a small group last Dec. 18 on the 25th anniversary of the Holoholo's disappearance.
The intriguing mystery of the ill-fated Holoholo, which received wide local, national and international news coverage, was recalled during the ceremony. In rededication remarks Friday to an overflowing audience in the marine sciences auditorium, Karl said the Holoholo was conducting "very important research for
A high altitude U-2 aircraft reconnaissance flight Dec. 18 showed a hull adrift about 75 miles south-southeast of the OTEC site believed by some to match the Holoholo.
Many issues were raised and controversies triggered during a U.S. Coast Guard and National Transportation Safety Board inquiry. Rumors flurried that the Holoholo mission was "classified" with secret government involvement, that Harvey may have been the target of a kidnapping plot because he had been on a Russian research vessel, that Russian spy satellites were observing the Holoholo and that a submarine collided with the Holoholo. The inquiry concluded that high seas and flooding could have caused the Holoholo to sink and that the accident could have been prevented if the university and the vessel's owner had followed standard safety procedures.
Those who were close to the lost men "are still haunted by the fact that there is still no explanation for this tragedy," Karl said. He cited this line from a poem written by
The Many Changes at Hickam:
Those of you who lived on base at Hickam would probably not recognize it now. The housing in Ohana Nui has all been torn down and replaced with new housing, mostly the same location of the old houses, but much nicer homes. Capehart houses were gutted and rebuilt, but look basically the same. The flightline housing nearest to Base Ops was torn down to the ground and new units were built, the first increment is nearly complete. The Officer, Senior NCO, and enlisted houses from 1937 are also being renovated, along with the newer Officer quarters. The old NCO Club and Tiki club closed and a new all ranks club, JR Rockers, was built down the street from the 10th Puka, which is unchanged, except Jay’s BBQ is now an L & L dinner; the Officer’s Club remains relatively unchanged. After 9/11,
For those of us who were there in during the Vietnam War, there have been even more changes; the old wooden “MAC” Terminal, where we greeted our returning POW’s during Operation Home Coming and waited for Space A flights, is now the base gas station, the flight line fronting the terminal was torn up and turned into housing, which is already being replaced. A new AMC terminal has been built further out on the flight line. The old main gas station is long gone, and up the street the Commissary, where the lines for gas in 1973 wound passed in the early morning, has been torn down and a new Commissary has been built near the greatly expanded BX. The theater across from the HQ building is now the
Newsletter Featured 548th Success Story:
UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
COMMAND CHIEF MASTER SERGEANT LISA A. SIROIS
Chief Master Sergeant Lisa A. Sirois is the Command Chief Master Sergeant, 55th Wing, Offutt Air Force Base,
Previous to this assignment, she was the Command Chief Master Sergeant for the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing, Manas Air Base,
EDUCATION:
1980 Administrative Specialist Course, Keesler AFB, Miss.
1985
1989
1991 Associate degree in information resources management, Community College of the Air Force
1997 Distinguished
2003 Bachelor of Arts degree in human resource development,
2004 Chiefs Leadership Course, Maxwell-Gunter AFB,
2005 USAF Senior Leadership Course, Center for Creative Leadership,
2006 USAF Senior Leadership Course,
1989
1991 Associate degree in information resources management, Community College of the Air Force
1997 Distinguished
2003 Bachelor of Arts degree in human resource development,
2004 Chiefs Leadership Course, Maxwell-Gunter AFB,
2005 USAF Senior Leadership Course, Center for Creative Leadership,
2006 USAF Senior Leadership Course,
2008 Master degree in human resources management,
ASSIGNMENTS:
1. December 1980 - Student, Administrative
2. January 1981 - July 1985, Administrative Assistant, Aeronautical Systems Division, Wright-Patterson AFB,
3. July 1985 - June1989, Noncommissioned Officer in Charge, Administration, Photographic Processing Lab, 548th Reconnaissance Technical Group, Hickam AFB, Hawaii
4. July 1989 - July 1991, Chief, Information Management, 548th Reconnaissance Technical Group, Hickam AFB,
5. August 1991 - July 1993, NCOIC, Publications Distribution Office, 28th Mission Support Squadron, Ellsworth AFB, S.D. (deployed May - September 1992, NCOIC, Executive Support, 4404th Composite Wing (Provisional), Prince Sultan AB, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia)
6. August 1993 - March 1995, Chief, Administrative Communications Branch, 28th
7. April 1995 - May 1997, Superintendent, Information Management, 28th Bomb Wing, Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
8. June 1997 - July 1999, Superintendent, Executive Support, Directorate of Logistics, Headquarters Pacific Air Forces, Hickam AFB,
9. August 1999 - August 2000, Superintendent, Information Systems Branch, 28th Communications Squadron, Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
10. September 2000 - October 2003, Career Assistance Advisor, 28th Bomb Wing, Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
11. November 2003 - March 2004, Superintendent, 28th Operations Group, Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
12. April 2004 - October 2005, Superintendent, 66th Mission Support Group, 66th Air Base Wing, Hanscom AFB, Mass.
13. October 2005 - October 2007, Command Chief Master Sergeant, Electronic
14. November 2007 - October 2008, Command Chief Master Sergeant, 376th Air Expeditionary Wing, Manas AB,
15. October 2008 - Present, Command Chief Master Sergeant, 55th Wing, Offutt AFB,
MAJOR AWARDS AND DECORATIONS:
Meritorious Service Medal with five oak leaf clusters
Air Force Commendation Medal with two oak leaf clusters
Bronze Star Medal
OTHER ACHIEVEMENTS:
1982 Senior Airman Below the Zone
1997 Distinguished Graduate,
EFFECTIVE DATES OF PROMOTION:
Airman March 10, 1981
Airman First Class September 10, 1981
Senior Airman September 10, 1982
Sergeant September 10, 1983
Staff Sergeant March 1, 1984
Technical Sergeant June 1, 1989
Master Sergeant May 1, 1993
Senior Master Sergeant November 1, 1998
Chief Master Sergeant August 1, 2002
(Current as of January 2009)
Newsletter Life At and After The 548th: A “few” pounds heavier than my days at the 548th. Investigating the 1966 loss of a F-105D pilot on the Plain of Jars in Please send your stories of 'Life At and After The 548th', articles, photos, or other ideas for publication in future Recce Rags.
The Webmaster, SMSgt (Ret) Bill Forsyth:
My 17 years plus at the 548th is the record for time with the unit. During those years, I first worked as a Photo Interpreter in Exploitation, and then moved to the newly formed Special Projects Section, with MSgt Jimmy Rogers. This eventually evolved into the Research and Analysis Division, where I was the Senior Analyst for
When the 548th flag was cased on 3 July 1991, it was also my last day of work as an Imagery Interpreter before retiring on 1 September 1991. I initially planned on getting a job in the DC area as an Imagery Interpreter, but peace had broken out, and jobs were hard to find, which turned out as a blessing for me. After working several months as a Child Support Investigator for the State of
Giant Scale imagery of an F-4D crash site with two unaccounted-for Americans we had searched unsuccessfully for until we found it on the wartime imagery which was initially processed and exploitated at the 548th.
I also was able to go on field missions in both
548th RTG on Facebook: If you have not already done so, check out the link to 548th Facebook page and see how much everyone has changed with the years.
Recce Rag, Newsletter of the 548th Reconnaissance Technical Group