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BATTALION PROJECTS
1. ASSOCIATION RECORDS:
The Copies of our S-2/S-3 Staff Journals were purchased and
were on display for our 16th Reunion in Spokane. They were all turned over to Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas for
conversion to Computer Discs (CD), free of charge. Our photo albums and other records are included. These discs are now available
to members at a nominal charge. CONTACT JIM KNAFEL, our Treasurer for a copy.
Texas Tech University has an Active
Viet Nam Archives program. Many of us will be called upon to add our Oral Histories to their collection (volunteer).
Contact David Bowman, at "bowman@midcoast.com" for additional information regarding this project.
2.
The Jumping Mustangs Assn decided to have a monument for the "Jumping Mustangs" at the Airborne and Special Forces
Museum. Donations were given by members to support this project. The monument indicates the unit crest, airborne, airmobile
and air assault badges, to honor all Jumping Mustangs. The monument was completed when the Museum opened in Fayetteville,
NC on 17 August 2000. A PAVER was purchased and was emplaced by November 2001.
see picture below Note: The List of Sky Troopers KIA in Viet Nam has been completed with the help of several members of the Chapter,
the 1st Cav Div Assn and the National Archives. To the best of our knowledge the list is complete. The Sky Troopers
are listed on the Memorial page.

PHOTO OF JUMPING MUSTANG MONUMENT AT THE AIRBORNE & SPECIAL OPERATIONS MUSEUM
IN FAYETTEVILLE. NC
JUMPING MUSTANG MONUMENT WITH PAPPY LONUGHRAN STANDING BEHIND.
The picture of Pappy standing by the paver has somehow gotten deleted from
the site. If anyone has the picture and can get it scaned, please send it the webmaster. Thank You.
Thursday, August 17, 2000
MUSEUM OPENING IS GRAND
By J.S. Newton, Staff
writer.
After years of planning, millions of dollars and some frantic final days, downtown's new crown
jewel opened to the public Wednesday. Soldiers salute during the presentation of colors Wednesday at the grand
opening of the Airborne & Special Operations Museum. The Airborne & Special Operations Museum -- a $22.6
million joint venture between private groups and every kind of government agency -- welcomed more than 3,000 eager visitors
on its first day. It is 90 percent complete, but museum leaders weren't about to wait. "It's been
a long time, but we're finally there,'' said retired Gen. James J. Lindsay, president of the museum foundation.
''It's a great day, a great day." The grandness of the grand opening could be seen in the details.
For instance, it took 16 dignitaries to cut 35 feet of maroon fabric at the ribbon-cutting. The audience shone with stars
-- military stars, that is: There were more than 35 active-duty and retired general officers at the opening ceremony.
There were a dozen or so Golden Knight parachutists, a few of whom jumped and landed in the center of a circle of cheering
onlookers. There was also a former presidential candidate, Ross Perot, at the party. Organizers say Perot's
$1 million donation helped make the museum a reality. Even anti-war protesters showed up, exercising their rights
to assemble while men who had lost their limbs in combat sat quietly by on the museum's freshly sodded lawns.
Gen. Hugh Shelton, the nation's top military officer as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, came, too. "Great
nations need reminders," he said. "Reminders of what made them great in the first place." There
were congressmen, state senators and representatives and war heroes. There were stirring speeches liberally salted with quotes
from the likes of Ben Franklin. There were 76 reporters to witness the event. And there was, most of all, a sense
of accomplishment -- after years of planning and waiting, the community's dream of finding a grand place to preserve this
rich history had finally come to fruition. "I have a deep feeling of emotion when I walk through here looking
at the giants of our past,'' said Shelton after the ceremony. ''When all the other pieces are completed here
in just a few weeks, (visitors) will come and the word will spread that this is a tremendous facility." The
museum's history dates to 1982 when it was first discussed by representatives of the Fayetteville Area Chamber of Commerce
and Fort Bragg. The museum was to be on Fort Bragg, where there was even a groundbreaking in 1996. But the project was delayed
by rising construction costs, and the city of Fayetteville eventually offered money to complete the project if the museum
was moved downtown. Ground was broken for the museum in June 1998. It was the same ground that had included a
row of bars that had become part of downtown's ugly image. The museum, its supporters said, promised a new day for Fayetteville.
Hectic days For the final weeks leading up to Wednesday, museum employees worked nearly around the clock to get the doors
open. "My staff has been working for the last month, pretty much seven days a week, 10-12 hours a day,"
said John Aarsen, the museum curator. "Lots of details come together at the last minute." The work must
have paid off. Some visitors were moved by the 59,000-square-foot facility, which houses a hanging vintage airplane and helicopter
-- and a tank. Huge glass windows cast bullets of streaming light on the giant entrance room. A mannequin of a falling paratrooper
hangs suspended in time from the bright white steel rafters of the museum's freshly painted ceiling. "You
have really done a great job," Perot said after walking through the museum. "I am always concerned any time I get
involved with something like this that it be done properly. It couldn't be done better." Speaking to
the veterans and active-duty troops in the audience, Perot said Americans should not take their freedom for granted. "People
have made sacrifices for our freedom ever since day one,'' he said. ''And I am honored to be in the same place
with the people who are making those sacrifices." The museum still has nearly $4.5 million to raise to finish
its fund drive. Officials from Boeing aircraft company presented a $100,000 check Wednesday to help remind people that the
museum's work is not yet complete. U.S. Rep. Robin Hayes said the museum is sure to be a boon to the local economy. "I
think it will do extremely well," he said. Retired Lt. Gen. William Yarborough, who is one of the pioneers
of the Army's Airborne and Special Operations forces, said the museum inspired him. "I'm very impressed,"
he said. "I think this thing is going to be an inspiration to not only the civilian community but certainly the young
soldiers who march through it. It's magnificent. I've never seen anything finer."
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