Military

Otto John Glasser
1940

Lieutenant General Otto John Glasser was deputy chief of staff for research and development at Headquarters U.S. Air Force in Washington, D.C., with additional duty as military director, U.S. Air Force Scientific Advisory Board.

General Glasser was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in 1918, and graduated from Cornell University in 1940 with a degree in electrical engineering. He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Officers Reserve Corps in May of 1940, and was called to active duty with the Army Signal Corps in February 1941 along with fellow EE Carl Rhodes ’38. For the next several years, Glasser was assigned to the Caribbean area and was responsible for the installation and operation of early warning radar systems.

He entered flying training in September 1943, graduated the following June, and then received transition training in the B-17, B-24 and B-29 aircraft. In September 1945 General Glasser was assigned as chief of the Radar Branch, Headquarters Continental Air Forces (later the Strategic Air Command), Bolling Field, Washington, D.C.

In 1946 he attended Ohio State University for graduate training in electronic physics and received his master's degree in 1947. Following graduation, General Glasser was assigned to the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project, Albuquerque, N.M. In January 1951 he entered the Air Command and Staff School, Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala., and upon completion of the school in May 1951, he was assigned to Headquarters U.S. Air Force as chief, Munitions Branch, Research and Development Directorate.

General Glasser joined the Air Research and Development Command in 1954, and went to the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division, Los Angeles. Calif. He was one of the initial group assembled to develop the first intercontinental ballistic missile. He later became program director for both the Atlas and Minuteman missiles.

In October 1959 General Glasser was reassigned to Headquarters Air Research and Development Command, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, serving first as chief, Ballistic Missiles and Space Systems Division, and later as assistant deputy chief of staff, research and engineering. In February 1961 he was designated special assistant to the commander, ARDC, with additional duty as chief of the Command Special Projects Office.

In July 1962 General Glasser was transferred to L.G. Hanscom Field, Massachusetts, as the vice commander of the Electronic Systems Division, Air Force Systems Command. He remained in this position until July 1965 when he was reassigned to the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, Research and Development, Headquarters U.S. Air Force; first as deputy director of operational requirements and development plans, and then to the position of assistant deputy chief of staff, research and development.

In February 1970, General Glasser was assigned as the deputy chief of staff for research and development, Headquarters U.S. Air Force.

His military decorations include the Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit and the Air Force Commendation Medal.

General Glasser is buried in Section 30 of Arlington National Cemetery. His wife, Norma Mayo Glasser (11 January 1922-18 July 1986) is buried with him.

Army 1st Lt. Carl F. Rhodes was an officer and a gentleman to the end— a horrible end

An electrical engineering major, had joined the R.O.T.C. together with a couple of other brothers, and was called up in February 1941. He was commissioned as an officer in the Signal Corps, and in April, sent to the Philippines as war rumbled on the horizon.

Imperial Japanese forces invaded the Philippines almost immediately after Pearl Harbor. Carl was captured at the Fall of Bataan on April 9, and along with tens of thousands of other American troops, sent on the infamous forced march through the jungle now known as the Bataan Death March. Many died of starvation, heat stroke, and exhaustion, or at the hands of their captors. The survivors were divided among three camps near Cabanatuan, Luzon; Bro. Rhodes was sent to the worst of these, Camp #1, where dysentery, malaria, malnutrition, and abuse took a heavy toll on the prisoners.

No one at home knew his fate; the Japanese did not observe the Geneva Conventions. Fellow EE and Army officer Otto Glasser ’40 wrote the Cornell Alumni News in March 1943:

“I was delighted to read that Bruce Cormack '39 is alive although a prisoner. Bruce, Carl Rhodes '38, and myself entered the Army together, with the same outfit, and but for a queer quirk of fate we would all be together today. I hope you will have good news about Carl in the near future.”

News of a sort came in June, when his parents and childhood friends identified him in a photograph of the prisoners printed in Life magazine. It was the last anyone would ever see of him.

As American forces advanced in 1944, the Japanese began removing healthy POWs to Japan, leaving only the sick and wounded at Cabanatuan. On December 13, 1944 (U.S. time), 1,915 of the remaining POWs, including Carl Rhodes, were put on the infamous “hellship” Oryoku Maru. Two days later, as the ship made its way up the coast, it was bombed by American planes. One bomb hit the hold where the Signal Corps lay huddled. Another bomb struck the ship as it sank, a mile from shore, blowing the wounded and non-swimmers clinging to wreckage to bits. Only 1,100 survived the swim back to shore, where they were recaptured. Two weeks later, the prisoners were put on another hellship, the Enoura Maru. They were not fed the entire three-day voyage, until they docked at Takao (now Kaohsiung) on New Year's. On January 9, as Gen. MacArthur invaded Luzon, Takao was also attacked, and the Enoura Maru was bombed. A deck collapsed, and the hatches were blown out, exposing the prisoners to the winter. Remarkably, Bro. Rhodes survived all of these ordeals as well.

On January 13, 1945, by-now the enfeebled remnants were boarded onto the Brazil Maru for the final, and most hellish, voyage, two weeks to Japan. Amidst the frigid winter temperatures, the prisoner quarters had no heat. They were given no water, except what they could bribe from the guards. Deaths were constant, with guards hauling bodies up to the deck to be discarded on a daily basis. Bro. Rhodes, whose weight had dropped below 100 pounds from severe malnutrition, stayed huddled in his bunk for warmth. As they neared Japan on January 28, one his of sergeants, risking his own life, stole a cup of water and brought it to Bro. Rhodes, who drank some, then passed the rest to his chaplain. The sergeant left them to replace the cup. When he returned, he found both the lieutenant and the chaplain dead— two among the five hundred who died on the voyage from Takao to Moji.

Despite the degradation and dehumanizing treatment Carl experienced in his final years, his men had only warm memories of him. S/Sgt. Thomas O'Shea wrote “He was my lieutenant and I worshipped him. He spoke to the men as courteously as he spoke to officers and never asked any man to do anything he would not do himself.” S/Sgt. Anthony Marangiello added, “We knew him when the going was tough as a soldier, a gentleman and a friend. He was never too busy, too tired or too sick to help the other guy. He always shared what little he had. We shall never forget him.”

Lt. Bruce Cormack, his and Bro. Glasser's friend from Cornell, survived, and wrote to Carl’s mother: "I want you to know what a fine man Carl was in the opinion of all who knew him and what a good soldier and officer he made. His men loved him, would do anything for him and would follow him anywhere. I could not have asked for a better buddy and companion.”

His parents created the Carl F. Rhodes ’38 Scholarship in his memory, which was awarded for the next 20 years to an outstanding Cornellian ROTC cadet.

Lt. Col. Gerald Evan Brower ’16

Lt. Col. Gerald E. Browser ’16 was a military aviation pioneer and a founding father of Omicron Zeta.

A Brooklyn native, he joined the U.S. Army after completing his civil engineering degree in 1916, and served in the First World War as a captain in the field artillery in the Toul Sector and in the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. He became an aerial observer for the artillery in November 1918 and there found his true calling, transferring in 1921 to the U.S. Army Air Corps.

In 1928, he was given command of the 1st Pursuit Group, the first air unit in the United States armed forces, at Selfridge Field in Michigan. After that command, he became commanding officer of the 3rd Pursuit Squadron, based at Clark Field in the Philippines. In 1936, he was appointed to the Office of the Chief of the Air Corps in charge of the Supply Division, and promoted to lieutenant colonel.

While serving as a military observer with the Royal Air Force in the Sudan, he was killed in a plane crash on April 20, 1941 near Al-Ubayyid, in what is now North Kurdufan. He was the first casualty among American military observers in the runup to the Second World War.

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