A L09- ,..1 sv- 3 ,lu .-v M '-'Q 'N,.,,. k,,.. brim-Y' 'kisfvwvr Q' -.pf-1. -' n,u.,,,.... 5.11 ' ,,. --f. Y, 'Ibn-1L -+41 .-.453 ,- !s... ' . .. , 4. --., ., HX-- 4- -- ,2- Q '.il ' JY? X- j, we ' .Q A . 9 4' - S , ...- -V- V u,..f-f .4 we- Q IQQ. M. - Behind her lay weeks of preparation the loading of needed supplies the practicing of skills a last and difficult goodbye to a beloved face i v fm el 1 if 'Nvr-Naval: QQ A -nil' .M Y- -.,,. ,K trongdi QTERLW ' l W 41. .- ,:.a - .., . -.Mb x K 'fi f, usd ' .rm, e s ?Q5Ei ssziii 4- Q I, Ahead were the ports U i', and adventures of a long cruise at . . . duty somewhere in the icy Atlantic her mission, antisubmarine patrol her role, ambassador of our country to the nations of Northern Europe her name . . . USS WASP CVS-1S Flagship, Antisubmarine Task Group BRAVO f r 'l.yK- K ,X Commander Carrier Division Fourteen Rear Admiral Paul D. Buie Chief- of- Staff Captain Edward I. Gibson ' 5 Commanding Officer 'Q Ui -av' Captain William F. Brewer 'l in J .Aff v ,fy M fa ll, CDR R. L. Cormier lixoculivv Uffiffor ,XL it A... .gf El I X 'atb CDR John Weeks CDR Tom Sullivan CDR Richard Knight Operations Engineering Supply LCDR Gene Bouslog CDR D, L, Spaulding Communications Gunnery R Z -mmm' ,llla il' F 0' ..,5 Z CDR Robert Mead CDR Glenn Dumas Air C ' CAG Departnlent I Clouds 'x . . swf. V ..- Dr. L. A. Herrmann Medical CDR Robert Kimener Navigation LCDR W. R. Brown Dental 4 ...uv xx. . , , X if I nikki if I.. ,V 1' Q our cruise began... The clziqf' izoml port ofEizgIa1zd, Pompey zvris ri nznjestic' zi'0Ic'onze fo the grciizrfezri' ofold Europe PORTSBIOUTH ENG I ,AN D The magnificently carved and gilded bovv of the l-l.Nl.S. Victory may well serve as a symbol for Portsmouth. England, for this historic ship represents the long and proud heritage of the English Navy, centered in this most important naval port. As a town with a continuing interest in naval affairs, it was a most fitting first port for our Eastern Atlantic Cruise. H Majesty' Shp V toy ll i 15440115-aQgQ 'if M O 3 ' v -'MY' and Traffic on the Portsmouth streets . . . a charming con- glomerate of elegant automobiles and double decker motor busses, shining perambulators wheeled by starched nurses and inhabited by red-cheeked youngsters. and the ever-present bicycle, all under the crisp direction ot the bobble in his impeccable white coat and medalled helmet xv-J' ' l i3 We came to know the town, as well as its harbor, finding it to be l l as traditionally English in its varied aspects as we might have expected Portsmouth Bus Stop . . . twentieth century frieze whose motif is people molded in sharp relief against the city L 3 gs W' , M ,,',m. w , I THE MANSSHOP 'x t A .. . , m.. .,..,.t . iiwfzxthagr , .X v'l ' A gs ,., 1 . - QF.. -:Ziff VM-N' ,y k NW V. M 15 VM . V . I4 - -- gf , r we -- ,VF 1, . it ' vw ' if , .Q x,t.s Q ,, ,. , mf, , r ,V A A Q-,Q .. A , ., - .r -V A ' s ,ta A ',,,l,,-. A :rw-,,: K -- X ,y W 2- mv: ff- 'A ,Am u . 'asf'-A ' 33' a. '42 2' fe l t ., i .. , nf, A X- -if -f rw, Q y v It ,rP'Q,fL- if .xp fm' - 3 t 1 ra.. a- . 1- v c A if i V ' ' -n,.' . in .JV -X . nuns-1---nf..-.,-..,,., -H L-aamf w' f-fav--u,:..I'. .., ff, 11.13, -. . Y- J1 '41-Y 1- M -,,,..ng.:..av-xf.'z --fi - A' ' f Q -, -Q..-fx.:-:W -r, Q1 3, f.- - . -W , Y .. -- ' V vw, A -ww Y ,,,-,km ,.wx,,.,....,...........-...:. , Wk . ?f1':fh1,,: wa.-.,: .,,M- ','710...m. -,X-v'i-nw..-- --f-0-- '-M' , -nfim r K ,, -rf , .,,... .,..,.., . ,,..f A-.- -., ..., - v. -ow anal,-n9rr in Al 5, g 5 4 X-5, ' 'b 5! X- -on ,, V ,,,x 4.6 , gun 1 7 -,.6' ,AV , f'M4-'own ' Y WM, my ' v 3 m, . M ., ,,.L.G3 V I -. A an .,, -i, ,VV an v W r H--n lui L31 113 iz. Q. ' , . ar M- of 1 , , It , ,,t,,. ,A . -f'A?k ' 'fi i.,'f 1 , Q v -Q xii? -su, . ..,, - r at 'W P , M., -f W . 1 ,,X .,,.-, . 'X A-f ' ,,.', J- ' fm, un ,rV?f,,' 1 J get .Y N I 4 ' nf N ' - M :I I ' f if -9- , N 4, in ,, ',.- 'Ani' ' fn. ., , ' 1 A an ' ' ' ,fd f '. if Y ,,,f,, , H 0 . - -a mf. . n Wi f ' A Pj. -'ak' ,- M - i A 1 A 1 R V. A A E- ,aw 7 W , 5, . , . - , -,M . A ,, --N. Z VA I4 Hx W J A 'H' 1 ' L' ' , 1' N, x 'wa f 1 gr 'rg .J 5 F xv.. X 'M-, ' , , , A '1 ..-H iiwif' , L f f -iff' , f'+m. 5 1 K 3' ., ,, 5 5 - 5 ,701 V gl X In ,139 t 7-4. it I W I twe n1 I ,gr '- W win N K, . X M D .,Mw,,ii5-li Je 1 V- K 2 Q 2 V V A fwvwfwwxfgm if ,.,,.1'- ki. lx xx ff iff' iJ' 9- 1' iv gt-. But the real interest of Portsmouth was its people who greeted us with friendship and curiosity lVlen, women, children, even animals . . . their clothes were different, and their ac- cents, but these were people like those we know at home, honest, strong and real They came to visit us... to see and know, to ask questions and to answer ours- mutually, we became acquainted I .JJ 1 -ifffm 'H' I ',d,v V Nllllb, 'Jai ffl Il v I Il -ffiizr-f '1u f uoaflwi I If A.a4a..Ad ,gl 'qw ...ff -A if X ' 1' KAR' ' - ' if L Q .IIJN N I' u l 1 X XX R i 1 , , . si 1 3 1 I ,. 4 ,fs I f ,H Q 1, R I i 2 3 1 fmkx Pa f-1' And there were ceremonial visits, too from the Lord Mayor to the Royal Marines lending warmth and meaning to our visit which was over too soon. Car memories of Portsmouth will be many and -.aries . . , oar introduction to English life . . .to warm oeer and relaxes ciscossions and dart games in an- cient :eos c..r mastery of shillings and pounds. new .zeros and we.-. eanings in a familiar language, the oeaoefe s cziiresoiie sights of Hampshire and here 3 :ne s.-.irl of remembrance . . . one soeo a a e i Jo. friendship . .. -4- ,1111 r t, a fu MWA., Xp .4 r I I' if-1 juli' '. ivy Q I EW4' ' n ' Fl 'li f w kr 34- . V L Y U 'ST Q ' .L ,W 'z . ' 453 hi' A m , Vu ' 4 1. ' H 'Y fl- 3 is in vs 1 ,Z , ' -x-. n ,, cal R f . is X W ' A - -'Q X' D K ' , S 4 if vs NL Aff , a J x. u IL .e .1 A, -1, v M .31 I . A-.LU-A Av, ,jk , V. ...A eff 1 5 T he sonorozis C12 imi ng ofBig Ben, the great gothic towels sillzozietted agciinst the ivfiglzt . . . this was the city . . . LONDON ENGLAND London, capital of the United Kingdom and the second largest city of the world next to Tokyo, is certainly the greatest and most fas- cinating of English cities. lt spreads over the country for vast distances . . . yet it is a crowded labyrinth of streets and houses, intricate, involved, enormous. 23 . '.-1 fl ' I!! F! NIA! Q 1 4? ,ll 1-wg ,Jn-P N Rv 1+ h, 'Plus Jr. V My . Yv- si? f. A , M ,, 6- lk sag Av 24 .mug au M vvf' iff.. . IIHIH -wwf 'fw- Q- 'ul' -I, ' I' MK . '5-va-'L+'-jj afg- 42,4 :uv ,M YK X if ani 0 1 NA ,-.N ',xl'51 4 i The great and classic past lives today in England . . . lives with pride and delicacy and strength, echoing the grandeur gone and the growing future The sights of England are many and varied . . . from Winchester Cathedral to St. Paul's, to the home of England's great leader, Winston Churchill, or even the impressive grill of an elegant town car.. .these are sights we won't forget . The Queen's Guard and the Palace Guard . . . participants in ancient ceremonies as stirring and colorful today as in the hundreds of years past that they have been performed i B 1 s i 5 2 I E I 3 i 5 3 Wi P? fi ,Q 5 51 i Q X. limi: Lili TNT -' Q-an 4 I O f' x Hn , I ff Q.- A - ,W 4 N nw-. -V... ,, EI v 1 , x V- v 4 G I ' Ai . an A 1 , f wmcnsvs A 'f'HARRmN W M IA 2 0 3 A l-gun. ,U f 0 aj '. A 4 '- + ,f ,. 4 LEWWG cw -, 'i 5 Y' .L - .A P v 'A IT . f Lfff I W -,f W 411111414 A V E 5 Q' 1- A V A , A A . A 2' Q .1 I , A. if N z I W A 0 iw ' A , ll f . I 7 A -ll'.....'9:L1L. ' ,one W , in 7. 1 4 I Q ' , rf' ff 5, , s. an '- .2 ' - I f Y , V ' H F Q A - I f Jul: f . I wo, t A A -1' :nib K ' 2 A A if -'fa A S if Q ,S . 1 gfigf- ,15i? if A 4 , W A A 5 5 A f X' ' 1 -I U V iJ'fA7-'?,4,9Q, g'-517,31 -K 1, H A . A I' - f y'il :4-24 A..FEQf:71Q1siQ',, -', , QFET'TYQQEQ' Q-A' 'V - L!'1 -551,14 143' M, A 51-f7'5':'?7fV!ZlA ':,'S-.ix-tw' -'5Q'l:fTK, 'T A ' 'A y S .A-3.2g,:12Aq.1:T.,A' b A, .5,g,a:f3gg A ' . NIV, Ak- f -13.1 , - AA,. A' k,kgK tT.,jiing,L:, I. :g,l,?j5l, AA, . X . !fl,A5AiA2A :VA ji i3ff: LJiiAii 4 7A Aijg:A5 A A A .-,A:giff5,TA-A MA, Q, iff., jfLfg.f.2A. A A I -A V'4,3f'wg.'g,,gg1fz: Tgiffggprgfv ,mgA.Q,, A A, 5723: F 'jf-1-Qfiw A. W W , Vg ,g, an gf-,,,,, f,2'f-'iuvz'-wggf ....,,f 1. Aw- viz. , AAAA P A-.ig '..,f 'W f-me-,b V--V .A qt ygik,5s5fAA5,. . A Lf AiA'AA,:mf:ffA: : ,g.g1fFf,w :Ai.,A.',g:A--- Cl'+w 'f 45+ - 'A' Aa b 1Ti gg?Qf 1 Q' ' l:A 7?f: wi K A R P 4 EE 1-g'E.iQf,Pw+-fg3,g5 -i'af49.R23f'Efgk,3?fQ3hi1r!9F?iiTf!5jAQ'kf,..33ff?,3,.LVg5gwIflfggikgjlr J w x ,. AQ:Qg::. , Ai-5 xqggjgggs-.Ax5 siiitsf 'egg- rf:fz.AA',g 2ffSf1f iafn-a:ASmA AA Mwm, mpafwrr-A1::fp.g A. My ,-A,'A..,wAf, Agfigl -in V Aj-fi tgfhgxgg,-wgx Iggy- f At,,P3g: N A YV V N MMWHNQYMilf'-ff AAAA :gm-gf.-..r:g.zn- .-.A 'A '.fA.:.fT'mf,-+922-L' QQQWQAAL' 4 ina:-J ai , v , H' Mg.: :AFX 1 - ,f fs i ' is lil' The night life of London is up to date . .. with brilliant neon words lighting the black sky and pub-crawling an established after-dark activity 31 + 1 gm ,q, Vx ...o,'fN huf, .r 11 O 4 . 1 . 'f -1-ax v. .. -. e , K, Ng -U .,',' ,, . up 55 Q- , .- xy +45 Qsgffgfi 1:x':4 ' Q 'K Q -,..' M ,wk . , . Mg , s . lily, ' K Em 3 , ' 1. .tl i 158 'X Gym '.fl. VfT. ? L: iv! X54 ' 4 x w in 5 -X X K X 1 QEX. f 3 . '- - . , 21 L: 1 gf ,Fifi-xhff li ' Q u ,V A p fl- A, . If 'Um J 1 , 4 fri, V' f iq vs 5 9 ., 4 'G -it f Q fe .qw . 4 ,- W. fk - My 6 , ' if r .' 'V ' ... A -, Jnfi r 1 ,J F5 ,I , W, N .nf , , A-,L fig, Q as 1 ' 5 I 4 5.4-,, fi, 0 1 Q ffl f ol Q 4- 4' C 'li A ,v -. ' ' M , 1' ' xx ' , .I fs .A fig! , - - v 5 xgyb Q1'e.,yffs.'f Q' ' ' s X. 'Y hmiw. W 'fxm 'S ' K1 tuikwf vwavff '- -a,..g: f I 4f1','.'f,Q?v' 5'-f if 'ggi' X 'Q , N. : -1 4, Fifi-is 'Q , , . ' Q. . we, ,,V 1 M .1-X-x . git- EV. ,A J A 1 I ,1 s ' 3' , x , 1 ,- LQ., Qi i .L -4 I I , Xu ' ,xl Q 'fi 1 ' 2' Q x my v L N s 2'-.1'lf Ai, And at Stonehenge we marvelled at the enigmatic structures of stone set carelessly in the English countryside like a giant toy puzzle dropped by a huge hand 33 0 f 3 I A w 'rf The eternal England. outlasting time and the ravages of modern controversies, the countryside stretches in the soft haze. linking the past and the future Our tour .c Lcx. t -cwsessec e.: ,- thing me cools so tc I . . . ' cs' :ce night life of Pleas? 5 ans Sosa: tie austere niaiestx of life :fe -' .5-s ci Devils, ment. tive Tcf.-.er cf Loses' . . T' .nes 2 glittering. ccsvoacii 3.e: cam-to-earth v.'or'ld. and its Sur.c..rf:Z'g QQgm1rj,'51gj5 -535 as enduringly beaoziizi as our vfeitories be or this cente:'ofEngE1sn life. 1 X i x N X. 1-- 'Y 'e Val J' 3 i Qi. F , ' Y., I x xv .1 'Ss '-, . N E ' -1 ,1- 'fi ew I! ?'J'.w Q F4 vias Y . , s , v u ' 1 Ka 4 ,m U ,, . timmy X !xx'xgni x mfs! 'ixs-F 5,93 2 X I' A dazzling moclerfn city rebuilt from the wfreckctge of the mfuctgect town that efmergecl from the Wow, this was ct treat Dutch, tfreagtf RGTTERDAM THE NETIiEllLANDS ln a sense, our stop at Rotterdam, the Nether- lands, was a voyage from the old world of English pomp and circumstance to the fiercely modern and busy world of this aggressive and enterprising Dutch city. We received a literally open-arms welcome and enjoyed the bustle and spirit of these staunch and friendly people. Attimes,Rttd d I lyppltdbybyl Q- v I ..., Q ng xg 9. A 72 5 J 5' . 3 . ' xxx ' . N lin. I .L 4 1 q. 1 ,x WX ink ,il Q I -ii T' - It V A? ' ' ' 9 4 Q.: T S 'V if A., 'P X N-XXXX. UN x K J vi' K g XUWJN J, 1 V-4 E 4. X aff 'T i Yet even a new city retains the flavor and customs of the old world i s K I s K S 'TN ' I The vivid contrast of old and new was at no time more prettily expressed than in some of the Rotterdam visitors to WASP . . . here, in modern dress. most attractively displayed. the Netherlands Tulip Queens. set against the almost-futuristic background of the A40 Skyhawk . . . and Dutch ladies in the costume of yester- year complete with starched. tulip-winged caps and multi-colored striped aprons 39 Euromast . . . towering symbol of this city . . . A . K .' N2 ' . X , - ix i - K . 4 , 5 Mt X ,. v -ff . x . Y Amt. 44. A , Y M.. o , N l y. N . 1 , i A i it :Fil K Vx commanding an inspiring view from its height . X, i -4 , I . ,. - N ..,, 3 . I X ' J 1 X , o- '. N , Q . - Vx ' X . -BQ 2 XXI? . - sr W K , 'A X A-v .W :gi . l 46 JSI. ' A- . f ,V 4 353' ' .Q-,.. u1:-1 vw- , ff' Q- f'f-I Euromast, from the harbor . . . the highest point in the city, waving our flag in greeting, and from its peak, a view of WASP anchored in the Nieuwe Maas River arf The whole cit5 a bicycle but i.-.ae Q I i Z X 5 pug .4 I For the sailors of WASP there was much to see and do in this friendly city ' SSS? I 1. - - -- 5x'W 7 ?' ' IGx.:1LL1'v e e' x I. H was on foot. . . or from me ccefcfts :f - x our feet gave out-for there was ff'-ri t and buy! M C I V I 6 N14 --an. la vi. , -1 1 Q 'R' .rf ,Q fl, 1-'- X279 Y W I-if . X . fy' f u M5 I Y 1' -fx AL X 'I 9 ni ' . , . ,X I in . Q , 1 A v ,f - A 1 5 ' is ul J? '. 'L X :J V 7' V' 'ff'- N 01 3 - .lxfu 6, Q Q V ' . 'Q if-No 1 x 4: i-at -ig' r 151, .X , - ,, .. nag. ,. 1 Iwi . -3' J J 0 4:44- -L x 'Q 's Q ' N x 'x NK x HPI I' lTHH'iS1 H H ' 1 . nq ,K if 4- 1 1 8 !' 'sa xsx, O I . s 15' 5. G 'S- ,Y . S' - 'QM ,..p- The city and the country . . . ,,.the eternal contrast of old and new, quiet and energetic 4-Q, L x .,.:,k 4. W -1-si.. 1 --.,. ,M J ,go 'Qq.,,,,o .V 'VZ t not i X 1.6,-qwdmf -,. mx wk -,,g4 'E r ff 'A Q In R1Ty,,v..tuqM,,,,rq,w,u .H-pf 41. A ,xf'9 .M FEV . 1. ,,,,,..wr ' ' 'W it ' P av '3ilm-aff. M , W1 ive'-lq,,,.,,l,,,,. ' 1-ling., fi 4'-2-an 45 We found means of communrcatron when the language barrier seemed insurmountable Aa: ,yi 1 AN. -4 .J 5 sq, ,f- 'S I I. PX' 'aa gf 'N-' W? 4 O 'X-. R , L kk.. 55,-A.-.x C1ptain William Brewer brings greetings from Rotterdam New York to the Burgomeister of Rotterdam, the Netherlands We brought to Rotterdam our interest, our friendship and received in return, all of theirs I 9. fzfiw . , n J . ug W Al- K IQXQIB ',, Rv-fx A' tlfx '- 9 ' Ng.. 1- .Qi he . v Q' ' y , .' -' N. -, 5-.' r, Ax x'l' ' f 'J 3 - ,'K 'fem' 'Q N I ' 'o P .2 , X 'Q LW 1 -s -4 x ' .l . A ,' v 5 fs--' I ' . Bw-, A -4, r 1' .4 ' - I W if 5. ',r Q i'f,.'!'.s 3' flu , . 'y Nl' , X CX 1- ,H ' 2' 3 ,' ,I I t yn L' fi: f-, ,I xl 'x ' ' iii, if . -, ' .1.' A n xl xl! li' JI -'gl , f Lf? nil I I' '30, l lxibf rflsl I... 1 . ' - xx 'I -3 'Ju I D fy X B I. 0, M 'f . LL' R? 'f ' ': ' I, . ' If ,., ,:,- ' ' r X A ffv ' Q ' . A K l , I 1' ,...,X. V K . t: V Q ' at xr V' '- rf J. I if , - f s . v , - V' 4 ' I ' ! . iv xfx-55... 2 , 'H ' ' 'I 5 as ,Q , . ,A . ' X I I I , 5 s I W , IJ l.4Y' ,fi ' A A' -1 . -. 'fs n l,, ' x x V' ' p- , v u ,f - L ' ' fl 'x ' ,-I , ,, 4 ' -' 1 L '..' 'N ' . 1. f 4 -'- , . - '- . f- 5 -Q, x 'L fwf'-+ , 'P H wa- '- AX f 11 -If .- .A s - 1--., .aim , A f-iffx ,.5. I ,, S., . , ' -f , A- ,v 1-v--. , ' 'Y ' sv' ' 'f 3 J v 'NN 5? A fx- A ,ii 1 t37w'.-- - K ' 'f':'f-54 , , K - .,,. Q 5 -Q. A 'M A 4 , :f- 1 Of? 'f .f - ' fa- .- 'Nw-' ? :-1.1-Qfff f X N -My . x' A T ' 77 .:a.,'N+4if1ff Q-1. ,Lf . . lg' l gy Pi ' ' In ' -L A ' 101421 if ' i' 'inf-'T' - . ,J , jg 955. ' I - 'J A -' ,f 'l A , maj, f 1, . .X ' ,A ,J . s p KY. i - A'.-A Y Lf. J -.f -, L-. pf, .f , . f1.f ., .1 I 4 K f , 4, . 'fl ' ' X. J f fri fl '. :J IH' ,, -gm--4 Q f' y .inf .af , cr , .- .. . 1, !, - ' ' :' ni -ll ' .Mt-1 ' 'W' ' , .-.., ,J I 1 X A Al g, . L:--7' az, - ,,,,. 5 - - . Q u ' - - , 2 , ,. , ,,, . r 1 Q ff. n ' J H ... - 5 A V ,- . . 4 j Y .. , , -hh f ' . V 2- tru: 5 4 1 -1- - ,S JU X I a 1 X my , 1 f vt ' . ' fl L1 ' L-' - : ' 1 I, d ,,,, 1 r V- - i -1- 'Z - ' -- f A lv - A f ' ' - V ' 3 ZH ,, Y r M Y- '5. , - ., , - gr' El . N 5 ,' -, 4, -. H Q , N- .1 , x ld M ig - 'L J' 1- -1-+: -+ ::, iff 1 . k , -f ,- , -- - , . - . f 'Af f ,- M -aw mf-'21 ..f-4, ' V N f-:vw 1-fn - 1 3 Q W, P .W 5 4- W --gig , qu.: 7, ,. 'Z 9'-ff' T, i. Ma- k,,f'f'- ,.-.rf -, ,, ,f , ., V ,, M N KX X ,I M , .- 'Z f l-5 A l f' '1v-+-- I ,,,- f' M- - - .. ,N-H .4 , MA ...Q X ,-xx.: A.. . 35 ' ,SAW M, ., ----' ,' , A . , ' Q K Aj , - ' , 0? K, X ' v 3 V Q . A 'VIA Q . .- Q ' K 5 L: U ,w 'qi' .JY n .Q gn .V .W :Q My f S76 i,g,..Y H A-' - ,'. -'J . - ' f 5 . r f ,..... L, -, ' 4 I , X . -4 1' bn.-g,2 j,, ' ,sit fr. ,. , A ,, W H .. H- ,. .V 1 I -M 'A 'v X Q. --..J4f x' ' ' A ' ' ..-. - H .. 1 . f' ' V Y IM , .. ff, . ww... A N' ,A b in f f .4 ,V - , , ,, ' ff :,, A ig..- Q- x,.. Y Z. Aw A Na,-apga., f, , ' A - W, , -j , - .. 4A 'g L' x' W' - L' i, 1- 'Q -f 1 , 4' -if .gk ' , ie- w ,, -HX . -M' Q f f-' E-'12, 1.4 T- ,-Q. ,ff-,... ' '-' AMSTERDAM Older, perhaps, and quieter, is Amsterdam but the hope of this Dutch city's future smiles from innumerable young blue eyes lf Romero more SlOl'.'lj, traffic jams and flashing Qff .QFCQ all, ra-, as DlCN'ClES. Amsterdam revolves ' rn vr-f CN N! ,-Qfsv-xA .J qi. ., aff: Q- Cf' ,rl for A0061 rrffasu the busiest Y SCfLlUl'5f:C,l my nt mncimills. Although the ogles of legs and cyclists Ollil car or taxi thrown in ease that pervades even szcoeo, wholesome, well- Sha ,J I ', JV, r . I , , , 4 rv 0 r rv .W 7 1 7 Y 1 F V- .,z ,, f I 6 v Fifi 4' fi., 1' 1 f 0 ba! - ,ii J R. ,Qnhql ,lg 5.-4 I 1 I Q ,r., . Vi 7 1' sk WW' f 4 ,Q,.y '5 ' ' 1 W, ,r -ve'mp 'w- ...x 'L f W .. x Q' -Q ,Y V - few .. nga ,. , V ll f:f ' 'x... W . 1 , M Q V' - . r nh r,3Q A Q, 'Q , S M A Y iymllizv ' Q' . V -vu. QQ:-im, , P 0 ug Q W ,,, . ' ' vw- ' ' A 'I' .J--A 2 ff-f swga ,tel K, -'Q A195 A ,rl ,' .LQ a..wQ::- '-- liita... ,, 'ao 3 k Q W! in ., wvlww ' wr W -'VW ww '5 , f' ...W Qu. 1 5-'.t.., , I V i f lil lr- P, W -Galan- Qw .veA -nf ,pkdx 4 -a -an biz ..4.a, V J.-LEM I .A .P .4 M ,iii auggnvr au. 444: his N- -.X ,Za-hw A 'f QQDQSQA , ..--.x-P 4 W h W M 4 t V - V. N ...:,,w,:.' . ry Q ww 'A'-35. ,LM J, ' Ar ,A Q V X 'O XM , ' k 1' , f fwffwge-fw.m., . , . ' ' fy , W - A ' ' -,N-uf, ' i 1 K Qaqg, 4 , 5.1.4. 1 ' ..,m , . f-X' 'lf as 1 I - - V ,L .Au bw 5 K , ' 4 . 'X ' av-vw x -Cllr' - k U .,,, W- W , . wx - -fzfuii-fm , ,-ff vb- wr ' b ,,,,, W, - 4 'fv f x up H ' ' fp ' A ,.ff..v , Q - f' V- Lam 149- , . A... ' 3. - X ' , , ,. ., ' .ik ilu: V, 1-bw., W- .-mal' ,Seagulls and tzlglioczls ,D7'O'L'lCl6Cl llzeii' rcizicozis zi'0lc'ome CLfjCl'lllSl the nz ist-slzi'ozicleccl lziglzloinds Iyulllyl-S iizystirrczl, iizrzgzbczl land GREENUCIQ Scotland Surrounded by storm-tossed seas, Scotland is a land whose heritage has proven that it requires strength to meet both the waters which bound the country and the circumstances which have troubled its long history. For centuries, therefore, the Scots have demonstrated that they are masters of the stormy seas, as well as skilled ship builders whose great liners today sail all the oceans of the world. As we came to know them, we realized that their indomitable and proud spirit, their stern exteriors and warm basic nature, reflect the years of diffi- culty and trial which have beset this tiny yet im- portant nation. 53 Greenock. . . the town itself and the War Memorial, both tributes to the brave people who inhabit this sturdy country .: ,uex ' A l ttf ' J 14 .- 1 -v ' R 4 . - r iw' ' 1i .i-1:-Trl-'1' jif. 'Q ','-s. , lf ' . 'g - 11 ,, ,, X J' TQ f'1'Q?'f'?Ep3U'iwf EF K ' f ' HH '-, it R1 Yi 1 sip.-' ? aj'-',s4 g,e , ,,. Q rf , 511211? i',gfff,?2-'Q ' A ' ' ' i t , o r , , H'i,'2:s:5L, , 1- , g -rpkfg q r yz' i ' 1, r Xa B . fag . X 4' 1 , In 'QNQU-up kr 0 4-?......,,,,N,,, ,, 5.4 -annals! ua-, I 1 'XM 'NN L Q . ' 1 i f W I ' fl 1 1 ' 1' ' 9 x 4 A p A ir an ' - A ,li 'im 1 1 H 4 k,.:- I ,I 1, 4- 2 , W E ' 3 N' t .-. -, 'A 1 If K A 4,.. , 3 M vi ll 5 , Lb .gi 1 f 'ii an-nn-W J, www I lx A ti' - Q , -'Q' Y' K 4 ' . Yung gf ' n Q , 1 t gd J- yr A ' H - B W V ,- f -A , If wftii, A 1. W 'V f 1 K, ' xxx? . 1 -4', QA 5 Qx.N 'Nm...w I 4 l l l 1 l ,. if V f' ? The children ...the children . .. we'lI not forget the children . . . seemingly universally freckled ,.-L and missing teeth ,1 ,a r i i l i . i i i 1 l A I 3 . l l l I l 1 9' s fife- OO l l I , ., z N W ! dt fuk 1' pl yi' 95, 1 was T! N I -'Q' N. 1' 'nfl qt Ji n. Ak ,1- 7 5 .W 5 x Lt! K 915 1 W 1 4 W ,4 X I , .- Y fb I' x fLnffl1'1r..f Y' I 1 -, 51.134 ' h - - ' . . , I ' 'rf V s, 2 ,433 5 , 1fhQ,' ,ffj -.4 , . - A - L..1w 'n in V is - . if . if Q :lil r f , 251 i' -1 rw l, , X On the South shore of the Firth of Clyde only twenty three miles north of Glasgow, is Greenock . . . known for sugar refining and the manufacture of Scotch whiskey ,ae 'X 1 ..- -4-4 l'7'.r-:',- Fr: All-P ---sv-----f'V - 'iss ',l DflA' hx, , ' ..7 Q- F 'Q . I' al-- 5,1-Hs, 'I -1 1. ii ' . 1. Xi, AI ,O 1 Air 'i fit: 1 il. J u . -,ws ,f Ig' V X as .. 4. a .. 'O X 'K I 1 IF. 2 'fn-, .. 34 , Q -.- P I , i 'I m V14 Q.. , . 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'f Vf'- tri oggvfx 1'-z-tz. .,:,-, H. .. .f..x..1g:,,Q-px 4. -- 'fn pygx K- 7-.ww if-' , ., .. .. VV ,-, 5 ,Nr ' ' 4, ,- ' 1 , - , lg,-'V -I-1 V x ' 'r LVEV-C:f'f? .f-52 ., SfCii1Q-K'1 -4-f-N ' , ,, .. 'Z -- 'W-,-f.--, QT-l ',,f1g-QF -Ewa-ti--., 1,1'4 , 1., ,Q .,,--.Nagy KA fwa- .zu -Y - -- -- -----H as-Nl' ,y mt 35,52 'fag , 1 ,U , ,. , R is 2, M- ' 'mg' if f L ants 1-51 my ,. ' T ml Ccbpital Qf'Sr'offriiirl, .wif iif'Smfti'.sl1 lair, fcimous for ci dc1i'!.' mfr! ruiiiuiilir- lzi'.sfoi'y and the fzirzbel l.Cl'fl1If!' liwriiify rif' its 8l'H?.llTfj EDINBURCSH Scotland, Only a few short hours from Greenock lies Edinburgh, set among magnificent hills. The Old Town is built upon a long, sloping ridge descending from the rock crowned by the Castle to the Palace of l-lolyroodhouse. Below and be- yond the beautiful Public Gardens is New Town, a place of wide dignified streets and handsome public buildings. The city abounds with museums, gardens, churches, castles and monuments in whose dark and forbidding halls, one truly believes that ghosts walk, just as each loch' seems truly the home of at least one legendary monster. 1 ol We oisitecl Plymouth, ct lovely cmcl i'esU7zil place, tivo fL'Ll'l'LCl'l 6Cl miles soriitli of London .... oiiee tlie last port toiielzecl by the Pilgrifm Fotlzeis on their way to the New World PLYYDIOllTH lcNc:l,.xN1J Another visit to England . . . this time to Plymouth, some- what further from London than Portsmouth, hut near enough to enjoy the sights and activities of this great cap- ital once more. While we revisited famed attractions we also made new friends among the fine people of this town, a city which suffered such extensive damage during the War that it ranked second only to hard-hit Coventry. Today, though, the citizens of Plymouth are justly proud of the reconstruction of their beautiful city. .Aft i924 s -33311 'if ,nf llagf., vm M1 f. 'id --gf 43' , .Y - , ar a , ml' A 3- M, A n f ' S-'hx , K -A. f-'W ! ' 3 3 l .Q at ' 5' -M ,M ki 401 . QW . .44 ' 'Q N . E. ,W ij: , . , 3' 'M' JS N '?5aT ' Wx 45 - A . ,.,,,,, -Qu F A .. JMX h ' -A yr f . A, L, wh . ' f - N 5 .N 1' , ' M53 r V1 My t 0- r 7 1 P- e1i iws: -46 ' f 'Ff4fzrL 23,54 - 1, A, , , ,A LN - . 5, HQYQIHTL- K - .7'iT'., aww ff , ,4-fxm fkg fggw Q ,ig ' 'Q , 1- L ' Q 4 ,: I A V X , . , XJ I .W',,5.jxQ,, puff. , u 1, , I m 1-1 . ,M ,Q 4,.M,q,,, N , 4 W ,V Y' Q kk x .A-wi., ' aka ' ' nfl , 'h ,. ' Y . N wa, L- . jf., . 55,5 1 . mga, , Q1 , A ' 1 ' ww.. fm' W 'wwf-n , ,, M , 1. M ,f ,. W .4 ' - , v fn .. gf- - . ' ., Q ' -35 . Lf fj3am.,M, it mfg 'M W6 :nfl M iw f ' 5 1 -W 1 ,, at M V X-M N m b A - wum . fl-. ., ,Q . . K '1 '. V S Q,-' 'L A s wk K . R., ' Q... E M 4 : -' 111' Fr ,I ' 'uh' .A ,,. . d-X,,,..f , s , ,a -- Niwfq 5' . . IV ' Y -,I IM! gif' 3 ffffvf IAQ- Q K x , S -A-1 .4 X . X r K AW 1 N fa: , sf , , .s -. f :Q ,, A Y , 1 HQ N 'Pr W, I Q. 'W 4 A ,V 5 , I 1 f S ' XXX Greetings from Plymouth, Massachusetts which bears the historic name of this city .As .is 1 . our visit represented an e af good wishes. from the 'sec' c Cdr country to the people - ral ws. Of special note were the ' :sent .en Wade by USS WASP ac: Pfvetizrv Massachusetts to the ' ni' Q' Plwwotitli. as well as 3 visit Q ' - .4 l-.t-Moria Cross orphan who . 'ie great medal it is her ,Taq ,Nr .r . ,. 2 .. gl cc, n ti 2 Xu. Fe ' 'S' ,I V I 6 I S 'Q .' :lug I Illlll k usa. 'lilly -,N..r W sfrr .Ve '5,,w , J-... -1-'3 l r Q K .0 3 1. I On the Hoe . . . a promenade, a spacious park, a wonderful place to just relax. with good company, of course 73 Er! l l l I 'K l f if 4. fi, .3 I '1 '4 Q 3. 4 I' .4 . 4 . fa!! Ili, 4 I A ' fx' A JJ J!! rf ,J JJ J Q , ' I da' if J' ,nf S gi, ,Jia ' The center of the city and the Civic Center . . . new, glistening and modern . . 5 J.. :S it -i 59 Q? -J , I 55 .I Il -1 'A ,U I J il A FJ fa 1 D 1' if 'Q 'Q 'ja 4 ,g ' .,! .QA . it A iv I ev' 4' gt 1, .1 . lag. -fwf I - fan :S J v aim: 'WT ,L 7 i ,wif .5 if X' '41, i ' 'a .i'Ri :d,v'f :i 331' Q 'vE'-2,d4,,gfi.l,1..t -M it gi. die'-iii f fu 3 i 53' f 5 1 ,ini 4 uv i -S . . - S !4 e 'flf A X3-eigffdaw 1 . . . few as i silt :mil Pm ,,, it e ' Q n ' ! fl fl ' . - ' t'n e:ntElnIH!95 Vpfarv ti ' ,veeii .'N' 5 ' tri iw EM n' if 4' 'QL ,A As , J 4 . F n v 2 3 . 3 g ' Y . x 4, H., fu V 213 ff 1 , f 2 1 2 ., X...w,....X--n...,. ,.,, X if fi'2gfwri2i1f 2145 YIM? :K ,ff ,ZJIV ,Bl-In-' 591' 'J Ifg ug!! 45' ,JH , , , , v ,, if 'nv ' 3, K 4,41 - -,if ,fx-r X. 0- -,,,..q4v0 ,..- ----Q, ffm-f, 's , 4-1.-F' KX Z 'ix ? DEQ' , W-V- ja 215.52 'vo ,-4, ? ' 5 if K ,ki L f MAN 'W ' N vga.. A KQ- .4-ya, 'ai' I W gyms- - Ffwqiw f 1 t ,fir ' ,ws : :'gi,. A ,mi 5 Jw, ' z . ZW 51 -nl And here, too, dominating all, the omnipresent contrast between old and new 7l Nc'1'c'l' 1Il.'fiil'f' Cliff irc? fiiloll' the ii1r'uili'iiy riftlir' ii-orc! r'i rirwrZ iriztil irc iizomwrl in ICIEL GERNIANY We had been greeted well before . . . cities had demon- strated everything from an aftable welcome to genuine affection, but never had we been literally besieged with multitudes upon multitudes as in this German city. Perhaps our most enduring memory will be of a pushing, smiling crowd, waiting to meet us. As the first aircraft carrier of any nation in the world to visit this city, our reception was more than overwhelming. . . it was indescribable. ,T,'r' I I I I , II 'I I A i I I I I I x I I S -I I: I I I I I I ' A. I , I- , I ' v I' I I I I And they waited . . and they stared .. and they learned . .. about this place called WASP 1 And thus, we remember, not the city, but the faces ...all kinds of faces, young and old, some memorably beautiful, all interested T 'rg-w'eag f. 'l's .xfS1f:E 9 'f-Q14 YV, sf? ff? A kk s N. if T., Q AV I' K1 Xiu 'K Sri 'rf' ff,-R-Lx S K lrfffijy 1 t -. N -Exe 1,411 '-X -T 'fff,,,-s14Lc,,, M y V ffl,-' g'41gg33LlL.-2,!!V y A Qg i , ,?f,.fffi' And, as background for these faces, ii! By the modern city, newly rebuilt. f, ff' l Today, because of the economic rebirth , c of the German Federal Republic, L +-. a thriving naval base once more ...Q ,few 1 ..1-ul-'- A 79 ? 3 a i, :Wi uf I v L ? X M! N, H Z 1 Q . 1 .I i-. 2 Qhiaw ' 1 2 X l 3, ni v' 54 ! , 5 2 4 . , , + . , , 1 Q V' K 1 X 535 - l,: 1 , 4 V 1 , 5 w 5 1 1 SFI 3 1: 5 w Q i M s 5 W 1 2 I . I X i c S ' H 1 I v 1 x gnu-an I Y ,' 2 f w K 1 1 I 'E' 5 Am .1 ml F GTX? f its ' . -asv' ,W ...-,M-s., , fi. 4 ff, ,X -HAS? W .Q 2 ai' nv' 'YK I5 w X- I , H3 .2 r H 'jf 5 fi. 1'- i 2 Alllf HY' l'l's1'ff'1f l:l'l'll.ll, 'Q ll'flf'l'f' flu' Cilfif UYIII' is ll Iliff!-If iw1l,',lU l 4 ' 611217 U10 rl2'i'l'si'nn lirffiiwvi l',,flSf rrnrl Hfrrsf il i N is Cl ffslllrjrlili' rim! ugly .sfi'1ir'fi1i'ra A t I 1 H '! 72. I N i lfizozi'1i u.s Tl1rflVrfN i 9 rlin, the divided city, From Kiel we were able to tour to Be t t many of tne worlds most dramatic tensions, cen er o i where east meets west in tne nearness of across the t et ln Berlin too we were well received and made to s re . . . feel welcome. But at tne border and the checkpoints it was easy to feel tne nearly electric emotions which flash between tne two sides. F.. fx 0 7 'XA ei? Pm! ik 1,1 vm pw ' X t H ..- F-Q vt' XX - ' V X 'S K. ,g9uS ' k XX ' f 1 1. M .f::00 ' X 1 1' 31'0T,.f W X ' Xw. .2-.v-W' 'nk XJ, Q .VAX - K ,,....,X , , M4 ' YJ-31 :V 14,2 'f,c. 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In .W Q X My V w A A ,bfmkbs A V ,jf .yan ij. VV J If X L .X D N KW V , Lf Q K ,X X M fy Lf, ,Mffw A H X x X. X I if f Xffkg -4 X 5 .W A' 1 f-' 45 5 f ' 5A QM if X up 4 X if V iii ff' I , Q ff Q..-v . fu if 'M W 4 X 27154, IV, l .ef-X ' t 1 ' A .N 'Xi , ' 9 A , 15 'Q 4 if f- S149 df' 4.55-AQX XXX ,, W M' M X XX XM if end if gut! XY, V rf' ' 5 X X X ff - as N ' f i'1,::4I.IQ yin' if aff fig Y ,X we X -1 Q ' X ' 'f X. A Q If 'Mr' X ' ' X . f6,w 7' 'uf' L ' -I an ,Xmf-'vw - wwvrl' ' K MV M' mfr K XX A 'X' Q' fr X X + . X A--rf W' Tw XXX -bf 9 A ' iv ,W MW? XX Q Q X' - 'f f , A If X ' V X ' ' -K M f XX A 1-ww ' ' 53 - 5 XX D X Xff 'fffgtf wx M 3554. M f xi-H 1' X I X A T' 2 X Vg gig XX - X '1jg,.c - X gg f X, ' , 7 F X ' li X W I 1' fff 'y g, X-LXX xii K g H K fq: XX X, . V . X , M h,V, ,, ,X,, A N V 5 , X X X X , M QV-f'. Mg., : ' if ' fi., X Q. ' - X Q ,bd fi, ? , D Wm M- 51 X Sim -Rf JK X X ba ia, 4 5'g ' , LQ ,V ' 'X t . ' L , gf K X Awww. ,, .,LX 4 ff: Q , .X fin rf S, WX X ,XX H 51- 'X ...X 'tk - Y 1'5 'pX 'A 2- . 9 'X -I , 1 My IS W ' XlQ.f:Q' X fi ' X Q Q ' U Q ' mi f F X ki ? ,X A . ag X A X 1 uw- X M 4 611' .1 X Xi, A 9 s M ,gX,1:pX i 3 4- ' , ' n-. X V .,..X .gs 1 5 I ' - 44: i A ' f X '-wXfab'H 11 a- 1 Q A 1 .U af'. 'Q t V 1vX Q XX XA ig X X , 4 'lm X, X X .Q X si Q -C ,- if L gf 'ul xx Q 0 is X . 4 X X, '? Mfg Q, I A in -aff' ' iX ' H ,M M615 , .. 7 ' 'fii Q 4' x All 1 RM -1 X 4 Poll er V1 ' an 1 1 , A X 4 ff'l 1 ?X p W ,Xa 'if' , 4 .fX? f ' A X ii' 41' 1 ,-- 11:1 af, , X.,..f 'vw' fs 7 .X if , .X 11 ? vi 'ff ,Ag . 'fag To the chrldren of the drvrded clty the blue coats and white hats of our touring sarlors provrded a lure whrch Pred Paper luke caused them to follow us everywhere 6 . P 7 - 9 ' ' r L ,r --p ,,Q, , ,K . , ' x. 'W-'5 'Tl' Q: -., -4 - ,' ' 'P .i.,,.aP- v . , nk' if Y I Q Ami' 5' iv 4,4-'Jw 'Q' .1 id, .-,,t'.'-- ' ff! f,. F, '-v91..3 as 1 Q' .t ' -v . , re g v C -, ,J , . L n A FN' . ' -fi Q: ,., r' 5:-5 M. n 4 . 4 v I J' Q. +V ,Q g . ,Jr N... -V A t .-4 rf Q . rv- ,uf-1-1 ...- gn w. v. N Y M N, D, ,a,, ,, . mf mf W 18 A gy, -Q 'ff 1 .., x X ,, -e.,.g-1 ,Nj-W M , 7 J 'ft no-11 ,4-, .. ,V 'IM .... ,4-9 ,N L? .45 -N -W , 17 ,,,, xmas I-in-1 .Av A. XF Q ., ,-A, . XQMX- f. Qfvz.-is , :gl Wfzf - M xg QM -QQ J: V , N , + 'Q11 XM ' x 4 , . .f-..,m,,.m -I --m- , , V ps Q Friedrichstrasse and The Wall . the harsh reality of Communism reflected in a girl's tense eyes and the militant stance of the weary MP's on duty F s L , AQ 1 we gk I if EE' I. ll . Z 'I I 'W if-li Nw! 4- ,,. ,, .- . . -Q 1 'A---' 'iw' . ,Q ' - .. .H-. A- ' ' , A - 4, ..-.-t..-......- , ...W I- ,Q ,gm wk --Y-w--W -v-------tv' Y ,,,,,., H - QV F , t . .nw .al-A ' - V f 4- 1. 4 , . . - .. A.. - ,EL M W- i 'Q The East Zone Border tour will remain indelibly etched in our minds. . . in desolation, barbed wire and the stark fear and despair of the German people f. , ,4 . F5'!'!. '1'-.M,f fx,- 1 in . 4 l Hx 7 ACHTU N G ' H Sue verlossenjetzt WEST-BERLIN 11 -A-N.--.1 -- ,ihmf - ' -..- .,., . t -- - 'A N ,1,,...u 'as ...-.,. V I km- ' .,-1 -s ...tr ,...,. L -MJ ,K tx: . - . ,, , , 1- N. -Ibis-.,..a lar- W H -+---M'-- -W f- f ..... ., .ry , , I I ' , ft 1, -.........,... ,,- ,J -ii? - +f 'v'f '1lfv!a-.-,www-1-Law-S ,' fi r. fa- ',-- -ov ' ' ' 'tw-1. 'fi ' .' ' . I ff ,, 4 , IU ARE LEAVING AMERICAN SECTOR I BbIE3IIIAETE II3 EPIIKAIICKOIO CEKIOPA VOUS SORT,EZ EUR AMERICAI SECT MSSEI w A 'vig . - y .,.,,. .lui w M in 1 X. , n . 1, 1 A7 ,, 1'-fy .,4E 'ff3 , out ' ' In y S LL 'F 5, x ,. YW- V. -f-f-'.f ' ' f--Q.. E ..f-4'1 I, 4 Qs ' - AN S n , ' , ' 5 sm .Q f ' X. ,I JW ,f. fl-'l A rl Q 1 ' .1 Q.. ' 4 1 'rj J W-:T7-.r s N 'fs-.. gn- -J tx X4 , w V :- 'IJ uxr E: qfflv lu 5 fif - A 'f .JU -.23 ' -- A L ,..-aint' K 'Q-E- ,N ,' lf , 4 441-' 4Id5,: f ' Qu:-16 'W ' - ' Y-3 . ...K 1 1-Q ,N Jw' .nl A Garden of Memories in East Berlin . .. but it won't be the flowers we'II remember, or the smile on this Communist PoIiceman's face U- Q 8-:diminish V'Y '? v V-rs-a4.aui-an-aww.-LQ.. I x 'if L H Hsu -our A Q M Q an , W n XY ff : . x . . Twig- -ji 1 1-.,. -55 9 'gn' . lox -QQ K - x O' A ' 1. ff ..' tire, ,Q ' 1 lei f Y.'i 5' ' ,A .,u ,A , pe? sq. ,ual K. fesbm. - Q ,nw M-v,,',1Q,, 7- , -'+,vl,! 'lupu- r X ff Ill' wzjoyvrl flw morlrrn .Qigllix rrizrl lieuuty, Q VV. ll'fl1ll'r' flue Njl'.l'l.f fffflll' l'ff.'l'llg.s foollls in Iliff-VI'l'l' rlnrlsfrn'lllljp11.sf OSLO N fl IIYVAY Oslo, largest city and capital of Norway, is situated at the head of Oslo Fjord against a backdrop of three forest-covered hills. Here in this clean and modern city, there are no slurns due to progressive social legislation, but the city abounds, instead, with beautiful statuary, gay, colorful sidewalk cafes and lovely girls, perhaps some of the most beauti- ful in the world. ,., . '1 I' Truly a place of beautiful sights and dramatic settings, Q Oslo was a treat to the appreciative eye -gy vi :'i, ... ,. - ..,'+-- - - E, Y --snr.. --A. m , ., ,, 'u I1 .,' 4 . I 1' x 4.1, ' I I I - . u .' ,'- :f'!Lq, ' '. 1 . - ' . ' 4 qs, 1 ,. , I AF' , f,50 ol' . ., xv, --'g:.'2'of is . - O x .,, , W ' g 'lu , - J . - .ff I . ' ' 7 .. ' I Q . g ' Q xr . ' , ' 4 . 4--x - ,AW 0 I f 'g,gn l V It h . .A 1l I . 1 0 4 :gf 31, , . . ' I . 1 . ',--' lg A ' N c A - -. 1 . X ' I. . Q ws, I . ' I V I 5 s I 1 I n B I - ' , 0 I ' 0 u - s ' n I I . . . I. I-' . I 1 g . , .' My A . 'fd I r'. n I I ' Q . Q ' ' 1 . , v - ' u 5 . , Q Q a . 1 .- r A u v ' , W .-,.1 ' . -'Q' . ..,, J.. 1 . . ' .. N , ..--' L 9, i I ... , - A. 2112. I . ,ul -'avi' N - , ' If. ' 4 'l.-. -. .- . ,,, Z. v Q, gy.- , flfq'-iq f , 3 - ' , ' '-. .' 1' 'X I ,lf 1 n V My '71 .L .v ...M I , 61, TE, .EA-f Ta., ,:',k1,l,'c,',-- .. i 4-A-.v11 '-V+ , Q'-.arf 2 - .v'-A --H 2 1-1 - 5' ' 0.--'V.?','4 .Az ' -Q P Q 1 ' -sv ' J.-M ', . A , ,- , ,,- 'f --,., uggr. ..-fr, K, -g Q o-rv -4 --q - 1 -,- - -Jam -an.. s A - an , , , bf' -351' ' ' F , . ' A' 'Q .:, i A W'--, A , M v - O .4 .- L. ',, 1 , . 1 , . .- was . . , - 1'-W.. A ,,,: .Q-. , . . . f A-f-v. - - ', ., . A Q ,, -f .5-, '. -9:A , sx - -' 'C . A 'JK - 1 , . W 4-V I - 1' 4 I . ,. , . - f . 1 .f , .1 . M' RL- nd D 4? - . 5-ffsi-si-153 Q33-flbf' ' 1 . , ,ov F. X ,3-- 'X Frogner Park, where unusual and intriguing statues and monuments captured our attention for hours on end af, . ,M .,,.,...,,,..,L'.2f,,g,,g,gg it 'T'- All the majesty and dignity of this country's great herita e E , captured in stone . . . as our memories . . . of a poignant beaut Y, of warmth beneath the cold, of a fierce individualism that was Norwa Y , 9'N37 9 - -M ,vqtlg f' '9 in 2-gf L-ET15 ' gf' V , x Y pb. yi f ,gf I .. . ,f ,, ., Q .-, Iv- - . 4+ H -. d if lla R-' E , '.-0' 'N 5 w S Q' 9 'Q 1.5 A , 1 A, . 1. if 7: ,ax gms-'A' 3-' 'fl 11' . unix' 'I ,l' ' so F N 0 1 wks: ' I f, ', ,--iv ,,, ,ns ,I .Q I., .xc II, 'Jn ..zvf',.l. 4 ' -1 q'g2 ' qzfffiiilhz D fi. 'A-in .1'. ,' N . ln I It '1ft4f 'ff '51--fre 4 5 -5 ,Q in xii xg T--. x Agp! 'rf N I -Ng 'L I 1 ' -QM jj f I V ' ' I I I ffl l'lfff 1l'ffff fill rl! ifrFfrrrirlfrr'fll!l!f'IIIIIIII' Q . V 5 , 1 - . . i i ' llfllf ffm ilpfnl ,,-,,l!i. if lilrlilfrlrlf lfil'!S. fill' ffl A . !l'l.1lfA,',x'Il1fl,f 'fur iar,lilfr.f.1l! Ijl.l'!X . I ,ffl i I I IC Y KJ ,XVI li lC'l'Il,.XNlJ Mucn to Cu :oi cfige. izelaod was not perpetually covered with a slweet of Qce, 'sand to be a highly civilized, very uosto-date country., lcelanders .were friendly . . . curious, as our visitors ever',t'.'.t'-ere . . . democratic . . . well-in- formed . . . and amazingly oeauiful. Here, country, iust soutn of the Arctic Circle, is the Nortn Atlantic defense system, and we also serve a tne front line of United States proud to meet our compatriots in freedom Ray-Kya-Veek?l in this island a vital link in in WASP, who defense, were CCan you say m, 'llll Dr. ll! LIJAI. .1 gnnff if, i 1 JE A ,Nav , -5: r ' . . . and how! A .2 .-.e k.-.ere x-.armed by a bevy of Msitors to WASP wif '- - lv A 'x E i i ln addition to the attractions of Iceland we also provided our own entertainment and recreation and discovered the talents and strengths of our shipmates a last fling before the long crossing home .... W l M, , H 4 . ,,g,!' Bat of att the sights, anywhere tn the exettevnent of Northern Europe, the happiest and dearest was that one special fagg at HOM ECOMI N G 4. oa,a t V. , A. ' , - 3 ,A,, F,jM::WN vlgx X p .1 6 kk LN Q- .L:,v, H K 'W . Wi K Q ., xx 7 K' x 'L i 4 V' , 1' - ,V . ... - 4 IQ 1 his ,E 11, , nib- ak, ' . ' ' f ' bw! M ., . - 1 M -w , tr . u , -M W. an - Q A wr -as-Q + XY-1. tr'-. -is ' if on if f if-L' A Q 'A in 'fp'-.-A pf fhkyi ' iii f 'A ,f aid' In ' f lv 1 ,fig And then there it was, Boston, not a city to be studied, or a people to he met, not new friends to make, or a faith to reaffirm, out home - and loved ones who made the world seem far away and even unimport- ant for those few brief, ecstatic moments when we were first together again. 5 I 'Y vf -ng . Ai H-uuwqw x VA' - ,1'Ni,..a: ft x W E .,,x N .- x 'Q-as Q K I R 5 N4 15950362 fn , -4-, Y v Q--1 ' -- , I Ag 1.1 ' l'- 'I -5 Z' X We tn WA SP had travelled the world . . . learning that a city can be known in two ways . . by its sights and structures and, more importantly shy its people whose faces we'll remember always. In oar own world, on this floating city, we eanffincl ou-1' zmclefrstanding of ourselves by kfhowflng how we look and what we do. but .- most flmpofrtant of all, who we are. i 5 4, . . u' ff , . Q ' ., u , .4 A '7' 4 ' ' f V 1- 2-., f..,,., if X ' . -. 'x Y' 3 ,V .W ., 1, affix 1' A ' . , ,fi-vs iilfew-e fewiviv' Mlssms Q f ,-.if 1 , sez-q., 3d'lU , , 1 , 3 ,I , .4,..s:m,q'.f , ., M .. K- 1 fwtmssfl K Lf -U. 1... .. Jiffy , 2- I W 4 Z., J H We learn that we are -e busy people here in WASP...busy doing things hands that gesture meaningfully with a flag, hands that carefully plot a course, eyes and minds that study intently and decide i i Y a F I 2 3 S 1 E 3 l L 47 1 ij 115.16 We are hands from whose fingers flow the movement of machines. dials that spin and valves that operate gauges that measure . . . we are hands that move a ship. bodies that supply strength. minds that direct. training that meets a need , M' rr sf Q .Q W ,AV . '. ' -F Q., .iff .. M' ,QM ,N M fih':,, 1., L., .ff - J. -0 , X A- ,wr .My J ,rg , ,, .. , ,. 'f .. ...fly Lf. . L' A' ,J 4 V ' 1 i-V: WL.-:T fu y-4, ,DQ -nw 'IW' . -iff-,L 4'-3 ff? , V x . ,ig fk m 'ral' ZZ' We are healers . and tailors and bakers WASP is all of these and it is our faces above the loaves of bread and gentle above the operatrng table and hot in the steam of the Irons V 1 if XS barbers, carpenters, tailors, photographer sailor S W V 'fl WWW X ff 85+ -go , Jf - 'Q Q Q 'rf' l , 0 Za ,1-. . is i A-'Q .5 sf But we are more than hands, faces, jobs, minds . . . i we are emotions, the emotions of men who sense the seriousness of what they do and its importance - N but who still can laugh 'H-. 'Hu P 1 Our hands, our hearts, our heads . . . together they are music... music that roars with the hum of a busy day that cries with the sweet loneliness of evening r X , ' I E 1- 'T .J ff 4 fi JJ A 4 l Winn:- 'i-.. RSX... i 'YJ' that blares its independence and strength music written for the dance of work, a clumsy ballet of awkward dungarees and clanging pails What me these jobs we do . . . . . . we who whistle while we wooeh, ofr sometimes curse . . . A gtttfht ship is owes to command the sects ctfre ours to battle we, cmd the ship we sail, get hungry 1 ' , E -, 4- ,- If-, , f 2 . 'rsfgfw myjj.: F, f I W ' . MN' l'A.a,a2-192:63? g4,g1,A,' N 1 F. .. ., - A, K., . e., Q., ' u X39 ! Q X if C It 1 U 'v.Qy I . ., 9 -Q 3 'Q X + 41 I. js 5:1 u- fl ln..A ' ' Q 1 E I X 3 if C , if .Lf f Q M v,.'w, Q, 1 x :N 2iL,.u,.kx.w!.ii: x if 1 fx , ' ll!-TTI 'P N 2 51 '-:Q-Pg.-I A stinging rope, a foaming sea, a precise endeavor 'I ar ' .-J., X-Q -g '.,.. , Q if auf of man Qsgl 3. ' ' gl '- ' ' 1 es'--..L..--ff' --ui -- f Tf-A and ship, ship and elements...Refueling 1-i , I . ' ! 4 I 9 ' 3 - ':-,Q-fs, pf, -, sh' ,J ,, ' ' Q- .J 4 - - --' - 'Htl' 4: N ii fa lm, . Qs -r-Lak - -,L-JFQ? Tb -1- -L H MJF- 'Q' . 'dw ' ' - - A ,':5'b. V Q U. - A' ' ,,.,,:ffe - i -, 1' , fm, fffifgfffff --e. .41 ,E-'lr'-' ' 121, i.,ii if 'K - ff-.Ql,' , . I K -Q' lf N- ul S ' ' ' M Q Rx ' ,bn ss X ' ,x N 4 ,N J N I ff!-H .kfxxg-my W 'K' ' 'iw- m.:.:.. s ,, -.. 0. pf--. ,Am .ar .., , . 'lp-vc-. :....,s..., , H--.M-.., ... A.. , v ...-.,.,,, -N .-- ,-,, .,., .. , N ,.. .,.-.t. ...M .Mc -,.-,4-,, 1 MNa..,..,.. ....,, ,NN A mar' ,.,.,,m...,,.,i,g..,, .1 , ' . 1-1-w:.....L::: 5 4 r Y WM, ,x.,x d,t.-M.,.., , X as .af v-1 I -'af , Q- V' A fl tw' And while the ship drinks deeply from the great tanker, the ocean drinks and gobbles, too... and tears our feet from the solidity of this swaying thing called WASP to the uncertainties of swallowing ice Mfgvssf 1 . i e lv, : V ' V' W I Q f at , ,V 'ifx 4 fl ,f L' oJ - in ' 5 G , l Q -fl-Q - .. - ,. -- ,,A.. . ,Y 3 l Qi. lP.w gm .dx - f A9i' v 4 ' 'I it ', c. fig, L. -71 fix N51 .hu 95.-,. W V Zh, i 3 1 1 i 5 ii ff t Y r X S. W -...W-W i ng ,X w- 'SP rvrfx .-wif ' , Q, ' c B, , .s . .5 ., of fs' I igiirkj q' .ifffez .nw see imrl X, rg, s K K f,1..'- 1 ,' . ' 'fer rf ' 'J' - --, ' .x,Qs! A H The ocean returns us to being men and we become faces worn with weariness etched with tension and doubt strengthened by experience ,5 -, --'iv T' 1 A L ,J i' iff' ,f Miv- W5 2' .Lg Q Q s v ' . ,df -0 .gil R lv 8 - E ,,. Q .qv I f mfs , X If 1 I M :J ' I r ' ' '1 fm Z, 42312 , , W ,A wsu.. Q .1 A.a....- ,- 'E Www 19 V W, , , X, , , Wm. ' A 14: af ,W L. . ' ,W O , , 7 5. , 4 ,, , rn 'W' M5g,.rffy, N, 'VL V, 'if M 1 X,qg, f If A - f' 9- 4: ff ,Wh if ' , v, , ,Q ,4.wxVV...:,,.,, g, . ,:4.,, V V .j 1ff'V.. I ' VV,-:wv?L 1 f' -VV 9 g-3' 'V ' L' V . - 'J K f, ' 'g0'g,gQl ' . V ,V yr, L 'Fi- '-2:1110-ir' ?fiW L'f7' N ' E .f A gf' I j'f-,::.4,.. j-, -. :wa V f ' ' V Q QQ M9-1-P 1' ' A , I 4 47- V 5 . ' g , ' ,' .. 5 K A, -. '. -'V- 'N-.mafgqw W- ,, ' ' A . f -, --,:- ,M V:,,.:-J , ' .T Q V .141 , .7 ,A Af-ada V ':,2.4,!f': 'fm m 1 4 W Y , .y,,,.axu.:f:g -Z- wwf- ' . .:1, -L . -, b ,I V, . V 'l' f. 'I I--Q-L ' .f ,, ,Img Y I V fff!,, ,fi!,-. M ,rv VM' ' V V - - - - ' W V 1'?33 .1-QQ,-pj?f' .gi fr.. - 3 . , 1 , KLFSTTQ- I 3 Y , f'.'T'j:,1k Q. . gjmf .Al , ., :A-gas-?,'j.',, V- rv, 4 3 -,gf -,1 I :, V---'Q - f' 4 ,V .- -A.,,..'3.7f' ' . A .al , ,gf ,,5V! ' ,. - 7 '. 7- pf....-,Veil-.,.,.f. f,' 123. gf!-:A , 97 L,., . Y ' - ., . f .4 , fa. ff' :-'-,-- .- V-iw 19113. - . - ' ?, fW15igaw- .ff'::'::'93? f V 7' A ,,- VU, , ,A1..,,.,4 , , ,. L V ,5,,w, ,Vr:f'f. - V A . .uw - V..f .,. Q.. J... . P i 1 s al' Q1 I L 4 . v i E n P 1 N -. 'fvgfz A - - Q-.U ' , W : 'vQs .1 PEN 'H V+. a... x 'T ff SL.: .mr f , , or 4. - S AA . 1 X I . . 5 'I 'x . O 4 -M . ' 1. . 'MQW . -:QQ , Q Q H f A To put a plane in the air requires know-how and muscles and screw drivers... here are more jobs for our hands and eyes and our arms and legs These planes must be made ready IF! gi ii 'JSYHII .1 .- r is and kept that way up i, 'H .l' 410' ,-.iii Kept ready for that moment, when, surrounded by attendants of many colored costumes, engaged as central character in a dynamic yet bizarre symphony of sound and gesture, the great bird is prepared for flight W5 on 'Q-'N I ,4- ' ff 1 If 1'- Ma- X ..-A N, 4 - Q 4'-, 1 1 i ,N . 'Q'7l .1' P L i e :F , 15 1 8 1 .1 ..,- 4 M .1 2 'Wm -e - worst: 5, f.-' .- .1 s '4' ,J Sl lui 1 1 f-v f Q,-s wil. 4 ,Q -- l I ,fl - 4.8 pr-it , . 5 1 I 5 F1 2 X 5 f i 2 I E 2 o 1 I An agony of motion an intensity of noise a tense and disturbing synchronization , of man i machine and sea ' ' ff' if .i 1 Y 1 1 A , 1 ur I I i 3'5- 'QP , I.. ' -wr ,ta we i fuse 0 4 . 'i' ' in And once again, we are what we are not what we seem to be not super-humans who can fly or bear pain or noise beyond comprehension not these but men behind the garish hats and goggles beneath the sweat shirts and the flight suits submerged in the panorama, but above it... we are men, fearing, watching, sweating... ,f -X A v ,, ., 2- SQOPQ f n , W -TN-. M -Q-5--W I. I 1 ',.a...,, ,N-, if .. - fr 4 - 39526 -. , 1 ' SCJ 'ibiza' I a ' 1 ' I is NAV Y 'N ' . VII JJ w P' Sl ,L We are men who make the planes fly - who soar with them above our world, or wait behind we are men who make the helicopters probe deep into the echoing ocean and the radars spin We are the hunters and the killers i 1 -'C 'sf M. N , -X' ALI 1 4gv'n'r'r '- , ,. s fx f J- ,-ff I 1 xl.'-C M v 1' .V .. P' I 0 D I L 4 yin A L3 'xx fs Q.. -ug Hn, . f -S-'15-qvgn' fa 124351 1 1 Ml. ' - Q-av '-ww. W 6 21 . ,fy -1 V ' 7.1 A .1 Wig! w.,u,n,fi!'h- - 1, .'.4pr'7Q Z ff if l Q - 4' an 1. Ad fix 'Q M Vt! f A r may. U. x , 1 w-'Qui wg nf . . 5 f. ,qw ,. -u-,, 'M , I I , .1 ,Mg 4 ,f A at ,R ul A, mv, ew, vf,4.wf'f V',f.vA w ,,, np M 'lv M Q '50 f 4,-' h 5, 2' '11 Q' 1' ' ,t , . A? , W iq' .13-.L . ' ..,-it 4 -' 1 X , ,- M-, .1 u. ., ,-f: , ' - N ,N ' ' f y f J . ,Ill f -.-.-4- ' if A ff -': - ' ' gm' , T ,.. ' A li , ,- fur , W, V -f 5. . A , ' gsm A - M y N D l u w M -4 A M .W g '1,,g.:',Lif.:Q3 ,- A ' v A ,, v K , - , L '- 3 - 'V f... V V- -qx A fx-,N -'Q T - ,111 PP .. A -1.4 N ,A f M, NvQgf' - .-- 'MY W' .11-,,' ' , .-'mf' ' .-'H , - f'-rw-M, . ' af- .1 's7 'M'.- ., M 5' A ,..5,--- 1 v rd, , M - 'H rut- Q ,I ,, , fn f-, ' Af j 1- V' '5i4?'-- 'w 71: A -+1 -f' f-if 4If, ' -' ff f-Vf ',, -- ff b , ., , X . . 1, K M .HJ-.. . V , , , -5, -.Jw A . N --. ---M - ' 1 -Q. ww 'f -- --W f -- b A V x. ' - -:N , -'V A .,. , , .. ,, , . - . wmv. X, x ., x. he - ' JM, Q N x A i . Q ,f K uni, Jaw- g , X gy - , ,Q ax, , .V M ,W -r Q- I -s ...,...- A H gp . .,,..f -X Y ff x ,V ,IA ,, A - f N. . A , - fs V.. -an I A - Q K . w ug , V . , yan .Ll , . , I , : Q - . 'hn9 .. V-'TSE' w , V it-4 W ,N h K :X 8 - - -. I N , K V 4 . . - ' . 4 'Y 2' X 1' X VL. . -S 3-QM-' .. , . - V , ' ,y ,, ,- y ' . K lg M4-... , ,V , AA , , -- . P ,X,.,..,f-..- - X., .. w.,,,,, D , Q ' . 45 V, . x ,, ,M x W Vw ,K s. ,, A , -Al I - .. X ' ' 'gp ,YAP Rm' W f 2 ' ' 1 ..,, f 'M-'iw' ,fr-v ' --2 '..-----f -R -- . , x - -Y-' wuvffvffw' ' 5' , .. f W'55n,, , f .- , , W, M ,im A ww-QW wvfliu.. 'f3- - As. 'A ,M ,.,..-LM,4 -- f A V. A i And this is the world we inhabit...WASP... 5 Bounded by steel, surrounded by an ocean or a sea of air A ship, a planeg encased in our own emotions from fear to hilarity - our world within a world ourselves within this smaller world shaped by its sights, its movements, its purposes, its traditions to a meaningful, working existence... 4 Yi i ... ..f --N ::fii Lvi7SJL :fa-as 1' H M- --,. M M- .72 --:aff M ',-.5-..:1. .11-Q. hy'-f f Q v ,,,... ':'.... .4----u....z - 5 -'fx'-:fr-'vm' 12--' ff HH?-Gil'-Q -ar -. '- .,,..,f.-9',,-4xf- ' I' ' E 1211 2,1311-gg -Sfffigjg -4:33-'Je' Q52 31-f-Q..-.:,f.f -v W N. f ,aqf , -rw 'Ei q Tf.:'g,f'X , 1 .p,,,-ee'--'.g ,,..,, ,Q w .,,-vw. 'z'g '5 fr - '1o ,. -' A- .4 .0- bw - -.. : x.:1,ff..,,,.fg-3.9,-f -q...5f-,:',. - -...-:'-4- if AN ... .4..-xy I--'7'.1.'f1+::':g,: lf' --H Dwi Y '-.- Q ,fu ' ' , f :W 5 ' 4 1'f.-'-a.'.x-ff, -1.7 M 'V-,rv- :-,, ' ' ' +0 -f 'L' M, -..Q1y,-. ,. Z--.f.,H3- if .- ,,,. Icragv ,., ,glty Y i:.:.V.x.-3-4:'. ' ,. 55:11, - - '1f'h,'h'v+- -PZIDQHI -1-4-1-, 'Z.A -' . , M L., -. ..- fy ,-.-f .::. '- ,limp -+1-.ttrvl-1+:S-L, -W rn. ...J-A ...tx ft: - ,, - ,, - N, s r-LM f -.f fi ' A-My 1:--:1f'.:21 f3':.-'r..1L..-... -M - ,.. . - -4, ... 2 . -x , iff, ,,..' ,f 4 , gb.- mx ....,...... .....5. Q.: v- -45 I .. - , . J -rl f,,V .1 , ... f N' -'- Q Q A , I 'C , w Q 1 . 1 . together we are the of WASP , s n 1 1 o , Q I 1 v , in 1: 'v ,- -, msn my ' 2' 2 1 ,Y G ..-' X -.. ,Q. ,A 1 ,K-QZ,':: I . f'4f3rff - . ' ' 'lf Q km 8,,M5:.g an 53 T: - 44-L- H s Z,-fi' -fo. . 1, Ni. .. -, 1 1.1: - 'A '3'- ':6T A ? : . .,, -- V, ' -- - ' :. J' 6-f 'W' ' , . in F'-1 ' .4:.-lk?-Yi , 3 i-Qs,-,jf-3 L V' V- .. ' Q.. , ' ,- fP:.,.E.,, bf. 1:79-w-,. .-' ' ,s in-f 'W --N -f 1 Nr' W, Q ' ' m' If -1 5' i ' ' - L D it ff -' 7 .' f .: 5 3.T i L WR . . . 1- U- on 4 f Q V'Vl . 5:3241 'X ' JATQ- gg my-f 4 '1F' N7 1 , 4 V . ' 9 4 i ' 1 4' 'f 'S O i ti-x' 'Ill ,VU jill v W H- .'q'5 ff 'I ' I I' - oli- 'sv 2 gy' ., 4 fm -I f in Sl Q'-1 rf' FH. vi ln .Q 3, Akai .fl X I F' 33912 HY, .I 453, ,gf A 4' n 1 , V STAFF OFFICERS First row, I to ra CDR Warren Cole- grove, CDR William Bruce, QAPT Frederick Oliver, CDR Harry Miller, CDR William Brennan. Second' row: ENS Lawrie Larchez, LCDR William Wright, LCDR John Erickson, LT Joseph Horner, LT Donald Bloom. FLAG DIVISION First row, I to r: Andre- imnii-ll, Joseph Theriziult, Jarnes I lpliiiiwtrriw, Robert Folloth, Alfonso lliwi',ir,1.ir, Lawrence Mack, Clair Foriniulii-ll,i, Antonio Rnptistn, l. C. Arrinritwn, EdclioArrini1ton, Second row: Rliharrl Stinehiser, llnrolil Gilhool, lnnws Sweeney, llillriry Owen, Dunne iJrS.'.ri, William Slermer, Jnrnes Smith, ,lrifrne Palisor, Enwry Roc-ly. Third row: George Weiss, Vincent S.ill.ante, Robert Vines, Robert Sirnpioil. Rare tolome Claudio, Mwximino Iiezom, Lucien Pelletier, Willigam Diilahex. William Thompson. X DIVISION First row, I to r: R. Crrsfucla, I-larned, R. Purcell, Henry Heir, Peter Vancluyse, Elmer Wlnte, Second row: Yieko Hail, William Fisher, LTJG Anthony Kuras, ENS Thomas '.'ullalg,, LTJG J. G. Eurrcugh, CDR John Zoller, LTJG Peter Traxers. ENS Alfred LaPeter, Rufus Turpin. John Helt. Third row: W. L. Smith, D Rusk, Joseph Fekety. David Yleek, Janres Grldociil, Jerry Bouttcher, Robert Stevens, William Hansen, Earl Tack. Danny Emmer. Fourth row: James Randall, John Corrado, Robert Ser- afini, Eugene Schnieoer. Fc.-.ye Bauer, Donald Johnson, Daxld Remo, James Wein, Robert Farnham, Eer- nard Bombard, Leonard Erozo.-.ski Richard Cercosimo, Wiliiarn Tuggle George Niccolai. I4-4 I , X.g l:'N I 4 t J 4 1 P '1 1 Hg, ,ffl ,I 44 .fwfr ond FC .fs 1 , jfsxv, rf-'1 Ufzff arf! fx! I 1' vcr, 'ff D, .farhru Dlfharfl ff , mlth. IAS V-2 DIVISION First row, I to r: Raymond Daniels, lvlichael Davis, William Flynn, Donald Lut hard z, J. R. Law, Robert Reic , John Clark, John Gayes. Second row: Virgil Hammonds, Da-rid Steadman, George Somers, Henry Brooks, Robert Aburey, Robert Malone, William Hold- ,3 eri war i' W. ns Fry. T.' cr, 'ffl j lllt tn, Urn i hird row: Albert White, Tommy Schnell, Wil liam Hancock, George Beaman, Richard lvlanningg, Courtney lfliinn, Walt o fe First er Gougglienoiir, Dqiiglas 'i' est. V-2 DIVISION lliirolrl Sclirnirlt, IT I llvri.lv's.--1 Nolan Dolapp, I l Rolwrt ll nl Willmin Wall, Iinnnull For gn w Lrlimlos Spirits. Second row: I-.z YOW, I to T: Ililrlvs lrtlvriiq-', VPIICO Nlllvlivll, Iiaririic li. l1' Cf? Mlrlilt' Imiigi, Iiiilivrl IsJ?ml.i, Pg Yilroicxnslxi, Iioixiltl Irnnlw, i'i'i'n. Shillings, .lost-pli Iviile' R qt-r XXNCISOII. Clifford l'.iiiilrvi', Third row: .Idnics Oiwris. Il.-.rains Tam: Gdrlfior, Harold l.l.'t'Arrr1'uk, Ch: ' g i l'I0ll0r', Tubx I'i.lIlt'li. Rfhwi ,, Alxin Ifrd. V-3 DIVISION First row. l to r: fafves it I- Harold lxirnber, N:sJt.1j. Dennis Trends. Clxzries Herman Freund. LT Cifeffs Sette- field. Jimmie Martin. RAIN Farther. Ronald Savage, Ralph Rsse, Second row: Raymond Hapslip, Ne'- sen, Linwood Scott. Gssrgs Sindh: Robert Caxanaga. Denial 51.11 Thomas Smith. Allen Priest. Diaries Barefoot. James lxenneg., Corbert. Third row: Nilsen Ti.':: e. Willard Graybill, Harold Cslwrse. Joseph Guastella. Henri' D'.'qrer', Park Betl Do R Q nine, Harold wsiiglcs. .cger Rueter, Harold Beck, '.'.'i!iem Flenfzrfg John Walsh. I4 6 af l il' Q 5 1 w ' . Ol I v . 0 . x ' , rw s X -xklb 10N - f , X I1 xx it xxx , xx-X .1 'ICUU RWM .Q '. X ui lWxlf'lUN ' Y X 11 'usnmli .1 . . . r. , ' y l , nur 'I 1,1 vfwfl ' ' I 'Ulu 5, a,,1 , ' I,r ' ' v. I V. v' 1: .5U1Jl'1lOH f . N v V . ff 11 , . I., 1 , ,f 74 nr ' N.-'f' ,'r ,,-1 I1 1' 'f,,, ' 1 ' 17. I, ,f,f'. ,, w , uf., Thnrd row , . lr ,ff ff.f.f ',, , . ,, I . 'g'g.r f ' , , 'f,,. Iv , . 4, . f', E47 V-6 DIVISION First row, I to r: William Ross, Ken- neth Pinto, Terry Yonder, Robert Renner, LCDR Joseph Rebik, Wendell Forehand, Joseph Mecca, Dennis An- derson, Anthony Rogers, Herbert Ruff. Second row: Joseph White, William Thompson, John Hammond, Harry Yetton, Frederick Trollinger, Bruce Baird, Thomas Walters, Gene Long, William Foust. Third row: Esra liflc Daniel, Vencent Vecchio, John Hesse er, Richard Barry, George Drake, Irving Charles, Henry Ohrt, John Shea, John Buriak, Raleigh Mason. V-6 DIVISION First TOW, ITOMI: wi Iiiir Inks, lirnirs NIC KIUSIIV, Iiiildvrl Nlvlltiii, Itliiiiirul Ifylliir, IVI.iniivl Iivniivtt, IUIJI? '.'.'vn- ilvll Iioiolmiitl, Iiioimlil Stahl, R ibwt Itilmiilki ,liisviili Niiiiimii, Il, ', qlgf Oliver. Second row: Irinli l'X3ii',a:, Forrest Cniiiplwll, INw'i.ilt'l limes, Roimlcl I'l.intl, Cilllt-ii ,l,ii,iigr, T -w,- ,gig Iivvurtifi, Ifmiitws Ilpttl, IILWK, AITICUUU lxOIItIri?1Iif. IIIIIQIUJ. Third row: Pliilip Q s- il- Cliirlos Im l's-wh I N x S ..t.t- tit, 5 lX4l.ilorw, Nelson Cntr,-.di if Il I'lorror, Iiviiiiis Pc-.-.lt K i Ph ilip Htiiiiiitgmi, ' OA DIVISION Front row, I to r: X'a'i.T'f -ggete, Fred Volpe, LCDR 5.1-eitii' Jared ASC I Finis Scates, Wiiliain Cai. 'fix Robinson, Back row: '.'.T'5:wt William I3oyle,NEelc:':z1C aw, R::s't Hahn, Michael Sloan. Came Canf- iia, Richard Ward, Robert s. Alan I l3DDV. Wafofd Crcssii l48 1 'LY NNN I , '5 5 , A Y , 1111111 um I , 4 I 1 I,'n1 1 4 V 4 , 1 Vi, ,,u ,jf Second P::'f',. ', ff.--.1 I 1 '11 If v arf. z , J . , nj, 1 ,+ r' ,f,':!? flkflfil' IA? First row, I to r: Jesse 'ey : IVlclVIeans, Jernee Baller, were Kogut, David Iffertz, Jarrree I?ahy,'f'e. John Dix, Robert Harte. Second row: George Mitchell, Boyce Drfr'5.se,. Franlr Ioooliti, lJfini:ari . '. David Peek, IAir,hael Digger. 2'1- ward Easterlinpg, Jar: Czietrlio. Third row: James Alexander, Hill zur. nington, Peter Hrgttig, Jpsrgpr. Cer- nantonio, I-Ir,,-,lard Jr,l.n:f,m Vi., .X r .Q ., l i OI DIVISION Swartz, Richard lllilfrrigiri, Ifep T nan, Raymond Illerrit. ,.. OPERATIONS DIVISION First row. I to rn Iailiili Vi. - POXMGII, l,I'JG l.'i.'.irrvn Sl' VN ' lluyer, Wrllinm Il.il.v:w ' driclls. Second row: '.'. Ronald NCIXG-Uri, Il.'l'e't IirIIlIS.'Ii.I, Iivlllw' I ' Ixellv. Third row: Rftx PIOCIt'l'ICiX Nlllpr. IU Q V551 Cnrriicrm, Tern low- I J S g'T' 151 ' V '. 'I t:.'.5r. ' it eh saga' R f 5 ef-75'1Q'fg Q 24 I -fx fi ' my , - ,ff rf 4. Q X 1 g ' u ' I CR DIVISION First row, I to r: C Eduard Kelly. James . Morgan, LTJG Giibe D Alfred Trtrslov.. Fendi ZIV' Thorp, Gary Nefsert Second row: ' William Boner, Deibe Allen, William Serfk. ish e Teddy Vaden, ,Iss James Sclniinactzef. ix Third row: Theedwe Dickens, Stexerr SN: Schaffer, David 3 Hannafin. George A tensc. Kirchner. John Haynes, N H 1- Ronald Neilson. ISC ,,,, A JL.-V I, . , 'T ' Qc, 11 ' f 7 4 bf- Ps 1 my , I if' sz h - 'Nw vi -1 ... ...,, , CR DYWSION '. .WA If ' x,,' . x 5:.J'. Jn . I LI J f L hlrd 1 f f F urth row :Sl ' mfr ,f:',',T,, : ,C': ', LE, lP:fFf53 'Hfggf' ' f ' ' ' F ' f -' 1 v f ' , ' ,. ,,.:J' -11 ,JC TWU,-fpajnl ffll. ef, 'Alf' j,:,,,:fp 2af,'?ir:!fI'. .en -.4 , A W N . , L 5 ,- . ' 5 A , x I ' Q u ' ,, M C UU If .U L K X. , .V I., , A. H A V Q V , I K' 4 ' ' -- ' ' 1, , ' , 5 4 . ' W - .- A- , ., ., -. ' 7 1 ' Q - i ' ' -l i . Q, 4 X . ' ' N ., ' , 1' I .4 . - ' '- A A ' X. .'.' Q - ' ' l .W N - A 'v ' x 1' Q A1 . - A . - -4 , T - ., ,f -X , , Q . , ., , s ' ' . ' . ' ' . - ' - ' , ' ' h .. - -. Q- 4 Q J . 3 1 - ,., N, .Z .N X . ' q A K7 ' .. 1' U. .T '1 U , . ,' K V , - ' , 'A 4 -. . - - , .. ' 7 r- - T . Q U Q V A ' - fm 0 '- - ' I Q o - A ' 2 - , A 3 , S., Q... 1 ., K ' . N ,, N ' - ,Q - Q N - Q 4 T ,- . , K. , ., Y , - - , A- W ,n - 5- 1 Q Q , ., Q Q , - , . ' , H - : A A A J. ' . .X Z. . Q. . .N A i i ., N L - Z - . A A L l A Z x if 1' ' 2 '- ' -A ' Q . + - 5 - 3 , . .. , , . ,h X- . 3 - . u - . A A L -, 4- - :,. - - ' V ' . 5 - . ' A ' . 5 ' -Q W A 2 X A -' - .3 ' . A i A- ' A - ' , - A W- .. - , .- M x . x -Q . A , , . A Y, , -.x.E1lD?ff- ' ..-41 A . 1' ' p Nfi , ., x Q1 -- ,. -- .. T1 T x 1 T ' K ' 1 - - - ' . .w ., 5. -- A- . ,, L- N ., -, i . , D A . - 4 . 4- . , L -. .. 4. ., 4 , , ,A W , . A. - . , - . - . . ' 1 x -Q -H .N . ,, , N - - . A .. Q - A - . . . ..- X - - N. f ,,, - i A - s - T L- - B DIVISION First row, I to r: Harold Libby, lee Barnhill, Glover Jones, ENS Paul Coughlin, Paul Tuttle, Dennis Fare rell, Jack Bechtol. Second row: Lyle Vlfhisler, Edwin Trinirnrm, Charles Mann, Donald Harris, Enos Haver- ship, Gary Williamson, Rafrnqnd Cr- Iando, Donald Ford. Third row. Rphrvt Keebler, Joseph fallen, Iarglf Iowan. Jakie Jones, Genre Jastar, Fff-',c: ' Slaski, Francis Diller, Iirnrnirg B DIVISION FITS! I'0W, I to Y: Ifirtiiiri Ii If, I' 'I Frzifirir, Cllr-n tllirirl, Mfr-riinii I Ilfl I7t'I1-IIN 'i!r:rI'i:ii'i, I Iizlrrifra, Riilwrt Cmnt, Iirlffj VVIIIIIIT I3.irII1'II, IJIIIII Hlniil'-.'. Second row: Iinsr-,f If--iiliwr, iii' Tvstn, Mziyiitirct Clin-.-f., Willif- ' Aramis Arriva, lvrry li-iilnii, lk' llnnii, Rnzlmrrl Iir.nn, Iiiliii I I-rvclcly Rnpiniliii, II.irrni Ilwin , ll i' nlcl Mriiiclvrs, Riiyiiininl l.'.lnl-2 V- Cnnnliipn. Third row: Ilvaii. Vin ii'-r . N v - .Inintfs t.iinniniili.iiii, Utlri P.-t..i ' Willinin III-imrrlis, llcnni. I ix, i Smith, Rnlwrt Wiirrl, lvrri. ,Inlin Ihcilmstnn, Rt-n.iItl I?.i:?v'., ixv' li IIUIII SIWOIIJIIIIIU, lliniiiv I.'..i I N' I I3i'LiIH.iflwi, I.irl IDrv.is,lv ., ' Str.inilIwri1, Ilinnx l.l.'.iriwr E DIVISION First row, I to r: Pnnl .ani R ard lXI.ilnnv, Roxvv t.'f'x1, HRH? Rich. IIIG l.'.rl',1:f' lx X' rg, Gvniiiv Ilcislmiiy -' X' -1, rntintl Nolan, ITciit gl,zs Cyl AV, Q .ard Rnsscll. 'lhonins Sv? 't. Secon row: John Giinios. Rah . IIHKS .lnhn HannQin,an, ,laiitus S. '. 1 ', Fai cis lN'Iilwl.aifg'.2lI, .lon -X'xi'.ss , P5 rick Hastings. Russell Cfrdsx 7:11 Gillrnore, Robert lx.z 1zs R Hooynmn, -larnes Hs p.2'. '. Get? Curran, Ronald Cannot, Recs' . Tielx. Third row: ,lclin HQ ,2 i, X: ss Davies, Dennis Ciosbr.. Lola'-Q T: s Herbert Calirner, tlclv' f',e :es Peter Sonris. Ralph Ee lirrislike. Lex-.is Haskins. Troxell. Persons not shown: Pet' : INfIahoney. James Rlaffcliyd, -She Johnson, Ronald '. Beale. Daniel Payne. .lcseplv Sag Lenis Tilton, Janwes liable. I ,. Garrett, Stephan Rish, F e:e : Wedin, Douglas Larsen. Rtgtffefio' Smith, George Mai':3:,z:cs. Tuggle, Stephan l.'.'3ts:zt, F'3 : Beatty. Evan Crosby.. Udo lxmg, Cornell, Robert Filctftiiloiigli, Engine Goodridi. Heneij: Iifscriiclse. E DIVISION 123 'SN N . .: I'u.? .Q I r: Ns'- X 1-. sk: x,,- iv' I '9 xv ,- -f wg Second ron: C'-3' vs 24-I '.'fw1-vw K -x .,', EN' N.: .III 1- QI i' x I I 'N , x,,Y!YfIIlIgI I ' PHC IN Lf' ': 'I fn V .QRNIX r I I xl In X X .1 IQ xl . I... 5 I . I . , . I '. 'I'I M Fomth :msg .' 'MII 'Q .II ' III. II I ' AI I M IIIVITIIIIN I Ivr. IIIII '.-'I' .'.'I,lII, IIIIII If' I- IIII IIfrI:.1 ',' - I , I 'I ,1'vIv,5 II II, I, I1v','.I,,r a,II1,' mv. I' 'I' UU .mv I'f' 4IIIIIJI'i,54: . .,1, l,'4,,U.' VIIIIIII ww IHIHI I ', .'.',IIIlI f I' Ihfvr. I Ir I'dII,'. f I'.'.' r'1rI M DIVISION I Io rx 'H2:',',, IMI, f,.-. :,,,H,,,1 IHC, ' 1' '! fix, IMNI ' f f 1-' 'I Second '1,',',', .'.' iiwarn 'Hal- .','ff'Z, 'IfI',m2:f, Tfvfrn- , 1f:'. Iff'f:',I Sifgbkf. ,' Vff'f,fgIII Gffrrrnan, if Third row: Delmas I 'HI 2Zr',.'.mngg, I?0.'fI?md ' f f Caee, Jam. Scheper, A f' Lguzg Iionrmaky, War- IS3 NI DIVISION First row, I to r: Thomas Kaetzel, Thaddeus Smigielski, Rojelio Garcia, Florian Barbiarz, Albert LeDoux, LTJG Albert Penta, William Wilson, Dorris McDowell, Romain Latrarlle, Lawrence Newcomb, William Taylor, Richard Olszewski. Second row: Don- ald Driscoll, John Fisten, Wayne Fam, James Thurber, Richard Allard, Kyle Clark, Woodrow Bartholomew, Wil- liam Wilbur, Oliver Workman, William I-lowey, Richard Street, John Carr, Robert Miniati, Gerard Bernier. Third row: Arthur Grant, Frederick Caywood, Richard Sullivan, Larry Hater, Steph- en Jarossy, Clifford l-leubner, 'Earl Nlartin, Charles Nofty, Dennis Leiser, Archie Edwards, Earl Heberling, David Gunnoe, Michael Pool, John Fehlahaber, Dominic Rivara. R DIVISION First row, I to r: William Blunt, Jo- seph Cesanio, Thomas Barry, Noel Battershell, Kenneth McGuire, ENS John Berger, Donald Meisenheimer, Jacob Sweeney. Graham Hamilton, Wesley lylurray. Second row: Blain Keiderling, Wilbur Fain, Gary Smith, Francis LeBlanc, Dennis Orsurt, Wil- liain Kreadv, Gary Furman, Charles King. Robert Willis. Clayton Smith. Third row: Lawrence McPheeters, Theodore Etrerts. Lyndel Admire, Gene Dragnett. Raul Wojtanek, Den- ten Roberts, Ordell Akre. James Beal, ltflichael Fleming, Cecil Crabb. A DIVISION Bottom row, I to ra Nicholas Ariola Michael Staffa. Donald Girard' LTJG Lawrence Jasper. Rcbert Snow Charles l-lcuchens. Ed-.-.ara kgnfgfgkf, Second row: Richard Abreu, :Mason Miller, Walter Winalski, William Les- lie, Keith Flynn, Michael lxiethenv. Third row: Daniel Kelly, Andrei-.f Swanson, Kenneth Talmage, Charles Albertson, Niel Schultz. I5-4 Y A K Is 'HU I I I' Aiil- 'L' I ,,,,, f ffff sf, ' I X ,- I A , f gg- C . , Q ii gt., . I ,, A DIVISION :-...J :n.1!or::v?Zu .'..fv' . . - -xv' bm - s . . N ' 'QQ I v u .. 5 . J N x' , ,K ,X Tmrd ron. .K -x , 1 V ,rrmud mw Mr.. Tud rw H DIVISION FHS! row, l to rrffzwfVm,f-v.31fu,Mf.h '.-ew .. ' ,fr 11 Pfrrm ir' 'K ' ', Hryrrrn:,m'1, John 'Ha .11 '. 9 ,7,f:'f V ,9ff:r3, Paul Vi' f 'Z Second row: Poloffrt Ullurn, ff: ffff' ,, f .':'ef Frarrcour, Pob- ' I-,Q-.ff , .'.'af'e '.Hchf:i, Theodore ev. LH' ,r Pf,f'f,'r',,'. George Gleason, . 23 ?'f:,', PXP 211113, Charles ew. Edgar Ney, Pafmorxd Dum- :'z'T. 'Je' 'rr Etffnart, Wullaam Seng- 'azrei 'wrrrrara Wrfnbel, Walsh '::d,'. Tr-crvas Nallrer, Robert De! 5,-rr f 155 D DIVISION First row, l to r: Leo Boudreak, LT David Smith, LCDR William Brown, LT David Sullivan, Curtis Hall.. Sec- ond row: General McCain, William Moats, James Harvey, Paul Goddard. FIRST DIVISION First row, l to r: Louis Avard, Gary Titsworth, Larry Monroe, George Simons, Vernon Solomon, Millard Madden, John Guyoski, Sherman As- bell, David Thomas, Keith Post, Ern- est Workman. Second row: Patrick Phealan, Ernest Raposa, Charles Trobaugh, Jack Laroche, Miguel Pa- checo, ENS John O'Neill, LTJG George Muzea, Curtis Surette, Wil- liam McDaniels, Thomas Bacon, Clif- ford Tooman. Third row: Glenn Eshleman, Thomas Brooks, Gary Cook, Patrick Gannon, David Dubois, Paul Weiner, Vincent Dilorenzo, Pat- rick McDonald, Harry Napier, Harry Porter, Jon Blilie, John Hamilton, Joseph Santoro, Wayne Holt, William Miller, Francis Peterson, George Green. Fourth row: Richard Vogel, Daniel Depippa, Robert Barone, Ken- neth Shumaker, Jerone O'Connell, William Maple, Thomas Kifer, Henry Shurmatz, Hugh Zeigler, James Kee- gan, Hiliaro Gutierrez, Louis Cole, SECOND DIVISION First row, l to r: Juan Alvarez, Ray- mond Westgeides. James Weston, William Pratt, Robert Weese, Haydon Hunter, Joseph Power, Lester Trip- lett. JW Huffman. Second row: Jonas Reighn, Wayne Moran, Jease Johnson, Richard Remo, Adam Wiel, Louis Fobbs, Charles Devereaux, Paul Blouin, Frank Cooper, Robert Be- gonis, Richard Kiel, Mark West,Adam Guclelunas, Joseph Hoskins, Henry Renz, Clifford Crescott, David Sey- mour, Ronald Buimer. Third row: Kenneth Rice, Robert Wilkerson, Den- nis Young, Peter Bissonnett. Roger Benoit, James Owens, Gus Spanos, Alvin Golida, Mike Randazzo, Edward Bogush, Gary Tarmay, Aurthur Ward. George Sapp, Frederic McDougall, Ronald Diedrich, Clarence Point- dexter. IS6 v x N U A N, ., .. A 5 Nsxl .',.x, . x..x YUM ugh r umm ,s r ond r ,Hr 11117: , 7,1 ff, V Thurd row .,4',,' Y, 77, ', f- fjli:T'ff1 g wfj Ffffifgr ' 7f::',?'2:rN ?i',.'.',fQf ',r5fY',r : fl ?19:g,1'r!Uff , Yfjfx. Gil f , HW, Nanci FOX DIVISION First row, I to r: Gerald Kuopus, Wal- ter Goetter, Harvey Puckett, LTJG Joseph Perotti, James Braun, Clif- ford Cowan, Stanislaus Nehilla, Doug- las Capone. Second row: Ronald Ammerman, James Kotke, Robert Derr, Frederick Spicacci, James Grimm, Franklin lvlarlatt, Roger Selle, Richard Flannery. Third row: Richard Bernier, James Harvey, John Schmitt, Allen Chastain, Michael llflurzi, Gary Struck, Lawrence Newton, Lawrence lVlerrell, Danny O'lVlerra. G DIVISION First row, I to r: John Cuvelier, Jo- seph Dumond, Richard Buckman, Lawrence Labelle, Perry Carlis, Be- nito Cruz, John Shedrick, Maurice Berry, Herbert Bailey, Richard Coul- ter, Robert Rice, John Collins. Sec- ond row: Eugene D'NeiIl, Gerald Men- ard, Richard Dobbs, Seabie Rucker, Carl Bergglund, CWD fl, LTJG Peter Bripgis, Alexander Senibaldi, Cecil Billingqsley, Georgie Courtney, John Pollard, Charles Card. Third row: James Brooks, Fdward Hall. Paul Drown, Cecil Wallace, Jerry Cargle, Edward Clark, William Digelo.-.', Nor- man Dear, Raymond DiRaimo, Vin- cent Korbal, Charles Horn, Hoi.-.ard Gise, David Revoy, Ronald Quinn, Robert Steffic, Billy Brov.n, Kenneth Obydihe, Richard Zintgaro, Larry Neil- S-Oh, Jerry Neilson, Robert Stank-,e, John Ives, Raymond liapture Fourth row: Joseph Ross, John Dennett, Charles Conner, Robert Garner, Charles Slemback, Daniel Saitsnqzry John Chutko, Larry Cox, Phillip Vanasse, In-.in Weiss. Dauid Nelson, James Barrett, Steven Mchlorror.-.', Dale Howard, George Green, Thomas Crofutt. W DIVISION First row, I to r: Lo-.-.ell '.'.'hitlo'.-. James Lat-.less, Everett French, LTJG Joseph Foreman, LT Stephen San- ford, Roland Anderson, ENS Robert Voccola. John Digiacomo, Arthur Huizinea, Franklin Melton, Second row: Francis Groshel, Jerry Drtberg Frank Stvczynski, Kenneth Bair. Ed ward Belford, Joseph Vogrin, Richard Clayton, Stuart Skolnik, Roy Lish Larry Davrsoii. Third row: Stenle, Norton, GW Gates, Nicholas Fon dak, John Fields, Sherman Lynn Dale Stankiewicz, Donald Fatout r i Robert Kaiser. Robert Tavenne David Bringardner, Frederic Born ham, Jerry Wylie. 158 1 1 1 1 , 4 1 1 1 ' U 1 11 1 1 1 1 , 1 . v v v I v , v r 1 I.. ,., ',cgr,r,Hti ION: 1, ',,', ' r H, ,.,, Thur! rom , j..,,, 1 A ' 1 1 s T111 .fA1.f ' ,, -51. 2 . , ,f .- 1 r ,r f, nf, .rffwff V ,f'11r1v,f f, . 11, 1, k DPI f-VJY 359 S-4 DIVISION First row, I to r: Donald Bro.wnell Clarence Burch, LTJG Richard Bird John Gill, Robert Bailey, Carl Wie gand. Second row: Reynaldo Esteller Harold Nunn, James Nelson, Fred ericlc Costley, George Kick, Dennis Boo. S-5 DIVISION First row, l to r: ,liisvpli lriiii-s. lr Riiclolpli Stewart, lmririrrl Rn li.irils r Jollii loiws, lloinmrrl .lrllilSN1ll, lil reiico lVli1Coringii'k, limiik llirris, Inn llinclsmriii, lVl.irio Arigiivllvs, lliiiiviug Aiicliarle. Second row: llirimis lr if cisco, Clwstvr lmriivs, lil.-.,iril l.i l Lrliosliiiiiv,lfouliilfiv lisrliilv, 'i in l Tnbingn, Qllviitin llobiiisisri, :iff , Ori.iS, Goimro T.iqlll,io. begining ' Corrvii, Nlrlrliil lN'l.irtiii, Gr,i,1a'1.' Pr' deiidd, Nlmllllkxg llrw.-.ii Third row Israel Natlmn, ,lpliii l.'.'illi,mw5, S. 1 C vostcr fiery, Willie Ei, TLIUTQV, wp x i I N N ,NU 4 l fisio lllxiil, Xxllllk i. Mil, - l loillo Fellini, lllrllllly' Gaiifsws, im l emidos Boiieiiierilg. Mgrihgi Agp, NlClxlQ Nallari, Elmer Nagy? JLISUHB NICDIQS, S-6 DlVlSlON First row. I to r: Ronald Hcr:1,R7:?a3 Martin, LCDR C. P. Phlegef, Rfihi K I Van Wyck. Albert Taxis. Allan Efriissy, Second row: Schwartzberg, Roger licppelrwfssz A thony Boyenggz, Adam ,'c?wsozf, R dolfo Cruz, Harold Phillips, llc Dixon. Fiiiiils Petwsvw ll iso r T 'ff- ' :Sn N9 DECK 'MASTER AT ARMS . bm Omi lon 'Hvvd mv. 1- 'wi JSM S5-cond ron. bmw a 5 v - 1 - 'Inf' 1: .. ,.K. ,A - CNW ,Ju ' Jxmf' Mun, 1 Hfmlf 'fn VS-28 First row, I to r: S. P. Gordon, J. L. Mercer, R. D. Lewis, W. O. Bratton, AOC E. R. Thornton, ADC J. J. Smith, ATCA M. R. Miller, J. W. Dutka, J. R. Michael, M. A. Dantonio, E. L. Pirie. Second row: W. R. Presnell, M. Dwyer, F. E. Koenig, P. W. Luke, J. Mazza- rese, L. G. Tingue, J. J. Jenkins, F. J. Lauzon, E. B. Stroble. Third row: E. A. Madden, J. W. Dyer, R. E. Simpson, T. E. Robinson, J. H. Palmer, R. Smith, T. J. Hickey, W. C. Wales, R. A. Zaman. VS-28 OFFICERS Front row, I to r: LTJG Monte D'Ar- mand, LT Carleton J. King, LT Paul G. Coughlin, LT Charles G. Hender- son, CDR Marcellus T. Pitz lExecu- tive Officerl, CDR Paul V. Converse tCommanding Officerl, CDR Frank W. Ford, LT Walter V. Roeser, LTJG John K. Thurston, LT Charles K. Hutchin- son. Second row: LTJG Martin D. Kauffman, LTJG Robert F. Bowman, LTJG David B. Cox, ENS Dale 0. Cooley, LTJG Richard F. Meese, LT Virgil J. Lamaur, LT David A. Felder, LTJG William G. Mills, LT Burton R. Laub Jr., LT Robert H. Smith, LTJG Don Holcomb, ENS Peter W. Kiewel, LT Thomas A. E. Davis. Third row: LTJG John W. Matheson, ENS Thomas C. Sharkey, LTJG Henry Von Kolnitz, LTJG George C. Mullin, LTJG lvan V. A. Nance, LTJG Grady W. Davis. LTJG David D. Sullivan, LTJG Eugene J Byron, LTJG Kenneth Slobody, ENS James F. Johnson, LTJG Peter C. Pinson, LTJG John S. Morris. Not shown: LTJG Robert P. Wren, ENS John R. Limbaugh. CVSG-52 Front row, l to r: LT QMCJ Hari.-ey D. Lewis, LT H. Wayne Srnexog. CDR Glenn I. Dumas, LCDR Pacl S. Olm- sted. LT Bill Bonnen. LT tit-lCl Charles M. Louden. Back row: Edgar Vaughn, Marshall Frenchie Lanier- ie, Clive W. Phillips, Robert W. Bailey, Phil Caron, Jim luiarshall, Bruce Funston. l62 . A ny-- i 2 2 M 'TI P' l il! A g .,. ll' i . i .. i X ' ' NLT X'lCli4llNlE Ji. 3-'Cl 1t:X'5vl4 ' Q TILA i A . Tx O N Y Nil A if.:4:.i iixilj ,gn ,, f... -vpp'-'r f-fl ri 4 O r7f'f' .r QE: 'S 'ui :Q 3 if 0 5 5 M Q x...,, . ' . ' V 4 kwa v-We 13: 4 n 1 A nl 7? Z -A ,A HS-11 . X .X U x..1..i ?..S:::x, x. N N. X.-ix Xvx. - x, vi x . X N Ns , Qu ,'x.' N H' . .. . U .SXC 5:'.C T 'Dux 1 'Nz V. gx. X .. ,Q 'Xiu 1... D U , , X 'Jn .f X 4. kx.x , , i K 1 . m ANI A l I 'R N311 'i4,v. 5 mill!! ' '. I I ,Q vlx- 4 ' '1.'xf . 1 1 x 1 ' ' ,A ,N .I WV ',I Nw! , , U Iv ':, u lv if v !,, ,x-,r ' 1 1 ll: T' 'ri VNV! 1 ' 'WW' ' J., . 1 , , ' 'Q 'r ,' 4' L , 1 ' ', ,' IWM I V, ,,'. 4 .-- 1 yr fa'frr fy 4 ' 5',1,'r! HSJ1 rw, I 10 r: f: f Nf - 1., . ,. 'lf' H 'y ':,' A ' . ' ',' ri ',:,57-'55, -bf Tu-M? Second row: Inv 7 ,,.- vflfpl fdfgllff ff: 'fl-,g f f',ffs 1 if W 'fljifff f j Vow 1 ff ' QIA Huff, 'JMU ' gud ' nf 3 jgfff-5Y,f47fY'13f'E , pq! Faflti, Ldff . , r,,,1m-. f' N H.: , ,,,,.4f'.. CQV I 1 'V is . 'E I 4 N.V-, 2, ',, Z 1-4 ,fi Q11 Q .1 'xQ7 K V3 i rxiz.: -' li K llxlfo . , 1 .- - .Q Y . ' A jr J ' , ,. sei, X 4 - FFF LA HS-11 First row, I to r: Jack Parker, Johnny Corn, Ernie Owens, T. G, Sirnrnons. Mike Opava, Jerry Shupe, Ed Bran' nen, Jim I-luk, Doug Bissell, Joe Gantert, John Kitchen. Second row: Donnie Croom, John Johnson, Lee Stanko, John Sinlaler, Paul Gerald. John Landon, Ray Flak, Larry Rich- ards, Ray Rogers, Seahon Worthen, Pat lVlilton, I-larold Benden, Jesse Hatcher, Carl Clover, Third row: Don- ald Dori, Winford lvlcDoi:.iell, Gary Ludwig, Jasper Sasser, Ed Cooper, Ron Harmon, Doug Kirlefuocd, Earl Carpenter, Stanley Daurn, Francis Lowry, Robert NlcRohhie, Richard Wastel, Roy Johnson. HS-ll OFFICERS First row, I to r: LTJG Dave Ceiriii-r'..'.. LTJG Robert Weston, LT William Sumrall, LCDR Sezirgqeai'it, CIJR Warren Taylor, CDR Fl. lfernon Pega- por, LCDR John Kost, LCDR lnsffgili Cassidy, LT Ron llipp, IT llll.nil l Switzer. Second row: LTJG llfiri, Riclinrcls, LTJG lvl. Ibniiiifi Ifouitfy I lm . . . . I Pliillip Tlionieis, I N5 Llitirli.-s Intl I. LIJG Rzileiifli Snnlli, lllii Init! Hover, LTJG Vern Run, ITIG lihif '- - s M s . . V., Illggixs, LT Carl lloss, llltl Viriinl Onslow, LT Riclnircl S2li.intl. LTIG I ' ' . N . . Pete Foley, ll .losvpli lwlltliarti, LTIG Robert Fislwr, ITIG lil.-.Jul Spiors, LT Vvliiltllll ltlnitin. Third row: LTJG ,lllllll l.'VtllSon, LTJG Robert Lllllfitl, LTJG Georgie Slnnnalw. LTJG Jay Zapp, ENS .illll lleeni, ENS Rugs' Love, LTJG Fmnlx Osggootl. LTJG Arie tliony Wilcox. LT Clmrl0S Morris. LT Nlmtv Yellor, LTJG Toni klfftillpiigf, LTJG Jolin tlistgrmw. ENS Gevge Olson, LTJG Toni Wngiioiy VS-31 OFFICERS First row, I to r: LT Dowd H Fist' LCDR James F. Elafncs, LCDR Cf R. Vvllnler, CPR lrxing H. lvpi . Jr., XO. CDR George R. Rgnxs LL. CDR Josiah Henson. LCDR Liu: E. Metcalf, LCDR Robwt X. .':lxcc. LT Cuitiss O. Walxeiimn, LT 5. Benningliam. Second row: LTJG Harry E. Lex-.is. LTJG X'.a'. J. LTJG Pool A. Ruth. LTJG Edna-5 Redden. LTJG llaisrev Seeks . LTJG Harold D Shepherd. LT Semi. R. Walker, LT Duane C. Sc tg'f-3: e'. LTJG David I-lillefy. LT Rsbsrt ix. Potter, LT Noitimei C. R:bZ s: . LTJG lvlichael li. Murphy, LTJG JCL7' D. Wolff, LTJG John N. DePe:.. Third row: LTJG Maurice C. Dtzfcfs. ENS Joseph E. Gros. LTJG H. Hinkley, LTJG James L. Grahsin. LTJG Ernest J. Ehle's. LTJS 53'-1 S. I-lutchins, LTJG Robert A. Petit.. LTJG Donald E. Fleigle, LTJG Sanus W. Gregg. l6A -.L nzz-sf' M - P? ...Q H f . - ATT Q5 -is J lx 2 S ' P? K5 3 I ' Z Ffqvx. Y, 1 3 4 - pq H- f f - ,G -I if E: fm '-f'i ' 5 1 if 11: I gl fn EXE 5 f 2 :Q LK, rf J xr Z fy 'CKAJ H v-5 -.f -, v sf I' .n ,. 1 Q A if-l 4, I ' l L L1 f ,, . Qi! gg 1 Cb 7 A C3 4 '53 ' E , ' r' I .A l svn -5 1- 30' 1, 's l 2 1 3 Z xi 1 ,4 Q wx' ka 01 ,, '-.x . '-, tum YSG1 V 'st 'sn to Ti .Tc s .. -, Vs: ' - ,. ..,' N 'I 'C f S ' bi. 9 35. 'cvs Lic ,r In .dsx D X1'x'xK'Rx 4 N, 'Xl .fx D f:f'x', -1 . r. 15. Svcond 'I-N X ' 'Q x S 'Q 'Un :Cx ' T Z:. .'s, 'xi.'. TN5, LN L.' ' X-f Q , '. . :I 3 . Trmd row . K., , V 1. li l., ls! 1. ' I H x'm fi, . . il.. M VS ,H 5'A1wv. T U' I .1 lc',',- 11, xl. 14 1 fx 5 J., f' , 1 'XV + Suomi row I I' i.',x1' ff l-N v 'I r 1 K V I Y ' 11 4 vlf, 5. ,l vin i' f'! , I. . fllnfq xv!! ' ya,, ' H5 . '4,'!fllxrn 'J 1:0 'mirvl . V 1 11,4 , 1 f A 1 1 lf, f,f,,111 VS-31 Y '32 'on I To rg ',' 1 'f?. 1,1 il ' ' ..: 1' . 5 Yylzz' if- ,',' '.,:gfrN',rw, , uf ,ff ,ipnnlr 'gif ulfllnlt ' ,,, 1 H ', ff, I- ' .' V, D',?+f:fTj. Second roar: 1 ,'1: j .'.', Jlrlzgfvf. ' ' :y : 1, 5 21' ' ',',', ffm V, MUUUZ. ',, ', I-'??-'mf fi. SIU- -f., 1 :. 'J 'f ! 1' gulf C. Slfazizis, H , iffy C. rmgffr. R01 ..:,a,:4 iw, H',rr'af,, Thnrd row: Lg, ij Eigmf, 153, Gijfj F. 99111. JESVWES ,L ,a',f3',', 'fat E. Gaffvfl. JHUW95 E' 'fail Sgijgri P. DUNS, Ronald R. Fell, ja' T, Giver, Charles E. Strxckland, 165 VAW-33 First row, I to r: Albra Fisher, Walter Reese, Fred Leyh, Donald Cayton, Raymond Nye, Leroy Weaver, William Wilmot, Ronald Bober. Second row: Arthur Orlandella, ENS John Alton, LTJG Bradford Lescher, LTJG Robert Ruble, LTJG William Ball, LT Syl- vester Brovvn, LCDR Alfred Sullivan, LCDR Claude Mounce, LT Leo Smith, LTJG Frederick Wilson, LTJG John Sayles, LTJG Byron Hazard, LTJG Paul Michelotti. Third row: Peter Siewenie, Van Hobbs, Harold Barlcs. Raymond Zwick, Lester Liptak, Henry Deeks, Raul Micheliche, Louis Robert, John Matejko, George Haines. Peter Chymczuk, Roger Peterson, Louis Carter, Robert Schmidt. Fourth row: John Schmidt, Carlos Bessolo, Thomas Black, Terence Reese, Dafid Perry, Raulin Martin, Herman Adams, Ronald Bowman, James Cribbs, Robert Banner, James Burns, Robert Sonnenburg, Richard Petters, John Cloud, Francis Spellane. HU-2 First row, I to r: G. W, Pwmil, lf Torn Zinn, LTJG M G. lomr, E T Muse. Second row: D. EQ. Pt-rrr.. H lc Hansen, C. Hout, C A, Sykes. J R Strndley. VA-S4 First row, l to r: Frank Tlrqrne. .. Sukup, William Ferguson, Rcrs Reed. John Goddlott. Grce .'.aj. CV John Capone. Frank Scctclfas. Lester Milton, Guy Htitclr-r1s: , Second row: Robert Dekett, LT .larnos Rsth. LTC Robert Biglov., LT Robot F'sQi'e'p Len Gray. lDoug!as Aircraft Ter . Rep.l, LT Edv.ar'd t':frrge'te'. CCR Eduard Herbert. LT l.'i:l'aei Cevltt. LT John Parks, Richard Ne's:'f. Third , row: Leonard Crisci. Robert '.'aft '. David Rath, Billy Atchison. R:t:e't Wysocki, Billie Lexnis. Gecrge Src.-. . Harry Doyle, Daxid Tinwntsns. Rcfac r Mitchell, Alan l-lilla. -lanres Lg.dn'a'v Fourth row: Tyrrell Hanrrncnd, T:i:. as U Hinson, John Bohr-e. Rsbert sz. George McCune. Benard Blshcr. Wesley Farnham, Louis Pa'i'a7'. Earnest Jones. Gary Christer- rr, Wayne Clendenning, l66 KJ ' u . Y A . p f U! Ms.,-2 f 2 1 , if , ,. X . Fi J. J. Powell, PHI R. F. Reed, PH2 R.C. Payne, PH2 W. B. Havens. PH2 D. A. Perala, PH2 H. E. Kelly, PH3 D. E. Carmona, PH3 IVI. A. Bernier, PH3 T. L. Lefever, PH3 JUS ?'l . CRUISEBOOK STAFF PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICER CDR David L. Spaulding, USNR EDITOR LTJG Warren W. Sparrow, USN BUSINESS MANAGER LTJG Kent Huntzinger, USN PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF PHOTO LAB CHIEFS Chief R. E. Boyer. USN Chief J, F. Fallun. USN PUBLISHER VRC 40 Detachment 1812 Al P .I llrlwrty IT Mrrslxlll IZ NWHTIHI M AD I 3 B. L. Lucas, AN F. R. Miller, PHAN R. Inglis, AN W. P. Clayton. AN P. L. Ostlc. AN R. A. Benner, AN N. C. Jensen, AN D. H. Kaluszka, PH3 Howard Wohl Associates Westbury, New York ,, 6 f La., 1 X 1 41 I 1 1 Y' A if 2 .64 i . . . X , 1 V W. 'I' ' I KA 9' A B 1. h 0 V ' Q I ,f-gf.. , - - 'T I fi,'5.S'-f'- , vu 5., , ,. , - - -J-'Q' I - K' 1 v . 12, ' . -gi , . , ' 5 X .lx 1- msp. W A at 1 '. , 4 Ji WSW L , gg. , fx 2,g.,...qj , M kj! .' .N 9529- M4 if-KI: ' . A - ,Av H .A fl' 1 Q ,.1-fli'-X 'I fm' .A,x . . .W ., 1 K' 1 ' P' -. an 1 .1 5- X A a 5 1, , I' f -r, ' '-1 i J, 1 - ,fan ff fix f-- . 4 i I' 'xifigi , ' ' A Q5 v, -in . , Q, sg., ff, - 1 ' ' . I Q , . . f - PM 'Wg' H., 5,234 Q 4 f ' Q ' W Q ' 'Ii '-1.4. ' ' ' .. ww - '1 Q , f',HA,,Q 1p A V 3, . , , wg, .V : 2.49 5. 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