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Show HILL TOP TIMES Page 21 Career Girl Job Clerk-Sten- o is Pins Go To 37 Workers Twenty-Yea- Vital Link in Busy Office r more employees Thirty-seve- n M ever at Hill AFB have completed 20 years of federal service. They has substitute for a competent ipvised by technology. Career Girl Pauline Brown clerk-stenograph- er been employees, who will receive pins and citations at separate cere- f l of office- experience, Government, Mrs. Brown is one of two women assigned Minuteman Division's Base Support Maintenance ?mund Equipment and Auxiliary Systems Section. world-wid- e support and management "Our section has of the Minuteman. t the equipment needed for transport is it travels up to us to get it on When the 'big firecracker' can take pride in, and we! all feel it." way It's a job we Mrs Brown has been with the Minuteman Division 1962 when she returned to Hill AFB for her second tasks much typing, including tour Her job includes many SAC missile bases through with lourii draft correspondence time cards, and all the mail the United States, dictation, familiar with classified matter routine. She is thoroughly clerical work relating to a highly tech- and in all phases of '9 I! almost all in - ed-- monies, are: BASE COMPTROLLER MAINTENANCE LaMar P. Barnes, Dorothy G. Barton, William E .Bell, Gene V. Clark, James Crook, Jr., Jose B. Florez, Angus E. Gibson, Oliver C. High, Ellis N. Jones, James R. McGavock, Atta S. Nye, Leona E. Richards, Raymond E. Russell, Ronald L. Schilling, Rex D. Sonnenfelt, Darvel S. Spring, and Earl J. Wahlstrom. ' ' that one should keep the office well-organize- d, and the as possible." This Career Girl had a solid groundwork for her chosen field. A native of Salt Lake City, and graduate of East High School there, she continued her education at the University of California in Berkeley for three years, majoring in English and business. Returning home to Utah she took the LDS Business College secretarial course. She worked for the Utah State Tax Commission two years, but in December, 1941, Pauline went to work at the Ogden Arsenal on a stenographic job. After a few months, she transferred to Fort Douglas because it was nearer home. She was assigned to the Military Personnel Office and later the Adjutant General there with the Ninth Service Command. In 1945 the headquarters moved to the Presidio routine as simple San Francisco as Headquarters for the Sixth Army and Pauline "went with her job." In 1946 she decided once more in favor of Utah and) came to Hill AFB to the Supply at Directorate. Her position included cost accounting as well as stenography and she worked variously in Supply Personnel, in ANG Asb f WASHINGTON Fw (AFNS) Air National Guard have been nominated President Nixon for the to major general Frank A. Bailey, chief of staff, Arkansas Promotions following of-C- ari by to the Senate appointments : X; B 2 MATERIEL i w. what she considered the most valuable trait or stenographer, Pauline Brown answered: for a secretary "The ability to get along with everybody! Then I would say -- Inn mmMm When asked Pauline Brown Transportation and in the Warehouse Section. Just prior to the opening of the Korean Conflict, Pauline was pro- moted to a clerical postition, in the Adjutant General Office, in Publications and Forms. There she edited publications and regulations, and was promoted eventually to the position of management analyst. Pauline had married in the meantime, and she left the base in 1954 transferring to Fort Douglas, and with two brief maternity leaves, became the mother of a son, Stephen, and a daughter, Diane. From the Finance and Accounting Office at Fort Douglas she was assigned as secretary to the Comptroller, a responsible position she held until 1962. That was the year she came to the Minuteman Division and found it the most exciting of all her career. "I have never in all my experience worked with nicer people," she said. "All are gracious and considerate; that makes for very pleasant days." Mrs. Brown lives in Bountiful with her teen-agewho attend Junior High there. Diane studies ballet and Stephen hopes to make Eagle Scout before long. "Retirement? Not for a long time. I get too much of a thrill out of Minuteman." liam xM 0?0O H. J Bon-figli- Roy D. Eck, Frank Guzman, Elden Hamblin, R. Ray Hapworth, Joe Maxey, Walter J. Mikesell, and H. Carl Ro- berts. 1906th COMMUNICATIONS Andrew L. SQUADRON Frecker. SOME PEOPLE think the moon won't be able to support life. Well, it's not such an easy thing on this old planet, either. HOW ABOUT FAST minimum balcnca t? FAIR FRIENDLY DIXON REISBECK 197 North Main - layton , Drop Li to c6rr czo c!c tiro convcziznl locations czd open ycur checks nok do cc-- t cf lirbxi tizzn ail crourid in, iho ar& ol Utcli czl&o Cz' &o cczX c Boa Le cjto izL-- j clrlidtD cicps to J MANAGE- MENT Dennis L. Bateman, Ina B. Bingham, Sammie C. Jenkins, James N. Jensen, George F. Kershaw, Alan B. Manning, and Mary T. Suski. DISTRIBUTION Clarence o, R. Bartlett, Richard E. rs Pendleton, commander, 146th Military Airlift Wing, ANG, and Charles W. Sweeney, California ANG; Robert S. chief of staff, Massachusetts Peterson, deputy chief of staff, ANG. To brigadier general, Minnesota ANG; and George James W. Carter, deputy chief H. Taylor, assistant adjutant of staff, Tennessee ANG ; Wil general for air, Utah ANG. c-- Max C. Hill and Emma C. Jensen. ""Ina position where sheer competence and dependability critical operation, experience is the ina are required by third valuable ingredient that makes for a smooth work-flo- COMMANDER Herbert E. Forsgren. hij cccsl tn: cl |