
Location: South Western Colorado
Registered: 24 November 2005
Posts: 1111
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Location: Arizona
Registered: 08 May 2005
Posts: 1541
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Registered: 19 February 2006
Posts: 1286
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The pilot of the Enola Gay was a sigma nu just like me. How do you like that.
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"Curmudgeon"

Location: Washtenaw County, Michigan
Registered: 21 January 2005
Posts: 1798
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Location: On the Beach.
Registered: 08 March 2005
Posts: 907
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Flags are at 'Half Mast' all over the Marianas. 
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Location: On the Beach.
Registered: 08 March 2005
Posts: 907
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from a few years back...quote: WHAT reaction do you get from Japanese people when you meet them and they find out who you are? Do you believe in killing innocent civilians if the need is great enough? These were two of the toughest questions from Northern Marianas College students that retired Brig. Gen. Paul Tibbets, Morris Jeppson and Dutch Van Kirk had to answer during an open forum at NMC yesterday morning. But the returning Enola Gay crew members were unfazed and even seemed to enjoy being grilled by the students. “I’ve been used to tough questions. I’ve been answering tough questions all my life. (The students’) questions were intelligent and I enjoyed answering them all. They are a good bunch of students and I like them,” Van Kirk told Variety in an interview. To the first question, Tibbets replied that he generally had no trouble dealing with the Japanese. The Enola Gay — which dropped atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 — is actually quite popular in Japan, he added. He said one Japanese businessman once told him, “We look up to you the way the American Negroes look up to (former President) Abraham Lincoln. You granted us emancipation. You freed us.” Van Kirk earned the applause of the NMC faculty and students with his witty reply to the second question. “Yes, I do believe the killing of civilians is justified if the need is great enough. Mussolini was a civilian, Adolf Hitler was a civilian. In fact, I have certain people on my list that I’d like to see killed,” Van Kirk said.
He and Jeppson then gave the students some words of advice. “Always have an inquisitive mind. Don’t believe all the baloney you read in your books, although not all of them are baloney. Get your own thoughts. I’ve always had a happy life because although Paul (Tibbets) gave me a lot of orders, I didn’t follow all of them,” Van Kirk said, partly in jest. Jeppson added, “Just have a good life and do a good job.” Tibbets declined to comment. For their part, the students said they were very honored to have met the Enola Gay crew. “It’s heartwarming. I never expected to meet anyone from history, especially from World War II. It’s an honor,” Liberal Arts student Francine Manibusan said. Accounting student Tatiana Babauta said she was very impressed by the Enola Gay crew, especially by their wit.
The three Enola Gay crew members also signed autographs at the Dai Ichi Hotel lobby yesterday afternoon. Between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m., they signed copies of Tibbets’ book “Enola Gay,” as well as photos of the plane and a poster on the mission. Hideyuki Suzuki, a tourist from Tokyo who happened to passed by the lobby, could not believe his luck when he saw Tibbets, Jeppson and Van Kirk signing autographs. Suzuki, however, was unsure at first if he could buy a copy of the book. “I am Japanese. Can I buy a copy?” he asked one of the veterans’ assistants. After paying for his copy, Suzuki lined up to have the three men sign it. He also posed for a photograph with them. “The story of the Enola Gay is well known and I am interested in (Gen. Tibbets’) book about it,” Suzuki told Variety. He added, “Frankly speaking, I’m very sorry that the atomic bombing had to happen, but that’s part of war. And war is miserable. That’s why we should try to avoid it.” Autographed copies of Tibbets’ Enola Gay book are sold at $60 each while photographs of the plane are available at $34 each. Those who want both the book and the photograph may buy them at $80. The posters, which bear the signatures of three crew members and the 60th anniversary commemoration cancellation stamp, are sold at $100 each. http://www.executive.gov.mp/news/nmc_06162004.htm
Hafa Adai!
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Registered: 27 March 2008
Posts: 5
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I've read the interview only to see more reason to admire him the responses he gets from the Japanese are amazing I would have never thought about it like this. ____ http://www.worldwar2forum.com/
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"Curmudgeon"

Location: Washtenaw County, Michigan
Registered: 21 January 2005
Posts: 1798
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bump
"It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it" DOUGLAS MacARTHUR, 1952
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"Retired SFC, USArmy"

Location: KY
Registered: 20 May 2005
Posts: 1437
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* 
Count it the greatest sin to prefer life to honor, and for the sake of living to lose what makes it worth living. -junival c.50-c.130
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