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Show EOD blasis mofor Page . . . .Page 2 4 This morning at 11 a.m., the newest educational facility on Hill AFB will be dedicated. This will be followed by an open house from 1 : 30 to 3 p.m. , which base personnel can attend. The Ogden ALC NCO School will become a reality from months of planning and many donated Located in hours of Bldg. 777 and the adjacent three buildings, the school will d now provide Leadership self-hel- p. base-assigne- commissioned officers (NCOs) with skills and to perform training non NAIL - supervisory responsibilities, leadership, management, world affairs, skills and communications x f fin t ii i i i Subject of her address will be "Stir What You've Got," a theme based on concepts of using the talents you have to better your life in lieu of complaining about not having any gifts or talents. Mrs. Taggart's speeches are filled with humor, yet carry a message, that everyone can use in their daily life. Tickets for the luncheon may obtained be from individual Directorate monitors or by calling Don Lowder, ext. 4612. Mrs. Taggart was born and raised in Ogden, graduating from Ogden High School and Moench Business College. Her career has spanned the role of secretary and payroll cleark, office manager, executive i i Wlj CDfl representing organizations the Air Force Logistics Command and one from other tenant units on base. It is anticipated there will be nine women attending every third class. school training. The new school will run nine classes per year. Maj. Gen. Edmund A. ALC Rafalko, Ogden ur commander, Brig. Gen. John R. Paulk, Ogden ALC vice commander and CMSgt. Jesse T. Barnett, Ogden ALC senior II 11 rnni 11 li ti ii foi(S P' t C"i r i i t i 7ce .A i Follies" in Page 25 eason .His vvi i ::;u j January zs, ivu CJ. G enlisted advisor are hosting the following dignitaries the opening ceremonies and dedication: attending Lt. Gen. James D. Hughes, commander, 12th Air Force; Brig. Gen. David B. Easson, director of personnel at AFLC, the Senior Enlisted Advisors from AFLC, AFCS Air Force, Ogden Stephen Dirks, Dr. Bishop, president State College, along and 12th Mayor A. if' Joseph L. of Weber with other WSC educators; members of the Ogden Chamber of Commerce and Jim Taylor, state president of the Air Force Association. SMSgt. James C. Huffman is the commandant of the new school. NCO Leadership School Commandant, SMSgt. James C. Huffman accepts the U.S. flag from MSgt. Henry Schrier, representing the Air Force Sergeants Association, who donated the flag and flagpole to the new base school. (U.S. Air Force Photo $4 million commissary instruction soon n new proi ects mat secretary and her banking career which began in 1941. She has been named Woman of the Year, Wasatch Chapter National Association of Bank Women in 1969; WToman of the Month in Utah Woman's Review in 1973 and Woman of the Year for the Sugar House Chapter of Business and Professional Women in 1975. Her civic affiliations include a member of the Board of Governors, Salt Lake Area member begin Air Command - assigned unit, the 388th TAC Fighter Wing, five from Ogden ALC were already on the base, Chamber will Students will represent a group of 16 from the Tactical utilized by the SAC Satellite organization prior to their departure in 1975. Bldg. 777 is the actual classroom site and the adjacent three buildings are dormitories where the students will live and study school, during the four will weeks. There lasting be nine hours of classroom training each day. The first class is scheduled to start Feb. 8, when 22 base 160-ho- it n fa) temporary duty (TDY) basis. for the Uj I OGDEN, UTAH for Hill Admin. Club Lit NCO Club. i 11 nn . topic relations officer for Zions First National Bank in Salt Lake City, will be guest speaker at the Feb. 3 meeting of the Hill Administrative Club at 12 noon in the base i i f?n NCOs Self-developm- ent Doris Taggart, assistant vice president and public ! n other information to make him or her the best qualified NCO the Air Force has to offer. This same training has been provided Hill NCOs at other Air Force bases on a Buildings Page 4 named n uti critical Energy problem Vol. 30, No. 13 advisors tax Unit missile of Commerce; of the Dean's Advisory Council, College of Utah State Business, University; member of the Merchant's Association, ZQMI Center; member and past regional vice president, Rocky Mountain Region, National Four new morale, welfare and recreation facilities costing a total of nearly $5 million have been designed and are scheduled to be built on Hill AFB in the near future, Civil a Engineering spokesman reported today. The facilities, which include a youth center, base bowling center, new softball field and a modern commissary, will be constructed from nonappropriated funds. "Nonappropriated funding is by far the most complex for means available construction programming," the officer explained. "Many approval authorities exist each which study nonappropriated construction, based on cost and facility function," he added. Throughout the Air Force, million of Association of Bank Women; more than $50 member and past president, Utah Public Affairs Council; member and past chairman, Utah National Group, nonappropriated funds are used each year for new and facilities. Each must compete with existing multi-billio- n dollar morale, modernized welfare and recreation facility deficiencies. The funds are acquired from sources such as officer and NCO open messes, base theaters exchange services, and restaurants. Commissary Trust Revolving Funds come from surcharges applied to commissary sales. (MWR) The following MWR funded projects are scheduled for construction : YOUTH CENTER new youth center is to be constructed on 6th St. near the main family housing area. It will include a full gymnasium, snack kitchen, game room, an activity room and lounge, and A restrooms with bowling center will be expanded from 12 to 20 lanes, snack bar enlarged, and game room, maintenance area and showers. Construction is planned for May 1977 with completion by January 1978. The complex will cost about $450,000. Existing facilities do not include a gym and do not additional cases, 10-tea- m otherwise adequately serve dependent youths. The new center is expected to provide them with opportunities to develop many of their own new programs. Work should begin in March and be completed in October at cost of about $360,000. Income derived from this facility will be used in Central Base Funds for other MWR BOWLING LANES Base bowling facilities have become inadequate as the operations. on Hill has increased. Waiting lists are population saturated and display installed. Leagues currently limit will be held to a able to expand and open bowling periods will be extended for all center users. SOFTBALL FIELD Construction of a n?w softball field, located in the southeast corner of the ball field area, is scheduled for completion by the beginning of summer. The new lighted field (Continued on Page 8) the most recurring gripe in a recent survey indicates that the bowling alley is frequently too crowded. This will be remedied before the end of the year. The Association of Bank Women; member and past president, W'asatch Chapter, American Business Association." Women's t j&Remtad F-1- topic of Ute 6 AFA meeting Tues. Neil R. Anderson, chief test pilot for the new 6 light- weight fighter program, will speak to the Ute Chapter of the Air Force Association nest Tuesday evening at 6:30 p.m. at a dinner in the base Officers' Club. Mr. Anderson is assigned to the General Dynamics plant, Ft. Worth, Tex. He will be joined by two other, key i ' F-1- : : j j Norman Robbins, General Dynamics vice president and deputy program director for program jji-- : .vJ(fl::"'::W"::::v g jij: executives, integrated logistics and Lt. Col. Joseph Spiers, the chief of the Acquisition Division at Hill AFB. F-1- 6 5 : : jj:': : An artists concept depicts the new Hill AFB Commissary to be constructed in the base military center. (Photo, courtesy of Arthur II. Bush Associates) The Hill Top Times is an unofficial newspaper published every Friday in the interest of It is published by Mor personnel at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, of Air Force Logistics Command. Media Sales, Inc., 351 North Main, Layton. Utah, a private firm, in no way connected with the and writers are their own and Department of the Air Force. Opinions expressed by publisher are not to be considered an official expression by the Department of the Air Force. The appearance of advertisements, including supplements and inserts, in this publication does not constitute an endorsement by the Department of the Air Force of products or services advertised. |