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View Full Version : A very cool thing done by two of my friends...



Okla-homey
12/23/2007, 03:32 PM
:D

These wonderful folks are in our Sunday School class. George and Rachel's son made it home this year. He was a guest in class with them today. He's a young Marine assigned to the Defense Languages Institute for 18 months where he is becoming an Arabic linguist. He hopes to go back for Mandarin Chinese after he's done a tour using his Arab talk.


Couple feeds the Corps for Christmas

http://aycu07.webshots.com/image/38686/2002389853974325484_rs.jpg (http://allyoucanupload.webshots.com/v/2002389853974325484)
George and Rachel Gibbs are shipping Oklahoma barbecue dinners to Marines in California this Christmas.

By MANNY GAMALLO World Staff Writer
12/23/2007

The Gibbses of Tulsa wanted to bring some holiday cheer to Marines not going home for Christmas.

Christmas dinner will be a sumptuous barbecue spread for more than 70 Marines at Camp Pendleton, Calif., thanks in large part to a Tulsa couple they have never met.

George and Rachel Gibbs spent thousands of dollars out of their own pockets in an effort to do something special for the Marines at Camp Pendleton who would not be going home for the holidays.

It took a lot of planning and doing, but the Marines will be enjoying Oklahoma barbecue with all the fixings on Christmas Day.

"Somebody took care of my Marine, so I wanted to make sure I was going to take care of someone else's Marine," said George Gibbs, a Tulsa attorney.

His son, Lance Cpl. George Edward Gibbs, was at Camp Pendleton last year and now is stationed at Monterey, Calif.

When Cpl. Gibbs learned that Pendleton's Marines in training could not go home for the holidays, he relayed the information to his parents.

George Gibbs said the plan to help the Marines began in October while he and his wife were in Monterey to visit their son. The couple were dining with friends, Joyce and Curtis Orrell of Valley Center, Calif., when the idea was hatched.

Gibbs credited his wife, an obstetrician-gynecologist at the Warren Clinic, and Joyce Orrell for coming up with the idea. "All I did was be the leg man to get it all done," he said.

The largest part of the effort came this week with the preparation of the meat -- some 200 pounds of it.

Chuck Gawey, owner of Albert G's barbecue at 2748 S. Harvard Ave., knew the order was coming, and he had his crew ready to prepare the meal and sauces.

It took several days to get it done. "We prepared 40 pounds of chopped brisket, 40 pounds of pulled pork, 40 pounds of bologna and 15 slabs of ribs," Gawey said.

"It was one of our most unusual orders," considering the amount of food prepared and where it was going, Gawey said.

He said Gibbs, armed with a bevy of Styrofoam containers, came in this week and packed up the meat and sauce to get it ready for shipping.

Gibbs said he has used Albert G's in the past to cater some of his office parties, so he has developed a relationship with Gawey over the years.

That relationship helped. Gawey said he cut Gibbs a break on the meal, but it still cost a whopping $1,500.

Even more than that cost was the price of shipping it overnight via United Parcel Service. The shipping bill came to $2,600, Gibbs said.

Together with buying salads, bread and dessert on the California end of the meal, Gibbs said he and his wife spent around $4,500.

Volunteers in California will prepare the meal for the Marines, he said.

The food is being kept in freezers at the Valley Center school system, and the Marine cooks at Camp Pendleton already have given the OK to use the ovens there to reheat the meal, he said.

This is the first time the Gibbses have done anything like this at Christmas, but they plan to do it every year from now on.

George Gibbs noted that he and his wife might try to trim the costs, however. "We had no idea it would cost this much," he said.

Still, the Gibbses say it is a blessing that they could afford to help the troops during the holidays. "We felt led to do it," he said.

"Those guys perform a service for us. You can't believe what Marines do for our country."

sooner n houston
12/23/2007, 03:36 PM
Very cool indeed!

Flagstaffsooner
12/23/2007, 04:14 PM
and the Marine cooks at Camp Pendleton already have given the OK to use the ovens there to reheat the mealThose military cooks will figure out a way to make it taste bad.;)

John Kochtoston
12/23/2007, 04:32 PM
:D

These wonderful folks are in our Sunday School class. George and Rachel's son made it home this year. He was a guest in class with them today. He's a young Marine assigned to the Defense Languages Institute for 18 months where he is becoming an Arabic linguist. He hopes to go back for Mandarin Chinese after he's done a tour using his Arab talk.

If he masters both languages, that would make him quite the cunning linguist...

...sorry, couldn't resist. :D Very cool deal by both the parents and the young Marine.

Tailwind
12/24/2007, 12:17 AM
Nice! And expensive.

GottaHavePride
12/24/2007, 12:33 AM
Good on them.

Tulsa_Fireman
12/24/2007, 12:38 AM
If he masters both languages, that would make him quite the cunning linguist...

Dammit, beat me to it.

And fine job, Gibbs family. I know I appreciate it, and I'm not even IN the service!

soonerloyal
12/26/2007, 02:00 PM
Ahhh, the greatness that is the Corps Family. Every Marine is OUR Marine.

I remember my boys saying they were impressed with the food quality at CamPen. Of course, that was soon after 13 weeks of food in the Recruit Chow Hall at the Depot.

Thanks, God bless and Semper Fi to the Gibbs family for taking care of our Devil Dogs. GREAT read! Thank you so much for sharing it!

soonerloyal
12/26/2007, 02:17 PM
Those military cooks will figure out a way to make it taste bad.;)

LOL.

However, due to privatization, the taste ruination is now done by civilians.

(We're hoping that the scuttlebutt is false that due to the same privatization, the 7051 MOS [Fire Dawgs] isn't replaced with civilians as well... :( :mad: )

BigRedJed
12/26/2007, 02:31 PM
Nice story. Oklahomans do a good jorb of reaching out to the military. Downtown Oklahoma City attractions have done this (http://newsok.com/article/3184064) for Fort Sill soldiers every year for the past several.


Downtown opens its heart to Fort Sill soldiers

By Susan Simpson
Staff Writer

From a standing ovation at Toby Keith's restaurant to a speedy slide down an icy incline, about 40 Fort Sill soldiers who aren't going home for the holidays instead enjoyed a fun-filled day downtown.

The soldiers traveled by bus Friday from the Lawton post and were hosted by downtown businesses and attractions.

"Out of the more than 15,000 men and women stationed at Fort Sill, these were the only ones who could not make it home,” said Kari Watkins, executive director of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, which the soldiers toured. "We thought we'd help make their time in Oklahoma memorable.”

‘I felt my heart jump out of my chest'

Pvt. Joshua King said he was "overwhelmed” by Oklahomans' generosity and friendliness.

"I've never gotten this kind of respect before,” said the 18-year-old from Oroville, Calif., as he lined up to snow tube at the AT&T Bricktown Ballpark.

Pvt. Aaron Maxfield, a New Jersey native, said he's proud to be a soldier.

When the group ate lunch at Toby Keith's I Love This Bar and Grill, everyone in the crowded restaurant stood and clapped.

"I felt my heart jump out of my chest,” said Maxfield, 20. "They know we are doing something good for the United States of America.”

Pvt. Shawn Straub said he was moved by the national memorial. The 31-year-old National Guard member is a New York firefighter and lost comrades and his fiancee in 9/11.

"It was good to see it,” Straub said of the Oklahoma City bombing memorial. Straub said he joined the military to support those fighting the war against terrorism.

"They went to war for taking out our buildings,” he said. "It's the least I can do for them.”

Teresa Webber was in line to snow tube after the soldiers and said she's glad Oklahoma City welcomed them.

Webber, a Los Angeles resident, was in Oklahoma City to welcome the newborn of her son, who is stationed at Tinker Air Force Base.
"It's hard to be away from family during the holidays,” Webber said.

TopDaugIn2000
12/26/2007, 02:35 PM
I saw a job posting not long ago for an arab speaking translator to work with the gubment, based in OKC. The job STARTED at 200K, plus bonuses. Wish I'd have paid more attention to Achmed and his family when they were chattering!