The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Qupperneq 2

The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Qupperneq 2
2 WHITE FALCON Monday, November 26, 1962 Community W elcomes Serviceman of Today More than two decades after the beginning of the greatest war Americans ever fought, members of the Armed Forces can appraise themselves and take pride in the changes that 21 years have wrought in the military. Is this to say that the serviceman of the years before the war was inferior to today’s breed? No—but different he certainly was. And as he changed so did the public conception of him alter, until now he is regarded as a valued member of the community. For in prewar years the U.S. military tended to isolate itself and he self-sustaining. Most service fam- ilies lived on post. Their friends and acquaintances were service people like themselves. They looked to one another for social contacts; theirs was a tight little world which the public at large only dimly com- prehended. As for the unmarried men, the average civilian thought them a rough and lusty sort given to pay day drinking, gambling and brawling. “Single men in barracks don’t grow into plaster saints,” Rudyard Kipling once wrote, and that about summed up the prevailing view of the peacetime regular. He was a rough diamond, a loveable lout who seldom associated with “nice” people. Today’s serviceman has little in common with this image, and for that reason the public esteem for members of the Armed Forces is at an all time high. The military takes an active role in community affairs. Men and women in uniform get a warm welcome at civic events. The money they spend is an important factor in the local economy. It has been estimated that the military dollar turns over five times in a community before it winds up in an account or goes elsewhere. Good reason, then, for the average American, if asked his opinion of people who make the Armed Forces their career, to answer: “Solid citizens.” (AFPS) THE WHITE FALCON UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION KEFLAVIK WHITE FALCON’S mission — To Inform and entertain all hands; to serve as a positive factor in promoting the efficiency, welfare and con- tentment of personnel. CAPTAIN STANLEY E. ELLISON, USN Commanding Officer, Naval Station Keflavik CAPTAIN FRANK G. VESSELL, USN Executive Officer, Naval Station Keflavik LIEUTENANT COMMANDER R. C. POWERS, USNR Service Information Officer & Officer-in-Charge STAFF Editor; David J. Howell, JOSN, Mike L. Crump, JOSN; Stephen M. Caine, JOSA, Reporters The WHITE FALCON is published weekly on Saturdays in accordance with NAVEXOS P-35, revised June 1958. for free distribution to personnel of Naval Station Keflavik, Keflavik International Airport, Iceland. It Is printed commercially by the Isafoldarprent- smldja h.f., Reykjavik, Iceland, from non-approprlated funds. Opinions and statements made In articles published here are those of the authors and are not to be construed as official views of the U.S. Government, Department of Defense or the Navy Departmant. The Chaplain J Cctnet By Fr. Richard C. Hunkins, LTJG, CHC, USNR The Immensity of God’s Ceration By the providence of God, and the will of the Govern- ment we have dedicated our lives to serve, we find our- selves in the rugged beautiful country of Iceland. Geo- graphically, Iceland is a mountainous country with its highest peak being Hvannadalshnukur, 6,950 feet high. With the powerful beauty of the Icelandic Mountains, some of which are actively volcanic, augmented with the un- predictable weather and terrain, our thoughts are auto- matically turned to a consideration of the power and the majesty of the God who created such unique beauty, so different from what we were used to back home. During the past Summer one of the most dramatic feats of North American mountaineering was accomplished when six young men from the Eastern Part of the United States climbed the southeast side of Alaska’s 20,320 foot Mount McKinley, the North American Continents’ highest peak. In trying to find the reason why these men would undertake such a daring feat, their reason was summarized: ‘It is in the majestic stillness of high mountains that the climber comes to discover the Immensity of God’s Creation.” To get the most out of ones’ tour of duty in this land of rugged beauty and splendor we can very easily apply the reason given by the climbers of Mount McKinley — Namely, use our time judiciously and through serious thought and prayer, “discover the Immensity of God’s Creation”. In traveling and observing the sights of Iceland, we can easily recall the words of the Old Testament Psalmist (Psalm 103): “Bless the Lord, 0 my soul! 0 Lord my God, you are great indeed! You are clothed with Majesty and glory, robed in light as with a cloak. You have spread out the heavens like a tentcloth; you have constructed your palace upon the waters. You make the clouds your chariot; you travel on the wings of the wind. You make the winds your messengers, and flaming fire your ministers”. ★ ★ ★ d&ivine eruiceS PROTESTANT ★ ★ ★ Chapel 11 a.m. High School 9:30 a.m. High School 9.30 a.m. Chapel 7 p.m. ipel Annex 7 p.m. Chapel 9 a.m. 6:30 3 3:30 Fellowship ..................................... Episcopal Service .............................. Latter Day Saints ................................. Chapel Annex 10:30 Christian Science ................................. Chapel Annex 12 Church of Christ .................................. Chapel Annex 3 MONDAY: Bible Study Group .......................... Chapel Annex WEDNESDAY: Senior Choir, Rehearsal .......................... Chapel SATURDAY: Youth Choir Rehearsal ............................. Chapel Senior Choir Rehearsal .................................. Chapel PROTESTANT CHAPLAINS Chaplan L. C. M. Vosseler. CDR, USN — Chaplain H. W Holland, LCDR, USN — Chaplain W. C. Hitchens, LCDR, USN. CATHOLIC SUNDAY; Recited Mass ................................ Main Chapel 8 a.m. Sung Mass ......................................... Main Chapel 12:15 p.m. Religious Education (Children) High School Bldg................ 11 a.m. Holy Name Society Communion (2nd Sunday) ...................... 8 a.m. TUESDAY-SATURDAY Recited Mass .................... Eucharist Chapel 31:45 a.m. Tuesday ........................................ Acolyte Classes 7 p.m. Thursday ................................ Choir Rehearsal (Chapel) 6:30 p.m. Saturday ........................... Confessions (Eucharist Chapel) 7-8:30 p.m. BAPTISM WEDDINGS, HOME BLESSINGS, ADULT RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION BY AP- POINTMENT — CALL. EXT. 4111. CATHOLIC CHAPLAIN R. C. Hunkins, LTJG, USNR JEWISH FRIDAY Sabbath Service ..:.......................... Chapel Annex 7.30 p.ra. Old Cannonball Finding Recalls Belvoir's Past Ft. Belvoir, Va (AFPS)—Every so often men at this Engineer Center stumble across reminders that their modern Army installa- tion occupies land rich in historic- al associations and that Belvoir in French means “beautiful view.” Most recent of such mementos of the past is a 200-pound can- nonball which the British lobbed into the area during the War of 1812. By that time the splendid mansion called Belvoir Manor was a ruin—it had been razed by fire in 1783—but its foundations and chimneys remained standing. When the British sailed up the Potomac in 1814 they took these for forti- fications and put them under fire. In its heyday — it was built from 1734 to 1741 — Belvoir Manor ranked with the most im- posing homes in the colonial South. Col. William Fairfax, who built it, was the cousin of Lord Thomas Fairfax who owned a sweeping estate which had been granted him in 1688 by James II of England. Col. Fairfax, as general super-, intendent of the estate, built his manor of English brick, surround- ing it with a formal garden, and called it Belvoir in memory of his ancestral English home. When 15-year-old George Wash- ington came to Mount Vernon in 1747 to live with his older half- brother, he struck up a friendship with Fairfax’s oldest son, George William Fairfax, that was to last a lifetime. His old friend, now Col. Fair- fax, in 1773 had to return to Eng- land to take possession of ances- tral estates he had inherited. He left his manor in Washington’s care, and in the next year wrote him to dispose of all its handsome furnishings; a new tenant was taking over. Washington complied, purchas- ing much of Belvoir Manor’s con- tents for his own estate. So, al- though the stately Fairfax home is no more, visitors to Mount Vernon today get a suggestion of the elegant style of life Washing- ton’s friend and neighbor enjoyed. Military Code Curtails Bad Check Cashing Washington (AFPS) — Members of the Armed Forces become liable on March 1 to the new provisions of Article 123a of the Uniform Code of Military Justice that deals with “making, drawing, or utter- ing check, draft or order without sufficient funds.” The new section says: “Any person subject to this chapter who— “(1) for the procurement of any article or thing of value, with the intent to defraud; or “(2) for the payment of any past due obligation, or for any other purpose, with the intent to deceive; makes, draws, utters, or delivers any check, draft, or order for the payment of money upon any bank or other deposi- tory for the payment of that check, draft, or order in full upon its presentment, shall be punished as a court-martial may direct. Scientists Unearth Primitive Artifacts At Wallops Island Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. (AFPS) — Scientists from Aber- deen’s Ballistics Research Labo- ratories have turned amateur archeologists while working at Wallops Island, Va. missile launch- ing sites. As bulldozers scooped and shift- ed the island’s soil for new con- struction, they turned up weap- ons and tools of primitive man who lived there some 5,000 years ago. Such traces of his inhabita- tion have been buried down the centuries by erosion and shifting sands. One of the finest artifacts of this vanished race was found by Charles E. Schafer of the Ballistic Measurement Branch. It is a per- fect specimen of a semi-lunar knife which archeologists have put in the 50-century time period and which, while found in eastern New England, has never before been unearthed so far south.

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The White Falcon

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