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Show HILL TOP TIMES Page 18 Happ eni PAY LAST RESPECTS and Col. Maj. Gen. Don Coupland, Ogden AM A commander, E. P. Donohue, Hill AFB commander, led a host of Hill AFB personnel to funeral services Wednesdied day for Paul J. Ronnfeldt. Mr. Ronnfeldt a of heart ;ailr Saturday at his home in Clearfield 21 Hill AFB for at fire chief been He had mer.t. vears. Mr. Ronnfeldt was credited with making I the original suggestion of coating runways with W I foam to enable crippled aircraft to Uk- - k--J iand with less danger. Ronnfeldt HONOR STUDENT Requirements and Dis Sherman B. Waite, chief of tribution Section, Aircraft Systems Support Mancourse agement Division, completed a at the School of Systems and Logistics, Wright-Patterso- n AFB, with a final rating of "A Plus." The class was the Materiel Requirements Determination Course. According to AFLC, this grade is given to only the most outstanding stu'(ill! inKn Jf his superdents. All of Sherm's Chief Division Chase Chief Branch Brian, visor Jo- n JnJi inrl Denutv Chief TfnUart r -. fcj . 7.z ite Sherm seph u. Jacoos are au proua oi wieir Jiunui Student." FETED AT FAREWELL Hill AFB Toastmasters Club No. 0129 had a farewell party for Col. Raymond W. Cassell this week at the Centerville home of Reece Robinson, deputy comptroller. Colonel Cassell is leaving later this month to become chief of Personnel and Administration at San Bernardino AMA, Calif. Highlight of tho party was presentation of the Toastmasters Area Coveir.or Outstanding Award for District 15. The scroll cited Cobnel Cassell for 'superior performance as area governor during July 1. 106:: through July 1, 1964." Some 40 Toastmasters attended the stag affair. They were from Club 3129 plus the newly formed base "High Noon" group. k TV fire-retarde- JV TAMARA TAKES TO TURKEY i A summer stay with a Turkish family in t 17 J i t nblil i happy adventure being enjoyed by Tamara Quick. ; Tamara is the dauo-hWTJ Meredith Quick, who works in Aircraft System Support Management Division, and the lat Glenn Quick, who formerly worked in Supply Tamara is visiting the family on an AmeriCai Field Service Foreign Exchange scholarship Her host family is Mr. and Mrs. Nazmi Evri 17-ve- ar t and two daughters. He is a retired Turkish ArmJ "luwi" ucacjiea scnooi. They are umtci Moslim. Tamara sailed from New York June on the Dutch Liner SS Seven Seas. nt 27 SON DROPS IN Two Hill AFB workers rolled out the welcomed ineir sou wuo xicw ius navy ijA Unon into Hill AFB on a routine pilot training flight. Lee Orme, who works in the Workload? p Section of the Aircraft Systems Support Management Division, and his wife, Althea, an accounts maintenance clerk in the Accounting and I45 Finance Division, were happy to see their son Navy Lt. Douglas L. Orme. Lt. Orme is staDutch tioned at the Naval Air Station, Patuxent River, DUTCH TREAT Maryland, and is plane commander of the Dutch Hinrichs, cafeteria "Orion," an warfare patrol air-, . manager, was surprised with a wtt.it,. aim uucir two daughters live with iui party in his honor last week. in Maryland. The occasion maiked Dutch's 20 years' service as cafeteria RECENT RETIREMENTS manager at Hill AFB. On hand Eleven Maintenance employees have retired from fedJ for the occasion were Col. E. P. ci vice wilu uuij itiagiiig irom 14 to zu years. New retirl Donohue, base commander; Lt.. are lony JV1. Aland, Layton; Eva M. Phipps, Oirden: StanW Col. Richard W. Taylor, deputy, Lucas, Ogden; Barbara B. Flint, Ogden; Phyllis R. Daari and and a host of "gaen; wiuiam ju. isagiey, salt lake City; William L. Ac friends. Dutch was presented an son, Layton; John J. Cortellini, Salt Lake Citv; Thomas cake and other Shepherd, Ogden; Mareta Kirkham, Salt Lake City; and Fi tokens of esteem. I. Peterson, Layton. Dutch took over cafeteria i management July 11, 1914, HONEYMOONERS when the restaurant had conNewlyweds setting up housekeeping in Salt Lake City crete floors and wooden picnic Mr. and Mrs. Lynn William Mitton. Mrs. Mitton is the fori tables with benches nailed to Marcia Cassell, daughter of Col. and Mrs. Raymond W. CasJ them. Today he oversees operColonel Cassell is chief of Personnel and" Administration ation of the main cafeteria, lonvini Qnnn frit i nsiv oooinmtnont if Vnrtnn AS will along with five branches and Calif. Marcia and Lynn plan to continue their education at i V fksi&w five mobile units. Col. Donohue presented him a University of Utah this fall. certificate for meritorious serv ice. Dutch resides at 1S98 East CITED FOR SUPERIOR WORK 39th South. Salt Lake City, with Four employees of the Ogden Contract Management I( his wife, Sylvia. trict were cited for outstanding performance of their iti TWO DECADES' SERVICE Miss DeAnna R. Yates, clerk steno, and Mrs. Cettejane Alice Cable, chief operator of secretary steno, were presented Sustained Superior Terfonu-the II'll AFB telephone ex Awards ar.d Outstanding Performance Ratings for their in the Thiokol Chemical Contract Management Office. change, was presented a A Sustained Supsricr Performance Award was rat. certificate o f service by 1st by Arthur O. Rarr, missile quality control representative at Lt. Jesse A. 77 fY.ntrnrt Matiiffoment flffifo. onera-t Burnett, Chester J. Travis, chief of Materiel Quality BranAjJ i o n s officer, rill" ffi ni cromont Dffire. rCCClVed afl PnntM c irtfictu r.f the fWlpn Wf A fnm. Mf. Don CoiDar.d. (licht) standing Performance Rating. SiMiss Cable K 5. mande.. wa honored at a tea at th; officers club last Tues-dtfQ "4 'A. on A beautiful silver has been the tray, appropriately engraved, was presented to Mr. Csupland on behalf of club members by telephone oper- Mrs. Larry Pennington, (left) club t. ' ' , : i ' Hill since her Alice discharg from the WAC in 1913. She has seen the base telephone? exchange grow from S00 lines to 2200 lines. She reside in Clearfield, with her father. HIGH-FLYIN- F-1- 01 G six-wee- ks f" F-1- 01 rs, :r h--n anti-submari- ne icing-inscrib- ed nHp 1 v.. - r. i 20-ye- ar I Pl.-ir.f- c Pnu-flo- V r a. pre-iden- -- '' - Pi,. Bill Ca'l,. SUPERIOR WORKERS Eight telephone operator of the 1901th Comm. Sq. were recently awarded Sustained Su- perior certificates, plus a $100 cah award. Cited were Lucille Hey wood. Velnu Lucas, Kath-ry- n Sewell, Lola Edson, Edith Limb. Margaret Hcnrie, Louis Child, and 'BIRTH' v,i,. T . TAKES CLUB ItEINS Weld.n m.,. Kill Adminislratlve Club presijfnt. lurn oer Ihe cavel t new President Robert (ioodfelliw. Other new officer? are M. G. Slorfenson, vice presidint; Helen Krd, tecr.iarv ' and Edward Fowler, treasurcf. Helen Bridge. DAY CAKE When IJ.mnie Real, typist in Aircraft Requirements and Distribution Branch, gave birth to a baby daughter, she pulled kind of a switch. Instead of being treated by her she decided to treat them. So, on the big day, she sent a cake to office friends. This in the first child for Ronnie and her husband. A1C Mike Real, 28th Air Transport Squadron. co-work- A furry, four w made an appearance at Ogden AMA headqua ri 1102 laft week and seemed to adopt Ihc place. KITTEN ON THE KEYS J gA sure whether the friendly yellow cat had cowe "light mousckeeping" or If she was only mk,n ular f uty vlR. At any rale, for several days she made e'' tions of each office, rwpondinjr lo sympam , .plkj rubbing against friendly leg, and occi"W" 8, J1tV4 self lo lunches she came across. Finally he ana welcome (and we're not kitlcn:) cat tale. 1 |