OCR Text |
Show HILL TOP TIMES 1r Friday, August 19, 1983 eltapipeir iressuiGS to the Jenny Lake Ranger Station to get help. By 1st Lt. Devin N. Asay Det. 4 Public Affairs Orville .Wright's Birthday Aviation Pioneer Come 1948 & y N schedules base briefing NCOs interested in applying for recruiting duty have more than 400 vacancies annually throughout the continental United States from which to choose. Applications are being sought by Air Force Recruiting Service to fill recruiting positions. A team will be on Hill AFB to brief prospective recruiters about . ; base of the mountain shortly after 6 p.m. after a 1 flight from Hill AFB. The aircraft commander, Flight Lt. William Thomson, received a thorough briefing on the site and the victim from rangers while the other crewmembers removed all unnecessary equipment from the aircraft e in preparation for the hoist recovery. At 7 p.m. Flight Lieutenant Thomson maneuvered the ' recruit-the-recruit- SAT. AUG. 20 FROM 1:00 P.M. TO 6:00 P.M. . , sergeant, 16 years or less, from all Air Force specialties are eligible even though they may be frozen for; overseas assignment. The freeze d status waiver enables NCOs who have more than four years total active federal military career-committe- er .service to apply. Eligible NCOs may apply for recruiting duty as of the date they sign into a permanent duty station and will be eligible to make a permanent change of station move after 12 months on station. NCOs who have received a Dislocation Allowance in the current fiscal year may apply for a recruiting assignment after October of the next fiscal year. recruiting duty Wednesday and Thursday. A general briefing will be held Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. in Bldg. 180, room 118, Merritt Room. The team will interview applicants for recruiting duty and in some cases be able to obtain recruiting school dates and assignments. NCOs in grades sergeant, over 4, through master high-altitud- See Our Great School Sergeant retrieving ur 'Recruit fhe recruiter' team helicopter arrived at the twin-engine- ed DeZubiria, the crew flew Schmitz to Detachment 4. Coincidentally, a crew and helicopter from the Hill AFB unit had taken part in a search and rescue training seminar for rangers at the park less than one week previous to the accident. Consequently," the ground party knew exactly how to prepare Schmitz for a hoist recovery by the Air Force chopper. When the helicopter arrived, the injured man was already strapped into a litter and awaiting retrieval from the mountainUH-1- After eVfc-ho- al still-extend- elDmbeir the Jackson Hospital, where he was admitted in critical condition after his ordeal. Doctors rushed him to surgery, where he remained for 9x2 hours. One week later, he was reported doing well. A1C Dan Gilligan and SrA. Howard Miller prepared and refueled the aircraft for the rescue mission after it was called back from a training mission. SSgt. Roger Jones, maintenance specialist, accompanied the aircraft to provide maintenance support. 40-fo- ot near-vertic- Park officials then turned to . irek hover above the accident site. With less than 15 feet of clearance from the face of the mountain, the crew hoisted pararescue specialist SSgt. Rodrigo V DeZubiria to the ground. He quickly ensured the litter was properly rigged, hooked it to the hoist cable, and Schmitz was hoisted into the helicopter. Rangers from Grand Teton National Park reached Schmidt four hours after the 12:30 p.m. accident. They quickly began treating his. injuries and called for assistance from two separate private helicopters. Neither was able to land near enough to the injured man to safely, remove him from the mountain. side. The - Jan. 30, "Huey" into a ; Detachment 4, 40th Aerospace Rescue and. Recovery Squadron, joined forces with U.S. Forest Service Rangers in saving the life of an injured mountain climber in an Aug. 4 rescue. . Kim Schmitz, 36, a Grand Teton National Park guide, was rock climb-- , level of Mount ing at the 10,000-foo- t Saint John, 20 miles north of Jackson, Wyo., when he lost his grip and tumbled 80 feet down a sheer rock cliff. The fall shattered both his legs and opened a large gash in his head. His climbing partner noted the extent of his injuries and descended three miles Aug. 19, 1871 iiifiijjoired d SHERM'S STORE "The Car Store" "QUALITY CARS AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD' (Ask for Janet or Shelly) 1975 Chev. Vega Runs good, auto, trans. w r: 386 West 5200 South Washington Terrace, Ogden 7gs 3 1974 Chev. Pickup good condition 350 1976 V-- 6, WARD A. MILLER CONSTRUCTION H;tV'iyUl..U.Ul.l.-slUJ.!!- j . . . V-- 8, $588 $1588 $888 . Pontiac Sunbird runs great . 1974 Plymouth Duster drive, bucket seats, , auto., P.S., P.B. ..... $1688 ; SHERM'S STORE Free Estimates Work Guaranteed ALSO FEATURING i PAYLE5S CAR RENTAL 621-717- 9 3240 Washington Blvd. : 621-71- 77 393-399- 7: Sweeftlheairts mm 1981 AMC Concord auto AtXClD VJclcomcs Movj Line off Import Ccr Fuel Pumps ! 1978 Chev. Conversion Van This week's specials: Sink, Ice box, super low miles, like new Cyclone Vy 1977 Ford Thunderbird - Sunroof, low on miles 1978 Chev. ed . Gallon Barryman 212-To- n Carb Cleaner truck Wildcat Coins & Bullion sharp 1978 AMC Concord Wagon Auto., air, cruise 2958 Washington Blvd. (Across From Klenke Floral) PLEASE PHONE ill AUTO OUTLET 11 35 West Riverdale Road ad Fog Lights 1978 Pontiac Trans Am Air, with Mean Mother 627-- 1 243 621-801- Mon.-Sa- t. & Till INFORMATION 6:00 P.M. , J basket Chrome Tail Pipe Extensions starting a ea. ea. 'CS Truck Seat Blankets starting at "IF WE DON'T HAVE IT WE'LL GET IT" HOURS: Open 2 FOR INVESTMENTS Open with Mon. thru Ksyil 5530 So. 1 Fit Saturday INC. 900 W., Roy 8-- Sunday 10-- 5 auto PARTS 773-93- 1 YOUR AUTO PARTS FRIEND! 0 |