The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 29.04.1961, Blaðsíða 4

The White Falcon - 29.04.1961, Blaðsíða 4
4 WHITE FALCON Saturday, April 29, 1961 AACS Is Winner Of Commander's Trophy Honors The 1971st AACS Squadron amassed 260 points to cop the Commander’s Trophy and to move within one span of winning it permanently. The unit has won it twice in a row; one more time and it will belong to the organization. Softball, badminton, golf, pool and ping pong will head the sum- mer activity which is underway this month and will last through September. Headquarters AFI was a close second with 235 points, followed by Naval Air Facility with 210 points. Here is the way the remainder of the contenders ended up: CAMRON ................ 160 VP-10 Patrol Sq....... 120 Air Base Sq........ 85 Civil Engineers Sq ... . 60 Hospital ................ 60 AC&W Sq (Rockville) 60 Supply Sq ............... 60 Transportation Sq .. .. 60 IDF ..................... 45 57th FIS ................ 40 USN Security Group .. 20 9th Weather Group, iDet #13 .................. 20 AACS Leading Trophy Chase AACS is off to a good start toward winning the Commander’s Trophy again after picking up 14 points in ping pong and 18 points in pool during the recent tourna- ment held at the Viking Service Club. AACS has won the trophy the last two times and one more win will automatically place the trophy in that organization’s case permanently. In the tournament, J. N. Jean of Transportation took first place in ping pong singles with Nick Popovich of AFI second. In the doubles event, C. H. Brown and James Graham of AACS teamed up to cop first place, while Max Willingham and Doug Carlile of Civil Engineers won second place. AACS made a clean sweep of the pool tournament with Webster Sunberg and Kenneth Knapp of that unit taking first and second place. Transportation picked up 14 points, Hq AFI got 13, Civil En- gineers 11, Supply, 9, Hospital, 2, and Band, NAF and VP-10 pick- ed up one point each. Clean-IJp Appreciated Col. O. B. Steely, AFI com- mander during the temporary ab- sence of Col. Benjamin G. Willis, has sent the following letter to Keflavik Airport squadron com- manders : “During the recent Base Clean- up Drive, many hours of planning and accomplishment of this pro- ject were expended by you and your personnel. I wish to express my sincere appreciation for your full cooperation and efforts in making this drive a success de- spite the inclement weather, which ordinarily would have hampered such an endeavor. “I wish to extend to you and your personnel my gratitude and appreciation for a job very well done.” Roundup W I).: /I [US » By AFPS Sports Considered Vital At AF Academy Coach Ben Martin of the Air Force Academy claims he will have 14 juniors, 20 sophomores and 47 freshmen to form a grid team from next season. This includes the return of 14 lettermen for 1961 action.... For the third straight year, Ernie Cates of Parris Island, S.C., captured the Biddle Trophy for winning the individual champ- ionship during the 4th Annual All-Marine Judo Tourney held at Quantico... .Two Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind., keglers, Mike Wagner and Jim Ellis, combined efforts to defeat pro bowlers Dick Weber and Jack Curran. The Army pair rolled a three-game total of 1,214 to win by 77 pins in exhibition play.... Three senior hurlers, Chuck Davis, Gary Carlson and Ed Ettinger, will carry the burden of pitch- ing assignments for the Naval Academy. ... Speaking of Navy, one of the best grid tilts on tap in the East next fall will be between the Middies and U. of Pittsburgh at Pitt., Oct. 28.... Servicemen interest- ed in scuba or skin diving may be interested in an announcement of the American Institute of Biological Science. According to its find- ings, sharks are less likely to attack swimmers in light-colored suits than in dark ones.... Gene Tunney, onetime world heavyweight champ who headed the Navy’s WWII Physical Fitness Program, has been mentioned by a leading sports magazine for appointment to the post of national boxing commissioner. SPORTING SLANTS—Retired Col. O. C. Krueger, former post commander of Ft. Meade, Md., now the director of Milwaukee opera- tions for Green Bay of the National Football League team....Bill Cobbs of the 1st Mar. Div. cleared the bar at 6’1M>” to set a new high jump record during the 1961 Camp Pendleton Intramural Track and Field Meet....Vic Zarema, who led his team to the Northern District and ATC championships last season, is back to manage the baseball nine at Lowry AFB, Colo......Bob Lane, a standout intra- mural baseballer at MCAS Kaneoche Bay, Hawaii, last year, has graduated to the varsity nine and is holding down catching chores.... For the third consecutive year Travis AFB, Calif., copped top honors in the MATS Volleyball Tournament. QUOTE OF THE WEEK—“At the start of a season,” Baltimore Oriole manager Paul Richards said recently, “if you think you have a pennant contender, the club you must figure you’ll have to beat is the one that won the pennant the year before. So, last year, I figured we had to beat the White Sox and we did. But the Yankees beat both of us.” GCA Crew Commended For Save Of Diverted Scandinavian Airliner By 1st Lt. Philip A. Meurer It was a dark rainy foggy day at Keflavik. The GCA crew had come to work and for them it had proved to be a hard one. The mid shifts are long dull shifts with little or no traffic. Just a con- tinual checking of the unit to make sure that all would be pre- pared in case they were called on to bring an aircraft in. The weather in the entire North Atlantic had closed in. A C-118 had to feather one engine enroute to Keflavik. But the weather at Keflavik had socked in and the aircraft was diverted to Prest- wick. Keflavik was forecast to have bad weather but well above the 200 feet and % mile. So all the aircraft in the area that were to be diverted were diverted to Keflavik. At 0351 a Scandinavian DC-8 called Keflavik GCA for an ap- proach. This 'DC-8 was diverted from Sondrestrom to Keflavik. The aircraft was picked up by GCA and expeditiously identified by the GCA pattern controller, SSgt. Sherwood Gillette. The aircraft was given a random approach to Winners Are Named In Essay Contest The Dependent School recently held an essay contest with stud- ents writing on the subject, “Ice- land.” The winners are: High school: First place—James Zartman, sec- ond—James Peterson, and third place—Art Weisman. First place in the Grade School’s contest was won by James Fuller, Jennie Helms was second, and Lora Jessup won the third place. The contest was judged by Ice- landic teachers and Defense Force personnel. final. The final controller, MSgt. George Eager picked up the air- craft at 8V2 miles and directed him down to GCA minimums (200 foot ceiling and V2 mile visibility). The aircraft remained at mini- mums and executed a missed ap- proach because he couldn’t see the runway. It was at this time GCA was informed that the aircraft had only 53 minutes of fuel remaining and had to land here at Keflavik. The pilot stated that he had bare- ly seen the hig intensity lights on his first approach. The Scand- inavian aircraft had 53 persons on board. The weather remained with an obscure ceiling 200 feet with 14 mile visibility. A short pattern was made putting the air- craft on final at 4 % miles. Ser- geant Tager took positive control and talked the aircraft to a safe landing. One of the maintenance men was standing by the unit a scant 500 feet from the runway and he was unable to see the aircraft on his land roll. Sergeants Eager’s and Gillette’s names have been submitted to Headquarters AACS in order to receive credit for a save. A letter from the vice presi- dent of Scandinavian Airlines (Operations Department) was re- ceived this week. The letter said in part. “That a safe landing could be made was in no small measure due to the efficiency of the ATC and in particular to the excellent performance of the GCA controller under circumstances when it is all to easy to lose one’s nerve.” AEROSPACE EVENT Jan. 22, 1948 — The Navy an- nounced that it was able to launch V-2’s from carriers. The Air Force Academy recognizes physical education and athletics as an integral part of the cadet curriculum. Considered essential in helping to build character and lead- ership, the athletic program is officially equated at 121/2 semester hours. However, the® ~—-------------------------- complete program actually reach- es far beyond this figure in value received by each cadet during his four years at the Academy. Each cadet is required to take the prescribed courses in physical education as well as compete in intercollegiate or intramural ath- letics. Intercollegiate athletics provide a soui-ce of competition in individual or team sports against other colleges and uni- versities. Those who do not parti- cipate in varsity sports must com- pete in intramural activities. The first department covers both physical education and the intramural program. Phys Ed in- cludes judo, boxing, wrestling, swimming, gymnastics, unarmed combat, handball, volleyball and badminton. Also in this program are instruction and practice in carry-over sports such as golf, Well, Uh, Anyway! According to the Official En- clopedia of Baseball, the first big league baseball game play- ed at night was played at Cin- cinatti in 1935, and not at Yankee Stadium in 1946, as we said in last week’s White Fal- con. Naturally we could say that Armed Forces Press Ser- vice goofed, that is if we want- ed to make excuses. Thanks to TSgt. Bud. Rees, foreman of AFRS, for bringing this to our attention. tennis and squash. These are so termed because they represent skills the graduate may take with him into later life for continued physical fitness throughout his professional career. The Intramural Program is based on squadron competition with wing championships being awarded in all sports. At the end of the year, the squadron having the greatest number of points is awarded the John J. Melanaphy Trophy. Cadets normally compete in a particular intramural sport only one season, then are assign- ed to a different activity during the same season of the following year. They are thus given the chance to develop all-around abil- ity. During initial basic cadet sum- mer training, cadets are prepar- ed for the four-year physical edu- cation program they will begin during the Fall Semester. Through conditioning exercises and games,, the obstacle course and recreational sports, they de- velop physical strength, endur- ance, agility and coordination. The reasoning behind the sports program reflects the Greecian ed- ucational theory that it takes a sound body to contain a sound mind on one hand, and on the other, it looks ahead when the future generals will need an ag- gressive spirit, physical vigor and emotional balance. (This is another in a series of articles telling the story of the Air Force Academy. Editor.) Westman Islands Tour Offered By Viking Service Club May 20-21 Reservations for a tour of Westman Islands will be accepted by the Viking Service Club begin- ning at noon Monday. The first tour to the mountain- ous, craggy islands off the south coast of Iceland will be made on May 20-21 on the boat Herjolfur. Heimaey or Home Island is the only inhabited one of the group. The 5,000 people living in Vest- mannaeyjar depend entirely on fishing for their living. During the cod season, usually running from early January to late May, all available hands including school children help process the catches of up to 2,000 tons of fish landed daily. The islands are a place of rug- ged scenic beauty. In the spring hundreds of thousands of sea birds flock there to nest in the Golf Range Opens The golf driving range at Kef- lavik Airport is scheduled to open up for business today, weather permitting. Located across from the Youth Center, the range will be open Saturdays and Sundays from 1 p.m. till 9 p.m. During the week, the range op- ens at 5 p.m. and remains open until 9 p.m. Clubs are provided and a buck- et of balls will cost 25A perpendicular rock faces along the coast. Fees for the tour are 725 kron- ur each in six-berth staterooms and 850 kronur each in two-berth rooms. Payment is to be made in kronur when making reservations for the tour. Military personnel must have a recreation pass and be in Class A uniform but civilian clothing may be taken to wear on the boat. Badminton Play Begins May 16 The summer sports program will get underway at Keflavik Airport Monday with a meeting of athletic officers, coaches and managers, to discuss the rules and bylaws of the badminton tourna- ment. The meeting will be held in the Field House and will begin at 1 p.m. The double elimination tourna- ment, featuring both doubles and ^ngles matches, will start May 16. Entries must be turned into the Athletic Office at the Field House by 1 p.m. May 5. There is no limit to the number of participasts from each organi- zation and players may compete in both the doubles and singles events.

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The White Falcon

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