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Show ,, i m ....u.. . . pm4jptmt Yi Pri pMu tfkiil .twMtmMM fcyl V A'' Cp7, ?SS?T..?r?r? "Mr Ty tU fUm. ii" th lr 0i.M wn nd m m i. k. .nicul .i.rr.i. nprwd kmb by lk..MMkin m4 writer art tfcrir of the Air F.rc, f th The rduc4. r writM Jr.rtiW. t f praMl at HUl AFB. Utah. Ihhri t Kaysvill Huh. U. S. AIR FORCE AEROSPACE POWER FOR PEACE NO. 3 OL. 14 Club Sets """"MltM WHim Hrtit f jllinilimiii)Mf irilllMMi MBiniMlW Mmi.y- iMMini imhih 3nWBti FORCE, Midnight, March 1, is the dead- he for entries in the Hill Administrative Club's 1961 high school bay contest. Subject is "Hill Its Significance ir Force Base the State and Community." from Utah's 10th Entries trough 12th grade students are be sent to Mrs. LaPriel Carlton, 37 Circle Way, Ogden. Winners will be announced at ill AFB on April 13 at an award lncheon. . An additional mcen-- e for the ton winner will be ap- bintment as honorary Hill AFB Immander for a day. Second and third place winners 111 receive a 350 and $25 bond Ispectively, and trophies for them- school. r ilves and their schools. Contest Rules : contest rules and out- AFB. are still avail- Utah high schools in leir English departments. The ltlincs assist contestants by pro- mug facts and figures about the dollar air base. Don Sparks, " essay . chairman, Lid that contest materials were Complete nes on Hill lie in most . Julti-milli- Minuteman Model Arrives for Display Life-Size- d Life - sized model of the Minuteman missile rolls out of a Globemaster at Hill AFB for its first Hill missile to was flown Orientation Group for display in USAF's The the Utah. in by public display Salt Lake City in connection with the American Rocket Society Solid Propellant Rocket Conference concluding today. The Minuteman scored a spectacularly successful first firing Wednesday. General Anderson, AMC Commander, was the main banquet speaker at the ARS conference. C-1- 24 42 Employees Honored for 20 Years Recognition for 20 year3 of fed-- J eral service is scheduled for 42 employees at Hill AFB, according to Col. Raymond W. Cassell, chief of Personnel and Administration Office. Separate ceremonies at directorate level will honor the workers with two decades service. They will be presented lapel emblems Carlton for rules and out- - and certificates of service. available in time to fit into Je l'.HJO-English programs in kit Lake City high schools. Salt ke City students may still par- kipate in the contest by writing Vt - Gt Mrs. les. Twenty-yea- r employees are: Indicate Drive Success fledges Monies have started rolling in for the 10G1 National Health and int Crusade fund drives which began at Hill AFB two weeks ago ami run until Feb. 2S. Hedges and donations indicate g the $2.",S87. contributed last ar, according to L. A. Christian-n- , project officer. Covered in the National Health "ive are the following charities: iierican Cancer Society, Ameri-- n Heart Assoc., Arthritis and leumatism Foundation, Muscular strophy Assoc. of America., Inc.; itional Society for Crippled Chil-r- n II the base is well on its way to top- ness, .and United Cerebral Palsy Assoc., Inc. Included in the Joint Crusade are Crusade for Freedom, CARE, Inc., and American - Korean Foun- dation. The drive is being run over three paydays. Money collected will be audited by fund headquarters in Salt Lake City and distribution and Adults, National Assoc. made to charities- throughout Utah r DistortedChildren, National on basis of need or in accordance tifly for Prevention of Blind with wishes of contributors. - - Heads New Council o Handle Golf Clu bAffairs Vernon E. Hopfenbeck, Darwin F. Taylor, Ray E. Widdison, Annie E. Cochran, and Charles F. Hull. PERSONNEL: Glenn W. Merrill BASE COMMANDER: George D. Reid, Arthur W. Thomassen, Clarence A. Coray, Van O. Barker, Ericksonj Ferris J. Reeder, Lloyd L. Bute, MATERIEL MANAGEMENT William H. Sullivan, Jerome V. Florence B. Reid, Leona L. Bryant, Kilker, and Henry R. Leseberg. C. COMPTROLLER: Edward Brown. A. and Fowler Clare MAINTENANCE: Leo L. Ralph, M. Ray Bottomly, Weston Timothy, Wilbur L. Warn, Lawrence J. Bauer, Vernon G. Moulding, Ingar N. Andersen, and Myron P. Forbes. DISPROCUREMENT AIR Sunday, February 19th, at 4:30 pjn., should be a "must" TRICT: Adolph C. Dowiatt. date for all Ogden AMA perPLANS AND MANAGEMENT: sonnel. Don E. Burkholder and Weldon KSL-Tat that time will air Woozley. AIRMUNITIONS: Jess D. Hull the Twentieth Century proand Dale K. Anderson. gram's "Minuteman." A considerable portion, of the show was FOURTH YEAR filmed at Hill AFB last June and July and features the mobile Minuteman test train's op- SUPPLY: George R. Van House, Parker W. Facer, Merlin L. Bad ger, T. J. Wadsworth, John A. Schaar, Raymond C. Roberts, David W. Heaps, Revere Burnett, Marvin J. Trad,: and James C. T V MUST IS COMING FEB. 19 V erations. Don't forget Channel 5 at the time noted above. 1981 Ogden Air Materiel Area cm' ployees joined the nation in cheer, ing the successful test Wednesday ot the Minuteman missile. The Air Force reported 20 min utes after the launching that all three stages of the Minuteman had fired successfully and that tha missile had landed on target in the south Atlantic Ocean mora than 4,000 miles away. Gen. Thomas D. White, Aie Force chief of staff, called tha launching "one of the most significant steps this nation has taken toward gaining intercontinental missile supremacy in the critical years just ahead.'" Wednesday's launch, he said, "is the most recent in the' series of successes which have marked the Minuteman program since its inception, and which will lead t having the Minuteman operational at least a year earlier than was a1 first thought possible." Special Significance The successful launch held special significance for Ogden AMA which handles the logistic support of the intercontinental ballistic missile. 'Located at Hili AFB is the $4 million Air Plant 77 which will as- semble the solid-fumissile. The 40G2nd Strategic Missila Wing was activated at Hill A.FE in December to have operational control of trains bearing the CftHl mile range Minuteman missile which will roam over the nation's Force-Boein- g el railroad trackage as an elusive part of the SAC deterrent force. Hill AFB supported four tests of the Minuteman train program last summer. All Utahns are particularly proud of the Minuteman's achieve, ment because it is felt it is really Utah's .missile. The first stage U built by Thiokol in Box Elder county and the third stage is produced by Hercules in Salt Lake County, in addition to Ogden AMA's rola with the missile. Hill Top On Top Again it has done again! For the fourth consecutive time, Hill AFB's ncwspa.ei has won the Air Materiel Command's Newspaper - of - the - yeal The Hill Top. Times Award. The honor this year has added distinction. In the past, the Hill Top Times competed and won against AMC base newspapers only in its population class. During UWSO, all publications were grouped into a single competition, with fifteen different AMC newspapers vying for first place. Hill Top Times is an internal information function of the Ogden AMA Office of Information. It is edited by Mrs. Dorothy G. Nelson, and is published by the Inland Printing Co., of Kaysville. Runner-u- p honors went to the Brookley (Mobile AMA) Spotlight, with the Tinker (Oklahoma City AMA) Take Off in third place, and the Tachikawa (Japan) Marauder taking fourth rating. The Gentile Electron, 3083rd ADG Sentinel and" the Olmsted (Middle town AMA) OrbiWr were . Col. nr. Oe-de- - FEBRUARY 3, , Woore Victor Moore, chief materiel services division, materiel man- directorate, has been named president of the first council pent jpointed to administer the business of the new Hill AFB Golf Club. pther council members include Richard J. Iverson, director vision, and William D. Beckwith, procurement and production, plans and management division, Lt. Col. Joseph E. recorder. The council is now. considering ysakowski, staff judge advo- all applications for membership ; Captains Andrew S. were filed late last year and which Winir. 27(."th Airmunitions January. Applicants will be during Jj Charles E. Nesossis, Ogden notified of their acceptances and a. pA: own w r.ai-untheir membership cards by receive n, 2849th :ABW (custodian) J mail in the near future. t3 Allen R. Pike. AMA Membership applicants who de g Arthur A. Harmeyer, 270,"th, information or to Messrs. Ercil C. Henderson, sire to obtain submit payments on previously ining devices division; Kay E. filed applications are asked to Nman, budget division; Keith E. make contact with Mr. Dearman phola, transportation operations at WKU! or visit him in. Building 'ion, Gordon R. Milne, IM di 107. m- U Successful i Minuteman i - First prize in the contest will bond and a tro-ll a $100 i.savings ; ' j. j tne winner aim1 uxic j.ux ny ior . IW,... Ti- Hill Cheers eadline On Essay, tk. Hill T.p CoL Victor Moore cited for outstanding editorial work. The Hill Top Times will now represent AMC in the annual USAF. world-wid- e newspaper com- petitions. AMC uses the following yardsticks in judging its base newspapers: 20 points for local management articles which assist the commander to more efficiently operate his organization; 10 points for s about local units, AMC and Air Force mission and operations; 15 points for articles about unit awards, personnel, promotion, transfers, including communitj relations, and 5 points for national policy articles explaining and interpreting U. S. position in world affairs. ar Other judging factors excelunder grouped "journalistic lence," and include such items 'a ar-tide- editinc lajrouU ttc .J |