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Show HMES June 18, 2009 Moldina summer experiences Stone New Hill SARC aptly prepared to assist victims BY LEE ANNE HENSLEY Hilltop Times staff J anaee Stone has a warm smile, a discreet voice and can engage anyone in friendly conversation at any time of the day, even when work calls her at all hours of the night. "My hours of operation are 24/7, but I do this job because it is my passion," Stone said. Hill Air Force Base, meet your new Sexual Assault Response Coordinator. Stone became the SARC for Hill AFB after March 30 and brought her passion and experience with Youth Center provides summer camp with fun for everyone BY CATHERINE COBNETT Hilltop Times correspondent her., ,--.'• • "I love helping people and being involved, especially with the military," she said. 'The military is all I've known. I graduated high school and was in boot camp two months later." Stone was active duty in the Navy for 12 years and it was during that time that her resume as a SARC developed. "This program was established by the Navy in 1995 and the Air Force actually didn't start their program until 2005," she said. This gave Stone plenty of time to explore the many career options in this burgeoning field. "I was a religious program specialist in the Navy for 12 years. The crossover of this position in the Air Force is the chaplain's assistant. I did a similar program See SARC I page 13 A CATHERINE CORNETT/Hilltop Times Top, School Age Program Assistant Kimberly Potter helps Sydney Howeth learn how to use the pottery wheel in the Art Studio at the Hill Air Force Base Youth Center. Above, Ashlyn Colvell and Josh Polglase practice their skills in the Construction Room. t first glance, Hill Air Force Base's Youth Center, located in building 883 on 6th Street, might appear to be your typical summer camp experience. Children of all ages are running back and forth in the hallway, either headed to breakfast or looking for their friends in one of the classrooms. What you don't realize is it's a highly organized movement between classrooms and breakfast, which is one of the reasons why the Youth Center is a step above any other type of youth summer camp or afterschool experience. Once the children are dropped off, they must take their name badge and place it under a classroom on what the center calls the "Choice Board." If there is a row of stop signs under the name of the classroom, the children know that they can't go there because there isn't a teacher present. If all of the slots are full under a classroom, they know there is no more room. The Choice Board allows children to pick where they want to go, as opposed to being told. It's a great way for them to see what's going on in each classroom and also to see if their friends have arrived yet. Of course, there is always adult supervision, but the * See CENTER I page 11 'International' cast fun to watch; while premise a bit of a stretch; BY STEVE SALLES Standard-Examiner movie critic , I Columbia Pictures International 'm a big fan of "The International's" main cast — Clive Owen, Naomi Watts and Armin Mueller-Stahl — but I didn't buy into what they were asked to do. Clive Owen is a jittery Interpol agent, Louis Salinger, who's spent years trying to nail an international bank for financing arms deals for any side that'll pay. Just when he gets close to an insider, that person dies under suspicious circumstances. These days, he . seems to be working with the New York district attorney's office, specifically Eleanor (Naomi Watts), but it's never clear why a Manhattan D.A. would have any jurisdiction in a European banking scandal. It gets really nutty when an Italian bigwig is assassinated in Milan, practically in front of them, and they walk right Clive Owen stars in Columbia Pictures' thriller "The International." See REVIEW Ipage 13 |