9
Pf'toto bV Rlch.rd 'IIARI!!:; CORPS July 4: 200 years f defended freedom 1 ,. VOICES FROM THE PAST Modem' Marines rep..Mnting nI'Itt\lcM. personalltie. from the 2oo-y..r hi.tory of the United Stete. Merine Corp•. will filiihliflht the Corp. blcentennl.1 celebration hera on Oahu. Thirteen individual hlatorlcel period. will be represented during' the blcentennla' . .peg.. nt by Merine. dre.Nd In.unlform. from the peat. Pictured he .. (left to right. itendlnglMexlcan Wer (1888); Spenl.h-Amerlcan War (18981; Revolutionary War 117711); Marina pilot from the 8anana War In Nicaragua and Haiti 119181; and a Navy Corp.man (17991· M A R I N

July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

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Page 1: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

Pf'toto bV Rlch.rd o'o~-

'IIARI!!:; CORPS

July 4: 200 years

f defended freedom1 ,.

VOICES FROM THE PAST Modem' Marines rep..Mnting nI'Itt\lcM.personalltie. from the 2oo-y..r hi.tory of the United Stete. Merine Corp•.will filiihliflht the Corp. blcentennl.1 celebration hera on Oahu. Thirteenindividual hlatorlcel period. will be represented during' the blcentennla' .

.peg..nt by Merine. dre.Nd In.unlform. from the peat. Pictured he.. (left toright. itendlnglMexlcan Wer (1888); Spenl.h-Amerlcan War (18981;Revolutionary War 117711); Marina pilot from the 8anana War In Nicaraguaand Haiti 119181; and a Navy ~ltel Corp.man (17991·

MARIN

Page 2: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

I ,

Page 2, Hawaii Marine, July 2, 1976

Vlewpolnt:Would unions In the' military be. effective?

SgtMaj, Edwin Kellner1/12 SgtMaj.

I dan', feel how it woulilbe 'effective, I don't seehow the military couldfunc.tion properly as aunion. ,It just wouldn'!work,

Sgt, Kenneth Travi.. H8IHS

Overall ii wouldn't doany good, You have tohave, sOmebody in com­mand to do something.The union would break thecommand.

£..-4/Cpl. Tal Martin'

MPCo.

No, because if ,you had aunion it would be just likeeverybody else on the out·side - layoffs - andthey'd go, "Wow, union,we'll all get together andgo on strike." Then' itwould not be a v~ry

effective Marine Corps,now would it?

Col.' "J" "C" RappeThird Marine Regt. CO

I seriously doubt it. Idon't think there is an,yplace for a union in theservices". Every countrythaI's ever had it - theirarmed forces have deter­iorated; the quality hasgone down; respon­siveness has gone down.We don't need that. Wehave a lot of problemswithout compounding it byhaving union repre­sentatives voting onwhether we ought to fightor not.

Cpl, Jame. CadeCG·. Office

It would take a lot ofplanning, and I think itwould work really good butit would take years ofplan[1ing. People wouldhave to make it feasible.'We can't just go on strikeall of a sudden, But I thinka union would get somethings done, We'ddefinitely 'get some goodaction.

Hitchhiking: gambling with your .fife.

At 'K·B.y. there er. fourauthorized pickup stations whereMarines m.y stand. but not lICtivelyIOlicit; for rides. TtMM stations .r.loc.ted at ·the corner of Mokapu

·.nd H.rrls, across the street fromthe Ii....qu.rters 3d .MarinesRegiment. in front of the PX, and ,next to the fire station. ' ,

by Sgt, Marri. Perry

To hitch, or nor to hitch: rhlt is tlra quasrion:WhIt"" 'tis nobler in tlra mind to svff"TMltnn- and fi...of~ humansOr 10 /.k, '1I'01*'.c, ",.inlt. #III of trDub/,.

1/ the great WilliamShakespeare were to have written apiece on the practice ofhitchhiking, the lirst few linesmight have looked something likethe above. , .

Hitchhiking today, as in thetime of Shakespeare. is a rather riskybusiness. This is not only true forthe hitchhikers themselves. but alsofor the people who stop and offer alift to the hitchhiker,

Take, for instance, thedilemma of Staff Serge.nt GeorgeSp.ar of H&HS. He wasreturning to K·Bay· after droppingoff his date at her parents' home inSchofield Barracks.

"It was late at night and I was" long way from home. I wantedsomeone to talk to so as to helppass the time. I saw this guystanding along the road.hitchhikin~ He looked O.K. to me•.so I stopped and picked him up.

"To make a long story short,this guy pulled • knife .nddem.nded my money.' , sl."{'mad

, on the brakes and started hItting

him in the face, He dropped theknife, and I kept punching hi ... tokeep him off of me. He was finallyable to grab the knil. from the.floorboard end then jump out ofthe car and run IIWIY.

"I certainly wasn't going torun after him; after all, he still hadthe knife and I had nothing.Nothing,.that is; except my money.But more. important than that, Ithink, I still had my life."

THE LAW

The Hawaii state law strictlyprohibits hitchhiking., But. because01 a 1972 bus strike. a countyordinance was adopted permittingride solicitation at bus Slaps. Theordinance also included a passagepermitting hitchhiking on 'roads"where there are no official stops."

The only requirements put onthe hitchhik.rs. is th.t they notstimd on the roa<h1'ay, or eitherthre.ten or intimidate motorists.

"Even with all of those,pickup stations. we stili hand out15 or 20 M.O,R:s (MinOr OffenseR~rts) a month for unauthorizedhftchhlklng." admitted Gu~n.,.y,5erge.nt S. Crow/.y of the K-eayMilitary Police. "If I see someonestanding at one of the pickUpstations. I'll usually stop and pick·him up," he added.

The transportation· that Isavailable to Marines who want to.get off base is plentiful, In adilitionto tl)e four pickup stations. there isalso the Liberty Bus. It stops at theaforementioned pickup stations,a,nd a schedule is posted i'l each.

BUDDY ~YSTEM

'" "d.finltely do notrecommend that a personhitchhik....·cl.imed SSgt. Ed Beachof the Honolulu Armed ServicesPolice. "But." he continued. "if •person still wants to do it. th.n I'dadvise him to use the 'buddy....st.m: Also. hitchhik. during theday rather then at night, arid nevercerrv: I.rge sums of money with­you. Some men set out for townwith their whol. prfcheck In theirpocket"

In the eee8 of women. Itlipointed'out, "FlICts show that most.xu.! _Ih are committed in theautomobile:'

But. these types of assaultsare not solely limited to women, Aserviceman was walking back to hisbase 'ate one nigh(\ when, 8 mandrove ul' and offered him a ride.The. serviceman eccepted', s'nd gotinto the car. Instead of being drjvento his base. he was tak.n 'to anearby pineapple field, 'where. atknife point. h. w.s sexually.ssaulted by the male ilrlver.

YOUR DECISION

in light of this nation's highcrime rate.. why do peopl. continueto hitchhike? Why? Why do theyleave themselves vulnerable toassaults. robberies. sexual abuses..nd even death? Because it willnever happen to m.? Th. odds willfin.lly disagree with you, If th.yhlllen't already.

In the fin.1 .nalogy, thequestion. to hitch or not to hitch.'can be' answilr'!d by only oneperson: you, No on••Ise can make'ah.t decision for you, because thea~r could quit. eeslly meanyour Ii!•.

The next- time that you standalong the road end *tick out YOllrthumb" or go driving along .nd seelOmoone elte with his thumb out.think of 'the question.' Let it weighheavy on your mind.

HawaII malin.=::-o:::""~.~.~,:::::::...:::::::::::::::::~:::::~,,==.,.,.,..,. • -......• -- l2I1·1'.:t1..... 0lllfI!. . " - 0¥'III. .-liIIIftl2l1.1'.'1..... ""'-"'.... • "COWIl QI'.2OJ............ .. Ql7·:t'.11.....-- .. ···eo·.·.. . O"W' Ql1.:t'.Jt,...-- Ql1·I'Q...-- . , O"l2I1.I,."==eor""';';";';:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~':;~:J::;:;

Page 3: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

select or sergeant mafor I:.

during the Ouaniico tour .'andbecame the senior enlisted manat Officer Candidate School

arrival here from Iwaku'ni a yearago.

Enlisting in 1949. SgtMaj. Caletook his' recruit training 'at ParrisIsland. During his career he hasbeen a drill instructor at thatrecruit depot and a weaporisinstructor at Camp Lejeune. N,C.

There are no plans to groundany aircraft at this time. The pur­pose of the investigating board ,sto find the causes of the acc,­dents as soon as possible in orderto prevent future mishaps. TheFederal Aviation Administration(FAA) will not take part in theinvestigation since no civilian air­craft was involved,

Memorial serVices for thosewho died in the two crashes wereheld in the field' at PTA and alsoaboard the Air Station,

will be transported to Tripier.however. since K-Bay personnel

. and,their del'4lndents utilize the

""support thIS program an pro-spective. donors should contactthe designated liaison officer intheir unit .

The causes of the accidents arenot yet known, The results of theinvestigation will be for officialuse only. and will be availableonly to those who utilize that par­ticular type of, equipment. to helpprevent future accidents.

Eight Marines died in the crashof a UH-l N "Huey" helicopterJune 24. First Lieutenant BrianArmstrong; First LieutenantJames Miklovic; Corporal VictorEckloff; Corporal James Ford;Corporal' Lonnie Thomas; !..<lnceCorporal ThOmas Stramat; LanceCorporal Frank Anderson. Jr.; andLance Corporal Charlie Mann.The two survivors. Corporal PeterReiser and Private First ClassPedro'Rodriguez. have been flownto Brooke Army Medical BurriCe"ter. San Antonio. Tex.

wllf.~pon to t e Ir Stat on s­pensary, instead of' having totravel to Tripier Army MedicalCanter. Blood collected at K-Bay

Iq order to meet the continuingrequirement for brood donors. 8special program has been set up

The'pilot of an AH-l J "Cobra".Captain Edward Cranford. was,killed in Friday afternoon's mis­hap. which' occurred les~ thanthree miles from the site of Thurs­dav's crash, The co-pilot. FirstLieutenant Richard Wilkes. wasnot injured. Both helicopters wereon routine training missiQns ..

The same investigating team ishandling both crashes. It is

A five· man board is inves·tigating the helicopter crashes.which claimed the lives of nineMarines in two separate mis·haps at Pohakuloa Training Areaon the Big Island last week.

, ,

July 2. 1976. Hawaii Marine. Page 3

Team probes crashesiiniured in burn c~nter'

headed by the executive officer ofMarine Medium HelicopterSquadron-262. to which the air­craft were attached. A medicalofficer, a safety officer, a main·tenance officer and a Naval AirTraining and Operating Pro­cedures Standardization(NATOPS) officer complete theboard.

During his tours in Vietnam. heserved with 3d Amtracs and 3dShore Party Battalion. He wasredesignated a first sergeant frommaster sergeant in 19.69 and tookover as first sergeant of Head­quarters and Service. Company.3rd Shore Party Battalion.

Alte, his combat tours. he was.. transferred to Ouantico where he ., ser~d as. first sergeant of the

Pholo It)' Stt. R. J. MllI.ry

PTA MEMORIAL SERVICES - Chaplain Michael O'Neil 3dBa~lion, 3d Marines' chaplain, gives a benediction during mem'orialservIceS Sunday on the Big Island for the Marines who died in lastweek's helicopter crashes. Leathernecks assembled from all unitsparticipating in training exercises there. Several hundred people alsoattended services in the Air Station Chapel Wednesday.

~egt. gets new SgtMai, ,The Third Marine Regiment got

a new top enlisted man Tuesdaywhen, Sergeant Major WilliamCale relieved Sergeant MajorJoseph Monteleone as regi­mental sergeant major in anafternoon Staff NCO parade, '

:3gtMaj. Monteleone has beenthe regimental sergeant majorsince October 1974. He had also

• been the ,sergeant major ofMarine Aircralt Group 24 andHeadquarters and MaintenanceSquadron 24.. The outgoing .sergeant majorreceived a Certificate ofCommendation at the cere­monies for his "exemplary per­formance of duties" during his 20months. as regimental sergeantmajor. .He is bein tr.he IAll1an.

SgtMaj. Cale has beenassigned as sergeant major. 2ndBattalion. 3rd Marine,s. since his

At Q glance ... By SSgt.' Spear

NEW CHM JOINT CHIEFSOF STAFF

On a national level, all thearmed services will get a newchairman of the Joint Chiefs ofStaff tomorrow. The new

. executive. Air Force GeneralGeorge ,5. Brown was nom­inated by President Ford ,June9. '

PRAISE FROM SECNAV

After a 99 per cent paasingscore on the PFT during arecent IG, Secretary of theNavy Middendorf com­mended Marines of the 3dMarine Division for their phys­ical fitnen program which, hecited, "prolongs longel/ity andmaintains immediate fitnessfor emergencies."

NEEDLE NEWS

It was inevitable. With somany ceMs of the Flu blankat·ing the nation. Uncle sam wasbound to take tha offensive andbreak out the vaccine, Roll upyour shin sleeve and prepere topeyche yourself up becausesomeUme in August or5eptemlNtr, syringes will makethe _08.

. WARRANT OFFICERBOARD

- Out of 250 allocations. awarrant officer board filledevery quota in '4B MOSsrecently. 'ALMAR Bl/76. liststhe names.

NAVAL ACADEMYOPPORTUNI~ES

The powers to be in "Yash­ington claim that few Marinestake advantage of the oppor­tunity to apply for the U: S.Naval Academy. Eighty-fiveregulars are authorizlld eachyear and if you're between thtt.ages 17 and 21 , check out newMarine Corps Order 1530.11 C.

TRIPLE STRIP~S

T~e 2,170 corpOral-to-ser­geant promotions schaduledfor June will, Instead. be madethis month. HQMC 'manpowerexpens, claim that tha relisonfor delay was because theywanted to prevent overpopu­letion in certain occupetionalfields.

CHEAP FLYING

There are still many open­ings on Armed Forces Travelflights to and from Chicago andWashington. D. C. this summerclaims C. L. Heisel, the firm'svice president. If you plan ontaking leave and -traveling tothe Mainland. check with K­Bay's' AFT representative at254-4BI5.

(;OMMISSARY CLOSES

Patro."s of the K- Baycommissary are reminded thatthe facility will close its doorsTuesday in observance of thenation's birthday. Normaloper,ation will resume Wednesday.

NAVY RELIEF HOURS

The Navy Relief office is nowoperating under new hours.Hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 1p.m. Monday through Friday.

TIME-IN-GRADE CHANGE

Officials at HOMC havechanged the time-in-graderequirement for sergeant to 12...months. ALMAR 82/76 sndMCO 1430.58 change 1 coversthe revision.

SELF-HELP ABUSE

Patrons of the Self-Help pro­gram, Housing Division, are notalways using the facility right­fully claims the Housing Direc­tor. Tools and materialscl:lecked out from the facilityare .for use on government

- quarters. not barracks oroffices. The Housing Directorasks that 'all COs comply withthis regulation and not allowtools or materials marked"PWH" to be used in their workor billeting areas,

NROTC SCHOLARSHIPPROGRAM

The NROTC Scholarship Pro­gram is one of several edu­cation and commissioning pro­grams available to enlistedMarines. The package dealincludes a 4-year college edu­cation and a regular com­mission in the Corps or Navy, Inaddition. the program prllvidestuition. books. educationalexpenses and $100 a month.Interested Marines should readMCO 1306.17C andMCBulietin 1120 of May 6.1976.

.

Page 4: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

Page 4: Haweii Marine. July 2. 1976

'1

AWAITIN'. CH-63t.lks oveSerge.ntQuartero.

Sto

PhotBALANCE ISTHE KEY - Croasing the Slide·for-life. M.rin. R....,:,.· terr.ln. From this single "ength of rope Recon Marines can build aCapt.In Barme Bays demonstrates one method of traversing difficult bridge, if the need fb~ a permanant fixture shoul!!_.i... ,

To 'him', a wild 'weekend •'IS

He practices the ancient arts. 01 stealth.guile, and deception, th.e technoques ot thefrontier scout. .

His eyes and mind must attune themselvesnaturally to things others must strain to seeand 'leeI'. .

Because his engagaments often take placein darkness or on difficult terrain - and areolten over in a matter of minutes - he' mustreact spontaneously and be able to use fear tohis advantage.

He cannot relax or do things in a normalmanner because to do so invites only defeatand destruction.

His training is his basic weapon. Basictrain­ing is only the beginning of what he must learnto survive in the environment in which heoperines, .

Who is this man who 'may one day play forlile-and-death stakes in a game for whichthere are no rules?

He.could' be the manager of a local grocery,the student sitting beside you in class or theguy dating your daughter.

He might be the teller at the bank or themechanic at the serVice station who works onyour car. He might even be the executive youhad lunch with today. He could be just aboutanyone you know.

DUAL ROLE

When not in his civilian role. he is a MarineRe..rvist with Ha_Ws own 4th Force Recon­nais..nce Company. And the training heundergoes as a Recon Marine makes him anelite Individual, relyinll on rigorous and relent­lesa training to kaep hom and his tli!ents honed10 ••uperb sharpness.

He excels in such tricks-of-the-trade asSCUBAdlvlng. map reeding. rope bridge build­Ing. jungle .urviv.'and parachuting, fte is the__ of the arts of demolitions•. camou-

f1age, marksmanship and hand-to-handcombat. .

Gunny liu teaches some of the basic para­chute landing falls and_commends and this.helps because the instructors throw it at youpretty fast in school. It's mental alertness andif you don't get it the first time. thtly drop you.Instantly.

The gunny also makes sure, along with themany other training requirements. that mem­bers of the company are trained in SCUBAdiving which is taught in a month-Ionl! courseby the Navy at Pearl Harbor.

The gear Gunnery S!lrgeant G: W. Gardnerhas in his Supply Section permits the Reserv­ists to operate independentlyofany other unit.Even though it's smaII. 4th Force Recon has itsown cooks and messing facilities, communi­cations gear, transportation. medical section'and administrative clerks. The mission of theunit requires highly sophisticated items andtraining and Gunny Gardner's equipmentensures these responsibilities are fu"illed.

TOP OFFICER .Major Tim Geraghty, the Inspector-Instruc­

tor of4th Force R8con, has been around Reconfor several vears. . •

"I sPent most of my career in recon or forcerecon units. I hed a recon company in Viet­nam for 16 months and ended it as forcereconnaiSHnce officer with III MAF. Then Iwent to Camp Lejeune as operations officer ofa Beltalion Lending Team in the Medi­terranean on NATO operations." he said.

He also had the Force Recon desk at theMarine Corps Development and educationCanter for two years and was the operation$officer for 3d Recon Battalion on Onna Point.Okina_. " .

In addition to three recon platoons. MajorGeraghty also commands Motor. Transport,Tralr~lng. Communications, Supply. Paraloft.MedICSI and Admin 5ectlon. filled year-roundby Marines on KIll,. duty. But one WMQnd •

month. these billets are filled by the Reserv-ists attending drill. '. He. as a Recon Marine, is the specialist. Heos the professional trained in all phases ofdefensive and offensive combat that enableshim to operate for extended periods of time

ep in enemy territory.An" it will be he. Ha_Ws citizen/Marine,

who woll demonstrate his capabilities whenttle ,4th Force Reconnaissance l:onipanydepart$ Monday for two weeks of AnnualTraining Duty at the Mountain Warfare Train­ing Canter at Bridgeport. California.

PRIOR TRAINING

The trainfng for this particular,missionbagan several months and, in some cases.­e~n years /lg.o., Gunnery Sergeant RaymondLou IS the tralnong noncommissioned officerfor the company. He was an Instructor at.Recon School on Okinawa and then spent atour in Vietnam in 1972 with "lima" Com­pliny, 3d Battalion, 4th Marines. He was aninstructor at the Recon School at CoronadoCalifornia before reporting to Hawaii to servewith Force Recon, It's up to him to schedulethe training for the unit and the treinlng Istough.

Recon Marines. reporting in to Fort Ben­ning. Georgia for Jump School expect thetraining to be tough. But the Marines canalready max the Army's basic requirementsbefore .theY ,depsrt the Islandl For example. sixpull-ups are required but Recon can do at least10. The 3-mile run is done in Ie.. than 30 min­utes for the Army; Recon does It In Ie.. than24. Five,jumps rate the Marine his Army BesicJump Wings but it takes five more jumps witha qualified unit to earn the Navy/MarineCorps Jump Wings. And 4th Force Recon isone of three unite In the Marine Corps qual­Ified to jump. The othera are Air Delivery andAN()lICO, •

Althougof Individcro88-traithe othermight becations gcould be

But disbe, classto learnson's job.

As olteeverytrai'field.On-tyou are a

I learningAyoun

challengeing out offinally getmuch 10 tcen do it

And it'sassistingMarinesTrainingwas deslgmonthagpolicebathe trainiwill bafabattalion.

Thethem therappellintheir lifeiralnlng tmuch 80And it·s uteach the

Page 5: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

• •S1u·mplng

jrI.I

. AWAITING THEIR TURN - Beforetheyboerda CH-63 helicopter, Steff Sergeent AI Changtalks over the million with (left to right), SteffSergeent Gilbert Lewis end Corporal LanceQU8rtero.

Story by SSgt Tom Daigle

Photos by Sgt. Corry Gott

Although they're an oUldoor-orienled group'of individuals, Recon Marines have to becross-trained In Ihe mission and functions ofthe other members of the unit. A rifleman:mighl be back-up man for the radio communi­cations guy. If somelhing should happen, itcould be up to Ihal rifleman to cover for him.

BUI disheartening as text book training can·be, classwork is whal is somelimes necessaryto learn many of the details. of another per­son's job. lis part of being a specialist.

FREQUENT FIELD EXERCISES

As often as possible ~ whichis jusl ,aboulewry trailling weekend - the unit takes to thelield. On-the-job training is more lun becauseyou are actually doing the things you '118 been

I learning about in the classroom. ,A young men joins Ihe Reserves 10 fulfill a

challenge. He kind of digt>lhe idea about jump­ing out of airplanes and things like that. SO,hefinally gets a chance to do it. And he likes itl Somuch 10 that he transfers to actiw duty so hecan do it all the time.

And it's this caliber of Reservist that will beassisting in teaching the, 3d Battl!lion, 23dMarines from New Orleans dunnll AnnualTraining Duty this year, The louiSIana unitwas designated an infentry Gettalion about amonth ago, before which they were a militarypolice bettalion. So it's unlikely that, excepi forthe training they received in boot camp, theywill be familiar with the missiOn of an infantrybattalion. .

The Hawaii Recon unit will be teachingthem the -'Ulls of rope bridge building' andreppelling, knowledge that may soma day savetheir fife and the Iivn of their buddlea. It'siralnlng they "arned and have mastared; 10much 10 that It la pert of their everyday living,And It's up to the citizen/Marine of Hawaii toINch them how 10 be e apeeialist.

(I

July 2, 1976, Hawaii Marine: Page 6

WALKING A VERTICAL GANGPLANK ~ Sergeant Pete Casabar uses the D-ring methodof deacending a vertical plane. Much of the Recon Marines' training tekes place at theArmy's East Range near Schofield Barracks.

1IlOO FEET ABOVE THE HELEMANO COUNTRYSIDE - Lance Corpore' Eric Strelber pre­pe.... to ••It from the CH·lS3 "s.. Knight" helicopter. There ware .Ight 'cheRY jumper.'me/ling theW first Jump with their unit alnee the completion of Jump Schoolet Fort hnning,G-Vfe, _.

Page 6: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

whips .1/3, 5-2 in Saturday bout;infram ural. cham pionship

VMFA-235falces 1976 softballChamps:

Page 6, Hawaii Marine, July 2, 1976

SUCCESSFUL SEASON

do as they left two on base.In the fifth inning, Robert Ortiz,

came in for a score for 1/3making it3-2 in favor olthe flyers,

Roasalez and Ondrejickawrapped it all up in the bollom 01the sixth when they added thefinal runs for 235,

rhe Death Angels defeated 2nd .Battalion, 3rd Marines and Pro­visional Service Battalion' toadvance to the finals afterdrawing a bye in the first round,1/3 lost to PSB in the first round,but out fought Com.municationSUPPQrt (CommSpt) and thepowerful Navy Squad to advance10 the semifinals. There they metPSB again and elim'lnated themselting up the champIonshIpmatch. PSB had losi to 235 in awinners"bracket showdown.

For 235 the intramuralchampionship was the climax to avery successful year es they onlyrecorded two losses. One losscame from 1/3 and Navy had theother one. Both were in pre·

. -season play."It was hard keeping the team

from gelling over confident afterwinning every game. All thetea'ms were out to get us," thecoach explained, "But our teamunitY and spirit pulled us through.It wasn't just winning the -championship but the: idea' of l"hoIo bot 1eI-~ MenNJ Jt.

. remalnlnq undefaeted thet. THRILL OF VIJrrORY - M.......rs of VMFA-23I5's Intlllmural

hetr.:: '::;,;a"on. 12'h Mar'n.a., :.t:r":='.t.:...mJ=,:~~~.,::-- v=.:"lCht.C:=z~who were me softball ct>amplona .Coach MiltO"'~ndeo Itwes until the":I:tt1lnn'ng~two run..the J last two years io\ a rbw put eny chionce.. of vlctolV 'for First Bettllllon Third Merin.. out offini~hed low in the standings and eight. The Dellth Angels beIlt 1(3, 6-2,-after de1..tlng2/3 end PBB tofaillld to make the playoffs. edvence to the flnels. They were undefeated In reguler "'I:9n pley.

DEFENSIVE GAME

According to the coach, itlooked like it would be an easy'game. But the 1/3 defensebuckled /lown and they scoredtheir . first·run in the second

in~;;:,a;A'236 dldn't get anothertally until the founh due to the

S~=boc::l:':ji:kl':r'::,.bYo:,~t::"Angels added another tally at thispoint on "Rosie" Rosalez hit. Butthat was all the squadron could'

By Sgt. Ruben Martinez Jr.

Leading by a slim 3-2 marginin the top of the sixth inning,VMFA 235's Death Angels drovein two runs and went ahead tostop 1st Battalion 3rd Marines' inthe next inning to take the 1976Intramural Softball SiowpiichChampionship, 5-2.

1/3 putit all on the line Satur­day morning as they had to defeatthe squadron twice in order totake the championship in thedouble elimination tournament.Bui the flying Marines were not tobe denied the crown or even a lossas they had compiled a more thanrespectful 18-0 win-loss· recordfor the season.

"It was all defense until thatinning." said team .CaptainGanier. "They are certainly thebest team We faced all season."

Bill Germann started off thescoring in the first inning when hegot on base after his single. SteveKarlik also got on base after 1/3'sthird baseman committed anerror scoring Germann. Karlikthen scored on "AI" Alvarado'shit to right field.

SPOilS WORLDCOmmUMI'Q'UE'5147••""27

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LEARN TO S9VIM - A l1ed CrossAdult (18 yeers anil older)beginner. swim cllis will stlrt st10 I.in. July 10 at the Stationpool. For more Information, ...11the Red Cr_ at 267-2808.

HASAC . TOURNEY - TheHewaii Mer.ines Men's slowpitchsoftball team plltcecl third In the.Heweiiari Armed ServicesAthletic COuncil Tournament this

.week with e 1-2 record. Thewomen Merines' teem alsofinl.hed in lhlrd place with a 2-1record during' the three-daytourney held at camp Smith.

PING PONG TOURNAMENT _ThefW will be an Intremurel PInt·flUng Tourllllment _Ing July12 at the fulllyThHter .. ta.m.The IoUfnarnent begin. on July19.Entrycludllne IeJu1y12st"p.m.

FREE MARTIAL ARTSCLASS -If you era Intereeted Inimproving your mind, body end

. SCUBA CLASSES - CI..... , SIlirlt ..nc1 you're'. short of c.shfor scuba dilling will be stertlng then maybe you need to telk toIlIIIln W8dneedlY with the swim ~Frlnk ubrede at 2117-3136. Hetest given et lhe station pool at tNClhn T.. KWon Do et the15:30 p.m. Me8ll8 end fin. will not Station gym In Henger 103 tobe ItMdecI until the eecond enyoM, trw of marge....Ion 0_ will be 'held onMoncI8y, It'IIednftdey end Frld8y.ThefW will be six 88Hion8 during~ for _en Ifelnlng. TheCOUrH Ind8 to NAVI, PAD!. endYMCA· certification. ContlctDennis Klrwlln at 281-68112 or'Femlly Servion at ~67-3808.

HUNTING - 'the opening of GOLF TOURNEYS - 'The'the hunting 58ason for wild goats Ouarterly.<;at Fight Golf Tourna­on the Island of Kauei will·begin ment dates have been changed.on August 7 end end on sept. 27. The tourney will be held July 23'Weekends will be the only Insteed of July 9.,EntlVdeadlinesauthorized times for, hunting is July 11. The e III be haccording to the Division of Fish gun stert 'et n~n~EntlV ';.~,~;and Game. Department of Land golfers on colets ;. t2.76. Alland Netural Resources. ' . other golfers' f is'1.76.

The bag limit will be two goetsper hunter for the' 58ason and The 38 Ho s 'Golf Teamhunters will be assignad hunti"g Chemplonmip will be on July 21dates through public drawings. end 28. The' 72 Holes-Golf

Wild pigs, goats and ferelsheep ,Individual C,hampionshlP'. will bewill also be availeble f '. Au' 4 nd fl EOn the ,'slend of HewaII 'July; 31. . held on gust a . ntrya" deedllnes on both events is July

For further informetion on both 13!'-l.4 p:m. Further informstlon58esons, contact the Division of be obtelned by calling SpecielGame end Fish by telephoning services et 267-3136.548-6917 .or _iting to 1161Punchbowl St., Honolulu, Hewali.

MARTIALARTS TOURNEY-Asecond Full Contect Martial ArtsTourney is scheduled for 7 p.m..July 21 elthe station gym, Henger103. All militelV martlel artsetYIt.la ere Invited to ettendJuthelytryout. being held at noon.10 end at 10 e:m.. July 11 In theFemily S8tvicn center eudl­torlum Ioceted next to the 7 -DeyStore. For lI1O(e Information, cellBurni. White at 2117·2402 orRich8rd Il8ymond at 2117-2418.

Page 7: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

July 2, 1976, Hawaii Marine, Page 7

3/3 shows power •In FEX

CO PLEASED

However, the success of theoperation cannot be placed uponthe storming 3/3 alone. Lt Col.Giles concluded by praising thesupporting unils during the FEX.

, Such as, the beans. bullets and

3' f bandages provided by the3/ not only displayed itsel as Logistical' Support Unit; keeping

a vital part of the air and ground the Marines well led and ammo~t.:.,:,u, ~'::r~:,m:,~:.dit,': boxes fiffed to the max, The spirit.

~ Ballafion Commander, Lieute- and drive of Charlie Ballery 1 /12nant Colonel Jerald Giles. The Bn' which kept the enemy's . lireCO, commented that his Marines' power to a minimum with arunery'achievements .during the FEX supporr was also appreciated.were "basically outstanding." Theie was also the continuedAlso. he went on to explain thaI efforts of Co. D. 3d Amtracs.the FEX was more than just train- furnishing 3/3 with its success-ing for the Leatherneck alone. ful mechanized assaults."Anytime you start operating at Last but not least was thethat level you're no longer really aviation supportlrom Marine Air-training the individual Marine.' craft Gr.oup-24. With tactical'During lhe FEX. yo,,'re e~ercis· inserts. air strikes and airing the ballalion staff and their droppings 01 supplies. the craftsability to coordinate all the established ·their indisputable.aspects of an operation of this role in the air and ground leam.

PI'Ioto by SlIt. R. J. MAlle,y

BEHIND THE BUSH - Sergaant Sam Freeman feeds the ammo whileLance Corporal Eugene Shoemaker (both from Company I, ThirdBattalion, Third Marines) preparas to fire the M-60 machine gunduring the three-day battalion fiald exercise at POhakuloa Traininl/Area last week.

Isize. Also. 'thought the man"er in

'. which the baltalion staH operatedwas fantastic," complimented ItCol. Giles.

EARLY ATTACK

high-spirited Leathernecks hadaccumulated more land than aFlorida real: estate broker, therewere plenty of opportunities leftto push the enemy farther andclaim more ground enrouleto thatmonsteroussand mound Puu Ahi.

By LCpl. Gil Fulgenc;o

POHAKULOA TRAINING AREA- For some time now the highlymotivated Third Balla'ion, ThirdMarine 'Regiment has beenproving itself as a superiorstriking force on tha Big Island.Through long days of rigoroustraining, rifle companies,di~persed about the training Between the hours of 4 and 5areas, have performed patrols, p.m. the follo,wing morning, Co. KambushEl,s and other . types of Heli-Iifted its troops for antactical maQeuvers. allacked on the Puu. During that

last weeK'S fielde~ercise was a . time, the third platoon from Co. 1.product of h'std work on the reinforced with machine gunsnewly-formed b~talion's part. and amtracs, proceeded downDonned in their lalest combat La R d bl k' ..gear, the hard Chargj"~eather- va oa to a' oc 109 posItion'necks demonstrated II th brain jusl west of PUu Ahi, preventing

any enemy escape in thatand brawn in the three-day climax direction. Once the platoon was inof the- deployment. '\ position, Co. K. on the probable

\ line of deployment, batlled theirSTART OF ACTIO"'~ WilY 10 securing that objective.

With another victory. in theirFrom the start of field actl ,.1 grasp,. the 3/3 machine was

wa's evident that~as a 'rce rolling smoothly .. However, thenot to be reckoned ith. aggressors decided to throw aSupported by Compan1f. D: Third wrench into the hard chargingAmtracs, Company I. 3/3'carried machine. In the next series of up with Co. I platoons and form aout a mechnized attack on one of events, Co. K was to make a consolidated defense to allack thethe first objectives, Puu (hill)·Kea. meChanized assault, from the final objeclive. At midnight theProceeding' approximately 200 south, to seize the lava Ridge- two cbmpanies joined forces andmeters down lava Road. Co:"'I--along"Saddle..Road..JNJ1~e Co. L the following morning theycam\, under an artil/eryattackand moved to a blocking positiiii1elrst-moved in on Puu Kaena and thea s,,!all ar"lJ! ambush from the of the ridge. At this· time, Co. I saddle ridge to its north, seizingaggressors, Company' A, First· Was heli-lifted to a fanding zone the final objective.Battalion. Third Marines. After near' firing point 301 from theirdismounting the amtracs. the 3/3 first objectivll. Upon reaChing theleathernecks called in for an air .zone, Co. I had received word thatstrike. proceeded by an artillery Co. K fell victim to an enemy

~~ ....ck from Charlie Battery. first am b us h, s uffe, i n g 7q%8aitiJllon-:1WtIf1tl'Wtlfl4 lUM.·..._ ofdown enerm- f1r•._ 'then CO., Wove RkIge wa••hlfted Into CO.pushed on. to capture their rs hands. From the lantling zone,objective. At the- s'ame time, Co.lconductedagrdundallackon

, Company l. 3/3. tothe south. had the north' half portion of lava.lheir hands fUll. conducting a ridge. At about 4 p.m.. that after·Buccessful assault on another noon the company marchedobje~tive, the hills of Puu Maile through the rugged terrain. Afterand.Puu·Moanalua. . receiving enemyharrassment fire

Once Co. I and Co. L had· enroure way. Ihe companysecured their respective objec- stoPlled some 400 ,"-eters westofrives. Company K.· 3/3, added the "dge. There, they got anotheranother victorious assault to the call saying that Co. K hadbattalion's victories with the regrouped and were in control ofc81>ture of Puu lehue. lava Ridge. Afler which. Co. l's

Butthis wasn't the tinieto gloat ne~t orders were to proceedovar .its Winnings'. Although the through Co. K's defense and link

'There must· be some place' to .90?It'-a finally here, the weekend

and the day America has been .weiting for. Waiting for 200 years,aa a matter of fact. Ifa JULY 4.1976-:;-

Just allother weekend? .. ,NOT sal There are avenll ached·'uled for the local area from fire·wOrka diaplays to perac!ea and oldfaahioned berbecuea. So. hare'athe~p. .

There. will be an otd·faahionedOlIlebratlon at ttie Hale Koe Hotel-' Fan DeRuaay thla weekeod.Team round-robin competition inAnd \/011e~II, and male endfamale tug·of-war. plu. a1Mtbecu8 buffet will hlgh/lgltt the

·fwtlvllie. at the millUiry hotal.-Jland and choral groupe from theMainland and alao J.J. tha Clownfor all the kiddie. will perform at".,-Iou. tlll'lll' tomorrow Ind~". ,1M e.rbacu8 Buffat will be8undel' at 11 I.m. to 4 p.m. 1M

Wa( Muaeum will also bededicated Sunday at 10 a.m.There Is an ·admi.aalon charge forthe barbecue. I

At 1 p.m. al80 Sunday in Kailua,a perede will march down thestree~ headed by Jack Lord,grand marshall and slBr of thepopular CBS Hawaii 6-0' series.He will lead more that 40 entrieain the Fourth of' July CelebrationParede which' will atart at 1 p.m:

.There will be live entertain­ment and ana and crafta exhibi­tion. after the perade and a bigfireworks diapfaywlll fill· the skieaat8 p.m.

""80 on Sundsy at SchofieklBarracks, three big ellent. will beheld at sm. Field end everyone iaInvited to attend.

An ecumenical _ahlp with athell'lll of "In God We Trust" willbegin at 9:16 a.m. A combinedchoir Indthe2lilh 'TroplcUghfn.

;ng" Infantry Division Band willprovide the music. . .

AI noon, a stirring 5·roundcannon aalute to the netion will.be fired at the flagstaff.

Evening festiyities will begin at5;45 p.m. with a performance ofthe popular Tony ComPton Showfrom Waikiki. The 25th DivisionBand will give a concert after thatshow. .

After th!l' c'ancert. the "ArmyGrand Tatoo" will be held with acaat of over 200 performing theahow wm honor all the stataa andifS territoriea.

And then more fireworka. Thedlaplay ia billed all ona of theblgg8at flrllWOrka diaplay everheld on an Army installation.

In tha event of inclemenl_ather. the worShip serviceswill be held in Conroy Bowl: Fire­woika will be reschedule(J for~y evening but the showwill not.

Fireworks incidentally, areprohibited aboard Marineinstallations irl Hawaii.

Tomorrow. the N.avy guidedmissile cruiser USS Reeves willbe open for public visiting at PearlHarbor's Hotel Piers from noon to4 p.m. Visitors are asked to enterand leave through Halawa Gate.­located adjacent to the ArizonaMemorial Boat Landing.

So there is a lot going on. Butyou atill mList remember that witheverything happening simultane­ously, more people will be on theroad celebrating our Indepen­dence Day weekend.

It's a time for celebration andthat one more drink or thet eXlraten minutea in the water couldmeka one of the most jOYQua daysfor the entire world one of themoat mournful days for you oryOur antire family .. Heve a \lOOdtime but make it 88fely.

Page 8: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

Page 8. Hawaii Marine. JulV 2. 1976

( Classified ads )

I)

MOVING SAL£ Fro.. Sit.' Sun 1804·8 S lIwr.fICI Ad 0lII·doOflu1n.fnllllloldr,.pto::niCI8bl1.S..,.~r~.

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ONE 6ELJEO ..... tw rRlItf(f4",. Iowmile•• ,II. IJII lubbe'u.. houllll1.nl w/rlldwoOd lilli'll" '35. II n_lld hOUHpllnl. In 00'11""""" .35O ..(h. 1 o;h,I(I'. eI'''" '10. J_10 plenflt. w/bioom• • lIu,l. 110 uch ClJJ 261 4118'DWH. 254.J9.1 6 AWH

The .ppe.r.nc:. of IId...... U..ment. In •thl. publlceUon doe' not con.Utut. .nendo,"",-nt Dy ttl. o.~'tment of ttleN.W M th. ~,IM COfP' 'ot Products Ot.fltlCH .dwrtlsed.

. Ad .ublTll.lonl .,. go""'"" Dy anddt6d In MarIne Co,p. PubllcaUonl .nd .PrlnUng R_gu ..Uon.. Ad,,-U"ng ..PfOhIbRIld In .,.,k. publk.tfon.. WhenIn.,t" by. Of' for••ny prl.,.t_ Indlltldu.l •"r"" or corP~Uon _)IQtPt tt,.t .t.t1onnew.PI!per. mIIY cont.ln ft.. ..I'dnoncom,,*,c~1 .Mh..t"ln. of ,ul OfpelIOn., prolMfty or of ..,.,Ie., orr.,.d byend for petton.,.' of (he Itatlan for (II..,con..,.nlerl(l8. provIded such ad""'tI.lntrep,...nh -" Incident.' ••dI..n.. bet• .."J*'f,onIMI of the ~vat U ..«Illlftnwnt ..netnot ••u....'n. bUu"", o,*,.,lon. Such__.,.,U..ment. AMY InclUde k»ft ..net foundnoUCfto ,,,.tI,,.. 0' 01'''' «IY IMl'"tclnn""'fIMd 10 or .mployed by th_ '..:llItI..wfl'cfl .r. u..a « .r. to be utMl .. the~All,.~o, t",H,.,UMr.

CHAIN LINK l.roo::,ng.IIOIIt' '111. - be"offll Ifl""""" w/glltCall2l1t 4&111 OWH. 264·3816 AWH

ART CARVED 14k' gokl~ ""111 • ""ldung dilmond"""""""111 '"",, "'nd_'2OD/bnlotI" (;pi " ... 261..21&1 DWH.

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TWO '!'fAR old MII'plopIllId 1_~, .....lIh efl.. eI'c:he,.462r..4·42.G9

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ACCOfIlDlAh no. v,oomIn·. Huffy , 1IPd. big "II. Call 167·2210 OWH. 264·1103 AWH.

Miscellaneous

lHi MGI·QT. wire ."",., IIClIo. "400. 211·4634/477-8149 LICoi Jln"n. .'

117IYAMAHAI50 ~1I'l1Ic:ond.. loWm,"e",.I~IedlIoti..y blI.plu••." '"150. till~ Reed267-31&401211.41130 •

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1911 Ctlf\o1:LlE 3Q74 df.•ul0,·116/oHel. 247·2377.

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Page 9: July 4: 200 years f defended freedom · Cpl, Jame. Cade CG·. Office It would take a lot of planning, and I think it wouldworkreallygoodbut it would take years of plan[1ing. People

What'sat·the flick?

ENGINEER LUMBERJACKS - Up a tree toclear fields of fire and trajectory paths are Ser­geant Barney Riego (with cha)n saw)anej Pri­yate First Class Joe Vallejo of Compeny A. 3d

, Engineer BaUalion. Fifteen men from K-Bay'sengineer outfit also built fortified machine gunand grenade la4ncher emplacements a,roundthe Navy Communication Center at Waikele.

Prl Sit Sun Mon 1\aet WMI Thurtil"""';I" 1\' te 14,15 16 II 1 '. 56" '"71'.1\1' I ItlH\IL) I• ,,"'UyTt' ....HUlll 12 13 ,1'" (),

. '7 I ~ 1'.111.("MPSMITU .. 9 10 5I'/j',lllArt \HfNt""i\I.KJ\('kS 3' .711' ,"

~beap' ~brillsNow come on Leeward side, I

know that my nippy game has taKenon a bit of an icy sting but that's noreason to freeze up. Look at K-Bay'swinner Major Nick Carlucci fromBrigade G-3, who aimed in onGlacier's iceberg of lrivia slUmpersand fired away ttie correct answers, 6ecom,n'gthe first officer to outskate the cool Marine. Forthose who fell victim t6 ihe trivia hail, here arethe answers:

1, "Medic, ", medica! ({rllma series acclaimedfor it~ realistic'portrayal 0/ hosp'ita!,problems andpraCllces. .'"

2. Mike Wallace, reporter/interviewer whoinitiated in-depth interviewing on his prog aQl

'''Nightbeat.'' .3. Edward R. Murrow, opened his show with

the words, "the name of this program is personto person." , _ ' '

4. "Toast {If the Town:' TV. show in whichMsrtln and Lewis made their comedy debut.

6. President Eisenhower, first to have hisInau~urationseen from coast 10 coast on live TV.

ThIs week, the iceberg ,kid wants to lest yourwits in the field of sports. Digging deep into hisrefrigerator of trivia, Glacier has selected someteasers that will throw you a curve, burn your, .twine, hit you with an upper cut, tackle yourbrains and have you be'uing at the track. Still feellucky? Then dodge the sting and give us a ring at26.7-2431.

1. Gene Tunney lost only one of 76 profes­sional boxing matches'. Who 'defeated him?

2. Horse racing's Triple Crown victories in theKenlUcky DerllY, Preakness, and Belmont Stakeswas won in 194B by Citation with Eddie Arcaro.the jockey in all three races Arcaro rode anotherTriple Crown winner in 1941. Name the horse:• 3, The first Supsr Bowl was played in 1967

between what two·clubs?4.' What pitching record did Babe R\lth set

while pitching in the 1916 World Series·for theBoston Red Sox against the Brooklyn Dodgers?

6. In 1968 a record Wlls set for the largestindoor basketball crowd '·at the HoustonAstrodome. Who were the two teams in that

arne. '

~: i~·.I...:~I:'~~:~"_~~~~ ~:'~~i.<;O~;:'~~J. WHEfIll THE OlIII .LOOM - H.rlY De.,.., O. drlml.... £"""0 - ~~, OItine t..6d. PO, .,m.5 THI """'NGI" AND THI OUN'tQHTlft - ~ Vln elM', PG, d"m.e ....D NEW' IIMtI _ Wilt., MlnNu, filum O'Ne.L PO. C(lm«ty .1. "OlIN AND MARlAN _ h'" Cc»n....,." Audrey Heopbutrl, PO. ltd...nlU"8. IMILI! _ "'_ Off", &',Mr' F.ItkIn, ;0. COIMdY .9. THE Tt"MINAL MAN - 0.00.. &.911. ...IMn HecUn, PO, .u.n..

,10 CACTUIIN nt••NOW _ ftldl••d Thom..,~.. KIng, PO. comedy'1. ItIUI" 'OfICI- ,hit., ..VII .... ~., Fonda. 1\ df.m. I12 HOMI'eomf. - "" ~, Fr.,.",.. Ful/llr. I'G. horror13. THE oYftRINncllHI" Of DUDDY It"AYfTt _ Alchtld DI.y1u", PO. dllm.'4. O,","ATION DAV"'IAIt _ T1molh., 8otIom., Mlltln ShI"". PO, dt.m.::: =1~~~I':~I~N":~~:~~,":l::.t:;~~=:~h?~=:UfI