GOVERNOR LESTER G. MADDOX
THE ADJUTANT
GENERAL'S MESSAGE
MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE J. HEARN
My Fellow Guardsmen:
As our summer training periods draw to a close, I am rece1vmg
outstanding reports of your progress and operational capabilities.
It is clearly evident that our Army and Air Guardsmen performed
with distinction, and I want to take this opportunity to commend
each of you for your unswerving devotion to duty this summer.
As many of you know, one of the most pressing problems facing
the Guard at the present time is the retention of our experienced
Guardsmen after expiration of minimum terms of service. Induce-
ments to stay in our ronks hove included retirement benefits, pro-
motion, career opportunities and extra income.
At the lost meeting of the Adjutants General Association of the
United States we discussed the necessity for on additional induce-
ment - a re-up bonus. This could become a reality in a year or so.
Therefore, I strongly urge that commanders and senior non-coms
include this distinct possibility in discussions with men planning
to leave the Guard. Just when our young Guardsmen reach a point
of perfecting their skills we ore always reluctant to hove them
leave our ronks. Continuous efforts to secure re-enlistments is
essential if the Guard is to maintoin its dominant role among the
notion's reserve forces.
I om happy to see another group of young officers join our ronks
through the medium of the Georgia Military Institute. This excellent
officer candidate school has provided our Army components with
316 highly qualified leaders in the post nine years, and we heartily
welcome the 22 new second lieutenants into the officer corps.
------------------------------------------~-----------------------THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
Vol. 20 Apr- Jun 1970 No. 2.
A publication of the Department of Defense, Military Division, State of Georgia. Published in the interest of the Georgia National Guard and distributed free to members of the National Guard of Georgia. The Guardsman uses AFPS material.
HONORABLE LESTER G. MADDOX GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA
MAJ GEN GEORGE J. HEARN THE ADJUTANT GENERAL
L T COL DOUGLAS EMBRY Editor
Publication and Editorial Office P. 0. Box 48 39
Atlanta, Georgia 30302
Chief Master Sergeant William E. Bell, !17th Tactical Control Squadron, Savannah, is honored by the Air Foret: Associ at ion for being voted the Outstanding Airman of the Georgia Air
National Guard. Colonel William H. Kelly, Presidenr of the Georgia Chapter of AFA, presented CMS Bell with a gold wrist watch. CMS Bell was cited for his "outstanding leadership," campi etion of many ECI courses, off-duty supervi sian of training programs and was credited with being "instrumental in his unit receiving the Most Operationally Ready Plaque
among all C&E units in the U.S. "
OUR COVER .
One of 6,000 Georgia Guardsmen on annual maneuvers at Ft. Stewart in June, Sergeant Eugene Reaves of Milan, Ga., mans a machine gun atop an armored personnel carrier. A member of Co C, 1st Bn, !21st lnf, Sgt. Reaves, as a typical infantryman, had an important role in the success of the summer encampment. Story and other photos of these exercises appear
on pages 2-6 of this edition.
The Air War College Correspondence Program, which parallels the resident program as closely as practicable, can be accomplished by Air Guard officers in grade of lieutenant colonel and above, on an individual basis or through group s tudy. Full details are available through unit training offices and the Air War College (AWCAPC), Maxwell AFB, Ala. 36112.
APR JUN 1970
Georgia is 12th
In 1-yr Re-ups
The "Try One" program lives on.
Phase I of the enlistment procedure allowing former servicemen and Guardsmen (with no remaining military obligation) to re-up for one year ended 30 June. Modest success was registered during Phase I, according to a report in The National Guardsman magazine. Georgia ranked 12th in the nation with a cumulative total of 224 extentions and enlistments through May for the "ARNG .
The progra'Y will continue in an effort to bring trained servicemen into both Army and Air Guard components. Purpose is to save basic training tax dollars and to preserve a high degree of operational capability.
Meanwhile the National Guard Bureau forwarded to all states a supply of retention folders entitled "Why should you stay in?"
The folders, separate ones for Army and Air, show the many hats a Guardsman wears while serving his country. Pointed out in the copy are the advantages of membership: added income, retirement pay, career opportunities and comradship of fellow Guardsmen.
THE GEORGIA G U A R D S M A N - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
MIGHTY M48 TANKS INDICATE 3RD BRIGADE POWER
RECOILLESS RIFLE ON JEEP READIED FOR ACTIO N
Echo of 6,000 Ga. Guardsmen
Resounds at FT. Stewart 14-28 June
Some 6,000 Georgia Army National Guardsmen traded civilian jobs for milit<Jry duty for two weeks (June 14-28) as their units underwent annual training at Fort Stewart.
Representing 46 Georgia communities , the Guardsmen arrived at Fort Stewart via motor convoy and immediately begain to prepare for military operations late Sunday afternoon. The y were to function ~s such for two we.eks.
Some of the units lived in the fie ld in bivouac areas for four days and nights either the first or second week, to get more realism in their combat training.
The men faced the fur y of the elements while continuing to train, sometimes long into the night under the most adverse conditions .
Some of the men were c hos en to play memb ers of the Aggressor National Army. Their primary duty was to strike without warning, day and night, in lightning commandofype raids, solely to test the alertness of the encamped Guardsmen and to test the effectiveness of their sec urity measures.
2
Of course, only bla nk ammunition was used, and a truck could be blown up, but only on paper a note marked "TNT" or "Grenade" attached to engine block would do it.
While not engaged in tactical combat training, the units performed many types of duties : MP's manned guard houses and directed traffic; maintenance men worked on various vehicles and equipment; medical units patched up numerous cuts and scratches .
Armor crewmen fired their subcaliber weapons, and artillerymen sent their practice projectiles miles downrange to targets as the men became more and more proficient with their weapons systems -mortars , tanks, armored personnel earners , HJ6 recoiless rifles, 155mm self-propelled howitzers and other systems.
Administrative-type units took care of all the paperwork. They wrote , typed and distributed orders anci messag es . From these offices came the flow of information and instructions which insured that training was carried out to the letter .
Covering all of the units was the Georgia Emergency Operation Headquarters Public Information Office which k-ept a steady fl ow of photographs and news releases going to hometown news media so that the citizens would have some idea of what their Guardsmen were doing at s ummer camp .
After a stay in the field, men welcomed the chance to do some more civilized living, in barracks with s howers nearby . Within wal king distance were theaters, recreation rooms and PX's - all with a ir conditioning .
During the middle week-end, those men without s pecific duties were free to leave the post for Savannah's sights and s ounds, or for any other destination within a 50-mile radius .
So pass ed the two weeks. Three separate commands were represente d : The 3rd Brigad e, 30th Infantry Division ; the 118th Artille ry Group and the Georgia Eme r gency Operation Headquarte rs. T he first two commands are the combat arms (armor, infantry and artil l ery) . Their support units, includ ing medical, s ignal, maintenance,
APR JUN 1970
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - T H E GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
BRIGADE COMMANDER AND STAFF LEAD PARADE
COLORS PASS IN REVIEW AS SOLDIER AND BAND "SNAP TO"
military police, transportation fall under the EOH.
Besides training at the platoon level, the units underwent cross training , such as infantry-armor attack training. On another day, the armor may have predominated the exercise.
Prominent military visitors to
Fort Stewart during the Guard's stay were Major General George J. Hearn, adjutant general of the State of Georgia (representing ailing Governor Lester Maddox at the annual parade) and Major General John M. Finn, deputy commander, Third U.S. Army.
Repre senting the Guard com-
mands were Brigadier General Andrew W. McKenna, commanding general of the Georgia EOH, Colonel John E. McGowan, commanding officer of the 118th Artillery Group and Colonel Holden C. West, commanding officer of the 3rd Brigade, 30th Infantry Division.
(Continued on next page)
APR JUN 1970
3
THE GEORGIA G U A R D S M A N - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --
MAINTENANCE OF VEHICLES IS ROUTINE DUTY
WAYNESBORO ARTILLERYMEN AWAIT FIRE MISSI ON
BRIG GEN ANDREW W. McKENNA OBSERVES EOH TRAINING
MEDICS KEEP TROOPS IN FIGHTING TRI M
EMERGENCY OPERATIONS HEADQUARTERS STAFF P OSES EXPRESSIO NS SHOW REA CTIO NS TO GAS IN DOCTRIN ATI ON
4
A P R - J UN 1970
-------------------....:...-=---------------THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
ARTILLERY OBSERVERS REPORT ACCURACY
COLORFUL CHATHAM ARTILLERY CANNON RECALLS HERITAGE
I
L T COL JAMES E. PRESTON WINS DISTINCTIVE SERVICE MEDAL COLONEL HOLDEN C. WEST SURPRISED WITH DSM BY GEN HEARN
RETIRED CHIEF WARRANT OFFICER JAMES L. BRAKE HONORED WITH DSM
COLONEL JOHN M. McGOWAN AWARDED DSM BY GEN HEARN
(Continued on next page)
APR JUN 1970
5
THE GEORGIA G U A R D S M A N - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
TOP SGT GEORGE W. POOLE HONORED WITH DSM FROM GEN HEAR N EISENHOWER TROPHY WON BY CAPT ACREE ' S TOCCOA UNIT
BEST SUPPLY AND ADMIN TROPHY WON BY SVC BTRY, 1ST BN, 230TH ARTY , AND ACCEPTED BY SGT CARSON D. SHATTUCK FROM BRIG GEN CHARLIE F . CA MP
AG ' S TROPHY FOR SMALL BORE RIF LE WON BY L T DANIELS ' COB, 1ST B N, I 21ST INF
6
APR-JUNI
Brig Gen William B. Wrigley Retires After 30 Years Service; Gets DSM
Veteran Georgia Air National Guard Colonel William B. Wrigley, with 30 years total commissioned service, has been retired with the rank of brigadier general and was awarded the State Distinctive Service Medal.
General Wrigley, a scientist with Lockheed Georgia Company, was Communications and Electronics Staff Officer of Headquarters, Georgia Air National Guard in At! anta. He was officially retired 22 May.
Major General George J. Hearn, Adjutant General of Georgia, in a citation to General Wrigley said he has "demonstrated outstanding leadership, attention to duty, loyalty, dedication, patriotism and sacrifice in the highest sense throughout his military career."
Graduated from Lehigh University and commissioned in 1940 in the Officers Reserve Corps, General Wrigley was promoted to Captain in January 1941 and later served in the Third Army's ordnance and artillery commands in Europe.
He began his professional career with the Radio Corporation of America in Philadelphia and came to Georgia in 1946. In 1947 he became a member of the Air National Guard at Dobbins Air Force Base and was activated for the Korean Conflict with the 154th Aircraft Control and Warning Group. During his two years of active duty, he was associated with the Air Force Research Center Cambridge, Massachusetts.
When elements of the Air Guard were re-organized at Dobbins after the Korean hostilities ended, Wrigley became commander of the 116th Air Base Group and was promoted to colonel 7 July 1952 the youngest full colonel in Georgia ANG hi story at the age of 36.
General Wrigley was for several years associated with Georgia
APR- JUN 1970
BRIG GENERAL WILLIAM B. WRIGLEY
Tech's Engineering Experiment Station as research scientist and contributed articles to professional journals, including publications for radio engineers and amateurs.
Colonel Wrigley was assigned to the State Staff in 1960. In reflecting on his 22 years as an Air Guardsman, General Wrigley said "my whole military experience has been a personally rewarding avocation.''
He attributed his long tenure as an Air Guardsman to the "stability of personnel in the structure and the close associations formed over the years."
Go ANG C124 Featured In "Armed Forces Report"
A C124 Globemaster belonging to the Georgia Air Guard is featured in this year's annual worldwide publication, "The Armed Forces - Report to the Nation." A photo of bird #20979 unloading emergency supplies at Keesler AFB, Biloxi, Miss . , for victims of Hurricane Camile last year appears in the section illustrating the Air Reserve Forces in action.
ACCIDENT MARS RECORD
OF GA ANG GLOBAL FLYING
A nose gear collapsed on a Georgia Air National Guard C-124 Globemaster aircraft landing at Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, Tuesday afternoon, 30 June 1970.
There were no InJuries to any of the eight crew-members, all of the 128th Military Airlift Squadron at Dobbins Air Force Base, Georgia.
Aircraft commander was Major Ralph R. Orrie of Riverdale, Georgia. Copilot was Captain Richard J. Tandy of East Point. Other crew-members were listed as Captain Alan J. Mandel, navigator, Master Sergeant James A. Edwards, Master Sergeant Thomas H. Herald, Master Sergeant Edward Ingle, Master Sergeant James F . Spruce and Tech/ Sergeant Marion S. Matthews.
The aircraft was enroute to Davis-Monathon AFB, Tuscon, Arizona to pick up aircraft engines. It was the first accident for the Air Guardsmen at Dobbins in nine years of flying global transports on worldwide missions, including more than 150 flights to Vietnam and Southeast Asia.
SOLAR ECLIPSE MISSIONS TO MEXICO SUPPORT EXPERIMENTS
Georgia Air Guardsmen of the 116th Military Airlift Group at Dobbins AFB participated in airlift missions in support of the April solar eclipse experiments. Along with nine other airlift groups, the intrepid airmen flew scientific and logistical equipment to Salina Crux, Mexico. In addition to the 126.3 tons of equipment, the airmen transported a number of prominent scientists to and from the Mexican site.
7
THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN ____________________________________________________________________
Governor Sends 2,000 Ga. Guardsmen To Augusta and Athens to Restore Calm In Wake of May Civil Disturbances
GUARDSMEN GUARD STORE FROM POTENTIAL LOO T ERS
AUGUSTANS OF 1148TH TRANS CO CONDUCT CAR SE ARC H
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - ---(UP I Photos Courtesy Jerry Huff)
Stemming a tide of lawlessne ss that swept with violent fury over a 130-blo ck area of Augusta, mor e than 2,000 Georgia Army National Guardsmen responded to a call to State Active Duty 11-18 May 1n the first commitment of troops to a Georgia city for actual riot prevention since before World War II.
Acting in response from the Mayor of Augu ta, Governor Lester G. Maddox- directed Major General George J . Hearn to furnish National Guardsmen for the protection of the beleaguered city. The Adjutant Ge n eral then imp! em en ted plan s alre ady called for under Spread Eagle II procedures for the protection of Augusta. Task Force Southeast, under the command of Colonel John E. McGowan , got the call at 2100 hour s 11 May and was immediately dispatched to the scene,
Utilizing three Cl24 Globemaster transports of the 165th Military Airlift Group , the entire 2nd Battalion, 214th Artillery with Colon el McGowan's s taff of Hq Btry, 118th Artillery Group, plus
th e !65th Hv Eq Mt Co, were ai r! ifted from Savannah to Bush F ield outside Augusta in the early morning hours. Already on the scene was Lt Col Billy Britton's 878th Engineer Battalion and the 1148th Trans Co, which mustered more than 130 Guardsmen onto the streets to assist the overtaxed police and state troopers at 0030 hours 12 May. Moving into Augusta by convoy were batteries of the 1st Bn , 214th Artillery, from Sparta , Thomson, Waynesboro and Washington.
Four "Pepper Foggers" were flown into Augusta from Atl anta in a U6 "Beaver" of the 151 st Av Bn. The c h emic a l spray devices were airlifted by Lt Col Jack L. Conrad a nd Capt Hugh Estes. They arrived at the Augusta airport at approxim ate ly one a. m. on the 12th.
In a rapid sequence of events, General Hearn directed Brig Gen Andrew W. McKenna, Commanding General of Georgia Emergency Operation Headquarters in Deca-
tur, to Augusta to assume command of the growing battalions of Guardsmen being rus hed to the city-
Focal point for the rapidly esc a! aci ng operation was the 878 th Engr Bn armory. Calling in key staff officers, including dep uty commander Colonel Ed Slaton and Chief of Staff Colonel Ben L. Kersey , General McKenna quickl y assumed control over the Guardsmen, set up a communications net wi th State Headquarters in Atlanta and arranged for Guard shifts and relief of troops , some of whom did not s l eep for two ni ght s .
Setting up roving jeep patrol s with Augusta policemen riding shotgun , senior commanders a! so established s tationary check points at key intersections along busy hi ghway 12 southwest of th e city. These posts were manned by Guardsmen in Armored Personnel Carri ers. Four of the APC' s had been airlifted to Augusta before dawn on 1'2 May by three C l 24 aircraft of the ll6th Mi li tary Airlift Group from Dobbins AFB,
8
APR- JUN 1970
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T H E GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
AUGUSTA ARMORY OF HQ, 878TH ENGR BN WAS ACTIVE
ROVING PATROL PASSES KEY INTERSECTION IN AUGUSTA
BURNED OUT FIRM SHOWS RESULT OF VIOLENCE
COL JOHN McGOWAN AND STAFF OF TASK FORCE SOUTHEAST
(Continued on next page)
Marietta. In the aftermath of the violence,
six civil ians caught in the bedlam were dead, all believed to be looters or arsonists. Many others were wounded or otherwise injured. Hundreds were arrested. Some terrorists were caught by the Guardsmen at roadblocks after impo sition of curfew with Molotov Cocktails and other homemade bombs in their possession.
By 07 45 12 May, 989 Guardsmen were on duty in and around Augusta. AI so on hand at that time were the armored personnel earners flown in from Atlanta, 600 air mattresses and extra stores of ammunition. Ten additional 2~-ton trucks were obtained from Ft. Gordon. A detachment of 18 men from Atlanta's 138th Medical Company were dispatched to the scene with 5 ambulances.
Later in the first day of oper;:ttions, Lt Col James E. Preston's 176th MP Battalion was called to Augusta. Fifteen additional radioequipped jeeps from Atlanta were sent 10 for command control.
Twenty walkie-talkie radios were rushed in, plus two jeep-mounted infra-red search lights for night operations.
A quick tour of riot-torn Augusta was conducted by Governor Maddox and General Hearn the afternoon of 12 May. Later in the afternoon it was determined that additional troops would be needed for relief of the Guardsmen who had been on duty almost 24 hours without rest. L t Col Joe Genone' s 1st Bn, 121st lnf was mobilized with the Perry and Eastman companies , boosting the task force by another 600 men.
At midnight 12- 13 May 1505 troops were on duty . With curfew imposed all was quiet in the critical area being patrolled by the Guardsmen.
At 0950 hours i3 May, strength peaked at 2,004 troops. Shortly thereafter , the 176th MP Bn , with 202 men was directed to Athen s to cope with student and other dissenters at the University of Georgia. Moving swiftly by convoy, the 176th set up operation s
outside the City of Athens and deployed indi vidual Guardsmen to ride with Athens police patrols. Later the Guard assisted local Jaw enforcement personnel in arresting some of the student protestors who were blockin g traffic.
Called to duty for one day to assist the 176th in Athens was Hq & Hq Btry, 1st Bn, 214th Arty, which was not mobilized for duty in Augusta.
On Thursday, 14 May , approximately half of the 878th Engr Battalion was rel eased from Augusta duty. Also half of the 1148th was told to return home. By the end of the day the 1st Bn, 214th Artillery and the 165 th Hv Eq Mt Co were rei eased in their entirety - for a combined total of 500 men.
Some 1500 Guardsmen remained on duty in the Augusta area over the weekend. When quiet prevai led in Athens, the 176th was rei eased on the 17th, and all units in Augusta were returned to their hometown s on May 18th as risk of furth er violence subsided.
APR - JUN 1970
9
THE GEORGIA G U A R D S M A N - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The following was written by the wife of SSG Shelton G. Riner of Sandersville's Co C, 878th Engr Bn, in the aftermath of the call up of Guardsmen for Augusta riot duty in May. Mrs. Riner wrote the piece for her scrapbook- but was encouraged to have it published in the Sandersville Progress. It was. It tells in vivid form the story that could hav e been written concerning hundreds of other National Guard families. The Riners have presented their "side of the coin" for posterity.
troubled sleep while he was away. Sleep still comes slowly to him and you sense that he needs to talk about it. He needs to tell you that he doesn't want to go again, but that he is on alert for the weekend. You listen as he tells you of the nights when as you were sleeping safely at home , a sniper was firing at him and his men, a
The silence of the night is
broken by the scream of the tele-
phone
. sleep flees with a
tremor of fear . . . then you hear
him say, "Yes , I'm leaving now"
. . . and you know that the Guard
has been called out again. A
feeling of dread grips your heart
and that eternal prayer leaps to
your lips, "Lord, keep him safe
and bring him back safely."
Today, on the brink of what
has been called the "Riot Season"
when so much is being said about
the cruel and inhumane treatment
by police and guardsman, let the
wife of a guardsman tell our side
of the story. Let me tell you what
it is like to know that your hus-
band is leaving you, there's no
chance for planning or reschedul-
ing of plans long made , clothes
are to be packed - for how many
days you don ' t know, instructions
are given for cancelling dental
appointments, fishing trips, re-
newing the automobile insurance,
all the while each of you being
careful not to say what is in your
hearts . . . be careful, darling,
with words which normally would give rise to him striking out, but now he will stand mutely as a guardsman. When he returns home he will show you the dents in his helmet caused from bricks tossed at him as he stood guard before a burned out store and tell you with a lump in his throat of how he "took it" without a word.
. .. "When he returns home " ... you always know there is the chance that he won't . . . maybe that sniper on the rooftop will find his target tonight ... maybe when he searches that car at the barricade, he 'll have acid thrown in his face or catch the bullet from a concealed gun or spill his blood from the plunge of a switchblade.
Then, if you're lucky, he's home . Unshaven, unwashed, and bone tired. If he was lucky , he got a few hours of restless and
car ran a blockade after striking a guardsman, stores were burning and being looted, he was being cursed and spat on by children and adults as they threw rocks and sticks at him.
Guardsman stand to protect this state and they know the chances they will have to take when they join the National Guard, but in taking those chances and in protecting their homes they deserve the praise due them. They are not inhumane, cruel, or hard they're just brave, strong men who are doing their duty at home and who although they don't like it, continue to answer that phone in the middle of the night and go to do that which must be done. Read, then, both sides of the coin before screaming "Guard brutality."
Mrs. Shelton Riner
come back to me safely and soon, don't worry about the children, I'll miss you and pray for you . . .
Then he's gone .. . . . . Gone . . . . not to fight
a foreign enemy to protect the
country that he has already fought one war for, but to stand guard and protect the rights of his fellow ctuzens of Georgia from the rioting and violence of other fellow
ctuzens of Georgia . Passively protect , though. You know that he
will silently stand guard to prevent
looting, he will enforce barricades and curfews, he will stand as children and adults assault him
KEY INTERSECTION GUARDED BY !21ST INFANTRYMEN
10
APR - JUN 1970
--------------------------------------~~~------------------------THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
Need a C124 Part? Ask Dobbins Computerl
A sophisticated re.cords manage-
ment system which direct! y ties
in the Georgia Air National Guard
Supply Depot at Dobbins with the
Charleston Air Force Base Re-
cords Center via the Univac 105011 Computer has been placed in
operation and is expected to
provide the Military Airlift Com-
mand with a response capability
that exceeds established stand-
ards. The
computerized program
enables the Air Guard at Dobbins
to maintain an orderly flow of
parts, equipment and material
while the records for these items
are stored miles away in Charles-
ton computers. Not only can base operators in
Marietta place an order for a
needed piece of equipment from
the communications apparatus at
Dobbins and receive an instantan-
eous response, but the computer
will also keep a close check when
stock levels are low.
Opening the system between
the two bases, Brig. General
Charles S. Thompson, Jr., Com-
mander, ll6th Military Airlift
Wing, Georgia Air National Guard
and Brig. General C. T. Ireland,
Jr., Commander, 437th Military Airlift Wing, U.S. Air Force,
initiated correspondence which
was transmitted by the computers.
Writing from Dobbins, General
Thompson said: "The 116th
MAWG, Georgia Air National Guard, is proud to be accepted
into the standard supply system
managed by the 437th MAWG,
Military Airlift Command. In the
ever increasing mission responsi-
bility of the Air National Guard,
it is imperative that we keep pace
with the changing technology of
the support provided. I am confi-
dent that the consolidation, by
satellization, of our two accounts
will provide the Military Airlift
Command with a response capa-
bility that exceeds the established standards.''
APR- JUN 1970
Brig. General Chari es S. Thompson, Jr., Commander, I 16th Militory Airlift Wing, Georgia Air National Guard, opens the first communications I ink between Dobbins AF B and Chari es-
ton AFB vio the new Univac 10-50-2 Computer system. Looking on ore civilion employees Mrs. Vivion Beorden and
Mrs. Brenda Weeks.
In his letter, General Ireland said, "With this transmission the initial communications link between Dobbins AFB Supply Account and the Charleston AFB Standard Supply System Computer is complete. It gives me great pleasure to observe the technological advances made in the logistical support of our mission
aircraft. These advances have enabled us to provide an airlift capability unparallell ed in the history of the United States Air Force. We gladly accept the responsibility for your supply account with the knowledge that this is another step in the progressive evolution of the Military Airlift Command.''
Chaplains of the Georgi a Army National Guard pose inside the Fort Stewart Provost Marshall Detention Facility, 24 June 70, during annual training. The visit to the detention facility was a part of the Chaplains' training and ministry while at Fort Stewart. From left to right: Chap (Cpt) Charles R. Hosty, Macon;
Chap (Cpt) James L. Travis, Milledgeville; Chap (Maj) Clarence H. Stucke,
Savannah; Chap (Cpt) Vance B. Mathis, Tennille; Chap (Maj) John T. Lewis, USAR, Boiling Springs, N. C.; Chap (Maj) Howard C. Scarboro; Chap (Maj) G. J. Stafford, Dublin; Chap (lL T) William S. Morrison, Springfield; Chap (Cpt) Dan A. Entwistle, Marietta; Chap (Cpt) William F. Mueller, Atlanta; Chap (Cpt) George L. Gogl, escort officer, Fort Stewart; and Chap (Cpt) Billy C. Jett, Monroe. Denominations represented by the Guard choplains: Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presby-
terian and Disci pies of Christ.
11
THE GEORGIA G U A R D S M A N - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -
When o shrimp boot went aground on the Georgia coast near Hinesville, Liberty County Civil Defense Director John Rogers got help from the Notional Guard as well as the Coast Guard and other volunteers. Here seven Guardsmen of Col . Jock Hoddle's Annual Training Equipment Pool make like sailors. They ore SSG Shelby Groover, SpS Rolph Woods, SSG Aaron Hendricks, SpS Hersholl Dosher, SpS Bobby Harold, SpS Lorry Deloach and Sp6 Martin Johnson. Civilian
in coveralls is Grady Wedi ncomp.
Participating with C&S Bank's May 2nd Clean-Up campaig n in Atlanta, Guardsmen of 166th Lt Maintenance Co man jeeps with two-way radio communi cations to coordi note movement of sanitation vehicles. Other Guard units throughout Geo rgi a cooperated in similar C&S projects to improve community life.
Major C . L. "Sink" Marshall, left, swears in his son, Alto n, at the Reynolds' armory of Co B (-), S60th Engr Bn. SpS Wil li am Lee, right, unit AST, witnesses the ceremony. Major Mar sh al l is former commander of the Reynolds company and now se rv es
as bottol ion executive officer.
&;If.,.. ___
ii!UI!!I!3!!= P,liiis;!!S
Visor nose roi sed and forward romps extended to the ground, U. S. Air Force C- S Gal oxy di schorges ISS mm howitzer during successful loading demonstrations ot Pope AFB/ Ft. Bragg, N. C. Besides outsized pieces like this (46,SS0 pounds), C-S carried Army 's main bottle tonk - IOS,SOO pounds - plus o self-propelled 17S mm gun and o carrier command post for total payload of more than 188,000 pounds. Galaxy is the only airplane large enough to corry every item
in Army field division inventory.
Collacting medals for winning state honors in the Chief, Not io n al Guard Bureau, competition conducted by the National R if le Association, members of Rome's' Co A, 1st Bn, 108th Armo r, pistol team get in line as Capt. Jerre J. Field, left, Co A commander, doles them out. In the group ore, 1-r, Capt. Fi el d, PSG Thomas L. Lane (team captain), SSG Charles R. Snow,
SSG William Jones and Sgt Larry W. Nelso".
12
APR - JUN 19 70
Colonel Robert T. Baird Is President of Local Chapter, Assn of U.S. Army
The Hub of the South Chapter, Association of the U. S. Army, has installed Atlantans Robert T. Baird and James F. Williams in its two top leadership posts for the year starting July 1.
Baird, a colonel in the Georgia National Guard, is Military Support Plans Officer of the State Department of Defense.
The chapter also elected as first vice president J. 0. Partain, chairman of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles, and named Col. Harry J. Maihafer (USA-Ret), now with the C&S National Bank, as second vice president. Glen Soderstrom and Klaus Halm, civilian supervisors in Third Army headquarters, were elected treasurer and historian, respectively, and Col. L. B. Mattingly, information officer of Third Army was named chapter secretary.
Lt. Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Jr. (USA-Ret), was reelected honorary president.
The Association of the U. S. Army is a national organization of more than llO chapters and some 110,000 civilian and military members. More than 23,000 AUSA members are affiliated with chapters in the Third AUSA Region, which corresponds geographically to the area of Third Army.
Principle objective of the association is the advancement of public understanding of the role of the Army in national defense and the need for strong military forces as a deterrent to aggression.
Wife: "It says here that they've discovered a ship in Egypt that's over 5,000 years old."
Husband: "I'll bet it turns out to be the troopship I went overseas in."
Student: "I always drink lots of milk because my doctor says milk is a great bone builder."
Coed: "Too bad it's gone to your head."
APR - JUN 1970
GA ANG NAVIGATOR, MAJOR JOHN A. BLACKMON, IS REVENUE COMMISSIONER
Major John A. Blackmon, navigator of the 128th Mil Alft Sq, was appointed Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Revenue April 1, 1970, by Governor Lester G. Maddox. Major Blackmon had been serving as Deputy Revenue Commissioner since June I, 1968.
A native of Columbus, Major Blackmon attended Columbus public schools and studied Industrial Management at Auburn University where he received his B.S. degree in 1955. He graduated from the Lamar School of Law, Emory University in 1961 and started work immediately with the Georgia Law Department.
Major Blackmon served as a navigator on active duty in the United States Air Force from 1956 to 1958. With the Georgia Air National Guard, he has periodically served short periods of active duty with the United States Air Force. He holds the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal for service in the Dominican Republic and the Viet Nam Service Medal for duty performed in Viet Nam and Thailand.
Artilleryman,
Gen Wyont lean,
Dies in Atlanta
Retired Brigadier General Wyont B. Bean of Atlanta died at the age of 64 on 26 July.
For ten years, 1947 to 1957, he commanded the !79th Field Artillery Battalion. He served as Executive Officer of the 48th Armored Division Artillery until his retirement in 1962.
In 1960, he serv'"ed as President of the National Guard Association of Georgia.
A graduate of Tech High School in Atlanta, General Bean served as city of Atlanta planning engineer until 1966. His son, Captain Wyont B. Bean Jr., commands Headquarters Company, Ga. Emergency Operation Headquarters.
General Bean entered the National Guard in 1924, joining Co C, 200th Infantry. He was commissioned as an officer in 1931 with the 122nd Infantry.
During WW II, he commanded the 694th Field Artillery battalion, and participated in the Rhineland and Central European Campaigns with the 472nd Field Artillery.
"lt'stlmeallke this .. you learn who the leaders arel" 13
THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN _____________________________________________________________________
Promotions
AIR NATIONAL GUARD
William M. Berry, Jr. to Lt Col Laurence M. Dunn to Lt Col Ray F. Gore to Lt Col Ottie W. Shinault to Lt Col Ned M. Sanders to Maj Wayne D. Smith to Maj William P. Bland, Jr. to Maj Gene L. Meyer to Maj Ervin D. Meyer to Capt Jimmy B. Queen to Capt Edgar L. Rhode s, III to Capt Annie R. Tufts to Capt Robert W. Bond to Capt Ralph T. Bishop to Capt Albert I. Tarica to 1st Lt Laurie R. McKee to 1st Lt Robert F. Dozier to 1st Lt Nathan C. Coleman to ist Lt Herbert P. Donnelly, Jr. to 1st Lt
Five ANG Non-Commissioned Officers hove graduated from the Non-Commissioned Officer Academy located at McGhee Tyson Airport, Knoxville, Tennessee. All
members of the 165th Mil Alft Gp at Savannah, they ore, right to left, Senio r Moster Sergeant Bennett H. Elkins Jr., Technical Sergeant James M. Re ese,
Technical Sergeant Nolan L. Salter Jr., Technical Sergeant Joseph E. McElv een,
and Technical Sergeant James K. Wright. Both Elkins and Reese were memb ers of the Honor Flight. All ore full-time ANG Technicians.
Guard Benefits Come from Support Of NGAUS Magazine
There are many advantages accruing to members of the National Guard, thanks to the National Guard Association of the U. S. The officials of our senior association are constantly applying to Congress and government agencies for benefits in our behalf. They have been partly responsible in rec ent months for low-rate SGL I insurance coverage.
All Geo rgia officers are member; of this association and subscribers to th~ National Guardsman magazine. Enlis ted subscriptions have been on the decline. This informative magazine is for ALL Guardsmen. Keep up to date on what is happening and is going to happen within the Guard structure. The associatio n is pushing for re-up bonuses. You can help. Subscribe by writing to NGAUS, 1 Massachussettes Ave. N.IV., Washington, D. C. 20001. The price? Only $2 per year for 12 "goodie-packed" issues.
14
Decorations honoring Army Advisor personnel were bestowed by Colonel How e ll B. Thompson , Senior Army Adv isor to the Go ARNG , left, in recent ceremon ies in Atlanta. Colonel Robert T . Dunn, former Advisor to the 48th Armored Division and to the Jrd Brigade, 30th lnf Div, Macon, was presented the Legion of Meri t for his s i x years' service to the Go ARNG, 1964 1970. He was cited for hi s "outstanding Ieodership qualities and professional competence." Lt Col Thom a s E. Rustin, who retired, was presented on Oak Leaf Cluster to the Army Co m mendotion Medal. SFC Max J. Lantz was awarded the Bronze Star and Army
Commendation Medal for service in Vietnam.
ARTY, CAVALRY UNITS TRAIN AT FT. BRAGG
Two Ga ARNG units had their annual training this year at Ft. Bragg, N. C. The Radar Section of HHB , 1st Bn, 230th Artillery, Waycross , and Troop C, 1st Sqdn, 196th Cavalry, from Griffin and LaGrange, were on duty there 30 May to 14 June.
If yo u ask m e I will agree, I think that I shall never see a poem so lovely as a t 'ree-A t'ree day pass made out to me.
A bachelor-a selfish, callous, und ese rving man \Yho has cheated so me worthy woman out of a divorce.
APR JUN 19 70
-----------------------------------~~-------------------------THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN
Ft. Gordon Hears Boom Of Guard's Howitzers
Ft. Gordon resounded with rhe booming of big guns in April for the fir st time since 1963. Battery A, 1st Battalion, 214th Artillery, parta, used one of the ranges to fire their new 155mm se lf-propelled howitzers for familiarization.
Formerly a towed 105mm battery, the unit made the change to the bigger self-propelled weapons late last year. "The c ha nge from 105's to 155's is a big one to make, and we wanted to be sure that everybody had a chance to fire them before s ummer training ,'' Capt. James M. Boyer, the battery's commanding officer said.
"After the initial shock at the amount of noise these guns make , they are pretty easy to work with," Corporal Peter Reddick added.
As if in proof of the corporal's word s, the battery almost demolished the tanks that were being used as targets .
The battalion's other units, Battery B from Thompson, C from Waynesboro , Headquarters from Elberton, and Service from Washington, used the Ft. Gordon ranges this Spring.
Retire from Guard Svc.
NAME
ORGANIZATION
RETIRED RANK
WRIGLEY, William B. GARONI, Aldo E. DUGGAN, Ivy S. HARMON, John M. BLOOD, George A., Sr. BLOSFIELD, Leon M. BROWN, Joseph E. WILLIAMS, Jame s C. PETTWAY, Luther R. MORGAN, Selwyn S. HERRING, William B. BRAUSA, Maurice C.
Hq, GaANG GaANG Hq, 3rd Bde, 30th In Div Hq, Ga EOH 165th Mil Alft Gp Hq, 3rd Bde, 30th In Div Hq, Ga EOH Hq , 151s t Avo Bn
llOth Maim Bn Hq, 1st Bn, 108th Armor Hq , Ga EOH Btry A, 1st Bn, 230th Arty
Brig Gen Brig Gen COL COL Col LTC LTC LTC LTC
MAJ CW4 CW2
NAME
SIGMAN, Thomas M. LEWIS, Robert A. E RWI N, William L. GIDDENS, Ronald J . CRAIG, William H. McDANIEL, James L. SPRINGFIELD, David P. MASINGILL, William H.
ORGANIZATION
Btry A, 1st Bn, 214th Arty HC (-), 1st Bn, 108th Armor Btry A, 1st Bn, 230th Arty Co C (-), 1st Bn, 121st In Co D (-), 878th Engr Bn HC (-), 2nd Bn, 121st Inf HC, 878th Engr Bn HC (-) , 1s t Bn, 108th Armor
RANK
1SG SFC SSG SSG SSG SSG SP6 SP5
l lOTH MT BN TROOPS GIVE BLOOD IN TEXAS
They may have been a thousand miles fro m home, but 25 membe rs of the Guard 's Hq & Co A, llOth Maintenance Battalion, responded to an e me rge nc y call for blood while undergoing annual training at Red Riv er Arm y Depot, at Texarkana, Texas . The Atlanta and Marie tta Guard s men were contacted when officials at St. Michae l Hospital were tryi ng to save the life of a 26-year-old Texarkana girl who was s uffering from a serious blood disease . The Guardsmen were in Texas during the period 21 June to 5 July .
APR - JUN 1970
Sergeant First Class Winfred C . Brown of Company B, 1st Battalion, 108th Armor, Ce dartown, is presented with the outstanding non-commiss ioned officer commendation by Lt. Colonel Forrest McKelvey, Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion, 108th Armor. Look ing on is Captain Richard 0. Flournoy, Brown 's Commanding Officer, who recommended him for the Battalion Award. Brown, who was cited for outstanding leadership, integrity, and attention to duty, serves his
home unit as mess steward ond recorder of the Activities Committee.
15
THE GEORGIA GUARDSMAN-----------------------------------
Appointments
AIR NATIONAL GUARD
Maj Ronald A. Botsford, 128th Mil Alft Sq Maj Peter M. Fenton, 158th Mil Alft Sq Maj William R. Todd, Jr., 158th Mil Alft Sq Capt Patrick M. Marshall, !65th Mil Alft (Jp Capt Wallace L. Hubbard, 117th Tac Con Sq Capt Jimmy B. Queen, 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt Homer E. Morrow, 116th Sup Sq Capt Thomas R. Eason, Jr., 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt Willard K. Baker, 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt Alfred A. Wright, 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt George G. Brantley, 116th Mil Alft Wg Capt James R. Sneed, 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt Gene L. Meyer, I 28th Mil Alft Sq Capt Joe S. Smith, 116th Mil Alft Wg Capt Richard J. Grimaldi, l58th Mil Alft Sq Capt John R. Baggett, Jr., 128th Mil Alft Sq Capt Frederick G. Kuhn, 116th Mil Alft Gp Capt James L. McCloskey, l28th Mil Alft Sq 1stLt Nancy E. Chadwick, 116th Aeromedical Evac Sq 1stLt Carl S. Zimmerman, 202nd GEEIA Sq 2ndLt Warrington B. Howden, 165th Sup Sq 2ndLt Benjamin K. Harrison, 202nd GEEIA Sq 2ndLt Edwin M. Barrett, Jr., 128th Mil Alft Sq
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
MAJ Harvey L. Simpson, Jr., HC, 2nd Bn, 12lst Inf CPT Donald G. Broadwell, 158th Avn Co CPT Frank G. Baratta, 138th Med Co CPT John B. Stevenson, Jr., 159th Avn Co CPT William G. Bacon, Jr., Hq, 15lst Avn Bn CPT Walter L. Thompson, 159th Avo Co 1LT JohnS. Candler, Jr., HC (PART), 1st Bn, 108th Armor lLT Edward W. Fleuren, Co A(-), 2nd Bn, 121st Inf 1LT Reginald C. Carter, Hq, 560th Engr Bn 1LT Leroy J. Delionbach, HC (PART), 2nd Bn, 121st Inf 1LT Edward G. McCants, Jr., Hq, 560th Engr Bn 1LT Richard E. Seals, Co A(-), 2nd Bn, 121st Inf 1LT Arthur M. Kinney, HC (-), 1st Bn, 121st Inf 1LT James F. Hannah, HC (-), 1st Bn, 108th Armor 1LT Gordon T. Goldstein, 138th Med Co lLT James S. Roberts, HC, 3rd Bde, 30th Inf Div 1LT Curtis T. Ezzell, 3rd Plt, 30th MP Co 2LT Christian A. Nygaard, Btry A, 1st Bn, 230th Arty 2LT Carl G. Earnest, CoB(-), 1st Bn, 121st Inf 2LT Jerry L. Fish, Co A(-), 1st Bn, 121st Inf 2LT Charles L. Brown, Co A, 1st Bn, 108th Armor 2LT James V. Moore, CoB(-), 2nd Bn, 121st Inf CW2 Griffen L. McRanie, 158th Avn Co CW1 Robert Standridge, 158th Avn Co CW1 William 0. Cooper, 159th Avn Co CW1 Donald T. Sanland, 159th Avn Co
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Mitchel P. House, Jr. to LTC Dover L. Johnson to LTC William J. Hogan, Jr. to LTC Joel C. Ray to LTC Mell A. Cleaton to MAJ James E. Sloan, Jr. to MAJ Lou H. Jacobs to MAJ Charles L. Strickland, Jr. to CPT Fredrick L. Stewart to CPT Robert E. Cannon to CPT Louis R. Alexander to CPT W. H. Powell to CPT Frank C. Williams, Jr. to CPT James C. Hunt to CPT Walter A. Mays, Jr. to CPT Alvie L. Dorminy to CPT Robert F. Larkin to 1LT Johnny D. Durden to ILT Jeneral B. Swindell, Jr. to 1LT Charles G. Abernathy to lLT GeneS. Adams to 1LT
16
Promotions
Hewett M. Alden to 1L T Tully L. Allen to 1LT Willie C. Barfield to 1LT Phillip R. Bell to 1LT Theron P. Bramblett to 1LT James B. Brewer to lLT William L. Christman to 1LT James M. Denby, Jr. to ILT Paul R. Donald, Jr. to 1LT Jefferson C. Dorn to ILT Ronald F. Dunn to 1LT Carl G. Earnest to 1LT Carroll L. Edge to 1LT Richard D. Edwards to 1LT James W. Fulmer to lLT Donald L. Groover to 1LT James D. Hagin, Jr. to 1LT John T. Hancock, III to 1LT Gerald L. Harper to 1LT Joseph M. Heard to 1L T Walter B. Johnson to 1LT James R. Kennedy to lLT Robert M. Kennemer to 1L T
Walter G. Lee to 1LT Ronald W. Massey to 1LT Rembert L. Miller to 1LT David G. Noe to 1LT William R. Nance to ILT Henry C. O'Pry, III to 1LT William J. Page to 1LT Billie L. Pettigrew to 1LT Thomas E. Rushing to ILT Robert E. Shaw to 1LT James M. Stancil to ILT Allan M. Steine to ILT David L. Steltenpohl to 1LT Alvin D. Taylor to 1LT Charles E. Thompson to 1LT Otis C. Thompson to 1LT William E. Watts, Jr. to 1LT Raymond E. Grant, II to 1LT Ronald J. Whitfield to 1LT Rex B. Wilson to ILT James H. Yates to ILT William T. Webb to CW3 Joseph B. Kennedy to CW3
APR- JUN 1970
WINNER OF THE "MISS GMI" TITLE , SUSAN PERRY WENT ON TO WIN THE "WORLD POSTURE QUEEN" HONORS. ALL OF THIS INDICATES THAT OUR GMI CADETS KNOW A REAL QUEEN WHEN THEY SEE ONE. SUSAN IS 19 AND THE DAUGHTER OF MRS. EVELYN
PERRY , SECRETARY IN THE MSCA SECTION OF STATE HEADQUARTERS IN ATLANTA. WE CAN'T TELL MUCH ABOUT HER POSTURE FROM THIS PHOTO , BUT IT IS EASY TO SEE WHY SHE GOT THE VOTE FROM THOSE LUSTY GEORGIA MILITARY
INSTITUTE CADETS.
**********************************
ATIONAL
oe
. . GUARD
..o. .. . EFENDS
Ar.~'f.I~.\
. 0
08
o o o
rr:f'"
Servicemen's Insurance Coverage Raised Automatically
WASHINGTON (AFPS) - Servicemen's Group Life Insurance coverage for everybody in the armed forces was automatically increased from $10,000 to $15,000 by legislation signed into law by
To $15,000
President Nixon. The law also extends coverage to Reservists, National Guards-
men, and ROTC cadets during drills, summer camp duty, and while traveling to and from
training. Servicemen on active duty
will pay $3 a month for .the
$l5,000 coverage, while premiuins for Reservists, Guardsmen apd ROTC cadets will be $1.80
per year. 'The coverage is effective for
all deaths occul'l"ing after midnight June 24, according to Veterans Administration Director
Donald E. Johnson. Servicemen who want $10,000,
$5,000, or no coverage at all, will have to say so in writing. Such requests, Defense officials said, may be made through unit
personnel offices. The rate on $10,000 coverage
is $2 m::mthly for a man on active duty, while the $5,000 coverage is $1 per month.
Premiums for Reservists, Guardsmen and ROTC cadets will be $1.20 annually for $10,000 coverage and 60 cents annually for the $5,000 policy.
The law also extends from 120 days to one year the insurance of active duty men who are totally disabled at the time they are separated from the military.
NEW MILITARY PAY RATES
Thes< are the new dail y basic mili tary pay rates effective last 1 J an., as compiled by the Air Force and as applicable to the Army and Air National Gua rd for eac h single drill or day of annual trai ning, active duty , or acti ve dut y for trai ning . (For a MUTA-2 , for example , multipl y by two.) The pa y tab le is carried up to the grade of Maj Ge n- the highest Federallyrecognized rank for the ARNG and AN G .
Pov
Grade 2 or Less Ovr 2 ov... 3 Ov.,4 Over 8 OverS Over10 Ovr12 Over 14 Over 18 Over 18 Ovr 20 Over 22 Over 26
0 8 52.38 0 -1 43.00
o. 32.24
0 -5 25.71 04 21 .75 0 3 20.21 0 -2 11.20 0 -1 13.92
53.93 48.47 35..U 30.30 21.41 22 .59 19.24 11.42
55.22
37.75 32.37 28.26 24.13 2 3 . 11 19.24
28.72 23.88
28 .76 27 .99 24.38
OFFICERS
69.33
61 .38
82 .13
30.04 29.00
33.37 3 2 .0 8 30.61
36.16 33.89 32.08
63 .93 39.03 3 7 .6 0 35.44 3 2 .8 6
64.71 69 .33 46 .20 40.31 38.98
67.63 63 .41 47.51 42.62 38 .01
70.11
48.64 43.90
72 .94
61 .36 46.45
66 .71
OFFICERS WITH OVER 4 YEARS' ENLISTED SERVICE
0 3
28.72 27 .99 29.00 30.68 32.08 33.37
0 -2
23.88 24.38 25.16 26.46 27 .49 28.25
0 1
19.24 20.66 21 .32 22.08 22.86 23.88
W4 W -3 W -2 W-1
20.158 1 8 .7 1 18.39 13.85
22.08 20.30 1 7 .7 2 16.88
22.08 20.30 17.72 1 5 .8 8
22.69 20.56 18.24 18.98
23.81 20.80 1 9 .2 4 17.72
WARRANT OFFICERS
24.86 22.32 20.30
1 8 .4 9
26.67 23 .61 21 .07 19.24
27 .49 24.38 21 .83 20.03
28 .76 26.16 22.69 20.80
29 .78 26.91 23.37 21 .57
30.56 26 .72 24.13 22 .32
31 .58 27 .74 24.90 23 .11
32.62 28.76 25.91
36 .15 29 .78
E9
E8
E7 12.33 14.78
EO 10.83 12.91
E 6
9 .18 11 .31
E 4
7.72
9 .87
E 3
6.59
7.79
E2
4 .81
8 .415
E 1
4.44
5 .9 0
E- 1
4 .15
t Und4montt.)
15.33 1 3 .. U 11 .115 10.22
8 .33
1 6 .8 7 1 3 .9 9 12.37 11 .02
8 .88
1 1 .41 14.153 13.18 11 .157
ENLISTED
1 9 .8 2 18.93 16.08 13.72
23 .38 20.17 1 7 .4 7 1 5 .81 14.28
23.92 20.70 18.03 1 6 .41 14.78
24.47 21 .25 18.83 1 6 .9 3 1 5 .0 6
26 .01 21 .79 19.36 1 7 .4 7
25.57 22 .31 19.90 17.75
26 .07 22 .86 20.17
27 .45 24.21 21 .62
3 0 . 12 26 .90 24.21
0
-
.
-
::!