I'm a retired computer systems analyst, having worked with medium sized IBM and DEC mainframes and voice/data communications for Dupont for 36 years - after two years of active duty in the Army toward the end of the Korean conflict, I've been widowed since Oct., 1997 after being married for 42 years. I have four children and nine grandchildren, and live in beautiful Virginia in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains (near the Martinsville NASCAR race track).
About me then:
I was just out of college with a
commission as a 2nd Lt. in the army. My unit was the 9223rd Transportation Service Unit,
better know as the Transportation Arctic Group. This unit tested oversnow vehicles
attempting to find the most economical and practical methods for moving cargo on the
icecap. While testing these vehicles, we hauled supplies to an Air Force radar base 100+
miles east of Thule. Bases on the icecap were part of the Dew line (Distant Early Warning
radar bases operated durng the cold war).
It was also in July that the bay was almost clear all the way to Saunders Island - the long flattop Island across the bay. (below, left) Pictures like this (above, right) with Mt. Dundas shown in relationship to the base were against regulations, but I couldn't resist, and kept them to myself. This one was after the ice had cleared out of the bay. Russia knew about as much about the base as we did. "Moscow Mollie" broadcast in english, played stateside music hits, and told us which runway lights were out.
The rock cairn on
top of Mt. Dundas will be described later, but looking past the cairn and me, you can see a
reverse view of the base and the icy bay. This shot was taken at 2 A.M. on a Sunday
morning in June (after the sun started going in a circle for 24 hours of daylight).