| i. | RODNEY6 GROSSKREUTZ. |
| ii. | TRISHA6 FRANCE. |
| i. | RODNEY6 GROSSKREUTZ. |
| ii. | TRISHA6 FRANCE. |
| 130. | i. | JAMES BRIAN6 BARTEL, b. July 15, 1959, Oshkosh, Wis. ~ Winnebago County. | |
| 131. | ii. | KIMBERLY SUE BARTEL, b. September 19, 1961, Oshkosh, Wis. ~ Winnebago County. | |
| 132. | iii. | ELIZABETH ANN BARTEL, b. March 18, 1969, Oshkosh, Wis. ~ Winnebago County. |
| i. | SCOTT ANDREW6 BARTEL, b. November 08, 1971, Wautoma, Wis. ~ Waushara County; m. SENGAMPHONE KONGRATSASY, October 05, 2002, Wautoma (Waushara County) Vol.6 Page 184; b. September 10, 1974, Laos. |
|
More About SCOTT BARTEL and SENGAMPHONE KONGRATSASY: Marriage: October 05, 2002, Wautoma (Waushara County) Vol.6 Page 184 |
| ii. | LISA MARIE BARTEL, b. May 31, 1971, Wautoma , Wis. ~ Waushara County. |
|
Notes for LISA MARIE BARTEL: Source 1: Newspaper article: Saudia Arabia--On an expanse of desert whipped by fine red sand, Capt. Lisa Bartel stands watch over the Patriot missile battery she commands inside this vast Saudi military complex. Her unit is responsible for protecting the base, the surrounding oil installations and a nearby U.S. military housing complex from attack. But Saudi sensitivity about the kingdom's need for U.S. protection runs so high that publicly, Bartel's mission does not exist. Tough security restrictions bar her and her troops from going into Riyadh except on official business. In five months in the Saudi kingdom, she has never been invited to a Saudi home. "We have limited interface with the Saudis," said Bartel, 30, of Oshkosh, Wis. "But I'm here to do a mission." Promoted by heightened security concerns since the Sept 11 attacks and by restrictions the Saudi government has imposed on U.S. military operations, U.S. commanders are re-examining their presence here. The Central Command, in Tampa, Fla., the headquarters for the Middle East operations, has prepared a sweeping contingency plan to move out of Saudi Arabia, senior military officials say. The plan would uproot a state-of-the-art command post that has been the nerve center for the air war in Afghanistan from Prince Sultan air base, south of here, and move dozens of fighter planes, the officials say. The leading candidate is Al Udeid air base in Qatar, which has vast hangars and 15,000-foot runways, among the longest in the region. Officials emphasize that the contingency plan has not been presented to the Joint Chiefs of Staff or the Pentagon's civilian leadership, nor has it been discussed with the Saudis. Because there are no regular, high-level military talks between Saudi Arabia and the United States, both sides tend to avoid confronting problems head on. It is clear whether Vice President Dick Cheney will raise the issue of the U.S. military presence when he visits Saudi Arabia this week. "The military relationship with Saudi Arabia doesn't work well when it gets a lot of attention," said Anthony C. Zini, a retired Marine general who led the Central Command and is now the Bush administration's special Middle East envoy. "It has to be quiet. A number of things have happened since Sept 11 that have got us crossways in the relationship, and we should do major work to repair it." Zini said he began planning for a reduction in the U.S. military's dependence on Saudi Arabia when he was commander of the U.S. forces in the region in the late 1990's. "I wanted to have some flexibility, so we didn't become totally dependant on one place," he said. Appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on March 11, 2002 Lisa still in the Army and soon to be promoted to a Major, as told to me by her mother at the Slife Reunion July 2005. |