Fall - PNG Military Museum
Transcription
Fall - PNG Military Museum
Governor Edward G. Rendell The Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Jessica L. Wright Features: End of an Era . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Pennsylvania National Guard says goodbye to respected leader . . . . . . . . . 9 Remembering, honoring fallen service members . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Governor Edward G. Rendell The Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Jessica L. Wright A nd the beat goes on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Weather or not, this station is ready . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Keystone Airmen unlock Kyrgyzstan kindergarten’s potential . . . . . . . . . . 14 Executive Editor/State Public Affairs Officer Lt. Col. Christopher Cleaver Train as you treat: the 21st century Combat Lifesaver Course . . . . . . . . . 16 Managing Editor Sgt. Matthew E. Jones Big hearts on the Big Island . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 State Public Affairs Staff Maj. Cory Angell Capt. Jay Ostrich Staff Sgt. Ted Nichols Sgt. Damian Smith Joan Nissley A more accurate, more effective mortar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 State Public Affairs Office Pennsylvania National Guard Fort Indiantown Gap Building 8-41 Annville, PA 17003 www.dmva.state.pa.us A run to remember . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 19th annual State Veterans Homes Week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 From Gulf to golf, bunker to bunker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Departments: Final Roll Call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 K eystone Newsmakers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Curator’s Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Bob Ulin, Publisher Marie Lundstrom, Editor Gloria Schein, Graphic Artist Chris Kersbergen & Darrell George, Advertising Sales Toll Free: (866) 562-9300 Fax: (907) 562-9311 Web: www.AQPpublishing.com www.dmva.state.pa.us This unofficial magazine is an authorized publication for members of the Pennsylvania National Guard. Contents of the magazine are not necessarily the official view of, or endorsed by, the U.S. Government, the Department of Defense, Department of the Army and/or the Air Force or the Pennsylvania National Guard. The appearance of advertising in this publication does not constitute endorsement by the State of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania National Guard, DoD, AQP Publishing Inc., the Department of the Army and/or the Air Force or the publisher of this magazine of the firms, products or services advertised. Pennsylvania Guardians magazine is published by the Pennsylvania National Guard to keep its members, the Guard command and public officials, better informed on the issues and events affecting the Pennsylvania National Guard. Editorial content is edited, prepared and provided by the Office of Public Affairs, JFHQ-PA. All photographs and graphic devices are copyrighted to the Pennsylvania National Guard, unless otherwise indicated. ON THE COVER: Sgt. Lindsey Myers, top, and Spc. Isiah White treat a simulated casualty during a Combat Lifesaver Course training lane May 20 at Fort Indiantown Gap. The lanes feature intense stressors, such as battle sounds, screaming instructors, fog and darkness, in order to test the Soldiers’ skills under pressure. Photo: Sgt. Shawn Miller Join the Pennsylvania National Guard, the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs and the Adjutant General online. PA National Guard: Twitter – www.twitter.com/panationalguard Facebook – www.facebook.com/panationalguard Flickr – www.flickr.com/panationalguard YouTube – www.youtube.com/panationalguard DMVA: Twitter – www.twitter.com/padmva The Adjutant General: Twitter – www.twitter.com/tagpng Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 1 FINAL ROLL CALL Sgt. 1st Class Bryan hoover holds a piece of a rocket-propelled grenade in Zabul, Afghanistan, May 15. Photo: Courtesy of Dan Shakal Sgt. 1st Class Bryan Hoover and Sgt. 1st Class Robert Fike provide security for the Zabul, Afghanistan, Provincial Reconstruction Team, May 14. Photo: Courtesy of Dan Shakal Two Pennsylvania Army National Guard Soldiers were killed by a suicide bomber in Zabul Province, Afghanistan, on June 11. Sgt. 1st Class Robert J. Fike, 38, Conneautville, Crawford County, and Sgt. 1st Class Bryan A. Hoover, 29, West Elizabeth, Allegheny County, were on a foot patrol in the Bullard Bazaar when they were killed in the blast. Sgt.1st Class Robert Fike poses with his daughter MacKenzie before deploying to Afghanistan. Photo: Courtesy of Fike Family They were serving with the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s Company C, 1st Battalion, 110th Infantry, based in Connellsville. They were providing security for Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul. “These were experienced Soldiers who had done other combat deployments and were dedicated to serving the nation and the commonwealth,” said Maj. Gen. Randall Marchi, commander, 28th Infantry Division. “It is a tragic loss and we send our heartfelt sympathies to their families and friends.” Fike was a 1989 graduate of PennTrafford High School, Harrison City. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Edinboro University and worked as a corrections officer at the Albion State Correctional Institution. He joined the Pennsylvania Army National Guard in September 1993. In his 16 years of service, he served two other tours: one in Saudi Arabia from 2002 to 2003 and another in Iraq from 2007 to 2008. His awards include the Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Armed Forces Reserve Medal, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary and Service Medals, and Iraq Campaign Medal. Hoover graduated from ElizabethForward High School in 2000 and earned a bachelor’s degree in sports management from California University of Pennsylvania. He was a track coach with the ElizabethForward School District. Hoover joined the Marine Corps in October 1999 and served on active duty until September 2004. In March 2005, after months in the Marine Corps Reserve, he enlisted in the Pennsylvania National Guard. Hoover’s military awards include the Army Commendation Medal, Pennsylvania Commendation Medal, Navy/Marine Corps Achievement Medal, Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Air Assault Badge and Humanitarian Service Medal. Fike and Hoover previously served together in Iraq in 2007 and 2008 with the 28th Military Police Company. They are the 35th and 36th Soldiers of the Pennsylvania National Guard killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They were posthumously awarded the Purple Heart. O Sgt. 1st Class Bryan Hoover and Sgt. 1st Class Robert Fike provide security at the Bullard Bazaar in Zabul, Afghanistan, May 7. Photo: Courtesy of Dan Shakal Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 3 Four 111th Fighter Wing A-10 Thunderbolt IIs fly in formation during a refueling mission over New Jersey in May 2005. Photo: Kenn Mann Courtesy of the 111th Fighter Wing Staff Sgt. John Deyoung, an aircraft mechanic from the 65th Operations Support Squadron at Lajes Field, Azores, Portugal, completes a post-flight inspection of the 111th Fighter Wing’s A-10A Thunderbolt II aircraft in support of Operation Southern Watch in January 2008. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Scott W. Johnson 4 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 The 111th Fighter Wing officially bid farewell to their A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft at the End of an Era ceremony June 6 at Willow Grove Air Reserve Station. The ceremony commemorated 86 years of flying for the unit, which is scheduled to transition for their new mission, termed AFFOR, or Air Force Forces. The mission is an Air Force Headquarters staff augmentation package. Personnel assigned to the AFFOR will train to augment headquarters staff agencies. Although its long-term future remains unclear, the 111th has a clear history of excellence in the air. The 111th FW’s history began with the establishment of the 103rd Observation Squadron in June 1924, based on the sod fields of Philadelphia Airport as a unit in the 28th Infantry Division. The 103rd’s first commander was Maj. Charles Biddle, who had flown in World War I as part of the famous Lafayette Escadrilles, a volunteer group flying French aircraft before the United States officially entered into the war. The pilots of the 103rd flew a wide variety of observation aircraft for the next 18 years. The most well-known of these aircraft was the JN-4 Jenny, an open cockpit biplane. It was replaced in the 1930s and early 1940s with metal-skinned, prop-driven observation monoplanes. In February 1941, the unit was ordered to active service, performing antisubmarine patrols off the coast of New England. In 1943, the 103rd was given steady upgrades in equipment beginning with the P-39 Airacobras, P-40 Warhawk and the B-25 Mitchell. Eventually the unit converted to the F-5C, a photo-reconnaissance version of the P-38 Lightning. The 103rd ended up in the China-Burma-India Theater in 1944. It supported U.S. Army forces fighting the Japanese in the jungles until the end of the war. Four A-10 Thunderbolt IIs from the 103rd Fighter Squadron are sprayed with water by two 111th Fighter Wing fire trucks as the jets taxi in from the unit’s final combat training sortie during a ceremony on June 6 at Willow Grove Air Reserve Station. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Marie D. Harmon The 111th Fighter Wing lineage comes from the 391st Bomb Group (Medium), which was constituted in 1943 with four flying squadrons. It trained at MacDill Field, Fla., in the Martin B-26 Marauder and then flew ground attack missions over Western Europe in 1944. Late in the war, the pilots transitioned to the A-26 Invader aircraft, for combat missions against German railroads, highways, bridges and armor vehicles. For its actions in World War II, the wing was decorated with the Distinguished Unit Citation. In 1946, the 391st was redesignated the 111th Bombardment Group (Light) and returned to the Pennsylvania National Guard flying the B-26. The Air National Guard was reorganized in 1950 and the wing was re-designated as the 111th Composite Wing. The unit was not directly deployed for the Korean War, but many of its unit members were sent into combat there, assigned to other units. In 1952, the unit was removed from active duty status and personnel were returned to the Air National Guard as part of the 111th Fighter Bomber Group. The unit transitioned to the F-51 Mustang. In 1953, the wing made the jump from propeller to jet aircraft with the arrival of the F-80 Starfighter and then the F-84 Thunderjet, which arrived in 1954. The unit was redesignated the 111th Fighter Interceptor Group in 1955, and transitioned to the Air Defense mission flying the F-94 Starfire. The unit finished service in this mission in 1959 while flying the F-89H Scorpion, an all-weather rocket and missile firing interceptor. In 1962, the unit made the transition from interceptors to transports, flying the Boeing C-97 Stratofreighter. One year later, the 111th ended its 39-year history at Philadelphia Airport and moved to new facilities on the north end of the Willow Grove Naval Air Station. In 1969, the unit changed missions again, returning to its original roots as an observation unit. The new 111th Tactical Air Support Group initially flew the U-3A Blue Canoe and then transitioned to the O-2 Skymaster. The Forward Air Control mission was sustained with the unit’s switch to the OA-37 Dragonfly in 1981. The unit made several deployments to Central America in the 1980s to support allied training. The 111th received its current aircraft, the OA-10A Thunderbolt II in 1988. The unit was redesignated as the 111th Fighter Group in 1992 and then as the 111th Fighter Wing in 1995. The wing deployed to Kuwait in 1995 to support joint combat flight operations for Operation Southern Watch over Iraq. The 111th was the first Air Guard fighter unit deployed to Al Jaber, Kuwait, and the first Air National Guard wing to serve a solo three-month Operation Southern Watch deployment. In 1996, the 111th Fighter Wing pilots transitioned from the OA-10 AFAC mission to the A-10 attack mission. The second 111th Fighter Wing deployment to Kuwait occurred in 1999, again to (Continued on page 7) Col. Tony Carrelli receives the unit’s flag from Maj. Gen. Stephen M. Sischo, deputy adjutant general-Air, Pennsylvania National Guard, and assumes command of the 111th Fighter Wing during a change of command ceremony held Aug. 2, 2009, at Willow Grove Air Reserve Station. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Marie Harmon Lt. Col. Scott Hreso, Col. Howard Eissler, Col. Jim Blaydon and Lt. Col. Bill Griffin, A-10 pilots with the 111th Fighter Wing, walk a U.S. flag flown in the A-10 flyover toward the stage during a ceremony on June 6 at Willow Grove Air Reserve Station. Photo: Master Sgt. Stanley Woods Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 5 END of an ERA (Continued from page 5) AIRCRAFT operated by the 111th FighterWing OA/ A-10 Thunderbolt II (1988-2010) OA/ A-37B Dragonfly (1981-1988) O-2 Skymaster (1970-1981) U-3 A/B Blue Canoe (1969-1970) An A-10 from the 103rd Fighter Squadron turns to make an approach to fire its 30 mm GAU-8/A Avenger Gatling gun at Avon Air Force Range, Fla., March 5, 2009. Photo: Master Sgt. Patrick Cashin C-97G Stratofreighter (1963-1969) F-89H Scorpion (1959-1962) F-94C Starfire (1957-1958) F-94B Starfire (1956-1957) support joint combat flight operations for Operation Southern Watch over Iraq. Immediately following the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the 111th deployed back to Al Jaber to support joint combat flight operations for Operation Southern Watch over Iraq and the new Operation Enduring Freedom over Afghanistan. Weapons personnel from the 111th assisted in the loading of combat ordnance for the first sorties into Afghanistan during November 2001. In October 2002, the wing was the lead unit for a short-notice deployment to Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. The 111th aircraft supported joint combat flight operations with U.S. Army Special Forces and coalition ground forces in Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom. The A-10s were flown and maintained in very primitive and hazardous conditions, yet the 111th personnel flew 100 percent of the assigned tasking for their entire deployment. About six weeks after returning from Afghanistan, the 111th again volunteered to participate in another deployment to Al Jaber Air Base, Kuwait, its fourth visit, from February 2003 to May 2003. The wing deployed for joint combat flight operations, in support of U.S. Army, Marine and British ground forces as part of the initial phase of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Wing personnel were initially stationed at Al Jaber before transferring to Tallil Air Base, Iraq, midway through the initial campaign. The 111th Fighter Wing was awarded the Air National Guard Distinguished Flying Unit Award in 2004 and the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, with Valor, in 2005. The unit made two more trips to Southwest Asia in the A-10 to support combat operations; for Operation Iraqi Freedom in Al Asad, Iraq, in 2007, and again for Operation Enduring Freedom in Bagram, Afghanistan, in 2008. The unit ended its proud and distinguished 86-year aviation history when the final aircraft departed in August. O F-84F Thunderjet (1954-1957) F-80 Starfighter (1953-1954) F-51D Mustang (1953-1954) RB-29 Superfortress (1951-1952) A-26B Marauder (1948-1951) B-25D Mitchell (1943-1945) F-5E Tiger II (1944-1945) P-40F Warhawk (1943-1944) P-39Q Airacobra (1943-1944) O-52 Owl (1942-1943) O-57 Grasshopper (1942-1943) O-49 Vigilant (1941-1942) O-47 North American (1938-1943) O-46 Douglas (1937-1942) O-38 Douglas (1932-1937) O-17 Courier (1927-1932) O-11 Curtiss Falcon (1926-1932) O-2H Douglas (1926-1932) PT-1 Trusty (1924-1932) JN-4 “Jenny” (1924-1928) F-16 Fighting Falcons from the 8th Fighter Wing and South Korean air force’s 111th Fighter Wing prepare to take off for a joint training exercise June 8, 2007, from Kunsan Air Base, South Korea. This was the first time since the South Korean 111th Fighter Squadron moved to Kunsan that the South Korean and American units had briefed, flown and debriefed together on a dedicated mission. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Darcie Ibidapo Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 7 Pennsylvania National Guard says goodbye to respected leader By Airman 1st Class Claire Behney As the firing party performed its 21gun salute, the weapons’ report resonated in the hearts and minds of the audience as they stood to honor a highly esteemed and influential man, retired Pennsylvania Air National Guard Lt. Gen. Frank H. Smoker Jr. While paying respect to his loss, it’s also important to celebrate his achievements. For Smoker, it was a life filled with accomplishments and dedication to his community, country, fellow service members and the organization he loved. A member of the Greatest Generation, Smoker was a true patriot. From his youth, where he earned recognition as an Eagle Scout, to his retirement years, when he authored and published Back at the Gap – a History of Fort Indiantown Gap, Smoker lived a life of extraordinary accomplishment. Smoker’s military career began with his enlistment into the Army Air Corps in 1943. He served with the 8th Air Force and was assigned to the 92nd Bombardment Group, Podington Air Force Base, England, where he completed 26 missions over Europe and completed 222 combat hours as a B-17 aircraft navigator. Gen. Smoker was released from active duty as a captain and World War II veteran in 1946. While serving in England, Smoker met his wife, former Kathleen M. Farrow of Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, England, with whom he celebrated their 64th wedding anniversary in December. Together they had two children, Barbara and David. Col. David Smoker is the current commander of the 193rd Mission Support Group, 193rd Special Operations Wing. Smoker, born in Columbia, Pa., joined the Pennsylvania National Guard in October, 1946. On Jan. 17, 1947, he became a member of the 53rd Wing Headquarters during its initial federal recognition. This was the first Pennsylvania Air National Guard unit to be federally recognized. Graduating from the United States Air Force Pilot Training program in 1952, Smoker completed more than 5,000 flying hours, including five combat missions in Vietnam, in C-121 aircraft, while assigned to what is now the 193rd Special Operations Wing. During his 42-year military career, Smoker served in various Air National Guard capacities including commander of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard headquarters and Pennsylvania’s deputy adjutant general – Air, until his retirement in June 1985. Smoker, who received an honorary promotion to the lieutenant general on the Pennsylvania National Guard retired list, earned the Air Force’s highest peacetime decoration, the Air Force Distinguished Service Medal upon his retirement. The history of the Pennsylvania National Guard was something of particular interest to Smoker. He played a critical role in standing up the Pennsylvania National Guard Military Museum at Fort Indiantown Gap. “Thanks to him, we got a lot of support from the Air National Guard,” said Charlie Oellig, Pennsylvania National Guard Military Museum curator. Oellig said Smoker was persistent about starting the museum, working with the late Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard Scott, 46th adjutant general of Pennsylvania, in forming a team with the state museum Maj. Gen. Frank H. Smoker Jr. __________ 1925–2010 and a board of directors. Smoker served as president of the museum from 1985 to January 2010. “He was a real leader and just a pleasure to work with,” Oellig said. “Gen. Smoker was the perfect gentleman, the nicest man you’d ever meet and I’m really going to miss him.” Agnes Moss, a retired Pennsylvania Air National Guard administrative assistant, said “He ran a very efficient, good office and was fair with everybody.” Moss said she worked with Smoker for 40 years and remembers how good a writer he was, writing wonderful speeches that everyone talked about. “I think he commanded respect; everyone seemed to respect him and not the just position he had, but the person he was,” Moss said. Following a lengthy illness, Gen. Smoker passed away July 16. O Retired Pennsylvania Air National Guard Lt. Gen. Frank H. Smoker was laid to rest at Indiantown Gap National Cemetery July 21. Photo: Lt. Col. Chris Cleaver Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 9 Flags line the entrance to the Fort Indiantown Gap National Cemetery for Memorial Day 2010. Photo: Joan Z. Nissley By Airman 1st Class Claire Behney On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress passed an act establishing an official flag for the new nation. Since then, the American flag has served as the icon of our nation’s freedom, and its colors, each symbolic, wave strong every Memorial Day along the entrance drive to the Fort Indiantown Gap National Cemetery, Annville, Pa. The color red symbolizes hardiness and valor; the white, purity and innocence; and the blue represents vigilance, perseverance and justice – the kind of vigilance, valor and commitment displayed by the more than 5,000 service members killed in action since Sept. 11, 2001. Twice a year, Memorial Day and Veterans Day, The National Sojourners, Harrisburg Chapter 76, sets out their traditional ordered rows of small American flags. Each one represents a single service member who died supporting operations in Iraq or Afghanistan. “It gives me a great feeling to take part in doing something for the families of the men and women who lost their lives, to honor those service members’ dedication and sacrifice,” said Vaughn Schwalm, president of National Sojourners, Harrisburg Chapter 76. Chapter 76 works in conjunction with the Navy Club, Lancaster County Ship 166, to create this flag memorial. The weeklong process begins with gridding out the location of each flag along the entrance drive to the cemetery. Members and volunteers carefully measure the exact location for each flag, creating straight and even columns and rows. After about a day and a half of gridding, holes for the flags are punched into the ground and the placing of the flags begins. “When you’re actually putting a flag in the ground with your hands and you realize that flag represents the history of a person, their life from being born up until they die and everyone they’ve connected with through that life, it’s heart wrenching when you get involved in it,” said Schwalm. The Sojourners initially began this display on the lawn of the Zembo Shine in Harrisburg in 2004, about a year after the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom. 10 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Volunteers help members of the National Sojourners’ Harrisburg Chapter 76 and the Lancaster County Navy Club’s Ship 166 place flags for the annual memorial display at the Fort Indiantown Gap National Cemetery during Memorial Day 2009. More than 5,000 small American flags were placed this year in ordered columns and rows to represent each of the service members killed in action since Sept. 11, 2001. Photo: William Hall “When we started, it was only about 800 flags and unfortunately it has grown,” said Larry Rutt, Chapter 76 member and former president. “We now include those killed in action in both Iraq and Afghanistan.” Master Sgt. Scott Fritz, 193rd Special Operations Wing fuel cell supervisor and a 10-year member of Chapter 76, said the memorial is all about paying tribute to the fallen and honoring anyone touched by these service members. “Everybody, in some way, shape or form, has been affiliated with the military, even if it’s just a family friend,” said Fritz. “They are able to look at the 5,000-plus flags in the memorial and say ‘they’re doing that for me’ and that’s what we’re hoping and I’m sure we do that.” To Schwalm, remembering the significance of what each flag represents is essential. “When you come out, you can walk through the flags and just look at them and think ‘oh they look really beautiful,’ but when you walk through them and walk by every single flag, you need to think of each of them as a person and the history of that person,” Schwalm said. And it’s that kind of remembrance that Rutt suggests should consume everyone on Veterans Day, Memorial Day and every day to honor the fallen and the service personnel yet to come home. “The reason to keep doing this memorial is because we can never forget what the men and women of our brave armed forces have done for us,” said Rutt. “It’s to inspire pride in what our military does and if we can do that in a spectacular manner such as this then we will continue to do so for as long as we can.” O AND THE BEAT GOES ON By Retired Sgt. 1st Class Tom Leonard Memorial Day abounds with traditions and rituals. It usually starts in the morning with a community parade, including fire engines, high school bands, civic associations, color guards and motorcycles. As the procession winds through the town, it may pause at a cemetery or town monument. A prayer is said, comments made, a rifle salute is fired and the air is filled with the mournful strains of Taps. The afternoon is filled with baseball, barbecues and the opening day at the pool. So much gaiety for a day set aside to reflect and honor the nation’s war dead. What am I missing? When I was in Vietnam, I would go over to the airbase. I could see the silver colored wings of the cargo planes sitting on the flight line with ramps lowered. I could see the silver caskets lined up waiting to be loaded into the cargo hold. I could feel the blast from the propellers as the transport taxied out to the runway. I could see it climb to the heavens to begin its lonely journey home. I turned away and walked back to the company area. Along the way, I passed a group of new arrivals. Their instructors took them for a short run to help them get acclimated. Together they sang a familiar refrain: “If I die on the old drop zone, box me up and send me home. Tell my girl I did my best, then bury me in the leaning rest.” So much bravado in that rhyming chant, but it is necessary, for it inculcates a sense of mission-first and duty. When asked: “How do you stand there when confronted by war elephants, chariots, archers and spearmen?” An old Assyrian soldier once replied: “A soldier’s spirit.” For it is a soldier’s spirit that allows them to cross hundreds of yards of open field at Gettysburg even with 600 muskets pointed in their direction, or claw their way up Hamburger Hill in rain, muck and even friendly fire only to hear: “Well we made it to the top of another pile of dirt.” Or man a redoubt against thousands of yelling communist Chinese soldiers at the Chosin Reservoir while nearly freezing to death. In these scenarios and thousands more like them, the beat goes on; drums keep pounding a rhythm to the brain: Ladi Doti De, Ladi Doti Di. I never saw that airplane land. I never saw the staff car with the three Marines and parish priest turn the corner onto Glenthorne Road in Upper Darby. I did not see the staff car stop in front of Bobby Resnick’s house. I did not hear the knock on the door or the cries of anguish and pain when the door was opened. Witnesses said that people way down the street heard the wailing. Mrs. Resnick was never the same. She died that way. Another casualty, and the beat goes on. Years later in fall 2000, I left the military. Like many others before me, I marched in the Veterans Day parade in Media and walked with the American Legion through the cemeteries planting flags. But something was missing; it just seemed so perfunctory. A few years later, my old National Guard unit, Troop B, 1st Squadron, 104th Cavalry, received its marching orders to Iraq. So I went to the armory and saw them off as they boarded the buses, and I waved them goodbye and Godspeed. According to official records, Troop B performed its mission admirably and with much élan with the loss of five personnel. Five is such a small number; it most certainly can be overlooked, discounted or lost in the overall assessment of events. Only comrades and family understand their missing presence. They were Lt. Mark Dooley and Spc. Christopher Merchant from Vermont, Spc. William Fernandez, Spc. William Evans and Sgt. Michael Egan from Pennsylvania. Egan came to us after the events of 9/11 from the Marine Corps. He could use the pay and missed the camaraderie from his days in the Corps. There’s that Soldier’s spirit again. I went back to the armory to see Troop B come home. As I looked down Roosevelt Boulevard in northeast Philadelphia, I could see the convoy approach. Lights flashing, sirens wailing, flags flying, motorcycle escort, the convoy motored to the Armory front door. Car doors opened and there was a loud cheer from the assembled crowd. There was much hand shaking, back slapping, hugs and kisses, and smiles all around. What a far cry from the reception Vietnam troops received. I followed the service personnel into the armory and watched as the families filled the bleachers and the troops formed up on the gym floor. The commander called them to attention and honor was rendered to the colors. Medals were pinned on, awards were handed out, comments were made, and without further ado, the commander called the unit to attention and simply said, “Troop dismissed.” The families filed out of the bleachers and mingled with the troops on the floor to begin the long process of recapturing a lost year – all except Mrs. Mike Egan. She just sat there gazing out on the gym floor, looking left to right as if hoping for a presence that was not going to be there. There would be no medal for her, no award, not even a hug and a kiss. Will she be able to renew her life, to start again? After all, Mike was her life. For his daughter there will be no dad at graduation or to walk her down the aisle at her wedding. All those future events that will never be. So there was the missing element. The pain that is part of Memorial Day, but somehow lost in the celebration. Not anymore, for every time I plant those flags in the local cemetery, I will remember that day and the emotions that it evokes and tell myself, “I hope we never have to do this again.” But we will, for it is part of the human condition. The intensity of the pain and the loss is restrained by how well we manage our situation. Conflict will always be there, as will adversaries. And you hope for more Soldiers like Mike to man the ramparts. And the beat goes on. O Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 11 Story and photos by Airman 1st Class Claire Behney Thunderstorms and nor’easters are two of the biggest weather threats that could ground a pilot. From behind the scenes, the 193rd Special Operations Wing weather station works to forecast these conditions to ensure the safety of anyone transiting through Muir Army Air Field at Fort Indiantown Gap. Staged on the flight line of Muir Army Air Field, the weather station’s three-man team has a combined total of more than 100 years of meteorology experience making them a key asset to the Gap. “It’s an aviation type of forecast; we’re strictly pilot oriented here so it’s much more detailed,” said Don Roth, a meteorological technician with the weather station. “We’re telling the pilots how high the clouds are, how far they’ll be able to see, what the winds are going to be, what the pressure is going to be for their aircraft. So it’s a little bit different than telling you that it’s going to be cloudy with a chance of showers.” This information is given to the pilots in a mandatory weather briefing from the weather station before every takeoff. “The pilots report to us in the weather station for a DD Form 175-1 Weather Briefing,” said Bruce Russell, manager of the weather station. “The weather briefing form then gets attached to their flight plan and the two documents go together to give the pilot a release to fly.” Bruce Russell, manager of the 193rd Special Operations Wing weather station, works alongside meteorological technicians Gary Peel and Don Roth, seated, to review satellite weather scans of the local area in preparation for reporting a local area weather briefing. Don Roth, a meteorological technician with the 193rd Special Operations Wing weather station, reviews one of several weather charts that are posted daily for the technicians’ assessment. Information obtained from these charts is given to pilots of Muir Army Air Field in mandatory weather briefings prior to every takeoff. 12 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 n, g Along with briefing pilots, the weather station releases a local weather report three times a day that goes on their network for customers concerned about conditions. “Even on the best weather days, we are always looking over the horizon for the next approaching storm to predict the impact that it will have on flying operations,” Russell said. The Eastern Army Aviation Training Site, for example, conducts aircraft qualification courses, instructor pilot training and many other aviation training courses. Other customers include the post’s non-flying operations that also receive weather warnings. In order to issue these advisories, the weather station coordinates with the 15th Operational Weather Squadron, Scott Air Force Base, Ill. “We are the 15th’s eyes forward,” said Russell. “We are their local eyes and ears.” The weather station also assists with required on-the-job training for the Airmen of the 15th, as well as the Airmen of the 193rd Special Operation Wing’s 203rd Weather Flight. According to Gary Peel, a meteorological technician with the weather station, once Airmen graduate from military technical school, they can report to the weather station for key hands-on forecasting experience and to apply what they learned in school. “The Airmen come in highly motivated and they’ve got the knowledge. We just help fine tune them and get them mission ready,” said Peel. “It’s not something we have to do, but it’s a way we can help.” Both the 203rd Weather Flight and the weather station fall under command of Col. Christopher Dutton, 193rd Regional Support Group commander. While the Weather Flight is the combat arm and deploys, the weather station is immobile and staffed with civilian technicians, Russell said. The team members of the weather station are all retired Air Force noncommissioned officers with more than 20 years of active duty service in the meteorology field. That expertise can be seen every day, whether on the job or working alongside new Airmen, sharing what they know. “Just last week, we had a crew flying around during a thunderstorm watch and we were communicating over the FM radio with them,” said Russell. The pilot asked to keep him advised to the movement of the storm because he had priority issues to accomplish, Russell added. “When we saw the storm crossing the river headed for Muir, we advised him to return to base immediately and he did, just beating the microburst – another save.” The weather station also rose to the challenges of this year’s winter storms. “What a year this has been, and we’ve been doing really well in putting out the warnings,” said Russell. “We’ve hit the snow fall amounts well this year and gave our customers enough lead time to be able to get things back into the hangers and cleared off the ramps.” While the weather station is successfully mission focused, their dedication to the career field plays a key role. “I don’t think I could do anything else,” said Roth. “It’s a new puzzle to solve every day, and when you go to weather school, you never see the sky the same as the person that doesn’t know what they’re looking at.” O Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 13 Story and photos by Senior Airman Nichelle Anderson Members of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, deployed with the 376th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron, delivered goods and spent time with children from the Yagodka Kindergarten in Vinogradnoye Village, Kyrgyzstan, during a humanitarian assistance visit in April. Airmen also donated coloring books, crayons, activity workbooks, children’s books, toys, sports equipment and cookies to the school. “In the past we’ve brought toys, games and balls that the children can share mutually and ultimately will be left for the school,” explained Capt. Michael Torres, 376th ESFS flight commander. Airmen from the 111th Security Forces Squadron, Pennsylvania Air National Guard; 159th Security Forces Squadron, Louisiana Air National Guard; and the 161st Security Forces Squadron, Arizona 14 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Air National Guard, received support for the humanitarian assistance program from family members and friends. “All of the crayons, coloring books, and activity books were sent from a friend back home who obtained a donation from Crayola,” explained Tech. Sgt. Patrick Geiser, a noncommissioned officer from the 111th. Torres said support from the community, families and friends at home is what helps Airmen from the Transit Center at Manas donate a variety of items that aren’t available in a deployed environment. “I have a friend back at home who is a teacher at a predominately Russian school, and the books were donated by his class,” Geiser said. “Each kid in his class was given extra credit if they brought one book in Russian to contribute to the school.” With the Manas Area Benefit Outreach Society and the 376th Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron, the 376th ESFS Tech. Sgt. Patrick Geiser jokes with a student at the Yagodka Kindergarten in April at Vinogradnoye Village, Kyrgyzstan. During a visit to the school Airmen from the Transit Center at Manas donated coloring books, crayons, activity workbooks, toys, children’s books, sports equipment and cookies. helps to improve the facilities of the Yagodka Kindergarten. During each visit, Airmen spend time with the children and continue to look for ways to improve the facility. “(Airmen) have come and done some painting, cement work, replaced piping throughout the building, installed new radiators and enhanced the overall look of the playground,” said Torres. During the visit, Torres toured the school with Principal Burul Aktasheva to address concerns and determine projects necessary to further improve the facility. The squadron has supported the kindergarten for about two years, and although the Airmen may only stay in Kyrgyzstan for a few months before they return home, the humanitarian assistance mission remains the same. “Although we’ve done some things for this school, I think they’ve done as much for us as we do for them,” Torres said. “We saw the smiles here. It’s an amazing experience. It brings me back to home, keeps me grounded in my job and illustrates what I’m really doing it for. I love it, I think it’s great.” O Tech. Sgt. Patrick Geiser shows off the box of children’s books to Burul Aktasheva, the principal of Yagodka Kindergarten, during a visit in April at Vinogradnoye Village, Kyrgyzstan. Air National Guardsmen from the 111th Security Forces Squadron, Pennsylvania Air National Guard, have been essential in providing humanitarian assistance to the children of the school. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 15 Spc. Lucas Davidson of the 131st Transportation Company calls for help as he treats a simulated casualty during a Combat Lifesaver Course training lane May 20 at Fort Indiantown Gap. The lanes feature intense stressors, such as battle sounds, screaming instructors, fog and darkness in order to test the Soldiers’ skills under pressure. Staff Sgt. Kelly Eitreim, top, of the 131st Transportation Company evaluates a simulated casualty during a Combat Lifesaver Course training exercise May 20 at Fort Indiantown Gap. Train as you treat: the 21st century Combat Lifesaver Course 16 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Story and photos by Sgt. Shawn Miller Painful screams cut through the thick smoke and noise of gunfire as a fourperson combat lifesaver team scrambled through the dark looking for the casualties amid the chaotic war zone. Although those screams were those of actors on a training exercise at the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s Medical Battalion Training Site, the stress felt by the students of the Combat Lifesaver Course was very real as they conducted the culminating event of the three-day course. “This type of training was hands-down the best medical training I’ve ever been through in the 10 years I’ve been in the military,” said Sgt. Mike Quartucci of the 131st Transportation Company, a Pennsylvania Guard unit that is scheduled to mobilize before the end of 2010. After being broken into four-Soldier teams, the students were thrust into hectic mock warzones complete with Hollywood-style special effects including colored strobe lights, heavy smoke and violent gunfight sounds blaring over loudspeakers. Add in the screaming instructors demanding faster action, and the students experienced what Sgt. 1st Class Jennifer Jordan has dubbed “the frazzle effect.” “Once you get stressed to the point that you have that surge of adrenalin, you lose your cognitive skills and you lose your fine motor skills,” explained Jordan, an instructor at the MBTS. “We want them to still be able to perform with that happening.” The course starts with classroom presentations teaching all facets of first aid on the battlefield. The students then move into individual skill labs to try the procedures first-hand on mannequins. On the final day of class, the students bring it all together with the training lane. “They have to be able to give a good assessment, prioritize the wounds and then treat appropriately,” said Jordan, discussing the goal of the event. Even if the Soldiers are doing everything right in the lanes, the instructors still demand more just to keep the stress at a maximum. “The staff is probably one of the greatest things at stressing the students out,” said Sgt. 1st Class Jim Johnstone, the noncommissioned officer in charge of the training. “Whether or not they’re doing well or doing poorly, we still find things to nitpick about.” No matter how frazzled the Soldiers got, however, they all seemed to emerge Spc. Matt Meily of the 213th Personnel Company looks for casualties as he enters a simulated attack zone during his Combat Lifesaver Course training exercise May 20 at Fort Indiantown Gap. The training lanes feature realistic battle sounds, smoke, obstacles and live Soldiers acting as casualties in order to better train Soldiers for deployment. with a better grasp on what they had learned the previous two days. “It made it very realistic as opposed to just doing it in a classroom environment,” said Staff Sgt. Kelly Eitreim of the 131st. As the Army constantly adapts to changing combat environments across the world, the training that Soldiers receive must also adapt. “This is not an Army requirement; this is something that we do,” said Johnstone in reference to the hyper-realistic training lanes. By overloading the stress and pushing the Soldiers to fight through the confusion to react and save lives, the instructors hope to point out strengths and weaknesses while still in a controlled atmosphere. Once the real chaos starts, these new combat lifesavers will have training to rely on. O Spc. Isiah White, left, and Sgt. Lindsey Myers treat a simulated casualty during a Combat Lifesaver Course training lane May 20 at Fort Indiantown Gap. The training lanes are designed to deprive Soldiers of basic sensory skills while adding intense stress to test skills under fire. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 17 Story and photos by Tech. Sgt. Culeen Shaffer E malama kakou is Hawaiian for “to care for all,” and that is exactly what 28 Airmen of the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s Medical Group did the moment they arrived in Hilo, Hawaii, on June 10. As part of the Hawaii Medical Innovative Readiness Training (HIMIRT) program, members of the 193rd Medical Group provided free health and dental screenings to the people of Hilo and surrounding areas for six days. Assisting the 193rd was a dentist from the 104th Fighter Wing, Westfield, Mass., and five members from the 171st Air Refueling Wing, Pittsburgh, Pa. The Airmen also worked closely with the Bay Clinic, Office for Social Ministry and the State of Hawaii Department of Health. This mission was the first HIMIRT on the Big Island of Hawaii. Medical Group members took the concept of “E malama kakou” to heart. “We were told that it was a humanitarian mission in Hawaii where we would be providing free medical screenings to the underserved,” said Staff Sgt. Katie Duff, a medical technician with the 193rd Medical Group. “Not only was I excited that it was Hawaii, but more so because it was a humanitarian mission, and I truly love helping those in need.” HIMIRT provided much needed care and a training opportunity for members of the 193rd and the local community. Nurses and medical technicians of the 193rd and staff of the Bay Clinic, for example, conducted cardiopulmonary resuscitation and intravenous training sessions at the Bay Clinic’s office, Keaau Clinic, Hilo. Along with medical training, the medical care included cholesterol checks, glucose checks, blood pressure checks, eye Senior Airman Courtney Mishoe, an optometry technician with the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s Medical Group, checks the vision of Eli Ishimoto in Hilo, Hawaii, in June. 18 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Staff Sgt. Matthew Nettles, a medical technician with the 193rd Medical Group, pricks the finger of a patient to do a glucose test in Hilo, Hawaii, in June. exams, height and weight measurements, dental care, and medical background and family history reviews. “We saw 93 people, which in a course of four days with a treatment facility is quite a bit,” said Maj. Wade Newman, a dentist with the 193rd Medical Group. Duff assisted in the medical screenings, but she also entertained the children while family members were being screened, which significantly impacted both the children and their families. “At one of the health fairs, I made friends with a little boy who stole my heart, and we ran into him on a few different occasions – I won’t forget him,” said Duff. Because of the attention the little boy received on his first encounter with the medical group, the next time he saw them he immediately ran up and tagged some Airmen, resuming the game of tag they played with him before. “Everyone in the medical unit has a huge heart, and we were happy to help,” Duff said. The people of Hawaii expressed their appreciation to the Airmen. Newman had extracted the teeth of five-year-old Nalyssa Keawekane. As a sign of gratitude, Keawekane and her siblings made a thank you banner and leis of construction paper and yarn for the military members and the staff at Bay Clinic and OSM. “Seeing that kid (Keawekane) over there that I treated on Monday and seeing how happy and healthy she is,” said Newman in regard to what he found most gratifying from the mission. “She was not afraid to come back and have her picture taken with me and smile with me; that was the most rewarding.” Airman 1st Class April Loeper, 193rd Medical Group medical technician, said she found the locals’ appreciation to be the most rewarding aspect of the mission. Pennsylvania community members also played a role in the 193rd’s mission to Hawaii. Derrick Duff, president of Mid-State Occupational Health Services in Williamsport and father of Staff Sgt. Katie Duff, loaned four cholesterol machines to the Medical Group. Many Hawaiians had not had their cholesterol checked in years and for some this was their first time. Maj. Danelle McMinn, an optometrist with the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s Medical Group, checks the vision of a patient in Hilo, Hawaii, in June. 193rd Medical Group receives outstanding medical unit award Nalyssa Keawekane and her grandmother Malie Keawekane, with the help of Lt. Col. Robert Petley, an optometrist of the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s Medical Group, presented a banner to members of the 193rd Medical Group at Wailoa River State Park in Hilo, Hawaii, in June. Staff Sgt. Chris Frederickson, 193rd medical administration specialist, works at Washington Elementary in Barto. She spoke with a fellow teacher, Julee Carns, about her concern of keeping the Hawaiian children entertained while their family received the free health screenings. Carns is the monitor of a council made up of Washington Elementary students called the Kindness Council. This group raised more than $200 to purchase coloring books and other items for the children in Hawaii. Carns also received other donations which included crayons from Linda and Frank Gerhinger of National Penn Bank in Barto; “kids under two” toys from Jen Huffman, manager of the Wendy’s in Pottstown; and baseball cards of Philadelphia Phillie Shane Victorino, a Hawaii native, and figurines of the Phillie Phanatic from Kelly Yergin of the Philadelphia Phillies organization. From medical care to donated equipment and toys, Airmen and community came together to provide health care through HIMIRT in Hilo. “The 193rd Medical Group may only come together one weekend a month and for missions like this, but when we are together the teamwork is unbelievable and we consider each other family,” Duff said. “There isn’t anything we can’t do when we do it together.” O The 193rd Special Operations Wing Medical Group was recently awarded the Theodore C. Marrs Award as the Outstanding Medical Unit for 2009 at the 2010 Air National Guard Readiness Frontiers conference in Minneapolis, Minn., on June 19. The medical group provides direct mission support to the third largest wing in the Air National Guard, which includes eight geographically separated units. “The motivation of the 193rd Medical Group was also tested and proved this year through multiple wing inspections, deployments and short-notice support worldwide,” said Col. David Gann, 193rd Medical Group commander. “The successful results of these daunting missions confirm our commitment to excellence. Staff Sgt. Katie Duff, a medical technician with the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s Medical Group, pricks the finger of brave 23-month-old Kahia Inman in Hilo, Hawaii, in June, while his mother Malia Duvauchelle holds him. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 19 With every movement, the mortar tube of the Mortar Fire Control system must be re-sighted, a task Soldiers from 3rd Battalion, 103rd Armor learned while training at Fort Indiantown Gap in June. A more accurate, more effective mortar 20 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 An M-1064 Weapons Carrier sits at Fort Indiantown Gap as the Soldiers from 3rd Battalion, 103rd Armor, prepare a training mission. Pvt. Jeremy Kissinger, an M-1064 Weapons Carrier driver from Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 103rd Armor, bore sights a 120 mm mortar as he learns to operate the Mortar Fire Control System in June at Fort Indiantown Gap. Story and photos by Spc. Coltin Heller Speed and firepower are important assets of today’s military. When combined, their effect is twofold: the enemy is defeated faster and troop survival is increased. With this fact in mind, the Mortar Fire Controls System was created. Before the MFCS was implemented, all mortars were fired from grounded positions and all coordinates and fire commands were transmitted by radio from the forward observer, which were in turn relayed to the mortar position. Not only did this process take time, but the room for error could not be ignored. Thanks to the MFCS, mortars are now as mobile as their vehicles and supported by the latest technology. Computers connect vehicles to each other, reducing human error and decreasing the time between fires. “It’s ten times faster,” said Sgt. Bryan Laubach of the Lewisburgbased Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 103rd Armor. “The MFCS also dramatically reduces the error,” said Laubach, comparing the old system to the new system. Two hundred meters was the standard margin of error with the grounded system, while under the MFCS the margin drops to a mere 75 meters. Laubach recently returned from Afghanistan and had only fired the ground-based mortars. He is learning, along with the other Soldiers in his unit, how to operate the MFCS. The 120 mm mortar tubes are mounted in the back of an M-1064 Mortar Carrier, a modified version of the M-119 Troop Carrier. The vehicle commander sits in front of the computer display to monitor incoming information. The fire coordinates are then sent to the rear of the vehicle, to the gunner, so he can adjust the weapon for maximum accuracy. “It’s spot on,” said Pfc. Ryan Campbell, also with Headquarters Company. “The risk of danger close is also reduced. We effectively create a bubble of safety where we can’t fire, keeping other Soldiers safe.” Thanks to the MFCS the Soldiers will be able to minimize damage to their own troops while at the same time conducting swift and effective fire missions against the enemy. O Sitting in the back of the M-1064 Weapons Carrier, a 120 mm mortar tube awaits the Soldiers who are going to learn to use it. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 21 Team Eberly poses for a photo the day before the National Guard Bureau Marathon on May 2 in Lincoln, Neb. Photo: Courtesy of the Nebraska National Guard By Sgt. Matt Jones “He would still be around 10 years from now, 20 years from now if he could.” Four other Pennsylvania Guardsman also ran in the marathon. Sgt. Dan Kysela, Company B, 1-110th Infantry, finished in 2:57:28. He qualified for the National Guard’s All Guard Team. Staff Sgt. Matthew Stern, of the R&R Battalion, was running his first marathon and finished in 3:14:41. He also qualified for the All Guard Team. Sgt. 1st Class Clayton MacKnight, 3rd Battalion, 166th Training Regiment, finished in 3:45:33 and qualified for the 2011 NGB Marathon. Sgt. Steven Burns, Pennsylvania Army National Guard Training Site Command, finished in 3:48:33 and qualified for the 2011 NGB Marathon. O A team from the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s Recruiting and Retention Battalion ran in the National Guard Bureau Marathon on May 2 in honor of a Pennsylvania National Guard drill sergeant who was killed while training for the event. On the morning of March 17, Master Sgt. Mark A. Eberly, 39, was running along Route 183 in Bernville when he was struck from behind by a car. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Fellow drill sergeants Sgt. 1st Class Kriss Berry, Sgt. 1st Class Joseph Patterson, Staff Sgt. Gabriel Sweger and Sgt. 1st Class John Walton, along with Sgt. 1st Class Wendy Diaz and Staff Sgt. James Smigo of the Recruiting and Retention Battalion, ran in honor of Eberly. Team Eberly finished with a chip time of 4:32:21 and qualified for the 2011 National Guard Bureau Marathon. In a message addressed to Eberly and distributed to members of the Pennsylvania National Guard, Team Eberly said “Master Sgt. Eberly, this was for you, we did it.” “When we entered the University of Nebraska stadium running cadence, the Pennsylvania Army National Guard brought the entire stadium to a standstill as we heard them announce (Eberly’s) name over the loudspeaker,” the message stated. Sgt. 1st Class Gino Burns, who worked with Eberly as a recruiter, said he was a huge workout fanatic. “As a matter of fact, if he were standing here right now, he would ask you if you run, and if you didn’t, he would ask why you don’t,” said Burns shortly after Eberly’s death. “Any time I put on my running shoes, I think of him.” Although Eberly was less than two years from being eligible to Members of the Pennsylvania National Guard’s Team Eberly celebrate a retire, Burns said he was dedicated to the military and would have successful run after the National Guard Bureau Marathon on May 2 in Lincoln, Neb. Photo: Master Sgt. Alan Brown, Nebraska Air National Guard stayed around much longer. “He wouldn’t leave,” said Burns. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 23 19th annual StateVeterans HomesWeek By Joan Z. Nissley Pennsylvania’s six veterans homes, operated by the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs, celebrated the 19th annual State Veterans Homes Week from June 13 through June 19. “State Veterans Homes Week is designed to make citizens aware of the resident veterans in their community and to thank the staff and volunteers of these homes who provide selfless and exceptional care for these heroes each and every day,” said Brig. Gen. Mike Gould, the state’s deputy adjutant general for veterans affairs. “It’s also an opportunity for members of the community to visit the homes, meet some of America’s honored veterans, and explore the numerous volunteer programs available.” U.S. Army veteran Frannie Dwyer enjoys a visit from the Phillie Phanatic during the Corvette Show sponsored by the American Dream Corvette Club during State Veterans Home Week in June at the Southeastern Veterans Center. Photo: Patty Carfagno 24 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 www.bankofamerica.com Veterans at the Delaware Valley Veterans Home celebrate Flag Day during State Veterans Home Week in June. Photo: Bill Jackson Special activities throughout the week included ceremonies, special musical entertainment, golf and fishing tournaments, carnivals and picnics. The six homes serve more than 1,600 eligible veterans and their spouses and include the Delaware Valley Veterans Home in Philadelphia, the Gino J. Merli Veterans Center in Scranton, the Hollidaysburg Veterans Home in Hollidaysburg, the Pennsylvania Soldiers and Sailors Home in Erie, the Southeastern Veterans Center in Spring City and the Southwestern Veterans Center in Pittsburgh. For more information about veterans home eligibility, volunteer opportunities or employment at a veterans home, visit www.paveterans.state.pa.us. O Storage Units • Vehicle Storage www.extraspace.com www.campingworld.com www.uhaul.com www.unitedrentals.com Dan Sorbo, a Purple Heart recipient who served in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1948, participates in a sandcastle building competition at the Southwestern Veterans Center during State Veterans Home Week in June. Photo: Chris Veitch Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 25 By Capt. Jay Ostrich The pressure of driving iron through sand, running from bunker to bunker, or getting near troubled woods while desperately trying not to hit innocent civilians is nothing new for most combat veterans. But for one day in late June, combat veteran Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff couldn’t be happier to have done all of that. Especially being near troubled woods – Tiger Woods, that is. That’s because, through what he describes as the “luck of the draw” and a little help from his Army brethren, Vasiloff was asked to play a round of golf with the world’s best, if not most infamous, golfer at the AT&T National Pro-AM held at the Aronomink Country Club, Newtown Square. They didn’t need to ask twice. With a slight breeze and early morning dew glistening from the tee box of the majestic, 430-yard first hole, Vasiloff, a 27-year veteran of the Air Force, was introduced to an enthusiastic crowd and his golf dream began. In a familiar pickle, Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff tries to figure a safe way out of the sand while playing alongside the golf great Tiger Woods on June 30 at the 2010 AT&T National Pro-Am tournament at Aronomink Country Club, Newtown Square. Photo: Capt. Jay Ostrich Hauling off boldly with a driver, he hit a towering shot that faded into a thicket of lush, green rough. Sitting 85 yards ahead of him, squarely in the middle of the neatly manicured fairway, was the champion, Woods. One shot later, Woods was on the green putting for birdie. As for Vasiloff, he was back with a familiar friend – the sand. All in perspective Just a few short weeks before, Vasiloff, chief of logistics with 201st RED HORSE Squadron of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, Fort Indiantown Gap was finishing up his third combat After sinking a birdie putt to place his team in the lead, Tiger Woods shows his gratitude with a hearty fist bump to Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff, chief of logistics for the 201st RED HORSE Squadron, at the 2010 National Pro-AM tournament June 30 in Newtown Square. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Stacy Gault 26 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Retired Pennsylvania Army National Guard Col. Joe Laneski, center, and Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff, right, study the swing and strategy of 14-time major golf champion Tiger Woods at the 2010 National Pro-AM tournament June 30 in Newtown Square. Photo: Capt. Jay Ostrich tour in an austere location devoid of green anything let alone the comfy confines of country clubs. The unit’s six-month mission was to build and repair military infrastructures that support missions as part of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. For the chief, driving his Airmen and keeping them safe was the only thing he could think about. Doing that for a golf ball would have to wait. But as he walked up through the par-4 second hole, where he would again find himself in a bunker, it all started to come into perspective for both the chief and his family. “George thinks he died and went to heaven,” said a beaming Ronda J. Vasiloff, his wife of 16 years. “Usually we would be worried about when he’s in the sand. Not today though. Today there are no worries.” After slightly struggling to find his best game through three holes, his caddy, retired Army Col. Joe Laneski, former Pennsylvania National Guard chief of staff, took the bulky bag off his shoulders and presented Vasiloff with his trusted driver and some comic relief. “The bag’s getting heavy,” said Laneski to his golf partner of 12 years. “You better start playing.” After all, it was Laneski who had submitted his name for the AT&T military caddy program, which turned into an invite to play in the Pro-Am when the sponsor of the Tiger Woods Foundation learned Vasiloff could score near par. Like any good troop, Vasiloff followed orders and sent a missile 330 yards on the 466-yard par 4, fourth, sailing it past three bunkers and softly landing it on the fairway about 15 yards ahead Woods, winner of more than 70 PGA events, including 14 major titles. But if that wasn’t enough, Vasiloff chipped onto the green eight feet below the hole and coolly drained a birdie putt, one ahead of the champ who hadn’t yet broken par and wouldn’t be able to muster it on the fourth. When asked on the next fairway whether he felt pressure, the humble hero paused and put it all into perspective. “After the first hole, when I could finally breathe, I realized pressure is sending your guys out on a combat convoy,” said Vasiloff. “This here? This is just fun.” Tiger Woods and Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff walk up to their approach shot, as fans cheer in admiration, at the 2010 National Pro-AM tournament June 30 in Newtown Square. Vasiloff was selected to play with Woods just weeks after returning from combat in Afghanistan. Photo: Capt. Jay Ostrich “Who is that guy?” asked a casually clad country club couple after watching Vasiloff outdrive the champ on yet another hole. “He must be the president of the club or something,” replied another. “No, he is just a normal military guy,” said Ronda, who followed him with a smile throughout his 7,000-yard journey. This was just fine with his professional playing partner, who was happy to talk about his father, Earl Woods, a U.S. Army lieutenant colonel and two-tour Vietnam (Continued on page 29) The real hero As Vasiloff settled in and hit his groove, sending bomb after accurate bomb down the hilly and treacherous course, Tiger’s fans started a buzz about the man with the buzz cut. Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 27 From Gulf to golf, bunker to bunker (Continued from page 27) Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff talks to world champion Tiger Woods about his upbringing in a military family and an upcoming putt to conclude their round of golf together at the 2010 National Pro-AM tournament June 30 in Newtown Square. Photo: Tech. Sgt. Stacy Gault veteran, who introduced Tiger to golf at a young age and remained a coach and mentor throughout his life. Woods, the tournament host, wanted a way to honor the military through golf. “I just think it was something that should be honored, and that’s why we’re doing it,” he said. “It’s just a way to say thank you.” With a special military pavilion and more than 30,000 complimentary tickets given to military members and their families, Woods hopes they were on target. “Tiger knows where we are coming from,” said Vasiloff. “This was just a great overall experience.” For Ronda, this was just another example of her husband being humble and thanking others before taking credit for himself. “He is a noble man,” said Ronda, who tried to hold back tears of pride. “He is in a noble profession, and he gives it his whole heart and soul.” His caddy and friend, who hours earlier had helped bring it all into perspective, couldn’t have agreed more. “He’s dedicated to his family and to his service first,” said Laneski. “The third love of his life is golf, and somehow he’s able to tie it all together and be excellent in everything.” Ultimately, the team finished a 7-under par 63, tied for seventh, far from the prestige both have felt at being the best in their business. And as Tiger Woods shook hands with his partner and walked over an isolated bridge by himself, Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff humbly walked through the crowd and into the loving arms of his family, not just as an above-average Tiger Woods, son of former U.S. Army Lt. Col. Earl Woods, studies the swing of Chief Master Sgt. George Vasiloff, a chief of logistics for the 201st RED HORSE Squadron, at the 2010 National Pro-AM tournament on June 30 in Newtown Square. Photo: Capt. Jay Ostrich amateur golfer, but a superior Airman and a champion at life. From the Gulf to golf and bunker to bunker, it was a perfect ending to a near perfect day. O Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 29 KEYSTONE NEWSMAKERS A better way of doing business In the wake of the Pennsylvania Guard’s largest modern deployment, a specially created think tank is energizing efforts to improve the way the organization conducts internal business. To that end, the Continuous Process Improvement team held a workshop in May and set out to find ways of streamlining joint operations. With roots in Lean and Six Sigma, the CPI philosophy is designed to align an organization with its strategic objectives. The Lean philosophy is designed to increase efficiency, eliminate waste and simplify workflow with a focus on highvalue steps. Six Sigma focuses on increasing consistency, reducing variation and eliminating defects. In a 2009 memorandum introducing the CPI concept, Gen. Craig McKinley, Chief of the National Guard Bureau, wrote: “The joint CPI program will help our enterprise become mission-ready and mission-capable by removing wasteful and non-value-added activities.” 30 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Pennsylvania National Guard members discuss the seven primary goals they developed during the Continuous Process Improvement workshop in May. Courtesy photo During the workshop, the Pennsylvania team pinpointed several goals, each with specific objectives and benchmarks to measure success. Homeland defense, maintaining unit and individual preparedness, and continuity of operations were among the topics targeted for improvement. O During 1st Lt. Reed Preece’s combat mission in Iraq, an explosive round pierced his Stryker vehicle and set it on fire. With his helmet knocked off and shrapnel injuries to his face and back, Preece ordered the evacuation of the smoke-filled vehicle. After exiting, he noticed his gunner was still inside. Pfc. Brian Miller had two broken legs and was stuck in the Stryker’s front hatch. With no thought to his personal safety and, despite his injuries, he climbed on top of the burning vehicle and, along with another Soldier, pulled Miller to safety. After coordinating a medevac request, Preece directed his Soldiers to question local civilians regarding the attack. His quick actions resulted in the collection of intelligence that led to the targeting of a nearby insurgent hideout. O Dale Earnhardt Jr. stands with 1st Lt. Reed Preece. Photo: Sgt. Michael Baltz, 107th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment Eight National Guard members from the 8 Soldiers and 8 Missions program stand with Dale Earnhardt Jr. after unveiling his car on June 30. Pennsylvania National Guard 1st Lt. Reed Preece, second from left, was chosen as one of the eight Soldiers to be featured on Earnhardt’s car during a NASCAR race in Daytona, Fla. Photo: Sgt. Michael Baltz, 107th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment Fall 2010 / GUARDIANS / 31 CURATOR’S CORNER By Charles Oellig Thirty-one members of the Harrisburg City Grays, Headquarters Company, 55th Brigade, 28th Infantry Division, pose wearing parade dress uniforms in 1933 – gray cadet-style jackets with white cross belts, white trousers and dark blue shakos trimmed in white with white plumes. These uniforms were worn only for parades and ceremonies. The two officers in the front row are Capt. Statton L. Rice and 2nd Lt. Raymond H. Hoffman. Today, the lineage of the City Grays is carried on by Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 28th Infantry Division. O This is the 28th in a series of historical photographs of Pennsylvania National Guardsmen of the past, submitted by Charles Oellig, curator of the Pennsylvania National Guard Military Museum at Fort Indiantown Gap. The museum is open Mondays and Fridays, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., or other days by appointment. Call (717) 861-2402 or visit www.pngmilitarymuseum.org for more information or to schedule an appointment. The museum is closed on major holidays. Sgt. Ryan Piersol of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s 213th Personnel Company operates the Humvee Egress Assistance Trainer on May 15 at Fort Indiantown Gap. The HEAT, as it is often called, allows Soldiers to experience a rollover in a controlled environment so they can react more intuitively and precisely if they encounter a rollover while deployed. Piersol, who is certified to operate the HEAT, was supporting pre-deployment validation training, which several units from the 213th Area Support Group went through at Fort Indiantown Gap to stay a step ahead in the deployment process. Photo: Spc. David Strayer 32 / GUARDIANS / Fall 2010 Tactical Air Control Party Airmen of the 193rd Special Operations Wing’s 148th Air Support Operations Squadron pull security around a Stryker during a four-day field training exercise at Fort Indiantown Gap in May. More than 50 Airmen took part in the FTX and played a role in the scenarios. Other participants included the various support elements of radio maintenance, supply, vehicle maintenance and four Lithuanian Joint Terminal Attack Controllers. Photo: Master Sgt. George Roach