Hey Tom,
Well, my comment on Wantajja was a bit rude on my part. I meant in the
comment, that a fella with his resources might have taken a little longer
in thought to give you a lead to Godwin. It took me about 20 mins to
come up with my offering. It was rude of me..because a guy of his
"caliber" and responsibilities...did at least tell you that much. And without
his "name-drop"...I would not have made the search...so he was afterall
very helpful! My apologies for my comment to Mr. Wantajja...
But, you never know what will occur! 3 weeks...a month from now..a
"light bulb" may flash in his head, and you may get a totally unexpected
revelation in an E-mail!
A Case in Point
20 years ago at a Jaguar Club friends wedding, I was cooling off outside
during the wedding reception. An "old gent" was doing the same, and we
struck-up a conversation..where he revealed he was a former Convair
Electronics Engineer. His "bag" was the B-58 Hustler Celestial Navigation
System and its woes. We had one heck of a conversation for the restof the
party....you just never know what will turn-up....
I don't really care if Mr. Frizzell was an astronaut candidate..but what
intrigues me is the variations in his career..and where they led him.
1. Navy Flight, Catalinas WW2..which squadron and mission roles?
2. Post-war...jets nuclear weapons delivery...Navy or AF?
3. Post 1950..was he going to school for Nuke stuff..or was he still
inservice and was "funneled" into a program, which led him to
the Nuke Rocket Propulsion program.
4. If he was Navy, how did he get into a USAF rocket program as a Tech or ???
5 ...And of course the later Astronaut possibilities..
6.Post Dyna Soar, or Nuke Rocket Propulsion Program, what did he
do with the regulatory commision, etc. ?
Really, it's all a "bit" of a "head scratcher"....
If he has a family member a Los Alamos..wouldn't they be your biggest
lead?
Of course there is the Archives in Missouri...but theres a tough "dig"!!!
..but that is your "best bet" !!!
PS
In the Miller book...Neil Armstong was not one of the listed USAF pilots
for Dyna-Soar..what was your source?
_________________ He bowls overhand...He is the most interesting man in the world. "In Peace Japan Breeds War", Eckstein, Harper and Bros., 3rd ed. 1943(1927, 1928,1942) "Leave it to ol' Slim. I got ideas...and they're all vile, baby." South Dakota Slim "Ahh..."The Deuce", 28,000 pounds of motherly love." quote from some Mojave Grunt DBF
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