The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 24.10.1959, Blaðsíða 2

The White Falcon - 24.10.1959, Blaðsíða 2
Page 2 THE WHITE FALCON Saturday, October 24, 1959 Chaplain CoL umn The Still Small Voice by Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Edward Ellenbogan Do you ever find that you have nothing to do, and no one to talk to? How does the experience strike you? Most of our contemporaries dread solitude. Most of us will go to any length to rescue ourselves from such a situation, with the least practicable delay. The next time this development overtakes you, try your best to maintain your aloneness for a little while. While it is true that this experience is frightening at first, it can become very helpful. Being by oneself enables a person to make his own acquaint- ance. In solitude, one is capable of sustained throught. (Many will tell you, never be alone, if you can help it — it is “scary” to recognize how empty-headed a person can frequently be). It is likely that only in solitude does one ever hear the “still small voice” of the Deity. To hear that is the reward of overcoming one’s fear of lone-ness. The great ideas of minkind were conceived in solitude. Sit quietly and alone occasionally — to do so will make you a better person than you ever thought you could be. School Facilities Provided By Local Districts In ZI In September, when the school year started, children of Air Force parents entered the local classrooms along with other youngsters in every state in the United States. These schools are run by the com- munity and not by the Air Force, although in a number of instances Air Force dependents might comprise the majority of the school population. This “loading” gives some parents the mistaken idea that the school is administered by the Air Force, comments an Air Force spokesman responsible for dependents’ education. The Hq USAF offi- cial points out that only at Eglin, Patrick, Tyndall and McDill Air Force Bases in Florida; Craig AFB, Ala., and Langley AFB, Va., are the schools operated by the Air Force. In all other cases, in the US, the local school district meets the educational needs of the children. When a large base settles in an area or an existing base’s population suddenly swells, it’s up to the base authorities to advise local officials of the need for increased educational facilities. In some instances, to meet the demand, civil authorities will build a school near the base as a matter of convenience. It is this proximity to the base that often gives people the erroneous im- pression of the school “belonging” to the Air Force. Providing educational facilities does not mean the local district is bestowing favors on the Air Force. This is actually a community responsibility, and the community responds in much the same way it would if a large industrial plant moved into town with a subsequent influx of employees and their children. There is a difference, though. In the case of a factory or business, taxes would help support the exjflansion of a school program. An Air Force base, being Federal property is generally non-taxable, there- fore the community is deprived of this income source. Congress, recognizing this, authorized Federal assistance for com- munities if their existing facilities are strained. Legislation provides funds for school construction, operation and maintenance. The money does not come out of the Air Force’s budget. Rather it is paid to the' school district by the U.S. Office of Education, a part of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. This payment does not give the Air Force or the Office of Edu- cation a say-so in school operation or policy. If an Air Force par- ent wants to make his voice heard, a Hq USAF official said, he can do it by joining the local Parent-Teacher Association. The amount paid by the Government is based on the “local con- tribution rate,” which represents approximately the average amount a school district is contributing to a child’s education. As might be expected, it varies from place to place. The payment also de- pends on such factors as the Air Force family head living or working on Federal property. If he lives and works on base, the Federal contribution would be 100 per cent. It would be only 50 per cent if he lived off base. That’s why, early in the school year, usually during registration, little Johnny may come trudging home with a note from teacher. The apprehensive parent will probably discover it’s nothing worse than a questionnaire he has to fill out and return to the school authorities. THE WHITE FALCON Volume 9 Number 20 HEADQUARTERS, ICELAND DEFENSE FORCE Col. Benjamin G. Willis, USAF Island Commander Iceland (ISCOMICE) The WHITE FALCON it an official Armed Forcet newspaper published bi-monthly at Keflavik Airport, Iceland, by and for the Army, Navy and Air Force personnel of the Iceland Detente Force. The WHITE FALCON receives AFFB material. Views and opinions expressed herein art not necessarily those of the Department of Defense. Deadline for copy: noon Friday before the date of publication. Telephone numbers: i!56, i!9i. Information Officer.............Major Thomas E. Bowers, USAF. Information NCOIC .............. MSgt George W. Williams, USAF Editor..........................A/1C Laurence O. Smith, USAF Staff Photographer ...................... Sgt Jose Vazquez, USA lutolduprenttmM)* h.f. PAPPY GUNN, LEGENDARY AIRMAN-OF-FORTUNE Col. Paul Irvin (Pappy) Gunn lived and died under extraordin- ary circumstances. Hollywood fic- tion couldn’t be more exotic if it tried. The adventurous exploits of Pappy Gunn are well-told in Gen. George C. Kenney’s book, “The Saga of Pappy Gunn.” Four-star generals aren’t usu- ally given to writing stories about men who served under them. But Pappy Gunn was a bird of a dif- ferent color, and only a man of Kenney’s stature could paint the full, fantastic picture of Gunn’s military episodes in the Pacific during World War II. General Kenney had close con- tact with this unusual airman- adventurer, and knows first hand some of the many stories that grew up about the Arkansas farm boy. He also got to know the characteristics and mechanical gadgeteering of this superb flyer who hid the regulation book under his pillow whenever he embarked on a new adventure. Pappy Gunn enlisted in the Navy in his teens and by 1937 had completed 20 years service, retiring as an airplane pilot with the rank of chief petty officer. At Pearl Harbor time in 1941 Gunn was operations manager of the Philippine Air Lines. Both Gunn and PAL went into the war against Japan with the Air Force. Gen. Kenney as head of the air forces in the Pacific soon came in contact with him. The handful of B-25s in that vast theater at the time didn’t pack much wallop. Pappy did something about it. He ripped out the bomb sight, improvised and filled the nose of the plane with several 50-caliber guns, where it formerly carried only one small 30-caliber. His remodeled B-25s largely made possible the remark- able score for the Americans over Japanese shipping in the famous Battle of the Bismarck Sea. Pappy Gunn’s stories matched his genius in the hangars and in the skies. They were less easy to pin down for accuracy, but ap- preciated none the less. Pappy was injured toward the end of the war; his wife and four children were confined to Santo Tomas in the Philippines for three years. The family eventually was reunit- ed but the latter years were un- healthy and unhappy for them. The climax came in October 1957 when Pappy Gunn died in an air- plane accident in the Philippines. This did not end the saga of Pappy Gunn, however. Even in death Pappy defied the usual. His body was flown across the Pacific to the United States unauthorized, incognito and contrary to all re- gulations. The wires burned in Headquarters in Washington un- til authorization could be establis- hed to fly him to his final resting place in Florida. The turmoil and color that surrounded Pappy Gunn in life followed him to his grave. 997, 998, 999 .. . A B-47 Stratojet bomber chalk- ed up its 1,000th consecutive flight recently, accomplishing all mission requirements, in what SAC belie- ves is a record for its command. The B-47 made its record flight flown by a crew of the 9th Bomber Wing, Mountain Home AFB, Idaho. In racking up the four- figure total, crews piled up more than 6,400 hours of flying time. IADF Honors Janitor Mr. Gisli Danielsson, IADF Headquarters Janitor since 1952, was hon- ored last month as he celebrated his 78th birthday. Mr. Danielsson was completely surprised as members of IADF Headquarters present- ed him with a birthday cake baked by Mrs. R. E. Carswell, wife of Major R. E. Carswell. Born in 1881, Mr. Danielsson is a farmer and has worked on fishing boats. He is currently residing with a son in Keflavik where he raises potatoes and other vegatables as a hobby. He has nine children. Major Lloyd Smith, Provost Marshall (left) and Mr. Styrmir Proppe, Icelandic Interpreter, congratulate Mr. Danielsson. AFA Pays 500th Claimant Via Pay Protection Plan Washington — A Strategic Air Command pilot who lost his right arm in a crash of his B-47 earlier this year became the 500bh flyer to receive compensatory payment under a unique flight pay protection plan. <•>------------------ President Howard T. Markey of the Air Force Association, which operates the plan, presented a check to Air Force 1st Lt. Gerle L. Buckner of Las Cruces, New Mexico at the injured flyer’s bed- side in Walter Reed Medical Cen- ter. Lieutenant Buckner, whose B- 47 medium jet bomber crashed during takeoff at Goose Bay, Labrador, last February, is cur- rently being fitted with an arti- ficial arm at the hospital. Sitt- ing on the edge of his bed, the 28-year-old flyer from New Mexi- co recalled the accident that end- ed his flying career eight months ago and has kept him hospitaliz- ' ed since. Lieutenant Buckner survived the crash only because the im- mense impact jarred him loose and hurled him some 450 feet from the burning wreckage. One other member of the four-man crew also survived. The Air Force Association Flight Pay Protection plan has now paid more than $1-14 million in benefits to 500 claimants. In its fourth year, the plan has some $22 million of protection in force, with an estimated $350,000 in cur- rent reserve to cover payment on claims now in progress. AFA administers the Flight Pay Protection program as a nonprofit activity for the benefit of flying personnel of all services. The pol- icy is underwritten by the Mutual Benefit Health and Accident As- sociation (Mutual Omaha). Ad- ditional information on the plan can be obtained from the Insur- ance Division, Air Force Asso- ciation, Mills Building, Washing- ton 6, D. C. Name Change It’s still the same outfit; only the name has been changed. The Air Technical Intelligence Center was renamed the Aerospace Tech- nical Intelligence Center last month. ATIC, 1125th USAF Field Ac- tivities Group, is located at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. ARS Chief Visits Brigadier General Joseph A. Cunn- ingham, Commander, Air Rescue Service with headquarters at Or- lando AFB, Fla., is shown as he arrived at Keflavik Oct. 9 for a Command Staff Visit. Only recently assigned to the Air Rescue Serv- ice, this was General Cunningham’s first visit to the 53rd AR Squad- ron. He was greeted by IDF Com- mander Col. Benjamin G. Willis. After a cocktail party in his honor Friday hight, General Cunningham inspected the 53rd Oct. 10. Thimk! The IOP Eye, published by the Iowa Ordnance Plant, gives the following advice to beginning journalists: “Beware of platitudinous pon- derosity. Let your communication possess coalescent consistency and concatenated cogency. Shun all flatulent garrulity and asinine af- fectations. Use intelligibility and veracious vivacity without rodo- montade or thrasonical bombasity. Sedulously avoid all prolixity and psittaceous vacuity. Eschew sas- quipedalianistic proclivities.

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The White Falcon

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