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Page 8 text:
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' :m Captain Bivin was born in Ventura, California and attended schools in Southern and Northern California until he joined the U. S. Navy in December 1941. He entered the Naval Acad- emy in 1943, graduating in June 1946, After commissioning, he served in the aircraft carriers BOXER and CORAL SEA and entered Submarine School in 1948. He has served in the submarines REMORA, BLUEGILL, BAYA, SABLEFISH and SPIKE- FISH. His command tour was in GREENFISH in Pearl Harbor. Other tours of duty have been on the Staff of Harvard NROTC; Bureau of Naval Personnel; Stanford University Armed Forces Staff College; Staff, Com- mander in Chief; U.S. Naval Forces, Europe; Staff, Commander Submarine Squadron TEN, Commander Submarine Division ONE HUN- DRED ONE and Assistant Chief of Staff Ad- ministration and Personnel; Staff, Command- er Surmarine Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet. Captain Bivin is married to the former Joan Jossen of Douglaston, Long Island, New York. They have one daughter. Captain Homer Richard Bivin Commanding Officer .jVWn MiWw
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Page 7 text:
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USS CAMBRIA is a veteran of amphibious warfare. Completed in May 1943 and christened SS SEA SWALLOW as a U.S. Maritime Commis- sion, the ship was then acquired by the Navy. She was recommissioned on 10 November 1943 as APA-36 and named CAMBRIA for Cambria County, Pennsylvania. Manned by the Coast Guard, CAMBRIA departed for the Pacific The- ater in December 1943 and arrived at Pearl Harbor on New Year ' s Day. 1944 saw CAMBRIA involved in the occupation of Kwajolein, Majuro and Eniwetok tolls, followed by landings at Tinia and Leyte. On 1 January, 1945 CAMBRIA departed for Lingayan Gulf where she landed her troops on beaches which had been seized the previous day. During this operation CAMBRIA endured enemy air raids which continued for several days, and suffered slight damage from a near miss bomb astern. Following this action, the ship participated in the invasion of Okinawa, the last and greatest amphibious operation of the war. On 10 April, 1945 CAMBRIA sailed for the United States and was oper- ating out of West Coast ports when the war ended. CAMBRIA was transferred to the Atlantic Fleet in 1 946 and placed under Navy command. Inactivated in 1949 and then reactivated and re- commissioned in 1950, the ship has remained assigned to the Am- phibious Force Atlantic Fleet as a Division and Squadron Flagship. In this role, CAMBRIA has made numerous extended Mediterranean and Caribbean cruises. In keeping with her long history of important mission assignments, CAMBRIA participated in both the Suez and Lebanon crises, and in 1962 was deployed to the Caribbean in connection with the Cuban crisis. CAMBRIA deployed to the Mediterranean with Commander Amphibious Squadron SIX embarked. This deployment was completed August, 1969. She deployed again to the Mediterranean in December 1969 returning to her homeport, Norfolk, April 1970.
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Page 9 text:
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Adolf M. B. Jacobsen, the son of Oscar and Paula Jacobsen of Long Island, New York, was born in Brooklyn, New York on 29 June 1926. After graduation fronn the New York State Maritime Acadenny, Connnnander Jacob- sen served in the Merchant Marine until he entered the Navy in February, 1954 as a Lieutenant (Junior Grade). He has served with the Annphibious Force in San Diego, California, with the Destroyer Force in New- port, Rhode Island and Key West, Florida, by a tour of recruiting duty in New York City, and with MSTS Atlantic as Comnnanding Officer of the Military Departnnent of the USNS Rose. Commander Jacobsen was assigned to the Bureau of Naval Personnel in the Mobiliza- tion Plans Division and served on the staff of Commander Amphibious Squadron SEVEN as Operations and Plans Officer. While at- tached to the staff, and on his first deploy- ment to Viet Nam and the Western Pacific, the then LCDR Jacobsen was spot-promoted to Commander. Commander Jacobsen re- ported to the staff of Commander, Naval Re- serve Training Command where he served OS head Inspector General Support Branch, until reporting to CAMBRIA in June 1969. Commander Jacobsen is married to the for- mer Mary Tellefsen of Huntington, Long Island, New York. They have two children. CDR A. M. B. Jacobsen Executive Officer
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