The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Blaðsíða 8

The White Falcon - 26.11.1962, Blaðsíða 8
8 WHITE FALCON Monday, November 26, 1962 F. E. Kelly, AECS R. H. Widdowson, RMCS Three Chiefs Receive Stars Three Keflavik Chief’s are now wearing broader smiles due to a letter from the Examination Cent- er in Great Lakes, Ill. This letter notified them of their promotion to Senior Chief. The Chief’s and their new rates are: F.E. Kelly, Senior Chief Avia- tion Electronics Technician; J.A. Conaway, Senior Chief Commis- aryman; and R. H. Widdowson, Senior Chief Radioman. Chief Kelly entered the Navy in 1950 and has seen duty in many varied places. He was stationed at the Naval Air Technical Train- ing Center, Memphis, Tenn. be- fore reporting here. He is entitled to wear the Navy Occupation Medal, National De- fense Service Medal and he may wear three Good Conduct Awards. Chief Kelly is married to the former Mary Floyd and they have two children, Kenneth, age 8 and Marilyn, age 3. Chief Conaway resides in Wauk- the Naval Service in February of 1940 and since then, he has served SNAFU //t>ON'T YOU MEAN THE FIFTEENTH DECK,S7R?// J. A. Conaway, CSCS in the Panama Canal Zone, Guam, and on many ships. He was sta- tioned at the United States Naval Training Center in Great Lakes, Illinois before arriving here. Chief Conaway wears the Na- tional Defense Service Medal, Am- erican Area Campaign, Asiatic- Pacific Campaign Medal, Ameri- can Defense Service Medal, Euro- pean-African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, Korean Service Medal and he is entitled to wear 7 Good Conduct Awards. Chief Conaway resides in Wauk- egan, Illinois and is married to the former Betty Ann Slagoski. They have three children, James, age 19, Andrea, age 15, and Rich- ard, age 10. Chief Widdowson enlisted in the Navy on January 1 of 1947 and since then, he has been stationed in varied places. His last duty station was the United States Naval Security Station in Wash- ington, D. C. Chief Widdowson is entitled to wear the National Defense Service Medal and he has been awarded 5 Good Conduct Medals. The Chief has one child, Robert Hankins, Jr., age 13 and they make their home in Rumbley, Maryland. Waty Cxchanye The Main Retail Store and Housewares Store, T-27 will be closed Monday and Tuesday, 26- 27 November, for inventory due to relief of the present Exchange Officer. A wide selection of gift items still exists in all departments, des- pite heavier-than-expected sales. The trend this season appears to be toward household gifts. Cryst- alware, appliances, radios and phonographs are among the most sought-after items. Perfumes, jewelry and leather goods remain favorites with patrons seeking packages that combine multiple items such as perfume and col- ogne. Jewelry sets of matched necklace and earrings, and wallet and key holder sets are popular items. Items made in foreign countries appear to be preferred gifts sent stateside. Particularly popular are Icelandic woolens and ceramics. Some of the most recent addi- tions to the Navy Exchange stock include console phonographs and table radios from Germany, Can- adian-made sport jackets, radios imported from England and Irish linens. Food specials for the week, 25 November—1 December 1962, will be as follows: Main Snack Bar (T-100) Meat Loaf; Terminal Restaurant, Grilled Pork Chops; Viking Cafeteria, Braised Beef Tips. All food specials are served with two vegetables, bread, butter and coffee. The price .... just 55 cents. CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE ’56 Buick 4 dr. Hardtop, also a ’55 Chevy 4 dr. sedan, reasonably priced. Contact Mr. Hansen at Ext. 7271 or Keflavik 1746. ’57 Ford Station Wagon, newly rebuilt engine, radio and heater. Contact Lt. Col. Schmitz at Ext. 2271 or 3178. ’53 Studebaker with radio, heat- er, snow tires, overdrive, JO plat- es, winterized and insurance good until May of ’63. Also Miscellan- eous household items for sale. Contact Kelsoe at Ext. 4293 or 3277 on base and 1139 in Keflavik. ”55 Chevy Station Wagon, V-8 engine, automatic, 6 tires with 2 snow tires mounted. Contact Inman at Ext. 4204 during work- ing hours and 6225 after working hours. Three sets of 12 volt Icelandic headlights. Please call Ext. 7142 or 5282. WANTED TO RENT A one or two bedrm. apt. in the Keflavik area. Contact Sul- livan at Ext. 5239 during working hours or 7169 after working hours. A one bedrm. apt. in the Kefla- vik or Njardvik area. Contact Autry at Ext. 5192. A two bedrm. apt. Contact Dallarosa at Ext. 2100 or 2182. A one or two bedrm. apt. in the Keflavik area. Contact Matthews at Ext. 3223. A one bedrm. apt. furnished in the Keflavik area. Contact Tom Ramsey at Ext. 4100. WANTED TO BUY One used babv crib and mat- tress. Contact Johnson at Ext. 3233. FOUND One handbag with a pair of ladies shoes inside. Contact the transportation dispatcher at Ext. 4122. MISCELLANEOUS Anyone who has tapes or record courses in the Icelandic language, please contact Chief Lawter at Ext. 5105 or 6136. SLEEK SWIMMER —Eye-stopper Pat Taylor, one of the few Ameri- can girls among the European beauties in the famed Folies Berg- ere show, relaxes between acts at Las Vegas, Nev. Blonde and cur- vaceous, Miss Taylor hails from Buffalo, N. Y. Barrier (Continued, from Page 6.) Century Club Warren, a 28-year-old Texan, by completing this flight qualified for membership in the BARFOR- LANT “Century Club.” Only crew members who have flown 100 bar- riers may join the club. Wilson has been flying the bar- rier since November 1961. He en- listed in the Navy in April 1955 and is a 24-year-old native of New- burgh, New York. Charting the Course Navigators Giles and Garrett work near the middle of the cabin where they have a panel of in- struments, charting table, peri- scopic sextant, drift sight, and other navigational aids. Both navigators are 24 years old. Lt. (jg) Giles is from Evans- ville, Indiana; Ens. Garrett, from Pierre, South Dakota. Communications Opposite the navigators is the radioman position. All messages are in code. Radiomen West, a 25-year-old Texan, and Ingram, a 20-year-old West Virginian, send an average of 65 messages during each patrol. In addition to hand- ling message traffic they main- tain electronic equipment used by CIC and the navigators, plus their own communcations equipment. CIC, the Combat Information Center About one third of the cabin space is occupied by CIC equip- ment and technicians. In darkness they read red-illuminated instru- ment dials and intently watch luminous flecks of green appear on the radarscopes. One radar an- tenna searches a circular area 500 miles in diameter while an- other antenna searches vertically to find the altitude of approaching aircraft. Radar and ECM contacts are relayed to the plotting table and there changed into geographic locations. This information is checked by the CIC Officer and then transmitted to the BARFOR- LANT Operational Control Cent- er. Within but a minute or two after a contact is found, CIC must have its report in the Opera- tional Control Center in the Head- quarters of the Commander Bar- rier Force Atlantic. Lt. Murphy, the CIC Officer, entered the Navy as an Aviation Cadet and completed flight train- ing in April 1954. He had a tour of duty with Patrol Squadron 42 and another as flight instructor Basketball Schedule Monday, November 26 6 p.m.—Rockville vs Admin. 7 n.m.—57th FIS vs Marines 8 p.m.—Comptroller vs BarLant Tuesday, November 27 6 p.m.—57th FIS vs A/C Maint. 7 p.m.—Admin vs BarLant 8 p.m.—Marines vs AFI Wednesday, November 29 6 p.m.—NavCommSta #2 vs Public Works 7 p.m.—VP-16 vs A/C Maint. 8 p.m.—IKF vs Rockville Thursday, November 29 6 p.m.—Comptroller vs Nav- CommSta #2 7 p.m.—Navy Supply vs VP-16 8 p.m.—Admins vs IKF Friday, November 30 6 p.m.—NavCommSta #1 vs 57th FIS 7 p.m.—BarLant vs Comptroller 8 p.m.—AFI vs Navy Supply at Pensacola, Florida. Under an extension of the Navy’s Holloway Plan he attended the University of Mississippi and graduated in June 1960. After completing CIC School he joined AEWRON ELEVEN in November 1960. Assistant CIC Officer Downs is 33 years old, a native of Columbus, Ohio. Assigned to AEWRON ELEVEN since August 1960, he alternates on watch with Lt. Murphy. Technicians McCasland and Greene constantly check the elec- tronic equipment to see if it is operating normally. Should re- pairs be needed, they have enough tools and spare parts aboard the airplane to correct most malfunc- tions and failures. , McCasland enlisted in the Navy in June 1956. He is 25 years old and his hometown is Lisbon, Lou- isiana. Greene, although a year younger than MacCasland, has one more year in the Navy. He enlisted in March 1956 from his home in Morristown, Tennessee. They Also Serve Twelve crew members have been mentioned individually. The re- maining 12, named in the crew roster appearing several para- graphs above, perform duties which have already been describ- ed. Tempus Fugit Time passes in segments of work and rest on patrol. Each position is relieved at about three- hour intervals. During rest per- iods men may sleep, read, play cards, chat, or otherwise relax. If they are hungry, they may have a hot meal or a sandwich. It is most important that they return to work refreshed and keenly al- ert. “Constant Vigilance” is the watchword of the barrier; if vig- ilance were relaxed even momen- tarily, the barrier would be no more effective than a sleeping sentry. Eventually BARFORLANT OPCON sends word that Crew ONE has been relieved on station. Soon someone sights the relieving WV-2 coming to continue the pat- rol and everyone is happy to be heading for the hangar for a well-earned rest. The rest does not come immediately however. After returning from the bar- rier, an hour or so is required to clean up and post-flight the air- plane. During that time the PPC, co-pilot, CIC Officer and his as- sistant are in OPCON for de- briefing. There they review the flight and discuss the crew’s per- formance. Finally, everything has been done and Crew ONE can return to the quarters they left some 18 hours earlier — weary — a bit dishelved — another bout with the weather won — another patrol successfully accomplished — know- ing that for another day they helped keep the Free World pro- tected behind the Atlantic airborne early warning barrier. New Form Aids Scholarship Seekers Washington (AFNS)—The Air Force Aid Society announced com- pletion and distribution of a new simplified form, of the ready-to- mail variety, for use in applying for scholarship assistance from the Gen. Henry H. Arnold Educa- tional Fund. Copies of the new form have been sent to Air Force Aid Society at all major com- mands. Use of the form is expected to eliminate some delays in getting necessary application material to potential students.

x

The White Falcon

Beinir tenglar

Ef þú vilt tengja á þennan titil, vinsamlegast notaðu þessa tengla:

Tengja á þennan titil: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Tengja á þetta tölublað:

Tengja á þessa síðu:

Tengja á þessa grein:

Vinsamlegast ekki tengja beint á myndir eða PDF skjöl á Tímarit.is þar sem slíkar slóðir geta breyst án fyrirvara. Notið slóðirnar hér fyrir ofan til að tengja á vefinn.