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Show UrjLJ I 118? ZIIugway university o?. "r . - MfAYj JV Published or Dugway Proving Ground, Dugway, Utah Published, by the Truse lishing Company, Tooele, utan, a prtyasa firm, in no way connected with the De -- : Friday, January 28, 1966 VoL No. 9 No. 14 partment cf tfetAnaar. Optotone by pnhlirtir aad wntara benia are their nlHwirtwH m bjr the SepartmeaK erlET of the producta or aorvicaa adeer- - PwtitmtM i ffB-- of advertia SWF-- VMII Announces Seven New Officers Welcomed to Dugway Seven officers were welcomed during the last month and all have variety of Dugway positions. Lieutenant Colonel Arnold R. of 1965 and has become the vision. COL. YOUNC is an Infantry officer and was last assigned to the Army Aviation Test Board. Col. Young, his wife, Catherine, and children Carl, 12, and Cheryl Lynn, 10, reside at 524A Bonafin Avenue. Undertaking the duties of Executive Officer at the U. S. Army Hospital is Captain John T. Hailing. Captain Harling a Medical Service Corps officer, was last assigned as XO of the 196th General Hospital at Fort Bliss, Texas. A 1937 graduate of Florence State College in Florence, Alabama, Capt. Harling, his wife, Sonya, and children Shelaine, 9, Le Ann, 8, William, 7, Pamela, 5, and Sonya, 4, are living at 512 B Peak Avenue. FIRST LIEUTENANT James E. Shannon, a Chemical Corps Officer, has begun work in the Chemical Division. He has a BS in Chemistry from Colorado State and his masters in Water Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin. , Lt. Shannon, his wife, Anne, and daughter Mary Sue, 2, are living at 66A E. Knight. Four Chemical Corps officers arrived in January after completing the Chemical Corps Officer Basic Course at Fort McClellan, Alabama, last month. They are Second Lieutenant Peter B. Har-rington, Paul B. Bason, Robert D. Byrd, and William F. Bentley. LT. HARRINGTON is a Norwich University graduate and is the executive officer for the CBR Weapons Orientation ' Course Troop Detachment. He; his wife, Marilyn, and one year old son Mi- -. chael live at 41D E. First Ave. ; A geology major at the University of Indiana, Lt. Bason has been assigned as a Test Officer in Test Division. He is single and calls Mt. Vernon, Indiana, his home. Lt. Byrd is a 1965 graduate of Murray State in Murray, Kentucky, where he majored in Chemistry. He has been assigned in the Mission Planning Office and although single admits to being Winter Specials to Dugway Proving Ground legun assigned duties in a Young arrived in late Chief of Army Aviation er Di- Also working in the Chemical Division is Lt. Bentley. A native of Syracuse, N.Y., he earned a BS in Forestry from N.Y. State University in Syracuse. He is married and is living at 181 A E. Fifth Avenue. His wife's name is Christine. The Bentley's have a son, Scott. Basketball Re-Ope- ns Geodetic Survey Team Plots Dugway Proviug Ground Area Steel Towers Serve As Reference Bases DUGWAY PROVING GROUND. Dugway. Utah - The 19 men of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey at Dugway Proving Ground know exactly where they but seldom know havejpen by Pvt. C. Boyd After a break for the holiday season, the Dugway Intramural Basketball League resumed day January 11, 1966. Headquarters and Headquarters team won the opener by forfeit. Hospital Detachment edged out MIA Wilbanks was the high scorer for Hospital with 20 points. Harwood was high scorer for MIA with 15 points. That same night, civilians pounded Sig Met 117-3Colston was high scorer for the civilians with 36 points. One of the best played games of the season was played Wednesday, January 12 between Medical Detachment and Headquarters. Here Headquarters suffered their first loss of the season. One member of the Headquarters team explained to me, his team just couldnt muster up the teamwork Mr. Kenneth Otto has recently that has been with them so for this season." Everyone was playjoined the Administration and of the ing by themselves, he said. 'The Work Management-Branc- h " final score was 56-4The high Facilities Division. . Mr! 'Otto comes from the Erie Proving scorer for Medical Det was WilGround at Port Clinton, Ohio banks with 23 points. The high scorer for Headquarters and Head- which is in the process of closing. He and his wife, Martha, requarters was Lt. Scarborough side at 397 Valdez. They will.be with 12 points. The standings for the League joined by their children, Kenneth 17 and Gloria 16, following the are as follows: close of the present school term. Kenneth and Gloria both participate in band activities. Mr. Otto has been employed in the Federal 54-4- 8. 7. ' j . V "7. : W-' 10, 295-340- 7. New Employee Joins Facilities 7. TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR ZERO DEFECTS I am responsible for my work, it must be without flaw. 2. I will not accept defective work from others. 3. 1 am paid for producing work, not correcting errors. 4. I will help others to eliminate their defects. 5. 1 will inform my supervisor of any defects coming into or emanating from my job. 6. I will constantly strive to improve the quality of my work 7. I will submit ideas to eliminate defects in my work. 8. I will eliminate any defects in communication by correlating my work with others. 9. I will apply the test of logic and common sense where judgment is needed. 10.1 will hold my head high as 1 leave work each night knowing that I have done my best. 1. Three Winter Specials at Valley Music Hall are announced by Executive Producer LeRoy Prinz for January and February. THE FIRST of these Winter Specials will be Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass to be presented nightly at 8:15 on the 27, 28 and 29 January with a matinee on 29 January at 2:15. Featured with Herb Alpert will be the Good Time Singers. For the Lincolns Birthday weekend, February 10, 11, 12 Valley Music Hall will present Patti Page. Performances are scheduled nightly at 8:15 with a holiday matinee Saturday, February 12 at 2:15. Patti Page is the heroine of a Cinderella story, which she relates in her book Once Upon a Dream" Her recordings, many of them multiple'voiced, have earned for her the title of Patti Page, the Countrys Singing Rage." TWO WEEKS later on February 24, 25, 26 Valley Music Hall will present the Jack Jones show, evenings at 8:15, Saturday matinee at 2:15. Because of his versatility for any mood or beat Jade Jones has recorded many hit albums for KAPP records. His rise in the last year followed on the heels of no less an authority than Frank Sinatras statement that Jade Jones is the next major singing star of show business. ' Tickets may be ordered by mail to Valley Music Hall, P.O. Box 222, North Salt Lake, Utah. For information call Construction of the 77 foot tower was accomplished by the Coast and Ceodetk Survey team using prefabricated sections and a special vehicle-drivewhich designed by Coast and Geodetic. Survey. This is one of the four steel towers erected at Dugway Proving Ground last year. (U.S. Army Photo) n Service since 1951. Rifle Range Now Ready The indoor rifle range located in the west wing of Building 5809 is now complete and ready for use during and after duty hours. All units, teams, and groups must request the use of the range from the Training Division of Headquarters Commandant by calling either 2011 or 2861. The range is for .22 caliber firing only. No magnum or higher power ammunition may be The range phone is 2375. Photo Pete Headlines Tonight Dr. J. T. Thomas that the late this Filling the newly created pothe end of sition after broad experience with month and that by January there will be no doubt in my mind that I will know exactly where we have been. These results will not only tell the Coast and Geodetic Survey team where they have been, but allow Dugway to know' exactly where it is. The work done by the Geodetic Survey team has given Dugway the base by which accurate surveying can be accomplished using first order re- forence points established by the . team. During its 158-yehistory, the Coast and Geodetic Survey has covered the United States arid its territories with a network of nearly 6,000,000 markers indicating exact position and heights above sea level LOCATIONS of markers are calculated by mathematical Formulas starting with two established markers and measuring angles . to a new point, forming a triangle. The sides of this triangle can then be used to form more triangles, allowing surveying parties to move across the country in long steps from me to 50 miles long The mathematical tat ions involved in these long' chains of triangles are complicated by the curvature of the earth. To simplify use of the markers, final figures are converted to tables that allow local engineers to sur--, vey and expand from a precise - ... W3SRE3 . Cerald Banks records readings taken by Harold Ellis from a Geodimeter placed on a wooden tower. The tower is erected directly over a bronze monument placed by the Team from previous readings. More than fifty-twwooden structures were required to complete the survey. (U.S. Army Photo) o ROTC Scholarships Available to 1000 - WASHINGTON (ANF) The will award 1,000 ROTC scholarships to outstanding high school graduates who will enter college for the first time during the 1966-6- 7 school year, and to selected college students now in their second year of the four-yeArmy ROTC Program. Applications for the Program must be made between January 15 and March 1, 1966. Four hundred of the new scholarships will Ire awarded for four years, and 600 for two years. Each scholarship pays for tuition, textbooks and laboratory fees, and provides a subsistance allowance for the duration of the award. Army ar th points. MR. ANNIS reported .project will be finished on-po- st used. PHOTO PETE HEADLINES Special guest entertainer at the OOM tonight is Photo Pete at the Keyboard. A special $110 per person pike tag will buy all the pizza, sloppy joes and beer you can eat and drink Iran 710 to 010 p.m. Dancing to the music of Mickey Paramoie and her all girl orchestra will begin at 810 pjn. This but dont match party should be a ball so dont miss it. Sponsors for the party are Log and SJA. Operations, PIO, where they are going. The party has been at Dugway since October. Their construction of steel towers measuring 50, 64 and 77 feet tall caused speculation of an oil strike, but Mr. Carl Annis, chief of the party, said the towers would serve as reference bases to estalr-lis- h and update first order geodetic control of Dugway and its surrounding areas. First' order control is a high accuracy ground survey, which Dr. J. T. Thomas results in errors of less than one New AMC Director part in one hundred thousand. The party is surveying from of the Army Stanley Deseret Peak on the east to the R. vSecretary Resor today announced the Nevada bender on the west and of Dr. Jay Ted Thofrom U.S. 40 on the north to appointment mas as Director of Research and Delta on the south. In order to Laboratories, U.S. Army Materiel obtain a high accuracy survey of Command (AMC) headquarters, Dugway, it is necessary to estabD.C. lish references off the reservation. Washington, THE TOWERS are built high enough to enable crews to get clear lines of sight to other reference points. Working mostly at night to minimize light refraction, the triangular team at one point sights on battery powered pinpoint light sources from other locations. This allows them to complete a triangle and confirm the accuracy of their sightings. The sightings are made with very precise and sophisticated surveying instruments. They ' use electronic and first order theodolites in making all observations. Concrete monuments with designated bronze disks set in a concrete base mark the Control Periodically, measurements are checked with special steel tapes, electronic devices and solar observations. If errors exceed one part in 100,000, the measurements are taken over again. The Coast and Geodetic SurTooele County authorities will be at the Provost Marshals Of- vey was organized in 1807 as a fice Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. coastal survey to aid drip naviga-- . to 3 p.m. to issue 1966 Utah li- -' tion and was expanded in 1871 to include land surveys. Today, cense plates. The sheriff has requested that this technical bureau of the Commerce Department also makes vehicle owners not mail registration applications. The purpose of aeronautical charts and uses aeri- -' their being on post is to avoid al photography in its map makall errors and prevent the return ing It contains scientific studies of mailed applications. All cars on tides, earthquakes, seismic registered for 1965 will already, waves, the earth's magnetic and have the registrations made out gravitational fields and other technical matters. In wartime, by the County of Tooele. Those persons wishing to re- maps made by the Survey are gister new vehicles should make used to guide military operations. out the registration application and Presently, it is conducting extrepresent it in person. Applications mely accurate surveys for missile can he obtained from the ID and launchings. Its markers are used as reference points for everything Registration Branch, Security from international borders to city lot lines. 66 License Here Feb. 2 Applications must be submitted and postmarked not later than March 1, 1966. Application forms and detailed information cm the four-yescholarships may be obtained from the Commanding General of any of the five Annies in the United States, or from major United States Army oversea commands in which the applicants ar reside. Students applying for the two-yeawards will do so with the professor of military science at their present college erf university. Final selections will be made by the Department of Army and applicants will be notified during the month of May 1966 as to whether or not they have been selected. ar network. industry and educational institutions, Dr. Thomas will be a Deputy to General Frank S. Besson, Jr., Commanding General, U. S. Army Materiel Command. He will have complete authority over AMCs eight independent laboratories and staff responsibility for the work performed by the laboratories of AMCs major subordinate commaiKjp. Throughout his career Dr. Thomas has been affiliated with industrial companies in the research and development field. From 1951 to 1960 he served as physicist with the E. L DuPont de Nemours Central Research Laboratories, Baird Associates, and Sylvania Division of General Telephone and Electronics Corporation. In 1960 he became Director of Engineer-- , ing for Honeywell, Inc., and in 1962 was appointed General ManResearch Laboager, ratories. Immediatelv prior to his appointment as AMCs Director, of Research and Laboratories, he served as Chief Scientist and Director of Research for Northrop Space Laboratories, Hawthorne, California. In addition to his industry affiliations. Dr. Thomas has been active in the scientific educational field for many years. Commencing in 1950 he served as department chairman and associate professor of physics and chemistry at Knox College, Galesburg Illinois. He later lectured and taught on a part-tim- e basis at Harvard, Boston, and Northeastern Universities in Boston, Massachusetts and at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Calif. Dr. Thomas received his B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Oklahoma A&M College A.B. and A.M. degrees from Harvard University, and a Ph.D. from Rutgers University. Lear-Siegl- W-- 2 er Due Jan. 31 . Salt Lake City, Utah. Utah employers who have not yet given the wage and tax statement Form W-- 2 to employees are reminded that Form W-showing income and social security tax information for 1965, must lie furnished all employees On or before Monday, January 31, 1966, according to Roland V. Wise. District Director of Internal Revenue in Utah. 2, |