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He graduated from Manhattan High in 1961, then took a semester of engineering at Kansas State University before joining the military where he learned how to be a mechanic, specializing in learned radio and navigation equipments while on active duty.
He was working for A T &T for nearly a year when he heard that there was an opening for avionics at TWA. Even though it meant a drop of 60% from his then salary, he rejected an offer of a higher position at his work to apply and accepted the position at TWA. He wet his feet for three years as an avionics engineer before he was able to move up to the “flight deck” (as it was then called) as a pilot/flight engineer. Even though he was already a qualified pilot, he filled up the rest of his time taking up different courses in junior college to earn more credits. These credits later on translated to his move up to become a captain for TWA which he held for 35 years.
Due to the economy going down at the time, TWA later shut down and was bought by American Airlines where he kept his captain status intact before being forced to retire at the age of 60, from flying commercial airlines, that is.
Truth is, he hasn't really retired from flying nor helping fixed someone else's airplane. He has three FAA certification -- ATP (Airline Transport Pilot) rating, Flight Engineer Turbo-jet rating, and A&P (Airframe and Power Plant) certificate with inspection authorization. He also have an FCC (Federal Communications Commission) license or general radio with a radar endorsement license.
He has also continually maintained and fly two working vintage airplanes, a Swift and a Luscombe. Another airplane is on the way to completion: his very own Buckaroo T35A which is the fighter version of the Swift.
Throughout the years, he had helped many of his friends and associates put together their own airplanes. The most significant he had helped put together to its original flying state is the Buckaroo T35A, a trainer/fighter plane he had spent a lot of energy searching for and successfully negotiated its return here to the United States from Saudi Arabia. This plane is currently on display in the Swift Museum at Athens, Tennessee.