The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 03.05.1958, Blaðsíða 1

The White Falcon - 03.05.1958, Blaðsíða 1
THE Saturday, May 3, 1958 | Headquarters, Iceland Defense Force, Keflavik Airport, Iceland Volume VIII, Number 9 FASRON Exec Heads For Maine In the spring of 1951, LCDR D.L. Leland flew the first military aircraft to Iceland since World War II. In February of 1957 LCDR Leland returned to Iceland to become Execu- tive Officer of Fleet Aircraft Service Squadron 107; he has since completed a fifteen month tour of duty. His next assignment will be in Brunswick Maine with Patrol Squadron 23. LCDR Leland enlisted in the United States Navy in May of 1939 and completed his basic training at the United States Naval Training Center, San Diego, California. An enlisted tour fol- lowed with Patrol Squadron 14, Kaneohe Bay, TerritoryofHawaii. In 1942, he entered the Naval Air Training Command in Pensa- cola, Florida and was designated a Naval Aviator in June of 1943. LCDR Leland then reported to Headquarters Squadron 14 in San Diego, California. While sta- tioned there he married the former Miss Bernice Lee Foss. While serving in the Pacific campaign in the early forties, he was twice decorated with the Dis- tinguished Flying Cross; once in action with a Japanese ship off the southern coast of Japan and the second after a raiding action against Kanoya Airfield in Japan. In May of 1945, LCDR Leland was wounded while making an attack on a Japanese destroyer and received the Purple Heart. Following his Pacific assign- ments, he served consecutive tours as a flight instructor, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida, VR-5 at Seattle, Washington and also at the Naval Air Station at Corpus Christi, Texas. During 1952 and 1954, he was Assistant Air Of- ficer, Kodiak, Alaska. Following this, he attended Naval General Line School at Monterey, Cali- fornia, George Washington Uni- versity, Washington, D.C., and the Armed Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Virginia. He then re- ported to FASRON 107, Keflavik, Iceland. Besides wearing the Distinguis- hed Flying Cross and Purple Heart, LCDR Leland also holds the Presidential Unit Citation and Star, Pacific Theatre with six stars, American Defense Medal, Korean Occupation Medal and the United Nations Medal. In a farewell statement, LCDR D.L. Leland said, “This has been an enjoyable tour of duty. All military officers can and must learn to work with the other ser- vices, to learn their problems and policies. In Iceland, we are doing exactly that, and I believe doing it successfully.” Old Home Weeh? It was old home week for a couple of self-proclaimed “small town boys” in the 2dBCT recently. Their meeting was a complete surprise—and a happy one. After all, Keflavik is quite a distance from Crisfield, Maryland, as the men, John E. Whitelock, III, of the S3 Section and Lance Thomas of Bravo Company will vouch. LCDR D. L. Leland. Army Team Sees BCT Operations A First U.S. Army Inspection Team arrived Tuesday for the purpose of inspecting facilities of the Second Battalion Combat Team at Keflavik Airport. The team comes from the G4 (Supply and Logistics), G3 (Operations and Administration), and TC (Transportation Corps) Sections of First Army’s Head- quarters, Governors Island, New York. Team members are Colonel S.G. Brown, Col T.A. Rathge and Capt G.L. Dennett. The Inspectors are due to depart Keflavik Airport today, after having made a thorough examina- tion of the 2d BCT’s operations, as well as visiting Rockville, Grindavik, and other points of interest. No Restrictions On Army Boosts For the second time in more than two years there are no MOS restrictions on EM promotions as the Department of the Army recently authorized 42,206 ap- pointments for the quarter ending 30 June 1958. The breakdown is as follows: To E-7, 275; to E-6, 582; to E-5, 5718; to E-4, 28,225. For promotion to the pay grade of E-3, fourth quarter Fiscal Year 1958, authority was granted commanders to effect appoint- ments of all privates E-2 who have completed eight months active Federal sendee as of April 1, May 1, or June 1, and are re- comended by their immediate Commanders. Forgetful joker: Half way through a joke, he finds that the point has slipped his mind. Tours Cancelled The Viking Service Club has announced that the weekly tours, sponsored by Personnel Services, have been cancelled for the first two weeks in May. This cancellation is a neces- sity due to the poor road conditions which prevail dur- ing this time, resulting from the present warm weather. The next tour has been scheduled for May 18, mark- ing the return to the weekly trips, and will visit Hval- fjordur. 53rd ARS Sets Iceland 'First' Para-Rescue personnel of the 53rd Air Rescue Squadron set a new “first” for Iceland last Thurs- day by making two team jumps in one day. The first jump was made from an SC-54 and the second from an SH-19. Participa- ting in the jumps were T/Sgt Harold A. McDonald, S/Sgt Henry H. Kirksey, S/Sgt Bobby A. Cop- pock, S/Sgt Jess B. Mayes, and A/1C Mett E. Garrison. The drop zone was a small patch of sandy soil on the south side of the island, which was made even smaller by the recent rains that covered nearly half of the area with a shallow lake. A high de- gree of accuracy was maintained in the jumps with no man landing more than 150 feet from the target. The most accurate jump was made by S/Sgt Mayes who landed within 10 feet of the bulls- eye. Each member of the team is triple-qualified as a parachutist'—- medical corpsman — survival specialist. They have been trained to cope with practically any type of rescue, medical or survival duty, ranging from landing in trees or water to the treatment and evuca- tion of disaster stricken victims. The team’s most recent effort in this direction was the six-nation effort involving a Norwegian sailor with a broken leg from the ice-bound sealer, “Drott.” The team also spent three days re- cently on Myrdalsjokull Glacier in cooperation with the Icelandic Ground Rescue Team’s field train- ing exercise. The team’s experience ranges from one to fifteen years—S/Sgt Coppock having become a para- rescue technician only last year, while T/Sgt MacDonald was a member of the first para-rescue unit formed in 1943 (by the U.S. Coast Guard). S/Sgt Mayes leads in parachuting experience, having made 46 jumps. Just before his assignment to Iceland, S/Sgt Kirksey was a member of the team that rescued an airman and a civilian injured in the collapse of 40_foot wooden tower at Eglin AFB, Florida. According to hos- pital authorities there, the prompt and professional action of the team undoubtedly saved the life of the civilian. Normandy To Iceland Nearly fourteen years ago — June 6 1944 — the 2d Ranger Battalion was a part of the assault force that stormed across the Normandy beaches to breach Hitler’s “Festung Europa.” Today the 2d Rangers, now redesignated as the 2d Bat- talion Combat Team, has cele- brated its fifteenth birthday and is looking toward the D-Day an- niversary. The 2d Ranger Infantry Bat- talion was constituted as the 2d Ranger Battalion in March, 1943, and activated on April 1 of that year. After training at Fort Pierce, Florida, and Fort Dix, New Jersey, the battalion left for overseas duty in November, 1943. Seven months later they were writing history across the beaches and among the hedgerows of Nor- mandy. FROM EUROPE TO KOREA In addition to participating in the amphibious landings in Nor- mandy, the 2d saw action across France and in Belgium, Luxem- bourg and Germany. After re- turning to the United States, the outfit was inactivated but was redesignated as the 2d Infantry Battalion in August 1949, and shortly thereafter was ordered to duty in the Panama Canal Zone. Later the battalion was split up into idependently operating com- panies, but the outbreak of hos- tilities in Korea brought the scat- tered companies together again. The 2d Ranger Infantry Company became Company “A,” the 6th Ranger Infantry Company was designated Company “B,” the 14th became “C” Company, and the 15th and 9th were renamed Com- panies “D” and “E.” The 10th Ranger Infantry Company became Company “F”—which was recon- stituted into the medical detach- ment. Even though there are no members of the original 2d Ranger Infantry Battalion on duty with the 2d BCT, every member of the comand is justly proud of the battle honors amassed by the out- fit in Europe and Korea. From World War II the credits include Normandy (with assault landing), Northern France, Rhineland, Ar- dennes-Alsace, and Central Europe. From the Korean conflict come the Korean Intervention, the U. N. Counteroffensive (with as- sault landing), the Spring Offen- sive and the U. N. Summer-Fall Offensive. In addition, the 2d BCT holds the Distinguished Unit Citation and the French Croix de Guerre with Silver-Gilt Star. NAME PUBLICATIONS Many “name” publications, in- cluding “The Reader’s Digest,” are preparing special articles in tribute to the Normandy annivers- ary. Cornelius Ryan is preparing a D-Day history for the “Digest,” and it will be published in book form. He is particularly interested in the activities of the 2d and 5th Ranger Battalions, the 1st, 4th, 29th, and 90th Infantry Divisions, and the 82d and 101st Airborne Divisions. The magazine has asked for contributions from any per- sonnel who participated in the D-Day operations. Then there is the story of the man who starved to death while trying to get the cellophane wrap- per off a drug store sandwich. NATO UNIFIED POWER FOR PEACE

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The White Falcon

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