The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 22.11.1985, Síða 11

The White Falcon - 22.11.1985, Síða 11
NETWORK continued from pg. 10 Livley said the third phase of the network will provide financial services through automated tel - ler machines. "That means," said Livley,"the ab- ility to get instant information on balances in checking accounts, buy Individual Retirement Ac- counts, certificates of deposit or get loans." "Down the road, people will be able to apply for a loan at an automated teller machine thous- ands of miles from their home financial institution. The application will be processed through public access terminals and the funds .disbursed to the bank or credit union where the loan was requested. That bank or credit union will then be reimbursed by your financial institution." Another key to the successful use of the sys- tem is direct deposit. Lively says deposits can not be allowed through automated teller machines because of state laws concerning interstate trans- fer of funds. Livley says it will take 18 months to two years to bring the network to maturity. Omsbudsman Academy Nov. 3 Story by Katherine E. Crognale Ombudsman Council Coordinator The Ombudsman Council and Family Services Cen- ter will sponsor an Ombudsman Academy for current and prospective ombudsman and anyone interested in finding out more about the ombudsman program and how the base runs. The Academy will be of- fered from 3 thru 5 December. A training team from NMPC, Anne Holland and Betty Jones, will conduct the academy which will feature topics in- cluding the role of an ombudsman, effective com- munications skills, dealing with complaints, cri- sis intervention and other topics of interest not only to ombudsman, but to other dependents as wel 1. The Ombudsman Academy, which will run from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., will feature a resource panel from the Chapel, Exchange, MWR, Housing Office, and other facilities that we deal with every day in gathering information and handling complaints. For more information, please call the Family Service Center, at ext. 4401. SPORTS ................................. Marines win base playoff After winning 1st Place in flag football at the conclusion of the 1985 intramural season, the Marine Barracks again captured a number one slot, this time in the base championship playoffs. The Marines defeated the team of IDF/CFK by a score of 26 to 12 to win the base championship title. At the conclusion of the game, one of the Mar- ine players stated that, "Our coach had us out in the snow practicing everyday, so, we were ready to go during the playoffs." Commodore out - Admiral in... The next time you pass the Commander, Iceland Defense Force, don't say good morning Commodore! Not that there's a new prohibition against greeting flag officers, its just that the Commodore is no longer a Commodore but a Rear Admiral. . .but he's not been promoted. He is still an 0-7. Here's an explanation of the title change taken in part from a November 8 Stars and Stripes article by Norman Black. The Navy has a new rank: rear admiral lower half. The change will resolve a controversy that has raged in the Navy for five years: what do you call a Navy officer between the ranks of captain and rear admiral? (In the Marine Corps, Army and Air Force the title of an 0-7 is brigadier general.) Until now, or at least for the last five years, a Navy captain who attains his first star has been called a commodore. The fiscal 1986 budget bill deletes the title commodore and replaces it with rear admiral lower half. (In reality, nobody is going to address someone in person as rear admiral lower half; we'll just call him admiral.) The Navy first adopted the rank of commodore in 1864. In 1899 it was dropped and you were either a captain or a rear admiral. During World War II the rank was resurrected, only to be dropped again in 1946. At that point commodore was also used informally to designate the senior captain who commanded a squadron of ships. Until 1982 the Navy called everybody who advanced past the rank of captain a rear admiral. There were one-star and two-star levels but everybody wore two stars "and nobody but the paymaster knew the difference." The Defense Officer Personnel Management Act of 1980 was revised in 1982 so that one-star Navy officers were called commodore. But the Navy didn't like the change. It was argued that sailors were getting confused between the two-star "real-commodore" and the senior captain heading a squadron. After three years of discussions with the House Armed Services Committee a compromise was reached. Now an 0-7 will be a rear admiral lower half and wear one star but will be addressed as admiral. The White Falcon November 22, 1985 Photo by J01 Howard Watters 11

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