OCR Text |
Show .The Deseret Sampler, Friday, April 7, 1972 Chaplains DPG clubs reorganize in test corner As April climatology - feKionalism and profitability of the club system, Dugway NCO and Officers Clubs will join with clubs in the 6th Army geo graphic ere in an experimental . reorganizations! program. DURING. THE months of April and May, all administrative matters of foe clubs will be handled by an installation dub manager and reported to a re- club manager located gional with 6th Army headquarters. This manager will in turn report to foe Department of foe Army, specifically Brigadier General John T. Peterson,. Di- Funds, rector, Clubs, and Open Messes, who is now in charge of. .foe pro- - Temperature: Mean Record Conflict is involved in every huroan relationship to some do- gree itself conflict The word may arouse different responses Relative Humidity: Mean Record various people. Average number weather: of days in month with indicated 8.8 Rain ir drizzle 3.0 Snow or sleet 0.8 Sandstorm 0.6 Thunderstorm April is marked by a continuation of relatively cloudy, moist weather. Fair sides are obtained an average of 46.7 of the time. Precipitation in liquid equivalent averages 0.75 per April, with monthly record maximum and minimum at 1.05 and 0.09 respectively. April snowfall averages 0.8; record high total snowfall for the month is 3.9 The highest temperature expected in a typical April is 79.6, the lowest 22.9. On April 1 the sun rose at 0616MST and "set at 1856 MST. Sunrise on April 30 (note change to Daylight Savings Time) will Ire 0633 DST, sunset at 2025 DST. Courtesy of Detachment Air Weather Service. 19, part of an Aiiny program to increase the pro- - 6th Weather Wjng, USAF Since con-- flict can bring disorder and do- st ruction into human affairs, we need to study its nature and team how to relate to it and cue it in more effective and productive ways NOT ONLY do we expert- ence conflict on a personal level but through the mass media, we all confronted with group, gram. national and international conflicts in which we as citizens all share. Conflict can readily be seen in situations where needs and values are similar. ' Conflict is unavoidable in families between parents, between parents and children, and between foe children themselves when desired and-o- r needed objects are limited in number and the demand for them intense. Conflict also arises between individuals or groups when needs and values differ greatly. This reaction, too, can be observed in the modem family which has a generation gap between the needs and values of the parents on one hand and those of the vouth on the other. WHERE THERE is no flexibility in such a relationship, disintegration of foe family is likely to occur. Such need not take place if foe various members of the household seek to understand and appreciate another's needs and values. Communication is vital to the resolution of conflict. A failure to communicate can only . intensify existing conflict,, make a bad situation worse, and increase destructive relationships lietween the parties to the conflict. solutions ' to Unsatisfactory include conflict segregation, submission to the status quo, and the extemalization of conflict. Enforced segregation sets foe individuals and groups' apart, makes communication more difficult and arranges the stage for violent and uncontrolled controlled conflict. BLIND submission to foe status quo on the part of some individuals enhances sharp conflict with those who would seek creative and needed changes in the present system. Extemalization of conflict, keeping it outside of ourselves, is not satisfactory because it obviates the fact that conflict may be within persons as well as between persons. In order to settle a conflict with another person, we should seek to understand his motives by attempting to put ourselves in his place. Try to experience, the feelings of foe other person in his particular situation. Then let us our own position. Is either one completely right or completely wrong? Finally, since conflict is inevitable and a part of community life as we know it, let us approach it creatively. Let us use it to help understand one another better, resolve our differences and develop better relationships. . new program, labeled of Open Mess Reorganization II II), sepa- (ROMP Program from installation clubs rates command,, and places them in on individual channel, much like foe present recruiting system ' operates. Under the past system, the Dugway chibs were managed through a direct chain of com- mand system, and were rwpon- stole to the Army Materiel Cora- mand and the Test and Evalua- Ron Command. The old system was not connected to the 6th ' This direct chain of command. This program allows the installation commander to retain immediate control of his posts clubs, Data collected from the ex- -' ' perimental program will be collected and evaluated in June, and the Secretary of Army; Ro-bert Froehlke, will announce bis decision as to which policy the Army will follow on July 1. Under ROMP II, manage-froment teams will be available to assist dubs with any problems they might be experiencing, Dugway Installation Club Army. Manager Captain John C. Hdey WJHLE ROMP II is op-- said that there .would be only crating in the 6th Army area minor internal changes in foe dy. all other areas of comDugway club system. mand are PetraS E BETTER service . program called ROMP I, which should be the only thing vis-aleaves control, of clubs in a tole, he said, ' m re Capt. Haley also cited the goal of the program as a viable and responsive dub system. A meeting was held in San Francisco earlier this month to outline foe new plans to Army personnel in the 6th Army geographic district Attending from Dugway were: Major Harold A. Personnel, Training, Phillips, and Administration director; Capt. Haley, PT&A; Captain Charles A Cuprill, Judge Advocate Office; Captain Robert E. Shea, Adjutant General Corps; Warrant Officer Donn L. Subocz, Officers Open Mess; and William R. Thomas of the NCO Club. HEICHT When 1 was young, my producer George Tyler, told me that were I four inches taller 1 could become one of the great-- , deest actresses of my time. 1 A size. lick string cided to my of teachers pulled and stretched till I felt I was in a medieval torture chamber, 1 gained nary an inch, but my posture became tallest military. I became the five-fowoman in the world. And my refusal to be limited by me to my limitations enabled of one Scotland, of Mary day in history. foe tallest queens Helen Hayes COMPASSION Compassion is a main ingredient of leadership, a requisite that is sometimes lost or ignored in todays world. Charles G. ot INFLATION By 1974, judging from predictions of economists, the average American will lie making twice as much as an Englishman, three and a half times as much as a Russian, and half Senior as much as he needs. Scholastic. . RE-U- P FOR NAM Donald C. Weatherhead, Munitions Development OfCapt. ficer, administers the oath of reenlistmcnt to Specialist 5 Howard Brandes, who reenlisted for a tour of duty in Viet Nam. Post Career Counselor SFC David L. McKinney holds the reenlistment papers. . Chess Tournament Slated WASHINGTON (ANF) Its never too late to poliah up on ones chess skills. The 13th annual Armed Forces in Washing9 Chess Tournament is scheduled Sept. ton, D.C. lire Army and Air Force will each be allowed to enter five-mteams. A third quintet will be composed of members of the Marine Corps, Navy and Coast Guard. Sponsoring the tournament will be the American Chess Foundation, American Legion, U.S. Chess Federation and the U.S.0. 22-2- an Research Aid Adopted FT. MONMOUTH, NJ. (ANF) A computerized reference system, developed by the Army Electronics Command, has been adopted by the Defense Documentation Center (DDC). The system will be an aid to scientists in finding current literature in their fields. . About 2,800 agencies using the centers science and technology bank will be able to be apprised of the latest literature in any of thousands of fields of interest Called Selective Dissemination of Information (SDI), the system matches the individual scientists interests on the DDC accession against subjects listed computer tapes. Usually, about 2,000 new titles appear in each issue. semi-month- ly Copter Probed FT. EUSTIS, Va. (ANF) Work will soon begin on two projects for the Eustis Directorate, Army Air Mobility Research and Development Laboratory. Plans are to produce a prototype model of a new pilot assist control system for light helicopters and to investigate the effects of rotor design parameters on forward helicopter flight stall characteristics. The pilot assist system would incorporate features which have previously been too expensive to consider for any but the largest helicopters. The data from the investigation may be used as an aid in evaluating existing and proposed rotor designs. HERITAGE GENERATION GAP In New Guinea, you have If you wish to keep your light and heat, you must also keep children who are studying mediyour sun. If you wish to keep cine whose parents were canniyour perfume, you will keep your bals. Thats quite a gap. But flowers. If you wish to keep your whether its more or less of a forests, you must keep your trees, gap than the gap lietween a and if you wish to keep your sophisticated cabinet memliers rights and liberties in education, and his son or lietween a profesyou must also keep your God. sor of physics and his youngest student in college, thats a quesThat is the American heritage. The Quotable Fulton I. Sheen tion. Margaret Mead, Trans- - HARNESS BOOT has the areas largest selection of popular Harness loots. Here's one - high top boot with big, bold, harness strap wd brass ring. AH mens sizes. . . Sunset day-to-d- FOREICN AID lament that The our foreign aid program lacks a constituency in the US is just another of those myths we hold dear. Actually, our bilateral aid n program is, in effect, the soft-loa- window of the Export-ImpoBank; it is the source from which foreign governments bow-romoney on easy terms with which to buy goods and services from within the US. As such, it handles a lively constituency which exerts steady pressure on the government to keep the program going. Sen. Frank Church rt w of Idaho. NEW! C0UGER ATHLETIC SHOES SPORTS SHOE See this ouei Tho newest addition to Sunset's fantastic selocliw of aridolfc foot- ADC AS official "A.BJL SHOT' Aerari-caofficial ABA shoo. Tho shoo of foe Utah Stars" high padded wide sappoiMoegh hroathabls nytoa upper. Sore gripping solo. aa . HARNESS NOW: ADC AS GYM SHOE" tho Megiddo Message Reg. most popular gym shoo from Adidas. Foatares non-sl- ip robhor solo with white oik upper and black stripes. FOR THE "BOOT-MINDE- Famous nemo Harness boots - just fiko dads popular bold A brassy boots bait to toko tho roughest ADC AS "SUPERSTAR": Tho "hot one buftfar high school and cologo stars oxtramaiy durable . shoo in poet now stylo. DEPENDENCY In the forest, tree leans on tree; in a nation, man on man.. ESPEOAUY BOOTS ir CONVERSE ALL STAR NOW ADCAS ADCAS wHh . a 400 Americas No. 1 basketball shoos", worn by more players. Molded sole with greed SUIGGER" BRAS1 SHOT midti-doata- injactu. white solo. An ideal soccer deals designed in modem style. . LaoI iummmfff NiBI DwnVI NOW 0D D-Elt- es Perform The The Dugway recently held their annual March Review at the post gym. half-tim- e at activities DugMrs Can of the' direction during under perform Terry girls, have won many honors- - at state way High School football and basketball games and (Photo by Ogden Kraut) competitions. 4 Another style Reg. 15.95 stop and start traction. Cushioned insole arch and SPORT CENTERS H 0 Mb 05) 0 (?&, YOUNGER SET! |