Originally Posted By: David
Gentlemen, with respect, we are talking about a knife formerly owned by a man who served his country in three wars and in the dawn of American space exploration. Then, upon retirement, he continued to serve overseas in US AID. There is probably more to his story that we do not know.

Personally, I don't care if the knife was carried through Laos and Cambodia in a golf bag. IMHO, this discussion about the definition of "carried" is going in a direction that ignores the owner's lifetime of service and the unique history of this knife. I believe it is unnecessary.


Exactly my original point (see below). I don't know the reason for the subsequent gratuitous rock throwing, nor who the rocks were aimed at (me? pilots? USAF? Lt. Col Salvo? or his service in Vietnam-SEAsia? model 17 knives?). Knowing what some AID people did in addition to their "day" job, I also wonder if the obit tells the whole story.

Originally Posted By: Jacknola
“…Lt. Colonel Joseph P. Salvo: He was a heck of a soldier, and a man with accomplishments in his life that are truly of note... paratrooper trainer WWII, Japan occupation, Korean War, Vietnam War, Laos War, Cambodia War, and in between, NASA…”


Originally Posted By: Jacknola
“…But what is interesting is that the claim in the ad is probably true. This knife was likely a NASA knife, later carried in Vietnam, and probably Laos and Cambodia... hence the (model 15?) sheath.”


Regards



Edited by Jacknola (11/07/11 02:39 PM)
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Jack Williams