H W.. U., 'iw ,Mrk ,Y , I .A .Z Wx f -fr wwf' .ww ,Wy 1 , -, ,ww f, ,M ' fy w? 3 'fS uf. . qv- wg-fy,..um af-VFW M. ,V-. ,, . -.W , ,,,. M ,...w wav' ef --v...,,:k f .,,., ,, V fWmf.5i,,'.,, .. nv? may Wm , . ff ,,,., , .Mmm . .uf ,IX , . W ,A , . W wvxm, 15 1? ,W A Y ww. , .... 4 , W--v. Mm Q, ' -'fW f-,., ' M .1 'svn-w,4Wf, Q fi n Q , 3, - ' gf 2' 'M .vw . - V+-Q? 4, 3 fu, ,wJ,,,Z:., 4 ,ff A , W. - ' M2 -, , 'mr-..ff,,21Qs.f '1f N: d 'm.,: ,,,.,, M. Wi ' v' V M ',,, M-' ww f. ' ' N- A-1--' 3 uv+ f . IQ: ,. 1-Q MffT'f Mf' g A M . ' A A ' ' 1 A - , awlrv--vvv ' ' ,,,. '?4w-1 at W M ' . . W f 'W . ' K -ynfff -' ,, f- ,um , ,. my-W, - .gp A rQKt.'2sfr'jg....,,, W A ffm IM. ,gf I ,, we f ' A fy .MX r N ' '-- , ,, 'V ' 'A .Y ' i f-eh-om, J ,V ' M -N. ,NM 'K9Q9',, .W v . .WQMWA n A ' me ' ZW ' .1 ' ' , - t. W.. WW 5 f,,g H ..1ln-is., .,, Y I ' ' Hypml ' M .1 ,w,.g, -f WN' - .f 5- V M. ,Jw Wm, , W, - Vw ,D ww., V .N -,. QM I mt, ,..W t , .Q,. ,, , K ,,,,, , - Qin' ' 'FW W-ww 'N A ' '- 6.1 -w,,,G..x.. A k my ,f.:aX k ,.,Q. ' ,, , -um 5 .JE K , , D k ., V Lf. X M M ,A,.wb H W1 V ,, ..a:j-,-aQ4.,l. sb. W A , Mew-mf Y W- W , M A W qw MW, . v M ,I ., ,,,...,W . K M,,NWy: nm - 4 - A -f. , M 1w,,,,, W .,.,.,, ,N W. ..j.,,m,,, KJ . , A, M ' - f ' 'L-fl W- 3 A ' gf um., F ,.f'f'Qge' ., .WM , A H ,f V , W., H N 1, , - , , waf1f +Qwk K K A J ww W, K Q,,M,,,, .,.,. ,. K - f 'Wi' 1 fi, fJ4? '3 ' ' f Jn, A ,W - - , ' an K ww- , , . ' f.,M,w.ffp., . .4 .5 . 02' ., ' 4 4 ' .4 Am 'Tf ' ' ff .frm-f,,,M K , , . mm 'V -3 W gapqm. W r Y ww: , f, Jvfhv 1- kv 5' 'J I ,wgfaagsfffv -, , , W ' f .qu ...f . , gm 5. 7 wa ,V '-4 - f'f,?iF ' K I L 2 IH i l I 5 . I Q 1 f' A, USS PCRTERFIELD DD-682 WESTPAC 1967 V91 TSW x my 2672-2 . f .,-. vgfggff 'Q W .,,. lf we ,nf 1-QM' ff. ,, I , ,, I E-3 wmv 1 .,.m,f,.T.-, 5iQ55.gEkff:3:Ss15f1i ' Q. HE -l1Z :f f Z::,:?'LFj'11fQg' V, - 5 ,S h ff ! A 'l ,aug . zjgIs51f,j yff'gg'j 'ef.zIfE,1::ra - - .- KefifwzrxEliasEaiiazsfsiif,-4122 Y, ., , , QQQQLLW 12233 :-1f.z4:f':fQf'L 11' 1-ul . , ji 1,3 ,fs ' 1 ' kim CHANGE OF COMMAND f 1 may . W Wg 1. LCDR Wright is a graduate of the United States Naval Academy, Class of 1954. He has had extensive experience in the De- stroyer Navy with greatestemphasis in the Weapons area, beginning with his first tour of duty on board the USS WREN QDD- 568J as Fire Control Officer, ASW Officer and lst Lt. Following his next assignment as CIC OfficerfMissi1e Control Officer on the USS TOLEDO fCA-1337, LCDR Wright was Commanding Officer, USS PORTAGE QPCE-9025 for two years. LC DR. Wright then underwent two years of training in Ordnance Engineering at the U.S. Naval Post-graduate School, Monterey, California. From July 1962 until January 1964, he served as Weapons Officer of the USS TOWERS QDDG-95. His last assign- ment prior to the PORTERFIELD was at Naval Ship Missile System Engineering Station, Port Hueneme, as Project Officer for various developmental tests. LC DR. Wright reported on board 7 November 1966. 3181 '- - - ' , WGQ5 ffl t ,L -V-. ........,..ru..a..,44....,..n-vf-e...,,a,.,.,..4.......eV..L......-.' --A--A K --f - ,Nd . V if :,.l,,Y-.. g,.V,:,.aw.,-g- -,af faf- f A - ---fl - -S- SHIFT CO ORS! May 15, 1967, Pier 2, San Diego Naval Sta- tion. On that sunny morning the USS POR- TERFIELD QDD-6825 made preparations for getting underway. The last embraces were shared, the parting farewells voiced, the brow taken back, the lines singled up, then . . . . . .it was one long blast followed by three short blasts and we backed away from alongside the USS AGERHOLM QDD-8261. lt was a smooth evolution, the type that re- flected the training necessary for what lay ahead. We were heading for Vietnam. As part of DESDIV 52, we were deploying to join other United States Naval ships in the Gulf of Tonkin. The following pages will reflect some of the reasons why the 24 year old veteran took her officers and crew over 5,000 miles to war and what they experi- enced during WESTPAC '67, JR 1 Q Q Q V' J: F -?'WW'f-P-W Hs- f. 9V'i'f'r:1fzf1rQ:. JW? 'W nz . -1.-, rw-:f f .szfw-2,44 V 1' -:Q W W 't'?f'?f ff'Z3 49.4, f e Q O0 if 1 ,V iw! 1 f e f 4 1 Q , if Z2 1 'Z 1 'A YQ W K' Q QV ' M21 v'YWj 5Q54ig.QZf Z' ff iw ff Z X 1 ff fd - wif. f-zz -1 .X 'east w,,.,:EfZ.ff'wG'vf 'i '.f...-'WW' 41. y 5 if ff wif U' f ' '11 ,Je .J 11 -- f-Y f 1121 'fllfy '11, ,Zli9ef0i'ft4faL'Y. tff5kTf?0'f 5537? ZW?-'fW'T1 X W' 2-1112. -'f'ff,.-Ffimie '-iffy K if N 4 , , UNDERWAY FOR WESTPAC As we sailed past Point Loma and headed West, a feeling of expectation prevailed. during our scheduled refueling It was great. But all good things must end and There was a lot of the unknown ahead, but with some regret, we continued on to this was a highly motivated crew, a crew readied by months of intensive training. We were ready and the guns were ready. The cruise to Hawaii was relatively un- eventful and the days were filled with training drills and regular ships routine. Past famous Diamondhead and then the Arizona Monument. . .a very sobering moment as we all pondered its signifi- canoe, Then, after a day and a half of Hawaiian sun and surf, we set sail for Japan. Again, it was smooth sailing and the days eased steadily by. Next, came Midway, the tiny island of World War II fame. We managed to combine a refreshing sw i m Yokosuka, Japan. HAWAII AND MIDWAY QBe1owJ Midway's famous Clooney Birds . CCenterj SN . Wojtowicz, and SN Bonanno enjoy the warm Midway surf. QBOttomJ EM3 Stewart tries to out-flex SA Johnson. f ,wf2EZ5i5Q,. ,V - gwwyf-121L1.f, mmm, ,' 11 ,. .f fvffmzfsizifbf, , , . f W zefz-rmsreigs 71452 '1i1i11vzEI5:i5s. A115512 'f:,1,zfj. . . , 4e?.Hf:iw3fg1 f.ff1fsfs1 ' Wgfwi--efissfeswfaaff X NINE-f.1,'f24S TI3i Eiffi,f S -f fi ' was if il 1 is V . ' K' I , -W :em ig Q Q V X , f v ff QTopD Waikiki Beach. CCenterj At Pearl, we were tied up next to USS BAUSELL CDD-8455. QAboveD USS ARIZONA Memorial. jill .xt .IA ' , . P.: 'Cup' PORTERFIELD wo rke d with th e USS INTREPID QCVS-113 and USS CONSTEL- LATION QCVA-645 for short periods dur- ing the early part of the cruise. Thus, we were given the opportunity of viewing first hand the fast attack carrier force, one of the most effective weapons systems uti- lized by the Navy in Vietnam today. With amazing consistency - day and night - these bird farms belched forth high pow- ered jetsg destination: the varied fuel, sup- ply and ammunition areas of the North Viet War, or perhaps the support of ground ac- tion in South Vietnam. But wherever they roamed, our pilots spewed forth their ar- mament causing widespread death and de- struction. Without a doubt, our aircraft were a fearful deterrent to the overt Communist forces. Though primarily designed as an ASW car- rier, the INTREPID launched and recov- ered aircraft with the vigor of a new CVA, It was no great surprise when she won the Efficiency Award. Planeguarding and screening of carriers is seldom exciting to a gunship such as the PORTERFIELD, though the pace was fast and exacting. Thus, when messages indi- cated that we were assigned as gunship on PIRAZ, the officers and crew were quite exuberant. NOW SET THE PLANEGUARD DETAIL! 4 .j V , paw ,. .jf , y SEE! QNTREPID msn Z, ivfsef H -' , M , ,11, , h...f aw An A4-D Skyhawk is made ready for the launch. Underway replenishment with the INTREPID. fl- I .f1'2Q 1 gtmjq ezrhw-1' 1 - Us - ,gh .,:!I,,,g sq Q, 5 Ti: 5 l lg ui N. 131' 'T'- S fi N I fix n iilffx' 'N 4 islrzsxfahq. Qk,.?,:g N. 6 As gunship protecting USS WAINWRIGHT QDLG-281 35 miles off Haiphong, PORTER- FIELD found herself with a couple of anx- ious moments. Never knowing whether that small radar contact was aNorth Vietnamese P.T. craft or simply a fishing stake, the V General Quarters alarm was never out of the OOD's reach. On each occasion, we re- sponded to the test with the zeal and ability of an eager, well-trained machine. For- tunately, the hectic moments passed and our position remained intact. As Protector of the Weak , PORTERFIELD was never given the opportunity to demonstrate the effec- tiveness of her five 5 X 38 gun mounts. Af- ter ,8 weeks of tense, vigilant patrol, we de- parted for more fertile grounds. But first , a short break as the sleek PORTERFIELD headed for port. PIRAZ CTOpJ While hi-lining personnel to USS BOSTON, we became aware of her mighty 8 guns. CAbovej Working with HMAS HOBART and USS BOSTON off North Viet- nam coast during SEA DRAGON operations. SEA DRAGON During the time spent off the coast of North Vietnam, terms such as WBLC fW ate r- Borne Logistic Crafth and Coastal Defense Sites became familiar. t Working off the beaches, PORTERFIELD Q pumped hundreds of rounds into potentially W dangerous enemy guns and replacements. Q 'U , M 4,,, if 7 S Wfx ijlfcri I f ,s' Ck!! will Q V v gif The formidable coastline of North Vietnam -- hides the targets of tonight's mission. ' . if . Z titd Y , ...,i. . ,.. -z -N 1. 4 , -.Tn N.. N .L J, Q, :R- '.. 1-'G -. + - . tf1fA:?'., Q14 5RAQ0 ,, I . t . u 32 , . 44. I 'l?T'Tr Working with the A rmy off the southern coast of Vietnam proved to be an interest- ing and rewarding phase of our deployment. The mission was primarily to provide H and I fharassment and interdictionj fire as cal- led for by the ground spotters. We became quite familiar with a couple of the grunts and hence, more appreciative of their role in this conflict. The PORTERFIELD's 5 mounts fired hundreds of rounds into sus- pected Viet Cong concentrations , S up p ly routes, trails and bridges. The disposal of shell casings followed each W firing mission. NAVAL GUNFIRE SUPPORT fr'-ss ...Q at F !f'!1f, rc' A' .nf-' it-.si....u, Ciffli 'QQ V fl 13 'EB Cruising along the coast awaiting calls for fire from the ground spotters demanded pin- point navigation and constant alertness on the part of all hands. And whether it was a call for fire from the spotters or a request for assistance from a swift boat , POR- TERFIELD was always ready. We depart- ed the area with full realization that our guns had provided accurate and effective fire as evidenced by the spotters' words, outstanding - the best we've ever seen , These words are indicative of the dedica- tion and training of a fine crew. Working off South Vietnam also involved coordination with Navy swift boats and Coast Guard patrol craft. PoRTERFIELD'S 5 !3a guns were always ready, 1 3 lj 5 .ir 5 A 2 Y Y ff' 3 g? Ei E new 5 E L E ' ' -ff - --L - ff gf' 'W x P Lx X 1 x s 5... Fx W ANNE? A w : '-,O 95' W ,-3:1-.x gn LT ROBERT ANDERSEN Weapons Off1cer LT QJGD THOMAS WHISENHUNT F1re Control Offlcer ENS JOHN TOLSON Present ASW Offlcer ENS PETER DEAN lst Lxeutenant ENS NEIL LOVELL lst D1v1s1on Offlcer WEAPCNS DEPARTMENT LT CJGJ ADAM voN DIOSZEGHY Past Asw Off1C9F Keeping the 11ne taut prevented many a man from getting dunked. High line transfer to AGERHOLM. PORTERFIELD's Weapons Department is comprised of three divisionsg First, Sec- ond and Fox. In general, the department is in charge of PORTERFIELD's arma- ment and the preservation and maintenance of her outside structure. The boatswain mate is the senior rate in the Navy and is backed by a long tradition of hardworking seamen. PORTERFIELD's First division, which is comprised of all the boatswain mates, is no exception to this tradition and can be justifiably proud of the condition of the ship throughout the cruise. This was accomplished only be- cause of the division's pride in themselves and the ship. A scheduled holiday routine or stated liberty time was often not ob- served by First division personnel who could be found completing the necessary Work to keep PORTERFIELD in top con- dition, In addition to the ship's maintenance, First division had other tasks, one of which was rigging and controlling PORTERFIELD's refueling, rearming and replenishment evolutions. Time after time, service force ships complimented the ship on her smart seamanship in carrying out her functions. Many times the ship would c o m e off the firing line and make a run to refuel or re- arm and then run back to the firing line. W 1 6 4,11 HPSR? First Dixfision personnel make the necessary preparatlons to 1nsure that Ens. Korff won't 1 53' get his feet wet. s ,M-A ffl? -,S A couple of deck hands helping to keep the decks 1 looking sharp. X, Xefx X , x f fw X sf- 'q,,y,, px, ,N eff The PORTERFIELD prepares to refuel while the INTREPID takes on fuel on the portside. W ' CTopj LTJG. Whisenhunt, Fire Control Officer, gives a briefing to the mount crews and handling room crews before a firing mission. CAboveD ENS, Dean and ENS. Love-11 compute a fire control solution. f --- Fox division is comprised of Sonarmen and Torpedomen. Sonarrnen operate and main- tain the SQS 29 sonar aboard the ship. This requires a highly skilled and qualified per-e son for, he must not o nly be a technician and troubleshooter, but he must also beable to carry out the difficult function of track- ing and evaluating underwater contacts. It y is to the c redit of the PORTERFIELDYS' Sonarmen that the equipment of which they a were in charge had few c asualtioes and h those problems that did ari s e were haned dled quickly, efficiently and professionally. if 5 - :?1 2 EE 5 - 'Z-f , Y-12' 1 V V : 1 1- A, . w -- ,xg-3,- a: 51 : ? 2 : ? H .,,- 2,-: l af -5-I.: , 2 f:,l .,f- 2 --,.,.gY- -f : ..-- :,.,--2: g - ,Ii f - ,,. In Tf. - - f f :gf fffffn Y i is ' - Lgrm ' ? : 2: l? ,ifvg f 1 Z1, Ei: :: , l 22 ' -'- li ' !l ' ' :JZ -- ,- if .4 f ,i H 5'-5 2 2 if f .,- g- 5 ?' 1 + 'f 5,1 f 4- ,.., 1 - 3 , .ll --f Y , , , -. ff if ,Q , :ff Y, 1 5 af .-5. ,iff ,Q , ff ..fTf,l Y ff f-f l, , f ,-if 1, ff' ff - ' f 1,4- 7 ' -.5--1-f -:gif 1 ieffi f- gy: lf ff,-f 1 7 iff , - 2:5 , ,, ..- ii- - Y ,, , ,- ,., ,,.. - iii-f -f Y ,l if :Y -- jg --5 ii Z-, TY, -L7 - L,- f Y ,J Y Q 4 W Z: I - Y ' fiig-S g +5 Y- . -i fl- rx YY it-Y if 7,2 V -- Y-V ,.- Y ..,- Y -Y lf- ::1 -le f il ir-T, Aff if l! Y - , - ,Z i-- Z: 4:5 if i i W V, , -.i :ez A, .. ii .., V 1 , ...f- ,.-i W 77 ,, ji ,J fr li 1 - -eff f 3a5Y r Y - f, fe- L.' - i - ,fr .4- 134 Li 'ffff - :- -1 :rf 7 if 1x,,3: Man your unrep stations! Q Q W H VK r WL, WH- ,V 1 I .V t if LW, 35 --fi 'r ,f 7 Q ig, an fimarfnn 'M T .ne Q, A. fy I f 7 i me One way in which we received hundreds of rounds of ammo. From the sky came the majority of our mail and virtually every chaplain. ksiiii r-W,ff rife. - M rf , I I' I I - I' , . W! JZ. IQ W. vo ,,....,Q,. LT. JOHN BLACK Engmeermg Offxcer LT. CJGD HAROLD GREMS MPA ENS. DAVID KORFF DCA ENS. MICHAEL CHURCH Electrical Officer ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT LT, CJGD PRESTON PETRE Past MPA With all these crazy clocks around, I still don't know what time it is. The engineers accomplished an often over- looked feat this cruise---they made it pos- sible for PORTERFIELD to meet all com- mitments. Boilermen, machinist 's mates , electricians , shipfitters, enginemen and machinery re- pairmen make up the solid organizationthat keeps the ship running. With the dedicated efforts from a crew that manages to keep up a 24 year old plant, the meals were hot, the air-conditioners cooled the ship, and when we were to shoot at a designated target,we were on station and shooting. Working with a schedule that demanded PORTERFIELD on the line approximately 8096 of our deployment time, the stalwart men of the engineering department found their beach time lim it e d because of items such as fireside and waterside cleaning. Although, on one occasion, they more than made up for this problem by throwing a very successful party, while in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, PI. ANT .M xv P13 Q. ,QW , u . ,,,, f Q X 9 'S ,,,,,gm,.w Nnwwmvfww- MMI Leggitt displays his handlebars. No Sir, nobody but BT's back her rv The Engineering department is faced with the challenge of keeping up with the f as t attack carrier task force. PORTERFIELD logged close to 50,000 miles in her five and one-half month deployment to Westpac. She burned two and one-half million gallons of fuel oil. In spite of this tremendous de- mand on man and machine, the ship never had a boiler or major machinery out of commission. For every mile PORTERFIELD traveled, the engineers distilled 42 gallons of water necessary for cooking, drinking, showers and s t e am. Virtually every p has e of water distribution falls upon engineers. Over 15,000 kilowatts of electricity are produced daily and distributed throughout the ship, enough electricity to supply a small community. The electrical division maintains over 1,000 items, ranging from reading lamps to the ship's gyro compass. Needless to say, it would take a small book to enumerate all of the en ineer's res on S P ' sibilities. Suffice it to say that they per- formed their duties superlatively through- out the entire cruise. 1 mx, , 1 1,11-5 V ..-vj ,, u'f:,v-' .. ' LTU .--' 1 N- ,,.-2727 4 -f f ' .' 'iff , 3 11-'B 'vs-?:'::5.l.' ,.-r-xii . -' 'G .53--' . Im. .5 :N .4 . 1,4 .qs ' fag.- .-- J! 52.4 f .- II 1' 4,9 3 .-. V .5':Z ' ,..,'o1y ,,,4C,' L- .y,,.. vm , 5411. 'w!?,L,.-. 4 - ,. ,--: L-- ' .I 4 2 ,., .-' . .- uf' .' f. MU' f'v' ue ' Jn'-' r ' , - V,... .v ' rv 3 i ng Working under adverse conditions, the en- gineers performed many tedious tasks. In the hot, humid spaces below decks,temper- atures often rose as high as 125 degrees. But even as the temperature rose, so did the engineers' willingness to get the job done. f. wan Hah! You see, you do find oil in a head. CTopD The overworked shipfitters per- formed many tasks such as arc-welding. QAbovej The chief engineer calmly asks, How much vacuum did we lose? SF1 Piworski plays a little game of stick-em-up during recent nuclear casualty drill. X ENS GERALD REICHWALD Nav1gator DEPARTMENT LT. ROBERT JOYCE Ops. Officer LT. CJGD WILLIAM NEWMAN Comm. Officer LT. CJGD STEVE CRAIG CIC Officer LT CJGJ RICHARD RUFFIN Asst Comm Off1cer LT CJGD KEITH WEST Elec Mat Off1cer ENS MICHAEL CUDDINGTON Ass't CIC Offlcer s . I . ' 1 Tx I - fl Q 'Y:,.4'.4 'E OPERATIONS Operations in the South China Sea and Gulf of Tonkin require a flexible and h i g h l y - skilled crew. The Operations Department of PORTERFIELD proved itself more than equal to the task. In each and every naval operation, com- munications provides a ship with the nec- essary orders and instructions. The vol- ume of message traffic handled by PORT- ERFIELD was staggering - over 1,000 messages per month. Radiomen and Sig- nalmen stood watch after watch, t akin g messages by teletype, voice, fl a s hin g light or semaphore. The quality of PORTERFlELD's communications per- sonnel can be attested to by those s hip s with whom We Worked. Once an operation begins, combat informa- tion center takes over as the very heart of the ship. Here, radarmen with their mul- titude of electronic devices close at hand, collect, evaluate and disseminate the large amount of information available to them. Whether acting as PIRAZ shotgun, plane- guarding, firing at coastal defense lines in North Vietnam as a part of operation Sea Dragon, or firing in support of our own forces in South Vietnam, CIC is the nerve center of the ship. Though operations may vary greatly in almost all respects, the radarmen must be equal to supplying con- stant and accurate information to other stations so that the ship may fulfill he r missions. K Assisted by a fresh cup RD3 Hotalmg attempts another solution X . RG' l 5 ' A ' 'li is xx up Signalmen Dodson and Bonnno do their stuff. W' ill X SZ ff-' , y Xwiwwgfwfsifw N w:wmsws1w w.eq:'f:--ff - H V' f His?-A l., S. -at Zllw X 6, f -,la ,,'1-is ,SE Q -7 'si W X CLeftJ Lt. Cjgb West enjoys a brief momen reflection. CBelowD RD1 Turner, Ens. Cuddington, RDSN Campbell and Lt. Cjgl tv Craig insure that all rounds are on target. par. Knowing where to go and what to do are certainly ve ry important but witho ut knowing Where you are and how to go, you may never get there. Enter the Navigator and his crew of quartermasters. It is their job to fix the ship's po s ition and get the ship safely to its ultimate destination. In addition, quartermasters keep c h a rt s and publications up to date and also keep the quartermaster's notebook , a detailed account of every event which occurs on the ship. Radiomen, radarmen and quartermasters all rely heavily on electronic equipment in almost all phases of their jobs. Keeping PORTERFIELD's transmitters, receivers, radars and intercept equipment in top shape is the job of the electronics technicians. These men are on call 24 hours a day, ready to accomplish anything f ro m small tasks like replacing a fuse to la rg e tasks like trouble-shooting and repairing one of the many highly sophisticated circuits nec- essary in today's equipment to ke ep the navy up to date. The job of an ET is not an easy one and PORTERFIELD's ET's may feel justly proud of themselves for the out- standing job they did. sw,- vsee T 'ai ,Q .V N- 'Q 'Zi L' 914 A update service records Ya ., 3 , . 3 . PN3 Grinstead and SN Williams ,draws L W ' - 42: RM3 Gomez and RMSN Cromwell at work , ?6 i Ay atv al ,fship, ,small on such if 15lO RII',ERFIEyyLD, generates a s 1: arg g e rin g Qannoiint of a e erwork. Staying ahead! of it h e alvalanohe' of paper is the job of yeomen and ,pers onnelmden, Between standing watches and 'sitting infront of ' their typewriters, these inen put iI1'ig.YI18LI1Y hours a day to get l the job done. The jobthe fivelmyen assigned' to ship's office did, under' adverse condi- e tionsfspeaks for itself. A job of a similar' nature' isthat of the postal clerk, Who, be- tween watchesyhandled our money orders and parcels and provided us with the best l of all morale boosters, mail from home. y One never knows when sickness or an ac- cident may occu r and for that reason, PORTERFIELD has her hospital corpsmen. Our corpsmen handled everything from out fingers to removing moles to emergencies such as broken bones and displaced verte- brae. The job they did was greatly appre- ciated by all hands. RD3 Wolf, ace ECM Operator, tunes in another FM station QM2 Campbell Offers necessary assistance to aspiring junior officers. LT. J AM KIEFFER Supp ' SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S UIPIP ILY ! Without a doubt, the most versatile depart- ment on board any ship is the supply de- partment, and PORTERFlELD's supply de- partment is certainly no ex c ept i o n. Its members are like a sturdy chain consist- ing of five mighty linksg commissarymen, stewards, storekeepers, ships servicemen and a disbursing clerk---all bound to- gether by a can do spirit and a common goal, service to the ship. No matter what time it was, day or night, while W alking through PORTERFIELD's spaces, one saw the members of the supply department en- gaged in producing services that contrib- uted to the morale of the crew. The commissarymen were a lw ays busily preparing the food for the next meal. Wholesome food enabled the crew to pro- duce their best during the long hours of each working day. ln the pantry, the stew- ards prepared meals using new recipes in a constant search to find food that was fil- ling, yet low in'calories. Daily, the mess cooks held field day on the mess decks to prepare for another influx when the com- ing meal was piped down. At night, the bakers pounded the dough for bakery pro- ducts as the midwatch sniffed hungrily at the air filled with groovy odors. TN Abello prepares another tasty meal .....untouched by human hands. The storekeepers between watches, spent a great deal of tune maklng sure PORTER FIELD kept on board all of the repa1r parts needed to run the 1ntr1cate machmery and equ1pment They d1d such a good Job that major casualues 1n any equ1pment for lack of parts were v1rtua11y n1l Num e rous t1mes It seemed that the only tune any one needed a part was dur1ng the n1ght Sh1p's servmemen mamtamed the laundry, barber shop and sh1p's store The laun drymen washed dr1ed and pressed clothes around the clock The exchange of cle an clothes for d1rty ones cont1nued each day and never seemed to cease The b a rb e r p nt many hours pract1c1ng' h1s spec1al ty on the crew T1me after tune S3t1Sf16d customers would return for another one of h1s speo1al ha1rcuts The sh1p's sto re operator was kept busy f1ll1ng the coke and candy mach1nes and stocklng the store The coke machme espec1ally was fo re v e r bemg used somet1mes 1t even proved to be a good slot mach1ne The store pro v1ded all sorts of gedunks and other lterns to lnsure the crew was kept happy Re cord sales were achleved durlng the de ployment per1od CTopD SH1 Swafford and Lt Qgj Kxeffer pay the crew ,4 CAboveJ TN Reyes gets chpped by TN Torxblo if ,fy-2' WH , . , n I . - T 1 3 , . . - yyyl gs pg - ' ' , ' ' ' . . D jf' , . . . . I 'Xl N 7' Chi-if ' X9 , I - it fm!! ill- M K J SH1 Swafford at work The disbursing clerk spent numerous hours hunched over his c al culato r and p ay records, m akin g preparations fo r th e coming pay days. It was reported that he was seen several times engrossed in the manuals, trying to find ways for PORTER- FIELD to receive that extra month of com- bat pay. A summary of the s upp ly department's tasks would not be complete without a brief statement of some interestin fi ures Dur- g 3 - ing the deployment, 14,000 pounds of beef and 5,000 dozen fresh eggs were consumed by the crew. Purchases from the ship 's store included 6,800 cartons of cigarettes and 22,000 candy bars. The coke machine dispensed 48,600 soft drinks. The crew was paid S295,000.00 during the deploy- ment period--just enough to spread Amer- ican cheer everywhere, All of these services were often taken for granted. But the members of the supply department knew how much the remainder off the crew depended upon them. All five links of the chain remained intact and grew stronger, as they strove to add that extra touch to everything they did. I wonder where that +'?'Z,!!'?f file is? r if , j ' , - ,' Z H V ,VVN SKSN Cunmngham plugs away at some of supp1y's paperwork. 1. The Chop , standing bridge watches to ease his boredom, evades a question put to him by Lt. Joyce. if 1 4 ,gi ii: -2- 1 0 . riff F ' 4 fi Q fa. , L f ' 5' 'V 55' i' ' ? W? , g 5 526, f wi Q f J f Ut 1,r. 7: The gang's all here and what a time for FalstaffI THERE WAS TIME FOR A FEW BALL GAMES .... The officer X CPO team relaxes after another victory over the crew. I 'C WAS F0 BALL RA AHPS .... --.-.qgbxif X t I -sk, , . 1 env. -. f , . ' ' f.-sv.-ga, -,!Na-.- wa ap., . r ' . of ' ' ' .8135 a- My my I Miz- V A. EBWINQ' , ..w: e,'-ek MJ .',,k if .jfg,, A ' as-bi, ff., , , I ' 3292211 , ' , -.J X 7, L - Z-'sw r-'f '4ff ,Eff K Q' rgz:.I,si1M. -S lg ff 3 L A Q14 'fif'A'.?','21ili?Ey'1g.:,55,.:QNM,:i2zi Our favorite umpire, Ens. Reichwald, . prepares to duck again in a game at Kobe, Japan. A .Ui ,',Q,'? ..,, ,, an 1 r 45.05 Hot action at second base. The now humble crew's team ponders their most recent loss to the officers X CPO's. K 1 ...A NW'K5:'44 .N 1,5 ,W f.,xszs,,, f f ,P A 'W'-f, .w,'-P54 Nw , ,1 1233: .V ,W 9' ' nv. , a- ,-, Q. y Some played. . . others Just watched but everyone enjoyed it 40 , W n , ,V 4 1 f K1 , , ,, . I ,,,,,,, .Af ,ry , 2 W -V - ' x .xx , -f R, ,,f g:f,,,,. ws. -oN1 -R4-A. A:-9: GMG2 Dunlap dlsplays wmmng form enroute to flrst place TRAP SHOOT '-Q. 'inn ww, -.4 .O ETR2 Fox lofts another clay pigeon. . ,, ,, , M .. , ,Ur ....x-... k..,.,.,,.- ,,..-.-.-..h,......L .q....,.-..,...,....., ,-.,.-...,,.. ,,..,. .N..Q....,,.....-,,,..- It's all smiles when Capt. Bres cuts his first cake as new C.O. .--af ff ez? 5 CTopD Not just a good cake, but a GREAT one! CAboveD FN Brown digs into that good-looking cake. SHIP'S PARTY mx ENGINEER'S PARTY 1- K R 'W-A, ,nv-' Led by BTI Mansfield, the BT's from the forward fire- room indulge a little. 4111 MM1 Dunston, with gallant effort, manages to get a head start on Ens. Church. . ..... providing a little flavor to the Engineer's party in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. X Y'1l.iX QV! E xx'L 'U' 'U' 1 , Th1s Hong Kong lady IS enroute to market. HONG KUNG Lt. Cjgi Ruffm gets tongue-t1ed as Ens. Tolson and Ens. Church indicate they don't want to buy any pictures. Tm! M. 7' XX I an f ii. :BL 9215 355' 12.4 an , , ., , .., .,....,...-.v.L...,x.....p, 1.,,,...,.n ,...,.,,,.....,.A........X..,.,,A-u,.W-.-... . fx-.X-..-,,.,m.,...-....,.., g.,......,w..,....,..-J.,,. , v-wh V- We v '4Qf', Fresh produce xn th1s open-an' market. YOKCSUKA Yokosuka's famous Thieve's Alley . KB :nw-f ,. Riding in those Olongapo jeepneys is an experience one doesn't easily forget. --... 1' M e e en 4e e Af E NN P OL OWG M M .YL 'ar yl ' f ,-1 6. 4 Xp'?' Y 'i . 1, we YQ. 'F L f ? fm, 1 z , M f ,.. 5 - .hy . it Q E' x M y I X ' N V V T L' stE!?q3!!!ll.lk .. 3, -lv Q . 5 ' x 'Q 5 1 t 9' g , 'Z f f ' 529, F 'fr in R is f 5 K 4 1, , . K 3 5 S, QQ K 1 f v Y fi X , 6 4 1 1, A Q If A i if . , 1,1 J k , ..k, g3 ,lx fl I n eg? T. ek Kwai, 1 , , .,- ,tx gf- ff? , 1 - s. V 1 V , . ,D fy ' f A A .6512 3 ,Qze-ee,x4fQga- Veg gg We V V 7 V W ,I 5 1 N M' , 1 ,K , f 4 4 -, -. a we an if e NK . A.-.L + -Q V Wei' Q. e e . -r. 1,3q, ,.W,' f aww pf-'G V V A .neva ' ' , . Q, mMle ,w'W,f-?Ffw .as s 'gd ' e 1' 5 .gixfffgi A if ' ' - , fe' , Y- '-' A , - f' . Q , we-I ?,q,1wW'gM,MW'q,. f .grwgigi ' L ' i,'fl,'f':f31 3 n ,'ie5x.4awQ?Q5-nsfmiiix n SUBIC BAY .W .Jn ' Wg ,exft E E Milfs' W 1 K . K .' M wi' . f ,rf ff'-sm , , g J',??1sfl Q , f ' 'S it W' -Nj Capt. Switzer congratulates RMI Wiley on his recent extension. Wiley later was advanced to RMC. Capt. Switzer extends congratula- tions to former EMCS Garnet as he joins the officer ranks as a WO1. 5-A, ADVANCE- MENT IN RAT E -43 ' 1 Q 'f new V 'D X W N 'T A SKC MONTOYA, v. YNC COOPER, D. BTC TAYLOR, D. FTCS CHAMIS, J. Not pictured EMCSXWOI GARNETT, c. RDC LEMMONS, D, CPO S csc BOTT1, R. GMOs HANN, R. MMC SLATE, w USS PORTERFIELD returned to the s ame berth, the same pier at approximately the same morning ho u r from which it had left 15 May 1967. But one could not say the ship and its fine crew were the same . Rather, they were now a highly-t r a i n e d group of men with a vigorous W e s t P ac Cruise under their belts. This team had participated in carrier flight operations, provided gun support for the USS WAIN- WRIGHT only 25 miles off the s ho re of Haiphong, demonstrated its fire power with hundreds of rounds against coastal defense sites off North Vietnam and s upp o rt e d ground troops with accurate 5 X 38 fire off the coast of South Vietnam. In short, no matter what the mission, the men of PORTERFIELD kept their ship at top operational readiness at all times. It was then with good reason that the men of the PORTERFIELD returned to their loved ones as men proud of the job they had done, proud to be Destroyermen, rcs Ll 5 Q... nd SHIP'S CGMPANY Q v 'Q I, I I 4 E ANY ,ix if V T14 -ilk. ,, I ,, X f 3' f ' i ,r 5 .15 Aa, ll ' 1 M 5 W sr 1. ff: 3 . i, ,av if 1 , ii ,,,fxX 2 First Division PTM' sf ' . . Z 5 'W , ,. - S6 Q ff 522 .3 ,f 3 gpm? .Q 'N my Elin V 1. F' zijn , f J , 4 Q ,i ii i R X ' iq f. .,..-r 1, 4 First Division . -, 1 ,vw . 1 f. .phi .M il Second Division 4- snuff Fox Division I I fe h Ii ,Q .1 OC Division Qi SI OI Division ,gi , pi? ' 1 x is X 4 5 N , ' 4 X N if P A til Ji Q 1 'W 4 3 Q '41 .J 1... , xii Q iw Y. Q 1 Nl x 1 4 i ' Q v 3 OE Division NX Division 1 l x .3124 , gf, Ifxf E i as U Q 1 3 i ii K g 4899 5 1 ' ! 1 l SHIP'S COMPANY AND STAFF OFFICERS LT. R.V. ANDERSON LT. J.W. BLACK CDR. J.H. BRES ENS. M.A. CHURCH LTJG J.S. CRAIG ENS. M.E. CUDDINGTON ENS. P.J. DEAN EMCSfWO1 C.J. GARNET LTJG. H.H. GREMS LT. R.H. JOYCE LTJG. W.H. KIEFFER ENS. D.J. KORFF ENS. N.D. LOVELL LTJG. W.J. NEWMAN LTJG. P.O. PETRE ENS. J.L. REICHWALD LTJG. R.W. RUFFIN CDR. J.R. SWITZER ENS. J.F. TOLSON LTJG. LTJG. LTJG. LCDR. CHIEF A. VON DIOZEGHY K.L. WEST T.R. WHISENHUNT J.R. WRIGHT PETTY OFFICERS BOTTI, R., CSC CHAMIS, J., FTCS COOPER, D., YNC ERNST, D.R., BMC HANN, R.J., CMCS LEMMONS, D.L., RDC MONTOYA, v.E., SKC SLATE, W.L., MMC TAYLOR, D.W., BTC ENLISTED ABBOTT, D.L,, RD2 ABELLO, F.B., TN ADAMS, J.A., BTFN ADAMSON, D.H., FN ALEXANDER, W.H., SM3 ALLEN, D.P., STG1 ALLEN, C.G., SFMFN ANDERSON, K.J., FN ANDERS, D.L,, SN ANIT, BL., SD2 ARMENTA, L.W,, SN ARNOLD, W.S., MR1 AUDANO, F.A., RD3 AUSMUS, J.D., FN AYERS, R.F., IC1 BAILEY, B.C., SN BAKER, F., SN BALES, R.L., RDI BANKS, J.M., GMC2 BARBARIA, R.G., STGSN BARNI, W.G., MM3 BARTON, T.R., RM3 BEALOR, T.L., EM2 BEARD, RDS BECKER, C.W., QMSN BECKER, M.D., FN BENTLEY, D,A., css BITTNER, K.D., MM1 , BLANCHARD, R.G., MMS' BOLES, R.D, SN BONANNO, J.T., SN BOSLER, E.J., RDSN BOSLER, J.H., FA BOYD, W.v., MM2 BOYER, D.H., FTGS3 BRABENAC, D.R., RDS BRANCH, W.T., SN BROGDON, K.R., FN BROWN, J.C., CSS BROWN, L.J,, FN BROWN, T,E., RM3 BRYSON, J.L., SN BUMBALOUGH, B.L,, FN BURGESS, O.C., SN BYRD, R., FN CAMACHO, S.C., FN CAMPBELL, J.w., BTS CAMPBELL, J.R., RDSN CHANNER, R,E., EM3 CHASE, T.W., BM3 CHIMINO, R,P,, BT2 CLARK, E.L,, GMSN CLARK, J.B., FN CLARK, T.B,, FN CLEVENGER, J.W., SN CLUTTER, R.E., GMG2 COBLE, B,M., RDSN COKE, W.E., SN COCKRELL, G.D., GMG2 COLE, W.E., BTS Cox, M.D., RMB CROWDER, C,O., MMS CROMWELL, W.G., RMS CRUDEN, J.J,, EM1 CUNNINGHAM, L.D,, SKSN CURRY, D.F., MM1 DAVIS, D.R., RMSA DELSORDO, R., FN 1DIAMOND, L.O. EN1 DICKSON, R.W., FN DILL, R.R., SR DODSON. S.W.. SN DODDS, E.A., FTGSNV DUCKWORTH, W.L., SN DUNCAN, M.W., FTGSN DUNLAP, G.W., GMG2 DUNSTON, W.E., MM1 DUPAYA, R.D,, SD2 DUPUY, M.J., SN EASTRIDGE, M.P., SN ELDER, S.E., MM2 ELLISTON, R.E., SN ESPEY, J..I., FN FARMER, D.R., FN FEARNOW, L,R,, SH3 FERGUSON, R.W., RM3 FERNANDEZ, E.B., SK2 FERRER, E.v., SN FLANIGAN, J.P., RDSN FOX, J.A., ETR2 FRANKLIN, J., BT2 GAMBLE, .I.R., FN GARCIA, R., SN GESCH, M.T., RM3 GIBBONS, J.C., SN GOMEZ, R.R., RMS GOMEZ, T., SMI GONZALES, M.v., SN GOODRICH, D.W., ETNSN GOODRICH, W.J., FTGSN GREENE, C.E., FN GREER, H.L., QM1 GRIGGS, B.P., SN GRINSTEAD, K.D., PN3 HALLAM, S,E,, SN HALL, R,J., FN HALEY, F.M., GMG3 HAMES, A.T., RD3 HARPER, W.F., SN HARP, W.W., RD3 HEATH, P.O., ETR3 HERBERT, R.D,, STGSN HERMOSA, D.M., DK1 HICKMAN, L.D., SN HICKS, E, K., BTFA HIGHTOWER, A.E., MMS HILL, H.J., BTS HITE, L,H., CSS HOAGLAN, O.F., MM2 HOFELLER, T.B., ETNS HORNBECK, D.M., BT3 HOTALING, J.W., RDS HOYT, E.L., RDS I-IUENEMEIER, S.A., ETR3 HUGGINS, E.J., FN HUGO, D.P., SFP2 HUSTON, H.S., GMGI HUTCHINS, R.B., FN JACKLES, M.L., SN JENSEN, G.P., FN JOHNSON, SKS JOHNSON, M., SN JOHNSON, M.W., SN JONES, H.B., DCI JORDAN, A,M,, EMS KENNEDY, J.T., SN KING, R.B., RDS KOSTER, G.A., FN KOYN, R.W., FN LACOMB, T.E., FN LANDS, L.M., STGSN LEGGITT, A.D., MMI LESH, D.E., MMS LEWIS, P., BT1 LINDBERG, R.H., BM2 LUFF, v., RD2 LUTZ, C.R., RD3 LYON, D.J,, MMS MANSFIELD, F.R,, BTI MARTIS, R.R., QMS MASTERS, D.E., BT2 MATI-IIAS, T.L., ETRS MATTHEWS, E.L,, RMSN MCAFEE, J.H., BTFN MCCARTHY, R.T., FTG3 MCFARLEN, G.D., SN MQINNIS, B.R., PCS MCMILLAN, M.N., SFI MCNEELY, J.T., SN MELLOR, W.A., MNS MERCK, D.L., SN MERRITT, D.L., FN METz, S,L., SN MIHALKO, M.J., MM2 MILLER, F.L., BT1 MILLSAPS, W.E,, BT3 MONTAGUE, J,R., SN MORELLI, R.T., SMI MOON, D.R., FN MORSE, S.K., ETNSN MORTENSON, P.J., GMG2 MOSLEY, E.R., FN MURPHY, K.L., EM2 MURPHY, P.A., BTS NEGRETE, Y.N., SN NICHOLSON, S.S,, SN NORTON, R.L., SN NULTY, J., FN OXLEY, D.P., SFMFN PACK, L,D., RMS PARSONS, W,D. PENSE, B.C., FN PETERSON, D.R., STG2 PETERSON, E,L., STFA PETERSON, E,W,, FN PETTIS, R.J., SN PHIPPS, W.v., SN PIWORSKI, W.F., SFI PUTKONEN, E,P,, ETN3 RATCLIFF, D.R., MMS RAY, RM2 RAY, F.J., RMSN REHKOPF, J.R., SN 1 REVELLO, J,J., FTGS2 REYES, A.v., TN REYNOLDS, FTGSN RITTENBURGH, D.L., FN ROCKS, P.F., FN ROGERS, G.D., FN ROLFE, A.C., FN ROSE, R.J., STI SAENGER, A.N., BM2 SAMPIER, R.W., HMI SAMS, D.E., MMS SAYLES, J.M., MM2 SCHERER, B.C., DCS SCHILLER, D.E., PC2 SCHUYLER, M.L., FN SCHWEBEL, D.R., YNS SEITZ, L.H., TMS SELVIG, R.E., SN SKELTON, E.L., SH2 SLAUGHTER, E.G., RD2 SMITH, J.N., MM2 SMITH, W.L., TMS SNOW, P.M., MMS SOL, B.G., TN STARKS, D.E., BMS STARR, H.F., ENS STECKEL, J.P., SN STEWART, J.M., SN STEWART, W.L,, EMS STONE, D.D., STG2 STOUFFER, M.E., SN STOUT, c.I-I., ET1 STOVER, J.E., FTGSSN SWAFFORD, J.T., SHI STRICKERT, M.D., STGSN STRICKLIN, E.T., MMS SWAIN, S.c., IC3 SWEETAPPLE, R,R,, SN SYSLO, R.L., MMS TAGG, R.M., QMSN TEAHAN, D.c., SHS TEMPLETON, D,W., ETFN THERIAULT, G.A., SN THOMAS, R.J., FTGS TORIBIO, D.D., TN TRIMBUR, W.J., SN TROUT, CS2 TURNER, G.M., RDI TURNER, Q.L,, BT2 TUTER, MMS VELASQUEZ, G.C., TN VIGIL, L,A,, SKSN VIRLEE, R.J., RMS WATTERSON, J.N., FN WEBSTER, J,P., ETRS WELCH, P.D., GMGI WEST, R.A., SN WHITACRE, R.W., FN WILEY, L.E., RMI WILLIAMS, M.C., SN WILSON, J.A., RMSN WISE, B.J., csz WOLD, R.A., SN WOLF, J.D., RDS WOJTOWICZ, R.F., SN WOMBLE, G.E., ICFN WOODBURN, R.D., SN WOOD, M.L., EMFN ZACHARIAS, S., FN ZEBER, W.W., SN SNAPS X 7 I www, ni 'ta ,v STAFF Special thanks is extended to the following: Campbell, QM2g Lt. fjgj Whisenhuntg and to the men of OE Division. Special thanks is also extended to Mr, Glenn B. Miller and Mr. Terry Henry for their excellent layout services and timely advice. The Editor 64 W WALSWORTH n-main., nn., u.s.A. Editor, Lt. Cjgj Keith West. Primary photographer, Arnold, MR1 wi if I .- I U 5 l fx z Y - - wx - W + ' - lm..-.-. .nm- g Q9 I umm-u nm. ,QL 1 ...f........m, 666W fm, U nu x X, ww: db J H.-U,-,,.m. FU sumo IVORUFU KAIKYO wrofu To X. :E sus umm. Y' -.f + Z: fu: 5 X- I N A zf ? ff 4 r za 2 a 75 Z Qi? 1 m,.Wwwffm. ig 014 Wo jvmmx tg fn 3,0 sum... nm. In me x XV 'rm-xsmm. fsofuc... mum,w,f.u snare 'Q A o , , . , I-.ua-mm. nm., N1-P--wshfm--' . ogmwmuunm '- a.m..r.am. mmm inuxosmm. . . Klum mfu' 1. xo .nm .rm.,..n...f,,s4..,.. Lvmno sm I ,,,,m,, u..wncx..nm. J'..-.m.na:nj.m. Z4-ur..4m Kwai .mgrunn .mga yu.m.g... uAmANAs ' Q an-uw ' . r.m11maru...x..m.. empm 'A'-'W'-1 1-.mgunn,5uw .mm lliunm f,-,.,.,- ergjrn' Rummy-'w L, 5 5' ,mmm vp , l w ,M ,mn in - Uuunu xg w..-lm H' -1 in N, ug.4....g R,,w,,,g.h, QS. 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