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Search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra

Fri Aug 31, 2012 12:50 pm

El Dorado high school team to search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra
in Featured Article, War Articles / by Jack / on August 31, 2012 at 13:00 /

Nearly 70 years after four young World War II aviators disappeared during a training flight from Mather Field, a contingent of students and teachers from an El Dorado County high school will join in the search for the remains of two of the airmen. John Daniels, a retired science teacher from Golden Sierra High School in Garden Valley, said he was inspired by his friend Peter Stekel, author of “Final Flight.”

The book explores the mystery of the 1942 crash of a U.S. Army AT-7 Navigator training plane and the discovery in the past decade of the frozen remains of two of the airmen. It was Stekel who in 2007 discovered the second body in the Mendel Glacier in Kings Canyon National Park.

http://www.warhistoryonline.com/feature ... ierra.html

Re: Search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra

Fri Aug 31, 2012 1:13 pm

I for one, wish them all the luck

Re: Search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra

Fri Aug 31, 2012 1:57 pm

Jack you didn't steal the whole article...
Here is the full length story:

Posted on Fri, Aug. 31, 2012
El Dorado high school team to search for WWII aviators' remains in Sierra
By Cathy Lockeclocke@sacbee.com
last updated: August 31, 2012 12:22:00 AM

Nearly 70 years after four young World War II aviators disappeared during a training flight from Mather Field, a contingent of students and teachers from an El Dorado County high school will join in the search for the remains of two of the airmen.

John Daniels, a retired science teacher from Golden Sierra High School in Garden Valley, said he was inspired by his friend Peter Stekel, author of "Final Flight."

The book explores the mystery of the 1942 crash of a U.S. Army AT-7 Navigator training plane and the discovery in the past decade of the frozen remains of two of the airmen. It was Stekel who in 2007 discovered the second body in the Mendel Glacier in Kings Canyon National Park.

On Sept. 2, Daniels, Golden Sierra teacher Mark Hendrix and Hendrix's wife, retired teacher Patricia Graybill, will head to the high Sierra with four Golden Sierra students and a physician trained in wilderness medicine. They plan to hike to the Mendel Glacier to meet up with Stekel and a team from History Flight, a nonprofit group that works to locate the remains of American service members missing in action from World War II.

Stekel and the History Flight team, including dogs trained for cadaver searches, are scheduled to helicopter to the site.

"He and I go back about 50 years," Daniels said of his friendship with Stekel, who now lives in the Seattle area.

They first met at a Boy Scout camp in Sequoia National Park, leading kids on hikes in the Sierra. They met again at a camp staff reunion a few years ago, and Daniels invited Stekel to visit El Dorado County this past spring for what he described as a mini book tour. Stekel talked about "Final Flight" in appearances at Golden Sierra High, local libraries and civic club meetings.

When the opportunity arose for students to participate in the September search, Daniels secured the approval of Black Oak Mine Unified School District officials.

"We can only take experienced kids. They have to have done a lot of backpacking," Daniels said. "This isn't a training hike."

During the seven-day expedition, they will trek to the 13,000-foot elevation. Hendrix, who has hiked in the area, said the weather typically is hot and dry this time of year, with temperatures in the 80s and 90s as heat radiates off the rocks. The terrain, above timberline, is barren.

"It looks like the moon," Hendrix said. "It looks like another planet. It's nothing but rocks."

The Golden Sierra student body will have an opportunity to be involved in the expedition through a satellite phone feed from the search site.

The students who make the trek will take video and turn over the footage to the high school's videography class to produce a documentary about the expedition, Daniels said. A radio broadcast also is planned over KFOK Community Radio, FM 95.1, in Georgetown.

The AT-7 Navigator left Mather Field at 7:11 a.m. Nov. 18, 1942, for a five-hour flight. Aboard for the training exercise was the pilot, 2nd Lt. William Gamber, 23, and three aviation cadets, John Mortensen, 25, Ernest Glenn Munn, 23, and Leo Mustonen, 22. The plane never returned.

In 1947, four college students discovered the wreckage of the aircraft at more than 12,000 feet, strewn across Mendel Glacier in northern Kings Canyon National Park. The wreckage was embedded in ice. Two expeditions in the late 1940s failed to locate the crew's remains.

In 2005, two hikers came upon what appeared to be a man in a wool sweater and a canvas flight suit hunched over a rock. The figure was encased in ice. The mummified body was later identified as that of Mustonen. In 2007, Stekel found Munn's remains.

Working with History Flight, the Golden Sierra group will search for the bodies of Gamber and Mortenson.

Daniels said he expects the cost of the trip for the Golden Sierra team, including pay for a substitute teacher during Hendrix's absence, to total about $2,500. Donations are being accepted to help cover the cost.

Checks, payable to the Black Oak Mine Unified School District, with Final Flight Expedition on the memo line, can be mailed to 6540 Wentworth Springs, P.O. Box 4630, Georgetown, CA 95634.

Donations also can be made online at http://www.bomusd.org. Click on PaySchools, then on Donations and Final Flight Expedition. Any funds in excess of what is needed for the trip will be donated to the high school's Visiting Author Program

Found it here:
http://www.modbee.com/2012/08/31/235204 ... am-to.html

I like having relevant news stories posted here, but claiming someone else's work as your own is out of bounds and reflects badly on the site...

Re: Search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra

Fri Aug 31, 2012 2:22 pm

It takes a little effort to register on the school site but, you can make a donation via Paypal once you've done so. I wish them success in helping "bring them home."

HY

Fri Aug 31, 2012 7:09 pm

warbirdnerd

1. I just did copy paste from the site I found the news

2. I am NOT the jack you see on the report, my nick and his nick is just a COINCIDENCE.

3. beside that, 1 person may work in two different sites, right?? using a name in one and a different name in other, or in other words using PSEUDONYMS.

4.following a recommendation of someone here, he said not to post the entire story to save wideband, something you didn´t do. that´s WHY I just put the introduction of the story and the LINK to see the rest of the story from the site i took it.

Re: Search for WWII aviators’ remains in Sierra

Tue Sep 04, 2012 7:45 am

Sorry stealing may have been too harsh.
Linking to a secondary site with your name in the by-line and a subtle link to the original news is shady at best...
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