The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Page 6

The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Page 6
6 WHITE FALCON Monday, November 26, 1962 I Cortron Sixteen | Essential Element 1 In Early Warning 5 Command Escort Squadron — ■ has a vital role in the BAR- 2 FORLANT mission. This force ■ of eight ships plugs a gap in B the early warning fence. Ves- ■ sels included in CORTON SIX- 5 TEEN are the: USS CAMP, ■ USS KRETCHMER, USS J HISSEM, USS T. J. GARY, ■ USS MILLS, USS CALCA- " TERRA, USS RHODES, and ■ USS ROY 0. HALE. B Representative of the squad- ■ ron is the USS CAMP. The B CAMP is primarily designed ■ to detect aircraft along the B barrier line and spot submar- ■ ines transisting its primary B maneuvering area. S It is assigned to one of the ■ many geographic picket sta- 5 tions of the radar network ■ which guards the Continental S United States. ■ The CAMP carries all the 5 latest electronic equipment in- ■ eluding radar, sonar, and com- 5 munications equipment. To ■ house the new equipment, she S has a specially built Combat ■ Information Center (CIC), S radio shack, and sonar control ■ room, S Radar, intelligence, electron- ■ ic identification, and visual in- S formation is collected in CIC, ■ displayed on various status S boards and polar plots, co-ord- ■ inated, evaluated, and dissem- 5 inated to a defense facility in ■ the United States. This in- formation, consisting primarily of aircraft courses, speeds, alt- itudes, and positions is then correlated with flight plans of known aircraft. If a correla- tion cannot be obtained, the aircraft is further evaluated as unknown and jet interceptors may be scrambled and handed over to CAMP for control in identifying it if necessary, stopping the unknown if it is found to be hostile. In addition to air surveil- lance operations CAMP main- tains a continuous sonar watch while underway. She may pick up and track a submarine on her own equipment or be di- verted at any time to investi- gate or track a sonar contact made by another ship or air- craft. Reports of submarines encountered are then dissemin- ated to the U.S. along with the aircraft information. With the continuous training of her personnel and great emphasis placed on teamwork, CAMP is able to utilize her equipment to its maximum ex- tent, thereby making her an effective and vitally necessary unit in our defense system. The selection of radar picket ships for this big responsibil- ity originates in the early fif- ties when defense strategists realized the need for better methods of early waring de- fense. A new type of ship was needed to man the North At- lantic Barrier. The ship had to have great electronic capabili- ties and the ability to remain at sea for many weeks without refueling or replenishing. In order to utilize ships already built and to save money on construction, several DE’s were converted to DER’s by altering their structures. The CAMP and her sister ships answered the need. Barrier (Continued from Page 4.) according to schedule regardless of conditions however severe they may be. Crew members come and go ac- cording to the Navy system of rotating personnel regularly so that an entire crew of seasoned barrier veterans is only a theore- tical entity. For instance, only six now remain of the 24 memb- ers who were in Crew ONE just a year ago. Lady Luck favors whom she will among the barrier crews as she does elsewhere. However she seems to generally favor the dili- gent, thorough and tireless. No matter how carefully a crew in- spects and maintains the aircraft and equipment, it is possible that unpredictable failures will occur. Whenever a crew fails to take off within 12 minutes of the sche- duled time, they lose points in crew competition. Performance Factors For evaluating crew competi- tion, four performances factors are derived from the never-to-be- deferred necessity of constantly patrolling the barrier: (1) Read- iness, (2) Radar, (3) ECM (Elec- tronic Countermeasures), and (4) Communications. Readiness of the aircraft, its equipment, and crew to fly the barrier on schedule counts 25% of the total score. Another 40% is computed from the radar con- tacts reported, and 10% more from ECM contacts. The remain- ing 25% of th score comes from evaluating the promptness and accuracy of properly transmitted radio messages. Cmdr. Charles C. O’Hearn, Crew ONE’S Patrol Plane Commander, emphasizes the importance of each crew member funneling his indi- vidual efforts toward accomplish- ment of the total crew responsi- bility. Gleaned from years of ex- perience and more than 5,000 log- ged pilot hours, his formula for trophy-winning performance is simply, “A crew of devoted people who subordinate personal consid- erations in order to do the right thing at the right time.” Who’s Who in the Crew The following list of crew mem- bers reflects additions to the min- imum number needed on patrol. Additional personnel are frequent- ly assigned for training and in- doctrination. In order to function well as a crew, it is not enough for each member to be expert at his own job. He must also know about the jobs of all the other crew members and understand how his work contributes to what the others accomplish. Some men are cross-trained to handle two, three, qr even more crew positions.. Patrol Plane Commander—Cmdr. Charles C. O’Hearn Second Pilot—Francis A. Harding Third Pilot—Daniel R., Toleno First Navigator—Ens. Roger A. Garrett . Second Navigator—Lt. (jg) Mich- ael T. Giles CIC Officer—Lt. George A. Murphy Assistant CIC Officer—Ens. James A. Conaway Assistant CIC Officer—Leonard E. Downs, Chief Air Control- man Flight Engineer—John R. Warren, Aviation Machinist’s Mate First Class Flight Engineer—Philip R. Wilson, Aviation Machinist’s Mate Sec- ond Class Flight Engineer—Roger D. Bow- ers, Aviation Machinist’s Mate Second Class Electrician—Robert E. Engelman, Aviation Electrician’s Mate Third Class Radioman—Ted. D. West, Avia- tion Electronics Technician First Class Radioman—Stephen W. Ingram, Aviation Electronics Technician Third Class Technician—Harold L. McCaSland, Aviation Electronics Technician First Class Technician—Norman E. Greene, Aviation Electronics Technician Second Class. ECM—Leonard H. Brown, Avia- tion Electronics Technician Third Class ECM—Jimmy H. McCarty, Avia- tion Electronics Technician Air- man CIC—Ronald K. Dilgard, Air Con- trolman Third Class CIC—Wallace C. Coflin, Air Con- trolman Third Class CIC—Marvin G. Moats, Aviation Electronics Technician Third Class CIC—Joseph D. Buchanan, Avia- tion Electronics Technician Air- man CIC—Coy D. Strod, Aviation Mac- hinist’s Mate Airman CIC—James' W. Ravan, Airman Apprentice. Flight Begins on the Ground A flight begins long before the aircraft actually gets into the air. Crews are on stand-by status for six hours before the scheduled take-off. The flight engineers are at the hangar three hours before take-off to inspect and pre-flight the airplane. While the co-pilot is at flight operations to file the flight plan and pick up the weather report, the navigators are working on their charts. The PPC, CIC Of- ficer and his assistant, and radio- man are at the BARFORLANT Operational Control Center where they are briefed on the foreseeable conditions and circumstances of their patrol. Within 45 to 60 minutes before take-off all members of the crew are aboard the aircraft completing final preparations for the flight. Airborne During the flight each crew position was described to me. The PPC may be compared to the cap- tain of a ship at sea. Besides being the senior pilot, he bears complete responsibility for the personnel and aircraft under his command while in flight. Patrol Plane Commander O’Hearn talked to me at lenth to help me understand the important aspects of the patrol. He speaks softly but quite audibly, as arti- culately as a professor presenting a familiar lecture to his class. Perhaps his calm, precise manner of speaking is an index to Cmdr. O’Hearn’s method of managing an airplane and crew. Now a 45-year-old veteran of 26 years naval service, Cmdr. O’Hearn enlisted in the Navy in 1936. He advanced step-by-step from Apprentice Seaman to Chief Aviation Machinist’s Mate, com- pleted flight training ,and became an enlisted pilot. In 1946 he was appointed Lt. (jg), and in 1947 the Navy sent him to study at Ohio State Uni- versity under the Holloway Bill. Completing a normal four-year college education in 21 months, he graduated cum laude in the spring of 1949 and returned to duties as a naval aviator. After attending Naval Intelli- gence School and a nine-month course in the German language, he was assigned to the staff of Commander Naval Forces Ger- many. In October 1955, following CIC School and two cruises in the Pacific aboard the aircraft carrier USS BENNINGTON, he went to New York City to duties in the Third Naval District In- telligence Office. After complet- ing two years service in AEW- RON ELEVEN in December 1962, Cmdr. O’Hearn will return to the Naval Intelligence School for a refresher course in the German language. Youth. Center Tournament The Youth Center held a Round Robin Table Tennis Tournament on November 11 and 12. There were three divisions, Bantum, Junior, and Senior. In the Bantum Division, Kit Freed took first place with Ricky Canepari, the runner-up. Russell Pirnat placed first and Bob Cane- pari was the runner-up in the Junior Division. For the Senior Division, it was Bob Grybash in first while Norman Arons took the runner-up spot. For the girls, it was Donna Canepari in first place and Julia Mahler in second. The winners will now be seeded in the Harvard Elimination Table Tennis. Tournament for the Gold Medal Awards. This tournament will be held this week with the finals ori Saturday, November 24, at 3 p.m. in the Youth Center. Ricky and Stephen Vogel, Eric Miner, Chris, Casey and Shane Moore, Terrv Long, Bob Brown, Scott Ellison, Neil Svennigsen, Fred Johnson, Carol Emory, Elizabeth Quilty, Deborah More- land, and Carol Schmitz were just a few of the 24 entrants in the tournament. The entrants age ranged from 8 to 16 years. In the Cockpit Co-pilot Harding explained the function of each instrument and control in the cockpit. When I remarked about the ice and sleet which occasionally splattered against the windshield, he flipped a switch and illuminated the right wing to show me the ice forming on it. As I watched, a rubber boot along the leading edge in- flated, breaking loose a crust of ice. Lt. Harding is 31 years old and the father of three children. He is also a man who obviously en- joys flying and rejoices in his career as a naval aviator. In 1954 as an Ensign, he went from a destroyer to flight training. After two and a half years as a Navy flight instructor he returned to civilian life for three and a half years. Then, in December 1961, he came back to the Navy — “to stay,” he said emphatically. He considers aviation experi- ence gained in flying the barrier very valuable. With what sounded like enthusiasm he said, “We al- most always expect the weather to be terrible.” Perhaps I looked disturbed, because he immediately added that the WV-2 is a “fan- tastically reliable” airplane and that the crew is specially ’trained to cope with the unusual weather on the barrier. Flight engineers Warren and Wilson described what they do at a panel of instruments and con- trols just behind the pilot and co-pilot. Basically, they operate the four engines of the airplane by controlling power settings and fuel mixtures. They also manage the distribution and balance of weight in the airplane, post log entries, note mechanical discrepancies to be fixed by the ground crew, ensure that the air- plane is ready for flight, and take care of a multitude of details need- ed to keep the airplane in good fly- ing condition. (Continued on Page 8.) Students Named For Honor Role “The Honor Roll” of the Alfred Thayer Mahan High School was announced last week for the first grading period ending October 12, 1962. The Honor Roll is figured from points earned on this basis: For classes meeting every day, an “A” is worth 15 points, a “B” is worth 10 points, a “C” - 5 points, and a “D” subtracts 5 points. Failure in any subject automatically prevents one from being on the Honor Roll. Those with 70 or more points are award- ed first honors, those receiving between 60 and 70 points receive second honors, and those with 50 to 59 points are given honorable mention. The Honor Roll for the first grading period is as follows: FIRST HONORS Lee Warner ..... Senior Helen Kelly..... Junior Lucile Ross .... Sophomore Robert Storrs .... Freshmen Richard Vogel .... Freshmen SECOND HONORS Kevin Kearns .... Senior Ruth Hitchens ... Senior Lisa Fletcher .... Junior Laraine Kemp .. . Junior Karen Olson .... Junior Mark Svenningsen Junior Walter Ellsworth Junior Francis Freed .... Sophomore Paula Tower .... Freshmen Stephen Ellison .. Freshmen HONORABLE MENTION Pam Moreland ... Junior Colin Warner .... Junior Cynthia Fletcher Freshmen

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The White Falcon

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