296-4202 - WillDaniel.com

Transcription

296-4202 - WillDaniel.com
121 days until the 88th ABW ORI — are you ready? https://ori.wpafb.af.mil
Vol. 45, No.31
Friday, August 6, 2004
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio
News Briefs
ORI training event next week
The 88th Air Base Wing will
have an operational readiness
inspection preparation exercise Monday through Aug. 13.
The event will include basewide events and a deployment
exercise. Base people should
be prepared for delays at the
gates and other possible interruption to normal operations.
The wing has scheduled several training events in addition
to the regular quarterly exercises leading up to the Dec. 5-12
ORI. For additional information about preparation for the
ORI, visit the 88th ABW ORI
prep/readiness Web page at
https://ori.wpafb.af.mil.
Cable outages in Prairies
The Praries of Wright Field
housing will have widespread
cable TV and cable Internet
outages for rerouting of fiberoptic cable between 8 a.m. and
5 p.m. today. For more information, call Charles C. Littell
III at 904-8237.
Riders gather at Wright Flyer
The Miami Valley Military
Affiliated Motorcycle Association, also known as “The Wright
Wriders,” wants you. The group
is looking for motorcycle operators and passengers interested
in improving their riding skills,
reducing their chances of a
mishap, and having fun in the
process. The group will meet 6
p.m. Wednesday at Gate 1B for
a group photo, followed by a
ride. For more information, call
retired Chief Master Sgt. Tom
Edwards at 255-2489.
Housing office limits hours
During August, the base housing office will close at 2 p.m.
Tuesdays for training. In case of
an emergency call 257-6549. For
more information, call Floyd
Swinford at 257-6547.
Recruiters to visit
Recruiters from the Space
and Missile Center will be at
Kenney Hall, Bldg. 642, Area B,
for a briefing at 9 a.m. Wednesday. After the briefing, representatives from SMC will be
available for one-on-one interviews. Take an updated resume
with you. SMC recruits military
and civilian engineers, program
managers, scientists, acquisition security, financial managers, contracting and logistics
personnel. For more information, call Andy Clark at DSN
833-3026 or commercial 310-3633026.
Additional news briefs, Page 2A
Air Force photo by Spencer P. Lane
Jessica Lynch, a former Army private who was the first
American prisoner of war rescued since World War II and the
first American female soldier ever rescued, speaks with
members of the 445th Airlift Wing at the Bass Lake recreation
area Tuesday. They included Tech. Sgt. Hans Jagow, Capt.
Kimm Sandusky and Staff Sgt. Sandi Golden-Vest, who were
among the Airmen who transported Ms. Lynch and other
injured military members who sustained injuries, from Germany back to the United States in April 2003. It was the first
time they had met face-to-face.
Lynch meets air crewmembers
by Brett Turner
Skywrighter Staff
A
t the time, it was a matter
of doing their job. In retrospect, it was a brush with
history.
When members of Wright-Patterson’s 445th Airlift Wing helped
transport Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch
along with other injured military
members from Germany back to the
United States in April 2003, it was
part of their normal mission. The
hype was just building about Ms.
Lynch, who was injured when her
unit was ambushed during Operatoin Iraqi Freedom.
She was the first American prisoner of war rescued since World
War II and the first female soldier
to be rescued. Ms. Lynch soon
became a media sensation.
Five 445th Airmen were involved
in the transport. Capt. Kimm Sandusky, Tech. Sgt. Hans Jagow and
Staff Sgt. Sandi Golden-Vest met
Ms. Lynch face-to-face for the first
time Tuesday at the Bass Lake
Lodge. Ms. Lynch was here visiting
as a guest of Camp Wright-Patterson’s Operation Purple, a program
she is the spokeswoman for.
Ms. Lynch said she was glad to
be able to meet the 445th members.
At the time, she didn’t remember
much as she was in pain and under
medication but did later through
photos and video.
“We didn’t know until the night
before we would be transporting
her,” said Sgt. Golden-Vest.
“We knew of her, she was all over
the media, but our job is the same.
It made it a lot busier with the
media but we move the wounded
warriors and take them back
home.”
Sgt. Jagow said what he liked
about that mission was not so much
the hype. But it was helpful in
showing others what he does.
“This is not a job you can bring
your friend in to your office to show
them what you do,” he said. “What
was really neat about it was all my
friends and family saw it on television and they understood what I
did after the fact.”
The Airmen said one of the nice
things about being able to meet Ms.
Lynch was they don’t usually get to
See Lynch, Page 8A
Camp Wright-Patt combines
learning and summer fun
by Brett Turner
Skywrighter Staff
S
ummer camps are warmweather rituals for some
kids. Where some camps
have swimming, hiking and campfire sing-alongs, Wright-Patterson
Camp Purple offered something
out of this world.
This first-ever event here, which
began Monday and ends today at
the Bass Lake recreation area in
Area C, had 20 young campers creating and launching their own
rockets and participating in a
NASA satellite hookup with the
Johnson Space Center in Houston
— and that was just one morning’s
activities.
Add in visits to flight simulators
and outdoor dramas, shooting
paintballs and other games and
special guests like former prisoner of war Jessica Lynch, and you
have a camp experience like few
others.
Operation Purple, with purple
symbolizing all the military service branches, is a free program for
children of National Guardsmen
and reservists, who are deployed
or mobilized.
There are 12 Operation Purple
camps this summer at various military bases throughout the United
States and in Guam.
Although the activities have the
most appeal, the children, who are
ages 10-12 and are from Ohio and
surrounding states here, learn as
well. The camps teach the chilSee Camp, Page 8A
2A
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
News Briefs
WEATHER
Today
Mostly sunny
High 73, low 53
Saturday
Mostly sunny
High 75 low 53
Sunday
Partly cloudy
High 80 low 57
Monday
Partly cloudy
High 82, low 61
http://weather.wpafb.af.mil
Skywrighter
Deadlines
• Close of business Friday for
the following Friday’s paper
with the following exceptions:
• Free ad program: noon Friday.
• News briefs: noon Wednesday.
For more information, call the
Skywrighter staff at 522-3251.
Contact Airmen
Against Drunk Driving
by e-mail at
[email protected] to
volunteer.
Science majors participate in summer
physics program here
A group of 16 undergraduate students who are completing a physics
research program with applications
involving human genetics, the ozone
layer and laser technology will highlight their findings in a poster session 1-3 p.m. Thursday at Wright State
University, Fairborn. The public event
on the research work completed at
WSU, the Air Force Institute of Technology and Air Force Research Laboratory by the physics and engineering majors, will be in the student
union. The project includes workshops, seminars and discussions on
career opportunities in the physical
sciences.
Participants
receive
stipends, and the students at WSU
receive housing on campus and assistance with travel and food costs. For
more information, call Doug Petkie
at 775-3124 or Glen Perram at 255-3636,
ex. 4504.
Former CMSAF to speak here
Retired Chief Master Sergeant of
the Air Force Robert D. Gaylor will
speak at 9 a.m. Aug. 18 at the base
theater. Chief Gaylor will speak here
as part of the National Air and Space
Intelligence Center’s commander’s
speaker program. For more information, call Master Sgt. Troy Eden at 2578160.
Contracting end-of-year procedures
In order to ensure obligation of
expiring funds by year’s end, operational contracting (88th Contracting
Squadron) and the information technology contracting branch of Aeronautical Systems Center have set the
following deadlines for receipt of
funding documents:
88th Contracting Squadron:
• Aug 30 — all purchase requests for
$25,000 or less.
ASC/PKWI:
• Monday — hardware and software
more than $1 million.
• Aug. 16 — hardware and software
less than $1 million.
• Sept. 1 — hardware and software
less than $100,000
For a list of approving officials see
end of fiscal year procedures on the
following Web home pages:
online at the following locations: HQ
AFMC website — https://www.afmcmil.wpafb.af.mil/HQ-AFMC/DO/doo/
AFPC website — http://www.afpc.randolph.af.mil/sq-cc-board/
Restricted/majcom_board%20contact.htm.
https://www.asc.wpafb.af.mil/asc/pk/
pkw/pkwo/88abwpk/88thPK.htm
https://www.asc.wpafb.af.mil/asc/pk/
pkw/pkwi/pkwipolicy.htm
For more operational contracting
information call Thomas Richmond
at 257-6803 ext. 4293. Vera S. Callaway
of the ASC information technology
contracting branch can be contacted
at 257-2135 ext. 4497.
ASC/CCD to relocate
Aeronautical Systems Center’s discrimination complaints office will
relocate Thursday to Bldg. 11, Room
119. Limited service will be provided
Monday through Wednesday. The
office will be closed Thursday, and
limited service will be available Aug.
13. For more information, call Stefanie Wimmer at 904-5953.
Jewelry sale fundraiser
The Fisher/Nightingale Houses Inc.
will conduct an authorized fundraiser,
jewelry at discount prices, 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. Aug. 18-19. On Aug. 18, the sale
will take place in the second floor
concourse of Bldg 262, Area A. On
Aug. 19, the sale will take place in
Bldg. 16, Area B (near the credit union
and snack bar). This fundraiser has
been approved by the 88th Support
Group Services Division. All proceeds
will be used by the Fisher/Nightingale Houses Inc. to support the Fisher
House compassionate care facilities
here.
Gold Coast Promotions will be
accepting cash, checks and all major
credit cards. To make payments for
merchandise even easier, the company will be accepting payroll allotments for active duty military members, and automatic clearing house
debits and credit card payments
spread over a three-month period
from all base employees. For more
information, call Capt. Alex Montgomery at 904-2997.
Free picnic for unaccompanied service
members
The annual unaccompanied service members’ picnic will be held 10:30
a.m. today at the Kittyhawk Lodge.
The event is open to all unaccompanied enlisted members and officers on
base. For more information or to volunteer to help with the picnic, call
416-3279 or 785-3618.
Education office by appointment only
The education and training, base
education services section of the 88th
Mission Support Squadron accepts
appointments for any educational
transactions. If an appointment is not
scheduled, expect a delay in service.
For more information, call Gonzalo
Saldana at 904-4773. To schedule an
appointment, call 904-4801.
Commander candidate selection board
convenes in October
The Air Force Materiel Command
operations and operations support
squadron commander candidate
selection board will convene here Oct.
20-21.
The board will meet at AFMC
headquarters to select candidates to
fill projected command vacancies in
flight test, test and operation support
squadrons Jan. 1 through Dec. 31, 2005.
The AFMC CCSB is open to all Air
Force officers who meet the eligibility criteria in AFMCI 36-2601. Suspense for all nomination packages is
Sept. 17.
Commander Candidate Selection
Board information can be found
YMCA of Greene County
88th SFS vehicle pre-registration
The 88th Security Forces Squadron
has added a new feature to its Web
site that lets you pre-register your
vehicle before visiting the pass and
registration section to pick up your
base decal.
All of the necessary paperwork,
including your current government
ID card, state driver’s license, proof of
insurance, Ohio emissions check (Echeck) and vehicle registration will
still be checked for validity before
your base decal is issued. For more
information visit the Web site
https://www.asc.wpafb.af.mil/sfs/index.
html or contact the pass and registration section at 257-6506.
Transmission Tune
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• Before and After School Care
• Kindergarten Care
• Mon.-Fri. 6:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
• Two Convenient Locations
Includes Fluid & Labor
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Replace Pan Gasket w/New
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across from Frisch’s
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299-2300
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278-4277
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Xenia
560 Grange Hall Rd.
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Cars, Boats, Trucks, RV’s,
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Local News
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
3A
SOF Systems
Group adjusts to
ASC changes
by Sue Baker
ASC Public Affairs
A
eronautical Systems Center’s Special Operations
Forces Systems Group is
changing to improve delivery of
special forces capabilities to the
rest of the Air Force, according to
Tom Severyn, deputy director. The
changes are part of ASC’s ongoing
reorganization.
“The group has been very busy
lately with work supporting the
global war on terror, going on contract for four new AC-130U Gunships last summer, taking existing
aircraft and converting them into
Gunships,” he said. “With the ASC
restructure, we’re looking for a better, center-wide look at some of the
capabilities of (special operations)
platforms. Establishing this capabilities-based planning will help
us take a broader view of everyone’s connections and potential
synergies.”
One example of such planning
will soon take place with award of
a contract for 10 new Combat Talon
II aircraft next year, because
demand for special operations platforms is so great, he said. The basic
mission of the SOF Systems Group
— to provide combat capability for
special operations forces — will
not change.
Another example of synergy:
three weeks ago, the group
received congressional new start
approval for a personnel recovery
vehicle to replace combat search
and rescue helicopters for Air
Force Special Operations Command, a mission that command
picked up from Air Command last
October, Mr. Severyn said. “We’ll
be purchasing up to 132 aircraft to
replace the HH-60s out there right
now. The user wants them right
away to avoid life-extension programs on current aircraft. The new
program is expected to involve $1.5
billion in development costs and
$9.5 to 10 billion in production
costs.”
There are additional, subtle
changes happening in the SOF Systems Group, according to Mr. Severyn. “The Gunship integrated
products team will become the
Gunship Squadron, and the Talon
IPT will (become) the Talon
Squadron. For the CV-22, part of
the SOF Group that is based at
Naval Air Command in Patuxent
River, Md., we’re still exploring
how the new structure will work.
Previously, this program reported
directly to Washington, D.C., and
the Air Force program executive
officer there.”
Another new program that recently moved to the SOF group
from the Aeronautical Enterprise
Office is the Battlefield Airman
Program, Mr. Severyn said.
“We anticipate the SOF Systems
Group will continue to work with
the Air Force Research Laboratory
based here to get new technologies
out of the labs and quickly into the
field,” he said. “For example, on
the battlefield Airman they’ve
already reduced equipment weight
by 40 pounds, just by eliminating
a number of cables and antennas,
miniaturizing battery packs, and
developing small generators for use
when power needs are greater. Key
AFRL players in this effort have
included the Power and Propulsion
Directorate, Sensors Directorate,
Information Technology DirecSee Changes, Page 7A
Base hosts refueling wing
Master Sgt. Scott Ward “flies” the refueling boom from
the tail section of a KC-135 Stratotanker July 29 during a
training mission over Kentucky. Sgt. Ward is a boom operator for the 434th Air Refueling Wing at Grissom Air Reserve
Base, Ind. He and nearly 150 people are temporarily relocated to Wright-Patterson as Grissom ARB is undergoing a
runway upgrade project.
A C-141 Starlifter from the 445th Airlift Wing here takes
on fuel during a training flight July 29.
Air Force photos by Spencer P. Lane
653rd CLSS Airmen begin C-5A structural analysis
by Lanorris Askew
Warner Robins ALC Public Affairs
Editor’s note: Phase one of the C-5A
tear-down project officially began last
year. Phases two and three — which
involve tear down and further analysis
— are currently under way. Phase four
involves the aircraft’s remaining parts
being disposed in 2006.
ROBINS AFB, Ga. (AFMCNS) —
Members of the 653rd Combat Logistics Support Squadron recently set
about cutting through a C-5A’s skin
and muscle to remove the giant aircraft’s wings and lend a hand to
those evaluating its future viability.
Buc McRory, strategic airlift directorate structures engineer here and
lead engineer for the project, said
inspections began last year on aircraft tail number 69004, but the
actual teardown process has now
begun.
“This is an engineering structural
analysis project, and we’ve employed
the 653rd CLSS to help us cut the
plane apart,” he said.
The C-5 stands 65 feet tall, is 247
feet long, has a wingspan of 222 feet
and a maximum takeoff weight of
more than three-quarter of a million
pounds. It’s 62 feet wider than a football field and is nearly three-quarters as long, making it the Air Force’s
largest cargo aircraft.
A 10-member team of aircraft battle damage specialists began working on the aircraft in November. It’s
one of 14 C-5As Air Force officials
selected for retirement.
Master Sgt. John Manna, 653rd
CLSS project team chief, said they
began by removing save list items, or
items needed in the Air Force inventory, to produce spares for the supply
system. Now, they are working to
remove the larger components from
Air Force photo by Sue Sapp
ROBINS AFB, Ga. — Senior Airman Aaron Cooper saws through the wing of the
C-5A with the help of Staff Sgt. Paul Hockaday (behind the saw). The main goal is
to get all of the major components cut and shipped by the end of the year.
the aircraft such as the wings.
To put how large the project is into
perspective, the master sergeant said
the outboard wing weighs 17,000
pounds and the inboard wing weighs
26,000. An entire Air Force C-21, the
military’s version of the Lear jet,
weighs 18,300 pounds, and an fully
functional F-16 Fighting Falcon
weighs 37,500 pounds.
“We’re helping support the C-5 system program office with any parts
they need to get their airframes out
on time with the save list items we
removed, and we’re helping the Air
Force with the study,” Sgt. Manna
said.
The team chief said this is the first
study of this kind ever done on the C5A models. He said there are structural technicians, crew chiefs, electricians, fuels specialists, guidance
and control technicians and
hydraulics specialists working on
the aircraft.
Although their primary mission is
aircraft battle damage repair and
helping support the SPO by doing
drop-in maintenance, this new mission is one they’re taking on with
confidence.
“This is totally different from what
we usually see on a day-to-day
basis,” said Sgt. Manna.
He said this job is a little harder
because they’ve worked C-130s and
other aircraft, but this is their first C5.
“The team is doing a great job,”
he said. “So far everything is going as
scheduled and on time.”
According to Mr. McRory, the study
See Analysis, Page 6A
4A
SKYWRIGHTER
Editorial
August 6. 2004
AFA begins drive for new members
by Mike Uecker
Air Force Association
T
he Air Force Association will
conduct its annual membership
drive here today through Aug.
31.
AFA is a national nonprofit organization that works for better benefits
for all Air Force people.
“Professional military associations
such as the Air Force Association,
Air Force Sergeants Association, etc.,
offer unique opportunities for military personnel,” according to Chief
of Staff Gen. John P Jumper. “They
foster comradeship, promote military
professionalism, preserve our military heritage, and generally promote
a strong national defense.”
AFA’s effectiveness in supporting
the Air Force is directly related to
the size of its national membership.
Additionally, AFA is the only organization that represents the entire Air
Force family. Recent congressional
changes now allow civilians to be
active members of this professional
organization, and so all active duty,
Reserve, Guard and Air Force civilian
— enlisted and officer — are urged
to join AFA.
The association has long been
regarded as the Air Force’s professional society and, through its advisory councils, hears the needs of Air
Force people, takes positions on those
needs, and fights for them, according
to Wright Memorial Chapter President Mike Winslow.
AFA members enjoy many benefits
including a subscription to the highly
regarded Air Force Magazine, eligibility for several low-cost group insurance programs, résumé preparation
Visit the AFA Wright
Memorial Chapter Web
site at www.afadaytonwright.com.
and critique, an AFA Mastercard, car
rental. In addition, there are numerous opportunities to work and network with all elements of the Air
Force family and community leaders
to solve problems and effect change.
Your entire Air Force team has a
stake in keeping the Air Force Asso-
ciation strong and vital — your membership in the association enables us
to continue our strong advocacy of
the rightful priority of air superiority
and bring solidarity and weight to
that noble cause.
The Air Force Association maintains 250 chapters in all 50 states and
at many overseas locations. In this
area, AFA members are encouraged
to join the Wright Memorial Chapter
212. AFA membership dues, only $36
for one year and $90 for three years,
include affiliation with the Wright
Memorial Chapter.
We urge you to sign up today for a
better Air Force. For more information, visit the AFA Wright Memorial
Chapter Web site at www.afadaytonwright.com or call Mike Uecker at 4310557, ext. 126.
Street Beat
How have the recent exercises helped prepare you for the
operational readiness inspection?
Asked in Bldg. 830, Area A, and Bldg. 219, Area C
Tech. Sgt. Doug Bonner
74th Medical Operations
Squadron
Lt. Col. Susan Fisk
74th Medical Operations
Squadron
“It’s helped in knowing what
in the ORI to prepare for,
and ensuring we know
proper procedures and that
our equipment is in order.”
“I went through the Personal
Readiness Enhancement
Program training, and they
are doing a good job getting
us all in and getting us all
ready. It’s very busy and very
important.”
Airman First Class
Augustina Mushale
74th Medical Operations
Squadron
Senior Airman Catrina
Rawlsgray
74th Medical Operations
Squadron
“The exercises give you a
feeling that, in view of the
way things are in the world,
you need to get ready. This
includes making sure your
mobility bags are ready.”
“The exercises were practiced in a real world way to
make sure you’re ready. It
was just like being in an
ORI.”
Skywrighter Office
Serving the needs of WPAFB since 1960
Skywrighter is published by Brown Publishing Company Inc., a private firm
in no way connected with the U.S. Air Force, under exclusive written contract
with Wright-Patterson AFB. This commercial enterprise Air Force newspaper
is an authorized publication for members of the U.S. military services. Contents
of the Skywrighter are not necessarily the official views of, or endorsed by, the
U.S. Government, the Department of Defense or the Department of the Air Force.
The appearance of advertising in this publication, including inserts or
supplements, does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Defense,
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Editorial content is edited, prepared and provided by the Public Affairs Office
of the 88th Air Base Wing. All photographs are Air Force photographs unless
otherwise indicated.
Copyright 2004 Brown Publishing Inc.
All rights reserved.
No copyright claimed in material prepared by U.S. Government
employees as part of their official duties or in public domain material, however, the compilation, selection, coordination and/or arrangement of such
material is subject to Brown Publishing Inc. copyright.
Skywrighter is a trademark of the U.S. government.
88ABW/PAI
Bldg. 70, Area C
5215 Thurlow St.
Wright-Patterson AFB OH
45433-5547
Phone (937) 522-3251
E-mail
[email protected]
Col. Michael Schaffrinna
74th Medical Operations
Squadron
“Proper planning never hurts.
Exercises and training is
planning. We live in a time we
know is dangerous, and we
need to be prepared to serve
in diverse and difficult situations.”
88th Air Base Wing
Col. Andrew K. Weaver, Commander
Public Affairs Editorial Staff
Andrea Attaway-Young
Chief of Public Affairs
Steve Wolfe .................................. Chief, Internal Information
Will Daniel ........................................ ............................... Editor
Erica English ......................................... Production Assistant
Brett Turner ........................................................... Staff Writer
Mike Wallace ......................................................... Staff Writer
Spencer P. Lane ............................................. Photojournalist
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Perspective
Boy Scouts provide needed help
A
s a volunteer gardener at
the Fisher House I would
like to give a “hats off,
hooah” and “thank you much” to
our local Boy Scout Troop 162,
under the leadership of Chief
Master Sgt. Darryl Lee, for all
their help with the garden beds
and grounds at the Fisher House.
The Fisher and Nightingale
Houses provide a home away from
home for military families who
need medical care at the WrightPatterson Medical Center. There
are more than 30 such houses at
military bases across the country
staffed, for the most part, by volunteers. Several Wright-Patterson
organizations have contributed to
the gardens, providing flowers,
mulch and hard work to bring it to
life. Troop 162 came to my rescue
by shoveling in two tons of donated mulch.
The gardens are very appreciated by our guests who (thanks to
volunteers like the boys in Troop
162) have a beautiful place to stay
while getting medical care.
It is gratifying to see young people involved in scouting. I encourage parents interested in scouting to contact Chief Lee and join a
great troop.
— Jan Anderson
done for the Fisher House. It’s nice to
get feedback on things going well on
the base.
— Col. Andrew Weaver
Commander
Thanks for emergency help
I
wanted to take a moment to
communicate my appreciation
to the lifeguards and staff at
the Prairies Pool. Last evening my
daughter was hurt while swimming and the lifeguards immediately stepped into action to take
care of her. They calmed her down
and made sure that all the proper
steps were followed for her treatment. Everyone at the pool acted
in a professional and compassionate manner. EMS was called,
and they too were outstanding.
The injury to my daughter was
minor and she will be back at the
pool very soon. Please express my
gratitude to everyone at the
Prairies Pool.
— Lisa M. Clinch
Chief, Manpower and
Organization
Thanks. I am glad to hear your
daughter is ok, and to know well the
pool staff handled the situation. I
forwarded your note to the pool staff
and to the fire department. It’s nice
to hear when we do things right.
Thanks for letting me know about
the good work the Boy Scouts have
Tricare benefit options
I retired from the Air Force a
short time ago. I recently contacted some local Tricare participating care managers about
becoming a new patient and let them
know Tricare Standard was my insurance. Their initial response was to
stop by and fill out the new patient
paperwork. I then let them know that
I also needed an appointment to see
a doctor and they immediately told
me it would be a month or more.
It is obvious many of the so-called
care managers are at the very least
strongly discouraging military
retirees and I suspect will not accept
Tricare Standard unless forced to.
You needed to know this and I would
strongly encourage our military
health benefits adviser look into this.
Q
Motorcycle registration on base
You have several choices of
health-care benefits under
Tricare. You elected Standard, and while Tricare Standard
affords you more flexibility in choice
of providers, the out-of-pocket
A
I recently purchased my first
motorcycle and have a concern over base registration.
Long before I purchased my bike I
did the responsible thing and regis-
Q
I want your suggestions and comments
concerning Wright-Patterson AFB. Please
tell me what we are doing well and where
we can improve.
I suggest you first give the chain of command and base agencies an opportunity to
resolve your concerns before calling the
Direct Line. To contact the Direct Line:
• E-mail: [email protected]
• Voice: 257-2750
• Fax: 656-1279
• Your question or concern may have
already been addressed in a previous Skywrighter issue. "To review previously published Direct Lines please log onto the Web at
https://directline.wpafb.af.mil.
O
fficials of the base inspector general office said Tuesday that base
members turned in noteworthy
performances during recent exercises
in preparation for the upcoming operational readiness inspection.
• Capt William Dains, 88th Mission
Support Group, showed exceptional
speed and effectiveness during Bldg.
10’s building evacuation. All building
personnel were evacuated and accounted for in short order. Without
Capt. Dains contributions this training
exercise would not have been completed as quickly or orderly.
5A
Col. Andrew K. Weaver
88th Air Base Wing
Commander
KEY CUSTOMER SERVICE PHONE NUMBERS
Housing .........................................257-6547
Facilities/utilities ............................257-3131
Housing maintenance
Prairies and Woods at Wright Field 253-3488
Brick Quarters, Green Acres, and
Pine Estates .............425-0099 or 425-0098
Services ........................................257-7736
Environmental management..........257-2057
.................................................ext. 218
Law enforcement desk ..................257-6516
Legal assistance............................257-6142
Claims office..................................257-6667
Civilian personnel ..........................257-8305
Military personnel ..........................257-2547
Base exchange..............................257-6458
Commissary .................257-2060, 257-7420
Medical center...............................257-9131
Safety ............................................904-0888
Finance customer service ........... 257-3202
Family support center ...................257-3592
Family services .............................257-6934
Housing privatization.................... 255-3319
https://www.asc.wpafb.af.mil/asc/cvh
Direct line — 257-2750
tered for the earliest Ohio Basic
Rider Safety Course that was available. It turned out to be in the middle of August because the classes
are in such high demand. Yet when I
picked up my bike this week I was
told by security forces and safety
personnel that there is absolutely
no way that I can register it on base
until I prove that I have completed
the course, which basically means
that since I live in base housing it is
illegal for me to ride my bike at all
for the next two months.
Although I understand and support the motorcycle safety clothing
and training initiatives that have
been set forth, I believe that this is a
little excessive. When course completion is a requirement but the
attendance dates are basically out
of the individual’s hands, it is almost
like a punishment for base riders.
Would it be possible to issue temporary base passes to new riders like
myself who have done everything
possible to meet the training
requirements but are stuck in a holding pattern beyond their control?
Officials recognize top performers
by 1st Lt. Adrianne Michele
88th ABW Public Affairs
SKYWRIGHTER
Direct Line
— Col. Andrew Weaver
Commander
expenses are higher. Typically, off
base doctors and dentists take up to
30 days to give new patients their
first appointment. This doesn’t mean
they don’t want your insurance.
Another option available to you is
Tricare Prime. Under prime, the out
of pocket expenses are lower, but
you have less flexibility in choosing
your provider.
On the other hand, there are more
stringent guidelines set to guarantee access to primary care in a timely
manner.
If you want to switch from Standard to Prime, visit the Tricare service center at Wright-Patterson Medical Center or download an enrollment form from the Tricare Web site
(www.tricare.osd.mil) and mail the
completed form.
August 6, 2004
• Ray Robb of Aeronautical Systems
Center showed exceptional speed and
effectiveness during Bldg. 32’s evacuation. Everyone was evacuated expeditiously and 100 percent accountability
was completed. Without Mr. Robb’s contributions this training exercise would
not have been completed as quickly or
orderly.
• Steve Van Degrift, 88th Mission Support Group. During exercise play a
ground burst simulator failed to detonate, leaving a real-world unexploded
ordnance in the exercise play area. Mr.
Vandergrift immediately took all necessary steps to protect people from the
danger and coordinated the proper
destruction of the device.
Since it is a state-run course perhaps proof of course registration and
payment could be considered a valid
document?
If I understand the motorcycle
safety program correctly, it is
intended to develop all operators
into well experienced and safe riders. No one gains experience if the
bike is left sitting in their garage.
Air Force directives require
motorcycle riders to complete
a motorcycle safety course. As
installation commander I don’t have
the authority to waive this requirement. We require you to complete a
motorcycle safety course before issuing a temporary vehicle pass or permanent registration decal to ensure
this requirement is complete.
The Motorcycle Ohio web site at
www.motorcycle.ohio.gov/brcschedule, lists local agencies which offer
Basic Rider Courses.
You may find an earlier class date.
A new course exclusively for military personnel has been added to
this list as well.
A
Skywrighter
available as
PDF file
Now you can read
the entire Skywrighter online.
Go to www.skywrighter.com and
click on the icon
in the upper right
corner.
See us online at www.skywrighter.com
6A
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
C-5A board leader comments on results
by Laura McGowan
ASC Public Affairs
A
t the beginning of the C-5
assessment last October, the
Air Force Fleet Viability
Board, led by Col. Francis P. Crowley,
wanted to describe the fleet’s viability in three ways. He said the
board sought to determine the technical health of the aircraft, how
much it will cost to operate and support, and what portion of the fleet
will be available to perform missions
over a projected 25-year period.
The board concluded its work in
March, and Col. Crowley commented
recently on its results.
He described the life of the C-5A
as one that has had significant problems from birth. As a new aircraft
in 1970, its mission capability rate
was only 42 percent. And it will not
meet some Air Force standards even
with projected upgrades.
The assessment board’s three-tier
make-up was vital to the board’s
process, said Col. Crowley. “The first
tier is made up of engineers, logisticians, and cost analysts mostly provided by Aeronautical Systems Center. The second tier is a senior board
comprised of high-ranking officials
from Air Staff and Air Force
Materiel Command, whose func-
tional specialties paralleled the first
tier. The role of the senior board is to
provide mentorship and validate the
assessment product.”
The third tier is a group of senior
advisers to the board. Col. Crowley
said the senior board advisers are
non-Air Force aerospace industry
experts. This three-tiered system
offers the secretary of the Air Force
an honest and balanced assessment
of a fleet’s longevity and associate
cost of continued ownership, said
Col. Crowley.
He said he expects the board’s C5A viability assessment to be useful
to Air Force decision makers.
At the beginning of the assessment,
14 C-5As were marked for retirement, one of which will be completely dissected to determine if
there are any obvious or subtle problems with the aircraft’s structure.
Although the teardown will not be
complete until December 2005, a
“quick look” inspection revealed no
major problems, he said.
Col. Crowley explained that determining fleet viability is based on an
aircraft’s cost, availability and operational health. He stressed that compared to other large aircraft in the
Air Force inventory, the C-5 operational costs are not out of line.
Also, Col. Crowley said, the per-
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formance rate of the C-5A has
improved from its initial 42 percent
to today’s mission-capable rate of
about 58 percent. However, it
remains well below the 75 percent
standard. He attributes this performance increase to increased
expertise in program management,
aircraft maintenance management,
supply management, acquisition
management and manufacturer’s
help. Additionally, with the scheduled avionics modernization program and reliability enhancement
and re-engine programs, perform-
Analysis
ance is expected to go higher.
Col. Crowley said the C-5A will
have future problems. “However, the
C-5A is aging gracefully. With the
(avionics modernization) and (reengining), it will be less costly to sustain, and we’ll get proportionally
more available airlift for operations.”
He said that as long as scheduled
upgrade programs are successful,
and the ongoing aircraft teardown
continues to yield positive results,
the aircraft has at least 25 more
years of viability.
from Page 3A
came at the request of Gen. John
W. Handy, Air Mobility Command
commander, to determine if the
aircraft’s structure is living up to
predictions made in its original
design.
Mr. McRory said they asked Lt.
Col. Paul Wood, 653rd CLSS commander, for help early on in the
program, and he eagerly supported
the effort.
“Master Sgt. Manna and his team
have been on the project ever
since,” he said. “This is really
tough, dirty work in the best of conditions and working in the heat
and humidity makes it ever
tougher. But these men are professionals. They display teamwork
at its finest.”
Sgt. Manna said their goal is to
get all of the major components
cut and shipped by the end of the
year.
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
7A
AFSAC wows customers with green belts
by Stan Zavist
Black Belt, AFSAC
W
hy would you need green
belts to support allies and
coalition partners around
the globe? The green belts at Air
Force Security Assistance Center
are disciplined, and there’s the link
to the martial arts terminology.
But this is an approach to thwarting defects and variations in the
day-to-day processes performed in
support of foreign military sales.
Six Sigma began in the 1980’s at
Motorola. The original emphasis of
Six Sigma was to reduce defects to
less than 3.4 per million items produced. This would greatly minimize
rework and improve product quality, amounting to cost savings.
The statistical and problem-solving tools used in Six Sigma are not
new techniques.
However, the methodical application of these tools in a disciplined manner is what sets Six
Sigma apart from other quality initiatives.
General Electric forged ahead
with the application of Six Sigma
techniques to transactional and
service-related processes such as
billing cycles, payments, help desk
response time, in addition to the
production environment with great
success, having completed more
than 100,000 Six Sigma projects.
Twenty-three of the top 50 companies in the United States have
implemented a Six Sigma program
with application to all types of
processes.
How did AFSAC get involved
with Six Sigma? The previous
AFSAC commander, Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Riemer’s vision for the organization was for process improvements across the board. AFSAC
officials looked at possible tools
they could apply to become “world
class professionals.”
An initial group of five AFSAC
folks were selected to attend Six
Sigma green belt training. The
AFSAC commander also made time
to attend the training and work a
green belt project. The first projects are focused on areas of most
concern to U.S. allies and also to
the AFSAC work force. An additional seven employees have also
completed green belt training.
The most significant impact of a
Six Sigma project at AFSAC is on
the letter of offer and acceptance
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process being worked by Nancy
Hudson. The process time standard
within AFSAC is for 80 percent to
be processed in 120 days from
receipt of a valid letter of request
from the customer. AFSAC was at
74 percent in fiscal 2003. The faster
an LOA is processed, the sooner
allies obtain the equipment and
supplies they need.
Ms. Hudson said she knew where
the problems existed. But after
applying the techniques learned
in green belt training, she said she
was amazed that it did not support
her theory. Several issues were
affecting AFSAC process times,
including not knowing how to enter
the data in the tracking system,
processing data improperly resulting in negative days, as well as not
using tools to properly stop the
clock when problems exist.
As a result of her initial findings
she began several initiatives to
improve the process. Six Sigma
allowed her to hone in on the critical areas that were the bottlenecks. Her organization is capturing each document electronically
Changes
to maintain a working file that
everyone can use, also providing
the added benefit of saving paper.
These actions resulted in raising
the level of awareness concerning
the importance in monitoring the
data. Her folks are now looking at
the data differently and the supervisors are beginning to monitor the
data to ensure that AFSAC exceeds
the goal of 80 percent in 120 days.
For the current measurement
period AFSAC is getting 84 percent
processed within 120 days, a goal
not achieved before.
Brig. Gen. Arthur Rooney, the
new AFSAC commander, was
instrumental in bringing Six Sigma
to the Air Force while he was
assigned to U.S. Air Forces in
Europe, and also as commander of
the 82nd Training Wing, Sheppard
AFB, Texas. Having seen the positive results first-hand, Gen. Rooney
has AFSAC focused on taking Six
Sigma to the next level. He said his
goal is for “continuous improvement” at AFSAC.
For more information, call Stan
Zavist at 257-6289 ext 4200.
from Page 3A
torate and Human Effectiveness
Directorate.”
In the past, the SOF System Program Office developed the Combat Talon II aircraft and AC-130U
Gunships, plus initial helicopter
work, Mr. Severyn explained.
“Many of these efforts are now in
sustainment at our sister program
office at Robins AFB, Ga., and
since special ops forces are at the
tip of the spear in the global war
on terror, we do a lot of quickreaction improvements to support
their war-fighting efforts,” he said.
“The ASC reorganization will
help us focus on this better with
a cross-cutting look at everyone’s
capabilities. And customer support — to AFSOC operators and
ASC — will be our number one
priority, as always.”
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8A
SKYWRIGHTER
Lynch
August 6, 2004
from Page 1A
meet any patients they have
transported. The feeling was
mutual.
“It was definitely a once-in-alifetime thing to be able to talk
with them,” said Ms. Lynch of
her meeting.
One of the things that stood
out about the time for Ms.
Lynch was being given a 445th
hat to wear so she looked better
when she was arrived from Germany. Part of her head had
been shaved due to injuries.
She jokingly said she has better
hair now.
The airmen did meet Ms.
Lynch’s family at the time. Now
they are part of something that
will be difficult to forget in a
number of ways.
Sgt. Golden-Vest said she
thinks the mission bringing Ms.
Lynch home gave people something positive from the war.
And that the mission is ongoing.
“It helps us also remember
the war is still going on and we
still have people all over the
world still deployed and it
affects us every day,” said Sgt.
Golden-Vest.
Contact Airmen Against
Drunk Driving by e-mail at
[email protected] to volunteer.
Camp
from Page 1A
dren about military life such as
marching formations, etiquette and
discipline.
“What this is doing is help reduce
the stress in these kids,” said Karen
Kind, director of Camp Wright-Patterson. “These kids come in and may
know almost nothing about military
life since many of their parents work
one weekend a month and two weeks
a year. This gives them an understanding of what their parents might
experience. When you understand,
your stress is reduced.”
Jennifer Spurgin, chief of the base’s
family member programs, said one of
the important values of the camp is
letting the children know they are not
alone. Through interaction with other
kids in similar situations, they form
bonds that can support them in the
future, especially since all military
services are involved.
Ten volunteers, mostly military
members, assist in running the camp.
Ms. Kind said it has been the response
of volunteers that has been one of the
positive aspects to emerge from the
camps.
“I couldn’t do without them,” she
said. “These folks put in 48 hours, all
in 12-hour shifts. Also, with kids it
gives them a positive role model to
talk to. They do it because they enjoy
coming out and working.”
One could have mistaken volunteer
Tech. Sgt. Herb Nicholson, a reservist
with the 356th Airlift Squadron of the
445th Airlift Wing here, for one of the
campers based on his enthusiasm. He
said he has met kids with several different personalities but found a com-
mon denominator in fun.
“Some people might refer to this as
work, but this has actually been a privilege to be around all these smiling
faces,” said Sgt. Nicholson, who
worked around his other commitments to be here. He added he especially wanted to meet Ms. Lynch.
Ms. Lynch, who visited Wright-Patterson in June to speak at the
National Air and Space Intelligence
Center, is finding Wright-Patterson a
welcome stop on her busy schedule.
She became a household name last
year after becoming the first American POW rescued since World War II
and the first female soldier ever to
be rescued.
Not only was did she jump right into
interacting with the campers and staff,
Ms. Lynch also met members of the
445th Airlift Wing. They transported
her from Germany to the United
States last year after receiving treatment for injuries sustained in Iraq.
The campers crowded around Ms.
Lynch as they built miniature rockets from soda bottles and launched
them outside the lodge. She said she
was happy to return here to interact
with the children, and this was the
perfect environment. She said she
would like to be a teacher one day.
“I enjoy just being able to be myself
and not have to worry about much,”
she said. “The kids make it so fun and
relaxing and I don’t have to worry
about all the media hype.”
Ms. Lynch said she volunteered to
be the Operation Purple spokesman
and feels privileged to be a part of it.
There was no set agenda, so she just
let the kids talk to her freely and
always had time for autographs and to
pose for pictures.
“My main thing was being able to
help them out in any way I could and
this just happened to be a great thing
I wanted to help out with,” said Ms.
Lynch.
For campers such as Corey Carter
Jr. of Columbus, and Jasmine Mills of
Independence, Ky., this was their first
time at a summer camp.
“My mom told me it was going to be
really fun and I could talk to other
people about what’s going on,” said
Jasmine. “It’s very hard because you
don’t know what’s going to happen to
(my dad).”
She sported a dog tag reading “My
dad is serving in Operation Iraqi
Freedom.”
Jasmine said being at the camp has
given her a better understanding of
what her dad is doing. But she is gaining confidence.
Corey said he also liked learning
more about what his dad is doing. He
also enjoyed the camp, confirmed by
his saying the hardest part was getting
up early (7 a.m.) and having to sleep on
a cot.
Ms. Spurgin said everything had
gone very well at the camp and everyone from campers to volunteers
enjoyed themselves. And there is a
strong chance of continuing Camp
Purple events at Wright-Paterson in
future years.
For more information on Operation
Purple, go to the Web site at http://www.nmfa.org/programs/operationpurple.
Photo Feature
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
9A
Camp Wright-Patt Purple
Brant Fowle pulls the handles of a life preserver to inflate the flotation device
under the direction of Tech. Sgt. Tim Leedy during a tour of the 445th Airlift
Wing’s survival equipment shop Wednesday. Brant and other youth participated
in Camp Wright-Patt Purple, which is a free summer camp for family members
ages 10-12 of deployed or recently deployed military reservists and National
Guardsmen. The camp is sponsored in part by the National Military Family
Association and the 4-H Youth Development Division of The Ohio State University.
Courteney Navarini, Cassandra Helton, and Nikki Sipriano add color to their soda
bottle rocket Tuesday at the Bass Lake lodge. The three were participating in a rocketry workshop hosted by Bob Horton of The Ohio State University Extension Science and Education Department.
Wesley McAfee and fellow Camp Wright-Patt attendees listen to Col. James
Cramp, 88th Mission Support Group commander, as he talks after a retreat ceremony July 29 at Bldg. 10, Area C. The campers were asked what their favorite
activity was, and many replied they enjoyed the C-141 Starlifter flight simulator.
Camp Wright-Patt
attendees watch as
88th Security Forces
Squadron patrol officers Senior Airman
Daniel Born, Airman 1st
Class Matthew Winn
and Staff Sgt. Tyler
Weibel fold the flag
during a retreat ceremony July 29 at Bldg.
10, Area C. The
campers were invited
to join in formation to
witness the lowering of
the flag and observe
the military procedure.
Garison Wortham talks with his mother, Master Sgt. Patricia Wortham, as the
campers tour the 445th Survival Equipment shop Wednesday. Master Sgt.
Wortham works for the wing customer service center.
Air Force photos
by
Spencer P. Lane
10A
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Watching out for each other key to overcoming tragedy
by Tech Sgt. Carl Norman
AFMC Public Affairs
A
ir Force Materiel Command
has experienced its share of
tragedies recently, and leaders are encouraging everyone to take
care of themselves and each other,
especially in high-stress situations.
In a recent message to AFMC field
units, Gen. Gregory S. Martin, AFMC
commander, said he’s unsure why
murders and suicide attempts happened or whether the full story will
ever be known. But he’s encouraging people from all areas to be more
mindful and do all they can to stay in
touch with people to prevent more of
the same from happening.
“These incidents worry me greatly,” Gen. Martin wrote. “Did the natural stress brought on by this time of
year — the 101 Critical Days of Summer — contribute to the cause? Was
the stress associated with high
deployment tempo a factor? Did
local ops tempo or on-the-job stress
contribute? Did alcohol or illegal
drugs play a part? Were there personality conflicts or relationships so
volatile as to lead to this tragic
event?
“I’m unsure of the answers, but I
want to make sure we’re talking to
our people regularly, that we’re
aware of major things going on in
their personal lives, that we’re paying attention to performance on the
job and watching carefully for any
signs indicating a need for help. It’s
basic ‘Leadership 101’ ... but very
important.”
The general encourages every
AFMC member to seek help if he or
she feels stressed or overwhelmed.
“Talk to your commander or first
sergeant, your immediate supervisor, a mentor you feel comfortable
with, or one of our base support
agencies like the chaplain, the life
skills clinic, or the family support
center,” he said. “Many avenues and
options for help exist, but you have
to take the first step.”
For many, that first step is knowing
what signs to look for and what to
do about them. According to Air
Force Life Skills experts, there are
15 major risk factors that contribute
to suicide: relationship problems,
legal or administrative problems,
substance abuse, financial problems,
social isolation, a sense of powerlessness or hopelessness, a firearm
in the house, acting reckless or
impulsively, significant sleep problems resulting in impaired judgment,
See Overcoming tragedy, Page 11A
Air Force photo by Spencer P. Lane
Senators visit Wright-Patterson
Col. David Eidsaune, Air Force Institute of Technology
commandant, is introduced to Sen. John Warner of Virginia
by Lt. Gen. Dick Reynolds, vice commander of Air Force
Materiel Command, Tuesday at Bldg. 642, Area B, as Sen.
George Voinovich of Ohio watches. The Senators visited
Wright-Patterson AFB to learn about programs here and
gather information about AFIT. Sen. Warner is chairman
of the Senate Armed Services Committee and Sen.
Voinovich is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
11A
AFRL recognizes top performers
by 1st Lt. Lanourra Gillmaster
AFRL Public Affairs
A
ir Force Research Laboratory
officials recognized the outstanding accomplishments of
its top performers at the fifth annual
AFRL corporate awards luncheon
July 22 in Rome, N.Y.
Team and individual award winners were selected from finalists in
each of the AFRL directorates. Finalists and winners were chosen by the
AFRL corporate award selection
board and approved by Brig. Gen.
Perry L. Lamy, AFRL commander.
“The 11 award categories were
hotly contested by an outstanding
group of individuals and teams,”
Gen. Lamy said.
“All of AFRL commends the finalists in each category, and we are
proud of our association with each of
them. These men and women lead
the AFRL team as we continue our
support to the Air Force of the
future.”
• Marc Masquelier, Sensors Directorate at Wright-Patterson AFB,
received the Leadership (Individual)
Award for his outstanding guidance
to a 20-person team that executed a
$120 million classified program to
field vital homeland defense capability.
• The Senior Leadership Award
went to Lt. Col. Kevin Craig, Sensors
Directorate at Wright-Patterson AFB,
in part for leading a secretary of the
Air Force directed program valued
at $500 million.
• The Critical Pulsed Detonation
Engine Experiment Team, in the
Propulsion Directorate here earned
the Scientific/Technical Achievement Award for completing the first-
Overcoming tragedy
work problems, setbacks or failures,
history of abuse, major life transitions, serious medical problems and
prolonged and overwhelming stress
In addition to the risk factors, Lt.
Col. Rob Campbell, AFMC behavioral health consultant, warns of
additional signs people should look
for. For instance, suicidal people
tend to increase their alcohol use
and often use substances to medicate their unhappiness and pain.
Additionally, family violence, substance abuse and self-harm are frequently related. Problems in one
area should alert people to ask
questions about problems in other
areas.
Suicidal people tend to have trouble falling or staying asleep, he said.
They don’t enjoy normal day-to-day
activities that they used to.
They also seem restless or agitated, fatigued, tired all the time,
just can’t get moving or run down.
They can also have difficulty concentrating or feel preoccupied and
have difficulty making decisions, he
said.
Other signs to look for are someone’s appetite changing, they’re eating more or less than usual; they’ve
ever pulsed detonation engine
demonstration under simulated
supersonic flight conditions.
• Commander’s Cup Award went
to Capt. Michelle Rauch-Johnson,
Propulsion Directorate, Wright-Patterson AFB. She led the branch
safety and environmental assessment
program, orchestrating joint research
with the Air Force Institute of Technology and the University of Dayton,
and helping the government save $15
million through her aircraft fuel
microbial contamination research.
• Administrative Excellence,
Chanda Smith, Propulsion Directorate, Edwards AFB, Calif.
• Tech. Sgt. Joe Robinson, Human
Effectiveness Directorate, Brooks
City-Base, Texas, garnered the Senior
Administrative Excellence (Individual) Award.
• The Mission Support (Team)
Award was presented to the 30 members of the Air Force Health Study
Support Team, Human Effectiveness
Directorate, Brooks City-Base.
• The Mission Support Award was
accepted by Charles McClenahan,
Munitions Directorate at Eglin AFB,
Fla.
• The Scientific and Technical
Achievement Award was presented
to Dr. Morris Dilmore, Munitions
Directorate, Eglin AFB.
• Dean Lawry, Directed Energy
Directorate, Kirtland AFB, N.M.,
received the Scientific/Technical
Management Award.
• Commander’s Cup Award went
to the Active Denial Technology
Team and the Battlefield Air Operations Team.
• Commander’s Cup Award went
to Dr. Peter D. Klupar, Space Vehicles Directorate, Kirtland AFB.
Campbell said not to hesitate to get
help because, “While you’re waiting for the right time or thing to say,
the person may be finalizing (his or
her) death.”
Here are some tips on how to be
better equipped to “say the right
thing.”
• Ask: Describe what you are seeing, “Gee, I have noticed you are
(unshaved, coming into work late,
uniform is dirty, short-tempered,
low energy, having trouble concentrating, etc.), I am wondering if you
are okay?”
• Be direct: “Sometimes people
facing similar problems think about
suicide, are you thinking about
killing yourself?”
You can be of great assistance to
others by simply letting them know
someone cares about them. Use
open-ended questions like, “How
are things going?” “How are you
dealing with the …?”
• Listen: Allow him or her to talk
without interrupting. Key in on the
emotions they are feeling.
Repeat back what they say using
their own words.
Express concern about the person and a willingness to help. Peo-
ple who survive a suicide attempt
are shocked to find many people
cared about them.
If someone does indicate they’re
having suicidal thoughts, get him or
her help immediately. Do not leave
him or her alone for any reason;
remove all potential means of selfharm , such as firearms, pills, automobiles, knives, and ropes, etc;
involve the security forces if necessary to protect the person from himself or herself; and have someone
accompany the person to serve as
the point of contact during and after
the evaluation.
Col. Campbell said to have the
POC ensure the mental health
provider has a telephone number
for command feedback after the
evaluation is conducted. Mental
health has limits on who they can
speak to. The best approach is to
have the POC be the commander or
first sergeant.
“Nothing is more important to me
than our people and their families,”
Gen. Martin said. “Let’s not be the
one who says after a mishap or
tragic event, “Gee, if only I had mentioned this, or intervened there, this
event might never have happened.”
from Page 10A
lost weight when not trying, Col.
Campbell said. They can be withdrawn, not wanting to interact with
family or friends as much; drink or
smoke more than usual; and seem
irritable, angry, tearful and easily
frustrated.
“Watch out for the people you
work with,” the colonel said. “Who
is in a better position to recognize
something is wrong and to provide
support than the people a person
spends most of the day with?
“We know that less than 25 percent of Air Force personnel who
committed suicide were involved in
counseling the month before their
death. Airmen have to recognize the
signs and be willing to intervene;
they may be the only person who
gets the opportunity to prevent a
tragedy.”
He noted that risk factors are not
exclusively associated with suicide,
but are also conditions of vulnerability for a variety of other behavioral and physical problems.
Once one or more of theses signs
have been discovered, many people
fear that they might “say the wrong
thing” when talking with someone
who is suicidal or very upset. Col.
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SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
CAC network logon to be available to all
W
right-Patterson AFB members will soon be able to
log on to the base network
using their common access cards.
Earlier this year, 1st Lt. Sean
Strahan and Daniel Hart from
Materiel Systems Group briefed
people from AFMC bases on the
effort to enable hardware token,
certificate-based network logon in
AFMC. This type of logon is also
called smart card logon or CACbased logon.
With smart card logon, the network authenticates people using
the Department of Defense Public
Key Infrastructure e-mail signing
certificate loaded on the CAC. Network administrators and workgroup managers must configure the
network and all user accounts to
activate this capability. Additionally, all those who wish to use smart
card logon must verify two things:
• First, confirm that the e-mail
signing certificate was issued after
May 18, 2002. Before this date, certificates lacked a piece of information needed for smart card
logon. If the “issue date” printed
on the CAC is after this date, then
the certificate should be fine.
To determine if the CAC was
issued on or before this date, check
the certificate itself. Insert the CAC
in the reader, launch the ActivCard
Gold Utilities, enter the correct
personal identification number,
and review the properties of the email signing certificate. Old certificates may be updated by visiting
the military personnel flight in
Bldg. 2, Area C.
• Second, ensure that the e-mail
signing is the default certificate
used for smart card logon. Do this
by again inserting the CAC in its
reader, launching ActivCard Gold
Utilities, and entering the correct
PIN. Then click on the plus sign
next to “digital certificates” folder.
Right click on the signature certificate and select it as the default.
The certificate’s name will become
boldfaced to indicate that it is the
default logon certificate.
“CAC certificate-based network
logon is more secure than user
name and password for several reasons,” said Charlie Collazo, Air
Force PKI program manger. “First,
it is a two-factor authentication
requiring something users have —
their CAC — and something they
know — their PIN. Second, unlike
conventional passwords, the CAC
PIN is not transmitted over the network.”
Also unlike conventional passwords, there is no need to periodically change the CAC PIN. Using
the ActivCard Gold software, the
CAC holder is able to change the
CAC PIN at any time. However,
only in the event of a suspected
compromise is it mandatory to
change the PIN.
“If the CAC holder protects his or
her PIN, then there is little danger another person will gain access
to it,” Mr. Collazo said.
People will still forget their CAC
PIN or lock up their CAC after
three consecutive failed attempts.
The only recourse is to have the
CAC PIN reset. To do this, the CAC
holder must return to the military
personnel flight. Soon, PIN resets
will also be possible on dedicated
computers specifically configured
for this purpose. CAC PIN reset
workstations will be installed at
various locations on the base.
While smart card logon increases
network security, users will notice
that it takes slightly longer to log
on to the network.
“Authentication of a CAC holder
is more complex due to a two-way
certification process. The network
domain controller validates the
CAC holder’s certificate, and the
CAC holder’s workstation verifies
the network domain controller’s
certificate,” said Mr. Collazo. “The
interface software providers are
working to make this process more
efficient.”
Because AFMC was the major
command that tested smart card
logon for the Air Force, AFMC is
ahead in deploying this capability.
Test groups at Wright-Patterson are
already able to log on using their
CAC. More accounts are being
enabled. Contact your unit workgroup manager to find out if your
account is ready for smart card
logon. The goal is to have the entire
command enabled by Sept. 30.
For more information, call Dennis S. Hernit at 656-0650. Additional
information is available online at
h t t p s : / / w w w. a f m c - m i l . w p a f b
.af.mil/HQ-AFMC/SC/scp /projects/
pki.htm. Reference and training
materials are in the “library” section.
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271958
by Dennis S. Hernit
DoD Public Key Infrastructure Project
Manager for AFMC
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14A
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Colleges and universities offer advising here
by Terri J. Haney
Director, SOCHE
T
he Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education office,
Bldg. 50A, Area B, is open 8:30
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, and closed on Fridays.
The SOCHE office represents 12 colleges and universities in the local
area.
The following advisers will be
available by appointment only at the
times indicated. To schedule an
appointment or for more information, call the SOCHE office at 9044890 or 252-4888.
Antioch University McGregor
Oscar Robinson, from Antioch University McGregor will be available by
appointment only, 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Aug. 17. McGregor includes the
weekend college, which offers completion of the bachelor’s degree on
Saturdays, the weekend master of
arts in management degree, the master of arts in conflict resolution, an
individualized master of arts program, a community college management master of arts, a new master
of arts in community change and
civic leadership, and several graduate programs in education including teacher licensure.
Capital University
Rick Bernard, adult degree program adviser, will be available by
appointment only, 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Aug. 26. Capital offers degrees in
more than 20 majors, credit transfer without time limits, certificate
programs, and credit for life and
work experience.
Central State University
Vernon Smith from the office of
admissions will be available by
appointment only, 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Monday, to discuss CSU’s 35 under-
graduate majors, the master of arts
in education, and the adult learning
program which is held at CSU West
in Dayton.
Clark State Community College
Corey Holliday, office of admissions, will be available by appointment only, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Tuesday to
advise on the many associate degrees offered by Clark State. Among
them are evening registered nursing, graphic art design, court reporting, golf course maintenance, theater arts, and many certificate offerings in networking and information
technology.
Sinclair Community College
Advisers by appointment only
• Gordon Robinson, business technology programs, 9:30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. Wednesday.
• Joyce Haywood, liberal arts and
sciences, 9-11:30 a.m. Aug. 18.
• Don Stark, aviation technology,
9:30-11:30 a.m. Aug. 10.
University of Dayton
Jeff Carter, assistant director of
the MBA program, will be available
by appointment only by calling the
SOCHE office. Students of this program may attend full or part time
and obtain a professional graduate
certificate in the following concentrations: finance, international business, management information systems, marketing, and operations
management.
University of Phoenix
A University of Phoenix admissions adviser will be available by
appointment only, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Aug. 18. In addition to many online
undergraduate and graduate opportunities, University of Phoenix offers
a residential MBA, bachelor’s degree
in business management and a bachelor’s degree in liberal arts in which
students of the program meet one
evening each week.
Wilberforce Climb Program
Toni Preston, director of adult and
continuing education, will be available by appointment only, 9:30-11:30
a.m. Monday. Climb has four bachelor’s degree options: health services
administration, information technology, organizational communication, and organizational management. All of these degrees are structured to be completed in 14 months
and are designed for adult students
with at least 60 semester hours of
college credit.
Urbana University — UU4Life
Judy Brown, director, will be available by appointment only, 11:30 a.m.
to 1 p.m.
Thursday to discuss programs that
lead to a bachelor’s degree in business management with an emphasis
in organizational leadership, the
bachelor’s degree in human services
leadership, and the bachelor’s
degree in criminal justice leadership. UU4Life is designed for adults
with an associate’s degree or 60
semester hours. The degree can be
completed in nine eight-week terms
unless the student needs additional
general education credit.
Union Institute and University
The Union Institute representative Nan Fischer, assistant director
for doctoral admissions, will be
available by appointment only. To
schedule, call 252-4888 or 904-4890.
Union doctoral learners are selfdirected, mid-career adults involved
in work families, and communities
who build on previous experiences
and learning.
This interdisciplinary approach to
education is both innovative and
flexible for learners in almost every
field.
Wright State University
Advisers by appointment only:
• Becki Baltzer, adult and transfer
coordinator, will discuss undergraduate programs at Wright State for new
and transfer students, 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Aug. 19.
• John Kimble, School of Graduate
Studies, which includes more than 100
major concentrations, the Schools of
Medicine and Professional Psychology, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Aug. 16.
• Michael Evans, graduate business
adviser will be available to discuss
the MBA, the master’s degree in economics and the weekend MBA offered
at the Lake Campus in Celina, 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Thursday.
CMU waives admission fee
The Central Michigan University office here is waiving
its $50 admission fee for all military members, spouses and
dependents who apply for
admission to the master’s
degree program during August.
CMU offers a master of science in administration degree
program on base with concentrations in acquisitions administration, general administration, health services administration, human resources
administration, information
resource management and
leadership.
CMU offices are located in
Bldg. 50A, Area B, and classes
are held in the education and
training flight facility, Bldg. 50,
Area B. Presentations covering
CMU’s services are available to
all base offices. For more information call 904-4804 or 252-5600.
You may also access the CMU
Web site at www.cel.cmich.
edu/wrightpat.
B-29 Enola Gay pilot and historians to discuss atomic program
F
ormer B-29 Enola Gay pilot
retired Brig. Gen. Paul Tibbets
and a pair of historians will
explore the development and history
of the U.S. atomic program Aug. 14
during a public dinner at the Air
Force Museum.
Tibbets will discuss the Enola Gay’s
historic mission to deliver an atomic
bomb over Hiroshima, Japan, in
World War II.
Michael Vickio, Manhattan Project
historian, will cover the history and
legacy of the program’s mission to
lead U.S. efforts to develop atomic
weaponry. John Coster-Mullen, historian and author for the 509th Composite Group, will address the group’s
unique mission of delivering atomic
bombs. The dinner is open to the public. A $30 dinner reservation is
required in advance.
The evening will begin at 6 p.m.
with a reception under the wings of
the B-29 “Bockscar” in the museum’s
Air Power Gallery. The dinner will
take place afterward in the Modern
Flight Gallery, followed by the guest
speakers and a performance by the
Air Force Band of Flight.
Gen. Tibbets served as commander
of the 509th, overseeing the formation and training of the group for its
atomic mission. The group flew 15
specially modified B-29 Superfortress
aircraft.
The 509th has evolved through the
decades into today’s 509th Bomb
Wing, flying the B-2 Spirit stealth
bomber. The wing is based at Whiteman AFB, Mo.
Fore more information on the dinner and talk, contact Dawn Price in
the museum’s special events division
at 255-8046, ext. 312.
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271838
by Chris McGee
Air Force Museum Public Affairs
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353368
August 6, 2004
AFRL scientist earns international acclaim
Dr. John Maguire (left) with the president of the University of Ulster, Professor Gerry
McKenna. United Kingdom officials named Dr. Maguire a “doctor of science,” that
country’s highest academic degree.
by Pete Meltzer
AFRL Materials and Manufacturing
Directorate
A
n Air Force Research Laboratory scientist received the
United Kingdom’s highest
academic degree, “doctor of science,” for his contributions in the
fields of materials science and
engineering.
Dr. John Maguire, a physical scientist at AFRL’s materials and manufacturing directorate, received the
degree for pioneering work in materials characterization and computer
simulation and modeling. Great
Britain officials confer this degree
for academic achievement well
beyond the requirements of a doctor of philosophy here.
A committee issues the degree
based on the recipient’s long record
of research and publication. Officials said the doctor of science is
awarded to very few people, since it
recognizes the recipient as an
authoritative international expert
in their field.
Dr. Maguire is chief of the AFRL
materials and manufacturing directorate’s nonmetallic materials divi-
sion polymer branch. His achievements, covering more than 30 years,
have given rise to a number of fundamental breakthroughs in understanding the structure of matter.
They have resulted in new products
and processes being developed for
the commercial sector and applications benefiting the Air Force
and national defense.
Dr. Maguire earned his Ph.D. in
physical chemistry at the University of Ulster in the United Kingdom in 1976. Following postdoctoral
studies at the University of California at Los Angeles and a senior
research fellowship at the University of Amsterdam, he was
appointed to the faculty at Ulster.
He returned to the United States
in 1984 and became a naturalized
citizen in 1988, serving as a staff
scientist with the Gen. Electric
Company and later, as program
director at Southwest Research
Institute.
Dr. Maguire holds adjunct professorships at the University of
Texas and University of Akron. He
has been published extensively in
the refereed literature and has
made numerous keynote presentations throughout the United States
and internationally.
He is a “fellow” of the Royal
Society of Chemistry and 50,000member Society of Manufacturing
Engineers, and has been an elected
officer or member of several professional organizations, in addition
to holding select memberships in
the Priestley and Faraday Societies.
In 2000, Dr. Maguire received the
Air Force Office of Scientific
Research “Star Team” Award, recognizing the international stature
of his research team’s contributions
to the Air Force and science.
SKYWRIGHTER
15A
NASIC honored
for Bldg. 829
renovation
by Rob Young
NASIC Public Affairs
O
n July 29 the Air Force honored the National Air and
Space Intelligence Center
by presenting the Honor Award for
Interior Design to Col. Mark Anderson, NASIC vice commander. Maj.
Gen. L. Dean Fox, civil engineer
for the Air Force, made the presentation in Washington.
The NASIC team responsible for
winning the award consisted of
Beth Quinter, John Baldino and
Jim Frishkorn. Their design called
for an extensive two-year renovation that transformed an old photoprocessing laboratory into a 21st
century state-of-the-art digital
imagery facility.
The $5.35 million upgrade construction project completely renovated the 42,000 square-foot building, including interior demolition,
environmental abatement, historical exterior preservation, mechanical and electrical replacements,
addition of a new 4,000 square-foot
mezzanine floor, and a new soft
water plant. The project design
centered on a large, barrel-vaulted
space that took advantage of the
existing high bays to gain greater
volume and height, plus it used systems furniture to create an interactive working environment.
The competition judges said the
“colors are terrific throughout”
and “ceilings, lighting and furnishings are exceptional.” NASIC
and National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency people work in Bldg.
829.
16A
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Base fire offers safety tips for home, office
by Frankie Cox
Base Fire Department
N
ow is the time to eliminate
fire hazards with good
housekeeping
practices.
Listed below are a few fire safety
tips to keep yourself, your family,
your co-workers, and your friends
safe by eliminating possible hazards at home and in the workplace.
• Maintain custodial supply storage areas, work areas, in an orderly
and fire safe condition.
• Read and follow the instructions
for cleaning supplies printed on the
label of these products. Proper
storage and handling are important
for these items.
• Do not store combustibles in or
around water heaters and furnace
units.
• Do not store combustibles in
mechanical, electrical or boiler
rooms.
• Keep all areas free of large
accumulations of combustible materials.
• Do not store combustibles under
stairwells.
• Attics and concealed spaces
should be kept clean. No storage of
any type should be permitted in
these areas.
• Flammable liquids must be kept
in safety containers. Never store
flammables in glass jars — keep
them away from all sources of ignition and safe from tampering by
children. All safety containers must
be UL listed, or Factory Mutual approved. Never store gasoline or
other highly flammable items inside
your home or work areas and never
use gasoline to clean mechanical
parts. In the workplace, flammable
items should be stored in approved
flammable storage cabinets.
• Ensure all power equipment
and associated items are stored
safely.
• Lawnmowers provide all the
ingredients for an easy mishap.
Ensure that your mower is in tiptop shape and that you take all
safety precautions in accordance
with
manufactures
operating
instructions prior to and while operating your lawnmower. (All fueling
must be done outdoors where dangerous vapors cannot accumulate).
• Do not smoke while handling
flammables or combustible liquids.
Barbecue grills
Never use barbecue grills inside
your home, garage or any building.
Do not use under balconies, carports or under the eaves of any
structure. Use extreme caution
when using charcoal lighter fluid
and never use gasoline or any other
flammable to ignite charcoal. (Only
use approved starter fluids.)
When finished cooking, wet down
all coals and ashes with water to
eliminate any fire or sparks. Make
sure all coals and ashes are cold
safe and removed from the grill
before storing inside the garage or
storage shed.
Barbecue grills that use propane
tanks must be stored outside.
Ensure when cooking is complete,
that the main gas control valve on
the tank has been closed and the
unit cooled down before storage.
Always remember to prevent fires
before they start. Good housekeeping and cleanliness are essential
factors in preventing workplace and
home fires.
For more information, call the
fire prevention section at 257-4075.
Air Force photo by Spencer P. Lane
New leader for squadron
Maj. Michael Florio speaks to the people of the 88th Security Forces Squadron
and guests at the Wright-Patterson Club and Banquet Center Thursday as the
squadron’s new commander. Maj. Florio comes to Wright-Patterson AFB after
serving as the vulnerability assessment branch chief, Air Force Security Forces
Center, Lackland AFB, Texas. Master Sgt. Dan Hullinger participated in the
change of command ceremony as the unit guidon bearer.
Global Hawk program ‘leans’ into future
by Maj. Ron Jobo
Global Hawk System Program Office
I
n December 2002, the Global Hawk
System Program Office and its
industry partner Northrop Grumman embarked together on a “lean”
journey. The Global Hawk program
was selected by the secretary of the
Air Force for acquisition as one of
three Air Force programs to prototype the use of lean in its acquisitions
processes. Lean is a philosophy that
focuses on providing the best possible
product to the customer at an affordable price. Lean does this through
strengthening relationships of all
stakeholders responsible for delivering a product or service and establishing a common understanding of
how each person, organization and
process adds value to the final product.
The term “lean” was first used by
Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers to describe Toyota’s
production system. The researchers
noted Toyota’s efficiency in production with very little idle work in
progress, low rate of scrap and rework,
and very high quality products. So
today, most folks who have heard of
lean know it only as a set of techniques to reduce waste and increase
efficiencies in production and manufacturing.
The MIT researchers also observed
that as companies “leaned-out” their
manufacturing processes that other
factors and stakeholders above the
factory floor influenced the quality,
cost, and efficiency of their manufacturing operations. To “lean out” their
production, these companies also had
to take into account their suppliers,
corporate management decisions and
planning, employees and unions, government regulations, and internal
departments like finance and human
resources, and customer requirements. Not only will all the stakeholders of the “enterprise” benefit by
working together in harmony with the
same objectives in mind, but the cus-
271971
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please call Julie Miller at 290-7126
or e-mail [email protected]
tomer also receives an affordable,
high quality product that meets all
his requirements. This is lean at the
enterprise level.
The Global Hawk program has
taken lean to the enterprise level.
Lean has become a part of the program’s evolutionary acquisition
approach of providing capability to
the user as soon as it is ready. The
program embraces lean as the way to
transform traditional acquisition
processes to meet the demands of evolutionary acquisition.
Today, the Global Hawk’s lean
enterprise has grown to include not
only the SPO and its prime contractor,
but also the program’s major subcontractors: Raytheon, L-3 Communications, Vought Aircraft Industries, and
Aurora Flight Sciences. Also involved
are other government agencies including the Defense Contract Management
Agency and the Defense Contract
Audit Agency. Lean balances the different objectives of each of these
stakeholders and brings them together
with the same ultimate objective of
providing affordable capability to the
user with the quality the user expects.
Within the first six-months after
starting their lean journey, the Global
Hawk enterprise already had big payoffs. The Global Hawk enterprise
“leaned-out” its contracting process,
reducing the time to put a new capability on contract by 28 percent or a
savings of 99 man-days. Lean also
enabled the program to reduce the
cost of its sensor payload by $2 million
a unit and at the same time increase
the deliveries from three units a year
to six.
Today, almost a year and half after
its start, the Global Hawk’s lean program continues to show results. In
May, the Global Hawk enterprise held
a follow-on event to further lean out its
contracting process, and preliminary
results show an additional 10-40 percent cycle time reductions in the contracting process. Global Hawk also
currently uses lean to reduce the production time of its ground stations.
Section B
Friday, August 6, 2004
Marathon
becomes
‘official’
by Brett Turner
Skywrighter Staff
T
he U.S. Air Force Marathon has been flying high
for eight years. Its altitude
may soon reach even greater
heights.
Headquarters Air Force Services Agency recently approved
recognizing the annual September event as an official Air Force
function according to Steve Carlyon, 88th Mission Support Group
Services Division director here.
“The official endorsement has
always been kind of understood,
it’s just never been written formally; now it will be,” said Mr.
Carlyon. “This is just part of the
evolution of the Air Force Marathon.”
The marathon was initiated in
1997 as Wright-Patterson’s tribute to the 50th anniversary of the
Air Force. It is run on the third
Saturday in September each
year in recognition of the anniversary.
The Air Force Marathon offers
unique touches to make the
experience stand out for all participants, not just competitive
runners. For instance, runner
support through aid stations
along the course and volunteer
involvement are hallmarks of the
event.
It also differs in that it is run
through much of Wright-Patterson, as well as such historic sites
as the U.S. Air Force Museum
and the area where the Wright
Brothers made early experimental flights. Also, participants
are given eight hours to complete
the course, which is more time
than other marathons.
Although the 26.2-mile marathon is the main focus, there is
more to the event. Also offered
are a 13.1-mile half marathon
race; a four-person relay race
(26.2-miles with team members
running different parts of the
course); a 5k race (3.1 miles); and
a 26.2-mile wheelchair race.
In recent years, the Air Force
Marathon has drawn more senior
level involvement, according to
Mr. Carlyon. A record of approximately 3,500 people participated
last year, while approximately
7,000 others volunteered or were
spectators.
“We want to grow the event
and to make it bigger, and
needed to put an endorsement
on it,” he said. “Becoming the
official Air Force Marathon
brings that credibility to it. Plus
it ties in resources from the Air
Force Services Agency for marketing and promotional support;
it ties in resources from public
affairs and other areas, and
brings us up to that next step.”
See Marathon, Page 3B
Photos by MaryAnn Walters
Sharks host first-ever
swim meet at Prairies
Beth Clinch of the Wright-Patterson Sharks youth swim
team competes in the breaststroke during at the first
Sharks Summer Invitational at the Pool at the Prairies
Saturday. The base youth team and masters team combined to test skills against each other at this initial meet.
The teams, which are open to people with base affiliation,
swim year-round, outdoor in the warmer months and
indoor in the other months.
Right, Megan Walters shows off her unique eyewear
during the event.
Story, Page 3A
Volunteers needed for study
by Al Eakle
74th Medical Group Public Affairs
P
hysiologists at the health and
wellness center are looking for
volunteers to participate in a
10-week fitness training study. They
are looking for active duty males and
females who have achieved a marginal or poor composite fitness score
on their fitness tests, particularly those
who scored poorly on the 1.5-mile run
or bicycle tests.
“Last year Jim Schlub and I designed a fitness program for those
active duty men and women who consistently failed to meet fitness standards,” said Reggie O’Hara, staff physiologist at the HAWC. “We discovered
that when study participants added
heavy leg strengthening exercises and
reduced the volume of aerobic exercise they actually achieved higher
scores on their bicycle test.”
Mr. Schlub and Mr. O’Hara recently
received approval from the Air Force
surgeon general to conduct a similar
study. One of the many new additions
to their study is to determine if a relationship exists between any changes in
circumference measures taken at the
waist, hip, abdomen and leg, and
whether any of these changes could be
related to a participants fitness score
when tested via the bicycle or 1.5-mile
run.
“We also want to determine the precise magnitude of change that may or
may not occur after one participates in
a heavy leg strengthening routine compared to a heavy aerobic training routine,” Mr. O’Hara said. “We believe
that changes may take place within
resistance trained skeletal muscle tissue that could drastically enhance a
participant’s fitness level based on
the type of fitness test they take, such
as bicycling or a 1.5 mile run).
Mr. Schlub and Mr. O’Hara presented their outcomes at a recent
Aerospace Medical Association
annual meeting in San Antonio, Texas.
Results from last year’s study were
published in The American College
of Sports Medicine’s Health and Fitness Journal, July/August 2004
issue.The pair said active duty men
and women who are discouraged with
their yearly fitness assessment should
contact the HAWC at 904-9355 for more
information about this 10-week program.
Registration to continue
by Brett Turner
Skywrighter Staff
S
pecial registration for the
eighth annual Air Force
Marathon will continue the
next two weeks. A registration table
will be set up 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Air Force Museum.
During this session, entry fees for
the 5k (3.1-mile) race will be just
$10; regular fees for the race are
$15. Entries will be taken for this
price only on this date and Aug. 17.
The 5k is a family fun run for all
ages. Age group awards will be
given for the top finishers in ages 12under; 13-18; 19-29; 30-49; and 50over. Registrations will also be
taken for the full marathon (26.2mile race), the half marathon (13.1miles) and relay races.
Another special registration session at the museum will be 10 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Aug. 17. All registered participants will receive a patch and
T-shirt, and those who finish their
respective races will receive commemorative medals and towels.
The Air Force Marathon is sponsored by BearingPoint, no federal
endorsement of sponsors intended.
Interested people can also register for the Air Force Marathon at
any time through its Web site at
http://afmarathon.wpafb.af.mil. For
more information on the Air Force
Marathon, call 257-4350.
2B
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Youth flag football team
The youth sports office is taking
registrations for its flag football
program for ages 9-12. The team
will play in the Dayton Youth
League. There will be eight players on the field, so there will
need to be at least 14 players to
have a team.
The deadline to register is Aug.
31, and no late entries will be
taken. The cost is $45 a player.
For more information, call 2555053.
Movie nights at Patterson Pool
Bring the family to Patterson
Pool and enjoy free movies for all
ages. The cost is $1 for popcorn
and drinks when you show “The
Card.”
Films will begin at dusk. No lap
swimming will be allowed during
the event. Swimsuits with built-in
lifejackets will not be permitted;
Coast Guard approved lifejackets
will be available.
Films will be Friday, George of
the Jungle 2; Aug. 20, Atlantis.
For more information, call 2575327.
Putting contest
You could win $100 at the
Wright-Patterson Club and Banquet Center’s putting contest at
6:30 p.m. today. The event will be
on the putting green in front of
the club patio. All club members
are welcome. Registration will
begin at 5 p.m. For more information, call 257-9762.
Kuk sool won martial arts offered
Jarvis Gym is offering a kuk
sool won martial arts class 11:30
a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. The costs is $40 a month. the
class is for men, women and children, and helps develop strength,
quickness, balance, timing, flexibility and coordination. For more
information, call 257-3607.
Skateboard camp
A skateboard camp for ages 1017 will be 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday
through Friday. The registration
fee is $5, and the camp will be at
the new skate park next to the
youth center. Register at the
Prairies Community Center ,
Bldg. 6933 or the community
youth center, Bldg. 230, Area C.
For more information, call 2555053 or 522-2680.
Youth soccer program
The youth sports office still has
openings for youth soccer players
ages 4-12. The season will begin
Sept. 1. The cost is $45. For more
information, call 255-5053 or register at the Prairies Community
Center, 156 Spinning Road.
Pet Day at Prairies Pool
Bring your dog to the Prairies
Pool 2-6 p.m. Aug. 14 for a dip. No
human swimmers will be allowed,
only dogs. For more information,
call 257-5327.
Prairies Pool to close
The Prairies Pool will close for
the season Aug. 13. A pet day will
conclude the season 2-6 p.m. Aug.
14. For more information, call
257-5327.
All night softball tournament
Dodge Gym will host an all
night double elimination softball
tournament at 2 p.m. Aug. 14 at
the Area B softball fields. The
tournament is limited to base
employees. Sign up your team at
base fitness centers. For more
information, call 257-4225.
Youth basketball camp
The youth sports office will
sponsor a five-day basketball
camp noon to 4 p.m. Aug. 16-20 at
the Prairies Community Center
Gym. The camp will be for ages 716, and a limit of 100 participants
will be allowed.
The cost is $10, and each
camper will get personalized
instruction, certificates, a report
card, T-shirt and a customized
workout plan.
Sign up at the Prairies Community Center on Spinning Road or
for more information, call 2555053.
CHRIST THE KING
THE OTHER EPISCOPAL CHURCH
272264
• Faithful to the Scriptures and the 39 articles
• Uses the Historic Book of Common Prayer
• 127 years of undivided Evangelical Witness
• Biblical Positions on Sex, Life, and Ministry
Holy Communion
8:00 AM & 10:30 AM
Church School (all ages)
9:30 AM
Evening Prayer - Wednesday
7:00 PM
925 N. Main Street, Dayton
www.ckrec.org
(937)224-8555
Intramural meetings
An intramural soccer
coaches meeting will be 8:30
a.m. Tuesday in the Services
conference room, Bldg. 70
Area C.
A meeting for intramural
flag football coaches will be
8:30 a.m. Thursday in the
same location. For more
information, call Mike McInturf at 257-7845.
Youth sports council meeting
The youth sports office will
have a meeting at 6 p.m. Aug 19 at
the Prairies Community Center
for anyone interested in being a
member of the youth sports advisory council. The office is looking
for six people knowledgeable in
sports and willing to meet quarterly.
For more information, call 2555053.
Wright-Patt Golf Championship
The Wright-Patt Championship
will be at Prairie Trace Golf Club
and Twin Base Golf Course 7:30
a.m. Aug. 14-15.
The cost is $25 a person plus
cart and greens fees. A current
USGA handicap is required. For
more information, call Twin Base
at 257-4130 or Prairie Trace at
257-7961.
Club golf outing
The annual club golf outing will
be 9 a.m. Aug. 18 at Prairie Trace
Golf Course. The cost is $60 nonclub or non-course members; $55
for club members; $38 for golf
course members; and $33 for club
and golf course members.
Reservations will be take
through Aug. 13. For more information, call 257-9762 ext. 1.
Brick training,
Brick training workouts are 5:30
p.m. Wednesdays in the parking
lot next to the base tennis club in
Area C.
Brick training workouts combine biking and running in a single session with three bike loops
around the base, followed by a
run of two to five miles. Interested participants should bring a
water bottle, bike helmet and
running shoes. For more information about brick training and
other multi-sports events, contact
David Hardwick at 257-0241, ext.
4414.
Youth fitness program
Youths can get fit Saturdays
with the Fitness Authority at the
Prairies youth center. The program gives youths the chance to
learn new sports.
Preteens are welcome 1:30-3:30
p.m. and teens are welcome 3:305:30 p.m. For more information,
call 904-4700.
Base men’s basketball team tryouts
All active duty military men
interested in playing on the men’s
base varsity basketball team can
come to tryouts at 5:30 p.m. Aug.
16 at Jarvis Gym.
For questions, contact Byron
Brandon at 255-3708.
Base flag football team
The base flag football team is
looking for players who want to
play in a very competitive offbase league. The season starts in
late August and may run as late
as January 2005. If you have the
skills and want to show your stuff,
contact Greg Sudberry at 904-9495
or Ant Tillman at 255-9614 ext.
528.
Family bowling nights
Thursdays are family bowling
nights at Kittyhawk Bowling
Center. Bring the family 4-8 p.m.
and get two games of bowling,
shoe rental, a slice of pizza and
a fountain soda for $6 a person.
For information, call 257-7796.
Golf lessons
Twin Base Golf Course and
Prairie Trace Golf Club are offering private and group lessons.
The group lessons consist of six
hours of instruction for $100 a
person. The class size is limited
to eight students. Private lessons
are available by appointment for
$40 a half-hour, $175 for five halfhour lessons or $300 for 10 halfhour lessons. Junior lessons for
ages 8-17 cost $30 a half-hour, a
series of five lessons for $125 or
10 half-hour lessons for $225. For
more information, call Twin Base
at 257-4130 or Prairie Trace at
257-7961.
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
3B
Base swim teams compete in outdoor meet
by Sara Chambers
Sharks Swim Coach
T
he Wright-Patterson Sharks
swim teams had the first Sharks
Summer Invitational Saturday
at the Pool at the Prairies. This first
meet was for the purpose of giving all
swimmers an opportunity to meet in
their own pool.
This was also an opportunity for all
involved to experience running a swim
meet. Following this success, the
Sharks are confident they have the
ability to have bigger, better meets in
the future.
The masters and youth teams combined events for this inter-squad meet.
While scores remained separate,
adults and youths swam against each
other.
For Dove and Ashley Erich, this was
the first time mother and daughter
were able to compete in a race against
each other. For Chris McGowan, a high
school senior, this was a chance to
give the masters swimmers a run for
their money, as he won overall first
in the 50- and 100-meter freestyle
events.
In the 200 meter freestyle relays,
the masters combined team of Krista
Marchand, Chris Zingarelli, Michelle
Devit and David Hardwick swam the
fastest race in 2 minutes 27.1 seconds.
HAWC Classes
(Schedule is subject to change;
pre-registration is required for all
classes and interested people
should register early )
• Fitness Tester Class, 1-2 p.m.
Monday
• Equipment walk-through, 2-3
p.m. Wednesday
• Strength Training, 12:15-1:15
p.m.Aug. 18
• Winning at Losing, 9-11 a.m.
Aug. 26
• Fitness Improvement, 1-2 p.m.
The top youth teams included
Tommy Abramson, Chris McGowan,
Ryan Pitts and David Hazelton in
2:37.8, while Kelly Keelon, Sarah
Keelon, Angelina Papio and Lisa
Hazelton swam a 2:34.8.
Other top performers were Kirsten
Pace, Rosie Debronski, Heidi Peck,
Sydney Oren, Luis Boothe, Daniel
Papio, Tyler Thompson and Daniel
Boothe in the 50 freestyle. In the 100
breaststroke, Ashlee Davis, Angelina
Papio, Brenton Peck and Abramson
pulled their way to top times.
The 50 meter backstroke brought
top times from Kelly Keelon, Melissa
Peck, Sierra Pace, Danielle Copeland
and Stephen Keelon.
Lisa Hazelton led the girls with a
time of 1:22.3 in the 100 meter freestyle.
The 50 meter butterfly brought top
times from Chelsie Fadul, Sydney
Oren, Chelsea Bulseco, Lauran Bush,
Megan Walter and Ryan Pitts. Rounding out the star performances were
Ashley Erich, Beth Clinch, Lizzy
Debronski and Chelsea Ferguson in
the 50 meter breaststroke.
Other swimmers who set new goal
times and top performances included
Kati Shewmaker, Daniel Abramson,
Robyn Davis, Gabby Fadul, Desiree
Copeland and Heidi Pace.
The master swimmers pulled in fast
performances as well. Michelle Devit,
Aug. 20
• Osteoporosis and Exercise,
12:15-1:15 p.m. Aug. 27
• Stress Survival Kit, 12:15-1:15
p.m. Aug. 31
All classes will be in Bldg. 571,
Wright Field Fitness Center in
Area B. For more information,
call 904-9355. Classes are open
to active duty and retired military members, their family members and base civilian employees. Retired civilian employees
and contractors may attend on a
space-available basis.
Story ideas
Skywrighter is looking for sports and fitness story ideas. Ideas must pertain to people working at or retired from Wright-Patterson. Call Brett
Turner at 255-2534.
Bryan M. Tschanz, Esq.
Attorney at Law
• Wills
• Estate Planning
• Living Trusts
• Power of Attorney
Evening Appointments Available
937-748-4080
271929
15 South Main Street
Located at the Entrance of Historic Springboro
Krista Marchand, Dove Erich and
Karen Buffington led the ladies, while
Chris Zingarelli, Dave Hardwick and
John Wodochek led the men. The
Wright-Patterson Sharks swim team
participates year-round in U.S. Masters and USA Swimming organizations. During the summer, the teams
practice Mondays through Fridays at
Marathon
the Pool at the Prairies in the warmer
months and the indoor pool located on
the lower level of Dodge Gym the rest
of the year.
Practices for the masters team takes
place 6-7 p.m. while the youth team
begins practice at 7:30 p.m. For more
information, contact head coach Sara
Chambers at 255-8566.
from Page 1B
One of the steps will be tying the
marathon into the Air Force’s official calendar of sporting events.
This could entice more athletes to
participate.
Another potential boost
will be in drawing
name runners to the
event. Unlike
many major
sports, runners
here may be
able to compete alongside
top professional runners.
Mr. Carlyon
said the upside to
this would be competitors can see how
they compare to the
world-class runner at various
mile markers, and they would be
available to speak to the runners
and offer tips. The professional’s
finishing time would not count as
the winning time; that would still
be for amateur runners to claim.
The Air Force Marathon is
already a qualifying race for such
world renowned races as the
Boston Marathon and the New
York Marathon.
The Air Force Marathon is open
to not just military people but the
general public as well. It is an
open event.
Even though much of it is run on
a military base, anybody who
enters will be allowed to participate, regardless of age. A new
awards category was added this
year to recognize runners age 12
and under in the 5k race.
Another concern is leave for
active duty people. Permissive
temporary duty is authorized, entitling individuals to submit a
request through their commander
in lieu of taking leave,
while all lodging and
other expenses are
the individual’s
responsibility.
Mr. Carlyon
said the marathon office
here will work
with military
people and the
general public
in finding local
lodging.
Most U.S. states
are represented by
runners as are several
countries at each year’s
marathon. Many military units
send representatives to compete
against each other.
“It’s gone from a base event to a
world and country event,” said Mr.
Carlyon. “Our vision is to attract
20,000 runners.
“We’re going to grow it every
year. It has gone past the point of
beginning. It’s kind of now in the
developmental stage and we want
to mature it. We want to get it to
the point where it becomes the
marathon for the department of
defense. As long as folks are running marathons I think we are
going to be in the market.”
The 2004 Air Force Marathon
still has openings in all events.
For more information, call 2574350 or online at http://afmarathon
.wpafb.af.mil.
4B
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Pentagon launches ‘Operation Blue to Green’
WASHINGTON (AFPN) — Sailors
and Airmen may soon be able to “Go
Army” under a new Defense Department program intended to rebalance
the size of the military. The program
is generating new opportunities for
continued service and career
advancement for those willing to
transfer into the Army from other
services.
Under “Operation Blue to Green,”
the Army will reach out to Sailors
and Airmen, and underscore the
advantages of swapping their current uniform for Army green.
“We admire everyone who serves
in the nation’s uniform,” said Lt. Gen.
“Buster” Hagenbeck, the Army’s uniformed personnel chief. “But I know
that anyone who looks closely at
today’s Army will find a lot to be
excited about — we are growing, and
we need experienced people to lead
that transition.”
Both the House and the Senate
have shown an interest in hiking
Army strength by perhaps tens of
thousands over the next few years,
although the final number has not
yet been set, officials said.
At the same time, the Navy is
planning a force reduction of 8,000 in
fiscal 2005, with the Air Force trimming more than 20,000 over the same
period.
When the shifts are done, officials
said, Pentagon leaders are determined to see to it that the best people are still in uniform — even if
that means a different uniform. And
they plan to achieve that outcome
entirely by way of voluntary choice.
Where necessary, the Army plans
to use bonuses to stimulate the
needed service transfers and to carefully guide the experience mix so
that promotions stay strong.
The focus of the effort centers on
grades E-1 through E-5, but other
grades will be considered in meeting
Army needs. For example, the Army
will continue to have a sizable
demand in areas that share much
common ground with other services
in knowledge, skill and ability. These
include law enforcement, health
care, communications and intelligence.
As an incentive to join the Army
under Operation Blue to Green,
bonuses are being offered to those
who have skills that convert to the
Army’s most needed military occupational specialties.
There are 120 Air Force specialties that will transfer into 37 Army
jobs, said Col. Norvel Dillard, chief
of the Army’s enlisted accessions
division.
“Those are ‘Job One,’ but we’re
looking at others as well,” said the
colonel. “We’re also looking for officers, primarily junior officers.”
Anyone who makes the shift would
carry over all creditable active federal service, and procedures will
ensure that those migrating within
the active force experience no break
in service.
Gen. Hagenbeck said the program
is being designed to make certain
there is no break in service and no
impact on Montgomery GI Bill benefits already “banked” by a service
member.
The procedure is generally
expected to operate like this:
The Army will first match its needs
to the skills in other services. An
outgrowth of that effort will be the
identification of places where that
audience is concentrated, so that an
orientation team can be scheduled to
visit that base. The team would then
meet with interested service members and their families and explain
the options.
Following a short presentation,
one-to-one dialogue would be
encouraged with team members on
the spot — some from the Army’s
Recruiting Command, who can
explain the mechanics of the program, and some from operational
Army units eager to explain the
Army today. The Blue to Green Web
site also is being expanded to
include chat rooms.
“We are eager to tell our story,”
said Gen. Hagenbeck, “and we’ll take
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A little
tion, rank, uniform wear and career
progression. The first course is
scheduled to start in September at
Fort Knox, Ky. It is planned as transition training, not boot camp, officials said.
Those transferring to a new skill,
particularly in combat-arms areas
like special operations, would participate in the full range of developmental training to hone current
talents and provide a new set of
skills and abilities. Officers would
not attend a warrior course, but
would normally attend training
unique to their branch depending
on their grade and experience.
Upon transfer, new soldiers would
be eligible to compete for promotion so long as they meet Army minimums, which can be years shorter
than other services.
The Army’s recruiting goal for fiscal 2005, which begins in October,
is about 80,000. Of that number, the
Army hopes to recruit at least 8,000
prior-service troops. (Courtesy of
American Forces Press Service)
Hotline available for
outside of command chain
WASHINGTON
(AFPN)
—
Department of Defense Inspector
Gen. Joseph Schmitz is reminding
service members there are a number of ways to report suspected
incidents of wrongdoing outside
their chains of command.
His office runs the DOD Hotline
Program. Service members and
civilians who wish to report incidents without going through their
chains of command can take full
advantage of this program.
Those with suspicions can call
toll free (800) 424-9098, commercial (703) 604- 8569, or DSN 6648569 to report misdeeds.
Service members and civilians
can also mail their concerns to:
The Defense Hotline, The Pentagon, Washington, D.C., 20301-1900.
The e-mail address is hotline@
dodig.osd.mil.
The push to inform service members of this option grew out of the
recent series of Senate hearings
about prisoner abuse in Iraq. Senators believed there was no way
for servicemembers to report
wrongdoing outside their chains
of command.
For more information, go to the
inspector general’s Web site at
http://www.dodig.osd.mil/. (Courtesy of American Forces Press Service)
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Once a person’s eligibility is confirmed, the losing service would be
contacted to effect an agreement to
release. New service agreements
would be drafted, and the service
member would make the move. In
many cases, they would carry a
directly transferable skill.
Otherwise, training in the new
skill would be scheduled as part of
the move. In order to qualify, service
members must be eligible for reenlistment, must be physically fit,
and meet Army height and weight
standards.
If the skill is transferable, the new
soldier would be scheduled for a
new, four-week warrior transition
course, where he or she will be
offered a curriculum that provides
essential skills and abilities needed
in the new service. Topics would
include an orientation on organiza-
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Mask liner giving Airmen a second skin
els of the masks and the second
skin are classified, with or without the skin the masks provide
wearers a high level of protection
against chemicals such as blister
and nerve agents, said Johnnie
Kincaid, the program manger. The
second skin however, expands
that protection to the next level
with additional thickness.
The Air Force’s initial development of the SS was done at
Brooks City-Base, Texas, but the
original group to develop the SS
was the Army through the Edgewood Chemical Biological Center
in Edgewood, Md., for use with
their M-40 masks.
Sustaining the skins and all
technical responsibilities are
handled through center here. In
addition, the Defense Logistics
Agency is the supply source and
covers all procurement and distribution.
In the past three years more
than 314,000 masks have been
fielded, and since the first quarter of 2003, when the second skins
were first available, more than
500,000 have been put in storage
at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
The new skins are issued as
needed to people deploying to
potential high-threat areas, said
Laurie Beebe, an engineer.
All new mobility Airmen are
issued a mask, and workers here
fill those new needs as well as
replacements daily, she said.
by Lanorris Askew
Warner Robins ALC Public Affairs
ROBINS AFB, Ga. (AFMCNS) —
A simple innovation in chemical
protection gear could save thousands of Airmen’s lives and millions of Air Force dollars, according to the support equipment
team here.
Known as the second skin, or
SS, the recent addition to the
MCU-2P and the MCU-2A/P personal protective gas masks adds a
literal extra layer of protection
against chemical, biological and
nuclear warfare agents.
“The idea is simple, but I think
it’ll do wonders for the masks,”
said Don Waddell, from the
Warner Robins Air Logistics Center here.
Made of a rubber-type material,
the second skin is an overlay for
the mask which extends the time
it is effective in a hostile area.
Before the addition, the masks
had to be discarded after exposure to chemical agents, but with
the second skin the masks may be
used again by removing the skin
after
the
decontamination
process and replacing it with
another.
According to the team, the price
difference between the SS and a
mask is astronomical and that little piece of rubber saves the Air
Force roughly $170 per mask.
Earl Duck, an equipment specialist, said the masks are being
given to Airmen who are, or could
be, deployed to a hostile area.
Because of the emphasis on air
and space expeditionary forces,
this means almost everyone in
uniform, he said.
While the actual protection lev-
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ROBINS AFB, Ga. — Laurie Beebe
shows off the “second skin” liner
that fits on the MCU-2P and the
MCU-2A/P gas masks and adds an
extra layer of protection against
chemical, biological and nuclear
warfare.
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August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
7B
Air Force leaders support C-130J program
onto the commercial aircraft.
“Through testing, we’ve really been
able to wring out the aircraft for its
diverse missions,” said Col. Stipe. “As
part of this process Lockheed has
invested at least another $100 million
in upgrades and fixes. Through all
this, we are confident that we will
deploy the C-130J to combat areas by
the end of this year.”
While the outside of the aircraft
looks no different than previous models, the inside is a whole new animal,
according to Lt. Col. James Dendis,
acquisitions deputy chief of tactical
airlift, special operations forces and
trainer division.
“This looks like the older C-130s,
but only on the outside,” he said. “The
avionics have been updated throughout, and the aircraft is arguably more
complex now than our C-17 Globemaster III large cargo aircraft. It is a
phenomenally complex, computerdriven, high-tech airplane.” When all
of the bugs are worked out, it will be a
lot easier to maintain than the older
versions, said Col. Dendis, because
the computer test equipment makes
troubleshooting and repairs simpler.
“The pilots love it, and the maintainers love it,” Col. Stipe said. “It’s
designed to be very easy to work on.”
Leaders are confident the aircraft
will rapidly become a valuable asset to
the 21st century Air Force, despite
early challenges.
“Initial rounds of operational tests
showed more work was needed to
bring the plane up to our very demanding standards,” said Gen. John Handy,
commander of U.S. Transportation
Command and AMC. “The work to convert this aircraft for military use is
scheduled or already completed.
“The Air Force ... is confident that
the C-130J will more than prove itself
in global mobility operations,” he
added.
by Staff Sgt. Melanie Streeter
Air Force Print News
WASHINGTON — Air Force officials are standing by the C-130J Hercules as the aircraft prepares to join
the fight, despite a recent Department
of Defense inspector general report
criticizing the program.
The Air Force fully endorses the C130J, senior Air Force acquisitions
officials said. The program is one of
Air Mobility Command’s top priorities and the aircraft is currently
planned to be ready for combat
deployment by the end of 2004.
In fact, the C-130J already is supporting combat missions in Iraq as
part of the United Kingdom’s Royal
Air Force, said Col. Paul Stipe, the
deputy director of global reach programs for the Air Force.
“This aircraft was developed by
Lockheed Martin at its own expense,
and the company contributed more
than a billion dollars of its own money
to develop (the C-130J) for the commercial market,” Col. Stipe said. “And
they were successful. They sold it to
the United Kingdom, to Italy, Australia
and Denmark. In fact, the United Kingdom purchased it before the United
States.
“There are two basic ways to buy
an aircraft,” said Col. Stipe. “One way
is to pay a company to develop an aircraft that meets your needs from
scratch. This way, the Air Force pays
for all the research and development
and all the modifications. The other
way is to buy an aircraft commercially
developed and then adapt it to Air
Force needs. With the C-130J, the commercial route was more advantageous.
“With the commercial route, the
Lockheed Martin development investment of over $1 billion is shared by the
myriad of users and not just by the
DOD. Another advantage was that they
Air Force photo by Tech. Chris Steffen
LITTLE ROCK AFB, Ark. (AFPN) — Airman 1st Class Antonio Perez marshals in the
first active-duty C-130J Hercules here March 19. Air Force officials are standing
by the aircraft despite a recent Department of Defense inspector general report
criticizing the program.
could deliver the first planes faster,”
he said.
The first aircraft were delivered in
1999. The Air Force then took the
next step, testing the aircraft and
integrating the military capabilities
Commands highlight support, sustainment issues
legacy systems.
“You can’t put a price on these discussions,” Gen. Handy said. “There’s
no other way to address these issues
unless we sit down together and come
to an agreement on how to proceed.”
The group addressed the positive
steps being taken to ensure the C130J Hercules is ready to perform in
a combat environment by December.
The aircraft, a top priority for AMC,
are now performing noncombat operational missions. Lockheed Martin
has delivered 35 of the new tactical
airlifters to the Air Force since 1999.
Other topics included enhancing
the communications for passengers
on the C-32 and C-40, and sustainment
approaches for the Tunner and
Halvorsen aircraft cargo loaders.
They also touched on the fielding of
Large Aircraft Countermeasures for
SCOTT AFB, Ill. (AFPN) — Air
Force acquisition and management
officials met with Air Mobility Command leaders here July 27 to review
programs, discuss sustainment issues
and look for ways to better support air
mobility warriors.
Dr. Marvin R. Sambur, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition;
Gen. John W. Handy, Air Mobility
Command commander; and Gen. Gregory S. Martin, Air Force Materiel
Command commander, chaired the
meeting which included 11 other general officers, members of the senior
executive service, and their staffs.
They discussed new aircraft acquisition, improvements to existing
weapons systems and sustainment of
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fleet’s viable service life within a six, 14- and 25-year span, providing indicators of the cost of continued ownership, aircraft availability and operational health. Next up for the board
is an assessment of the KC-135E and
KC-135R fleets.
Officials from AFMC ended the
event by highlighting ways their
command and AMC logistics partnerships reduced programmed depot
maintenance flow days as much as
42 percent, and increased depot production capacity as much as 32 percent.
Gen. Martin said the meeting was a
very valuable tool for SAF/AQ and
his officials “to better understand the
needs for AMC in the areas of acquisition and sustainment.
“We have a team that cares about
doing what’s right,” he said.
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“smart tanker” concept, is a communications pallet that allows KC-135s
flying air refueling missions to relay
communications data from battle
directors to network users in a theater
of operations.
The director of the Air Force Fleet
Viability Board, which recently completed its assessment of the C-5A
Galaxy fleet, briefed the group on its
processes and findings. The board is
tasked with providing the secretary of
the Air Force and the Air Force chief
of staff a judgment of an aircraft
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SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Motorcycle safety important part of critical days
by Airman 1st Class Katie Booher
5th Bomb Wing Public Affairs
strate they understand exactly
what they are dealing with, he said.
MINOT AFB, N.D. (AFPN)
— Since the start of the “101
Critical Days of Summer,” at
least 16 Airmen have been
injured or killed in motorcycle accidents, primarily because they lacked proper
training or were not wearing
all the required safety gear
when they went down.
Rod Krause, the 5th Bomb
Wing safety office manager
here and a motorcycle enthusiast, said the policies and
clothing regulations are not
meant to deter people from
riding; they are in place to keep
people safe.
“The rules are going to protect
(a person) because the riding environment is more hazardous on a
motorcycle than if (he or she) were
riding in a car,” he said.
“People aren’t watching out for
bikers, which makes bikers more
vulnerable for traffic mishaps.”
Before a person ever steps foot
on a showroom floor, he or she
should consider the necessary
training and complete that training before driving a new bike
home.
“To operate a motorcycle on or
off duty, on or off base, active duty
members must successfully complete a Motorcycle Safety Foundation course, either the basic rider’s
course or the experienced rider’s
course” Mr. Krause said. Once people go through that training, they
must go through a one-on-one
motorcycle briefing with their
squadron commander to demon-
Along with the training comes
the amount of personal protective
equipment a person must wear
when riding, said Mr. Krause.
“A Department of Transportation-certified helmet must be properly worn and secured, and the goggles and face shield must be impact
or shatter resistant. A windshield
or eyeglasses alone aren’t proper
protection,” he said.
“Over-the-ankle boots or shoes
are strongly suggested, and a longsleeve shirt or jacket and full-fingered gloves or mittens designed
for use on a motorcycle must be
worn.”
One of the biggest questions the
safety office receives is on what
riders must wear on their upper
body, said Mr. Krause.
“A brightly colored upper outer
garment (must be worn) during the
day, and a reflective upper garment
(must be worn) during the night.
The outer garment must be clearly
visible,” he said. “Black leather
jackets alone aren’t enough; something must be worn on top of the
jacket to make it highly
visible.”
Those who chose not to
abide by the rules and
clothing regulations can
face military punishment
if they are caught, said Mr.
Krause.
“If you get hurt while
riding a bike and you’re
not wearing this gear, you
could be held liable under
the line-of-duty determination,” he said.
“Beyond being in trouble with the commander
for disobeying a direct
order, you could be stuck with the
medical bills.”
The rules apply both on base and
off for active duty Airmen. Civilians are only required to follow
these rules when they ride on base
or use their motorcycle for official
government use.
“If (Department of Defense or
nonappropriated fund civilians
are) going to use their bike for official duties off base, they must
attend a safety class,” he said.
“(For example) if I need to make an
office supply run downtown during the day, I must wear all the
equipment, but once I hit the gate
at 4:30 p.m., I can wear (shorts and
a T-shirt) if I want to.”
Planetarium closing to public
U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY,
Colo. (AFPN) — Officials here are
here closing the planetarium
doors to the public after 45 years
of providing programs about
astronomy, flight and navigation
to thousands of visitors.
The planetarium is one of the
academy’s oldest buildings, having been constructed in the late
1950s.
It will remain open for use by
academy staff, but there will no
longer be a staff to run the facility. The remaining two staff positions were eliminated in the last
reduction of force.
In the 1970s to early ‘80s, the
planetarium received more than
200,000 visitors a year; however,
in the mid-’80s academy officials
stopped advertising the planetarium and began reducing the
staff. In 2001, force-protection
actions in the post-9/11 environment nearly eliminated nonmilitary access to academy facilities.
Today, the planetarium receives
only 20,000 visitors a year.
“When the academy was being
built, the space age was happening,” said Mickey Schmidt, the
planetarium’s director since 1987.
“The planetarium symbolized the
future of the Air Force in space.”
Though the facility had been
closed temporarily for renovations in 1985, 1990 and 2000, this
is the first time it will close to
the public indefinitely.
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348342
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
9B
Absentee ballots can make a difference
selors are making 100-percent contact with every member to ensure
they are given the opportunity to
exercise their right to vote.”
The deadline for completing and
mailing a Federal Post Card application (for registration) is no later
than 45 days before the election
date, or 30 days before the election for the Federal Write-In
Absentee Ballot.
The registration process is quite
easy, Maj. Harrington said. As long
as you complete and mail the necessary paperwork before the
posted deadline, your vote will be
counted.
The Military Postal Service
Agency is also taking precautions
to uphold the integrity of the voting
system. Each absentee envelope
will be inspected by post office
workers for proper date stamping.
“We believe this will diminish
by Capt. Kimberly Layne
U.S. Air Forces in Europe Public
Affairs
RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany (AFPN) — In the Nov. 2
general election, the next president, vice president, 34 senators, 435 representatives, 13 governors and hundreds of local
officials will be elected.
American voters play a very
important role in this process,
said Maj. Rickey Harrington,
U.S. Air Forces in Europe voting
officer.
“The military has a strong
voice, and it is imperative that
every member is afforded the
opportunity to register and
vote,” Maj. Harrington said. “We
are making sure that installation voting assistance officers
and unit voting assistance coun-
the problems we saw in 2000,” said
Tech. Sgt. Wes Smith, a postmaster
here. “Incomplete and inappropriate postmarks, which plagued the
last general election, will not be a
problem this time.”
People should register and send
their ballots as soon as possible to
ensure that the registration forms
arrive on time, Maj. Harrington said.
While voting assistants and post
office workers play a major role in
the success of the election process,
the buck stops with individual voters. “We want to make sure the tools
are in place to help the voters, but
ultimately it is their responsibility to
start the process,” Maj. Harrington
said.
For more information about overseas voter registrations, visit the
Federal Voting Assistance Program
Web site at www.fvap.gov. (Courtesy
of USAFE News Service)
Reservists can seek medical, dental reimbursement
WASHINGTON
(AFPN)
—
National Guard and Reserve members who paid their medical and
dental bills and saved their receipts
may now seek reimbursement from
Tricare, officials of the military
health-care system announced July
23.
Officials said the system will
begin processing medical and dental claims for Guard and Reserve
members who meet certain eligibility requirements.
Only guardsmen and reservists
issued “delayed-effective-date active duty orders” for more than 30
days in support of a contingency
operation, and their families, may
be eligible to have medical claims
reimbursed.
And according to Tricare officials,
only those medical expenses
incurred during the servicemember’s “early eligibility” period —
up to 60 days before reporting to
active duty — from Nov. 6, 2003, to
now are eligible for reimbursement.
This temporary entitlement is
part of the Defense Department’s
2004 Temporary Reserve Health
Benefit Program, which sought to
enhance benefits for Guard and
Reserve troops called to active duty.
Normally, under Tricare guidelines, Reserve and Guard members
cannot be enrolled into Tricare
until they reach their final duty
location. The temporary entitlement
gives them access upon receipt of
activation orders, up to 60 days in
advance.
Last year, President Bush signed
legislation authorizing three new
temporary provisions for guardsmen and reservists and their families that provided enhanced access
to Tricare for a limited time during
contingency activation. The provisions were made retroactive to Nov.
6, 2003.
A second provision temporarily
extended eligibility for Tricare benefits to 180 days for those guardsmen and reservists who separated
from active duty status Nov. 6, 2003,
through Dec. 31, 2004.
The third provision extends Tricare medical benefits to reservecomponent sponsors and family
members who are either unemployed or employed but not eligible for employer-provided health
coverage.
All temporary provisions will end
on Dec. 31.
However, the measure did include
three provisions for permanent
health benefits: making benefit
counselors available for Guard and
Reserve members in each Tricare
region, authorizing medical and
dental screening and care for members alerted for mobilization, and
providing Tricare eligibility for
reserve officers pending orders to
active duty following commissioning.
Guardsmen, reservists and their
family members must be registered
in the Defense Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System and be eligible for Tricare to qualify for the
temporary benefit.
In order to apply for reimbursement, eligible members must submit
a Tricare (CHAMPUS) claim form, a
Officials reach agreement
for moving U.S. forces
WASHINGTON
(AFPN)
—
Department of Defense officials
announced July 23 that South
Korean and U.S. representatives
finalized agreements to remove
all U.S. forces from the Seoul metropolitan area Nearly 8,000 U.S.
service members will move about
43 miles south to the Pyongtaek
area near Osan Air Base.
The decision was reached during the 10th round of the Future
of the Alliance talks held in
Washington recently.
The agreement fulfills a com-
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With so much information out there, it’s easy to be
overwhelmed. Don’t get sidetracked; start your search in the
right place: The Skywrighter Employment Section. You’ll find an
extensive listing of jobs and new listings are added every week.
So, whether you’re taking your first step or your fifth,
296-4202
copy of their itemized bill, an explanation of benefits, and proof of payment (if the bill was already paid) to
their regional Tricare claims
processor.
Claims processing instructions
and a downloadable Tricare claims
form, DD Form 2642, are available
at local Tricare service centers or
from Tricare regional contractors,
or may be downloaded from the Tricare Web site.
... give the Classifieds a look.
mitment made by President Bush
and President Roh Moo-hyun at
their summit meeting in Washington in May 2003.
Officials expect the relocation
of U.S. forces will be complete by
December 2008.
“This relocation agreement
helps us meet our enduring commitment to the defense of Korea
and to the security and stability of
the region,” said Richard Lawless, the U.S. deputy undersecretary of defense for Asia Pacific
affairs.
10B
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Airman found guilty of black marketing
by Staff Sgt. Elaine Aviles
39th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey
(AFPN) — An Airman here was
found guilty of black marketing during a summary court-martial
recently.
The Airman received a reduction
in rank from staff sergeant to senior
airman, restriction to base for 60
days and a verbal reprimand.
“The Airman needed to accomplish paperwork for personal business, and a few of his Turkish
friends offered to help him by giving
him a ride,” said Capt. Mechel
Campbell, the 39th Air Base Wing’s
military justice chief. “Upon arriving in Ankara, these ‘friends’
informed him that in exchange for
the ride and for paying for the gas,
the Airman needed to do them a few
favors. They paid for the gas but his
‘friends’ asked for a lot in return.”
The favors included having the
Airman purchase $2,600 of gas
coupon books and merchandise
from the base exchange and commissary in Ankara on his Turkish
friends’ behalf.
“He purchased a large (number)
of items in a short period of time,”
said Lt. Col. Antoinette Kemper, the
39th Air Base Wing director of staff
and summary court officer. “This
sent up red flags to the store managers.”
The Turkish nationals walked
away with $2,600 of new merchandise, but the Airman was not so
lucky.
“Even good people make bad decisions,” said Col. Kemper. “However,
there can’t be leniency when our
people contribute to illegal activity. Black marketing is a serious
crime.”
Black marketing in Turkey is
defined by the legal office as “any
giving, selling or transferring of any
item to a Turkish national (or anyone else not entitled to duty free
goods) that was not purchased on
the Turkish economy.”
Even passing on used clothing, a
pack of cigarettes or a can of coffee is considered black marketing.
“Black marketing jeopardizes our
entitlements as military members,”
Col. Kemper said. “It also strains
relations with our host nation. They
understandably take this crime very
seriously.
“I weighed my decision heavily;
taking a stripe should not be taken
lightly,” she said. “We entrust our
young Airmen with a lot of responsibility, and most bear that responsibility with maturity and professionalism. However, as the Airman
in this case found out, there has to
be consequences for those who
breach that trust.” (Courtesy of U.S.
Air Forces in Europe News Service)
Airman charged after contraband investigation
EGLIN AFB, Fla. (AFMCNS) — Officials here preferred charges against a
728th Air Control Squadron
office after an investigation
found evidence he allegedly shipped contraband
items here from an Operation Iraqi Freedom deployment.
Officials from the 33d
Fighter Wing preferred
charges against Maj. Gregory McMillion who is suspected of shipping Iraqi
AK-47s, rocket propelled
grenade launchers, Iraqi
uniforms, rifles, knives and
bayonets.
People assigned to the
728th ACS found these
Courtesy photo
items in the fall of 2003
while unpacking mission EGLIN AFB, Fla. — Officials have preferred charges against Maj. Gregory McMillion
equipment after their de- after an investigation found evidence he allegedly shipped contraband items here from
ployment. U.S. Customs and an Operation Iraqi Freedom deployment.
the Air Force Office of Special Investigations experts
Maj. McMillion was charged conduct unbecoming an officer
were also involved in the investi- with failing to obey a lawful gen- and a gentleman.
gation.
The charges are violations of
eral order and a lawful general
Squadron members were de- regulation, failing to report and Articles 92, 103, 107, 108 and 133 of
ployed for seven months at Bagh- turn over captured or abandoned the Uniform Code of Military Jusdad International Airport, pro- property and dealing in captured tice. Under military law, charges
viding air battle management and or abandoned property. He was that have been preferred are
theater command, control and also charged with making false merely accusations. The Maj. is
communications for U.S. Central official statements, wrongful dis- presumed innocent until and if
Command.
position of military property and proven guilty in a court of law.
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SKYWRIGHTER
11B
U.S. now training Arab air forces
by Staff Sgt. Lee Watts
20th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
SHAW AFB, S.C. (AFPN) — The
United States, working with
United Arab Emirates, is now
training future Arab air force
leaders.
Iron Falcon, a month-long exercise held at the Emirate Air
Defense Air Warfare Center in the
United Arab Emirates, is upgrade
training for mission commanders.
Plans are set for all members of
the Gulf Cooperation Council to
eventually participate in the exercise.
“At Iron Falcon, students learn
about orchestrating air power
assets and how to work with other
nations,” said Lt. Col. Terry Ford,
U.S. Central Command Air Forces
exercise planner.
Iron Falcon was developed by
U.S. officials in cooperation with
United Arab Emirates officials for
multiple reasons. One reason was
to keep proficiency at the highest
possible level. The concept for
this training was developed during operations Northern and
Southern Watch, Col. Ford said.
“While deployed to those operations, pilots would fly combat air
patrols for 90 or 120 days, but
weren’t able to continue training,”
he said. “Air Force senior (leaders) wanted a training program in
the region where pilots could
keep their proficiency at a peek.”
Another reason for the exercise
is the diplomatic benefit.
Americans build personal relationships, which can result in better relations with people of other
nations and more effective use of
coalition military resources, said
Bill Richardson, CENTAF project
officer at the center. The training
usually involves captains and
majors.
“We’re looking ahead five, 10
and 15 years down the road when
our officers and theirs will be the
leaders of air forces,” he said.
“When they need to coordinate
efforts, it will be easier if they
already know the person they’re
dealing with and can call upon
their time together in training.”
Air Force senior leaders emphasized the value of training with
allies.
“The Air Warfare Center is an
important part of the overall theater security cooperation program,” said Col. Mike Otterblad,
CENTAF exercises and engagement director.
Col. Otterblad said the exercise
gives fighter crews from the American, British and various Middle
Eastern air forces a unique opportunity to train together in a realistic environment.
“The first two classes to test the
concept were a huge success, and
we will now start integrating additional coalition members in the
future,” he said, adding that by
training coalition air forces, the
United States benefits in more
than just military terms.
“The better the (council) air
forces are, the more we can
reduce our presence there,” Mr.
Richardson said. “As a result, less
of our military members may have
to deploy to the region, which
makes it easier on them and their
families.”
Airmen from the 77th Fighter
Squadron here recently returned
from the second session of the
exercise.
“It was a good experience,” said
Capt. Chris Bacon, a 77th FS F-16
Fighting Falcon pilot. “Iron Falcon is a U.A.E. initiative. They are
forward thinkers and realize the
value of combining resources. The
training there has more access to
the airspace, so the training is
really enhanced.”
Capt. Bacon said the Emirati
people are open minded, and the
pilots who trained there, came
back with an appreciation for
Arab culture.
“Learning about each other is
a great path for the future,” he
said.
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12B
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Experiment testing new data system
by 1st Lt James L. Bressendorff
Joint Expeditionary Force Experiment
2004 Public Affairs
NELLIS AFB, Nev. (AFPN) — The
Data Link Automated Reporting System is set to be one of the revolutionary initiatives tested here during the Joint Expeditionary Force
Experiment 2004.
JEFX 2004 is an Air Force-sponsored experiment that assesses new
and emerging technologies that can
be quickly fielded.
“With this system we’ve reduced
the time it takes to acquire, identify, assess, track and destroy a target by several orders of magnitude,”
said Combined Forces Air and
Space Component Commander Lt.
Gen. Bruce Carlson. “This capability
greatly enhances dynamic mission
planning because we have real-time
access to such data as weapons
available, fuel status and aircraft
currently available to be tasked,”
DLARS may be a new acronym but
the system has been in the planning
stages for several years.
“DLARS started out as an outgrowth of a 2003 Lockheed Martin
independent research and development project called Total Integrated
Warfare,” said John Herring Jr., program manager. “The project was
demonstrated to Gen. Hal Hornburg,
commander of Air Combat Command, and Gen. Gregory Martin commander of Air Force Materiel Command in December 2003. Gen. Hornburg was so impressed he e-mailed
the Air Force Chief of Staff, Gen.
John Jumper, about the project and
his desire to include it into JEFX.”
Mr. Herring also recalled the
events that led to the birth of what is
now known as DLARS including
product demonstrations to the commander of the Air Force Command
and Control, and Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Center, Maj. Gen. Tommy Crawford.
There were also meetings to include
DLARS as an initiative into JEFX,
then only two months away.
Instead of fielding a new data
format for DLARS to extract, officials decided to levy existing technologies such as the Air Force’s
newest aircraft data link system,
LINK 16, and integrate it into the
system.
“Gen. Crawford came to the battle
lab in January and saw what I was
doing with another initiative and
said, ‘That looks great but let’s use
LINK 16 information and get aircraft information into the CAOC
faster,’” said Maj. Rod Schack,
DLARS project officer.
Because of DLARS’ unique architecture, Maj. Schack’s team was able
to integrate the system into JEFX
within a short timeframe.
“DLARS is the last initiative
added to JEFX 04. The tight timeline
didn’t give us room to make changes
to the JEFX structure, so we built a
system that paralleled it. Because of
that, DLARS could integrate with
JEFX and the Theater Battle Management Core System,” said Maj.
Schack. “The design also allowed
us to build a flying version of
DLARS in two days which was flown
on ... a flying test bed.”
The information available through
DLARS can also be used for close-
ACC officials release
F-15E accident report
LANGLEY AFB, Va. (AFPN) —
A bird strike caused an F-15E
Strike Eagle’s engine to fail, forcing the crew to eject during a
training mission May 6 near Callaway, Va., according to Air Force
investigators.
The pilot and weapons system
officer ejected safely and were not
injured.
The $42 million aircraft,
assigned to the 335th Fighter
Squadron at Seymour Johnson
AFB, N.C., crashed in a field and
was destroyed upon impact.
According to an Air Combat
Command accident investigation
board report released Aug. 2,
investigators determined a large
black vulture was ingested into
aircraft’s right engine, causing the
engine to fail and starting a fire.
The report cited several contributing factors including damage to multiple control and
mechanical systems that rendered
the aircraft uncontrollable. (Courtesy of ACC News Service)
air support requests from the U.S.
Army, provide information to the
unit-level maintenance crews to support aircraft regeneration and assist
in upper-level air-refueling management process.
“During Operation Iraqi Freedom,
the Air Support Operations Center,
which manages CAS assets, needed
to request additional air assets from
the CAOC. At that time, the system
in use was not built to search for
assets that could be retasked. As a
result, there was a lot of labor
expended to find those assets
because they were needed immediately,” said Pete Peterman, lead
Army CAS and situational awareness assessor. “With DLARS the
requests happen at the touch of a
button. Once a request is made the
system searches for available aircraft and generates a listing of possible air assets that could be
retasked to fulfill the CAS request
within seconds.”
The system also helps improve aircraft regeneration times by providing information the aircraft stores
down to unit level.
“DLARS can provide the wing
operations center ‘Quick Turn’ display information that can be used to
calculate how much fuel and munitions are needed even before the
aircraft returns from a mission,”
said Maj. Bill Mengers, JEFX interdiction offensive duty officer. “With
this ability, maintenance crews can
preposition assets to put aircraft
back into the fight even faster than
before.”
The system also has the capability
to assist in upper-level air-refuel-
ing management by helping to compute tanker-fuel off load based on
data from receiving aircraft.
“DLARS in combination with
LINK 16 information enables refueling management at the operational level by providing real-time
fuel status for each receiving aircraft,” said Mr. Herring.
This capability assists with decisions regarding prioritization based
on how long an asset can stay on station, if it will have enough fuel to be
redirected to another target and prioritization of aircraft based on fuel
load and weapons load, said Maj.
Mengers.
“The benefit has been realized in
the Time Sensitive Targeting cell in
JEFX 04 when searching for a suitable asset with proper weapons and
enough fuel to strike a dynamic or
emerging target,” he said.
Although the recommendation to
the Air Force chief of staff on
whether or not to incorporate
DLARS into the Air Force will not
be made until sometime after JEFX,
officials are already looking into
possible future applications based
on this system.
“The logical progression for
DLARS is to exploit more data links.
All you would need to do is translate
the information into a usable format.” said Maj. Schack. “DLARS is a
very simple concept. The data has
always been there it’s just a matter
of taking the data and combining it
with existing databases. That’s what
DLARS does; it correlates, sorts and
displays useful information so we
can make quick, accurate decisions.”
Airman pleads guilty to rape charge
U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo.
(AFPN) — A general court-martial
hearing for an Airman charged with
rape ended here July 26 with a guilty
plea, a sentence of 42 months confinement and dishonorable discharge from the Air Force.
A charge of rape was preferred
against Airman Basic Darwin M.
Paredesillescas May 19 for violating Article 120 of the Uniform Code
of Military Justice. The crime was
allegedly committed on base on or
about Feb. 8 against a female active
duty Airman.
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June 11 September 4, 2004
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Airman Paredesillescas faced a
maximum punishment of life imprisonment, forfeiture of all pay and
allowances and a dishonorable discharge from the Air Force.
The case will next be reviewed by
the general court-martial convening
authority, Lt. Gen. John Rosa, Air
Force Academy superintendent.
Gen. Rosa may choose from four
options: agree with the finding and
sentence, reduce the sentence, set
aside the individual finding, or completely set aside the charge and the
sentence.
Section C
Friday, August 6, 2004
AAFES people serve troops overseas
by Mike Wallace
Skywrighter Staff
T
housands of service
members are serving in
Operations Enduring
Freedom and Iraqi
Freedom. In addition,
many civilians are supporting
them in a variety of roles.
One of these supporting people
was Bob Strawn, now the manager
of Wright-Patterson’s home and
garden store in Kittyhawk Center.
Mr. Strawn managed an Army and
Air Force Exchange Service post
exchange in Kandahar,
Afghanistan, for seven months
beginning in July 2002. He
described his experience of long
hours, temperature extremes, and
ultimately, a deep sense of satisfaction.
The day Bob Strawn landed in
Afghanistan, it was 128 degrees.
The heat was typical for Kandahar, Afghanistan, and Mr. Strawn
was there to manage the PX
located at the city’s airport and
base for the Army’s 82nd and
101st Airborne Division troops in
country. The PX supplied snacks,
music and a variety of other
items, and was a touch of home
for the combat troops.
“There was some strong sentiments after 9/11, and I thought I
belonged over there,” Mr. Strawn
said, adding that he was “an
Army brat born in Indiana” and
had lived in many locations
including Europe.
Having spent most of what now
is a 29-year career with AAFES
overseas, Mr. Strawn was working
at Dugway Proving Ground, Utah,
and said he was asked how he
would feel about going to Operation Enduring Freedom. He
answered that he needed to talk
to his family, who supported his
decision. He said, “I volunteered,
and it was the right thing to do at
the time.”
Under his direction, the PX in
Kandahar grew from one 40-by-80
foot tent to three tents. The
monthly business was $1 million,
and Mr. Strawn supervised as
many as 20 employees at the peak
of the business during his time
there. He said that 10 of the
employees were Russians who
had been foreign exchange students.
“The day I reported, there was
nothing to eat, and no soap,” said
Mr. Strawn, referring to the PX
Air Force photo by Spencer P. Lane
Bob Strawn, manager of Wright-Patterson’s home and garden store, inventories shelf items using an electronic scanner. A 29-year employee of the Army and Air Force Exchange
Service, he served seven months managing the post
inventory. “We were in a set-up
situation, and the logistics were
terrible. At first, the Air Force
would bring things in on skids at
two or three o’clock in the morning. Later we contracted with
some Pakistanis to move containers to us. I thought that all the
resources in the world would be
going to places like Kandahar,
but that wasn’t the case. The theater is huge.”
Besides having to overcome
business challenges, Mr. Strawn
had to make personal adjustments as well. “Power was a problem,” he said.
“There was no electricity
except by generators, and we
were on a fairly big base. We
lived in the back of the tent, and
there was no heating or cooling. I
was hungry and dirty all the time,
exchange in Kandahar, Afghanistan, beginning in July 2002
in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Despite long
hours and the lack of creature comforts, Mr. Strawn said the
experience was very rewarding.
and I went from 180 pounds down
to 145.
“There was a computer, and I
could send my wife a message at
the stroke of a key,” he said. “It
was so easy that we had to be
careful with operational security.
And whenever I got a package
from home, my team leader would
tell me to tear up the return
address. I asked why, and he
explained that the trash was
taken off base. He said that while
the enemy maybe couldn’t get me,
they could find out where my family was.”
Matching the summer’s heat,
Afghanistan’s winter cold was a
challenge as well. Mr. Strawn
recalled one frigid day at work
when business was slow. “At five
o’clock, I told my people they
could knock off for the day. They
all ran for their sleeping bags to
get warm. They hadn’t complained
about the cold all day, and it made
me proud to be with them.”
Self-effacing and downplaying
the 12- to 15-hour workdays, the
inconveniences, and the deprivation, Mr. Strawn said, “For an
AAFES person, it was very
rewarding. I felt like I was doing
something important. I was there
to support our troops.”
And from a personal viewpoint,
Mr. Strawn said, “I saw David Letterman on Christmas day there,
and Robin Williams, who must
have thought I was a GI, seriously
said to me ‘It is my honor to come
here.’
“Seven months was enough, and
I have young children at home.
But even today it pulls at me. It
pulls at me strong to go back.”
AAFES associates cited for heroism after rocket attack
DALLAS (AFPN) — Four Army
and Air Force Exchange Service
civilians have been recognized
for heroism in the line of duty
while serving at the Camp Anaconda post exchange in Iraq.
The employees are Jack Lauff
from AAFES headquarters in
Dallas; Barbara Brown from
Eglin AFB, Fla; Regina Koenig
from Fort Drum, N.Y.; and Irene
Panter from Hill AFB, Utah. They
were working in the store June 16
when a rocket struck near the
exchange causing numerous
injuries.
A rocket round that exploded
directly in front of the main store
building was one of three 127 mm
rockets that hit the camp.
The four assisted the wounded,
“without regard to their own
safety or personal risk, “according to the certificate presented by
Brig. Gen. James E. Chambers,
the 13th Corps Support Command
commanding general.
After the rocket hit, all four
AAFES employees scrambled to
administer first-aid and help
bring casualties and store customers to safety inside the hard-
ened post exchange building.
Three Soldiers were killed and
23 service members and civilians
were injured as a result of the
attack.
According to Gen. Chambers,
some of the casualties owe their
recovery to the AAFES associates.
“The ability to reach and take
care of people is a human quality
not everyone has,” he said.
Currently, there are more than
450 AAFES associates in Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom who volunteer to deploy to
places like Afghanistan and Iraq
for at least six months.
“It is difficult to comprehend
the commitment and courage of
AAFES volunteers who go to contingency operations,” said
AAFES’ Commander Maj. Gen.
Kathryn Frost. “Like the troops,
deployed AAFES associates live
and work under a constant threat
in order to deliver the exchange
service benefit to dangerous locations throughout the world.”
AAFES operates 54 contingency
locations for troops in operations
Enduring and Iraqi Freedom.
2C SKYWRIGHTER August 6, 2004
Community Calendar
Family Support Center
Tech. Sgt. Jeffrey Sanner at
257-2146.
Family support center
classes are typically held in
the classroom in Bldg. 2,
Area C. Due to pending renovations, they may be held in
alternate locations. For more
information or to sign up for
any of these classes, call FSC
front desk at 257-3592.
TAP seminar
Learn how to market yourself for a second career as
instructors discuss resume
writing, interviewing, job
search skills and more, Sept.
14-17 and Sept. 21-24. There
is also information about
veterans’ benefits and disability claims.
Loan closet reopens
The family support center loan closet has now
reopened for business. All
items are available for use.
Bundles for Babies
This class, 2 p.m. Aug. 18,
allows “parents to be” the
opportunity to learn about
financial, emotional and
physical aspects of parenting. Class participants
receive a free “bundle” of
baby supplies. This class is
sponsored by Air Force Aid
Society.
Hearts Together support
group
Families of military
members who are separated due to TDYs or
Remote Tours are welcome
to attend this monthly support group 6 p.m. Aug. 19 at
the family support center.
The FSC provides spouses
of deployed or remote
members a free meal and
plenty of volunteers to
entertain children with
activities. Also, meet other
separated spouses and family support staff, and talk
about concerns related to
the deployment. RSVP at
least two days before the
even. Call the front desk at
257-3592 or Tech. Sgt. Jeff
Sanner at 257-2146.
Smooth Move
Join representatives from
claims, transportation, Tricare, personal financial
management, housing and
other base agencies 1 p.m.
Aug. 20 to learn how to
make your next permanent
change of station a “smooth
move.”
Family readiness pre-deployment briefing
Whether single or married, before leaving for 30
days or more, learn how
you and your family can
prepare for and cope with
the challenges of separations and reunions. Married members are encouraged to bring their spouses,
9-10 a.m. today and Aug. 13,
20 and 27.
New support program for parents of deployed military
members
The family support center is forming a new support group for parents of
deployed military members. This group is open to
parents of all service members with children who are
currently deployed. Call
Meetings
Recurring meetings
• African American Heritage Committee — 11:30 a.m.
to 12:30 p.m. each Thursday
in the Wright Patterson Club
and Banquet Center’s
Rocker Lounge. For more
information, contact Yvonne
Wilson at 255-2382 or Staff
Sgt. Tammala Lawson at 2573971.
• Air Force Association
meets — 11:30 a.m. the first
Tuesday of every month at
the Wright-Patterson Club
and Banquet Center. For
more information, contact
Chuck Spencer at 434-9411.
• Air Force Sergeant’s
Association — 11:30 a.m. the
first Tuesday of each month
at the Wright-Patterson Club
and Banquet Center. For
more information, call
retired Chief Master Sgt.
Chuck Worm at 257-4981 or
Master Sgt. Darlene Tryon at
257-7428.
• Civil Air Patrol — 6:45-9
p.m. every Tuesday in Bldg.
1222, Kittyhawk Center. For
more information contact
Greg Blatt at 376-9124, ext.
338.
• Top 3 — 3 p.m. the second Thursday of each month
at the Wright-Patterson Club
and Banquet Center. For
more information contact
Senior Master Sgt. David
Kendall at 257-7190.
• Chiefs’ Group — 11:30
a.m. the third Thursday of
each month at the WrightPatterson Club and Banquet
Center. For more information contact Chief Master
Sgt. Mike Hushion at 9042726.
• Spouses in Action — 6
p.m. the second Thursday of
every month at the family
support center. For more
information, contact Cheri
Wheelock at 879-1208.
Call the following for information about meetings of base
Toastmasters clubs:
• Command Performers
Toastmasters — John Lee at
904-0448 or Kent Bierley at
257-4694.
• Tarmac Toastmasters —
David Rodgers at 255-4308
ext. 3306 or Angela Newcomer at 371-5961.
• Huffman Prairie Toastmasters Club — Jamila Caraway at 674-0163 or Maj.
Anthony Bond at 656-0337.
• Wright Flyers Toastmasters — Master Sgt. Walter
Grudowski at 255-6565 ext
How to submit to Community Calendar
Community Calendar is a compilation of brief
notices about base-related events. Submit via e-mail
to [email protected]. Deadline for submissions is 5 p.m. Friday for the following Friday’s
newspaper. For more information, call the editorial
office at 522-3251.
4293 or John Hayes at 2572881.
information, call Gary Gray.
Youth Center
Community Center
Unless otherwise noted, contact the Wright-Patterson
Community Center in the
Prairies at Wright Field at 2555053 or 522-2680 for information on any of the below programs.
Grooven dance
Be prepared to get your
“groove on” if you are
between the ages of 14 and
18. The community youth
center is holding a “Grooven
Dance” 8 p.m. to midnight
today. Call 257-6231 or 2555053.
Build a boat contest
The community youth center is holding a “build a boat
contest” 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Aug. 20 at Patterson Pool.
Building starts at 11 a.m. and
must be completed by 1 p.m.
Teams will consist of four to
eight people, and supplies
will be provided. Awards
will be given for team spirit,
most creative use of cardboard, most spectacular
sinking, and fastest boat.
Call 257-6231 or 255-5053.
Dog obedience training
All-breed dog obedience
training class will be held at
the community center 6:307:30 p.m. Wednesdays for
eight weeks. Dogs must be at
least three months old and
have valid certificate of vaccination. Cost is $85 or show
“The Card” and pay $76.50.
Class size is limited, so sign
up early.
Monday Mania air hockey
Bored on a Monday night?
“Rockin Hockey” will be featured for Monday Mania, 7-9
p.m. Aug. 16. You must be 18
years of age.
Upstanding young citizens
wanted
If you want to improve
yourself and your community through expedition and
exploration, setting and
meeting goals aimed toward
intellectual and physical
personal development and
by performing volunteer
public service, all while
earning awards bestowed by
the U.S. Congress, the Congressional Award program is
for you. If you are or someone you know is at least 14
years of age but not yet 24
and might be interest in
joining the Congressional
Award Program, call the
community center.
Webby dance classes
The Webby Dance Company is offering dance
classes at the community
center 3:30 and 4:30 p.m.
Wednesdays for ages 3 and
up. Classes are in tap, preballet, creative movement
and tumbling.
YES program — teens earn
money for college
Dependent teens of active
duty Air Force members can
earn money for college
while volunteering their
time through the Youth
Employment Skills program.
Teens can bank $4 in grant
funding for every hour volunteered on base. For more
appointments available for
children, ages 10 years and
under. Call the Advanced
General Dentistry Residency Program at 257-8761
for scheduling.
The youth center is located
in Bldg. 234 across from
Chapel 3 in The Prairies at
Wright Field. Teens and preteens are required to bring and
show their membership card in
order to enter the facility. For
more information on the below
programs, call the Prairies
Youth Center at 904-4700.
Pharmacy has Saturday hours
The Kittyhawk Pharmacy
offers full service 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. Saturdays. The busiest
times that day are 11 a.m. to
1 p.m., officials said. For
more information, call
Senior Master Sgt. Donna
Maurial at 257-9028.
Dayton Dragon Game Night
Join the youth center staff
and check out the action at
the Dayton Dragons baseball
game. Teens are invited 69:30 p.m. Aug. 14 — sign up
by Aug. 12. Be sure to sign up
early, tickets are limited.
Event is free.
Gum disease screening
The periodontal section of
the Wright-Patterson Medical Center Dental Clinic is
screening patients for potential treatment of gum disease. Eligible patients can
call 257-9616 or 257-9614 for a
screening appointment.
• Adventure game night
— 6-9 p.m. every Saturday.
• Arts and crafts night —
Youth ages 9 to 18 are welcome 3-5 p.m. Tuesdays.
• Smart Girls — Second
and fourth Wednesday of
every month. Girls ages 9-12
meet 5-6 p.m., and girls ages
13-18 meet 6-7 p.m.
• Dance revolution — Preteens and teens can compete
with others in this virtual
dance game 4-6 p.m. every
Tuesday.
• 4-H meetings — Second
and fourth Tuesday of each
month.
Mouth guards
Sports mouth guards are
available for active duty
service members. For more
information or to schedule
an appointment, call the
Wright-Patterson Dental
Clinic at 257-8761.
Eye exams
Dependents of active duty
members are authorized one
screening eye examination
each 12-month period. For
more information, call the
Tricare service center at 1800-941-4501 or Kenneth
Kirkland at 257-9166.
Skills Development
Education
Unless otherwise noted, call
the Wright-Patterson Skills
Development Center, Bldg. 95,
Area C, at 257-7025 for information on any of the below
programs. Pre-registration is
required for all classes at the
skills development center.
Dental assistant training
course
The 74th Dental Squadron
and American Red Cross
will offer a six-month dental
assistant training course to
individuals 18 years and
older with a high school
diploma starting Aug. 30.
The free training course will
be held 7:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m.
Monday through Friday at
the Wright-Patterson Medical Center.
The program will provide
instruction on general dental assistant skills, materials
and supplies used in dentistry, infection control protocol, and cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) procedures. Interviews for the
training course will be held
Aug. 25. For more information, call Master Sgt.
Richard Rooker or Staff Sgt.
Stephen Spencer at 257-5583.
Name tags available
The skills development
center is now making
brushed silver nametags for
$7.50. Blue nametags are
available for $2.50.
Frame and mat class
The skills development
center is now offering this
popular frame and mat class
three times a month. Classes
meet 6-9 p.m. Mondays. Cost
is $25. All supplies provided.
Porcelain doll workshop
The skills development
center is holding a porcelain
doll workshop 6-7:30 p.m.
every Wednesday. Class
costs $5. Materials are available for purchase.
Bob Ross painting
Classes meet on Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
skills development center.
Class fee is $45 with instructor-provided supplies.
Creative rubber stamp
Rubber stamp workshops
meet 6:30-8:30 p.m. on Tuesday or Wednesday for one
week at the skills development center. Class fee is $10.
Health
Children’s dental appointments
available
The 74th Dental Squadron
currently has screening
CMU waives admission fee
The Central Michigan University office here is waiving
its $50 admission fee for all
military members, spouses
and dependents who apply
for admission to the master’s
degree program during Aug..
CMU offers a master of science in administration
degree program on base
with concentrations in
acquisitions administration,
general administration,
health services administration, human resources
administration, information
resource management and
leadership.
CMU offices are located in
Bldg. 50A, Area B, and
classes are held in the education and training flight
facility, Bldg. 50, Area B.
See Calendar, Page 3C
Community Calendar
Presentations covering
CMU’s services are available
administration, information
resource management and
leadership.
CMU offices are located in
Bldg. 50A, Area B, and
classes are held in the education and training flight
facility, Bldg. 50, Area B.
Presentations covering
CMU’s services are available
to all base offices. For more
information call 904-4804 or
252-5600. You may also
access the CMU Web site at
www.cel.cmich.edu/wrightpat.
Physician assistant program
The education and training flight will accept applications Oct. 1 through Jan. 24
for the physicians assistant
training program. Only
active duty enlisted Air
Force members (E-3 through
E-8) are eligible for this competitive program. Those
individuals who successfully
complete Phase I and Phase
II of the PA training program
will be commissioned in the
biomedical services corps.
For more information, call
Kristina Adkins at 904-4781.
Scholarships available
• Air Force Clubs scholarships — several scholarships
available. For more information, visit the Web site
http://www-p.afsv.af.mil or
call 257-8220.
• The Raymond L. Haas
Scholarship — For more
information, or to contribute
to the scholarship fund, call
Ed Marrinan at 562-5552.
Volunteers Needed
• Airmen Against Drunk
Driving — e-mail
[email protected].
• Officers wives club —
call Shannon Allard at 4263086.
• Family Services — call
257-2910.
• National Aviation Hall of
Fame — call 256-0944 ext. 20.
• Retiree Activities Office
— call retired Chief Master
Sgt. Marvin Dale at 257-3221.
Miscellaneous
An all-American evening
“An All-American
Evening” will be presented
by Fisher and Nightingale
Houses Inc. to benefit the
compassionate care facilities 6 p.m. Sept. 25 at the Air
Force Museum. The event
will feature bistro dining; a
wine, beer and soda open
bar; a silent auction; an
instrumental patriotic show
by Wright Brass; a live auction; and a “USO show” by
Rhythm in Shoes. Attire is
patriotic business casual.
See the Web site
www.fnhi.org for more information.
Story hour at the library
Due to the overwhelming
popularity of our Summer
Reading Club Story Hour,
the base library is offering a
second Story hour at 1 p.m.
Wednesdays. For the safety
of all, each story hour is
limit to 25 children. All children who will be participating in the activity must be
signed up in advance. Sign
up is available at the circulation desk or by calling 2574815.
Cub Scouts
Pack 162, sponsored by
Services, invites you and
your son to become a member. Contact Paul Leciejewski at 878-7681, Mark Rickert
at 879-7301 or visit
www.pack162.org for more
information.
Parents and Tots Playgroup
The Parents and Tots Play-
group is a socialization
group held around
lunchtime so that working
parents can participate.
The group meets 10:30 a.m.
to noon each Wednesday at
the community center. This
is a drop-in group, so no
registration is needed. Call
Annie Verschoore at 2574608 for more information.
Hourly care
If you need short-term
child care, hourly care
services are available 7:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday for $3.75 an
hour with a minimum of a
two-hour fee. Children six
months to 12 years of age
are accepted. Reservations
can be made up to two
weeks in advance on a
space-available, reservation basis. For more information, call the Kittyhawk
facility at 257-1086.
Social
Unless otherwise noted,
contact the Wright-Patterson
Club and Banquet Center at
257-9762, ext. 1 for information on any of the below programs.
Tuesday night barbecue
Stop by the club 5:30-8:30
p.m. every Tuesday night
for a backyard barbecue
buffet featuring fried
chicken, smoked beef
brisket, barbecue boneless
pork, home fries, smothered green beans, whipped
potatoes and salad bar.
And for dessert try the
pineapple upside down
cake or fruit cobbler. Cost
is $12.95, or $10.95 with the
card. Children ages 6-12 eat
for $5.95.
Club offers discount dues for
Airmen
Airman through Senior
August 6, 2004
Airman can now join the
Wright-Patterson Club for
$4 a month. The new Air
Force-wide program provides Airmen the opportunity to participate in the
club experience. On promotion to staff sergeant, a
member’s dues will be converted to the standard fee.
Prime rib night
Prime rib night is 5:30-9
p.m. every Saturday. Only
$12.95, or $10.95 if you show
The Card. Dining room
reservations are encouraged.
Sunday brunch
Take the entire family to
a champagne strawberry
Sunday brunch 10 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. every Sunday.
Price is $13.95, or $11.95
with the card. Children 6-12
eat for $5.95, and children 5
and under eat free.
Cook your own steak
Cook your own steak 57:30 p.m. every Sunday on
the club patio (weather
permitting). Grill your own
steak or boneless chicken
breast. Cost is $12.95 or
$10.95 with the card. Price
includes steak or chicken,
tossed salad, baked potato
with the fixings, vegetable
of the day, and rolls.
Annual club golf outing
Attention all golfers, the
Annual Wright-Patt Club
and Banquet Center golf
outing is scheduled for
Aug. 18 at Prairie Trace
Golf Course. Cost is $60 for
non-club and non golf
course members, $55 for
club members, $38 for golf
course members and $33
for club and golf course
members. Price includes
breakfast, lunch, cart and
prizes. Start the day off
with a continental breakfast, 8-8:45 a.m., followed by
a shotgun start at 9 a.m.
SKYWRIGHTER
3C
Reservations will be taken
through Aug. 13.
Putting contest
You could win $100 at
the club and banquet center putting contest 6:30
p.m. today. All club members are welcome. Sign up
in lounges starting at 5
p.m., and contest begins at
6:30 p.m. Win $100.
Crud night
Crud night is every Friday at the Flywright
Sports Hangar. Practice
starts at 5:30 p.m. Super
Social Hour is 4:30-6:30
p.m. Located at the top of
the hill in Area B, Bldg.
189. For more information,
call 255-7205.
Mongolian barbecue buffet
A Mongolian barbecue
buffet will be served 5:308:30 p.m. Aug. 26. Regular
price is $12.95, or $10.95
with The Card. Buffet
includes soup, salad bar
and dessert. Dining room
reservations are encouraged.
Mom’s night
Mom’s night will be 5:308:30 p.m. Aug. 12. Moms
receive up to $5 off the
normal menu. Dining
room reservations are
encouraged.
Retirees night
Retirees receive up to
$5 off the normal menu
5:30-8:30 p.m. Aug. 19. Dining room reservations are
encouraged.
Prime rib night
Every Saturday night,
5:30-8:30 p.m., is prime rib
night. Enjoy a prime rib
dinner at a great price,
only $12.95 with the card.
Regular price is $14.95.
Dining room reservations
are encouraged but are
not required.
CHAPEL
Sunday school
The Sunday school for Chapel 2
is at Bldg. 1222 across from the Kittyhawk Bowling Alley.
Sunday school takes place 9:3010:30 a.m.. Classes for children are
available as well as two adult
classes.
Become a tutor
Protestant youth services is looking for volunteer tutors in all sub-
Military marriage seminar
T
he ‘Military Ministry’ marriage seminar Oct. 1-2 will
equip couples with proven
principles for strengthening
their marriages. It is also a great
beginning for couples planning
to marry. During this seminar
you’ll learn how to:
• Receive your mate as a gift.
• Clarify your role as a husband or wife.
• Resolve conflict in the relationship.
• Maintain a vital sexual relationship.
• Deal with hurt and forgiveness.
• Respond to your mate in love
ject areas to assist students. Contact Anita Jones at 258-8593.
Chapel services
Saturday Mass: Chapel 3, 5 p.m.
Sunday Mass: Chapel 2, 9 a.m.;
Chapel 1, 11 a.m. Sacrament of
Reconciliation: Saturday, Chapel 3,
4-4:30 p.m. Preparation for the
sacrament of baptism and marriage: Contact Rick Lach at 2572909. Daily Mass: Chapel 1, 11:30
instead of anger.
• Increase your commitment,
creating an even deeper level
of intimacy.
The seminar is presented from
a Christian perspective, but is
universally applicable and all
are welcome. A registration
form can be found online at
www.ohiomarriageresources.org
/rac21.htm. The seminar meets 69:30 p.m. Oct. 1 and 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Oct. 2 at Bldg. 1222, Kittyhawk Center. The cost is $10 a
couple, which includes seminar
material, lunch, refreshments
and child care.
For information, call Capt.
Matthew Uber at Chapel 1, 2577427.
a.m., Monday through Friday.
Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults
The Rite of Christian Initiation
of Adults is the process by which
adults learn more about the
Catholic Church and its way of life.
If you are interested in becoming a
Catholic or would just like to learn
more about the Catholic faith, contact Deacon Robert Perry at 2572701 for more information.
Islam
Quran and Islamic education
will be held noon to 1 p.m. on the
third Friday of each month at
Chapel 3 in The Prairies at Wright
Field. For more information, call
Bassel Elnamara, Islamic lay coordinator, at 255-4086.
Education program
An interdenominational Christian education program is conducted every Sunday morning in
Area C at base operations (Bldg.
206).
Adult classes are available at
9:30 a.m. and at 10:15 a.m. A graded
Sunday School curriculum is available for children and young adults
9:30-10:15 a.m. A variety of interdenominational Sunday School
classes are available for adults
and children. For more informa-
tion, contact Gary Uremovich at
656-2386.
Catholic Young Adults
All are welcome to meet in the
new Chapel Family Life Center
across from Chapel 3 in The
Prairies at Wright Field 4:45-5:30
p.m. every other Friday for Bible
Study. The group is now studying
the Gospel of John. You may join
in any time and feel free to bring a
friend. For more information call
Mark McPherson at 878-4584.
Protestant
Sunday services: Wright-Patterson Medical Center Chapel (in the
basement) — 8:30 a.m.
Chapel 1 (Area C) — 9 a.m.
Chapel 2 (Kittyhawk Center) —
11 a.m. Chapel 3 (The Prairies at
Wright Field, formerly Page Manor
housing area) — 11 a.m.
Singles group
Thursday Night Together meets
for dinner and Bible study each
week at the home of Gary and Julia
Uremovich. Call 322-0359 for information.
Jewish
Jewish services, 7 p.m., Friday
at Chapel 3. Call Renee Peery at
271-3856 for summer schedule.
4C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Covered bridge motorcycle
ride
A self-guided 75-plus
mile motorcycle ride
through the countryside of
Greene County and
observe seven covered
bridges will be Saturday
beginning at Kirkmont
Presbyterian Church, 3377
Shakertown Road, Beavercreek. All motorcyclists
welcome. Registration will
begin at 10 a.m. in the
parking lot and the last
bike will go out at noon. A
requested donation of $10
a person will benefit the
Dayton Gospel Mission
and the House of Bread.
For additional information, contact Santo at 8395984 or Mark at 320-0217.
Free “sister city” concert
A high school orchestra
by a group from Augsburg,
Germany, Dayton’s “sister
city” will perform a free
classical concert at 8 p.m.
Sunday at RiverScape
MetroPark, 111 E. Monument Ave. between Jefferson Street and Patterson
Boulevard, Dayton. For
additional information,
contact Bob Wolff at 2292972 or (937) 253-7339.
Library scavenger hunt
Families wanting to
learn more about the
library can join a library
scavenger hunt at 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the Fairborn Community Library, 1
East Main Street. Register
by calling 878-9383.
Former POW to speak
Col. Edward L. Hubbard,
who spent almost seven
years as a POW in North
Vietnam, will speak at
11:30 a.m. Thursday at the
Greene County Fairgrounds Assembly Hall,
1000 Fairground Road,
Xenia. Tickets, which
include a boxed lunch,
will cost $10. Purchase
tickets at the Xenia Area
Chamber of Commerce,
334 West Market Street or
call 372-3591 for more
information.
Col. Hubbard will also
d
n
u
Aro n
tow
speak 7:30 a.m. Aug. 12 at
the Holiday Inn Dayton
Mall. The crux of his
speech is that anyone can
overcome adversity and
reach beyond the loftiest
of goals by developing a
positive, focused state of
mind. Reservations and
pre-payment of $10 for
breakfast are required —
call 433-2032 ext. 200. For
more information, call
Julia Maxton at 433-2032
ext. 103.
tion, call the Greene
County Park District at
562-7440 or 429-9590.
Singles dance parties
Singles dance parties
are 7:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Fridays at the Christopher
Club, 3150 Dixie Highway,
Kettering. Learn salsa
dancing 7:30-8:30 p.m. in
August for $3. People can
dance to variety of music
from ballroom to line
dancing until 12:30. There
is also swimming at 9 p.m.
The cost is $6. Dances are
also 8-9:30 p.m. Fridays at
the Epiphany Lutheran
Church, 6430 Far Hills
Ave., Centerville. Get to
know a little about 12-15
others in a discussion
group or around the card
tables. Continue the
evening dancing and
swimming at the Christopher Club, all for $3, or
join us at any of our other
monthly activities. For
more information, call 6403015.
Library Saturday story time
Kids ages 3-7 can learn
about Woodland Indians
during Saturday Story
Time at 11 a.m. Aug. 14 at
the Beavercreek Community Library, 3618 DaytonXenia Road. Native American stories will be shared
and a special guest will
show samples of Indian
tools and clothing and
learn about skills Ohio
Indians needed in order to
survive. For more information, call 376-2996 ext. 206.
Hypotenuse gallery
Student artists will
exhibit their art work in
the Hypotenuse Gallery at
Dayton’s Sinclair Community College through September 8. The gallery is
located on the third floor
of Bldg. 13, at the Bldg. 9
walkway, located at West
Fifth and South Perry
streets. The exhibit is
open during normal campus visiting hours. For
more information, call 5122253 or 512-5381 or visit
www.sinclair.edu/facilities/galleries.
Bike hike
The Greene County Park
District will have a free
bike hike at 2 p.m. August
15 at Old Town Reserve
located on Old Springfield
Pike, just off of St. Rt. 68
North in Xenia. This ride
will be at least 10 miles
long, but participants can
turn back at any time for a
shorter ride. Children
ages 14 and younger must
be accompanied by an
adult. For more informa-
Free hunter’s education
course
The Greene County Park
District Ranger Division
will offer a free hunter’s
education course 6-9:30
p.m. Aug. 16-18 at the
Greene County Social Service Center Media Room,
541 Ledbetter Road in
Xenia. The course will
expand knowledge of guns,
bow safety, types of ammunition and safety in the
field. Participants age 12
PITSENBARGER MENUS
Luncheon menu Aug. 7-13
Saturday: grilled sirloin steak, Cajun
meat loaf, baked chicken. Special: corn
dogs.
Sunday: baked tuna and noodles, sauerbraten, parmesan chicken breasts.
Special: pizza
Monday: Swiss steak with tomato
sauce, baked chicken, baked sweet Italian sausage. Special: fried chicken
nuggets.
Tuesday: beef yakisoba, pork
schnitzel, lemon baked fish. Specials:
grilled Reuben sandwich, sloppy joe.
Wednesday: beef porcupines, chicken
enchiladas, Caribbean jerked chicken.
Specials: hot wings, turkey hot shots,
pizza.
Thursday: grilled liver with onions,
tempura fried fish, orange spiced pork
chops. Special: tacos.
Aug. 13: beef and corn pie, fried
shrimp, roast turkey. Specials: barbecue pork sandwich and fish sandwich.
Dinner menu Aug. 7-13
Saturday: pork chops with mushroom
gravy, fish almondine, chicken and broccoli stir fry. Special: corn dog.
Sunday: spinach lasagna, fried shrimp,
gingered barbecue chicken. Special:
pepperoni pizza.
Monday: baked ham with raisin sauce,
fish and chips, roast turkey. Special:
fried chicken nuggets.
Tuesday: paprika beef, barbecue beef
cubes, chicken fajitas. Special: grilled
Reuben sandwich, sloppy joe.
Wednesday: country style steak, fried
chicken, pita pizza. Special: hot wings,
turkey hot shots, pizza.
Thursday: pepper steak, Mr. Z’s
chicken fillets, pasta primavera. Special: tacos.
Aug. 13: corned beef, pineapple
chicken, Yankee pot roast. Special: barbecue pork sandwich, fish sandwich.
Menus are subject to change without
notice.
and under must be
accompanied by an adult.
For further information
or to register, call 5627440.
Sept. 11 salute
“Salute to the Brave —
Our Heroes,” — a concert
and tribute — will be 8
p.m. Sept. 11 at Fraze
Pavilion in Kettering. The
event is to honor active
duty military people,
Prisoners of War and
those Missing in Action,
veterans, civil servants,
and those whose lives
were lost in acts of terror
or service. A memorial
wall and living tribute
video will be part of the
ceremony, and people can
have their name or family
member’s name added to
the memorial register at
www.fairhavenchurch.org
or calling 434-8630. Salute
to the Brave — Our
Heroes will be a free.
Tickets will be available
at the Fraze box office.
For more information on
tickets, call 434-8627.
Parks offer rentals
At Dayton’s RiverScape
MetroPark, 111 East Monument Avenue, Dayton,
people can rent a boat,
bike, or in-line skates,
take a tour of Dayton, let
the kids play in a fountain
and more.
At Ride the River
Rentals, rent pedal boats,
HydroBikes, tandem bicycles, roller blades and
coaster bicycles, in youth
and adult sizes with an
assortment of child
attachments available. A
state identification or driver’s license is required
for all rentals. Call 2227135 for rates.
American Veterans Traveling Tribute
The American Veterans
Traveling Tribute, a
scaled-down replica of
the Vietnam Veteran’s
Wall in Washington D.C.
will be presented in Troy
at the VFW Post 5436,
2220 Lefevre Road, Sept.
2-6. Admission is free and
the display will be open
to the public 24 hours a
day. The official cere-
How to
submit to
Around Town
Skywrighter publishes
“Around Town” submissions that arrive via email at the below
address. All submissions are considered for
publication on a spaceavailable basis. Deadline
is close of business Friday for the following Friday’s edition. The
appearance of
announcements by arts
and entertainment
organizations in the
community does not
constitute endorsement
by the Air Force or Department of Defense.
For more information,
call 522-3251.
[email protected]
monies will be 11 a.m.
Sept. 4, with retired Col.
Mike Turner giving a
keynote address and the
Air Force Band of Flight
providing music. For more
information, call 339-5533.
Crochet guild
The Greater Dayton Crochet Guild meets at 7 p.m.
the first Monday of each
month at the Lohrey Center, 2366 Glenarm Ave.,
Dayton. Interested people
can learn new techniques
and patterns. The guild
will hold a Stitch-In for
the June meeting. For further information, call 3333131.
Library reading program
Children in kindergarten through grade 12
can join a summer reading
program at the Greene
County Public Libraries
that will continue
throughout the summer.
Incentives, including
coupons for free books,
will be awarded to participants. Visit your local
library for a schedule of
special programs and to
register.
The Greene County Public Library system is available on the Internet at
www.greenelibrary.info.
BASE THEATER
White Chicks (PG-13)
• 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday, — 2 p.m. Saturday
—105 minutes, Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans
(crude/sexual
humor, language, and
some drug content)
Now Showing
The Notebook
(PG-13)
• 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
— 121 minutes,
James Garner,
Gena Rowlands
(some sexuality)
Adults — $3
Children (10 and under) — $1.50
August 6, 2004
HUBER HEIGHTS
237-5900 • 800-878-3705
Kelly Anderson
Cheryl Arnold
Lloyd Hurst
Larry Jordan
Peggy Jordan
Stan Kersey
Linda Kreider
Ken Landis
Marlene Leffel
Monte Lynam
Sharon Lynch
Carolyn Miller
Wayne Miller
Erleen Molder
Kelly Moore
Bob Murray
Rita O’Leary
Eileen Pearl
Judy Lesley Reed
Christine Sink
Mary Spiller
Alvada Stanley
Margaret Stiggers
Gary Stroebel
Steve Strong
Jan Vargo
Kelly Verdier
475-6544
233-3664
667-2379
454-5001
454-5001
667-5400
545-2870
290-9240
233-2133
237-1566
287-7827
669-9774
237-2040
235-2271
322-6111
237-5900
233-2795
287-2317
480-6060
391-5924
667-4934
667-7191
236-7185
890-7369
237-9750
236-5385
274-2290
BEAVERCREEK
426-6060 • 429-3100
800-821-7427
Fern Babcock
Howard Back
Keith Brown
Dwight Caudill
Dan Dailey
Ty Davidson
Lavae Dierker
Louis Dockery
Vickie Gladney
Becky Grant
Jack Horstman
Lloyd Keller
Angie Kerr
Nancy Magnon
Eric Mott
Karen Mowery
Patricia Neel
Esther North
Ruth Norton
Joanne Petering
Sam Porter
Liz Richards
Benita Shea
Judy Telzerow
Dennis Terry
Dawn Thomas
Wanda Whitt
Bambi Williams
Darrell Williams
Elvin Winslow
237-8025
233-2470
434-8592
233-6418
657-5187
603-0583
286-3100
623-7682
672-2365
307-0936
657-5806
426-0807
620-2086
477-7941
623-1391
248-5951
478-2706
864-4590
864-4594
426-8955
426-0925
433-1000
431-1180
427-3757
477-0574
256-6604
671-0615
767-1006
609-0156
864-4594
FAIRBORN
879-3060 • 800-543-7798
Mary Chidester
Kim Fox
Kimberly Hill
Phil Keller
Mary Beth Larson
Joe Martin
Bonnie Maxson
Mynette “Mickie” Murrell
Bill Ramsey
Ken Riber
Sherry Riber
Bill Richard
Len Smith
Shana Spears
Diana Stevenson
Adriana Sutton
Phyllis Szary
Sally Valley
Russell Walker
Tom Wenzel
Deborah Wittig
348311
879-7872
429-3715
879-2831
482-0082
572-4454
320-1946
879-3060
397-3428
878-7007
470-7033
470-7033
307-9096
236-4549
489-0082
864-4297
237-9743
671-5288
864-5529
767-7656
429-3178
754-0901
Location
Arcanum
Bath Twp.
Bath Twp.
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Beavercreek
Bellbrook
Bellbrook
Bellbrook
Belmont
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Dayton
Fairborn
Fairborn
Fairborn
Fairborn
Fairborn
Fairborn
Fairborn
Forest Ridge
Forest Ridge
Germantown
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Huber Heights
Jamestown
Lebanon
Miami Twp
Miamisburg
Miamisburg
New Carlisle
New Carlisle
New Carlisle
New Carlisle
New Carlisle
New Carlisle
Springfield
Springfield
Trotwood
Trotwood
Troy
Vandalia
Xenia
Xenia
Xenia
Address
1485 St Rt 503
4405 Baker Rd.
3790 Beaconview
3548 Eastmoor Dr.
1601 Red Fox Dr.
2829 Russell
964 Ludlow Rd
3033 Southfield
1383 Meadow Bridge
584 Breckenridge Way
1015 Beaver Valley
90 S Fairfield
695 Jayell Dr
3585 King Edward
114 Darst Rd
3583 King Henry
3602 King Henry
2469 Lantz Rd
4347 Kemp Rd
115 Signature S
1268 Fudge Dr$
174 Wynstone
3665 Westwind
1377 Hickory
Lot 106 Homestead
2540 Eagle View
572 Alex Ct
4111 Wagner Rd
280 S Alpha Bellbrook
2110 King Ave
4333-36 Springfield St.
732 Huffman Ave.
1201 Vernon
2709 Dwight Ave
1918 Wyoming Ave
7815 N.Main #2
2358 Rustic Rd.
125 Alaska St.
69 Fernwood
135 Alton Ave
531 Heiss Ave
1690 Little York Rd.
0 Greeley Ave
4434 Acclivis Dr.
1380 Stonehaven
1374 Stonehaven
368 Woodlawn Dr.
105 Frahn Ave.
1528 Superior Ave.
210 Blair Dr.
2100 Wellington Ct.
3808 Lacoda Dr
5440 Signet Dr
20 Prairie Place
7770 Somerville
4631 Korner Dr.
7311 Cosner Dr.
7846 Harshmanville
6671 Harshmanville
6740 Spokane Dr
5742 Beth Rd.
5631 Benedict Rd.
8425 Eagle Pass
6100 Hemingway Rd.
8377 Eagle Pass
7042 Sandalview Dr
6628 Dial Drive
4724 Millridge Rd
7358 Windsor Ridge
8151 Shull Rd.
4738 Rittenhouse Dr.
3053 St. Rt. 72
2804 Quail Field Dr.
2383 Munger Pt
1607 Sue Ave
10135 Edgerton Dr.
3158 Spence Rd
737 Bellows
1123 Frayne Dr.
520 Church St.
1043 Campbell
154 Stratmore
1130 Oak St.
3430 Kenerly
4155 Redonda Ln
4021 Palos Verdes Ct
218 S. Williams St.
171 Larry Ave.
1809 Parkview Dr
1358 Vimla Way
220 Bedford
Price
$325,000
$182,000
$169,900
$249,900
$164,900
$164,900
$199,900
$248,000
$148,500
$172,900
$219,900
$319,720
$154,900
$193,720
$137,900
$149,720
$168,000
$159,900
$399,900
$795,000
155,000
$410,000
$274,900
$109,000
$249,900
$229,900
$424,900
$274,900
$130,000
$86,720
$25,900
$57,000
$67,000
$99,900
$61,250
$61,900
$65,925
$65,900
$59,900
$76,900
$79,500
$115,900
$162,900
$169,900
$204,900
$194,500
$128,900
$104,900
$49,971
$118,770
$115,900
$219,900
$130,500
$167,000
$87,900
$87,900
$89,900
$89,900
$91,900
$95,900
$99,900
$105,900
$106,900
$109,900
$115,900
$124,900
$131,900
$220,000
$249,900
$346,900
$94,900
$68,900
$145,000
$215,000
$149,900
$189,900
$279,900
$69,900
$79,900
$88,000
$89,928
$94,900
$67,500
$219,900
$71,500
$119,900
$61,937
$134,900
$174,500
$158,720
$94,900
Style
1 STY
1 STY
1 STY
TRI
1 STY
1 STY
1 STY
TRI
1 STY
1 STY
1 STY
2 STY
1 STY
2 STY
1 STY
2 STY
2 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1 STY
1 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1 STY
2 STY
1 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1.5 STY
2 STY
1 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1.5 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1.5STY
2 STY
2 STY
2 STY
2 STY
1.5 STY
1 STY
2 STY
2 STY
2 STY
Heat Cool
GAS
CEN
PROP CEN
OIL
CEN
INDIV CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
ELE
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
OIL
NO
PUMP CEN
GAS
CEN
OIL
CEN
GAS
CEN
EHP
CEN
OIL
WIN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
ELE
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
NO
GAS
NO
GAS
NO
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
ELEC
CEN
GAS
NO
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
OIL
WIN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
GAS
CEN
1.5 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
NO
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
TRI
HP
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
NO
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1.5 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1.5 STY PROP CEN
1 STY ELEC
CEN
2 STY HP
CEN
BI
GAS
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY OIL
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
NO
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
CEN
2 STY ELEC
CEN
1 STY GAS
NO
2 STY ELEC
CEN
TRI
GAS
CEN
2 STY GAS
CEN
1 STY GAS
NO
Bd
3
4
3
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
5
3
3
3
2
4
3
5
4
2
3
1
3
4
4
3
2
2
2
2
4
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
3
2
3
3
4
3
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
4
3
4
3
3
3
4
3
3
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
3
3
2
2
4
4
3
Ba Lav
2
1
2
0
1
1
3
1
2
0
2
NO
2
NO
2
1
2
NO
2
NO
2
NO
3
1
2
NO
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
NO
4
NO
3
1
2
NO
2
1
3
1
1
NO
2
1
3
NO
3
1
2
1
1
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
1
2
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
1
1
NO
2
NO
1
NO
2
NO
1
1
2
NO
2
NO
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
NO
1
NO
1
1
2
NO
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
NO
1
NO
2
NO
2
NO
2
NO
2
NO
2
NO
1
NO
1
1
1
NO
2
NO
2
NO
2
1
2
NO
3
NO
2
NO
1
NO
2
NO
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
NO
1
NO
2
1
2
NO
2
1
1
NO
2
NO
2
1
2
1
1
1
Bsmt
NO
NO
FULL
TRI
NO
CRAL
NO
FIN
NO
NO
NO
FULL
CRAL
SLAB
FULL
SLAB
SLAB
FULL
NO
FIN
PART
NO
NO
NO
FULL
FULL
W/O
NO
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
NO
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
FULL
NO
FULL
FULL
FULL
NO
FULL
NO
NO
NO
FULL
CRAL
FULL
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
FULL
FULL
NO
NO
NO
PAR
FULL
NO
FULL
2CA
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
PAR
PART
NO
NO
NO
NO
PART
FULL
NO
Gar
Listing Agent
2 CA
Patt Neel
4 CA
Bonnie Maxson
2 CA
Erleen Molder
2 CA
B.Richard/J.Martin
3 CA
Kim Fox
2 ATT Benita Shea
2 CA
Esther North
2 ATT Patt Neel
2 CA
Nancy Magnon
2 CA
Nancy Magnon
4 ATT Karen Mowery
2 ATT Angie Kerr
2 ATT Benita Shea
2 ATT Angie Kerr
2 CA
Lavae Dierker
2 ATT Angie Kerr
2 ATT Benita Shea
NO
Wanda Whitt
2 CA
Dennis Terry
3 CA
Nancy Magnon
2 ATT Patt Neel
2 ATT Nancy Magnon
2 CA
Patt Neel
1.5 CA Wanda Whitt
2 CA
Nancy Magnon
2 ATT Nancy Magnon
3 CA
Dennis Terry
3 CA
Dennis Terry
NO
Louis Dockery
NO
Angie Kerr
NO
P Keller/S Spears
2 CA
Adriana Sutton
2 CA
Adriana Sutton
2.5 CA Darrell Williams
2 CA
Kelly Verdier
NO
Larry E. Jordan
1 CA
Lloyd R. Hurst
2 CA
Kelly Verdier
2 CA
Margaret Stiggers
3 CA
Larry Jordan
2 CA
Stanley Kersey
2 CA
Kelly Moore
2 CA
Monte R. Lynam
2 CA
Margaret Stiggers
2 ATT Benita Shea
2 ATT Benita Shea
2 CA
Sherry/Ken Riber
3 CA
Micki Murrell
NO
PKeller/S Spears
1 CA
Debbie Wittig/AO
2 CA
P Keller/S Spears
2 CA
Patt Neel
2 CA
Fern Babcock
2 CA
J. Steve Strong
1 CA
Stanley Kersey
1 CA
Wayne Miller
1 CA
Peggy L. Jordan
1 CA
Margaret A. Stiggers
1 CA
Peggy L. Jordan
NO
Margaret Stiggers
1 CA
Stanley Kersey
NO
Eileen Pearl
2 CA
Margaret Stiggers
1 CA
Wayne E. Miller
2 CA
Mary Toomey
2 CA
Judy Reed
2 CA
Margaret Stiggers
2 CA
Mary L. Toomey
2 CA
Ken Landis
4 CA
Kelly Moore
1 CA
B.Richard/J.Martin
1 CA
P Keller/S Spears
2 CA
Christine Sink
2 ATT Dawn Thomas
2 ATT Vickie Gladney
2 CA
P Keller/S Spears
CRAW Ruth & Elvin
NO
Sharon Lynch
1 CA
Marlene Leffel
NO
J. Steve Strong
NO
Lloyd Hurst
NO
Kelly Moore
1 CA
Linda Kreider
4 CA
Ruth & Elvin
NO
Kelly Verdier
2 CA
Wayne E. Miller
DET
Kelly Anderson
1 CA
Larry Jordan
2 CA
Patt Neel
2 CA
Angie Kerr
1 CA
Alvada Stanley
SKYWRIGHTER
Phone #
478-2706
882-6025
776-8898
879-3060
429-3715
431-1180
864-4590
478-2706
477-7941
477-7941
248-5951
620-2086
431-1180
620-2086
286-3100
620-2086
431-1180
671-0615
477-0574
477-7941
478-2706
477-7941
478-2706
671-0615
477-7941
477-9412
477-0574
477-0574
623-6822
620-2086
482-0082
237-9743
237-9743
609-0156
684-5840
454-5001
750-2379
684-5840
236-7185
454-5001
667-5400
271-6063
237-1566
236-7185
431-1180
431-1180
470-7033
397-3428
482-0082
754-0901
482-0082
478-2706
237-8025
245-2339
667-5400
684-3022
454-5001
236-7185
454-5001
236-7185
667-5400
287-2317
236-7185
684-3022
684-3377
237-5900
236-7185
684-3377
290-9240
271-6063
879-3060
482-0082
391-5924
554-5626
672-2365
482-0082
864-4594
287-7827
233-2133
245-2339
667-2379
271-6063
545-2872
864-4594
684-5840
684-3022
475-6544
454-5001
478-2706
620-2086
974-5844
5C
MLS#
263509
248669
250324
259249
262413
263449
260498
261358
260986
257406
259364
260451
259800
258471
255849
254605
262493
252307
251226
246667
262020
245139
258038
258142
258602
262126
258102
234984
253985
256773
228237
240793
233723
263458
251195
254838
253089
249232
258752
257255
252419
247472
250439
256980
261198
261650
256807
244301
263090
257546
258103
253547
262263
260272
254873
262335
258073
257294
261204
243222
252937
251238
262406
258586
256967
259706
257291
244540
253816
247074
243528
249396
260918
258553
253995
260516
252446
257297
257151
258926
259823
257323
251125
263285
255045
245419
258571
260536
262931
262327
259606
6C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
RE/MAX HomeBase
633 N. Broad St.
Fairborn, OH. 45324
(937) 878-5993
Every time we sell a home a child benefits
Fairborn Sales
(937) 879-3662
Beavercreek Sales
(937)429-9292
1-800-345-3198
PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
(937) 878-2221
FAIRBORN - Sharp ranch, 3 BD, 1 BA. Remodeled kit. has light
oak cabinetry & ceramic tile. Vinyl siding, replacement wins. &
added attic insulation. Fenced yard w/deck & storage building.
$84,900. Call Jan Miller or Mary Kruzick 334-6498. E252773.
HUBER HEIGHTS - 3 BD, 2 BA, 2 car garage. Shamrock Model
w/10x19 patio room. Nicely updated. New heat pump, brick
raised hearth WBFP, updated kit, neutral decor. $113,900. Call
Jan Miller or Mary Kruzick 334-6498. A261954.
FAIRBORN - Mitman Park. Immaculate 4BD, 1.5 BA ranch w/full
bsmt, all appliances, 1.5 car gar., 9x14 patio room, hardwood
floors under carpet. 97x110 lot! $119,900. Call Jan Miller or
Mary Kruzick 334-6498. L261438
FAIRBORN - 4.5 acres located across from Park Huffman.
Designed & built by architect Harry Williams. Constructed in
1940. This home feat. 3 BD, 2 BA & bsmt. Large liv rm feat.
vaulted redwood ceiling, fireplace & built in bookcases. Wood
floors throughout. Exterior feat. incl. slate roof & redwood siding. Jan Miller/Mary Kruzick. 334-6498. L249168
21 S. Broad Street, Fairborn, OH 45324
http://www.wright-patt.com
Connie Armitage
Connie Brown
Steve Cassada
La Krisha Dinwiddie
Sharron Estep
Joe Flatter, Jr.
Bill Grosscup
Rob Hoffman
Diana Jones
878-7667
572-1005
237-8677
304-1495
477-0629
623-2401
684-2480
545-2730
879-3662
Zack Lee
David Love
Cathy Crouch Lykins
Ann Mentzer
Mary Rife
Larry Thacker
Jim Villines
Jerry Williams
Fern Wright
219-6798
623-0463
237-1323
878-3833
545-4937
879-0512
436-5294
478-7601
477-7546
HOME OF THE WEEK
FAIRBORN- 2 BD bungalow w/liv rm, large eat-in kit, 1 BA, 1 dry
rm, large 1.5 car det gar w/storage rm & extra lot w/storage
shed. $69,900. Call Sandy Smith 864-2463, D261071
FAIRBORN - This 4 BD Cape Cod w/full semi-fin bsmt is so convenient to WPAFB & I-675. Replacement wins, newer c/a, fenced
yard & carport, covered front porch. $101,000. Call Sandy Smith
864-2463. H262621
BELLBROOK - Ranch in Bellbrook, nice ranch w/1180 sq ft, 3 BD,
fireplace, remodeled BA, fresh paint, ceramic tile, fam rm, 2 car
gar, fenced yard. $102,000. Call Sandy Smith 864-2463.
B255977
HUBER HEIGHTS - 2 story Executive model, 4 BD, 2.5 BA, master BD w/walk-in closet, remodeled master BA. Some new carpet, fresh paint, new kit sink & water softener, 2 refrig stay plus
washer & dryer. $115,000. Call Sandy Smith 864-2463. B238188
www.realtor.com/dayton/remaxhomebase
348310
ext. 46
Riverside 4501 Silver Oak Dr.
OPEN SUN 2-4PM
Forest Ridge $151,900
Hartford floor plan 3-4 bedroom ranch with 2 bathrooms and 2 car
garage. Nicely decorated, new floor coverings, semi-finished basement and wood burning fire place with insert. Mad River Schoold
district. $180.00 yearly association fee includes pool, tennis and
basketball courts, and green space maintenance. Call Jim Villines
436-5294 Dir– Union Schoolhouse to West on Forest Ridge Blvd. to
North on Silver Oak.
Fairborn-1926 Centralia St-3 Bedroom Ranch, 1 1/2 Baths, W/one Car Attached Garage, $121,900 LaKrishna Dinwiddie 304-1495
Fairborn- 634 N Broad St - Commercial, Restaurant Bar, Possible Seller Financing $379,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn-809 S. Maple Ave - REDUCED! 3-4 Bedroom Cape Cod, 2 Car Detached Garage, Full Basement $89,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn- 1415 Sunset Drive- Beautiful 3 Bedroom Estate On Almost An Acre, Nice Location, $219,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn—524 Van Tress Dr - Large 4 Bedroom Ranch W/2 Baths & 1 Car Attached Garage $104,900 Ann Mentzer 878-3833
Fairborn—114 Greene St..-3 Bedroom Cape Cod w/Partial Basement, 1 Bath, 1 Car Garage, Florida Room $105,900 Bill Grosscup 984-2480
Fairborn-263 Chatham Drive-3 Bedroom, I 1/2 Bath Updated Home In Forest Hills $129,900 Sharron Estep 477-0629
Fairborn— 310 Clover St.-Updated 2 Bedroom With Full Basement anf Detached 2 Car Garage $79,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn-123 Marchmont -Extraordinary 3 Bedroom, Completely Redone, New Doors, Windows, Gutters,... $89,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn- 1881 Superior Ave..-3 Bedroom, Ranch With 1 Bath, & Partial Basement, C/A, New Shingles, $81,000 Connie Brown 572-1005
Fairborn- 28 Rossmore Drive-Much Larger Than Your Typical Pleasant View Home, 3 Bed/Fam Rm /Garage $93,900 Connie Armitage 878-7667
Fairborn-106 Fitchland Dr.-3 Bedroom, Det. I Car Garage, “As Is” Condition (Fumace Replacement Possible) $63,900 Sharron Estep 477-0629
Fairborn-706 Hidden Valley Ct.-2 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Bath Townhouse Condo, Great Location & Condition, $97,900 Bill Grosscup 684-2480
Fairborn- 1429 Ironwood Dr. -3 Bedroom, Extra Gate & Fencing In Shed To Enclose Backyard, Esy To Show $79,500 Mary Rife 545 4937
With so much information out there, it’s easy
to be overwhelmed. Don’t get sidetracked;
start your search in the right place: The
Skywrighter Employment Section. You’ll find
an extensive listing of jobs and new listings
are added every week. So, whether you’re
taking your first step or your fifth,
296-4202
... give the Classifieds a look.
Fairborn-991 Fred Johnson Dr.-Spacious 4 Bedrm Home, Still Under Construction, Near Twin Towers, $339,900 LaKrisha Dinwiddie 304-1495
Fairborn- “0” Byron Rd.- Approximately I 1/2 Acre Lot-Wooded, Comer Lot $42,900 Jim Villines 879-3662
Fairborn- “0” Herr Rd.- Approx. 5 Acre Lot- Reduced for Quick Sale, 241 Ft of Frontage, Financing Avail $74,400 Jim Villines 879-3662
Beavercreek- New Germany Trebein Rd.-3 Bedrm, Ranch With 3 Partially Wooded Acres Near The Mall, $209,900 Sharron Estep 477-0629
Beavercreek- 2394 Patrick Blvd-2 Bdrm Ranch Condo with Patio, 2 Baths, & 2 Car Att’d gar, Gas Fpl,, Pnvate Location $137,900 Jerry E Williams 478-760l
Beavercreek- 2395 Patrick Blvd- 3 Bdrm Ranch Condo, 2 Ba & 2 Car Attached Garage, Fla Room & Gas Fpl $169,900 Bill Grosscup 684-2480
Cedarville-38 W North St. -Home Built in 1900 w/3 Highly Rentable Units, Sold “As Is” Conditions, $125,000 Mary Rife 545-4937
Clifton-189 High Street- Large 3 bdrm Tri-Level situated on 2.9 acres (a whole block!) in the histonc village of Clifton $249,900 Mary Rife s4s-6798
348313
*OPEN SUNDAY 2-4
Simplify
your entertaining
with our
award-winning
catering!
*Anniversaries * Luncheons
*Parties *Picnics
*Formal Affairs *Weddings
*Birthdays *Rehearsal Dinners
Call the
Wright-Patterson Club & Banquet Center
at 257-7826
for all your catering needs.
10C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
P E R S O NA L I Z E D S E RV I C E
Trust these professionals for your buying/selling needs
Specializing in the
Wright-Patt Area
Associate Partner
Broker on deposit
GRI, CRS
full time experience
since 1979
Fern Babcock
237-8025
[email protected]
352873
MOVING?
EXPERIENCED
TERRY RICHMAN & LEAH HALFPAP
TEAMWORK
477-2050
609-5567
WORKS FOR YOU! [email protected] [email protected]
Ann D. Smith
Realtor®
426-0800
Direct: 431-7422
or 431-7423
21 Years in US Military
Primary: 937-304-5655
Secondary: 937-433-8324
Business: 937-433-3300
VM: 937-428-1596 • FAX: 937-433-1374
email: [email protected]
271830
352875
Gail Schikora, Broker Agent
“Committed To Selling Excellence”
Military Relocation Specialist
!! NEW LISTING !!
Lovingly cared for, warm &
welcoming 3 br brick ranch in
quiet location with very
private and professionally
landscaped half acre lot. You
will not be disappointed!
$164,900 .. #263449
[email protected]
1-800-599-8936 or 937-426-7070
The Professional’s
Choice
Benita Shea, CRS,GRI No one can illuminate the details on today’s housing market
Associate Partner, REALTOR
(937) 431-1180
(937) 477-2335
[email protected]
www.benitashea.com
271821
271827
like a qualified, experienced real estate professional. When
you need housing information, please give me a call!
Selling ... Buying ... Relocating
CALL...BENITA SHEA
Your “WrightMove” Connection
For Information About Advertising In The Personalized Service Section,
Please Call Christy At 290-7145 or Deb at 290-7133
271820
8C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
$124,900
EN Y M
OP NDA 2-4P
U
S t 8,
s
gu
Au
Skills
D ev e l o p m e n t
Center
your hobby and
craft source!
You can frame a picture,
order a plaque, pick up
a silk-screened T-shirt,
864-7386
Dee Harrison 864-7389 • Joan Butz 767-9915
Ron Murphy 864-3671 • Tausha Metz 864-7574
••••••••••••••••••••
REAL ESTATE TO SELL AT 12 NOON
Kettering, cathedral ceiling, 3 bed/2 full bath/2 car ranch with newer roof and
updated baths. Ceiling fan and track lighting. Upgraded light switches.
Wilmington Pike to 4341 Wallington.
Bob “Papy” Papajcik
Woodbourne Real Estate Inc.
937-478-8738
937-427-2991
FOREST RIDGE AREA
AT 3771 W. ENON RD., YELLOW SPRINGS
Woodbourne
Real Estate, Inc.
$289,900
Looking for a
unique home on
3+ acres? Would
you like to live in
your own “castle”?
This
modern
home with English
Tudor details has so many unique features, lots of oak woodwork. 7895 West Hyland, right by the Montgomery/Greene county border, Huber Heights and WPAFB.
271945
937-663-4184/937-652-1974
352884
7153 Dayton, Rd. • Enon, OH
ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 7th AT 10:00 A.M.
Pam Miller Howard
REMAX RESOURCES
(937) 608-0643
RESOURCES
$91,900
DAYTON
New Listing! Riverside
ranch,
Beavercreek
Schools, just $91,900!
This cute and cozy 3
bedroom ranch is neat,
clean and in move-in
condition. Large corner
lot with completely
fenced yard including
part privacy fence in rear - great if you have children or pets. Large bay
window in living rm - newer windows. CENTRAL AIR. Qualifies for VA, or
Good Neighbor 0 down, first-time buyer financing. Call Pam to make it
yours. 5540 Penn Avenue. MLS# 260910
271946
henderson
Royal Crest
Realty, Inc.
OF SPLIT LEVEL HOME ON 3.99 ACRES
IN BATH TWP., YELLOW SPRINGS
PLUS A CAR, FURNITURE, APPLIANCES,
ELECTRONICS AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Pam Miller Howard
REMAX RESOURCES
(937) 608-0643
For Photos Or A Brochure Visit On Line At:
ALSO KNOWN AS
637 WEST DAYTON-YELLOW SPRINGS RD.
271948
Located in southern
Graham
District.
7378 Grayson Drive
has a Springfield
address. This 2000
sq ft home offers 3
bedrooms, 2 full
baths and a great
family room on it’s
lower level. The
appliances
stay!
You’ll love the huge
backyard. $147,000.
Please call Gina
Roseberry at 6537781
We Sell The Enon Area!
HILES PUBLIC AUCTION
www.HomesInEnon.com
or
www.RoyalCrestRealty.net
(LOCATED: ON THE CORNER OF W. ENON RD. &
DAYTON Y.S. RD.
(DIRECTIONS: 2 MILES WEST OF YELLOW SPRINGS
OUT DAYTON ST.)
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4
1508 BROADWAY ST.
Well-updated 2 bedroom Springfield home.
Gas heat & central air, vinyl exterior,
detached garage on a deep lot. AHS Select
Home Warranty. $71,500. Dir: East on
Dayton Rd. (becomes Bechtle), left on
Broadway St. (1529)
BRICK DOUBLE
This Fairborn ranch features 2 bedrooms &
laundry room on each side. Off-street parking. One side vacant. $84,900. (1528)
NICE BONUSES
This 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch features large
eat-in kitchen, family room, French doors
lead to patio, 2 car attached garage. Just
east of Enon. AHS Home Warranty.
$139,900. (1517)
3 CAR GARAGE
Charming 3 bedroom ranch in Enon. Lovely
half acre lot, mature trees, 1 car attached
garage and 2 car detached garage. AHS
Select Home Warranty. $114,500. (1527)
BUILT IN 2001
Country 4 bedroom 2-story on 1.6 acres
just east of Fairborn, 3 car attached garage
plus 2 car detached garage. Basement partially finished & an inground pool. Many
quality upgrades. $384,900. (1515)
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4
5334 DRYDEN ST.
NEW LISTING. HOLIDAY VALLEY. Well
updated Enon 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath brick
ranch with fireplace. Cozy backyard that
backs to a field and has a large paver brick
patio with hot tub. AHS Home Warranty.
$116,500. Dir: Dayton Rd., south on Hahn,
right on Dryden St. (1530)
*DESCRIPTION: This tri-level home sits on a corner lot and has
lots to offer. It has 3 bedrooms and a bath up. The center level has a
K, DR and large LR area. The lower level has an office, 1/2 bath,
utility room, family room & a drive in 2 car garage. The home also
has a 3 car detached garage, metal pole barn, rear deck and utility
shed. The home offers a 300.87’ frontage on W. Dayton Yellow
Springs Rd., and 583.73 frontage on W. Enon Rd. (3.99 acres total).
The home is in need of some repairs and updates, but will be beautiful. Come see at the open house!
*OPEN MONDAY, AUG. 2nd FROM 5 TO 7 PM*
*TERMS: Property sells to the highest bidder subject to confirmation! 5% earnest deposit required day of sale, balance at closing
within 30 days. Taxes prorated to day of closing, immediate occupancy. Inspections or appraisals may be done prior to auction.
Property being sold free of all liens & in as-is condition!
*VEHICLE: 1985 Mazda 626 - 2 door hatchback, will need some
TLC.
*FURNITURE & APPLIANCES: Sears 2 door refrigerator, enamel top table, formica dinette set w/6 swivel chairs, file cabinet, desk,
rockers, electric lift chair, bent wood hall tree, ent. center, end tables,
full mahog. sleigh bed, dresser, sectional couch, wall units, walnut
desk, metal shelving, stands and more!
*LOTS OF ELECTRONICS & HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Stacks
of electronics (VCR’s, stereo components, TV’s, radios, camcorders,
cables, wiring, old tubes, electronic test equipment, electronic books
& more), boxes of kitchen utensils, lots of small appliances, pots &
pans, table & floor lamps, computer books, airplane patches &
decals, air force related items, hand tools, vise, hardware, work
benches, microfiche, battery chargers, other garage & household
items!
*NOTE: Lots of small items! Well at house is bad, needs new water
supply!
ESTATE OF: JON HILES
EXECUTOR & TRUSTEE: HELEN MATHEWS
ATTORNEY: THOMAS RAWERS
TERMS: CASH & CHECK • FOOD BY KOUNTRY KETTLE
AUCTIONEER/BROKER: DOUGLAS PADEN
www.padens-auction.com
1-888-502-4348 in Ohio
RESOURCES
buy a gift and have it
personalized or learn a
new hobby, all at the
Advertise in the
Skills Development
271741
Center located in
Bldg. 95, Area C.
Give us a call at
257-7025
for a complete listing of
classes available.
CALL
296-4202
Visit us online at
www.skywrighter.com
348314
FIRST NATIONAL MORTGAGE BANC
NEVER AN APPLICATION FEE
LESS THAN PERFECT CREDIT...OKAY
STOP PAYING RENT!!!
JACK SCHOMMER
890-6005 OR 559-0981
6500 POE AVE
DAYTON, OH 45414
OHIO MB # 1184
268583
268583
DEPARTMENT OF H.U.D. APPROVED LENDER
LISCENSED - BONDED - INSURED
“Thank you, First National Mortage
Banc, everyone else told me ‘NO’, but
PURCHASE YOUR NEW HOME
WITH
Jack did what no one else could. He
100
%
FINANCING
made it happen. Now I own my own
FHA/VA
home. Thank you so much Jack.”
FIRST TIME HOME BUYERS
August 6, 2004
MAZDA
MAZDA
PARTS
PARTS && SERVICE
SERVICE
Open
Open
I
T HE M IAM EST
EW
V ALLEY S NSPEED
MA ZDA R
DE ALE
M–F
M–F 7:30-6
7:30-6
SAT
SAT 7:30-12
7:30-12
2004 MAZDA 3
2004 MAZDA 6
Air, Am/FM/CD,
tilt, rear defroster, & more
#M577
16,495*
$
17,581*
MSRP......................................................$21,940
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2859
Rebate.......................................................$1500
Sale Price...............................................$17,581
MSRP . .. .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. ....... .. .. .. . . . .$17,415
MSRP
.........
$15,950
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$920
Sale Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$16,495
2004 MAZDA RX8
2005 MAZDA TRIBUTE
6-Spd, black chrome wheels,
leather, moon roof & more
Auto, air, rear spoiler, AM/FM CD
28,998*
$
#M5018
MSRP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$33,095
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4097
Sale Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$28,998
16,781*
$
MSRP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$21,035
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2254
Rebate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2000
Sale Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$16,781
2004 MAZDA MIATA
2004 MAZDA MPV
Air, AM/FM/CD, rear spoiler, speed
control, azure pkg, & more
Auto, Frnt & rear air, roof rack,
AM/FM/CD, floor mats, & more
19,589*
$
#M705
Air, AM/FM/CD, pwr seat, ABS,
TCS, 16” alloy whls, & more
$
#M827
#M519
SKYWRIGHTER
#M841
MSRP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,433
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2344
Rebate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1500
Sale Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$19,589
17,999*
$
MSRP......................................................$24,260
Langs Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2761
Rebate.......................................................$3500
Sale Price...............................................$17,999
QUALITY USED
USED CARS
CARS &
&TRUCKS
TRUCKS
QUALITY
2000 Honda
Accord SE
Low, low miles. all power,
a must see!
11,995*
$
2001 Mazda
MPV ES
1999 Toyota
Solara SLE
2001 Mazda
B4000 4x4
2001 Mazda
Tribute LX 4x4
2000 Honda
Civic Coupe
V-6, leather, moonroof,
has it all!
4 dr, full power, bed liner,
only 36k miles
Full pwr, tilt, speed control,
ready for fun
Moon roof, CD, pwr win,
only 29k miles
Leather, moonroof, AM/FM,
CD, rear heat and air.
$
16,995*
13,495
$
*Plus tax, title & license
13,995*
$
14,995*
$
12,995*
$
000.000.0000
000.000.0000
427-0002
2002 Honda
Civic LX
4 dr, pwr win/locks, speed
control, low miles,
brand new condition
MAZDA
271871
Mon-Fri 9-9 Sat 9-5 • Visit Us At: www.langs.com
427-0002
427-0002 •• RT
RT 35
35 && ALPHA
ALPHA Rd.
Rd. •• BEAVERCREEK
BEAVERCREEK
13,495*
$
2001 Mazda
Miata
Only 28k miles, pwr widows,
air and more
14,995*
$
9C
August 6, 2004
Advertise
in the
Huber Home Rentals
296-4202
7C
E-mail us at [email protected]
REALTY
(937) 878-6844 • CALL TOLL FREE 1-880-837-SOLD
41 S. Broad St., Fairborn • Across from Fairborn Twin Cinemas
Great
Value...Quality &
Selection
CALL
SKYWRIGHTER
• Some include: Ranges, Refrigerators, dishwashers, washer/dryers,
C/air. blinds. fireplaces, walk-in closets, garden tubs, garages & bsmts.
Our residents are top prior- • Good Schools; easy Interstate
ity Apts.., Condos, Twin access; only 8 miles to WBAFB.
homes, Villas, Townhomes, &
even
SINGLE
FAMILY Starting at $455 early pay.
HOMES. All at very affordable prices!
OPEN DAILY Call 233-4662
For questions on Rental Properties Call 878-1445 • Office Hours: 8:30 am - 8:00 pm M-F
We have RENTALS, SALES, PROPERTY MANAGEMENT.
WE ALSO PURCHASE PROPERTIES FOR RESALE
Look at our WEB SITE www.realtor.com/dayton/jlzimmermanr/
Let us help you find
your dream home!
352882
Nick Kammer
937-297-3611
Home Loan Consultant
Lock in you rate now before you find your new
home with our Pre-approved rate guarantee.
We have a loan program to meet your needs.
Desirae Zimmerman
864-1168
Serving the Miami Valley since 1981
NationalCity
Mortgage
3100 Governor's Place Blvd., Kettering, OH 45409
All loans are subject to credit approval and property appraisal. Programs subject to change without notice.
Preapplication/prequalification is not a commitment to lend, a condition of loan approval or an application
for credit. National City Mortgage Co., a subsidiary of National City Bank of Indiana.
EQUAL HOUSING
LENDER
271935
®
Bill Baab
376-5566
932 Lakeshore (Medway) - 3 bdrm., full bsmt., 9 lots
473 Kirkwood - 3 bedroom, full basement, huge garage,
big lot
226 Bellaire (Belmont) - 3 bdrm, basement, great price
215 S. Wright - 4 bdrms, 1.5 baths, remodeled inside &
out, great price
12219 Wellington (Medway) - 4 bedroom, 2 bath,
updates, nice & big
2879 Old Dayton-Y.S. - 2-3 bedroom, full bsmt, 1/2 acre,
1 car garage
Rainbow Lakes - business & land - money maker
Medway/Crystal Lakes - 4 lots available
1824-1830 Superior - Estate sale, investors check this out
655 Adams - big 3 bdrm ranch, fam rm., garage
1215 Chalet - nice 3 bdrm, fam rm., gar. SOLD
LD
SOmarket
625 N. Central - nice 3 bdrm, bsmt, garage, priced under
2307 Valley St. (Riverside) - Dairy King restaurant, great
location & price.
879 Sutton (Xenia) - 3 bdrm, full bsmt, garage.
2205 Hazel (Kettering) - 4 bdrm, 2 bath, full bsmt
1754 Styer (Park Layne) - 4 bdrm, quad level, priced right
OPEN SUN 2- 4 1379 Hemlock - 3 bdrm, carport, private
yard - must see
677-681 Shedbourne (Belmont) - Great investment, 3 unit
building, garages.
6744 Hubbard (Huber Hts) - 3 bdrm, 2 bath, totally rehabed,
2 car garage
2873 W. Enon Rd. - 3 bdrm, 2 bath, great fixer-upper
OPEN SUN 2-4 1423 Ticonderoga (Beavercreek) -3
bdrm, 2.5 baths, 2-car carport, condo
23 W. Doris - Totally updated 3 bdrm, great price. SOLD
548 Van Tress - 4 bdrm, 2 bath, full bsmt, garage
OPEN SUN 2-4 83 Rebert Pk (Enon) - Sharp 3 bdrm
ranch w/2 full baths, 1/2 acre, 2 car garage.
OPEN SUN 2-4 307 Woodlawn - Updated 3 bdrm w/1.5
baths, 2 car garage, great yard.
SOLD
8460 Dayton-Spfld (Enon) - Car lot - great location .
Call Frank
LDhome
SOnice
353 Ridgewood - 3 bdrm, 2 car garage, 2 bath,
1622 Superior - 2 bdrm, great price - call!
610 Hodapp - Beautiful 4 bdrm, over 2200 sq. ft., great condition
500 Ketcham (Riverside) - 3-4 bdrm, 2 baths, great location,
Call!
603 Saint Paul (Dayton) - 3 bdrm, 2 story, nice home - good
investment
2164 Beaver Valley Rd. - 3 bdrm, full bsmt, gar, large lot.
6370 Chippingdon (Huber Hts) - 4 bdrm, 2 bath, gar, new
kitchen
4496 Union-Schoolhouse Rd. - 3 bdrm, 1.2 ac - Call Today
1241 Hemlock - 3 bdrm, 1 bath, 2 car garage
3697 Rebert Pk (Enon) - 3 bdrm, 2 bath, fam rm,
florida rm, over 2 acres
1534 S. Smithville - 3 bdrm, basement, fireplace, carport.
RENTALS – MANY TO CHOOSE FROM
HOMES: 1362 Robinson, 1009 Lexington, 215 S. Wright
9 others to choose from $475 to $950
348312
APARTMENTS: 123 N. 1st, 1445 Superior, 701 W. Xenia
13 others to choose from $275 to $575
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
11C
Times Community Newspapers • 3085 Woodman Dr., Suite 170, Kettering, Ohio 45420 • Fax: (937) 534-1009
Ads can also be e-mailed to: [email protected]
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Private Party
Merchandise for Sale
1 Week
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Greene County Sunday Shopper: Thursday, 12pm
Friday 8am-5pm
Garage Sale
Automobiles
20 Words
Starting at $14.00
Run til Sold
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CALL 937-296-4202
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Homes for Sale
BEAVERCREEK
1990 Quad-level, brick/sided,
2000 sq. ft. 4 bdrm, fam, din,
living room's, bsmnt, 2 baths,
2+ gar. 5/8 acre. Easy access
to Shopping & WPAFB. High
$170's . Call 937-427-2036.
BEAVERCREEK-BY OWNER
Open Sun 2-5. 2953 Stauffer.
4/5 BR, 2.5 BA Tri-Level in
Tara Estates. ¾ ac corner lot.
Will co-op w/realtor. 426-3065
Beavercreek Country setting,
city comforts. Privacy on over
1 acre. 3+ bdrms, full bsmt, 4
car garage + out building, pool,
lots of negotiables, $179,900.
Call 427-7757.
FAIRBORN, 1220 Oakhill Ave.
3-4 bdrm, 1½ bath, full bsmt
w/rec rm, 2 car gar, corner lot,
avail immediately.
Call 878-2011
FAIRBORN – 1243 Apple St.
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, updates,
1 car garage. $85,000.
Call Tom Luke, HER Realtors,
Anders & Associates,
402-0442
FAIRBORN FSBO 567 Wayne
Dr. 3/1/1, Many updates, full
bsmnt, see Realtor. Com/
prop/1038430866 Will Co-Op
$99,500 Call 879-4402
FAIRBORN Open House Sun.
th
Aug. 8 , 12 pm-4 pm. 1926
Centralia, 3 bdrm, 1½ bath,
large 1 car gar. w/workspace,
$2000 decor allowance+ home
warranty, Walk to anything you
need! Call anytime to see!
Asking $129,900, 878-7312.
FAIRBORN, RONA HILLS,
1789 S.F., 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
Newer: Roof, furnace, A/C.
Beautiful move-in condition!
1158 Ortego Dr. 754-1013
FAIRBORN, RONA Hills, very
nice 2 story colonial, 4 bdrm,
2.5 baths, LR, DR, eat-in-kitch,
huge fam rm 26x15 w/WBFP,
beautifully decorated-just like
new! Call 937-754-0096.
Fairborn-Rona Village-Ranch
1634 SF, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, Family room, 2 car
garage, private patio. Plush
carpet, ceramic tile. $121,900.
Call 879-5919.
Homes for Sale
Real Estate Wanted
HUBER HEIGHTS
Exceptional 3 bdrm, 1½ bath
Ranch, full finished basement
th
w/4 bdrm & full bath, many
up-dates in last 3 years.
$127,900 Call for details
Chuck Grady 236-6096
Cameo RE Investments
STOP FORCLOSURE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
3-Family, brick ranch apartment. Replacement windows
and new roof. $11,640 annual
gross income. $79,500.
&DOO 234 E Main St.
MEDWAY
Two 2 bedroom downstairs
apts. Washer/dryer, refrig &
stove, C/air. Water & trash
paid. No Pets. $500/$525/mth
Call 604-1501
MEDWAY, OPEN HOUSE
th
Sun, Aug 8 1-5pm. 11102
Lower Valley Pike $239,900
Beautiful 1 acre, 3 bdrm ranch,
finished bsmt, swimming pool,
2+6 car garages, 11x39
screened porch, hot tub, 18x30
sunroom, 12x27 cabana,
3½ baths, 2 wbfps, gazebo.
Call 849-6045
NEW CARLISLE 8650 DetrickJordan Pike Remodeled farm
house, 1.25 acres. 4 bdrm,
2 full baths, C/air, 2 car garage, $149,900 Call 604-1501
SUGARCREEK 3738 W.
Salinas Cir. , FSBO. Custom
ranch 5 yrs old. Open floor
plan, 9 f ceilings. 3 bdrm &
bath, fam. rm, living rm, DR., 2
car side entry gar. Finished
bsmt., rec/rm, extra rm, full
bath & storage. Call for Appt.
937-848-4282. $349,900.
OPEN SUNDAY 3:00-5:00pm
1955 Rugby Road $84,900
Well appointed 4-BR, 2 full BA,
2-story w/full part fnshd dry
bsmnt, spacious rms, tasteful
updates incldg wndws, furnace, hot water heater, rm addition & more. Visit Web: Cecil
Brown.com for visual tour &
details. This is not a drive-by.
See you Sunday! Salem Ave.
to East on Rugby Rd. to 1956.
Cecil Brown, 477-5298
426-7070, X123
NEW CARLISLE,
For sale by owner. Country
home on 3 acres. 10 rooms &
2.5 baths. 15-25 mins. from
WPAFB. 937/845-1333
HUBER HEIGHTS $159,900
2 story 3 bdrm, 2200 sq.ft. N of
I-70. Immaculate, move-in
st
condition. Master on 1 floor,
cathedral ceiling, loft, wbfp,
2 full & 2 half baths, beautifully
landscaped, Open Sun 12-4pm
6570 Deer Meadows Drive
Call 667-6262
TROY-FSBO Brokenwoods,
451 Meadowood Dr. 9'
st
ceilings, 4 BR, 2½ bath, 1
floor office, Bonus Room, 2½
car garage on cul-de-sac.
$265,000 Will Co-Op at 3%.
Call for Directions
937-440-1661/937-609-9820
WE BUY HOUSES!
937-698-6179 / 937-477-2177
Rentals
3 BEDROOM HOUSE
Tipp City
Some Appl's Provided
1½ Bath, 2 car attached
garage, Shaded lot with
mature trees. Near
schools, shopping & I-75
937-667-6513
borchersrentals.com
APTS. & Doubles Available-2
bdrm.-3 bdrm. $395 to $625 a
mo. All close to WPAFB. Call
for additional info., UNITED
Inc. REALTORS, 878-9098.
BEAVERCREEK 3 BR, 2 BA
ranch, A/C, bsmt, 1800 S.F.,
recently painted, no pets,
$995/mo + 4482 Powderhorn
Dr. (Saville Estates), 252-4382
BEAVERCREEK, 4 bedroom,
2 bath ranch w/basement,
large yard, mature trees, covered patio, appliances, 2 car
garage, WBFP, non-smokers
only, deposit + last months'
rent, available 8-1. $1250/
month. 426-2070 or 901-5143
FAIRBORN- 1 bedrooms
Single story, porch, W/D hook
up, no application fee, call
Evergreen Apts., 879-0565.
Rentals
Rentals
Rentals
Rentals
*******
BEAVERCREEK:
Condos for Rent/Sale.
2 bdrm, 1,400 sq. ft., 1½ bath.
$675/month; Also 3 bedroom
available. Military discount on
deposit. RTO, LC, short-term
leases considered. Available
immediately. 937-236-4339
EAST NEAR Area B , WSU,
Lg. brick 1 bdrm non-smoking
apt. carpeted, appl. Heat &
water pd. $345/mth, 254-5180.
FAIRBORN 1 bdrm apt's
Up-dated. Immaculate, excellent maintenance, all new
appl's, new windows, on-site
laundry, on bus line.
$390/mth $100 OFF FIRST
MONTH. Credit checked.
Charles Apartments
Sterling Apt Group E
438-5665
$100
Deposit
One Bedroom
Starting @
$360/mth
Two Bedroom
Starting @
$415/mth
Special Plans For
Those With Credit
Problems
Includes carpet,
A/C, Mini blinds,
large closets,
Appliances,
Laundry Room
Sparkling New
Swimming Pool
5 min to
WPAFB,WSU
I-675 & Shopping
BEAVERCREEK TOWNHOUSES
3 bedroom, 2½ bath (approx.
2000 sq. ft.) with gas fireplace,
balcony, 2 car attached
garage, $1200/month.
(approx. 1400 sq. ft) 1 car
garage, $900/month
426-4631 or 604-1544
#
251 W. Dayton-Yellow
Springs Road
Charlotte Drive
ENON
Upstairs apartment & townhouse, 2 bdrm, washer/dryer,
refrig & stove, disposal. C/air,
water & trash paid. No pets.
$500/$550/mth. Call 604-1501
BETHEL SCHOOLS – 3 bdrm,
2 bath, w/full basement, 2 car
garage, lawn care included.
$850.00/month. NO PETS.
Also 30x60 bldg. available for
extra rent. Call 239-5662.
ENON Military Wanted!!!
Efficiency 1 & 2 Bedroom
Apartments. Ready Now. Attic
Storage, Energy Efficient.
$$ Ask About Specials $$
Dayton
CHECK US OUT
Call Cedargate Apartments
(937) 864-1282
2 bedroom, 1 bath, immediate move-in available.
Great location, heat paid
laundry/rm on site Call Claypool at 253-5711
Managed by
Gold Key Realty Company
DAYTON - Jaycee Towers
Amity
Green
ENON, 1 BR apts. w/gas heat,
wall A/C, new windows, remod,
excell location, some pets OK,
$325, Sandy Smith 285-0156
RE/MAX HomeBase, 878-5993
APARTMENTS FOR SENIORS
Affordable rent. Free utilities.
Apartments now available!
EHO 228-4064
102 Lindberg
FAIRBORN
2 bedroom duplex, water,
sewer & trash paid. $475/mth
No deposit for "Qualifying"
Call 878-3418
Eagle
FAIRBORN,
1503
Highland Dr. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath
condo, dining room, fireplace,
garage, C/A, near WSU &
WPAFB. $800/mo, deposit,
credit check, call 335-2366.
FAIRBORN: $225 Moves you In!
st
No Rent till August 1 .
Close to WPAFB & WSU.
Greenway Apartments
FAIRBORN – 2 bdrm, 1 story
brick duplex, appliances, A/C,
carpet, parking, W/D hookup.
$450 + utilities. NO pets.
427-0568
FAIRBORN 2 bdrm duplexes,
Good Locations. remodeled &
updated.
Appli.'s A/C, gar.
W/D hook-up, some utilities pd.
$395 up, 620-5467.
FAIRBORN: 2 bedroom,
2 bath ranch, newly redecorated, new windows, fenced
yard, A/C. NO pets. $650/mo +
dep., 298-5716. 251 State St.
FAIRBORN – Buckeye Ave.
2 bdrm, W/D hook up, A/C unit,
carpet, basement & workshop.
$550/month + $550 deposit.
Call 878-2810
Contract Business Development Representative
879-2525
Position Available
Nurse Practitioner for
Miami County
Well Child Clinic
• Registered nurse with certification as
Pediatric/Family Nurse Practitioner
• Part-time position in modern
facility with friendly staff
• Salary negotiable based on
qualifications and experience
For more information or application,
send resume to:
Miami County Health District
Attn: Elizabeth Widener
510 W. Water St., Suite 130
Troy, OH 45373-2985
ST Production Systems Inc., an expanding DoD prime manufacturing, test and engineering services facility located in Rural
Southwestern Pennsylvania, has an immediate requirement for a
contract marketing representative. Specifically, opportunities
originating at Wright-Patterson AFB for system design, systems integration, engineering and manufacturing services, depot and spares
are sought.
The successful candidate will have knowledge of immediate and
future contract opportunities at WP AFB, and specific insight to
convert these opportunities to sales.
This insider will have extensive DoD contracts experience, a network
of A-List players, a keen understanding of the local contracting
process and Engineering Protocol, and a history of fast-track wins.
Competitive compensation arrangements will be offered to the right
individual or firm.
Reply in Confidence to:
ST Production Systems, Inc.
90 Laurel View Drive
Smithfield, PA 15478
Attn: HR
271729
Equal Opportunity Employer
Office accessible to disabled
271719
We are an equal opportunity employer m/f/d/v
12C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
Rentals
Rentals
Rentals
Services
Miscellaneous
Help Wanted
Autos for Sale
FAIRBORN: Close to WPAFB
2 bedroom townhouse, office,
1 car garage, 2 story solarium.
878-6545 or 937/307-0553.
HUBER HEIGHTS – 1,500 sf.
3 bedroom townhouse, 1½
baths, laundry hook up, gas
heat, completely renovated, all
kitchen appliances & window
coverings. $695/month +
12 month lease includes trash
& lawn care. Call @
236-8254 or 559/636-9438.
Beautiful 3
SPRINGBORO
bdrm 1½ bath, Tri-Level w/gar
fenced yd, all appl's, near 741
& 75. Reduced to $950/mth +
dep (937)748-8855.
HOUSECLEANING Will clean
weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, or
one time cleaning. Have references, reasonable rates, flexible hours and I'm dependable.
754-9279
OHIO FIREWOOD LAWS
ACCORDING TO THE OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE, DIVISION
OF WEIGHTS &
MEASURES
TWO CONTRACT
POSITIONS FOR CATHOLIC
PARISH MUSIC DIRECTORS:
1961 BUICK Electra
225 Convertible.
V8, not wrecked, but
needs total restoration, $300.
Call 376-4596.
Fairborn
Efficiency &1 Bedroom
Apartments. Furnished
& Unfurnished. Nice Country
Setting. Lots of Storage
Energy Efficient. Won't Last
Treeborn Apartments
Call 878-4081
FAIRBORN - Hunters Glenn
Lovely 4 bedroom, 3 bath
home, near WPAFB. No pets
No smoking $1300/mo.
720-890-2643 / 937-322-7257
FAIRBORN- LARGE Townhouse/Condo 1600 plus sf.
plus walk out basement, 3
bdrm, 2 ½ bath. $900. a month
includes water. Call 878-3833
FAIRBORN, MITMAN Park,
1256 Adams, 3 bdrm, 1.5
baths, garage, finished bsmnt,
fenced, appls, carpeted, C/A, 1
Aug., $895, 878-7977.
FAIRBORN: Move In special!
Newer luxury condos, spacious
2 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 car
garage, gas heat, C/A,
non-smoking, $800/month,
937/604-0249.
FAIRBORN – Newly remodeled!
Near WSU & WPAFB
2 bedroom upper, 1 bath
duplex, incl. appl's. $500/mo. +
$500 dep. No pets. 760-5393
FAIRBORN Rona Village
3 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car attached
garage, quality up-grades
throughout, 5 minutes from
WPAFB, Brinks Security
System, $850/mth 849-0951
FAIRBORN SOUTH, Nice &
Clean 2 bdrm brick townhouse,
1½ baths, off street parking,
Good value. Near WPAFB
$480/mth + dep. 602-1200
FAIRBORN SPECIAL
1 & 2 bedroom apartments.
Free Heat, hot water, sewer &
trash. C/air, w/d hook-up, stove
& refrig. You pay only Basic
Electric $390-$485/mth
Call 878-3418
FAIRBORN- TOWNHOUSE/
Condos, new condition, 2
bdrm, 1 1/2 bath, full finished
basement. $750. a month
includes water. Call 878-3833
FAIRBORN- TWO bedroom
Townhouse, covered carport,
pool privileges, private
courtyard. $585/month,
deposit, references, credit
check required. No waterbeds.
426-1710, leave message.
FOREST RIDGE
4936 Amberwood Drive. 3 bedrooms, 2 ½ baths, family room
with fireplace, C/A, 2 car garage, fenced yard, $945/month
Call 937-233-2985.
HUBER 3 bedroom, 2 bath
house $675/mo. + deposit.
Pets allowed. For details, call
937-477-4098 between 7 am-9
pm. Available after 7/18.
HUBER HEIGHTS – 1,500 sf.
3 bedroom townhouse, 1½
baths, laundry hook up, gas
heat, completely renovated, all
kitchen appliances & window
coverings. $695/month +
12 month lease includes trash
& lawn care. Call @
236-8254 or 559/636-9438.
HUBER HEIGHTS
3 bdrm, 1 bath, living rm,
family rm, fenced back yard,
newly renovated. $650/mo. +
deposit. Call 374-0752
HUBER HEIGHTS
3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch.
1 car garage, fireplace, enclosed patio. No Pets. Credit
check. $825 early pay, plus
deposit, 286-1308.
HUBER HEIGHTS, completely
remodeled, 3 brdroom, 2 bath,
C/A, gas FP, covered patio,
fenced yard, stove & refrigerator $750 month + utilities.
$400 Deposit. 937-470-2144.
Roofing
TIPP CITY / TROY
2 Bedroom Apt / Duplexes
z Economical Utilities
z W/D in most units
z Experienced Maint Dept
z Easy Access to I-75
z Near Schools, shopping
z Appliances provided
z Near Airport
I-75 & I-70
z Excellent Maint Dept
z Economical
Rent & Utilities
937-667-6513
borchersrentals.com
(937) 376-5650
RIVERSIDE 3582 Valencia
3 bedroom, 1½ bath, family/
rm, living/rm, fenced yard,
garage. $665/mth No Deposit
"Qualifying" 878-3418
3641 Hillstone
RIVERSIDE
3 bedroom, 1 bath house.
Stove & refrig, trash pick-up
paid, $665/mth No deposit for
"Qualifying" Call 878-3418
RIVERSIDE (Mad River)
2 bedroom, 1½ bath, w/d hookup, water, sewer, trash paid.
$465/mth "No Deposit for
Qualifying" Call 878-3418.
RIVERSIDE Saville Estates lg.
home w/FP, balcony, cathedral
ceilings! Impressive Tri-Level
in terrific neighborhood: 4
bdrm, 3 bath, easy access to
WPAFB, WSU, Dayton & surrounding areas. 2,631 sq. ft.
Excellent Mad River Schools, 2
car gar, view, privacy, fabulous
yd. Gas heat. Call Brad Copeland, Cell (937) 604-4906;
Home (937) 429-9006 $1,195.
Miscellaneous
1 bdrm Apartments
MEADOWS OF XENIA
NEW CARLISLE
(N of Sugar Isle Golf Course)
20 minutes from WPAFB via
I-675. Historic home built in
1838. Wood floors. Two story
brick. 3 bedroom, kitchen and
parlor fireplaces. 1½ baths.
One acre lot with beautiful
trees. Garage. Great for
people who love old homes.
Recently renovated.
$950/month. Deposit discount
for military. Call 937-902-7595.
Roofing z Siding
Continuous Gutter
Patio Covers
Insurance Claims
Visa / MC Accepted
borchersrentals.com
Currently have 2 & 3 bdrm's
Available. $100 Deposit
Heat, water & trash paid.
st
(for limited time only) 1 Month
Rent FREE on 3 bdrm
GMHA Welcome. Call
MIAMISBURG, 3 BR twnhse
fnshd bsmnt, 1.5 BA, close to
Lexis Nexis, WD hk up, dish,
C/A & heat, all new carpet,
$775. Jeff, 513-319-3221.
Hail Damage
937-667-6513
KETTERINGSECLUDED,
custom built, spacious, all brick
ranch w/3 bdrm, 1.5 bath, lg
kitchen, dining rm, living rm,
rec. rm, central air, 2 fireplaces, 2 car attc. gar, pets ok,
on a 1.5 acre lot in Kettering.
$1350/mo. + dep. contact
Gordon Dieterle 937-294-1610
3 bdrm 2 story
MEDWAY
duplex, 1½ baths, stove &
refrig, large yard, carport,
Country setting. $600/mth
+ dep. Call 879-5259
(937) 440-WISE North
(937)454-0505 South
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP
1 bedroom townhouse w/loft.
1½ baths, attached garage, all
appl's. Available immediately.
$850/mo. Call 602-3838
XENIA/NORTH SIDE
4 bedroom, 1½ bath home.
A/C, totally remodeled.
Easy drive to WPAFB.
$890/mo. + deposit & credit
check. 376-1369.
XENIA – Off Lower Bellbrook
3 bedroom house, 2 full baths,
large kitchen, 2 car attached
garage. $900/month + deposit
Call 937/426-4631 or 604-1544
Services
AAA HASTY'S HAULING
Moving. Reas. rates,
Free Est's. Same day
service. 937-397-1610
CONCRETE
1993 MANTA Ray Ski Boat 19'
like new, 4.3L V6 200HP Mercuiser I/O, depth finder, open
bow, custom trailer w/new
tires, stainless prop. $6950
OBO. Call 937-673-3080.
1996 COLEMAN Pop Up
Trailer, sleeps 9, has AC, refrigerator & heater, many extras, G/C, awning, extra room,
$6000 OBO, call 898-3334.
4 TVS FOR SALE:
Big Screen-$400.
25"-$40.
27"- Blt-in entrnmt cntr-$150.
32"-$200. Call 864-7724.
BED- A full size set, plush,
unused, still in plastic with
warranty. Sell $135. 603-9676.
DIAMOND earring set small
diamond shape cluster $100
848-4373.
HAMILTON BALDWIN Piano
with bench. Walnut finish.
Please call Christina at
291-3436 for more information.
King Plush chrio. mattress
set. In original plastic w/warr.
$279. Never used. 937-603-9676.
KITTENS Tabbies, 3 Orange,
1 grey, $25, refundable to your
vet for neutering/spaying.
Evenings or all Day weekends,
937-767-1969
NEW ITALIAN Leather High
Leg recliner, unique chair 2k
value will sell for $800 603-9676
(937) 440-WISE North
(937) 454-0505 South
z PATIOS
z DRIVEWAYS
z PATIO SLABS
Visa / MC Accepted
EXPERIENCED PROVIDER
All ages. Meals & activities.
Refs. available.
Woodman/Burkhardt area.
QUEEN pillow top set. Brand
new in plastic warr. CAN DELIVER $165. 937-603-9676.
z
RIDING
MOWER,
2003
Husky, 15 HP, 38" cut $550.
z Husky 17 HP auto, $500.
z Conn Saxaphone, $55. z GE
Dryer, 7 yrs old, $35. z Willett
Cherry dining room suite, mint
cond, $795. Call 675-6756.
Sellers cannot advertise
wood by the rick, rack, facecord, pile, truckload, etc. only cord is acceptable.
Sellers are to provide delivery tickets with both the
name & address of the seller
& buyer, delivery date, quantity delivered plus amount on
which the price is based (so
much per cord) & the total
cost of amount delivered.
A cord must be placed in a
row with individual pieces
touching in a compact manner.
Seasoned
firewood
must be air-dried with a
moisture content value less
than or equal to 50 percent.
Unless the wood seller has
liability insurance, the homeowner must pay for delivery
damage done.
Help Wanted
AAFES
IS ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS ON LINE AT:
www.aafes.com.
Attn. Work From Home! Put
your PC to work. $1500+ PT.
$3,000-$5,000 FT. Full training
provided. 937-845-8737
www.heybossyourefired.com
Maintenance Person needed
for 114-unit community. HVAC
certified & skilled in all other
areas of maintenance. Start
immd. Call/fax 937-258-1591.
THE WPAFB Protestant
Program is seeking a piano
player for the 1100 Protestant Worship Service.
This is a paid contract position. Interested individuals
should pick up an application
packet at Chapel One for
complete details. Bids will be
accepted through 11 Aug 04
and interviews will be
conducted the week of
16 Aug 04.
Call 257-7427 for questions.
353687
1976 CHEVY Malibu Classic,
16,140 miles, good condition,
swivel seats, A/C, 305 engine,
asking $5200. Call 754-9903.
'00 HONDA Accord EX
V-6, perfect condition, leather
interior, black exterior, 46,000
miles. Loaded! Sell for
$17,990. Call 372-7876.
1976 MGB Roadster Licensed
as Collector, low mileage since
restoration. Bright red, blacktop & interior Michelins on wire
wheels. $4,900. Call 434-1953
'01 FORD Explorer Sport
2 door, 4.0 liter, loaded, 4x4,
clean, 45,000 miles. $15,700.
Call 376-0420.
1979 HARLEY DAVIDSON,
FXS, custom Low Rider. Many
extras, custom paint & chrome.
Must see! No joy rides! $9500.
Call Jim at 937-434-8456.
02 SATURN SC 1. (24K) 5
speed, CD, air, power sunroof,
transferable 60K warranty.
PCS must sell. $11,500 anytime 902-0130, days 328-6023
'03 OLDSMOBILE Silhouette
GLS/EXT – 12K mi., ruby, tan
leather, heated power seats,
dual power doors, chrome
wheels, gold pkg., OnStar, CD,
loaded, ext. warr'ty. $22,900.
1953 M38-A1 Military Jeep.
Solid rust-free body. All complete minus engine, $1995
obo. Call 937-372-5577.
1957 FORD FAIRLANE,
Classic Car! 47K orig. miles,
Yellow & Black, cloth interior,
lots of extras, for more details
call Rob, $13,000 OBO,
832-3352.
1981 FORD Fairmont Futura,
56K original miles, excellent
interior & body, runs great, has
CD system, $2200 OBO.
Call 376-1801, after 4PM.
1984 8' Hideaway truck
camper has AC (new 2 years)
3 burner stove, sink w/ on
board fresh water tank & electric pump, dinette, microwave,
toilet, rewired for 30 amp. Refrigerator needs gas good condition, $800. 376-1076
1989 Econoline Van, $2500
or will consider trade.
Call 879-3380 or 270-2142.
Cashiers
Produce Associates
People Greeters
Bakery/Sales Associates
Janitors
Grocery Receiving Associates
Cart Pushers
Meat/Deli Associates
Sales Associates
Day & Over-Night Stockers
Tire & Lube Express:
Manager Trainees
Sales Associates
Tire/Lube Technicians
Please come by the Wal-Mart Hiring Center
Located in St. Peter Church LifeCenter
6161 Chambersburg Rd. Huber Heights
August 9th - 13th, 2004
Mon.-Wed.-Fri. 8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Tue.-Thurs. 8:00 am - 8:00 pm
To fill out an application
We offer relocation assistance, salaries commensurate with
experience and a comprehensive benefits package. For
immediate consideration, please e-mail resume with
salary history to: [email protected]. Visit us
at www.ddc-web.com.
271353
www.ddc-web.com
1981 CHEVY Monte Carlo,
Ivory/Tan interior, 68K actual
miles, V8, well maintained,
always garaged, E/C, $4950,
OBO. Call 937-836-1327.
Career Opportunities Include:
Put your creativity to work, designing original software to
support high-speed networking products. Qualified individuals
must have a BS in Computer Science/Electrical Engineering
and at least 5 years related experience developing software,
3 of which must be as lead developer/sole contributor for
major software subsystems. Proficiency in C/C++ programming;
knowledge of networking protocols; and familiarity with one
or more of the following operating systems, VxWorks, Sun
Solaris, GreenHills Integrity, required.
EOE. M/F/D/V.
'00 CHEVY Tahoe LT
53,000 mi., new tires, Pewter
Silver, exc. cond. $24,000.
Call 426-2812.
Join the world’s best retailing team, recognized by
Fortune Magazine as one of the most admired
companies in the world. As a member of the
Wal-Mart team, you will receive competitive wages
And enjoy benefits including: Merchandise discounts,
401(K), stock purchase plan, profit sharing, health
benefits and career advancement opportunities.
Senior Software Engineer
348344
Send resumes to: Human Resources Department, Lisa R.
Cole, 600 Benjamin Drive, Springfield, Ohio 45502 or fax to
(937) 525-4353.
Autos for Sale
Your New Huber Heights Wal-Mart
Supercenter Will Be Opening Soon!
Use your expertise to create new digital designs for DDC’s
high-speed networking products. Successful candidate must
have a BSEE (Master’s desired) and a minimum of 5 years
experience as a lead designer or sole contributor in highspeed HDL digital design, FPGA and/or ASIC design. Ethernet
controller experience a plus.
SANITATION TECHNICIANS: Responsible for the 3rd shift
sanitation of the salad production facility and equipment.
Must be able to work with chemicals, able to repeatedly
climb, push and pull extensively over the shift. This
position requires the applicant to have a good mechanical
ability to disassemble and reassemble equipment, which
involves extensive lifting. Must be able to work independently and with limited supervision. Prefer applicants with
previous sanitation experience in a food production
environment.
1972 FORD Bronco, power
steering, power disc brakes,
C6 auto trans, 302 V8 w/fresh
rebuild,
35X15.5
TSL-SX
swompers on 15X12 eagle
rims, 500 miles on tires, truck
& all misc. parts, $6500. Call
830-9545.
Stores Inc.
Electric, Transportable,
4 Wheeler, Warranty.
Like New. $1,199.
614-761-3001.
Senior Digital Design Engineer
The following positions are presently open.
1969 Ford Mustang Fastback,
302 engine 4 barrel, VGC,
$8500, OBO.
1987 Gulfstream Motorhome,
37K mi, self contained, new
refrig, new tires, $11,000 OBO.
Call 879-1168 or 620-2933.
1974 JEEP CJ 5, 304, V8,
3-speed, 6" lift kit, 33" tires,
fiberglass body, $4500 OBO.
Call 832-3352, ask for Rob.
SCOOTER: SHOPRIDER '04,
Bohemia, Long Island, NY
As a Dole employee you will receive a competitive wage
and excellent benefits. Dole Fresh Vegetables has
in-house training in several technical areas at their state of
the art Springfield, Ohio Plant. This position starts at $9.00
per hour with $0.20/hr shift differential for 2nd and 3rd
shift.
1965 CHEVY C-20, runs great,
350 engine collectable $2,700.
Call Tom (937)-653-3606
Difference
At the core of Data Device Corporation’s cutting-edge product
solutions and thriving defense/aerospace programs is our
team of exceptional engineers. We provide a work
environment that fosters growth and offers the resources you
need to not only contribute to our development, but your own.
3rd Shift Sanitation Technicians are needed at Dole Fresh
Vegetables. Dole is a well-respected, highly professional
and internationally recognized company. Dole Fresh is
experiencing phenomenal growth and the future looks very
bright ahead.
1(:
OUR PEOPLE
MAKE THE
From defense to aerospace, our
success starts with yours!
SIESTA KEY, FLA.,
2 bdrm, 2 full bath,
located on the Gulf. Pools,
Jacuzzi & tennis courts.
Near shops & restaurants.
Call 937-848-2956.
The Catholic Parish is seeking to hire 2 Music Directors
who shall be responsible for
all coordination, planning,
preparation and performance
of music under the direction
of the Catholic Parish Pastor.
One position is for the 1700
hours Mass at Chapel Three
on Saturdays, and the other
is for the 0900 and 1100
hours Masses on Sundays at
Chapel Two and Chapel
One. Those individuals interested in either position
should pick up an application
package at Chapel One beginning Aug. 9, 2004.
Bids
will
be
accepted
through 18 Aug. 04 and interviews will be conducted
the week of 23 Aug, 04.
Call 257-7427 for questions.
35,&(
WAL-MART IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. M/F/D/V
August 6, 2004
Autos for Sale
Autos for Sale
Autos for Sale
Autos for Sale
1985 CUTLASS Supreme, 2
dr. 45k org. miles, PW, PL, PD,
Air, V-6, EC, CLASSIC, Looks
Sharp. $4,500 OBO. 436-4994
1995 GMC Suburban 1500,
Black, 4 WD, original owner,
well-maintained, new exhaust
and tires. Asking $12000.
Call 431-9782.
2000 DUTCHSTAR by Newmar
35' RV, 23,000 miles, lots of
goodies, Ford V-10 engine.
One owner, non smoker.
Call 937-376-3386.
97' CHRYSLER LHS, Red,
low mileage, good condition,
57k original miles
Call after 6:30 PM. 426-6603
1995 PONTIAC Grand Am SE,
4-door, auto, air, alloy wheels,
excellent shape inside & out,
blue exterior, salvage title,
asking $1795. Call 427-0980.
2000 FORD E-150 Cargo Van
New Jasper engine, White,
tinted glass, Ziebart alarm &
Z-Glaze on paint. $7,500. Very
Good Cond. Call 321-7573.
1996 CUSTOM Ford Econoline
Van, low mileage, PS, PB, PW,
towing pkg., very clean, EC,
low gas mileage, $11,500, call
937-848-7517.
2000 GMC Sierra SLE, ext.
cab 4 door, 4.8 L V-8 Vortex,
25k mi, Tow pkg. AM/FM CD,
A/C, 40/20/40 split bench pow.
seats. EC $18,500 879-9148.
1985 GMC Vandura 3500.
Newer engine, great cargo or
courier van, $1500 obo. Call
426-3694,
8am-1pm
only,
please.
1988 CHEVY C-1500 ext. cab
long bed pick up. New tires,
alternator, battery, belt,shocks,
rebuilt trans. Very dependable,
129k, $4, 000, 253-4252.
1989 LINCOLN Continental,
Excellent Condition! No rust.
71K original miles.
Interior immaculate! $4500.
Call 294-5713.
1990 ARIZONA S-10 Blazer: No
rust at all, wrecked drivers
side. New rebuilt trans. 4.3
auto. Not driveable. Will not
part out. $450 OBO. 681-4617.
1990 PONTIAC Grand Prix,
engine, transmission new. 3.1
litre Turbo Limited Edition.
New paint Appraised at $6,000
sell for $5,000 OBO, 898-5111
1991 CADILLAC, 4 door,
customized Florida car, only
64K mi, leather, Fawn color,
senior owned, $3995, will trade
up, Fairborn, 879-9838, or
239-398-9449.
1991 FORD Probe LX, 132K
mi, CD player, new battery,
new starter, new serpentine
belt, new fluids. Runs well,
transmission
needs
some
work. $500.
Great Fixerupper.
(614)260-9568/
(937)374-3736
1991 HONDA Nighthawk 750,
orig. owner, always garaged,
Red, looks great! Carburetors
need a little work. 2,900 mi,
$2000 obo, 937- 836-7339.
1991 TOYOTA Extended Cab,
4x4 DX Pickup, AC Custom
AR 15x8 wheels/31" tires, remote start, cassette, Bedliner,
running boards, hitch, passes
e check, many new parts!
$2995.00 Call 937-427-8484
1991 TOYOTA Tercel 4 cylinder, excellent MPG, 27 city, 39
hwy. 4 speed, good dependable, ice cold air, $1450 OBO
937-382-8540.
1992 GMC Conversion Van,
Full Size, V8, front & rear
air/heat, 2-tone Jade Green,
good W/W tires, Only 32K
Miles, $8,450. 937/433-0835
1993 CHEVROLET Blazer,
160k mi. Auto, rear WD, 4-WD,
4 dr, CD, leather, tint antilockbrakes, A/C,1 owner, reg.
Maint. EC, 376-1226
1993 DODGE Ram-250 Van
318 Motor, A/C, look & runs
excel. $1500. 376-1374
1993 EAGLE Talon DL, 1.8 ltr.
Engine, body good, excellent
mechanical condition, new
tires, exhausts & brakes $1200
call 4:30 pm-7 pm, 845-3035.
1993 FORD Custom Van
Beautiful condition, loaded.
Must see to believe! $4,950.
Call 937/766-2220.
1993 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass
Ciera needs exhaust $500.
Obo. Call 937-675-6610
1993 PLYMOUTH Grand
Voyager Great con., 138k,
maintained regularly,
engine runs new, $2000
372-8769 Or 532-9198
1994 CHRYSLER LeBaron All
power, V6, 4 door, automatic,
ice cold air, aluminum wheels,
like new tires, $1,000
Call 675-6756
1994 CHRYSLER LeBaron,
convertible, green, 98,000 mi.
auto, front wheel drive, 2 door
antilock-brakes, A/C. EC, reg.
Maintenance, 376-1226
1994 LINCOLN Town Car, 2
available. Executive Series,
green, 96,000 mi., always garaged, $4000. Cartier Series,
Silver, 61,000 mi. $7000. Both
in good condition, 429-4164.
1995 CADILLAC SLS,
Diamond White with Taupe
interior.
84K miles, great car, $6800.
Call 643-1995.
1995 CHEVY Astro conversion
van, 1 owner, loaded, TV/VCR,
rear stereo, 200 watt AM/FM
CD system, alarm, $4200
OBO, 836-3720 or 836-9191.
1995 FORD Econoline 150
Conversion Van, loaded,
TV/VCP, 100k miles, EC,
Asking $6000/obo.
Call for details: 390-3184
1996 CHEVY Cavalier, 99,780
miles, 5 speed, ps, pb, air,
am/fm cass, new tires, black,
$1500. Call 832-1440.
1996 DODGE Avenger ES - 2.0,
DOHC, 5 speed, loaded, 107K,
new timing belt, tires, water
pump/seals/clutch. EC. $2,950
OBO 231-2876 or 278-6928
2000 OLDS Bravada, White
exterior, dark leather interior,
power everything, SmartTrac, cassette/CD, tow pkg,
E/C, 69K miles, asking
$11,500 OBO, call 886-9155.
1996 FORD E 150
Conversion Van, V8,
fully loaded, front / rear AC,
quad seating, rear bench/bed,
garaged, 1 owner, 93K mi.
$7,500. 426-9218 Beavercreek
2000 TOYOTA Celica GT, 2 dr
hatchback, CD/am/fm, cruise,
A/C, silver, 60K miles, EC,
$11,000. 937-879-9858
1996 NISSAN Maxima GXE,
4 door sedan, Champagne
color, sunroof, original owner,
well-maintained, low mileage,
$7900. Call 431-9782.
2001 CHEVROLET Monte
Carlo LS, V6, auto, PS, PB,
A/C, PW, PDL, AM/FM, ABS,
54K highway miles, $9200, call
376-4914.
1996 TOYOTA CELICA GT
Convertible, Red, 5-speed,
new stereo, new top, 110K
miles, $7500 obo, call 937667-5390.
2001 DODGE STRATUS SE,
Sporty 2 dr, Silver, only 13K
mi, car not driven due to getting co. car, must sell! $11,750
OBO. 937-495-3786, David.
1997 BUICK Skylark GS
99K, 3100 V6 OD, 4 door,
leather interior, loaded.
Exc. Cond. $3,750 OBO
231-2876 or 278-6928
2001 Pontiac Grand Am
38K, black, $12,999.
Call 832-4753.
1997 CHRYSLER LHS, Red,
low mileage, good condition,
57k original miles
Call after 6:30 PM: 426-6603
1997 GMC SUBURBAN, SLT,
4X4, Dark Blue, leather interior, loaded, 91K miles, VGC,
$13,500 OBO, call 235-9252.
2001 VW Jetta, GL, Silver
w/Black interior,
5-speed,
power locks, keyless entry,
40K mi, $11,900, E/C, call 937781-9960 or 937-838-2500.
2002 CHEVY Trailblazer
4 wheel drive, 34,000 miles,
fully loaded, OnStar equipped,
sun roof. Like new. $22,500.
Call 376-1973.
2002 FORD Explorer, Eddie
Bauer, 4X4. White w/Tan
leather, loaded, warr to 100K
mi, New price $19,000! Call
937-238-6550.
1997 MERCURY
GS VILLAGER
7 Pass, Full Power
Price Reduced--$4800
937-433-2010
1997 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
SL Coupe, loaded, Red, 52K
miles, asking $7495, 1 owner,
call 845-1465.
1997 TOYOTA Rav 4. 97,000
mi. new. Priced below NADA.
Red, 4/WD, AM/FM stereo, tilt
wheel A/C, maint. rec. avail.
tow pkg. GC, 937-848-6899.
1998 FORD Explorer XLT, 94k
hwy miles, 10 CD, All Power,
new tires, 4X4, just tuned.
Great condition. Must see.
937-294-8852
1998 HONDA Civic LX, 75k
mi. 4 dr, auto, Silver, $6,400.
EC mechanically, int/ext, great
reliable vehicle for a commuter/student (937) 219-3507.
1998 PLYMOUTH Breeze,
white, air bags, looks good,
runs good, first $3,000 takes.
st
Leaving for school. Great 1
car for teenager, 848-3832.
2002 HARLEY DAVIDSON
883, with low miles, Pearl
color, with lots of chrome, E/C,
must sell, $6800, call
372-2871 or 371-7341.
2002 PONTIAC Grand Prix
SE, ON STAR, Keyless entry,
pwr
seats,
non-smoker,
chrome wheels 69k. Super
clean. $8,250, 513-774-9767.
2003 HONDA CIVIC LX, 2
door, asking $16,500, has
5000 miles, call 937-873-9697.
2003 SUBARU 2.5X, AWD, 4door, CD/am/fm, cruise, A/C,
luggage rack, Pacifica Blue,
36K miles, EC, $16,900. Call
937-879-9858.
'70 CHEVY Impala
350, 4 door, lots of new parts
& paint. Nice car. $3,700 or
trade. Call 376-2690
SKYWRIGHTER
13C
BE CHOOSY
The perfect home for you is out there.
You’ll find it in the classifieds.
98 GMC Savannah Conversion
Van, CD/cassette, TV/VCR,
loaded, super sharp van,
$11,500, call 845-9667 or cell
657-9569.
'99 TOYOTA Camry LE
Loaded! Gray color. Perfect
condition. 56,000 miles. Sell
for $10,500. Call 372-7876.
'99 VW Beetle GLS
21,800 miles, PW, PL, cruise,
5 spd, AM/FM/cass., silver
w/black interior. $10,000 OBO.
Call 937-271-7072
House For Sale
Family wanted to fill a spacious
3 bdrm. home. 3 bath, 2 garage, great
neighborhood. A great deal!
PARTING OUT 1985 Fiero SE,
V-6, cheap body parts! Some
mechanical. Must sell. come &
get it! 848-4373.
Motorcycles/Boats/RV’s
New listings added every week!
Call
1988 35' FIFTH WHEEL on
channel, new frig, sofa w/2 recliners, queen bed, full size
deck w/covered roof. Located
at Behm's Landing in Celina
Site 7. Rent paid for 2004.
$9500. 836-8000 or 836-7083
296-4202
1997 PROWLER camper,
rarely used, sleeps 6, kitchen,
bath, new awning, asking
$8200. Call 376-4843 after 5.
1999 KTM 250 EXC, excellent
condition, hardly ridden, $2800
or best offer. Call 371-9193.
2001 Bobcat 27' travel trailer,
1 slide, stove w/oven, microwave, ducted heat/air, ext.
warr., queen walk-around bed,
weight distributing hitch &
brake controller incl. $14,500
937-382-4362
2002 24' WINNEBAGO motor
home w/slide-out. Sleeps 6.
Has all the extras incl. entertainment ctr. & levelers. Under
3000 mi. Perfect condition.
Must see! $38,500. 416-6924
2002 COACHMAN Cascade
travel trailer, model 25RKS
with 8' slide, sleeps 6, like new
condition, many extras, call for
details: 937-675-7041 lv msg
or 937-675-5701 lv msg.
2002 COACHMAN Cascade
travel trailer, model 25RKS
with 8' slide, sleeps 6, like new
condition, many extras, call for
details: 937-675-7041 lv msg
or 937-675-5701 lv msg.
2003 HONDA VTX 1800. Less
than 1000 miles red. $9000
FIRM. (Cell) 937-559-7920.
Time to take your auto
to the graveyard?
2003 KEYSTONE Sprinter 25
ft. w/slideout. Pull behind. Bike
rack, all towing accessories.
$12,500. Loaded. Call
832-3954 or 937-684-3972
'89 CHEVY Conversion Van
Runs great, looks great.
$3,500. 252-2162 or 376-9486.
20' FISHER Pontoon, 75HP
Merc outboard, new cover, set
up for fishing or cruising, lots of
extras, with trailer, exc. shape,
$8500. 237-9014 or 233-0439
'92 CADILLAC LaSalle DeVille
Sedan, blue, 4 door w/white
leather top & interior, power,
CD player, 4.9. $3,500.
Call 251-7755
'90 DUCATI 750 Sport
Mikuni carburetor, Cobra F-1
slip-ons, Corbin seat,
9,600 miles. Asking $2,800.
Call 937-781-0506
Check out the Classified Auto Section
for the best deals in new and
used vehicles just right for you!
Call today to place your ad.
937-296-4202
1-866-212-7355
Toll Free
1999 CAD CATERA, 69K mile,
Black w/Tan leather interior,
loaded w/options including
BOSE stereo, good condition,
asking $10,850, call 748-2054.
'1999 CHEVROLET Dually,
extended cab, 454 automatic,
tilt/cruise & A/C, wheel simulators, trailer hitch. Good condition. Only $12,999. 486-2405
1999 CHEVY Camaro
Red T-Top, 3.8 V6, Loaded
All Power, new tires, 39K
miles, $11,000. Call 849-9440
1999 HONDA Civic EX 5 spd.
2 dr. white, 70k mi. new tires,
pwr windows, A/C, excellent
condition, 100k mi. ext'd warranty. $9,750 236-4786.
1999 LEXUS RX300, silver
ext., gray int., AWD, luggage
rack, heated seats, all power,
64K miles, very nice, $19,500.
937-233-8181
BUICK
COLLISION REPAIR CENTER
Under New Management
We Take ALL Insurance Companies
Lifetime Warranty
Brand New State of the Art Chief Velocity
Measuring and Frame Equipment
Shuttle Service WPAFB
'1999 LINCOLN Town Car
Signature, new tires, brakes,
76K miles, dark blue w/blue
leather interior. $11,700.
Call 434-2030.
(pre-approved security clearance)
Monday - Friday - 7:30-6:00 Closed Saturday and Sunday
2000 CHEVY S-10 Extreme.
Ext. cab. Auto, A/C, AM/FM/
CD player, tonneau cover, bed
liner, Low mileage, Good condition. Asking payoff, 372-2338
2000 DODGE Dakota Sport
Quad Cab magnum 8 red,
bedliner, auto, air, tinted windows, heavy duty tow pkg. EC,
low miles. $13,500, 878-5478.
PONTIAC GMC
Phone: 878-7375
After Hours Cell 937-605-7426
7 days a week till 10:00 pm
Fax: 878-8325
271878
Assurance
of Quality
14C
SKYWRIGHTER
August 6, 2004
FREE CLASSIFIED ADS
• For employees of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
• See free ad rules and policies on free ad form.
• For more information call 255-7000.
Deadlines
Skywrighter Free Ad deadline:
12 pm Friday the week prior to publication.
Homes for Sale
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
BELLBROOK – Beautiful 2750
sq ft, 4 bdrm, 3 ba, finished
basement, convenient location,
Open House, 1-5, Sat/Sun,
4353 Napa Valley, $256,000.
848-2575
A/C window 17,000 BTU's,
$80. 10,000 BTU's casement,
$50.
19" color TV, $25.
253-4307
ASTRONAUT – signed fine art
prints: Neil Armstrong, John
Glenn, Alan Shepard, Jim
Lovell, Pete Conrad, Alan
Bean.
Email
pictures.
253-7642
Rentals
BEAVERCREEK – 3 bedroom,
2.5 bath townhouse, 2 car garage. Lots of extras. Cul-desac. Appl. incl. W/D hookups.
Some util. paid. $1300/mo &
deposit 626-7998, Avail 9/1 PCS
XENIA, 3 bdrm, 2 ½ bath, appliances incl, 2 car garage,
fenced yard w/pool, 12 miles
from WP. Nice!
PCSing,
$1000/mo
+
deposit.
374-0217
ALTO SAXOPHONE, like new,
Yamaha with case, $850. LeBlanc clarinet with case. Good
condition. $150. Call 4356455
AQUARIUM AND oak stand,
20 gallon tank with light/hood.
All
for
only
$100.
937-342-1139
AUDIO CABINET, 4 shelf,
glass enclosed front, Peter
Revington swivel top wood TV
stand/cabinet, will email pix.
667-3066
7212
HUBER
HEIGHTS,
Claybeck, Thurs-Sat, baby girl
clothes,
0-2T,
Exersaucer
Snugli toys. Furniture, men's
large sweaters, NASCAR stuff,
more.
Sale:
MOVING
GARAGE
Furniture, toys, misc. Thurs,
Aug 11, Fri. Aug 12, 9am.
Edith
Marie
Drive,
Beavercreek.
Moving Sale, Washington
Township,
5719
Barnsley
Place,
household
items,
clothes, snow and leaf blowers, tools, wheelbarrow, furniture, Aug 5-7. 10am-5pm
MULTI FAMILY street sale.
August 6 and 7. 8:30 to 4:00.
South end of Middy Drive in
Woodland Hills. Lots of fantastic deals!
PAGE MANOR, 5643 Gross
Dr, Aug 6-8, 10-4pm, Maternity
clothes, 0-12m girl clothes,
changing table, infant car seat,
and lots more.
YARD SALE, Saturday, 7
August, 2470 Dakem, off Beaver Valley, Beavercreek, darling girls baby clothes, furniture, tools, misc. 9-5.
Miscellaneous
10,500 BTU A/C, $150. 1.45W
microwave, $45.
Computer
monitor, $25. 19" TV, $25.
Entertainment Center, $45.
Ditto Tape drive w/tapes, $80.
864-5425
18" ALUMINUM wheels with
used tires, $600/OBO, 26"
women's 15-speed bicycle,
$20. 879-1981
25" COLOR TV in a beautiful
solid oak entertainment center.
Extremely well built cabinet.
EC.. Moving – a great deal!
426-1977, $225.
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
BAR – Beautiful rustic bar.
Never used. Still in plastic.
Paid $1275. Must sell, moving.
Asking $600/OBO.
937-672-1004
COFFEE TABLE and 2 end
tables, oak and glass, $175.
Book cases, oak veneer 4',
$60. 6', $80. 2-drawer file
cab, $20. 429-2770
DOUBLE/QUEEN bed frame,
$15. Single mattress and box
spring, EC, $90. Dresser, mirror, headboard, night stand,
fair. $100. 252-4042
F-150 red truck cap, $495.
Great Big Bertha II, 9 degree,
firm, $199.
Exc cond.
878-1194
BED, FULL size w/headboard,
Simmons, $175.
Computer
Pentium,
187MHZ,
14"
COLOR MONITOR, Office 98,
$100; 5 ½' bookcase and 3'
cabinet, $15/each. 429-2770
COFFEE TABLE and two and
tables oak, glass topped, $80.
937-878-8125
DOUBLE STROLLER, $50.
Car seats, $25/ea. Dog crate
(med), $25. 429-7127
COMPUTER DESK and chair,
$30. Compaq Presario 1220
notebook computer, Pentium2,
Win98SE, Office 97, mouse,
extend
keyboard,
$75.
237-8343 after 5pm.
DRESSER(S) 2 each, 6
drawer, EC. Both med brown.
Call Will 9am-9pm, M-S,
258-0144
BEDROOM SET vanity large
mirror, dresser, full length mirror, bed matching head and
foot-board, all drawers, functional, $500. 879-3860
BUMPER
POOL/Exercise
equipment: pool, $30. Health
Rider, New $185, sell $40.
Formula Stepper, 15 resistances, $30. 376-2858
BUNKBED – desk and bookshelf combo, w/mattresses,
$600. Can back rocker and
table, $45. Bombay Co TV
stand & lamp (new), $350.
Kitchen
lighting,
$20.
294-7917
CABINET WITH glass doors
and lower wood doors and
shelves. Locks. Holds 12
guns.
Very nice condition.
$85/OBO 429-4233
BABY JOGGER/stroller, 3
wheels blue with hand brake,
$100/OBO 427-0231
CAMCORDER
SONY
$200/OBO. Dining room table,
white,
tiletop with chairs,
$50.
Breadmaker, $40. Call
252-0479
BAR, $45; speakers 3-piece,
$40; bookcase pine, $75; microwave, $25; torch lamp, $10;
Globe wood standings, $39;
club, $19. 439-4512
CAR TOP (luggage) carrier.
Sears, good condition. Call
879-2615
manual
BREAST
PUMP
AVENT ISIS, $20. Boppy pillow,
blue,
$15.
Call
937-320-9878
CEDAR PICNIC table, Amish
built. Seats 8 adults. Comfortable, hexagon shaped.
Center hole for umbrella,
$200/OBO. 299-2046
–
COMPUTER
DESK
grey/black corner, 2 tier. 28
inch high by 48X55. You dismantle. Great condition. $20.
427-0765
COMPUTER MONITOR 21",
1600 X 1200 resolution, good
condition.
Price:
$100.
Phone 754-7223
COUCH BROWN floral prints
with wood trim. Excellent condition, $95. Kiddi-o tricycle,
$25. Please call 426-5085
CRIB BABI Italia, light oak
with built-in drawer. Like new.
Asking $130/OBO.
Call
259-1145
DESK, TAN metal w/wood top,
$100. 2-drawer tan metal file
cabinet, $50. 848-8636
DINING ROOM table 4'X6',
oval w/4 chairs, $35/OBO.
253-5275. Lv message
DINING ROOM table, 6 chairs,
lighted china hutch, beautiful
wood, EC $495. 233-7377
DISHWASHER,
KENMORE
Ultra wash 2, white and almond panels, good condition,
$75. 937-427-7976
DRESSERS, SET of three with
matching mirror and night
stand. Beautiful dark cherry,
$400. Nancy 320-1794
DRESSER WITH mirror, chest
of drawers, real wood, in good
condition, $200. 429-0189
DRIVEWAY
BLACKTOP
sealant – Have fourteen, 5-gal
pails. $5/ea. All for $60. Call
864-5172
ELECTRIC
SCOOTER,
$100/OBO 669-2570
ENGINE 8HP BRIGGS Stratton horizontal 1" shaft has
electric
start,
$150/OBO.
849-6497
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER,
mission oak, $300.
Nordic
weight cage, free weights, twin
bookcase, headboard, mattress, boxsprings, $70. 19"
TV, $40. 885-1804
FLUTE BUFFET with case,
good condition. Paid $250.
Will sell $200/OBO. Just in
time for school.
Call
937-252-5470
FLUTE,
GEMEINHARDT,
open hole, B-foot solid silver
head, silver plated body, excellent
condition,
$400.
675-6528
FORD SHORTBED pick-up
cover that snaps in and bed
liner. Like new condition.
$280/OBO. 429-4233
FOREVER MINE, 3-in-1 convertible crib with mattress, excellent condition, $140. Bathseat, potty chair, and girls tricycle, $5/ea. 236-3483
FOR SALE: Bed, twin rollaway w/extras, $25. German
tea set, 26 pc, blue/white, $20.
Phone 879-2020
FOR SALE: Couch, loveseat,
earth tone colors, great condition. $350/OBO. Call Beth or
Mike 898-5228 after 7 pm.
FREE BEAGLES, all shots,
spayed, neutered, female 7,
male 9, cage, leashes, etc.
Not good with small children.
Loving. 937-623-6711
EXERCISE BIKE – DP air
Gometer.
White and gray.
Bionix computer and manual.
$35. 937-342-1139
FREE CAT: black and gray,
short hair, all shots, neutered,
sweet & loving. Wants to be
only cat. 937-429-9725
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT Universal gym with 4 sides, dual
weight stacks. Heavy duty, VG
condition, $250. 429-9985 or
671-8232
FREE CATS! Joe and Tommy
need a home immediately.
They can be separated. Wonderful pets! Children allergic.
Call 431-5585, 260-0726
FREE SKYWRIGHTER CLASSIFIED AD FORM
Only one ad per person per week in one category can be accepted
FREE CLASSIFIED AD POLICIES AND RULES:
Garage Sales
GARAGE SALE – Saturday,
th
August 7 only, 9am-2pm. 349
Apricot Lane in Pine Estates,
WPAFB, multi-family household, baby, misc. CD's
Miscellaneous
1. Only full-time civilian employees and military members at WrightPatterson Air Force Base, and retired military members and civilian
employees, are eligible to use the free ad program.
2. Ads must be typed or neatly printed in the spaces provided.
3. Ads must not exceed 20 words.
4. Only one ad is permitted per person per week in one category, do not
combine separate categories into one ad, except for individuals who
are PCSing; those who are PCSing may submit one ad in each category
each week, until they PCS. These ads must be clearly marked “PCS.”
5. Ads may be hand-carried to the Skywrighter office, bldg. 70, Area C,
sent to 88ABW/PAI through base distribution, or mailed to Skywrighter,
88ABW/PA, Bldg. 70, 5215 Thurlow St., WPAFB OH 45433 or use the
drive-through drop box in the parking lot behind Bldg. 70, Area C.
6. Only a home phone or address may be used in the ad; no base
extensions or base e-mail addresses are allowed, except for dormitory
residents (residential status must be stated in ad). Personal e-mail
5
$ 00
Deadline: FRIDAY NOON
for next week’s Skywrighter. . A drop box is available at the Skywrighter
office Bldg. 70, Area C, or submit ads by mail.
will put your ad in the
following publications
Fairborn Daily Herald
Greene County Sunday Shopper
Beavercreek News-Current
Beavercreek News-Current EXTRA
Xenia Daily Gazette • Enon Messenger
Kettering-Oakwood Times
Centerville-Bellbrook Times
Springboro Sun • Huber Heights Courier
Vandalia News Drummer
New Carlisle Sun • Englewood Independent
West Milton Record • Tipp City Herald
Name
addresses will be accepted.
7. Ads will be accepted on this form only. No copies or faxes will be
accepted.
8. No revisions or cancellations will be made after the ad is submitted.
9. Only “free” animals ads will be accepted (“free” must be stated).
10. Real estate, rental and ads for homes for sale will be accepted
only from WPAFB employees who are PCSing; the letters “PCS”
must appear somewhere on the ad form. Primary residence only time share, resort and vacation properties may not be listed in the
free ads section.
11. Ads appearing to promote a business will be rejected. (No firewood
unless free)
12. Ads for weapons, antiques and collectible items will be rejected.
13. Privately owned tickets sold through the free ads must show the
ticket price and may not exceed the face value of the ticket.
Type or print ad here – Limit of 20 words.
Check correct category for your ad:
❑ Share a Ride
❑ Lost & Found
❑ Wanted
❑ Real Estate for Rent/Sale
❑ Motorcycles/Boats/RV’s
❑ Automobile
❑ Miscellaneous
❑ Garage Sales
❑ Help Wanted
Address
I certify that the property here listed is my own and that the property will be shown, sold or
leased without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, military status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other non-merit factor. This form must be signed.
City
Typed or Printed Name
Zip
Signature
32' EXTENSION ladder, $180.
Whirlpool washer, $50. Frigidaire electric dryer, like new,
$150.
All OBO.
Call
974-0289
Home Phone
Office Symbol
❑ Visa
Office Ext.
52" RCA Big Screen, $795
firm. Running boards for extended cab pickup, $20. 30"
and 32" doors, oak, $25/both
270-2816
Credit Card #
Retired Military or Retired Civilian (check here) ❑
Exp. Date
Your cooperation is needed to continue the free ad program. The ASC Public
Affairs Office reserves the right to edit and/or reject ads not conforming to the
intent of the free ad policy, which is to provide base people with the opportunity to
advertise personal property in which other base people may be interested. A
rejection slip noting the reason will be forwarded to the submitter when an ad
cannot be accepted; no phone calls will be made.
2M YAESU handheld, 2m
Yaesu mobile, 10m President
mobile radios, $150 for all.
937-609-0655
❑ Mastercard
th
ABEKA, 3, 7, 8, 10 grade,
ABC's with Ace and Christie.
Misc curriculum. Wired dog
crate.
4'LX3'WX2'H.
864-7994
Do not include cash or check with this form.
To take advantage of this offer, ad must appear in
current Skywrighter issue as a free ad.
August 6, 2004
SKYWRIGHTER
15C
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Motorcycles/Boats/RVs
Motorcycles/Boats/RVs
FREE DOG Lab/Shepherd
mix. About 2 years old. Excellent with children. Spayed
and updated shots. 429-9985
or 671-8232
MILL CINN vertical 2A with
Palmgren vise 110/220 single
phase 1hp motor. Lots extras
and material. 937-325-7427
1968 CHEVY Camaro 350.
Auto, newer paint, interior Cragar 55 wheels, tires. Runs,
drives, looks great! $16,000.
937-426-2277
Thunderbird,
1993
FORD
white, 145K mi, alloy wheels,
PS/PB, Plocks, Pwindows,
A/C, $1800. 667-4826
14' ALUM V-bottom w/trailer,
new 45 pd Trolly motor. 15hp
gas motor, new swivel seats,
runs good. $1200. Call Rick
475-4266
1979 FORD F-100 Truck runs;
some rust; 107,000 actual
miles.
Springfield,
937-323-1980. $800.
1994 FORD Taurus GL, 4 dr
wagon, 125K, clean, cold air,
cruise, air bags, 2 new tires, echecked, $2575. Leave phone
# 877-303-2574
2000 FORD Taurus SES,
3.01V6, 70K auto, A/C, ABS,
cruise, PS,
tilt,
PW/PD,
PWseat, anti-theft, remoteentry, alum-whls. $5949/OBO
937-848-2028
30'
2000
GULFSTREAM
Travel Trailer Innsbruck Series, hard-wired slide room.
Less than 500 miles. Selfcontained, immaculate. Retail
$17,195.
Asking $13,900.
937-325-3596
FREE TO good home. 1-yr-old
mixed breed dog. Male. Neutered.
Feisty, but loving.
937-776-5618
FREE TUMBLING compost
mixer.
Has its own stand.
Easy turning mixes compost
for optimum performance. Call
864-5885 after 5pm.
FRIGIDAIRE WASHER and
dryer. Less than one year old,
$400 pair, OBO.
Call
372-7009
FURNITURE:
COMPUTER
desk, $8. Multiple shelves, 5
feet high, $10. Disassembled
for easy transport. Instruction
included. Call after 6pm. 2365633
MORGANTOWN GOLFBALL
cobalt
jacob
candlesticks,
$150/pr, seven cobalt juices,
$25. Each Amethyst pink blue
cordials, $25/each. 431-4763.
Leave message
MOVING,
REFRIGERATOR
GE 17.7 cu ft top freezer, $60.
Available 8/26/04. Sofa, loveseat, green/beige plaid, both
$75. More items. 236-0148
MOVING SALE: dishes, many
misc items. Too much to list.
Call 879-4536 after 6:00 for
more information.
MOWER CRAFTSMAN Selfpropelled, $80.
Dresser, 8
drawer, $40. Truck cap short
bed, $90. Chest, $35. Desk,
$30. 878-5820
MUSIC STANDS by Hamilton,
One in black plastic case, $12.
Other, no case, $10. Stainless
steel silver tone. 236-0361
1985 OLDS Delta 88, 2 door,
V8, good condition, e-checked,
$500/OBO.
253-8422
1986 NISSAN 300ZX, gold Ttop, leather seats, 2 door,
power windows. Approx 200K,
runs,
mod
rust,
$350.
937-320-1771
1987 HONDA Accord LXi, tan
4 dr, pb, pw, sunroof, A/C, 5spd, new tires and battery,
200K miles, runs good. $995.
937-431-9264
1987 HONDA Prelude Si, 5
speed, 2 door, new clutch, new
tires, replaced motor 5K ago,
runs great, great gas mileage.
$800/OBO. 937-524-6523
FURNITURE: ESTATE liquidation, couches, chairs, handicap lift recliner, tables, dresser,
chester
drawers,
etc.
657-8204
OAK DINING table with 6
chairs,
$400/OBO.
Cedar
chest, solid and refinished,
$150. Call 252-0479
1989 CHRYSLER New Yorker,
V6 engine, fully loaded. Has
only 80,000 original miles.
Like new condition.
Price
$3000. Call 849-6497
GAS BLOWER McCulloch,
needs
gas
tank
repair,
$5/OBO. Computer HP 486
50MZSX,
14"
monitor,
$50/OBO. 427-3255
ORGAN BALDWIN, church
quality,
includes
teachyourself-to-play books. Two
keyboards and foot pedals.
Great
condition.
$100.
836-9713
1989 HONDA Prelude 2.0 SI,
5-spd, cruise, A/C, AM/FM/CD,
sun
roof,
dependable
school/work car. $1800/OBO.
426-7305
GOLF BAG Ladies, $20.
Shelf unit brass tubing and
wood,
4
glass
shelves
39WX70HX14D,
$40.
879-2172
ORGAN: FULL-size Baldwin
electronic, suitable for church
or home. Lovely walnut finish
with roll top.
Make offer.
253-2725
GOLF CLUBS, left-hand, junior or ladies, 4 thru SW and 13-5 metal woods, oversize,
VGC, $110. 937-253-1001
PCS KENMORE HD+ washer
dryer, $250. Upright freezer,
$150. 20" TV Sony, $50. Pier
1 futon, $125.
All OBO.
937-258-9738
GOLF CLUBS, RH, almost
new 1-3-5 oversize graphite
shafted woods, 3-PW steel
irons, bag and putter, $75.
426-1517
GRACO BASSINETT – excellent condition. Looks brand
new! $40. Call 252-6740. Can
email picture!
electric
GUITAR,
BLACK
Bently, Barely used. Comes
with hard case, shoulder strap
and crate amp, $235. Call
937-304-8306
GUITAR TAKAMINE Acoutic/electric, Model ND15C,
good condition, custom fitted
hardshell case, 10' cable, instruction booklet, Elixir strings,
$799. 427-9560
HAYNES REPAIR manual for
91-99 Saturn, $10. Dex-cool
antifreeze coolant, $10/OBO.
Call 371-5961
HEAD BOARD by Broyhill.
Queen size. Perfect condition,
$300. 829-7356
HUMIDIFIERS
SLANT/fin
warm mist, $20. Bemis cool
mist, $10. Both excellent condition. Brass lamps, 3 ft high,
Pair, $30. 426-2014
HUTCH, CHERRY finish with
glass shelves/doors, detailed
design with interior lighting.
New $1300.
Asking $500.
937-252-9820
KITCHEN TABLE, really good
shape, clawed feet. 879-0825,
$65.
Portable dishwasher,
Kenmore, $70/OBO
LADY MACGREGOR golf
clubs. No. 1 & 3 woods and
No. 3-5-7-9 irons and putter.
New pull cart and bag. Never
used. $125/OBO 878-5524
LAPIDARY FOUR pounds
jade Alaska Wyoming much
cutting material diamond saw
unused mounted bowl thunder
eggs
abrasives,
$125.
864-0558
LATHE, ATLAS 6 inch metal
cutting, some tools and accessories, $250. Call 937-3762553
LAWNMOWER,
SNAPPER.
Self-propelled, discharge, bagger, mulch 22 in cut, 5hp, extra
blade. $145. 937-481-8311
LOVESEAT. PUB back. Oak
trim. Soft brown. Excellent
condition. Hardly used. Over
$200 new. $50. 236-0137
MAPLE TABLE – 42 inch plus
12 inch leaf. Four beautiful old
ladderback chairs, thatched
woven seats. Great condition,
$100. 427-0765
MARTIAL ARTS James Lew
video "Stretching and Kicking"
$10. 882-6559
MAYTAG WASHER and dryer,
Great condition, older model,
but
works
fine!
$175.
937-620-1278
RECORDER – digital BOSS
BR-1180CD, 8+ track, mint
condition, $900. Necklace –
new aquarmarine & diamonds
in
white
gold,
$575.
513-260-1775
[email protected]
RIDING MOWER – Craftsman,
15.5hp ohv turbo cool, 42" 6
speed. Great shape. Brand
new. $900. Dayton. 263-3419
ROTISSERIE/BARBEQUE,
game table, sleep sofa, bed
frame with spread, living room
chair. Two golf pull carts, ski
boots. Call 434-3751
ROUND TABLE wood, 42" diameter, 12" leaf with 4 chairs,
excellent condition, $75/OBO.
879-5298
SATELLITE RECEIVER, decoder, direct TV, no dish, 3 ½
years old, $50/OBO. 429-8567
SMALL DOG carrier, $10.
Deluxe pet yard pen, 72"long
26" high, $50. Call Mary 937298-1082 recorder, 9am-9pm.
Monday-Monday.
SOFA – beautiful dark red and
blue plaid, $125. Coordinating
chair recliner, $45.
Brass
bench w/cushion for foot of
bed, $12. 427-0294
TIRES, FALKEN Ziex 195X14,
new condition. Performance
radial, $120 all four.
Call
882-9606
TRAMPOLINE – 14 ft, $50.
There are a few small holes in
the mat. 15X36 above ground
pipe pool, $50. Call 689-1678
TROY-BILT mulching mower.
B&S 5hp Quantum engine.
S/P $150. 477-9037
1989 HONDA PRELUDE Si,
Looks good.
Runs great.
147,000 miles. Original owner.
$2900. Call 435-6575
1990 PONTIAC Bonneville SE.
Gray. Runs super, looks great.
Always garaged. 180K miles.
Passed e-check. $1400/OBO
864-1616 after 5pm
1991 DODGE Grand Caravan,
193,000 miles, power doors,
windows, locks, mirrors, trip
computer. Runs good. Needs
tires. Hitch. $900. 426-6593
1991 HONDA Prelude, black,
good condition, 5 spd, 160K
miles. $2,200/OBO. 233-2190
1991 TOYOTA Corolla LE, 4
dr, 5 spd, 93K, A/C, AM/FM,
cassette,
good
condition,
newer tires, brakes, exhaust,
$2000. 320-1041
1991 VW Jetta. Good condition. Auto, air, AM/FM, cassette, cruise, new exhaust and
heat, shocks.
$1300/OBO
937-748-2607
1992 CHEV Lumina, 129,000
miles, new radiator, alternator,
fuel pump, runs well, good
transportation
for
teen.
$1200/OBO.
422-4513,
879-5337
1992 CHEV Lumina, V-6, red
exterior, grey interior, newer
radiator, fuel pump, alternator,
air-Incp, rungs great. $1200 or
offer. 879-5337, 422-4513
1992 CHEVY Lumina, 4-door
sedan, V-6, automatic, good
condition. One owner. All
maintenance. Records. Echecked. 144K miles. $1000.
435-8206
1992 FORD F-250 supercab,
76K miles, towing package,
th
dual tanks, 5 wheel hitch,
Zeibart, original owner, nonsmoker, excellent condition.
$5,500. 236-0081
1993 FORD Taurus, GL, 83K
3.8LV6, silver, good condition,
power everything, automatic.
Contact Tracy
879-5804,
$1900.
1994 Mustang 2 door coupe, 5
liter 8 cyl mechanic maintained, Neons Sony stereo with
remote, $3500. 426-4263
1995 FORD Windstar 3.8 V6,
auto, PW, very nice clean.
$4000. 937-767-2507
1995 HONDA Accord EX, 4
door, sunroof, all power options, A/C, well maintained,
131K, $3900.
429-9985 or
671-8232
1995 HONDA Prelude SE,
High performance engine.
Ziebart rust protection, echecked, drive to believe.
$6000/OBO (NADA $7000)
233-9900 or 219-8800
1995 MERCURY Grand Marquis, power everything, CD
player, great condition. Must
sell. 681-3005 or 302-0675.
See at base lot $3800/OBO.
1995 TOYOTA 4Runner, 4WD,
manual black, roof rack, running boards, alloy wheels,
towing package, CD changer,
good
condition.
$5000.
266-2923
1996 JEEP Cherokee Sport,
4dr, 4X4, red, auto, 6 cyl, A/C,
cruise, AM/FM cassette, tow
package, theft alarm, 116,000
mi, $4,600. 937-429-9466
1997 EXPLORER Limited,
loaded, black with grey leather,
good condition. 102,000 miles.
$8500/OBO 667-7642
1997 FORD Escort, 118K,
well maintained, CD player,
new battery, new timing belt,
newer tires. A/C needs work.
$1800. 878-7787
1997 FORD Explorer, fully
loaded, 6 CD changer, tape
deck,
4X4,
$10,000.
937-371-7121
1997 HONDA Civic hatchback.
Excellent condition.
A/C,
AM/FM cassette, silver finish.
$3600. 937-879-7123
1997 NISSAN Quest, 3 dr dark
red, 7 passenger minivan, new
tires, clean, 78,000 miles.
$6500. 323-8410
1997 TOYOTA Corolla, new
clutch, timing belt, brakes,
power options, CD player,
good condition, garaged, nonsmoker.
$4900/OBO
236-1527
2001 CHEVROLET Cavalier, 2
dr, lowered rims and much
more.
Only 38,000 miles.
$6,700. Call 620-9482
2001 CHEVY Impala LS.
44,000 mi. V6.
Excellent
in/out. Original owner with records. See it on resale lot.
$13,900. Call 620-2950
2001 HONDA Odyssey EX,
V6, gold w/tan leather, loaded,
power everything, alloys, nonsmoker, rack, tinted, 34K
miles.
Excellent condition!
$18,500. 937-848-8337
1990 30' GEORGIE Boy Class
A motorhome. Fully equipped
ready to travel. Sleeps 6, Ford
Triton, V10, 17,000 miles.
$28,900. 426-9909
2001 SATURN L100, clean,
60K miles 4 cyl, 5-sp, side air
bags, ABS traction AM/FM/CD.
$0 deductible, extended warranty, $6850. 937-864-5926
Nighthawk
1992
HONDA
750cc, new tires, excellent
condition. Rebuilt carburetor,
candy apple red. $2400 or
reasonable
offer.
937-235-2688
2002 BMW K1200RS 27,000
miles, black with bags and luggage rack, completely stock,
$13,000. Call 254-2326, leave
message.
2002 CHEVROLET Trailblazer
4.2L-6, loaded, heated, sidemirrors, traction control, trailer
hitch, AM/FM/CD, speaker stereo. Only 37K miles. Only
$19,500. Call 937-236-0812
2002 GMC Sonoma pick-up 4
cyl, 5 spd, A/C, bedliner cap,
only 12K miles! 25 mpg! Warranty Kbb over $11K. Asking
$8995/OBO 937-429-0184
2003 BUICK Rendezvous CXblack 24,000 m, auto, sunroof,
leather, On-Star, loaded. Has
everything.
Cost
$31,885.
Sacrifice $26,800. Evenings.
667-8401
2003 HYUNDAI Sonata LX,
V6, white w/tan leather, moonroof, 16" alloy wheels, 4 dr Sedan, CD, one owner, 12K.
$14,995. 513-398-3453
WHIRLPOOL EXTRA large
capacity washer, 4 cycle,
white,
one
year
old.
$150/OBO. 291-3851
Help Wanted
BABYSITTER NEEDED ASAP
in Kettering area first or second shift (some weekends) for
21 month old child.
Call
304-7292
Davidson
1998
HARLEY
Sportster, nicely accessorized,
FWD controls, vivid black, like
new. $6795/OBO. 427-8759
2001 KAWASAKI KX125. Excellent condition. Low hours.
$2500. 602-8887
2001 HARLEY Davidson 1200
Sportster. Vivid black, chrome
drag pipes, SEair, re-jetted
carb. Solo & two-up saddle.
Extras. 3.5k miles. $9000.
879-2764
2001 HD Road King Classic –
always garaged 3,800 mi tour
pack, 2 tone paint, super
clean, extra chrome & pipes.
$14,000. 878-2794
9 ½ hp Evenrude outboard
motor, 1965 model.
Runs
good. $350. 845-2375
PONTOON HARRIS 1988
Flote Bote 200 sunliner, 20 ft,
35hp,
Mercury
w/trailer,
$5000/OBO 937-675-3490
SAIL BOARD, good condition,
$350. 878-0704
SEARS 13 FT fishing boat.
Good condition.
Oars included. Motor ready, $200.
Call 937-323-2256, Springfield.
Wanted
M/F to share 3 bedroom 2
bath house in Huber Heights.
$350/month including utilities
for details. Call 237-8402
share
ROOMMATE
TO
Beavercreek home.
5 min
from WPAFB/WSU.
C/A,
washer,
dryer,
Highspeed
Internet, cable $400/mo. All
utilities paid. 426-3528
USED MOVING boxes and
packing papers. Will pick up
848-3578
WOODEN SWING set with
slide.
Will dismantle and
move. Call 754-0986
LET US BUILD AN
AD FOR YOU
Just Call
296-4202
For More
Information
UP TO $2500
IN CUSTOMER CASH ON
ALL NEW 2004 SUBARUS*
OR 1.9% APR UP TO 48 MOS.
2.9% APR UP TO 63 MOS.
1999 ALERO GLS 61K miles.
3.4L, V6, red leather, CD Tach,
auto, keyless entry, sunroof,
$7500.
Split rear seats.
885-2915
1999 CHEVY S-10 Indigo blue,
A/C, CD, locking differential,
bedliner, bucket seats, 89K
miles.
Great
condition.
Regular cab.
$4300/OBO
937-902-5885
LEGACY
FORESTER
IMPREZA
PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
2004 Subaru Forester X, blue, auto, 8k
2003 Nissan 350Z, silver, 6 spd., performance pkg.
2003 VW Jetta GLS, 1.8T Motor, 5spd, leather, blue
2002 Subaru WRX sedan, blue, 5 spd
2002 Subaru Forester S, Blue, auto, 35K
2001 Chevrolet Lumina, green
2000 GMC Yukon XL, 3/4 ton, 4x4, tv, red, loaded!
2000 Subaru Outback white, auto, 45k
2000 Honda Accord LX, green, 4dr, auto
2000 Ford Crown Victoria, silver, auto, loaded
1999 Subaru Outback, auto, green
1999 Subaru Forester, white, 5 spd
1999 Subaru Forester, green, 5 spd
1999 Mercury Sable LS, low miles, red
1999 Hyundai Elantra, green, auto
1998 Subaru Forester, green, auto
1997 Dodge Dakota, green, 5 spd, 2 WD
1997 Buick Skylark Custom, 4dr, red
1996 Saturn SL2, gold, auto
1996 Geo Prism LSI, 4dr, auto, green
1994 VW Passat GLX, 5spd, gray
1999 FORD Taurus-SE, 4dautomatic, air PS/PB/PW/PL,
power seat, ABS, tilt wheel,
cruise, AM/FM/stereo, cassette, dual air bags, EC, 121K,
$4,100/OBO 937-585-4547
plus tax
on most vehicles
Includes:
Filter, top off fluids
& lube chassis
1997 WINNEBAGO Adventurer 32 ft wide-body 460 Ford
engine. New tires, batteries,
awning. 5kw generator. Well
maintained.
46.7k miles.
$37,500. 293-8261
2004 KIA Spectra 4 dr, gold,
under 6,000 miles.
Rust
proof,
undercoating,
paint/fabric protection. Asking
payoff around $13,000/OBO.
home: 937-836-7043 or cell:
419-276-9313
UMBRELLA STROLLER –
extra wheels, $10.
Soccer
shoes, childs, $4. Boys shoes,
$4-$6. Manicure set "The Nail
Center", $10.
Curling iron,
$25. 678-8529
WASHER DRYER, like new
condition, $400/OBO.
Call
426-0812 after 5.
Capri,
1996
BAYLINER
120hp, outboard Bimini top fish
finder skis tube included.
Runs great. Excellent condition.
$7000/OBO.
Ben
256-5584
2003 TOYOTA Tundra Limited, 4WD, V8, dark red, tan
leather, bed liner, excellent
condition, 19,500 miles. Call
431-8225
1998 OLDSMOBILE 88LS,
excellent, 74K, leather, new
brakes. $6,600. 325-7440
$15.95
1971 DODGE Xplorer Motorhome, 318 V-8, auto, low
miles, stove, fridge, furnace,
shower, etc. rare, good condition. $2500. 361-6775, leave
message
Davidson
1989
HARLEY
FLSTC (soft tail classic).
Clean machine, Good ride!
$10,000. 937-322-1832
TV 27" European Pal dual –
voltage, great overseas, $75.
Dresser and tall boy dresser,
whit color insert, $200. Excellent. 427-4150
WALL CABINETS – 3 piece
set
each
measures
78"HX32"WX16"D,
$100.
Chest
of
drawers,
52"LX37"HX18"D,
$40.
427-0294
16' FIBERGLASS fishing boat
w/trailer, 50 HP Merc, foot
control trolling, fish finder, lite
wells. $825. 426-9909
2001 DODGE Neon SE,
41,000 silver with black interior, $7000. 371-0014
$18,995*
$29,995*
$15.995*
$17,995*
$17,995*
$8,995*
$24,995*
$14,995*
$12,995*
$10,495*
$12,995*
$10,995*
$8,995*
$7,995*
$4,995*
$8,495*
$7,995*
$4,495*
$3,995*
$2,995*
$4,995*
* Plus tax, title & license
• SINCE 1971 THE DAYTON AREA’S OLDEST SUBARU DEALER.
• THE DAYTON AREA’S #1 VOLUME DEALER• NAMED THE NATION’S NUMBER
ONE SUBARU SERVICE CENTER BY SUBARU OF AMERICA
www.wagnersubaru.com
BOBTATONE
SALES & SERVICE CENTER
845 N. BROAD ST., FAIRBORN, U.S. Rt. 444
Across From Wright Patt. AFB
Mon.-Fri. 7:30-5pm
878-3914
The Dayton Areas Largest Full Service Independent Auto Dealer.
Full Service Parts, Service Dept and Body Shop
271906
271893
FREE LONG haired gray white
1.5 year old cat and all black 9
months kitten. Need homes.
Shots current. Call 254-4799
Driven By What’s Inside.®
Mon. & Wed. 9-8; Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-6; Sat. 9-4
1-866-243-2171
(937) 878-2171
217 N. BROAD STREET., FAIRBORN
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August 6, 2004
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MSRP ......................................................$13,550
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NEW CARLISLE FORD DISCOUNT............$700
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FACTORY
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FACTORY
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..................................$2,000
FACTORY
REBATE
..................................$3,000
★
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NOT A LEASE $
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2000 FORD CONVERSION
2001 MERCURY MARQUIS
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$14,697
$16,997
$15,497
$16,297
$16,997
$14,497
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★ 2002 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR 2004 FORD CARGO VAN
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2003 FORD MUSTANG
2000 HONDA CIVIC LX
2001 FORD RANGER
2002 JEEP GRAND
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2001 MERCURY SABLE
1999 FORD RANGER
2001 CHRYSLER SEBRING
2002 CHEVROLET IMPALA
1999 CHEVROLET CAMERO
2002 FORD MUSTANG
★ 2003 DODGE INTREPID
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2003 FORD 15 PASSENGER
B3000
2001 FORD FOCUS SE WAGON
2001 JEEP WRANGLER
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2002 FORD ESCORT
1996 FORD EXPLORER
1999 DODGE DURANGO
1999 FORD WINDSTAR
1999 FORD ESCORT
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