ea Q., , , S 'Q 'la Q w W f x.,.,,. ,.w ' X NAVY DEPARms15xT L!BRARYj 1 ' ' ARD BLDG44 WASHIINQION NAVY Y N WASHINGTON, D.C. 20374-0571 siL:L.,, -- ii.. W1 if , .f M, ,, . .- fi. 1-Q 3 . H xi , 5, .vm J- 1 -- . wig? Q :fri 1 .-Qrwg.. 4'gn.:.' J... .My . .-1., M- , -.g.. .wa -b ,.r. ,. gg . A, . x Fiw' ,,..' ,. V-fi' Jf: -Z1 1 T-Zi v 3, 2.2, - v 55.41 ,. J, - ,.- 1 . C-. -v .. . fr., ,L-LJ,-. ,Vex . t 1. . ,,.,,, H -It 3 --A ,gg V I ' inf,-3.1M A+-'sv-fb - I , .. iq, .4 ,, Q14 ., f 5-jf' xjgffg r .,.. , . ji-it , , J. ,mm ,, '-1.1 VL. . .4 :,,J,vf..x V. .,.4,, M ,. , S , . ... 'f , -A, M nm, A- -. - -. V- wwe' ' M' -A v . if -- A ,, .Hu 4 'lg-.aah . ,, --su s.,v -1 Qf Q zz: ne, law -w.. ,s v 4 . 1 , -h v ., , ,. .V--'V--VfV.V :HAL 41 Vw V Ag.. U., ,. -A ,.,:,M+ ' ff , . V ... .1 - 1-' , ' , M - 3 ' A A V 4' .-V VV . ,V .X , A ' ' ' f ,VVVV a, V 1' V' 1 V V ,V ,qt f fig,-T .fVf:'f2,fvVVVV?A ,,.4-T.A- ,V .. .. . . .' Vpwx--'--V-V-V' V-'Wg 1 ' ,.:.V.A V, , NA 5 VV A , A . V ,, V C. K VV, ' V ' . if .V .xg V' A :A :V V. A. V V 4 V V- 'VV - V Ah Av V - - I ' - 5.1 ' 1 . . gf ,, V ,oy , iV1VVV if' , NV V, .',.,VV, , V. j,A,M,,, A. V ,.- V -V ' :. V . . 'V ..-f - ' 1 Y' .1V ' M F7+!rf-0 '.,.'L V V ' ' ' V-V . - 1, VVV' ,. .V N 'ff .-1. V - 1-'- Q . V .f V. -V . R . V. . . ,-f-V' V. 1., V --14 . - TN ' ' J' ,V fx. , . ' ns. 'L ' VV 1 -V1l- 1 -A . - .' V '.,w- ,g. . , 4. V Vi-VYVVA.-.V '. f?a'r4...VW,-VV+ 'wiq1'S 'QQ' ' , V, ML'-..,, 'L 'P',V:.:' mv 5 'W' ' ,.-,:,.A.V,gaV' 4.2.1- VM, - ' 'Z' ' . nv .. ' 1- 'V 'Y -A .Qi Eff ' .q- '-1-!QLVV..11'-ff,.1 3 ITV- ' f,L,..ap,.','A, :ff-J ,V-. V V-fi, , v-gf' Vw :VV51A F-A -V5-'-'-7 ,fa - A V.. Q Vmi,AA?L! MIA., 1 A A . . .Aw ,Q HVVLJV,-V , . , , ..V .,V V. -.VW -'41 fa . If , .. ...1-5' -V!!-uf! ,wx ,.. ,. ,..,,fMV ,V, ,.-.,,1,.,,VEVV,5,L.V:Q,.gf'5l'f.N V M ' 'W V L ,.rfV'..fg'4,-V4 - 1Fl?J5f1V 7 . Na gd, V- WV V' ' V ,. -. V ?7-f ?'V, 'a,'5,'V1.,..N VV V. 5 A L, ,.,f.:'5 T ' -' ' V . V A ,Vw -. A , 'J' '-' rw V2 V .: . A Vf, .- -V ,-V V11 .1 ...L V fu. ': T7 -V1-' Vfff i V ,- A .frm K -V V V, V, -, ...AV we-.w..Q -'L-,V -V A it . V V A-V W-VV,.V-V 1 fn- 'V , ,V . . F, N4 ., , ,V V fq,w,,--91,7 V . '- V- 'V V5 V V,-,,.- ,. L., V -3,5 V V-r5...V, A-, V--valmfzf Pl VV- QT -iiuwi Y V -V1.4 AV A 'V 4 V .J ,V , V -' ' -N W., .... , V ,.. , -Vw. V ,LS 1-Mi? . .TV tb. 13-45,.VPg gi' EA-Lg, V45 1 pi., xi , . K. 5, ' -V V -, V'-Q - - 'N ,,,.s Va. .q'V:5 : ' ' w:xgvV? 'i ,.'.Vf-221. 'iw ' ' 55 ff' ' ' .. vim., ' Q., V-new jak- A V A .V - 1 G ,., - Kyo - . V715 . ,A V V' -' - ' ,, ,W Vw .. V- -..ybwl V VA? V V V V, VV---. 1' VV ...-rm MQ, ,JV f- W VV VSA uw. W. V .M - '- ' ' ' -f ' - V, V V : ' fV','.-1....', Sw -V ' 7 .. - 4, gy, '- QQ., - ff . , V. . LV f - W, , . . V .V... .. ' h 4,-A1 w,,,,,g.., 1, -V' '11, ...f-.1 W- V. .V ,. . gift uw ,. ,- vm , .A 2,V..' -.fb , ' - 3. .....,A .. ,A - V- 1' . ,, ' ' -' .... ' ' -V EN V:V-f X'- I 4' ' 'V I' mmf -V V W --w., 'V 7 V ' x' ' L W -V .V . Y - ' , -- . .- A .,-A V VA C... V . V A, . .V ,f-V A- - V - V-.A . . A , y-,V A .. I , V , ,--C.,,,1.f. ,.. up V . VA ...Af Q- AAj,:.M,..., ,W ,,V., . a1A,.,. ,.,,,,,,AVAJV ,.,,,..,yl , ,V VV Vp . A A f V V-Rx' L. 3- 1' , 1. ,A ,. :j'f.!H1V V V. 1 . V A .V Wh ..V'.:V., 5 . , V...,. '19 V --Q-V-f A V, M VV A ,. . V Ala? , ..- V.a.5.2-ff N 'L 'tu f ', . if 1. T . gf- V f ' W4 ,f 'Q V-A VVA-4-v2.14fJVsVVi-cw' fn N- , ,X Vw ,.. ,-1 :Ax 14' 1 V ,VVVVAVQM gg-.VqnV1- ' ' .' ,gf .fw VV V 1 .VV .,. A V' -.4 ,Af A-1 - Q . Vp . 5 - ' 'JV VA ,V - 1 1' Tw, -' E - V-Jw A? V V VMLJA 'V V. lim V 1 .. .-,ry 3.3.VggV ' 1. ,X X V- V' ,. ., VA V gf-14.45 Ji.: my .Y , NV. ,A Viv ,V .vu .V V ,. VM- V,V ., ...M-1. . . V' A 31 QM 4,,V,,,awV V V nn A VY, bg 1, A .M , ,, .V V g I , VV .I Y M, , V! AIM AV, ,1 QJVAAV .':1:..,, V7-1 ll. -V M, 9 V V Vf in ,- Af ,..V',V,1,,.1. ,V V . A ,.,,,,,,,H. ij.. .if -' 'R X K N A A ...--gi' 5' -f V- AAQ ' V . ,AL ., ' M.. . AjAf,::4 , ' . 7 .FV 6 V .V V: ,VV .V ,V1VA.VV LV..- ,,V.fV.,,.,,,V.VV .L -V V9-,, 1 V,,,,M, VA - QA 5V.,V,f.1.-- V ., . V- V ,. V ..:,, - U , . fi.: 1- V 1 . . V -1- . J' . 5 . VV-4 f - If V . V , , - .ip-. .5-V . Vx. f ' ' . . , .., :.'V:-iff.-',V4V,,, L 'r , . V s. Y: '11 mi- V, I?L:'7'f'1- ' ' . '4.V.... .. 'V ' 'ff if -VA ' ' VM V ' ill... -V NV H VV V- : ,. .' -',gtpV5V init ,swf - 1 1 MV. V ...VV ,sims V- -,,,M-M...-ff-'-my ,QS ' N I A fl. 'V V , .V . H 5. ' . ' - , V-'H ff .. V u 'rl 3. ,-'Q-, V, 4 ,V 'if .W ' ' ' V-, , . . 4 ,lf , .V 1 H' f..-5 A ,.,.-,V...w ,ff5g.yV,.1mm V4 V.... . ,V .. , V ' ' W V. , V AV --gg, ..,, 4- w-.V.,,,V N- Vg, ' ,V - -V. -V -Vw , -,.,,,, M . . gg, Af :..,.VV I A VV, J3gj,,,, ,gr.fmy8l!Gi mf 1 - f. ....,V,LgV J! f -- - 'WV -www' -V-Vw.. V Qs - - ,. Vl 62 wi-.V Vw' 4 luv frm. - .,., , ,. -1 lx is V .M V V..V.,,ff ' V '-1 V.-V1 ' V- V , .Mau '- ,. V A M, .VV V. 1' - rc, .MJIQA ' V .. wg, ,..,-A.. V,..- 'iw VV x M. Jw, V AAA., VHVV .v ,. ,..L,,A,, ,V.,. qv.A7...,.JV .VV 4V- WV ' V a A . -uqg, J' E , , A , r. , . A ' 'V , l0Q't' f If ...a --V.. 7 '75 4, VA MV A - . .,,g, ,,,.,,,,.. dy V ' 6 ' r- , V' ,:x'. .. V 1VVVVf ' 'ml . An' , A V. -.V ,,,. A ' ' J- ' -Ji! .Q-fu.. i .V I. V my .. , f- gulf- ' A , V .mu ,.A, Vwfm' K ' ,rg'-e- ,, VV A HAR AAAV .. l'V.,,g.,,AV V A, vf':r'.f+-H -,V . ff' 4- ' , ' A . . U .. ' 7 ' ...VH-w'f ,Vfv:z.isr'-P' .LLL ' VV V -f - W V,-,.,.--wiv , MM.. ,...,V,,.avfg'li-'f-re-!r '.,,. A ,, ...V -f M,-fg,...k5,, Q. ' V AV L, 'ff' -.. VV V' fx.-. ' , V . ' A + -' ' ' ?F',,,g , . Vs' -11' 'ff ' - ,a-V-'u,,,,p4l 'e P .V ' I' 5 , ' X ' ...4v3V 'V A V w. ' ' ' ..- ' ,,V-Q A V VVA V, J..- , - 1, -- 4' ,Vw l ,.,g., ,, .V ,.., , ' ff' - A ..fVV,,.. , , K ' ,pw 'V .V Vf ..,. R. 'W A:wv2 1f:f-snh if 1 ' ,z-1 Q ' - ,, ' ' ff: ' . 'H ' ' V 'K ' m,,,V.f- M V,,,..V.-V ,,,,,- . ., . +1 ,TJ . 1 r A- 4 0 f V my ff-' ' A af-7 . 2-MMV V 1 , rn H--Y - vm Q .Q--,gf ,I V-.4g,,,,:y, f ., '.'1g.f V fi- Y V .mg-,,f V V A fu A- L 'cam -. ,V , - ,.,.V,AV f 'M A an '95 Q 2- ,.., 5 ,ii N 3' 3 g sf 4 ,,.ll- ' 'f' I 'I 7' newest et CWM of: CVA-62 Y FV - K ,-,ar gm' .2-'ef---tr .- . - 'N ff ' Q, km. QLM ' , .Z - 5 U' --Q 5? japan i 1----and-1.4-1-b, X V K l W ' gy. Vf v Hwv- ' ,. ' ' ,., ' -1 , 'Q A Afff4w.f-M1 K' A' ' A-N f f . M 5 . 4 - -' ,.. ' '.. N. '1 f ' f .oh . f ww-1-:V ' V3 . 4 .,-. ,. ..-. ,, ' 1 ...J Y 1-lvx N . - -M Q . - ,N-A-f ' 'L gf: - , - Q .Aw if--5 , -X '- ,f fl . ' --..ffqnl'l'!'k-W .k ','fr- - .' far' - -. .- , U - ' 1. 1. 21. - 'fl , ,. ., fuss- Yl 4' Muni- Nj 'V U-H' -as-, '99, ,Q 44-ui g Q.. iff ' qi-'lI ' - Q.-.Y ' 'JM' F. A In , ,. - ' A N rr 4' -1' uf' 1 JA' M' If K .WT W., f Q .ma , -' at 'T M . ,, TL-, ., ' ga'--up T- --- ,tr ,. ,1 5 , M . K 4-, A I .h iagfd .. M., , - , . A ' ' ,U 4, 4,su.,A,,,,4 1 . .L 5 I .r-L ' - ,' ' -- .. . . 1- . 5 ,F -uc: -4' if., ' . , . ' f 1 ' I J... d - .F W1 in ' ' . - --M1 J N . 'A-4 ...v -1 www-If-fl-' r S, yd- x - x ,Q , .-u... 5 . - , 4 ,' 1 4 5 5 ev! f fm- . an -Z. . -P X. V , 'M .. V .' Q -, gf' Qt ' MA . - ia. - 'T l! Q ' s ' ' U 'D ' 9' L, -'F' -2' ' am-ff. .i ' ' 4 - 1' ' 5- ,-iv' -- ' W N ' ' f5l ,, ' .V ' ' ,g X 1 ' - .Q ' 1 f ' - ' . ' ' M'- .L . - I, A '55 Q- -QA-, ' .1 V In fl il, A ' X N 41 Y 4, 'Alu' ., . 'YK ' u , ,, 1- - ,A A-g, psi '7,?yI Lb WN Q0 file of the ll y S newest Jet COLTTi87f'.' CVA-62 .,mmom,, x vm I F, In-'I ' Fur' ' .W ,....- -5 ?L,,, 'X-4 :lg I' -.NM in ,L fm ' W 5 n , .447 ' .rf 4 n 8 4 . Tim'-. A X I V1 .. gjxffskf' 51149 fx, W .xx fx QL,u7,,,., xg, I-jg 4 A .Y - F' fr U -5 ' J - gl ' - . ' . ' - f 'W 4 4. f ':. -F Q, 4, . V 15 -r fuJ6f.v,' 1 'T V -j' Aff' 3 rrf gl,Cud!1C' 1:5 Z N is 5 Q .df 3 f 3: -f 'Fw , c it ' ... cw eg, ' 121114 lv!-af ' . Y , . 45-. wwf S' .. .. 3' :Z Y flzyl :elk . Tx,2a:7-'13 A U , - H -V 7f S! 1iam'-S .z- ' my-1-9-Q: ' Srl: ky-,fx 1 'ft ' . ' ww. , M ' ,, ,, 1 ni-wi 'f4 59'N Wag? .. , A ,Q .w L. - ' 2 w '1 f . -f .. .H 9 if 1 f' 6 fri gf' - 0 Ihr-lv 1393 , . ' ii' ' . V, I Bm., M i ' I, Nm -ff - Q' Y' - . .A nr, ...4-A- I ., if ' V Vw -6 , Q -Idsf' ' in . syt-N sr- ' ww ,. mmf' f ' -Q -If Hsu' ',,g,,,f 1' +-f ' 5' -U. 5, W .., -4 1' w ,hw-2 A --via Inf' Q - may 4.552 ., iv.. ' - '-,E.1fLag- ,Q 7 1:1 5' if lf' an ' . 3. , , , , A 1. Q if , .f -43,5 A -L 4 , fr'-'f f9?:5':'.,' ,LQ , ':aaw.f ,, vw' .-1' ff . - f v 0 In V -lg. , 1 ,A egfm her first M eclitefromeowfi Deployment . 1 i 'Wiliam I im, nm Rear Admiral Ray C. Needham USN, Commander Carrier Division TWO. relieves Rear Admiral Robert E. Dixon, USN, Commander Carrier Division FOUR, at Pollensa Bay, Mallorca on 19 August 1960. . . gig 3 N ,- w if Q45 9' FF 11 . '- '- iw 'h 5 fimff 371 fy f 'l I I 9 N Abfbx P ...,-f' 'r .MNT . g ' H! J P -.H AIHUISWM f f -H , 21 ish Tx , . N' ff : 1351 , xg ' ' sv, ik,-yeqh I f - ,q:z'XfFf!?H .. A ' Q' 7 fd 'A In , . I 154' , ' X 0 , Jr- 'J '- V -I QQQ,g,,:v-Qilg , 1. 73 19 s., if V wwf-AMMwxW . a gp d0 2 2,cfe fy' yum -,N :lx if if LA 5 l XXX HS. nu 'W 7 .Af Zgiif 'c' A , '-Af, A - ,A ff ffiggsis ya --,ffifpl :1f? :QA'ffF' 'f' I ,A V1 M M! W KA 3,56 4 vviiv 1 kj I N W 1' -V, II- lv ,A VA RA, K A K My A ' R 1 b b A ' A f?'fgiA.!Q5gf 25,21 'J- - 'A Afx, i - A 1-fg5.,1'1'iiq192?f'1ff1g: ':' LQ ., A . -4 ' X 5 A . ' A' - V E ff? 'F 4 lj? a, . ':,h-:lj flgiikliiv-E' L - - iii N I ' . W, ' I Q- V v ,, ' A' p I 5 , uw EA if-174.1 :.,1 , ---'+, A -r, ' ,A , , A Agn 7 A- ..f- A F ffm 'f - A N , A AA ,A ' ' A A ww ,.f5ww -2 ' A A 'L '1.' ' l - - ' . ' A A ' Q 'WWW ' P fffAfsJAfffw,fffffff1WLff'f'fff '6f2x,ff,,,fffJff' - 5,gfffff'f ',,3f'f,y'Z'1 2fA7 J ' V A -J ,,,y.,fyfgu'1' f I , ' V f -A '17, -N , A . 'V cf, J ' ,. ' , 'aa A - , in V - -hjn.und!4hu41A6'm ll GTV! A if ,f!p1.Ma1,ufll'!'fEFu . - nf , HL A.7L M,,m,,.,,.,fA lfjf-WJ., Aqz,,,fa,AA,.M7 4 I Ib fwwhiu dgl4,W,,,4,1f1,,,.,,xJJ,wWaf I yd! A K ' ff 'HMA' IFF, f?'L,.1nf,pdli.fLVfa,lL' dv, Mzgdfujiigi it ,225 I aitdu ' L i , gzffklgnnunfggz fA Zf.NWw7gn2Jd!iZ,2J lWlau,Zf11 I Q' ' 5M 1 1 I1 V 'ff' 7 ' rv A -A ' ' lily i- ' r V. Q 1 - ,L A ,,.hA,,..,,,.1h,,Af-nj WZJ 54,,,.,'f 4 -1fffM9ffff'i?f'-W ffffu-f'4?'? fu IWQZ ,A .,.Af.uw92ffff's0 f 1 'f fl 'V ' 2 5' fi fHfdfj,:vW,,Q'fuf 'eg A 'lljwd Af 1-ff f1f1ff3'WAZ i?,Aff'1 'Cf-iw W A I 0-Awuff , ,A JM. A ,A f iflk , ,M-'f ' bm in 35 ,AJ fQ'W'fJ'V 'f f1Zi7nf' J J ' 4' W I 'ff ff1'ff'f fffAf A A A, . MIUDMAWJ-,Ml - 455 my ' ' - , . ' '4 ' od'lI-1,1 r , ,A A f ,4hpnW ,IAN V' le A q '- V. t M,4,A,,.,,.,ff5f,Afgff,T.Jff , , - ,mwzgng ilyifly ,A AAA A M AAA A WWWQM ,,gZA..A,f ' Aff A + 7 '- v55r1JQ7'H'f1'A ' ' ., , ' :W , A jj? A 0 I I nb ' , Ai ,.kwjiajQa,gJMEpfyuli'fqf7 t'fuAfn'J !lumhinwJ!n!Q17,LawinNul ., V A ' Kg., 1 I I Aa .1 lll td E, 1 fy 4Ap,,p2gu?I:11N!uJ V Z If . ,A Af.. I . ,YA ' g, ,D A lf-W J77 f 'i7!g1ZL'W,fJ,,f,6l-A A 1- W' ff , IIXXQ!-AA, :l fkx f U 1' ?f?,3nd,gn,1,z4i'Ilfu 'flNkpn1IVn!J:Z I V. n V A f .'f ' X rll14lb07'OlAI 'id'nJJ0m',l - 7 I ' ,V f- 'A gy- 9 y A ,TAI Q ,ylzA jZwfif-Zfv,jHZlakl'fIl'QMAf at i A l W N 1 ,i2.'ZA i'Az2.,.A,,Ai,,A,.A.A 9Z4AAA,fAAA4A ZMAAAA,A- fffafwMffffWAQ.A 1,aA,,W FFA ' 'QA 'A Zi? '. ' ,A fb 5 'fmtifr-1 f41.l,ffAfi1gPo91J9'ff5'v'f'f'l Vf 'd ?'f'4 ' 'e' A V gA'9j,. ' A1k . 5.q ' 'X A '.X 75 'If ' Alukjr- , W , ,f ' ' wif' ff Q w w J-W5 , A, 3' ,,A f,,g.,,.,.1.ffp,,g.A1,4fw.AA,.fffW f v 4 .,, A T Kliqillbkii-E4 ff' 'Mn - g, A V' -A 4 4 EIN, .ip QA A f 0,i?wfGf0W,AM' 'f'if'5'm' ' , , , 5A-1' 1 -XML -i ixn I' I A-viii, I, , Ai' la lLYlAlfvM,'?M1MJ!yluuMpj!fflfg,I,Vv!lxX t Hb - . Ligf - -, f -:f!if,1,A.l U , .lff5A-Q A dd , jr .. J.AA,,.h.dA A A E A In A. , ,A ,Az VK , -- -A A A . g :AA W X -if I A M ' Avkwf gyg ,gr v A M -A A 5, A 4 , 111' 4 J L A A g AfAAff5,ff.7ffffffffQf 2 ,A :V A K P- A Z .V Q 74, 5'-EDA i- r -' tl vi llx- A ' ' + mm A 1 A ' ' A Q'A ,1, ' N .g.fQ , - i.Q w , AAL A- I ,v.. 3 H 5: g i n , T' A A fl ' , -- - ,A M i,.rf a - ' .--1 fafm' A ' J FH ' f 1 u ,AA , f A !. f,:,A .'f, PQ,, I' V Vl ' ff- ' 3 A 6' fsfpfi f,Qg- , AH, .Ak.,f- 1- -MQ gk, 1.-'Aff' 2.1 -Le ,wit x.,-5,55 ' - I ' lv X1 ' -. Q fe. 9 .xgffygir 7573, f im ' rf ' ,Q-ff LQ,-' 55' V , i RL 3Wf191 i ., nlwfkcm , . 4 W.Hvl6'W,,4,fn,.,,.nllA'j'1 M' H '7rnurll l lwwtu ' ' bu Z5 Wff-wfff'ff fZ'ZfPf W V .lol-fW 'T7' af-ff 'i'WnZ fb'1lpf51112 nm N nw .WHW 1- 0wfif,'::f'fff.4, nj ffinu 44, ip g,6f:,w5f 'J 'h 1 Z X '7 'iff' Aw,-7 ', ' -MW? wr , W 53W 1943 19 9 , G 'r zfmf p mid TLCLWLQ. 0 . gpg' , !W'Z5i,,zQ 'J 5 x 9 F H7 --f. 45.4 g fir, w KC S Q, vcrm -,g U 7 -.,'7..,!c+ , 31151: as '- :Mm-. n , .gjiiyff -l, - V.-A-4.11- 13, -' W. 1 ,Q X A it f' ffm' Ill ' dl W 1 1 mill' A , ' nlurfi flu 1.1, 1 Jl'llHlf1'A' -L flu vw: nn me 1 uni' I ffl! x'A fl Alf! 9 f-1 ff xr lp '1 1 and I Km fn. 1.1 4 :Z 1 1 ll Ilum I mf ul 'r fflllllll' L HN 15701 flfh. .JJ lnllu .1 A nfl A fn' jg '4Hl0'f4 ll-U 'nn 1 ! wm- 'L 1 ll' I .1 :U 4 :I ,..,- If mi f U 'I ur J 111:15 IJ ,,-f' 'un -. 1 1 1 ,uf uhnu, 1 NJA llbuw V43 - me l1L:!.'!1 'Y .rfljzurf-2 'gun me fgkmu NHL , 1, 4. gl, I P. 41 wr 'YH' .fa ,V .4 Amufl K ,. x If - ul llfll ,ff null n Mr,-ff 41 .hlzlht A fr nz-f'Q':1'fl n1.'JMi'5 . ' L F1711 9' 'I' and M -u E111-NIJ fzrfflm L H ma rx Il mn! . 'I rf' I f .71 ' - :JINIQH II f .Ln nm! 79' 41011151 I I If UI! 'UD if nu 5 ,. 4 '1 rm ll nl mu mf 5211: L ln' H1 in Mm :U '41-I u WL. 'JK 1943 199 1,4 Ju' ,- s. T1 ...sq , W py' Md Wayne v .W 9 1 0 ' cmd of the 1 U i z I S I 1 L Nation which created her W A faee that reflects the vital Zeaaeveslfmlp AQ REAR ADMIRAL RAY C. NEEDHAM USN COMMANDER CARRIER DIVISION TWO CAPTAIN FRANCIS E NUESSLE USN CHIEF OF STAFF CARRIER DIVISION Tvvo I DECEMBER I959-I3 DECEMBER 1960 CAPTAIN RICHARD E. HARMER USN CHIEF OF STAFF CARRIER DIVISION TWO FROM I3 DECEMBER 1960 Avid the peppetiial pespoiisibility CAPTAIN JAMES W. O'GRADY USN COMMANDING OFFICER CVA-62 COCTOBER 1959-OCTOBER 19603 ix A'::'iI:fv 3. fl. rn.. 5 , 1. 1- .,! :fl YQLLSL Yfiiiiliilif? J CAPTAIN HARVEY P. LANHAIVI USN COMMANDING OFFICER CVA-62 CFROIVI OCTOBER 19605 iinplieit in the ppesenueition of independence. . . A A . wq fir' .nhl . Q! COMMANDER GUILFORD D. ACKER USN COMMANDER RALPH E. ELLIOTT USN E UTNE OFFICER CVA-62 EXECUTIVE OFFICER CVA-62 EX C CFEBRUARY 1960-SEPTEMBER 19605 CEROM SEPTEMBER 19607 I5 fecee that reflects the deadly routine. . . Y L At the City Laundromat Buff, . . and rebuff . . . Carl Kitt Y Bread of life . . . 1000 loaves a day. . . I6 Matt Dillon and Sandy Saunders the constant vigil. .. 'I Mix!! Five speeds ahead.. . On the bogey .... in CIC Close up. . .on the signal bridge . .. at Central Control J. C. Foley Frank Ramos Michael Lamb 42' i ,.',vf: 5 . .fo u o Af Radioman sitting a continuous wave circuit John Dimaggio wiigu - G+ .I 0. T? the rapid pulsebecit of ci mighty ll attack carrier. . . 'ri Fill 'er Soundstage action. l7 UD I A face that reflects the worlcl back hoorte The worlol of clisc jockey chatter arlcl TV quiz shows... ,.-- ' l ND ' 1 This is W-l-N-D . . 1 Neil Silva Wit and wits on TlC-TAC-TOW . . . ob Pasley, LTJG Brinn, Heinz Hoffman, and Don Rush of hot clogs, coke machines, arlcl strawberry sartclaes . .. Jn.-.-. .,, , fl' Seventh inning Stretch... Once Upon A Nickel . . Gedunk bregk , U Steve Smink Tom Homan ,,.,M,,. ..,.., , , Y . I 1714 i' XQN Bee-beep . . A pill for every occasion Smittie Smith of .super Iziglzways, and the corner drug store . . . Go Johnny go! U14 P, S. I love you . . ' Tom and Linda Heath The world 0 f family cm fl friends and cverytlving familiar . . Doggie in the window . .. Jerry Gibson - A f 3, J .QQ in , ff 3 -J Q-UP' Q, if 5 1 TP? J IS ll- suv sajxvgf i Y 7,5 54 1' V, ? ,Q ' 'll Rf I .P x 3 Arg.. 4 4 face CL reflects emel Amemeec Angnst 1960 For months we had known we were going We had planned . . . and what we had planned, we practiced. . . 1 is-- :., 2, .. 151 , M-K 4.f -,jqx Oh boy, 'the Latest and the Greatest! Bill Strader and Bobby Crenshaw TESTMDIHE uss mumnoswcf cm-az -- 22 Step right up. . Now is the hour, when Am! zvlmf zu' Ilflfl1J7'flI'ZL?-f'f'Cl, 200 poizleizccl . . . U71 fnllfffl ofIf'K12'2'72'fj and zvlmf nznsf bcclfmv 170-ZCOl'P'ZlVf'IC'flL . . . uss 'NDFPENDENQ E x 1. x 5 But I thought you were going to keep the baby.. Gee .. M62 XMYQTQ 1 , U71 Zi.Qfr'1rcf7 fo mmz Mm had mndv rr JYCCIC'VHZ.NC',1011090072 zvnulcl Hlfllffj rfnntlwr . . . We fzc'czfc'71Cc7 H20 flags 0fJ14Iy d'Zl'?'7?CUC . . . W0 Hmzfght of goodbyes . . . and fricd to forgvi tl20 m ...N f or Cl ' fzvcfclf in D0z'roz'f or cz '2L'CCI1'072CI in Piz'fsbzm'g7z or cz day in Norfollf . . . ,Ny MY. Where'd Daddy go? . . . 'wx fl! ga K 765 V134 .X I- ,d E 05.92115 if V V? 'LJ . x I! 1 'gn W L- x Q i L i 3..,r' H115 gl!-gm 'f c. ., ' 'i LW HJJW 1 ' A fx +2 vEi!iQ,xs. , uf I . it P , 'l,.,..3 :U ,,.,4 f F ., Q if Q ' I f f4q,,ur'f: '4.,wL-A P jj ,, L' 1fl ' A1'2Q'Q 1...-. N kr -if 'J xx , .'5,-1,51-,5,5:T,, V', -,C 'Hmm' -I .-,,-gif H A . A Z, I f fr Q , 'f' .s -f f b:wf i -H '--- , - TY 13' T ,. F-W 1 Ik 4 H 6 l - I fff,::5VjP Q , A 5 V A ,+L xx ,--,, A q 1 Aj We must say good by. . . Bruce Allard For cz long distance phone call to somewhere . . . For a minute or two on the pier . . Be a good little puppy . . Mr. and Mrs. J. Hampton M: JT, ' Parting is For mmztizs we had lfwmfn we were going . . -4'-.S Are you sure you didn't forget anything? .wal 1 K , few J ., ..e ,L i' 'T A- ,,.... '-M f N 7 -K-M f- is-,-bw i W,' wi' -.... F A 1 ls-iff ' '1 if -,, . Q, K ' 'su' ' N ...M N ' 'QK ' 'Y' f , fs .. v vi' 1- 1 d 'f'T 'f 'x'aN 'af , ,ft 111 S 4.914 + -FV NK .1 ,AY ' M.-vs 'i1f'f Q.- Q- wc, V , - H- ef-,. ' .. - 4 'r.1':'f.3,....,w fs- . '4 ?'lg,e i ffl.. ., .A un. in M... , -e we , rf- '!Q.,-'T'S'3i1 1n...... 7 Qu, 'V Then . . . For it's along, long time . .. ., .fb A view from the bridge . . . one clay in earZyAzig1ist 731 - i,i... M nl 'f'.-AQV5' Q7 4 u I u I X I 1' L ' J! '- ., I s lu .1-f - 1 L if-If f E I Introducing the Ambassadors. . . Charles McDonald, Leroy Johnson, Hez Thompson, Harvey Porter Let go of my ear or I'lI deck you... Art Campli and Lloyd Turner .30 I joined the Navy because LTJG Ronn Brinn I is 17 August 1960 'tus 'E Al' Land Ho . . Africa's Atlas Range The comstlivzes of two contiineizffs Tise wzzirkily out of the Cloudy haze cmd take shape as the Pillars of Hercules on the .sfarboawci and Hie Anclalizisiain Range on the port . . . SL M any of us are topsicle at noon to ma rk I mlepend enee's .first passage Hiroziglz. the '72Ilf7'7'0ZU st1'aits of Gibfraltew Attention to port . . .The magnificent Rock . . . gateway to the Med . . . 31 - ,, ' - 'W r erm' f1'772IClKIf!1jS?HI llClNIJ1!IllCCIU.U1 nw-Sf QTHH 710-f UI' 1 and hlzfvci H1 c' 21'lz1'z'cf-Cajnpvcl .wa brflw-ll' . . . I 1 rzwf .so2n0 Iandnzarlf In f1ar'cIz'sfrz1zrv, GZ'IJl'fl1ff!7'Sffl7lf S . . . U1 dI777Z?.1lf!fZ'7?fj a barrcn mas! . . . a nafzfral .T0Vf 7'f'3S that n2nc'lf.Q finzc 07261ZL11C'l'ZC'77?CI'?r1LS . . . You've seen one rock, you've seen 'em aII A proud procession of powers for peace. . . s I 1 3 r i As we pass by, if sccfnzs to C11 aunge size and shape. like a nzassive Ifalcidoscopic image sh a ken gently by a giant hand . ., and then it fades from view . . . I n O ZL7'77?,CL7?,-77711616 fm'tress, we .snclclenly know we have cn rz'1refZ , Ng' 153. .35 ff , in 2 .L-Sm Oiikcet 9 and New oi 'Coe Xodeqcmkcv-cc Noxomi, fcfxe-skofx oi Coe Oqimed Stan:-5 S-aw Xe we Acicvec oi we :mb oui it oe Q-1066 zkixee- S1010 attack 'coxooqgh we 6cQXoqXnc5 out io! ce-5 ko 100-an Bxccbq xx oo'oXc e-Qone, e 'ikxcee demonencatxone oi out mwah oixm acggceeore. Nbco vocq do oox, 2,01 when uw wxqimwm Acxaq , oe- Ltoffx eu'-Qaocixog, imc ec eiio-zu. uk- Woe Sta 94 one . ow, cadwj cixo Koo Q00 had 9 dei 'sex Q od 1 sq 2. '-5 be ow: C O0 Kms, e X39 136- . vcixe Ae, ' ' xx as khma ' 9 KYB oi xi 0 at iii-Vx 0 'A- me oaX3N! who 6 10 'C K. X Ron -go mga Xx 3 ocea RYA ' 5 oe- . Q0 ' me ga Xfvm are X34 9 asc, lac ' 'ue e xo KMC at gc ako sub M9 S1 0 Qi C aknh -5 at KXOQ, 0-5 . a X 'Yue c, ws e , ng K xo Wa ca? out Koi cc what cbq Qi c-1 Z9 XM gc ace-Xe ogpet aixo 'Vac Uxdcqeodeocc ke- 'QXzwqkmg, 'loo me out iirsx Xknc oi Asians-e. 'X bmfxon ie Q1 out 6e'QXoq1fXcoK. no 'Boi opemx wa 413-KCXX. 'ikixs Ami oixco efu.qixX9 eactxikcca ami Xo 'cox Xx, 19 Quit. of, 'Coe 'izwi' 5 'gobg it 15 woq we are z9oXc fume 'Savvy . xfxoncq cafobox 'owg Noni. goo, 'Ocoee wno V-we Qte,ceAe,A qos, zmb 'Goose emo MAX Souoel , coqmxouxc ko ow gouxxxcq . 'Voc xe33 iex-uma, in aadmog to gow 'goeixiwoxe Quan ,QA -5cxf,,9,gx5gMMO,X W 3 -xoxo XX :Looe , K9 cc0'oo fixed Xxx the naive oi qos: six? - X?X9?f?9'5-9966? . x I 6 ar-'SYN ovaigywse Q23 X Z In Sight o f ci siimmer classy, the eh afizge o f oommaiid is accomplished . as Carrier Divisioii TWO relieves Carrier Division FOUR . . . Color, dress . . . Rfziffte.s cmd flourish es . . . The elcioh o f rifles, the 8O2H?JCiOf77'Z12l8iC . . . And then the whirl of official visits . . . with squared eiioag side-boys Cl,71CiC!t'l7tj9iifi0Ci bells asncl even a very red carpet one cz fresh green qiiartercleek . . . Barges, gigs, boats ozxrid laimehesswiftly shuttle from ship to ship amidst miegaphoiiecl shouts, groioliiig motors, and echoing . . . eehtoing . . . gun salutes A time to change . . . to erict or begin . . . uhm sv 1 .. .. , , .. Exeunt . . . ruffles and flourishes. v -Q. I -2- - -ws, . -Ag, 'Ci Q f . P kk S V I 1 1 f.- ,fhfsug , .Jn Moon and Med lighting. We only did this for the picture? Yr .Y ag T , X f '13 Y' 1 d vi., 1 HFS? , -if M hw Q' x. ev X P -M QT. .. -AA .L V Q J,!:.,-..1..-lj4,,. J' 'if ..:j' ,- Q 'im J .f,.. ,. , .FF 'Q -7-f '-Q-, xg Swim-call accomodation ladder -' 'v- .k,,.,V ., -,.., H Y.. g 2 ' 'FQW ,A 1 , . - 36 ,, , Q - - , ,,-- :,,P,l Q I .,',. f 1 l'm George . . I'm hot . . I - C.,, Some like it cool . .. V A ,417?CZflfILC'V ffm 107210, ZDZlHH?.I7fj f1n'2m1'c'rf1r'fz'z' 1'f2'0x f'm2f'I21f7ff fI1f'sfz'IZ1zf-ss of nigliz' f'77Z,'CIO1J-Q us . . . ITHCZFV an oz'ff1'lamf7 of ??fl7,'f.fjf!f?.O?IflI Stars, fmziuqlaf !Iwz'r,wf2'z'1zg,wnj'u'I11'fffl2'gl1fsblngc' . . . In fl Img fuzz' nzzgrpzlzfllfzwwIJfnU1r'1'1w mari: . . . in .1IUIlm'f'ff . . . in H70 Med. . HHN Iflffhwll and 1laffg2'fg'f1fcf.wV' fUH?H7'I'OZl' sprfwfis I1rf1'f1l'2'72gs . . . At sea again . . , where we belong. I 6 ' V' ' I if h:1T-v.,,,A 1 'fam A - -,J-JJ-L lk 5. .war I 4 A 15 H-V: ,I-N,-. w. . ,K . 1.,.g ,gw f , s f - .4 .,:j:'-1. .Q g I ,X hs., 3 gc V' msg 'nil gv- i 1 A. A LJ Pf 5 - ' ' 9-l -his ,Isl 7 'fF M-Il ,'.,44-- 1, f'4'7 ' '-- ' ' ' ' , g - 1 'wtf'-H ... ., ' iw Wifi' A X -g ' ' 'W 1, . 'i 'f'5',1'3:-A7-fl.: Qxwfc , . ' 4 V +- 3 , 5212 , , , '-s ,vf ...., , 'Q 'luv Lay 'I s, 0000-0800 Like ci Zimiiiioiis, grease-periciled streak on ci dark and vertical plot, dawn tracks tlie liorizori . . . at the first light of clay, qitairtermasters liigli on the islcwict of our seagoirig airbase . . . shoot moroiing stars to fix their ship's position . . . IlHi!1l Don Williams Arid a sitlioiiette on the signal bridge says Good M oriiiiigv to our rescue destroyers X I 38 ...first star I see this morn... Burton Schweider and Charles Eichorn ff. 1 , Q ' ,,,, ,Jag-.w:.,.... ,,' g rf .ill 'hw' 1. Ready for reveille . . . John Sharp if .-ga-..-nvf f'v'f' ffg Many nautical miles I have been steamed during the night with the bridge helmsman keeping the INDEPENDENCE steady on course in a surging sea . . On the windy, dawn-lighted deck, a weather balloon is launched to transmit upper air soundings to a team of aerologists . . . While several decks below, the flight crews are already assembled for a meeting of the Early Breakfast Club . . . Then, Reville sounds throughout the ship . . . i .gnlki ,aa-. W., i V ks., .QQ - 1' 4, , , M in Jwm 40 ...drink to the foam 1 WWE The Daily Herald James Cartiel f h We'll get an early start . . . and beat the traffic! .il Bob Warren and Bill Rheinhold For most of this eity's residents, it is time to heave out, triee up, cmcl light the smoking lamp Some sleepers, however, cloii't hear the worcl . . . and others wish they haalrift H ...You call me? Arthur Boutelle 'J V- ---V'I',,.- fd-P M..-.N Nmv, the 'nzorntzfng f!I7IZlf'I'0?'?yS must be yvmjformcd . . . S2,7fI7'ff7?'fjIfj .... Q 0 flvmvafm'2'.Q7fz'ft21.'USfPfl fI71C1CC17'0.f?lN?j . . . so the fznzfsfmflzv zfsfn't 7'Z'fC7fi'C?CI . . . ..- ltr Now who turned that water off. Isaac Henry X ,. X gf' B. 'lieu ' 1 Who stepped on my toothpaste? What shall I wear today? John Little 1 T... Never can get a close shave! Herb Homer ,, . 2 e-i -l - - ..., -nf-I lA AG ' EJB F l-1-M-I ,E Q 'JT But l thought you had it! Maurice Bolles, Bruce Allard, Victor Dorsey l 'x' l 504242 l Morning faces are full of Qwmclei' . . on boflz sides of file brecrkfast hair . . I 'ZUO72ClG'7' if H1 ese guys can smile . . . I lzuovzclei' if these cups are cool, yet . . . lVo'rcIIess wrmd er in cz, wakirz g iwolrld . . QEQL. Oh-oh, the keg's goneldfy - - Charlie Harding, John Clift, Ed Wlft e , -.1 , ,,..---' ' We've been up for hours . . Sam Reed, Tom Appel, James Walker, Bob Thomas 43 , 4 .JN ? 2 in E ll Ei. 'Iu- g Somebody's been sitting in my chair! Hudson Lanier But, suddenly, 'lt's 0800 . . . cmd all our working world is wide awake ll M Think l'll have another steak! Harold Dun, Bill Meyer, Calven Reese, Virgil Eismenn .....-..,,.,. -.1 f I Turn to . . . Commence ship's work... Ron Moeck AUGUST Vice-President Nixon in Hawaii and Senator ltennedy in Hyanmsport rehearse their potent lines for the Presidential campaign.. Diplomatic crises burn again in the strife- scorched Congo... . Algerian rebels climax worst week of terror in three years with massacre at Chenova Beach. V-2 uilot, Grancis Powers, an trial for espio- nage in Moscow, logs his 31st birthday, under Soviet guard... Climbers mount the Rockies' famous Diamond for the first time... Co-ed dormitories open with maximum se- curity on a California campus... Cool funnyman, Mort Sahl, fractures the USA with topical wit and comic sophistication... Two capsulated space dogs reputedly orbit the earth 17 times... High-flying Jerri Cobb passes exacting exams to become the first lady austronaut... U The let Age races to build airports for 600 MPH living... All The News That's Fit To Print. . Mel Tooker 8 ,wavy Inf. f Q Q R 1 l',,,'i. if fy J' Sl ,. JJ -J Q 1 A M ,,. - ' of Rome Q 4 1 'fi ,va I' ,V 46 31 August 1960 August ends . . . our European itinerary begins we anchor in the Tyrrhenian Sea and prepare to pull our jirst liberty abroad . . . 47 6 A uuf ' 'L-I gal 5 4 I a 0 eq - .Q J 'f ,f 1 J. ' I , . , sf v Q - si X E ' f. X I vu' 215 l .- ' 1 .v 4 I as vp 1 'A - x 1 ' X 'J,,q A - 5,1 is ,,,..x, '1 5 H! ' , if 4 Q, O ., If gy by - n XV ' -i,g i ' ' '., 6 14 A ' Q' :F :' , . , is ' lj. ' ' '....,. -. , ' . ,1 L :xv A . s ' , , I I - r '- s Q. 'A A V un. 'S - 1 1 , ..Y of Rome -'hx . f, I. if F t ' 1 31 August 1960 August ends . . . our European itinerary begins we anchor in the Tyrrhenian Sea and prepare to pull our first liberty abroad . . . 47 Debm'kz iz,g at the small c0aista.l city, Fizimifcino we jimi our bzi.stIing, b1'Z2'ngzml gizifidcs rzvazfing with HIGH'b2ig,S1L'l'L-7'OOf6'ClUZLSCS . . . we quickly bofrrcl. . . A'Ucmti! were off for our Roman lzioliiclay . . . 4? ' ' Qi till Fiumicino: l'm pretty rusty at this... Leo' Hetzman, Frank Ackers, William Smith. Fiumicino: . .and we have our own yacht! Fiumicino: Buses leaving the pier for New York Boston ,, i 1 . T 1 l , - 48 i 1 -..- 5'D.. pri. ,.., ,-.L,.A-'if'-,Y '-s-' I ,. An, -',r,f,rg ,,,,,' . f.: ,- .1..-2- -'Lg--Iv ,i ,. 1, I 1 ..A:.v,,.K4.,1,-q,gf..3-3, 3 ,- 5.1 V , vpn 'K ,r. 4, ,nl , f as ' .wks .1 J I+:--ff 1 ,. e. .I - A .F ffm , L Q 313361Z 7l'5'E ,2i1'9g'1iil'E3 'H-If fl ,Q ' L? f- V Eff, Q f' Q. ' -..QV 2 ' - Q IE We X rl 5, 43' 'vim 7',1,,.'I -' 3 g ' , ' l'p'h V . -'31 V'-xi' ' ' 1-f 'A --wa. I -'i f.-' . .A .. 1 .. , ., v S . o . ' . -.,..g .- M- wk- ,,,.J, ,z .Li , x -v' -'R ff Q. ,E ,Ai .I 'fun-R, - N... . ,., is fbi-.5 .. E 1. - r 'Jn -4,.- 1- , ., N LUV -R. .., ,, ' '. .: I 'Q 1 , -qv . K9f Q: 1,5 'I-'I , '1 . ,- ' ' 45' Q- 'l - -1- 4 Lf. .5 ,HA . E,f','i i . fn' . ' I 'fqfxn' ' if ' I. -4 .-' pa'-Iwq. '. ' ' ' N, . 'N '5-'s- '?- V' '9'3l g, 5 '11 ,-.N J 'M .- Z '4 vfveu V'.gU'4 vi' ' Aff H '.f't--'- 1 f','li '.--I. , 1 -' I 'g.. lhA-ul' KH ge-ft lr ' M V' 'Ah H - Tr rm.: .uf -14 r A f. ' - .- . 3 -' ' at -few ,f use if ' P, A pi-,Q :.,1-.wwf :H gp, ' 1 M ., sw 'K 4 f' are-,L ff if -I w ' Y, 1 I 4 in 3 L' g V ,fy M . ng, Lf. gf ,,, ,- x -1 , ., 4 . , . I r A5 -f I , , s.- . Lei,-yi' 'vie-Vg dx ,gc 1 - - -'- f . s ' H V' rf- I- , W P - -ff . A I,g.f4,-1 5 ,xf',.,g. 'a- A if 1-Q, 'A '- -K - f : ' -A Q- I 'v 'P K- . - K , 1 - ff., '- -. nz ' ' f.fI:fis'.,L'A .,m,.u. :,-.W I-9 '- 'A .. 4 'XZ . . -' - 'K A' A.. '. 'I '., ., A'l Q.-.Gun -'M ' 'Y '-'fx -. f- Castelgondolfoz Are you taking our picture? Along a scenic, sun-scorched route we rumble to Castelgondolfo . . . winding steeply upward to the suononer residence of Pope John XXIII . .. brightly uniformed Swiss papal guards . . faithful thousands who have coine for this rnorning's Audience . . . the basilica jainined with cheering throngs . . II Papa borne down the center aisle to his altar throne . . . to his followers words of wisdom and of warning Spoken in several tongues . . . A sinile and a Papal Blessing . . . Clown through the dusty town to the buses . . . Pope JOHN XXIII Now, the EfornolC2'1'y1'ts0Zf, Romo . . . 720'7'fllCIOdS??'Z0??HQ1f by H26 slzotfcrcd ozzflioncs of Nerds cmzozinag oqzfedouct and H20 sfzfbborn '2l'ClZLC7?fO'LUC7'S of ontiquizfy . . . poised scntincfls SHI! wcz,it2'91g, itsecfms, fo7'tl201'6zf2m'n of H20 glory that once was . . . 1 Flamineo: Saturday's heroes. . . CHendIemanJ Flaminio: Say, Joe! . . . CHendIemanj Fiumicino: Yachts in the harbor. . . QBledsoej 50 Rome: Sailors shutterbug in St. Peter's Square. . . CSeabridge7 Roine is a wonderland, flashed before our dazzled eyes like color slides on a cyclorainic screen . . . hope fully, we hurl our lira coins into the blue-green water of the gently beautiful Trevi Fountain and wish, that we'll coine back . . . Rome: Hadrian's Hideaway. . . CHendIeman9 Rome: Tests of Endurance. . . CBristolJ Rome: The Forum . . . but where is Caesar? CHendIemanb 51 Lf- 5- Rome: . . .only suitable buy for American sailors Ronald O'DeII 52 4 in Fi' if r fr - I' -- . ,, . 1 . 4 '- 1 1- , 1. r a , ' 1 It -masts - . - ' '? ' Rome: Four coins in a fountain . .. Walter Scott, Robert Habeeb, Gerald Beyer, Edward Habeeb The wonderland of Rome . . . colorful, enormous, majestic . . . the magnific- ence of St. Peter's Cathedra1...the triumphs of Michaelangelo in the indescribable Sistine Chapel . . . the mosaic of St. Paul's glittering in the afternoon sun. . .the sturdy basilica of St. John Lateran, the cathedral church of Rome . . . the Renaissance's handsome Palazzo Venezia, head- quarters of Mussolini during the Fascist regime. . .the blonde river Tiber . . . echoing ruins of the Roman fora . . . Ben Hur's Circus Maximus . . . the old Appian way Where Roman legions marched, and the damp, drip- ping Catacombs where early Christ- ians prayed. . .the monolithic Pan- theon. . .the model-strolling Via Veneto ...the lonesome steak dinner at Jerry's American Bar... a striking array of relics of genius . . .the Won- derland of Rome. .97 '51 3, 91 z is l fi -,ms Flaminioz From the ring to the stadium. P-x Rome: Sure I'm twenty-one! 'IN G . , Q' I X K XA Qi' 1 -.....,v,.... , ,, 0 I V f!,x, r.. K yr ff'-wff vu . 'Q' Qin ,- Flaminio: We go thataway! CHendIemanJ In the Alz1f2mm0f1960, all roads leacl to Olympic Rome wh ere among ch eering H1 ousancls we applaud with the world the bp0the7'lm0cl of man . . . Roamin' holiday. . . CHeathJ ii-3312! 54 F'amif'iO1'lHev.--wait Up! . . . CBristoD A mu. if 'Jil Fiumicino: Within the breakwater. . . CPattiJ . . . And all too soon, sunset secures our Roman holiday and we return to our own Olympic village resting in the darkened sea. 1 X . E - rs F Q ' i Flaminio: Sailor boy, please talk to me in English . .. Q Dolores Fuchs and Sixth Fleet Friends in I an ,y 3 .lid .,.' N - . I 1 V' - an 1 H 4, 1 A .ff ' f . S14 Q, ll ' LV -.,' 7. ,I PHARMACIE ,-,vpni-4 vs-., 1 Q September 1960 The Riviera . . . or more particularly . . . la cote d' Azur is a visual experience that cannot be adequately recaptured in 'words or ever be completely justified by photographs . . . w'4'ieff. LM ,, .....r' ' -' -t 4n--- - . ., - .f ,, Villa Franche: On the waterfront . . . CMossmanj I If is a H1i'72,'ff of wonclcv' and beauty . . both vzczatvleral and mcmf-made . . . Cannes: Beach, boats, 81 boy oh boy. Nice: Bikini? Where is that.. .? CMaIloryJ ,giiif-Q'f'5a5vf,' Lgifym ,, ' 4 . N 'Six ' e 1 W- ra Q1 -W. . -f +2 ,fi---.F -V nf -5 . 14 'WWII' 1 qv!! I' 11 fF1g' 9-X 3- 4 ur-HIM! . :tl--1 mf' f ' ' wg ' f:,:-vi! , een.,-up! I r, 'T 1 uml'l'v -'E LALP' I 1 I I yin'-1111 W .F ' W-nr i-' ' 4 -I In ,,,,1.'f- - V . 4 I' 1 :lvl-' ,, I I- ia' s..---f -A .. ., 4--- 'Y 1 C5- if a , Cannes: General Viewing . . . CSeabridgeJ reef Q1-itil' ,r- Q, X ., 1 A ' -4- :..,x:1,- . 1 sgfnw 1. i , ' MQ' ' -xi. . . ,gwii , A : -' Q' 1 Cannes: Memories are made of this . . CSeabridgeJ .V ' :.w,,q-yi 'C-'EAW' E, .A S 44 s 1 if-H4 sf'6.1,q . 'iff ' , , t,,,igJ,:. . . - A, K. W ,. 4 J' S ,, ' i . Ewgrzrfl' , ' - , , . ,...., L Monte Carlo: Here. . . beauty rests. . . Clviossrnany F,-4 Nice: Dual Retreat. .-4. i ' sw-ii rv, 4 v Cannes: Promise her anything but give her. . . perfume Nice: Swing 84 sway with . . . What was her name? Whether it be the old, tile-roofed and iron-balconiecl French houses tinted with harmonious variations of earthy, clay colors . . . or the new, streamlined hotels of pastel-hued stucco . . . wonder and beauty are paramount . . . Cannes: It says wind up here. Rolland Nelsen and Isaac Henry F F P Cannes: Really the cats meoooooow. Hi 'i il.: H.- , .CQM P 'A N'---,Q 'f , 1 as QQ gf .4 . 2 1 lmm llxflfv, Nl-,gi A Monaco: Her Grace lives here. . . CMossmanJ 62 ,ga-BK rw 1 -,,, , I 2 kv Cannes: What's the action. Turn to page 68 to see. . . fHendlemanJ Cannes: Backfield in motion . . . Robert Montgomery, Gerald Burkley, Theodore Carney, Clarence Ward and . . . .v 'Q f 14. I I ....4.3- A I rf rv ,' '-.,.,.., -.-'N -v,g,qx-.E 1 'f:V ' fl - 'sf' 'Fl' l -' y',,,1'+ W vw-ff as-. -, K L F 4' Lgfix., hip!!! L .wav V I I , L , .L ' xx- x it liynrx I . if?-li V x f Wy, tg 5 fr X 5 21,55 l 5' W 1 '31 f 1 Nice: Near the flower market . . . CBrinnJ - f - ,- -' 2 A T. A z Q' ffm x, ' Qi' K iff' ' - .af . -- .., ,... I J H' , Q, L 'Z' 'C-1 Q K-rj ? B,-. i , lie I , -' -2 53.1 Q1-f wg ,Qi For some must watch. E'Z'P7 ZjfIl?.7A?'fj12.1133 110711 . . . and r'z'm'yf02z0 In uglzs in Iangzfid Frcnciv ficlimns orprm'ofaf1'z'ce'Fr0m'l1 slang . . . Monaco: The new look. .27-ff ..'f z . .3 -.5 .. igdx. T3 vw 131' , vw . 111 , fi df- y W Q ..' Q ' ll... --: 'in f ' f ' n Qin'-M .'1'Vv .' - ' 1 ,A, ' 4 Q' ' C , - -----47 n. n --4v...: - ..n F . iq 4 ' v in 1 t ' ,-' ' 5 Y'rvw-,,,' ..-., ' ll lf L L- - ll n u n ,I 1 F ' 'Wilt ' ' ,,-1 'Ff l'yQ . 1' ' ,.- , I ll ll ll 1' ! AA . V , .--v l'r'r'r vr Q gy -' .1 F I , ' I nl ll 1' - . , is --5 '1 1 Y u I , .M v IVR 1 ' 1 vw- -.-.w..n n - - .1 - .- f 'rvr-: 'l - Q':l'nu inn- F , 'qv Ffv' - , A . , ..- ' 'z-n. sr .rn ff. 1 -., 111 ' 'Q' Q- fp pw- , ,'..'T -f r rr Ebel an u u bY2'f'-s. ,, . , t' 'T u -f' 1:.t1f t , H-'W r'H?'i:'p.1 ' --qi ,.. - -I - L-,FILF1 rq' M-Www F ' ' -F' 9 rn-rw-H' 1 F F:Q I rs rl- ' '- Q f - ,sb 5. . rw a rip 4 l' 'A A: '-P4- H ' n 'F ? . . ..:..if '- Q ' I .r 'm ff ' in . ,E-.i. ,f ,' , w' 'A Q1-35 I-l11!Si.'.'seu' i'1f if , .ab , ' f 'I I fe, :-- 64 rv '31 , .nf +- , .M -.- Q , ' xi sf' Monte Carlo: Fleet Landing . , , for fishermen . ..4,1Vv1,fJ 4' A, 'fihkfa 1 - Q-.- ,,,n-fs - 5 lf V l ll .V ' ' - -Q 5' . -..-inf '-'GSW ,qu . . o 'off'-v,::' ff-0 'J 1 M, S, xy I .. .,,, ,,x f Z M. l '4 5Qf7 '. 'J J' .qs -f' I t 1.9 ae ecw'-roimcl lvolzclm 'I O'l-Lf'l7'LG x I n ul I for the a,7'zstoc1'ocy and 7lG'LUl2j-7'ZCl2f . . . 05 'X I .-off Wiiis' . the young foolish and the olcl foolish . . . YQ I .al ' 5- E r .- A :gl S s'--s .:l'Q4,4':' iff: W il .Hia Cs: glen' 1 X B 'unix A , ' -., x -1 '-, , . 'WZ' A is -- - - - -- 'Q Q -4 'J':1'.-1 -. ls .-1: A 'A N C,f1.gflA nl gh - Nice: Aw, you don't want my picture. Cannes: I just don't know how you girls do it. It v, Y , ..- 1 7' iii, , , Y. . In ' A - .,gl.,.w 4 , i in . 1 . : , ', Q- . ' - -- V ' ' Q ,fi -, 11,4 . X . Q., . 1- Q ' Y fri.- '.fv A .,.,. . Q - .Am i - 'A ' if gl 1, ' - -- V . ' ' ' , 4 V .4 1 qi., ,, H- 'QV is-, 3 ' , 1.-'Q ,s .i . - 1 0'- -r i:f1+t'f,,.q' ' , .. -ss.: 1 - -14. ' N. 4' ' ' .. , .3 EVN: ,q.?q:!?f -In -yi. vaio, , ' N ix. . -Q ,fb-3 A A , v 5 ,wi ri Sq --Zkw , . A ' - A -.-r i ' ' ' 1 id , , 1 ..-f ' ' 7' , Q. 4-1-- ', 4. if 'i - .F .X i . ,A ' 3 , -,- -'gf' ,. 1: -4 -3 if I-,j, i.lQL-ax, X 'M 7 -UQ , ' 1' ' - .,. .' . Q ' K' li- .. ':,. 3 . ff 1 - - u- 4 X - 2 , 5'o':i.1m:.fg:-,sy - ir -' H -- .s . r ff. . A. ' , ' . ' 14- -Ji-3'3'i .egg -, Q - .' V, .5 .' V ' . ' ,J . ., . ' ' - W-H J. , 1 , Q . ., 1 ., . -QSM ' . , ' ' ' V f ty? - J M l ' Q -,ni Yr 1- h -QII-51 my vows A. . ',.44f,-., Q ' v - lv. 4 .,i Q4 . 4-m --A 9: S 4 ','!h, .. rr-J, V - .- ...yogi ,, C L J k D' ' Aix, 'Q is 40 B-nv '9G f v 1 ' ' J' W., f Q H 'Hy 1 b' is W- K ,mf l--l ,,, ,l j 'I'--12 I - .5 57- Us n N is N 1 1111 ' 3 A , 1 Tn, v 'Wi :K lf! I - i -, ,. 1, i Q -fs, 3-, f' i -- 1, - '-. i - - -1 - .- , 1, , M. 1 i , xg., si , 5 M V . W-y 9 ' K 5 In t 5 my . A , - ' ' ll U my N Q' I K f K A ,vi ,J K f ! su: Q 0 I 4n'f'2t 'al 'f' ' ,J 5 -sz' mi-fi' Q' if g 4 'b ' ,ml 'S .X if 'lf ,fy ,- M 'fn-'ff' dnl Q. 4 'Y J v U . '.' 'N . , . M' ,Jag i r Q 'vi g I if 11 L ,, ff Cannes: l'm peeling. . -V-.... ' , -H A1 Cannes: sur Ie plage . . . CMossman9 The R?'2'Z.C?'C! is an always sunny painting sms mos M Nice: Seasoned in the sun . . . CHeathD Nice: The eternal triangle . . . Uvlalloryj ff fig Kwai pi , . ..- 5 -'-'3'fQfG 2 1 R, a a' Required personnel. . . man number two elevator.. . , al- Vllla Franche: Hurry up . . . my foot's asleep. 68 C'est magnifique!! an always spinning roulette wheel . . . cz clay and night playgrmmcl . . . with wet, scmcly carpets, and worn cobblestone carpets, Q -pit- ' -1719 v x x w fl l E ...gl 5555, l 5 H 1 ..v,.,x vi 5-5 Sospelz Laughter knows no language. xx 'Nl- N Sospel: The town is in a huddle . . . and sinking green carpets, and steep rocky carpets . . . and ever a brilliant blue backdrop : the sky and the sea 69 Here H20 faded 010909200 of me C7'fI17U.S'lLIJI07?dS' szrrp1'2'S1'11gIyf well fzviflz H10 7,'1.'l'?'C7 0L17f7'Pf77IC'9 of uzodcrmty. . . in dress, decor, and fl,7'C7?'ff0C?'H7'C' . . . ,-. A, .wit . 1.- Maritime Alps: Light meter and meat eater Eze: Ezey Street. . . fBrinnJ ...N ' xl, wt 1 . . Maritime Alps: Through the hatch.. .CBrinnJ 70 'f in . as -iaeg 35-'lf1.gf::-,glfegfffg is 11 I fr ,ia Q5 A' J'-1 -'jiiff9.?375i32i25f-5Q.ff1gfriil:V 'Q , g ,vgrzsc- J ji-11:-1: '?' :,':i'?euv HIP,-?e'f,, ,N Jgvgf Qqz:p41,s.i1Eg-f55,:1 3 'Z , 1 ' 77 F. l 3' , ' r W 1 -wgvgizfw. :cf s . , f -af ..:.A,N.:5-,r,,3'. ,, x ,155-., .e1Q:g.-gf,::5,.- , , H: 'Fun-Jffhp.-',2:.-f 4 Ls: ' .Qi , 1 L, 1 gifs.. f., ?. i. 5, ,geasfctqg A 'lvgf -ge-i LH ' T fffflyfiif' ' .mi , -rw iff ':1 5515: ffl? 255'-FQ ' wr mu- ' f - V I-5'-A-W, wg: I 2' - e. z-,kv '.- ,f,, , 1, M...,.,,.,. Y .. ..J 4.1 Maritime Alps: Even the weariest rivers. . . Wends somewhere safe to sea CBrinnJ u ...Q- Maritime Alps: At the five and ten franc store . . . CHendIemany Frank Schrader 5-TV ...I -4...f-0. , an xg 104. ,ef- S as we wander tlzerovfglze the stfreets of anezent towns . . as we travel tlwouglze gorges I Ie . high in the M aritvlme Alps our eyes are the fviewfindefrs . . A V 2 our eczmeras, the captors . . . Valbergz No . . . I am not Friar Tuck! Don Brooks and LTJG Ron Brinn ,vu 'ar-,P 'N' ll' hs -4 .I IIHLA-i X. , ,Eu P pl 91 -,.4 Q ! Q ,-49 Sospelz Who was that lady? As we meet the people . . . face to face. N -f -'N 4 ' 41' 5 T '31 if'-731 A' 'ff' ' L1 ' ' ' - '1 ' lying gr -'ri-1:- rr .5 , F I n f ' 'H I . . ...Q f ' , 5 - - on , Cannes: Old man and the sea. i'-K.. ir -. 73 f 9 - 1' f 3: .aw rp-f : -wh- if ,i, J. iff!!-,,?, ' 1-A. .. ,,,,n-. , ,. Entrevaux: We're going to get our pictures in the cruise book me, v mgg, ,Q -H film... ' 11 fi s. . -e ' , Ai? --5 is T ' e ',?.:r '-.Q '- Y e' ' 2 N f-35. lj: 1 'gp 5' ' . -' V 1-' '- l pw,-nf- fs 4 .I - . p A , ag Fin,-X... ,Lum .- ,. L. lr ,, - X, P-M,-.-.Ll .F-1. ' ' e - iw X'2'.7 , , - ., ' V ' ' . : . fb- ' 'AV I' F :skis v-Qglffni','j,V,- 'P 43 'I x ..-il- if-,-aa ,QB--Al df' n - we-'gH53,,-fer. lap. 4 - -':,g?Ql' '. 3 5' S 1 ' jfp-J' - -3, 4 ' 4 rf' f 'V' 'r'vvrn ...I l'S. ' un , ES Lg rj I 1-' k 5. xw ,, -'74 gs, -I e---ff e :wie e W 1 1 H- ,f - 34. 5 . - e , -Q ' e '-' - A 'J' -J ,' . I 'mt-'-,. , . N. ' '. ' 9,11 . r , K , C' li, .. , 4 .- , 'Q' ' 5- ,-, 'vi .,. f ,Y :six A , V Y' .'-li ,J 'x . - - 0, 'yaklagl ' .I -'tif ' 'dh j ' ,.-. f'gs?1:i:-+..4 , 3.4 ' nf-',. , mx, f1w'Q-3551 -bi' .. ,A 4 zni., IN? 5 've-':.wJ. A - -- France: Paris express. ,p X V r ai- I 2' is a Zmzg ride by7'f1iIf1'0m Ccmnes fo Paris . s2mz.onc1', S?lCZCI6'72I'.Zj, is autzmm . . . as we come to HIC spectacezflcu' city, .9lz2'fv0rz'2zg in wimly S2112 Hgh 19, sI1imnzerz'ng in cz pIa2'n tez'1:c September drizzle tl21'0bbz'ng bcneatlz its 7269071-77100771 . . . Paris: Champ de Mars . . . from the Eiffel Tower. . . fswannn -1 x.-.K .4.. W' ' , l, --f , - b 419--4-V,,:-. , N-. .F WT, .V el,--N . 1 1. , -'u -, f .. . N. ,, , . 'l .--. , b--'.u-'V.f.- ',.,, -ea 4 . lf '11, e 1 , - 93' A '-V -1:-f - '-..r,4.-'L - '.,-1 -.-vrgs--' 1- -- ,,... if-1:44 - A N.. p-A, 5, -,aah - --Q -'I .I-vi, lllquw--v'1'- . . , I 'Vw H -,-- '. 1 -' ' ,- - - - .l ' : f .. ' :--- .-,,-5, ,-,,Q,v Aga, V Sfflni' 'ffl 4 t i4 'fj,QI : fI4iTfff'f ,p.u..Q 3,5- 1 - 1-ff-Wi' L V ,-3.3.3.0 , - ,ffl .te-1: Eime- - -'5Ol9mf1,GOUWlC, Paris: The little Arch . . . Cllfleagherj Paris: Notre Dames famed rose window . .. Paris: Notre D Centuries old . . . Wleagherj cMeagherj .,,f5 --snr--I--' 'ra ,-.L Versailles: The South Partere . . . CSwannj Paris is cz guliclcbook llZl7'7'tfCCH'Ij brozlglzt fo life . . . cz visit to H20 OHIC1' side of H10 looking glass . . . H10 I1 061 dy Ia uglztcr ovc1'11lccm'cl rmnalnfzb and gary . . . Paris: Eternal flame burns for the unknown dead... Clvleagherj 75 WP VMC H10 Hmmm wld UITZ. cabs .w'r'z'12g U10 C'2.'f.1ff'l'0'77? 2'f.Ql10C! 7'f . . . if is big, fr falmlous fling, U day and Kniglwf 0afc'm's1 0n info C'.17F?.fC'7716'1?ZL ...' 200 walk for 7711.163 . . . and fall in ION' 'zuz'H1 cz cify . . . Paris: When the sun goes down. . , Paris wakes up. V 'Him1'.Q.'W-'f. f1fWI i2.',,QL 1 f From H10 E'zfvI fmucfr the ff2't y 'is hazy, '21'2'7rcNJZo 'z1 'n , pa in fed in 7HI'SZLC'Cl colors, dijfuscfcl wifi: smzfime-1119 fl.ffC'IC NS . . . buf sofi m1 0cI tlwoiuglr time Q 7 6 -in Versailles: The day we tore the goal posts down . . . -3' -if R -Q -3.3 R- .......,s , ' 7' A ' . f' f . V M- :dxf-. , A , - SV: u ' 1 l f' An- ' V , ' ' f-,f'L,.'.2.,. ,, .CA A.-Y-is ' . 4.5 ' ' 1 54.11 L, , - ,V --.. 'Q--Q' i . . '21 A iufq- 2 '. 1! '.g M . ' 1 1 Q 6.457 V - 71 .... , - -g.. --F ,If ' I M, '. ,A Y -f--..,-.gfj w, 1, V ras' - - - -. W -4 ,,,.,-A-.... we rv- ish 'af wx Ar- --A-a ' ,- k f A ,, A - ,M Q. ' We ' .X iN L Nl xxx id eq.. Paris: Sailors will be sailors. Paris: On a busman's holiday- fvf ET, And Versailles, too, is a niovnent from the past an unbelievable gradeiir that was, is and will be . . . glory and beauty 'reflected in every polished mirror, every distant lake . . . every fonntained pool . . Then, too soon, it is back to Cannes and back to sea 8 ..flj,J', A '51, 1 bv ',. ' 4-5: x 4 U m -1 A x Mossman f ' ' P W ' Q Q 0 1 xl ' : 1 - vb' :. 0 I 1 J 4 - Y I A,.4.A J , Q 1 A1 .I '-1,-B? 1' 1 I ' 6 .k U f s. ' W 4 'n 4 -, X . P, ' . . , . 4 1.2 if 1 l .Il .JI 5 iz nl.. H. ua ' -J i . , of Athens n ' L' I 5 I ' fl . -. V f' 1. ' - tri' QA ' . ' q Patti Patti Brinn 1 Mossman September 1960 Exercises at sea are over . . . our long workout providing air strikes and air support has earned ifs a Greeiari liberty . . . We pause iiear the port of Piraeus on Phaleroii Bay. I I i, Mossman Patti 79 Only minufes f1wayisAzf72ens . . . fl 1'emm'k0bZe city . . . cz eolossus sfraclfllinq the Qmeomfortable bawier IJefufee12 East and West as zz' has fm many restless eentuwies . . !' A .Q A al 14 .en,l1fAQ xii 'A' :a 'H A-e, lm.- a if I , .1 Athens: Acropolis from Temple of Zeus 80 -'X AA Piraeus: Fleet-Landing Made in Japan Athens: Parthenon Termites? i 'll fri- if . 'A -- v..,rx in 'Ti-sr' x , . . t X. . ff. argl? 5 ,, 3 Q, Athens: Pillars ofthe Parthenon 1 it B 5 '41 f H. 1 v 1 I n m-fN 5 4?-4 if 'S sl 11 gm .4 A N-.-v I 4 Athens . . . a metropolis of Cl?Cl?'77?,i7'Lg inconsistencies . . . beauty in unsiglztlincss . . . wealth amidst poverty . . . priceless ruins steps away from a penny subway . . the counterpoint of the chestnut veneZo1 s clz ant Silverstein goes to Athens L. SIX' mf.. J, 1 'L mm lt ! Athens: Stoa of Attalos 83 ill .4 - .V - :lr x 13.3 11 xi - L, 1 ' ..- ul: .4 ' -1 amvfspggun-v- '77 IS -uf l Before and After Delton Wilson 84 See Joe, I play too! Tom Pratt ilk x L' -5 i .UIQ- i 'Nl' r'012frrzsfz'ng1f'z'z'lz fIIC CO72fC'll?2707'U7 Zj rlzyflmzs at H20 new USO . . . Don't bite your lip . . . Fred! Fred Lawrence, Doug Fowlkes, Rocker Roberts 'Z - e 1 1 .W I xjl SN. BLU l H lr 7'! Y'T'r'ff -Q.. f', . I, va Aflfmzs . . . Cl pri rfffiogff MII rzfzf 2c'z'H2 ff iilifffinjizci pc'r.wn0I1'fyf . . . zc'z'2'1.wzfHzc C, Z'Z.FIl'I.72'!j f'm7ur1'n.q.wyfiizlmls of Un flHC'?.C' 86 Hi f1H'1 f' . . . Take me to your leader Lt. Kawalkowski V Q 4 K 1 That's my plane, Bob! Richard Kamilar, Bob Mathias, Chester Watts, Lester Bridges y X . , ,u . P4 xt .-l., 'U . .. X - --rf -Q... x. a, 5 1- vid? Y 4 I Bluesuits in whites Richard Risciotti, James Sullivan, Edward Legay im, ff l Which floor for Sport shirts? and Hze cify visits INDEPENDENCE, cz potent force in flzeworlcl today . . . cz power for peace. x -.1 Some of us leave Athens for a day to see ancient Corinth and the forum where St. Paul spoke. . .to recollect our naval history near Salamis Where the Greeks defeated the Persians in one of the most signiticant of sea battles . . .to trace the Sacred Way to Eleusis, sanctu- ary of the earth goddess Demeter, where every year were celebrated still unsolved mysteries. . .or to wonder at the vivid mosaics of Daphni's Byzantine.Church, fashioned in the eleventh century for posterity to see . . . Hi! How are you? A f -- 'fl at U S. Come on . . . smile! i . .,,, ,' Some of us leave Athens for a clay to see ancient Corinth and the forum where St. Paul spoke. . .to recollect our naval history near Salamis where the Greeks defeated the Persians in one of the most signihcant of sea battles . . .to trace the Sacred Way to Eleusis, sanctu- ary of the earth goddess Demeter, where every year were celebrated still unsolved mysteries . . . or to wonder at the Vivid mosaics of Daphni's Byzantine.Church, fashioned in the eleventh century for posterity to see . . . Hi! How are you? Come on . . . smilel' X ! r 'Y' . , Paul Anthony goes up to sink another one 89 .ff for the INDEPENDENCE team . . . Aiicl for ci iiiglit, some 0 f iis join iii Greek songs mid clcuiees at the aiiiiiml Daplziii wine fest . an aiiitiimii feie . .. with all the tiraclitioiml flafuoii of festive Gieece . . . oclclly bleiiclecl with tl? e fioimieseeiiee of ci toiwist cittmetioii ' fm F' 3 'U P Daphni: Wine Festival Wine, women and song! N I X -r '- ' as --f+...,....4 Salute'! Bill Swann, Jim Gibson, Leonard Swiderski, Gary VanMeter, Herbert Feinman Inconsistent, perhaps . . . but Athens is that way and we like her for 'it . . 'x I Arr' J A'-f ' -w . ,L- E ff 'Q .G it-Q' KN DF? i 11' May you make 100,000 landings in peace U CDR Jester, VADM G. Anderson, H. G. George ThBIT1GlIS vp-4 5 if 4 egg , , I ff ff . 1 n i I KX P ..V was 9, 0800 1200 One of the first things a sailor learns about shipboard life is the subject of lines . . . and once having learned about them, he begins living with thern . . . lines usher in the working dag, appear here and there throughout it, and end it eight hours later . . . I . A1-M, In the best tradition , -t ,x.mgaSSJ-3 it . .X I . l 'K I Bosun's Chair Built for Two.. .' Morning is o tiine for lines . . . edch with ct definitive objective but Cl not so de jinite end long lines forined for personnel inspection . . and short ones for side honors . . . fordrollcall on the flight deck . . . for ci sich call down below. There are high lines, filel lines, and lines 0 f jimnping ggrenes f . -7 i ' 1,1 NW i f 4 E 'Q ,X 4' Xxx ' il Y - if X t x fe 55' WT N l ns' A ig' . All I want is an aspirin... 10 Jumping Jacks Thomas Johnson, Saylor Hatter, Si- mond Briand, Elton Pruitt, Kenneth Adair, Instructor Lloyd Chevers. Tin cans get thirsty too. 'And charge it, please 94 kg- This will wake them up! Thomas and Twigg e ,N M if J 5 A L S ome I'z'naes cure composed 0 f words and 'mmzbers N Q that must be writtcvza, read, , .vs , typed and 'retypecl . . . L BA- ,Q stszzclzfcl, logged, and filed . . f 'J ' Lf rr- Executive Suite. . . Upton Higginbotham, Art Roberts, Ardin Mielke, Leo Floyd, Bob Crenshaw, James Stumpf, Dale Babiak. .1 x Tw...n.!-.V 'vw 0 li-lag: uma o f , , 6 if IH! ! I H 1 Oth ev' lines are lines o f power . . that can leaslzla powerful ship . . . or loose a welding flare . . . or lalzlnlolz a flaming jet . . . al . ff, -r ' A975 , 'arf' iK..-,, ' M --. 5 L , - It's a bird... Edward Charbonneau and Starling Elrod Lines of eonzonnnteattonf are essential . . . t7'CLl72fllZtg lectures, legal counsels, Xi? sonncl-powepecl phones at a battle station and ll2l'llCl7'6ClS o f private or party lines . . and mail . . . ...in a cloud of smoke. .. th ,.. Frorn the halls of . . . Just rub two sticks together ,?olh1l??3Gapoe,r C?l?leNster Barnauski, Jack Mahoney, Thomas Cunmng- ham, Bob Nealy, and Donald Hanna. f V 7 X Par Avion, s'il vous plait . . Ron McDonald, Mike Palmo, Mac McGowan. Green pepper surgeon Victor Zabicki ll l ll .I Is plus or minus 5 miles close enough? Burton Schwieder and Ralph Westerman. There are the navigational lines . . . ofa charted course on the Captain's bridge . . . of a sleek barge in suspension . . . of a sidecleaning raft secured with mooring lines . . . There are safety lines and pnlleyed lines to platform stagings . . . haircut lines and hairlines to follow . . . a happy line that leads to a hard-earned erow . . and a fresh line of vegetables , prepared to attract a line of hnngry sailors to the midday meal . . . So goes the morning . on the INDEPENDENCE line . Acres and acres and it all gets ruSfY SEPTEMBER Heeifaarea Wilma Rudolph flies home with Gifted Nancy Anne Fleming ras 22 355 asym three 0lymDlC Eold medals for the USA-H bol of Michigan loveliness becomes the new Miss America at Atlantic City The black hulled SEADRAGON whose officers and crew trail-blazed a new northwest passage, and played a ball game at the North Pole as well, returns to a hero's welcome at Pearl Harbor... Hurricane Donna pursues an unlady-like course up the Atlantic Coast, leaving death and destruction behind her . . . Novelist Ernest Hemingway's The Dangerous Summer, a sun-burned epic of matador rivalry in Spain, simmers on the pages of LIFE... Hollywood remembers The Alamo with a 12 million dollar film reproduction of the San Antonio battle . . . Primitive painter, Grandma Moses, outlines future plans at her 100th birthday party. Advise and Consent a suspense novel of Washington politics, continues to sales surpass the Nation's other big best sellers The greatest scorer in the history of ice hockey, Montreal Canadien Maurice Rocket Richard retires at 39 from the professional rink The first nuclear powered aircraft carrier is christened USS ENTERPRISE at Newport News Virginia... lf ik Hmrfffll I ll , ,. -, flllll Pos .,,,Jn. 5 ,', -1, cjff. ,ff iq gl Lilly 5' . ln At .. 5: n Language Pape' The only Greig George Sagal hens It is afternoon 1 Q00-1 6' 00 and INDEPENDENCE is a symphony of working sound8 . . - with extremes of tone, volume, and tempo . . . The click of a camera shutter . . . the clatter of parts in a storeroom bin the record store register ringing up a sale armory guns clapping open and shut. . . a Shgraioler roaring into action . . . 'I 1 ls this your safety deposit box? Thadder Ward 98 Sell that man a new liberty jumper! Art Boutelle, Albert Montgomery wr ia. X, A Q -:-ii--...W -Mud, Launch Aircraft P mfg i i l l i 5 ' L,....... . i i ,.., , X g X 1 Y. Guns for the Gunners Mate... d Will you take drachma? . . . William Griffith, Joseph FOEGHIY, Ralph Vaughan' James Do eff' Wetzel Garrison, Edward Apple 99 There is rhythm in shipboard sounds the rhythm ofa chipper . . . of a razor-sharp blade iohirring through pounds of protein or inches of wood .,,-1, Some guys can sleep anywhere. . EIO, Richard Williams IOO Cut to order. . . Joseph Pollatta The rhythm of Honor Guard Marines slapping, clacking, snapping, and smacking their ri ftes for inspection . . . Admiral Brown, CINCSOUTH, inspects our Marine Guard We fix flats too . . . James Welch, Chief Carfield Man dig those crazy knickers. . . Howard Maner, Donald Lindsay 5, L LX 72 hours of G.Q.? William Gibb lOl 102 The afternoon air is alive with sound . . . the chatter of typewriters . . . the drimn of drills . . . the riwnble of rolling wheels . . . ' lenishinent . . . the dissonant drone of machines at work . . . the din of rep 1 the clang of a general alarvn . . . the jolting crack of a catapult . . . the hoarse blast of a jet exhanst, the drowsy lap of waves against the the sonnds of life are everywhere . Ma the blast of a jet exhaust ...thecrackofacat... sides of a ntility boat w l I'-i wud. is . 4.Q,,-,i 1. , ' x 1 an 4 1-sis Hi-ho 'I ... ' , - Sl ver away . . . Michael Bella No . . . he sm conference. . .Chester Barnauski 1.11 l I 9 A I pi .Q Siesta for sundowners . . . We listen . . . oi I . ls' -'I' 0 H It , J N . ol il answers oi question, as an or e 4 y ' r t hi hline crew . . ctsabo cttswain's mate shouts 0 ct g s a 'rnan on ci frnownt whistles at his work, VA- jp . X x What that? . . . No caption needed . 'N-. Q Q L X 40 L, 'VAVY NAVY That's 'Shipping over chow,' isn't it?' 4 I i AG 'B of I 'Arriverdercil L K i n N X What that? . . . No caption needed . . . A Q ,4 VA' lp 'YAVY X NAVY i That's 'Shipping over chow,' isn't it? 4 -.ug N .4-WY 'Arriverdercil 2. ff? aind the sozmcl of liberty call . . . 'wlzieozi our a,fteirn0on, symplziony of sozmds ends on the happy note 0 f HP67'772fiSSf07'L gmnted . . . Request permission to go ashore George Ries . Dress Right! Rfchafd Caldwell Dave Bushfield Robert Dixon, Ronald Uaki Hubert Tomyarilli, Lynn Paukel. Pap- 6 Q 'H X? K X' -A l ilk T 5' . V ! 71. . , . 1 ap es I xt J ' is. -. 74 , V , P J: .4 . 1 nz! if Brinn M .T Xe 8 October 1960 Cosmopolitan ships and dirty barges and burn boats and rocking dinghies and briny tugs and now and then a maonrno jill the harbor of Naples . . . th aircraft carrzer HIC Bay . . . 27nzp1'os.szf2:o backdrop fo the Mocliffewaozoaon S cafs 'world famous setting is domianatocl by broodivzg Vcszwius above, sleepy and volcanic . . . Naples: A familiar view I . . .ug 1 5 -. -1- . -T 4'-... I' ' A :A Q, nj -Y .ja'lH: ..:5 ' ' - Fl-H! ' . Jn? . , -,hiw I A M. 'F' I T L ' E , -rJ. +f:,- . 4 1 . U , V I lip. , , , :w'u11-living, :il v-.r . T .. , ,, --' .. . 5 -, v. L'..T.' , ,,,f:,.. j. v - 1..'4,-,,a -..Qi -- f willow - M, M ' 1 - 44 I -N I, ' E V .nm M, '- N -lla .ki- .-. . 5 -8 ,J F'-1 C u L I-.M N?-L, jf o lio --A tftfrcgl. .. . .45 M ...I-, ...................... .......... H ..,. V I L .E-:fd .-.'--'.sLa'F'- f ng ng, i'f'113111 1 as J ll I ff 'lWll1lln a, , YL .fzxnx 4f f' ui! '31, f ,Xia ,Alix If f I e Hey Joe, I show you trick! 17 MW 1 l. T .nw I1 Naples: Children everywhere sf W and by the bustle of the many lives tlmt compete Sl?0f2llClG7'-lfO-Sl2OZLZdGT fm' attention, at the base of the sloping foothills. 15.5. ' a . .5 : ,,j.LL.n .-Sie' 3 A- .. T ff az- . 5f'ffj. .E. -Ay Q ' ' 'HQQTQ Q . LS -Q., Q -f 5' 'LZ-fe 'S' new f 'O xi K ,- ttf: Souvenir-shopping-shutterbug . . . fHendlemanJ And over all, the sleeping volcano. . . Clvlatesj 7 .i . ., Nu. N ol V T K-.-I -- , - fem 'fx '-ur ' 1-'A ' f ,nf af' M To die or to drop dead are two enstreme reactions which we shall not 'ueiitifre after seeing N apleg, in spite of poetic directives by Shakespeare and Fielding . . . , 'I- X ' .rm '..'- dvni -vi .,,.w- ' 4 K+, The reflection of a fiery past. . . Sunset over Vesuvius . . . fShuhJ b .f5.f,hZ' A M. Twilight . . . andthe Bay of Naples . . . CSHUIU ,vu- ,A ' L , f f sf' - -' Naples: A city with personality plus... Naples: The old yieldeth to the new... HW' 'TE iz, my ' ' ,:,z1EE'?4 Naples: Cameos on the half shell ,A ' f at as lv -F 'V 'F ff . 'A I 'E fl -- 5'lT'?i 5 nfrxgfr ,- r' V I' V V ,. -1 -f r F S 'Y 'li ' 5 -l if ' 'f if 'F TI Q I ' :Y fr , r or if 'r V - I 'F il' 3 S T T V' ' l' 'l' K, ' rn V i 'ai ii ii V I 1 ,...- fi so i X , . vii- fl 3 S A. V E.. QL 1 ei e 5MQI,,L,,,e,,,,,,..si.Q,s- - , LA q Pl N E T A A ..:. .H- - rn N4 0-' ,Q 1 ,. qu . s. ,fl . -W M-if 'M 2 vr.'0Q-arf ., H f-1... .I but we find this frequent port-of-call sweet and sordid, rich and beggar-poor, peaceful and pulsating, charming and . . . well, charming . . . for Napoli has personality plies .- ',..' ,- -3 abt ,,, 9' 3 3 1 J mi' fm-'V' Y ..,..ua - V 2 V..-. -- i,,,-n- -p4l '4.r' uni!'d , ' - Q 9 -J 1 -- , fv f. g,- lt.. E .- : , pj '-4 a Q 1 ,.-4-f ,,.,-i-'- I A A rx c7SS'A F .. - ,133- X Ls..A ,- ,. J- 'J Naples: The city basks! H3 Shopping, too, is strange in Naples . . . and variable glx Jax-,,.,,v 4 Naples: Window Shopping? Nfl ranging from the persistent peddlers in tlie crowded, crawling streets and alleywflysi of the waterfront area and downtown distrwi-9 to the expensive, glass-encased Shoppe-9 ofthe niain streets . . . ,gm 1 M532 A .ei ir Froni the former, we buy geniline', Parker pens that do not write and are not genuine, and gold calendar watches , i i that don't keep time . . . and from the latter, Barra gloves, Borcelvflno hats and cameos cameo clzfjflinks and necklaces and rings and lamps cmd . . . Naples. . . cosmopolitan composite of laundry and crowds narrow streets and noisy little cars l Lv f X i Ii1 A 1 is! Aj, -1 '1 i :dl 5 il l We do al Iiftle siglztseeing and CZZ.SCO'LlC'l' the wolrlclis most CICZliCl2.02lS pizza . . we go on tom' afncl marvel at aslzcfn, still, rcfma rlfczbly well-p2'c.s'0lrfvecZ Pompeii. a.' '. f' , V2 Pompeii: A hole in the wall V' l - o,,, D 5--.' '.,v .X- X Q L 11 Q! -4 .- 1 ' '-4!'. lr I .V 4, , .1-, 5 ur l . QL L X tm Q . Ng:- A '-Q Q P ompeu: Fancy stone work sl x xiii' ...xy ' 1, x- ,tx .. .lxxg--L x.. x'-. hxgg L l 'ln Q K' 1, o, -,--as S, , , fivvf . fi y , 743 f. 5 49 1 l 5 Ju Pompeii: Main drag...OO63 A.D. 54.46 ',-- saw, Q M o We relish our glimpses into A' 5 f' ' A - the past of CL once shouting city . W that now sleeps in the shadow of the volcano thdtdest1'oyedher . - ,ay I... -ac' . ,' ,, QT ' RW- ,. A, 1 'X ..- uvlv-V ' f f. - .Q ' 4, 7.35 'ihr-:- II7 1 ......, M. ,, M.:-gn-nr We ricle the lava-maoaolam roaal U to the chair-lift level of barren Vesuvius, still cooling after its 1941, eruption, and hike 1000 feet up a sloping, zigzagging footpath to the top . . . Vesuvius: Up to the top Q! ..,4 3 , 1 , '.f,, 1 4 ,:',XA'-- ' . 9' Ak --L-4-.,i,,.,, inf' .fgfiir 5' wg' f- ,f5gN-,r4wg,- 1,1 5-1Zfi3i,1.?,5'7gf'37 .'.,.- ,gi 1 Uafsff ' . iavr-i+t?'53'f,i4?1f.'g61r,-2 f ' A bfd 1f:l?gL A-LQ.: .g.7r,g.,1.h:,:f.? fi .vb WY-if ,Lf '-fr 1 Sig-.241 -'H fl .v,.., .,.,-ir.: ,nw 4. ,'-. , fs nr' - -7, -2' - 1- ' -K ' ' -'. :A Ii . .t- .' '. '-. 4 ,- . 5151-' - - :Af ef , vp, eg. 15,115-F-ff' i-,fi-1.-Ml In J 12-151-4, ..,x,fi,. x 2' , -x.-'Z ,- Vesuvius: In any language attempting to capture on film the wisps of smoke rising from the clark crater. in ' .V .., Y . 1 -1 5: lu.-I. .Y H-.1-., ,rgl 'F qyv-- ig,-..:eT w.-, M- s .' - -'r , Q I 0,45 V . .w f ,r ffu Yi- 4 if ,- .ljpg5, I 'vw I: -1 fl ' . 3:ff 0 Qi lr Vesuvius: To the crater's edge n H Vesuvius: Steam heat We zmlelz 1flzese1'l2'lng sun clry-slzmla flze lwzwclozvs of Naples fav' below, lla e lnlf blue sea bG'ZfO7ZCl, and llze 7722.-9l.lj isle Of Cfzp7'1'.' cz lareallzlczkiizg eeizlerpzfeee of Slone in llze mlclclle of tlze Crescent-Slzapecl bay . . Capri: , . . where I found her! .gh -1' .' A fQ5Qxy,Mf Kc . ' ., x 4:5 Nz' , 'if , 1 ug, J' Q N r K V v . 4 ' ft. .5 N4 A ,kr 4 l I ' ua fl ll. 'in '.' is, :B lx. ,N ,. 2 ,.j,'?53i.:, . ir' f I .1-iii., - - L , 4-f ' N14-s' 15 D . , .gp A -l., at J- Va.-9' ' 4. -'fr' 'rid x r -lfdsvf 76.35 . V4 I 'IJ ' A W ' K U . , r Qu ft., . Y J A ! ,- ry gp 'He 7 , ,. ff Q . I . wg. l 'M 1 gr . 'Li :i,F. ' . .:' V rf ,fi . . . sq' - Q. . ?1 l7:..,',- r I' , - si 'QW , : ' . '. ,fu , V HnMWWWMMU if . A LW' VAN,- 't' - 1 I ?i,?Y'b ,5'f7 135-im? Rf '-5 A 4 '1'l D rv. ' 1 vu . ,U-, Q 1 W :Phd 33, ,.':'-.4-pp. I Ja-.:, 'guf42'iLF41'W-W. fu -,VY . J K A ,- - C W A 2 :Nw-1 -,X-1' A ful fi gaemi, .Wg 'q -'ff' 'T 3 ,. ,iffy- efgfWwV : I 11' - ' M. f' ' .. l L 1 KH Capri: Take my picture IIOIITE 50100 Capri: Itaiian liberty launch 1 D 1 n X Ziff :Xiu- - rg. Y 3 i F 5 1 l .fi s '2'itPL'.m ' 'pk , Q . 3' ' 'E K' fr 'A iifffrfizf af I , J ' . -L. 5 I ff, f' f K1 ' '1 ff --.. ' ' ' Vw' 5 KT ., ' ' l 5 L I' j .1 'V' , 5 ,' . , F M -,.,. .- , -i--552 , W M49 1.3 'Jr-1 Q 'TI' ': Ir-EEEACY' ' 1 J u nu 1 . . '11 ' -31' u 5-K Ancl we enjoy Naples in October . . . and November. . . and December. . . for i f the Italian language is mnsical then Naples is a song . . . silng by the panoramic city hncldlecl cluttered and close on the mighty hill, whose silmmit invites all travellers to come ilp, see Naples . . . ancl die . . . 123 'Tier ,A A ',-1 -'-'- 5 - .H -M - fs cf H' . '3 ' 1 . -if-Au lm ., .f .g,, f E ' ' n 9 .- 'nf 5, - V ' ' .. l W if ' fr-of ' 'L - ' I' K' 1 '+V 1-V - , I- ,Nr -' L., - V- -0 . , I, H :. 'fm-J--.... V 1 x 9,5 ,' . , .1 T And wc' cn-joy Naplm in Oalalm' . . avzclNaz'011zl10r. . . and I9Uc'c'nzbm'. . . for if H10 Ifallan lflllgllflfjl' is llIUSl.t'Ill than Naples is a song . . . szmg by flzc panoramic vity lzzalcllccl flzllfc and Close on U10 miglzfgf hill, whose szmmzlit invzftcfs all frapvllcrs lo come up, see Naples . . . and die . . Chacmge of ccmwncwaacl. . .15 October 1960 R DM Needham and Capt. O'Grady Captain to another . .. Auld Lang Syne- ,ffm-'rf 4' J A -- 1' alia' 1 'fb .. f aeefsis- - .1 'IF-.-e1' ,' Y V :mfs ga' 1 .. ' .- ...1-ef 1 1 me 1. IP UGTUBER The Only Foreign Language Paper ln Athens George Sagal tornado rl Republicans worry as Manhattan's vital voters welcome Kennedy in the whirl of a tickertape Former Army clerk, Joseph Mobutu rises to precarious power in the restless Congo.. The United Nations assemble for their 15th regular session in New York with Premiers Cgsftro and Krushchev present and well-account- e or... Pittsburgh Pirate, Bill Mazeroski, homers in the last halt of the ninth inning to capture for his crew the coveted World Series crown . .. Baseball's renowned Yankees drop their long- time manager, Casey Stengel, after copping 10 pennants in 12 years of diamond craftsmanship. 31A million students iam U.S. campuses for the fall semester... In Africa, Satchmo Armstrong and his .Pepsi Cola all-stars hit the spot while playing it cool on a hot chaotic continent.. Millions of Americans focus their foresight on the nationally televised Nixon-Kennedy debates. United States compact cars steal the com- petitive spotlight at the annual Paris Auto show. Sing-tingler Elvis Presley breaks the little finger of his string-zinging hand... VL-, V-'Q' ll si 'P LA MA of CVA-6 , I Q! x w i 0 K l The INDEPENDENCE is a powerful, self-sustaining entity with unlimited capabilities ' ' k its crew yet this entity is no greater than the 4,000 vnen who ina e up the face of INDEPENDENCE . .. 6 127 SJW Wiflzivz the oiltelwnoszf bounds of time 80,000 ton vessel live and 1572 drive the soul of Hale ship her mein . . . Y. J Xi-- lt started in Naples, , , Personnel Inspection! l28 Still lost, but we're making good speed Charles Eichorn, Burt Schwieder 5 ulmv, I Kfopvi- x sefgiw or ' J. l'm going to quit eating! .. Let's have another cup of coffee . . . Ralph Holbrook, Bill Bowden, James Clancy, Hamp Spates: Ray Copenhaver, John Hardman, Clarence Garber. W ' 4-'fix' 4-U -.1 'A l29 -Q . . . from the eng2'neer's .smoke watch 1 7 decks above the keel to the .fireman manning the bilge pumps Q6 feet below the water line . . . fwom the anchor wash on the forecastle to the J OOW on the fantail . . . from the gnnners mate on the starboatrcl gun monnt v 1 l to the almnan on the mtvmor landing demce . . . :H : nano 5 A 'TB these are the 4,000 who combine into the one massive entity known to fmencl ancl foe as INDEPENDENCE :- I .l, '- ' 'l Smoke gets in YOUr eyes. . . up here Cut it out . . . or I'II bilge you! At the quickie chain wash . . . Bill Clark: George Lentzg Bill Beasley Mirror, mirror on the walk Paul Corry Land Ho! Ralph Little, Richard Albright, Ernest Price, Don Jacobs fx ff' 'I' . , . nd.-,Q ,-E: '-'Fife' Mk' S inee being eonznzissioned in J annary, 1959, the INDEPENDENCE has proved herself ioorthy to be called the Latest and the Greatest . . . proud to be INDEPENDENCE in name and aini. Within two years, she scored her 20,000th landing and her 1,000th Carrier Controlled Approach night landing INU me FEL THAN one 51215 'EERTIFIEATE Pol? THE ZOOOD Ir' EFENDEIVEF You're a winnah! Ens. Lucky Lovett, Capt. H. P. Lanham ave SIZE winning Fits nicely in your scrapbook. . . LTJG Marshal E. Feltham CCA. . .Cake cutting a hl Bill Sherlow, Stanley lgepcigatlf, Hap Arnold, Larry Berg, Jim Foley. AQ, fi ' - OK, OK, there will be smoke out of the stack as usual . . Matt Dillon V ei' I -yt? .,g., J -1 ,. i . 4..f'r., . , , 945443 j -- , ,, Sold to the highest Bidder.. . LCDR Sam Rorex ,...a-- we-,fi fail 1.11 OK we'll build another one! Knew this sword would come in handy some- Mats Dmomjohn Ketelnut day! I-fig M. E. Feltham, CDR Hal Lang, RADM R. C- Needham, CDR G. D. Acker l34 It takes diligent and endless hard work by a top-notch Air Departnient to achieve this statistic . . . It takes plane handlers and flight deck directors and controllers to juggle thousands of aircraft swiftly and with precision . . . it takes a hangar deck crew that can safely maneuver nearly one hundred aircraft to utilize every precious foot of space It takes the close vigilance of the aviation fuels gang to keep the planes gassed and ready to hit the sky, and the cat inen to get the sky 'monsters off the pitching deck with enough speed to remain airborne . . . it takes arresting gear inen to successfully bring aboard the inasses of steel decelerating from 120 knots to standstill, in a few hundred feet . . . A .av ' ,- ' , - zum 1, ,, ' ND- 5 Him- ' - -. ' J f Pl: V-m-.gg f . Q . . .alittle dab will do ya! Willard Lewis Hanger deck control: How can we really confuse them? LCDR G. R. M. Pearson ENS Bob Martin: Carl Falkenbach, Jim Clancy. lsr A 5'-4-'P-,,.. 111 r 1 5- - Y xi 'Vg' f' A ,,. -9 7 -flrfj 4 -ag, , , :Ja r' he It is not on fire 'lbs '-75 EVQOFWFIQ the cable. . . I direction eith Cunnington, Fred Mielke, Virgil Walsh, J. M. CamPbe'f Shirley Thibodeaux. A ,.:.,, He's coming in from the other !ll Yet, the credit for launch ing and recovering 20,000 aircraft is not diie to th e Air Department alone nnder the vigilant, keen supervision of the Air Officer in Priniarg Flight Control. This sanie devotion bg hundreds o f snipes niang decks below, channels those 280,000 horses into driving this mighty vessel through the water at ,sufficient speeds to provide the necessary wind speed across the flight deck. Hand acceleration . . . Mac McCall . I 'Elm 5 I: To be or not to be. . .water hours David Mendenhall I'm thinking . . David Putnam . f qpqv The Chief and some of his Indians LCDR John Doheny, con E. K. Laubiiii, Chief Rogers, and LTig Hal Krieger W9 iQ ni, El il! ,A :M-...L 112+ I -..L , , , I -'gg ix l 'L I .1 g'0tfgtCh. Frank Rodriguez, L - . Bonifagioiewus, and Luis ,i , ,.......-...- Under the taut leash of the Chief Engineer, this ship can get up and get underway in record breaking tiine. The fact that INDEPENDENCE can go, in a inatter of ininutes, from a dead standstill in a peaceful harbor to the 'maminiuin degree of fighting readiness capable of launching aircraft rev eals the e jiciency and close-co-operation inherent in this fighting team. g--'-i- .....f6 ' 137 dr -A . E . A .. as 7. .V 5 E V. A -jfs'--'f--I 1 . ' ' ' . gr-Q-. ,,.....,. ., ,, ,JI I I . . 1 . i . ig. f I . 14315, Q 5 E 2' .sf S 7 i , ' .x 4 . Q gs 'fIt's a bird, it's a plane, it's super.. . CAG! John Held E! i KJ 4 . G E Q fr 4, 1 2 .-.M The ship, as a fighting machine, is only as powerful as the payload which it can deliver. The Air Department launches the aircraft, but it is the Gunnery Department which shifts the bombs from their carefully protected spaces to the bomb racks on the aircraft. Now, the schematic says . . . J. J. Oshea H ereiii, tb e G1l'7Zf7?0'7'jf D epo rlmieiit has proved itself to be CL Teal prof Umlei' the fzbl e giiiclfznce o f the G mi fiery axnfl Orclincuzce Officers V aencl oclepfly eo-ofrcliiiafecl b if the Opemtions Officer, f the bombs, missiles and iizicleaii ioeczlpoiis czirriive safely from the stowage spaces to be swiftly, cczrefzflly seczwecl lo the ioaitiiig, piilsatiiig aiieraft . wlzi l e the powclefr C!'7liCl1J'I'OjGCb'llGS are eoiitimially eamiiecl to Teacly gun mounts . . . awncl clireetors semi the .skies . . . Just like cleaning a .22 Care-ful, now.. . Lawrence Curthoys H I r- I I F -Y -4 f i x. 4 K I V A- l can write upside down too! John Tull Of... , y . , .491 5. f ., . 1I ,. 4 Xe ,li fx n +- EX Remote controller Bill Sherlow Under the care fill gilidance of Air Operations and C oinbat I n formation Center, the aircraft are directed to the target. At night Carrier Controlled Approach takes charge of the returning birds and brings thein accurately into the landing pattern nntil the pilots can get the ineat ball in sight . . . X Dig those flying saucers! Graham W Smoot 141 Tlze Sn J la De Ja? tvnent snpplzes the lzfe lznes B11 expel fly car 1 anna out 'LZLS nnsszon of pr ouzclzng and accounting for th e mate? zals and funds 7 eqmv ecl fo main fazn the slnp zn a state of nzammzmn Oper a tmnal reaclzness ancl by po ovzclznq sermees for the emnfm t, welfare, ancl morale ofthe crew, our Porlcelzops more than carry their share l l in making the INDEPENDENCE the pricle of the fleet . . . E H211 2 e - f ' ' l ' ' , . . wlzielz enable the INDEPENDENCE to be onaterzally self-snstaznzng. lf we haven't got it we'll get it for you . . . . wholesale. Don Lincoln, Norman Wortman, Bernard Farrell. l l l ll l Just what I needed and only. . . how much! Bob Russ and Carl Rhodes rl'-' . Sole support... l Eric Kunze - Remember, I'm not in boot camp . . Bill Atoeff, Mike Nelson, Willie Bowen and Angelo 142 Raymos. l l L 4-s 'T 5 ff' - ,KW x r , -X , 'V' But this is the combination! . . See, l told you so . . AS good as it looks . . . -l0e Wilson Man, my molars will munch today! Worth Nicholson Chip Lovett Supply has 0oll00l0fl its slmr0 of .7?r.9ls , too. lf 70011 fin Hnzflslffiifl2'i1g liz H20 T-71120CO77Z7l2C!llClC'7',Sl7?Sj7CCl?'O?l And H2 0 g0ln0ml fmms fm' H10 c'1'c'uf has lJ00n 0omon0ncl0cl as Un nzflslmzfllng lll0.s.w . . . NOT only clocks tl? 0 Supply l?0prfrfm0i1l fzlrizrislz H2001 ls for 17104111111 lizmgry INCH of H10 INDEPENDENCE 'it also sz4pplz'0S li'0zlz'ons fm' llms0 10110 fly, llmsc' fwlm 77161721 H10 lz'b0rly lc1zm0li0S, H20 b0a0li gziczrcl aslmr0, Cllllfl H20 l'll76 7'f.lj lmzlncls 01lfl10llSO. . . KL. Na-41 . IB: The outlook is bright. . . The coc'kpit,' of this vmghty shzp is the Ncwigfzfvmz Bhrzdqe on fhc' U7 Imfcl. It is here thai the Captazn, c1sshz'stc2cZ by the OOD and the Ncwzgatm, 'HlCl.Z.7ZfClZhfNS fhe ship on U safe CI nd 'LUZISC' 0010230 C f..l.W. ' an 0 Grady, Ens. Tom Doyle Say this thmg lsnton as 2 -T 2' '-N4 - N xxx , Q oo AL hoohh I . XX if- x '-T, R-Q5:lL-lr ., 1 fo 2'-crib.. -... 'li oil ,eg--P T4 ,.-ffffffflni QQ RQNQY QS qw sl Looks like a long boat ride! Charles Mathews The Bridge doesn't function alone, however. I t depends on valuable information relayed from Combat Information Center, from the lookouts stationed around INDEPENDENCE from the far-reaching eyes Of the sliip's many radars, and from information supplied by the experts in the Communications Department 5 lA K Two turns right and five to the left and Charley Caldwell N Th e I N DEPEN DENCE represents a vivid ci'o.s.s-section of a clivewsihed nation . . . it inepresents the molding of a oamety of e jfoicts and enepgies and hopes and dreams into a compatible community . . . Arising fpom this is a willingly accepted sense of inter-dependence on one another. l48 f 9 A pinch of salt. .. y, -1 Little John, Carman Morello 9 -0 Reef: 'nfeff key afldlpush starter. . uno eonen, David Stone, Larry Suche, William Elkins 5 rf' 5 rn L I I' -1 X Ready, on your mark, get set . . A The enum inns Comfmzmieations sen ds afncl receives 'vital messages . . the -mess-men feed the ship . . . the eng'inee'rs man the boileons and mm Hze ffzwbines . . . the a'i1'menji7'e the eatapzzlts and drive the tfraetors . . . the gszmmers mates fire the guns . . . the orclnance man b7 i'I1fgS up the weapons . . . the fuels gang pzmnp the gas . . . and the ggrenes shoot fvnom the fantail . . Bring on the ducks! 0 R Q vs T I I . x ,N -V 1 V X - 1- 1 I 1 ' J L N I j of W , 4 If .0 ,A My Butter-and-eggs men.. HFOgrJZi1Onr: and Seven years ago John Gitbertsen, Frank er Paducce, John Webster ' . I On the INDEPENDENCE, every man is a specialist or striving to be one . . . Tlz ere are the men who operate the raclars, make the photos, control the transmitters, maintain the boats, repair the aircraft, ran the elevators, bake the cakes . . . ancl type millions ancl millions of words every clay . . . The old black magic... Doyne Dugger Scrabble.. .on the keys. . , Tum Here? Angelo Ramos, Glen Houchins, Jack Huston, Frank Howard ,Zia ' .v- i X Man in the net? Away all boats! Watch my hand . . Yet teamwork is the key word on the Big I, and nowhere is teamwork so 'visible as in the conducting of air operations or the carrying out of a strenuous replenishment. Here the short launch interval and high number of tons per hour reveal the rewards of true oarriermanship . . . 151 Replemshment is an all-hands a jjfair. I 3 The srlipes come up from down below . . . the airdales descend from the flight deck . . . the gurmers leave their mozmts . . the deck force mans its crarles and cargo rlets . . . afncl the corweyor belts are assembled . . . Replemshmertts are chiefly hours of hard work, but the hours corltairl their moments of humor. Supplies for support... Straits of replenishment! L ,X , 5' ' -A 1, f . fgbffkai -I I Make a hole! 'v Nh N V9 A rf Q 'Q 'Q.rxx X1 fl Y . They' re ii not beer kegs! I Q v-xx Vertlcal replemshment! 1' ,B I 1 , 1 1 v Y its M I if 12125318 1? fi nughrfi S. Bobbing for apples? A Bill Atoeff F 00' instance, sovnetioncs crates 0 f apples get busted open, and tt's stwprising how quickly the contents can ctisctppecw! 153 ny, What do you mean graba line? Jim Martin, John Sewell, and Jum Pratt Pret-ty co-lor. . Gegyge Henry, Calvm Powell 1' u U 1 l n ,r 5 .N ,AAea.,,.., n Q af: ' KT ' 4 few. N VV ir' ' n arg.. '- 1 i if fr if-r -B. ' ' l , 5 ' an of if-cf-, 7 . . on moonlight bay! The officers and men o f the Deck Group conduct seamanship evolntions whic necessary for the morale of the crew and the continued operations o f the ship . . . hy encompass a host of duties 154 Ladder to liberty Eppert seainansliip reveals itself in the eafperieneecl lzanclling of the liberty boats by the trusty oofosioains and boat crews and of the flexible lzose-lianclling by the vigorous refueling teains . . . Daring adverse weather ancl sea eonclitions the trite skill, precision ancl split-seooncl timing of these I inen are especially worthy of praise . . Come on Joe... PulI. . 891. 1 1 Y - 5 i'n':w -- .f ' . ,if , ,- ,-uf ,- Secure from G.Q .... Lloyd Teets Some jobs seem great and some seem small- bilt, all are important in making np the unbroken chain of human activity and effort that resnlts in a ship like INDEPENDENCE ki ' ' P -I .dr A dal ' fx I f i Q .wiv K 'LN lx 5 ' is , pdf . if , 'Which part goes where? Chief Crowder, John Noble, William Conant, Larry Green and Edwin Wilkinson The sailor with the soilnd-powered phones becomes the key man when the Captain wants the word passed . . . ' the weary-eyed teletype operator p , E V, holds the ship's efficiency record I' Qyvjffgg in his hands when that one E all-important Alert message comes E over the circuit . . . 156 XM' Gif No, Cleopatra's not in here! Paul Foster ix the safety of the ship depends on the Zookofuts timely sighting of the swept ehamzel buoy when malnezwefrtng the S tmtts . . From the other side of the tracks . . . Looks like a helmet to me. Walker and Sarge 5 -,WT . nk pg! ' , 'wrong inn' tr 3-PR'-1 Weather guessers: Let's get boating canceIled! Norman Washburn, Guy Breaux, Chief Wiorek zmseljish teamwork and striving for a common goal 'make a ship great . . . 158 iii'- WeII done! CAPT Hergert, Chester Barnowski, S. Simon Briand ,WA Just dropped in to say 'helIo'! William Belford, Danin White, John Quarles, William Lockwood, David Crawford and VADM Anderson. Y JA 5 lei, my get ' i si .I ,g,.1,, A. ', ,fy LIN: gf' 44 1- F- But all is 'lZOfifLl707'li for Hzefmcm of INDEPENDENCE - - I A X' f,T, ll l nail! Tl' ll i il ,,, IH- nfl ll l l l ll Follow the bouncing ball.. Glen Bechman, Warren Cooper, Richard Ristau, Don Thayer, Charles Eve, David Moore, and Lonnie Rapert. i l l l 1 l ll ll ll T l l l i l l l l l I 4 l6O 4 A4ffC'7''ZL'OV7f-17OZH'S, Hzcfrc are itll? bull .90Ss2'01zs in the Zmmgcs, U20 qzfiei moincnts at Sunday services, H20 fnzozvics 012 H20 mlcss decks, and, in port, ZLi2C'gf!772C2S'i2?lHlGI7ClH7?gCL7'19612118 . . . Midnight Mass... Where are my 3-D glasses? . ' s ihilifit lfthey're not ready now, Marine, they just won't make it! Kenneth Kent I can't hold this pose much longer! The thirteenth button Ronald Jobmann O course there is also the never-ending shining of shoes tlice mending of nnifoonns, and the waiting in Zine . . . i6l I N 'I ll I 1 of i ig' i1 3- I K ii -1 xi' 0 r i r R ,V u I1 z ' ! in I PM r lf V x, Ir nfs r r Vs. N if ' r , . nl., Especially, there are the Zines . . . u . the eeaseless, never-ending lines that confront one from every dzrectzon . . . Banana Split please 'I S YVKA F r 1 510.05 Postage due? ! sasums amu xo swam: 5 'rf' f' - fx ,,..,, f K. 162 My pay number is two hundred and sixty-two . . . Norm Washburn, Gary Vant Leven- Victor Sielski, Delas Strode. One stcmds in Zine to get paid and th en, in Zine to spend the pay . . Then there's the chow line, f the shot line, A the mail Zine, and the gecttmk line . . . NOT to mention the liberty line . . . fu I' JH S ' +- The fleet's in . . Harry Dunn, Dexter Nadeau, Charles Barrows, James Barton. -, 1'-rf-ef.-'--Z .5 ' v -, !.,., Nw W, if W I VFW' JL , ,A-bl. J ..-at .. 5'f':-' -3311. -wihlduwm 'QeQ,5qg',1lgfyfj,',,', , .: r-Q , Y ,fs A GA 4 'I tr--.3 C , I 'Cu 1' if 3 C 'avi-11 4 is R ,Q Q07 . ilr -QVM , - 1'-:if .. ,, ,- -5 avg - W If - . .,-' -.- l f, F25 ' ' ' ' W- . .1-, ,ig I3 Aa , ' Just like rnother used to have! The worId's largest catcher's mi KX 1 CO2 or perfume from Grasse? Ron Papciak, John Webster, Fred Bush. tt... 164 James Clutes. l .v,,-.nQll'l49i , ' --'and du-1-rzur:vH'N- 'EE l A of Division pictures. . . What are they? Tom Wetzel But Sarg, where's the land? JOHN Cope, Jim Maloy, 1stSgt. Pierce. I' ew. L 5 i x . Y 1 ,li Yff.flNffHxI'U72-11-ffx,,, x ' 1 V , . . :K V 6 41 h ffl! !IHl'!f.flH'l1If!Iffqff7f'fy'f17j117j.f, W 'Ed R g, ff. J 4 . , . ffffff ffff 1'11-Ynfffefwn . .. ,' ' 5753 'fA f.a!f'7 - R' Hlflfff' Hp Ihr'lzfwnf'ff.wf1'1m' , , ,. . Xp N 'isa . , ' --' . Ni N . E U . LQ' 'Lx-E, X , R' 'I 'J 9 c , if ., afAf.,4. Q. 5' f 1 . 531 . ' 2-if I E - 7' - ' E E' LI' - No-'sittir1Q On my left . . Tynor, C. R. McConneI, R. R. McKimm. LTJC5'RonnbBrinN. oscar oldsaur, K. L. QL- mad if i.vf111'.wU2'1m'. . . in frrr'Z ,.Q,f10U0f'fl10H2 . . . E' iw HW! mfzlfcl up HW Iifrf fJfClS1l1.p UH 7'fl!'f'H, 1'fz117f.w,f'2'f'cPc7.w and m , . . . ENDENCE' . .. flu' C'fJ17?I7OS2.fFffff'0UfIIVDEWP INDEPENDENCE as standing in, Sir . . .? 9 I x EW.-' .E1:,, , . -. J: A-L: .L ,ur -,Twin Vw- X Y ' L' T ,Atv-'h-m1U.n -1 .-.. ,E -Tull X ll fi Q 33- , v ',. A A 'Q . ', u Q A1 f r N - ' f , ' ,S A, . 94 1: - , V 1 . . ks fa, x Rf v- f gg.: ,re X .2 ' T5 If MI: I. I 1 -.4 -4 I f u E-if is. I M, 1 I ..., , X51 gn- , 1 , 1-,Na of Palermo w N his 'U -Q ,1 1 -' .-, -.1 A Norman church with the domes of a Moslem mosque . . . aRoman road to a Carthaginian retreat . . . an Arabian palace, a Spanish arch of triumph, anol a Chinese casino in a Bourbon-built park . . Such is Palermo . . . an ancient city that graciously bears the brands Of 'many long-gone conquerors . . . Their relics remain here for moolern voyageurs like us . . . to 'view ancl visit . . . 167 1 5 E 3 Q Z 5 I 3 3 Z 4 I 1 X 1 1 2 E 3 E if 5 ai i 2 'K gr 2 I . E E 2 I 1 le . n ii K I r if P. I Q b 2 ii l n Still, there i.s much here that time cannot tarnish and decay majestic Monte Pellegrino, towering 2,000 feet over rugged, brown hills green valleys and flowering lemon groves, a haze-gray metropolis and a placid harbor . where rests the INDEPENDENCE . . . There is quaint and quiet M ondello . . . a long, slender beachfront . . . a rainbow fleet of very small boats . . . an odorous mart where shellfish are cooked in the open air and octopuses sold . ruddy fishermen mending pastel-colored nets on the shore of an azure ocean . . . And there is delightful paradox . . . Junior Officers messing Monreale Ensigns Bob Shea, Charlie Morgan Tom Doyle Joe Mason - X Full speed ahead . . . Palermo style. R. Kuchenbrod, G. Deion, and J. Wieland We like Palermo, a war-torn capital now fighting to make a comeback . . . s we like her friendly people, the thonsands of them who come aboard . . . the thousands more who welcome as ashore . . . we like Sicily . . . and our winter stop at this island in the sun . . . 'Xia Division party uniform of the day Herb Gibbs Home run??? 169 t T' X ' f 3 1 Evening eonies to the floating city of INDEPENDENCE and the residents who can relax . . . do . . . So many vnen whose every working minute 1 demands inaaziflniwn concentration . . . tiirn now to recreational pursuits with a siniilar attention to detail . . . Florentine Leather School . . . Do-it-yourself . . . Bob Smith l., . . v 1, 'BEEXAQ i .- , .I ff, ' X u ,-'gd 170 l 1 YQ - f Y,-4,135 U-Tr' Going broke saving money Up and at em . . . These are the leisure hoiws . . . F or some, these are the reflective moments . . . when ci, quiet talk with the Chczplc Lin OT ci solemn religions semnee may enhance the evening. Telling it to the Chaplain Chaplain Campbell x Nxt 5. r- fi ,I ' E r 3 NNN k f ,,., Here's to a sweet year... Stephen Ribak and Clarence Garber QA U 5 t L ? 2 . F . , F 'ti x . X L .r Food others, these are the fcwofrite times for vieioioz g cz mess deck viiovie . . . or 'oisitiiig the sick . . . oi' just 'reading a. book . . . in SILENCE, please! L Colces are coolest now, it seems K , and pizzas are sizzling lzot in the ioarclroom galley . . . Rex and his Skipper... Rex Rothrock, LT James Le Blanc, Chaplain Campbell, CDR L. T. Ward Meanwhile back on me Acropolis 172 1 Good front for a book joint . . . Bull Brabham, John Hartmire 754 worth li. ,,f4- ' il SILENCE L -Q, 'X xii! 173 Here's coke in your eye! Lawrence Hills and Tom Homan X f u lifr-'1 3 '- vs'-5'1 ... ,flu minutes to a liberty boat! I .A E l l while liberty whites steam topside l giccmmiteeiiig cz clay of tomorrow, l l g l 2 -ik Yet, for many, the watch, goes cm, in combat, in CCA, 32 cmd even on the foesul O 4 ' 'Q-N.- V1 ..,.4l' lt hasn't slipped an inch . .. Flying Saucers? Not on schedule... ENS Bob Redfern 152 r V 114 Dead short and the coffee tasted it . . . Cecil Collins and Glenn Swanner .,A , '. XA l . . then we'll have everything under control. . . W MZ e somewhefre a Marine witlz, foresiglzit tends to his gold . . . lll 111-i l75 1 in if in l W l i l,v l- if ,gil .il I: ,. ii l, rr .- l 1 . r V E 2 z .K The most important piece of silk in the world James Evans, Raymond Sanders VW And the sweepers 'man their brooms . . . Taps 176 , K . .4- That makes the 5.438, 792nd print for PIO. .. Bernard Bagdonas, Chico Ramirez Sweepers, man your brooms John Schow, Anton Kalna NOVEMBER , lar-wise endeavor to reduce the out- Minnesotafs UGO' ,, . n0T:fd?lI,3, gold, President Eisenhower calls Qgmeback team Ofdigecsggfrsgopthfn home an estimated 284,000 deD9fld90fS abmad- press poll to become 1960's' National College U U Football Champs... After running neck-'n-neck with Nixon in the U home stretch of the Presidential race, Kennedy , Adflllfal Charles Cat Brown, Cgmmandef. rides into the White House winners' circle to 'n'Ch'9f Allied Forces SOUTAGVH EUYODG. Serves 1 the Democratic cheers of the Nation... HS MY best man for 23 brides and EVOOITIS to l ' elul Con olese arrest and maul scores of C m5X H DSODIG-T0-DGODIG miSSi0n on the island f llmflicials ingleopoldville and Mobutu troops of Rhodes - -- xSB3fCh fill fleeing '-Umumba - -- A son, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, lr., is born in U U U Washington to the President-elect and his first F A Trros ll satellite televrses data from outer Lady, Jacqueline , H space to American forecast centers for the first time in the history of weather prediction... Fifty jolly elders are graduated for the Vol- 'ele unteers of America School for Santa Clauses ,,'i FrenchPresident, Charles De Gaulle,announces with a warning to keep their beards on straight. new national referendum to approve his pro- fur the formation of an Algerian State... A French magazine declares that the middle. aged woman no longer exists... 5 5 1 il. 5 ' r. . . ' A l. Other American Newspape U Hours Ahead Of AIUENS Joe Lang 1 l77 1 l i l Q M, 1, A '1 will if 3 i ,IQ YQ is 'i ,, 1,5-5 ,V .y J. .,, w 1 I 15- vi M4 a ms, N':J--J.-f-f-'f1f5,::-fffgzgljfjnvg-,-'...g:gL2.T7i3aETk.eETi5:4....,.M::'::s..1uzaw,fr1,13 Q - . N' - ' ,,,.m,,.m ..,, 4 ...m,.-,., ,1, ,,x,--- m,,,,w,,, N , A A A ww.. ,-,, ,Mn ,YA , . A ., .., A , i ,,,,,,.,,,w 1 4 4 , Elm 4 Elan 4 I sq we ,li 'w - 1 :fm :mf M F1 U '34 -1 1 , 'ul ,Ez- .M ll 5:55 Nfl' si? -z 2 is -fly 8 ,gg- wvf- - Vx r-R, .mn n, A 0 iv : if 33, n nw r. if - fy 4 91, A L . Q J, ,,! I lim. h ' f ' 'J af Of Genoa From a gaudily-lit jukebox in a smoky Sottoripa cafe blares a stereo-recorded voice singing Misty . . . Ami, appropriately enough, Genoa is . . . in the gray Of our December arrival . . . just that . . . Rain clouds cloak the city's heights . . . Wet winds whip the white-capped waves of the harbor . . . When weather occasionally permits, however, we leave our new floating city . . . We brave the swells to explore the sites and sights of an old, old seaport . . . We tour two splendid Rivieras named for the rising and the setting sun . . . the sun we seldom see . . . in Genoa . . . 179 l X .az-Q. -3 ,,, ,,gl.!l if Q2 , -1 R I If Genoa: On the street where she lives. filllll 1 - 1 at -1 A in 1 i.. 1 Genoa is a giant mosaic . . . fashioned with rocks by Nature and man . . . and polished by winter rains . . . Wet and weathered, the rock endures . . . in the wide, granite avenues bordered by stone facades in the gravelled stairs of steep and zig-zag alleys . . . in the monumental parks and flagstoned piazzas . . . in the limestone tribute toheroic, unknown dead . . . in the colorfully inlaid walkways of elegant arcades . . . in the narrow, cobblestoned canyon of medieval palaces in the humble, jieldstone home of Christopher Columbus in the paved, Riviera roadways slithering precariously through picture post card towns and villages . . . big, bold, baroque . . . Genoa: Where you make it for Piza f -'5 . Santa Margherita: Standing on the corner. but where are the chicks? Stiglieno: . . . and farfrom potter's field . - - in the anguished marble statuary of Stiglieno's oddly opulent cemetery . . . in the serpentine paths rising and falling throughout a crown of clijs and tumbling hills . . . in the mountains that roll down to a rocky beach and a rolling gulf beyond . . . All this is Genoa . . . a city at once both static and streamlined . . . a city as strong and beautiful as the rock that adorns it . . . amosaic city . . . Misty, it is . . . but still magniicent . . . The Holidays N Bfaon Natale, Feliz N afvidad, Joyeiav Noel or the old familiar Merry Christmas . . . they all say the same thing when that long awaited season of the year finally arrives Away from home and steaming in the far dis tant waters of the Mediterranean, the many T' ,ry 5311 You know what's in these packages? Yeah! Dry CereaI! San Juan. Irvin Carey lt's from the Sick Bay on the Sara. . . faces o f INDEPENDENCE reflect the in finite meanings which the spirit of Christmas holds for each 'man in its own special way. is Come back, real soon . . .' af Language is no barrier! Ron Howell -wr Christmas Eve will find us... LT Frank Hill, J. D. Bell, R. W McCarthy, N. A. Spier, D. L. Smith J. DeSnoo, R. D. Hagen, C. B Dawson. '1 A ,A is I 7' 72' But on this little piece o f America, far renioved from the families and loved ones back honie, the traditional evergreens spring forth . . . Throughout the ship, groups gather in lounges, divisional spaces and even in gear lockers to decorate the bnlhheacls, hang trininiings, and trini trees . . Christinas draws closer . . . Midnight arrives . . . Sonie open gifts and others re-read Christmas wishes that rernind as Christmas is here . . . and hoine is far awag. H iindreds reaffirvn the true spirit o f Christmas at Midnight Mass celebrated in the hangar bay . . . g l N The conininnion o f nian with God . . . loved ones with loved ones . . . I H? In aff. I 1811 Mid-night Mass, Christmas Eve Twas the night before ChristmaS - - LT Vic Osher fry, . , - W .- ll 9 I 91 I .m.-.,.- V ,, 15 . ' -, ' A 2'--' Z I ,'2 ,'fL1,l . llfffllli From the S'Ol0'HZ-ll'll.lj of a '77lf0lll'lfIll'1l0 Christmas at sea to a gag, festive New Years rn. Naples . . . The liberty section goes ashore . . . with warnings to be careful and the Clusty section stands the last watch of the year . . . The spirit of INDEPENDENCE reflects itself in the faces of the 'merry revclers, the not-so-merry sleepers, and the busy watch starlclers . . . I 1 t lima, fi The word . . . Rudy Dlzon, Roger Demetrio Did you say a launch in 10 minutes? LTJG Ralph Richter . .- . from the duty section! BH' Cox. Bob Crenshaw, Flavia De- USGFO, Michael Palmo Ronald Monkl Tom Hearn, Arden Mielke, and Bill Ramey. 'Z 1 ..f Using Along with Rich LTJG Rich Martin, LT George Hoff- man, LT Wendy Powell, Arch Free- , man, LCDR George Kimmons, I ENS .lim Dunlop. :'-- Y - , 4..:.-QQ: -1.4.1. +:.:.:..-wwe,-5,,-1,:..a:::f '- 'N---.-.... ,, ,, A Happy MPP! Jam Heberlmg New Years or not. . . I need my sleep ENS Al Smlthson -u. xiii! '-l' And so on the first day of 1961 ...The Quarterdeck watch wish they could join the fun!... LTJG Guy Curtis . . . the OOD writes his log in iambic-octameter. . . and your duty cruise book editors retire to their typewriters to add one more facet to the Big Picture of the Faces of INDEPENDENCE . . . The party's over. . . ENS Jack Bledsoe 188 ,,, 'JAM' 11 1 'l . lulv 1 pi. , x ,,., E L Now can I hit the beach? Alan Wismer DECEMBER to see life . . . to see the world Tom Saunby hu Queen of two weeks crown l89 Rrots rock Brussels and Interrupt the honey moon of Belgian Kung Baudouln and Fablola Lerner and Loewe s lavish new musical Cam elot opens on Broadway wnth Faur Lady Juhe Andrews and an advance ticket sale of S3 000 U S economists predlct an end to recession an the latter half of 61 but caution that 3 mul hon lobs must be created soon Brltalns great wartlme leader Sur Winston Churchill confounds his physlclan by rlslng from has convalescents bed to mark has 86th burthday Fire crlpples the unflmshed S250 000 000 aircraft carrler CONSTELLATION After a two year self Imposed exule opera dwa Mana Callas returns to Mnlan s famed La Scala and to dramatic triumph In Polluto Ph ladelphlas Eagles edge the Green Bay I Packers 1713 to cop the professional football Amencan teen agers feel maxed emotuons at the elopement of star dusted Bobby Mack The Kmfe Dann and Sandra A Summer Place Two hundred due un two mayor aur dusasters m New York and Mumch Germany U S shoppers buy more than 150 mllhon dol lars worth of festwe wrappmg paper to sheathe theur Christmas gifts .-. .-...f ' . rn' ' Z - , ,D . o Q - l Y? , J sb 5352 f!g. ,ir iid iii: 5 1 1 if s 5 E gi w 3 1 y I S 4 Y ' 1 4 s Before tim picnics of I NDEPE NDENCEIS air gfrmip are ready for a, safe, quick: Zmmfch, fiz'gI1z', and frecoifery . . . cnziniicss jobs musf be done by scores of men. Tin cloud on the deck... reparation 3 Fl l X K Ingredients of the licorice stick Ronald Malecha, Paul Corry, Shirley Thibodeaux, John Campbell 1 1-2: . Q'-if l v W5 l' Catacombs of CVA-62 W0 John-Chambers, Clark Dunlap, Ben Gams, Harold Callahan, Jim X Kelly. vi C J - M' la Q J E 1, 3, is W J , Q , r' QA-iX,,, - rv... . .C Easy Mac, Don't tilt it! John Ashe and George Vickers You push the little valve down and the wheels go round and round Jimmy Mosteller l93 .tix X. Pre-flight preparations encompass a wide range of1'n,d2TvidnaZ cjorts and energies . . . knowledge and know-how from the continual cleaning and greasing . . . to the arresting cable and catapult onaintenance . . . to the fine actjnstvnent of the sensitive gear the aircraft carry . . Just like route 66 . .. John Hughes, Danny Madison 194 Pick a part, any part... Fred Hollis, Ray Jurjens, Fred Brown X. And now, for my next trick . . .' Looks like it dropped its load Dir-ty fin-ger-s! Chief Richard Sheldahl Zone inspection? John Schueneman 7 heads are better than one Counter Clockwisez Royal GOGU John Schueneman, Rudy Rudfj Paul williams, vincent Blake. WI' liam Kerr, Robert Cooper- Lift it with the left hand and thread the bolt with the right. . . , is ' ' ' ' i 4.4.2 I, i K J . l D Chief R. H. Ayers I know this is the Marine Corps but who ever heard of a spit-shined A4D? Dick Wilson, Guy Brennan, John Baker, Jim Marlowe, and Bill McGrath. apkeep is a iieivep-eiicliiig responsibility with little glamour, , bitt big clioicleiicls for the gfroimcl opeios and eat gangs . . . they make the laimelies possible aiicl play a key pole in freaclyiiig skip aiicl planes for the mission alzfeacl . . . l I,'Fi'eE.' 4.'a.t-nies, ,.,, ,,...- Q l l 8 'Y I l I l 1 l 1 l 9 l 2 5 I A-nest of eggs. Jim Talley, John Harvelick, and Bud Marsh. The Lemheh The primary mission of a Carrier Air Group is to destroy the enemy while provid- ing for the air defense of the fleet. . . Fur- ther it must maintain air superiority in Naval Operations, and provide reconnaissance. . . ' The destruction of the enemy's capabili- ties is committed to our nine squadrons and detachments readily identified by the letters V for fixed wing and A for attack ...Embarked aboard INDEPENDENCE are four attack squadrons, VA-72, VA-75, VA-86, and VNIA-224, the Marine squadron . . .There is one heavy attack squadron VAH-1 and two fighter squadrons, VF-41 and VF-84 . . . ln addition, we have detachments from VAW-12, VFP-62 and HUP-2, our Angels . . . This is Carrier Air Group Seven, the same hard hitting outfit that struck the Jap- anese at Palan, Luson, Leyte, Okinawa, Kiiurn Harbor and Manila Bay. . .that crippled the Japanese off San Bernardino Strait, and were the last to strike the scattered, mangled lm- perial Fleet as it fled west . . . Fighting CVG-7 later saw service in Korean skies flying from the BON HOMME RICHARD. . . And now, commanded by CDR HALLANG, it is the largest most powerful group of men and aircraft ever assembled aboard any fight- ing ship, anywhere. . . I98 Flight Quarters, flight quarte1's! blares the IMC . . . more than 1,000 meh 'ready themselves for INDEPENDENCE Air Operations From the control tower . . . CDR Cockrell and CDR Drewelow Inj!! V iii? get Pre-tty pic-ture's! Larry Rowe ...M X '12- 'Q And there we are. . . in the Caribbean? WW, -' ,Z-, - 9 'N ,W ..-.aff .A ,N 'x ff 199 The carrier's pnrpose is about to be realized . , , Crews .scramble to their positions . . . A ingriacl o f inillti-colored jerseys jill the flight cleclc in well-orclerecl cliaos . . . Primary Flight Control, Hangar Deck Control mm CIC air controlers are reacly . . . Air Operations and Air Intelligence ' liafoe teletypecl the latest dope to the reacly rooms, ioliere the pilots are receiving last-ininilte briejings . . . , X l i X S g ' Launch four at once? Rod Hilton, Glenn Beecham, LCDR Ed Hofstra, ENS AI Rodger. Now you guys land from the stern this time! LT Osher gms i S xxx 200 Ready Four? Who's the joker that down- ed 605? Chiefs Mattair and Sanders ll and M lu- - ' I 4, xx- J , , ,. 1 Z -bgg- Sometimes hot air is good for something LCDR Jack Carroll Up angels, away! Z horns blast an cl sirens wail . . . the elevators whisk up and clown . . . the planes are spotted for launching the H U-2 Angels are airborne . . . Black Ace commg up' 201 . . . Reel-shirted ereiomeu finish the fueliug . . . ' Pilots, mart your aircraft booms through the ship, Message for Garcia as orange-suited flyers scramble to their aircraft. ing windshields 202 Use over 10 miles of paper every day shin- David Swanson if H Z' , lm. I ge The line-up . . . Team work to the nth degree . . f f Sure, go on and blow tubes. . . in Q 'ki if ,JA ,K 4 ..f nil 5 1' .. , . gf K ... ,- I , .3 ' a 9 .1 Q Q 1 I 431, 1 wh. ,A ,, Q, , Q K fl-F I 'H' , '-5 new, , . , ' -was The Oflieei' 0 f the Deck Iieads the ship into the wind. A deafeiiiiig, wailing blast splits the air as jets are started . L41- -wt H it N x qwngx N Q More steam heat. . . And more steam heat Tm Clouds go up i , ,..u, .sg I 204 - 7 F. -, 1. -A .. -. .E 'M-,..r f ,. nw: l fag A ' , P ' .,,,,,, ,ff --f f,:'59 'W'4'. :fly IA ,.'L i, . . Q gy.- F, r l' vi! D HM in -uv 1 . .. 'J N, -- .1 4- :J ... -i ,H , l ' E, ,. ,f '.'!.Z.n-md -- ' 5- E . 'E .E 'lgiifhm- 'H? ' f' ' ,km - ', ,fm ' 1' fi 2 ' 3 f. M N., 'fa: qf2 '4Y-1.51 Vnq' 'Zi' 13 f 'D -' 19, -v ' '?- !','g,.' l. ,Mg P316 ' 2 Stull another and wzth 0, roar the catapaults flmq the sleek wmged awcmft into the blue The lazmch is in the air ,' - INDEPENDENCE settles clown for the bzg w Chalk at up' Gaylord Teeter Harold Hunt NAV Black 2 from Blue Leader. . . Don't Shoot. It's me I The A3D twin-jet bombers of the VAH-1 Tigers, our heavy attack squadrons, are high in the blue above the weather, racing for dis- tant targets . . . Their primary mission is the delivery of nuclear weapons against the enemy heartland in any weather, day or night . . . Twenty combat ready crews of 3 men each - pilot, bombardierfnavigator and a third crew- man-insure the readiness of the heavies . . . Typical of Navy versatility, however, is the fact that the Tigers of VAH-1 can deliver convention- al weapons as well . . . Either high-level or low- level attacks are made.. .The unique ASB Bomb Director Set, sweeping aside barriers of dark- clouds or rain insures deadly accuracy... ness, , Amazingly enough, the 70,000 pound A3D can fly on one engine if necessary . . . 207 In direct contrast to the A3D is the AAD- the Mighty Midget also nicknamed 'Hiene- mann's Hot Rod after its designer . . .The only carrier aircraft without folding wings, it weighs but 12,000 pounds and carries a ter- rific punch . . . The Marine attack squadron, VMA-224, finds the speed and maneuverability of this tiny craft ideal for pin-point accuracy in close air support of ground troops, and for strafing with rockets, bombs, napalm or missiles. . . As the marines storm ashore below them, VMA-224 cleans the sky of enemy aircraft, and with on-the-spot accuracy strafes the enemy beach in a close support mission of the ground troops . . . An A4D streaks in to blind the enemy with a smoke screen, while helicopters dart to- and-fro, teamed with protective A4D's, to drop troops and encircle the enemy. The boom of naval gunfire reverberates across the beach while high above a man from Barrel's Bums is spotting for the big ships . . . Meanwhile, the skies elsewhere are filled with A4D's, as attack squadrons 72 and 86 of the INDEPENDENCE are streaking toward en- emy targets. . . Mid-air refueling and speeds of 700 knots enable them to soar non-stop to far-off targets . . . The attack squadrons can choose from 14 modes of delivery, day or night . . . When coupled with a Pathfinder mission, wherein an A3D twin jet bomber, with its greater instrumentation, guides its little cousins to the target, the power-packed tinker-toy jets find inclement weather no problem . . . Attack Squadron 72 activities include Hawk talk, the newspaper written by the men them- selves, which contributes greatly to the morale of all hands and gives their families back home a glimpse of Hawk life at sea and a Save the Children program where VA-72 is the inte r- national foster parent of 7 needy child - ren con tributing to their health and education Th ' e officers and men of VA-86 participate actively in the Save the Children program, and are currently sponsoring two Greek and two Italian youngsters. ln Athens and Naples, too, the sponsored children and their families were given a warm reception on board by the Side- winders. The deeper and come com l t - p e e under standing brought about by such visits enhance O r HP I ll u eop e to People program . . . ,.,.4 . ,,.k ,,,.....:.T,,-i..,, H.-,C.G.f.t,..T -, TI XM - ' . wf. ff'T:,1'fLj 1 ,Eff - : ina, V f.fIi-G., f L A4D...atthe-pump... Skyhawk formation . . . 'S' A V 1 AL' ..... ,., f-.-5. ., . ' - 'I 7 ' , . , x., ,Y M ,,.Q , 1 v 'f1 A ' 4. tl 1 f V , ' if ' . -,- 1 Y ' i f A,.-: ,,V': -,.Z ,f JM F K i lf R - w ,A as A Vx Q -ug ts'-5' ABBE- IQ., J l l While the four jet attack squadrons r02f through the skies high above, a low-level long range attack is pressed home by VA-75 in the most versatile of Navy aircraft, the AD-6 . . . The venerable Skyraider is a prop-driven combat- tested aircraft, ideal for rockets and Napalm bombs, dive bombing and strafing attacks . . - lt carries an even greater payload than thi famed four-engined B-17 bombers of W. W- ' . . . Primary emphasis is placed on treetop-level nuclear delivery. . .The AD races in all the WHY at very low altitudes, escaping radar detection . . . Hence enemy fighters and ground-to-air-mIS' siles are ineffective . . . , Evidence of high-order teamwork IS the Sunday Puncher's safety record: 13,000 con- secutive hours of flying time . . . two years. . - without a single accident . . . f l l .. ,IPD 5' it ? The attack squadrons are carrying the war to the enemy's heartland. . . But long before the skies are filled with the many-muscled air arm of the Fleet, a lone Crusader F8U aircraft streaks through the clouds completely unarmedp its only defense being the pilot's skill and air- craft's speed . . . It is a plane from VFP-62, the light photo- graphic squadron whose mission will guide the attack unerringly to the target... Detachment 41-60 of VFP-62, Barrow's Yogi Bears have scored an Outstanding on their Operational Readiness Inspection and re- ceived the Atlantic Fleet Safety Award from the Chief of Naval Operations . . . The Crusaders . . . alias the Jolly Rogers... VF-84, although a part of CVG-7, spent the majority of the lVled Cruise in Rota, Spain, spreading not only their good reputation, but the lNDEPENDENCE's as well . . . Known as the Jolly Rogers, they fly the FSU Crusader. . . and fly it with the kind of excellence that has set records for them . . . VF-84 maintains an overall, high state of training and readiness...the result of hard work, which is characterized by the attitude that no job is impossible... The battle now rages over land and sea: the strike has been launched, INDEPENDENCE swings downwind to await the return of her birds . .. l ' . .. Defense of the fleet is now primary, and far out at sea, planes from Detachment 41 of VAW- 12 are flying lonely picket patrols. Their mission: Airborne Early Warning. . . The plane VAW-12 flies is the WF-2 twin engine prop, described by startled stateside civilians as a flying saucer stealing an air- plane. . The huge dome actually contains a radar antenna for the detection of enemy air- craft closing in on the fleet...The WF-2 is nicknamed the Willy Fudd, and the pilots are known as Fudd drivers. . . Also aboard are aircraft controllers, called Fudd controllers, men highly trained in CIC and AEW work in order to skillfully control jet interceptors . .. The Fudd Fixers keep the aircraft at peak performance. . . An incoming enemy raid is detected. ln- stantly, the information is flashed to the flagship, including the radar picture from the Fudd . . Combat Patrol jet interceptors are launched . . . The ship sounds General Quarters. . .The jets streak skyward to intercept the nemy, guided by the controllers aboard the Willy Fudd . . . 'iff ..' ' ., ', ' ASD' - . I The all-weather fighter interceptors that insure the Air Defense of the fleet are the F3H Demons, flown by the Black Aces of VF-41 .. . In rain, fog, or darkness, the F3H can streak fQTl'1e defense, blasting the enemy from the sky with 20lVlNl cannon, or deadly air-to-air Spar- row lll and Sidewinder missiles. . . Her complex radar makes possible intercepts without sight- ing the target. The Demon Doctors enable the Black Aces to maintain the rugged performance de- manded of fighter interceptors . . . The Recovery Aboard the ship, the return is awaited. Varied are the ways of spending the intervening time . . . relaxing from tension . . . watching from Pri fly. W f The planes are sighted . . . Stand by to recover aircraft . . . The flight deck is readied . . . Clear Deck The first plane is in the groove . . . The pilot sights his 1neatball in the landing rnirror . . . The LSO gives the green light . . . Watch the birdie. . . .A A ,-5' gg B , Dig that fun-house mirror 214 9'lQ Hello operator, . LTJG Milt Jines, LT Red lsack, Dan McAllister ob 'T 4 V -v-4 4. Now where is that ship . . UThe Sidewinder Slide K ..,.,.., 2 . A V 'Mx X 1 V -5. 'N'-N- , --xx , Q, is XSL-L R ,Nik , hx 5 0 Thr 216 f My thx. M lr. fliiiiu- ee Points Hey, there . . . that's my line . . .' 154:54 H.-A. , ... . x , A , ,. 1-5, 'AWP' BoIter! gh? word from the catwalk . . . rvllle Smith, Fred Mielke, LCDR Ed Hofstra 217 Kg The arrested plane screeches to a halt. The hook runner frees the cross-deck pennant for its fast retraction . . . and the aircraft is taazied to safety . . . The birds catch the wire . . . but occasionally, there is a bolter . With a burst of power resumed, up and around, again, he zooins . . . Saucer recovered 218 A familiar face if if f A! f 1' ff al' The props are last to come home wr., 5 4' 5 f V ' V- EV: Lic. , ' , ' f llffl' if 5 ' 'r ' : Q, x, if ' ' r . ' 4 fy fi f . ,xx .. ,V ,1 ,pg , W - , gt,g1,r-.w,j- , - V. . , Here comes the mail! N Q Best dressed men of the Med Cruise 9 When the attackers and fighters are all aboard, the Bzg I s pony express oar mazl plane rs recovered Pzlots and passengers deplarte happzly heralolmg a mart call Cold, hard work uf-Q After Recovery lx: Recovery conipletedn. . . the tie-downs are secured . .. the cliocks are in place. The milestone landings accninnlate and celebrations are in order . . . and so are training sessions. On the flight deck, the ecccitevnent of the lanncli and recovery passes . . ie, .. A.,. N A-... T...-:Y- -umm Matt and his buddies... A chock in the sun... Robert Loft . , . H' iff! l i V f .4 , .. n-,,- A , K v I 4 3 l r 1 L ,l 5 ll l l l 5 E 1 , , ,.....,-N 1 Matt Dillion, Harold Prentice, Donald Jordah, Rich- ard Staly, Don Gaultney, Patrick Allen, Rollm Peffy '1 , ,A And you thought school days were over . . . a 4 Jim Hillery, Bob Kincade, Ottis Holi, Bill Aus- tin, Dan Baird, Douglas Payne, Fred Phillips and Bob Reed. Admiral Smith, CIN CUSNAVEUR, visits the birdfarmers lllf 'Q -.in X f vm 1 UW or finw ,-,xv 22l To play's the thing. . . Dick Ristau, Charl6S Eve The integrity watch is set . Mairztenarrzrce and clearzirz g start again, but the tempo is slower And the ship settles down for a brief, well-deserved respite from the fever-pitch 0 f around-tire-clock operartions . . . VA-75 . . .Who else Fudd flight Fixer fixing a Fudd for Vernon Dyer X 'QQN A XX , ff 445555 R rr. ffm , E WSIB The Ken Horl0n. 5Penc Ward, Van Bartkus, unl!!ai 'Today the Mess D .JH va-75 llliil ,AA .Jw 222 g,,5.J Ott 0-60 The bears' club Ken Horton, Spencer Wood, Dan Young, Dewey Ward, Van Bartkus, Royal Goetz. iw . -if 'Today the Mess Decks-Tomorrow LeMans . F62 v-wi! ,xx 22 ..an.Aar.-M ...-....... ....., 1 1 1 1 1 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 'Q 'ff '4Vwf:-- -4? -pw'-IP' '-F' INDEPENDENCE and Carrier Air Group SEVEN watch vigilcmtly over the Peace that free 'mera . . . everywhere . . . cherish 224 JANUARY , .Cold war in Southeastern Asia wears on as divided Laos smolders in the heat of border skirmishes . . . 'The United States severs diplomatic relations with Castro-crazed Cuba. . . France shows deep confidence in De Gaulle leadership by voting Yes in a nationwide referendum concerning the future of Algeria... Divers enter the storm-wrecked and sub- merged radar tower off the coast of New Jersey in vain efforts to recover the bodies of 26 death-trapped men... Concluding his last news conference as Chief Executive, President Eisenhower bids the press farewell with his familiar double V for victory gesture... ln blizzard-blanketed Washington, John F. Kennedy becomes the 35th and youngest Presi- dent of the United States, committing the Nation to pay any price, bear any burden.. .in order to assure the survival and success of liberty... Clinical tests prove that a new type of con- tact lens permits the legally blind to see... Following a 7-month detention in a grim Soviet prison, two surviving airmen of the RB47 reconnaissance plane shot down by the Rus- sians over the Barent Sea are released and returned home . . . Queen Elizabeth ll rides on the back of an elephant in Jaipur to launch her six-week tour of lndia, Pakistan, and Nepal... A mathematician in Arizona maintains that machines will eventually become more intelli- e Largest Circulation Of Any American Newspaper Printed Overseas Mickey Horn gent than man . .. 225 226 'Us .U ,I 6- J Brinn 1 f 1 A 14 5 K x ,JP 4 'uf' 1 I' 4 !1 M.- A A V .H K, I ,Gui 3 I In f 'M V s A I I 1 .Jr 'Q l L. of Barcelona f , 4 im? I I If-5 28 January 1961 Srtows smothers the North Atlantic states frost flrrtperils Floricla's oztrus crops as INDEPENDENCE steams into the swn,-sparklecl harbor of balmy Barcelona, Spam Mossmon and zt's 22' below zu Wyommg 2 S ,.,, PI 5 QL. 7191 . 4,1 1.,:.mL:.esL 3 159' i 3 5 3 V Barcelona . . . a bull fight ring, quietly out of season . . . the Pueblo Espanol, the tree-shaded Ramblas . . . dazzling fountains, the night sky patterned with searchlights . . . Barcelona . . . a bus tour to ' the holy mountain o f Monserrat . . . ., a busman's holiday on the Santa Maria . . . .1 an attempt at playing the castanets and dancing the flamenco . . . wine from a goatskin bota . . . a warm and wonderful city a-337 ' ..,,.-rai!'4'5 ' Barcelona . . . a seaport metropolis sprawled laughingly in a haze o f sun and smoke by the blue Mediterranean . . . where the sun blazes through a white mantilla of lacy clouds . . . where the moon glows in a black satin sky . . . where there is always someplace new to go . . . H I fr I 228 A , Q We sighi remembf and the 1 the place the peop the job 1 we lmou aml we c Barcelona: In the Square of the Pigeons We sightsee cmd shop, remembering August and the months o f deployment . the places we have visited, the people we hafue met, the job we have clone . . . we know it is nearliy F e brfziicwfy and we cofzmt the days be fore us ,,, ,,,i Barceiona: Light up the sky... Barcelona: Do you mind if I sit this one out? I a i 229 ,....,4- .. 1 V, ...'i,LL ' 4 x t A 230 . . . . While across the street at the foot of the Raniblas and ninety tliree feet above it, a ononilniental Colilnibns stancls . . . pointing westward . . . toward INDEPENDENCE, toward the Atlantic, toward lionie. Mossmo Hufh ,ps Vu P s ,N ,.. N Barcelona The Cathedral Mossmcm .--s..-..-.-.-3+ Q. ' ' Q ' -.-..-----1-.......-... . Q O0-0600 From, laps to clown at sea . . . the lll77llC wlz en 'most men sleep . . . cis, for some, H1 e linze fo 'll'Cll1l'lI and work to fzcait or plan for llzrc clay lo follow . . . '11 ldifvb.- ..... X fe f xx l 'I ':l,Jf:..4t Did you say not and dusty , Weather bird? Bob Orton, Vic Dorsey Pinpoint fix.. . J 1 These are the .space economists who park the aircraft for the night and pack the lnnches for lovnowonfs hops . . . the ppoplzfets who calculate the weather or plot the positions of inlenclecl movemenfl. . . - ' And a dozen what? Lloyd Sanders ,I .IQ AT and T went up 1551! Jim Heberling Wish l had a buck for every unch of icing l've put On.,- Mac Cade and Matt Dillon I ' vi W, r 'X Read that agai I5 s 1, if 5 l 1' I .4 rl 6' , fb 4 rv ' k'?Q K the fi1U07'S on the IIIIGZQCZI7' cmd flight decks cmcl'cm't1's1fs in the ba km'y cmd tickefrtape men in the teletype room n-hook wire A on Fuze 3967 ag,g A ff ,KA 23 T116 Sf' arc fm pfnff 2 s ll zflz fl Nbr 1 iff lflllliffi fo 1619021 and II'ff2O'fj7Cl17Ill7 N zflz U 6102111 press 10209 fo p1 mf r -L s -was 3QZ1?fvg - Watch those fingers! Benme Brock Richard Droham Max Reed and Howard Schoppe We had mall can today and Q x Those o rc coi'pmzfor.s fzviflz an lzbcrfy lrfzmclz fo royaooiv' . . . and l2'z'l2og'mpl1r'rs izuiflz of rloily press-views to print . . 1 V U-I! r 5 Y ? I X Watch those fingers! Bennie Brock, Richard Droham, Max Reed and Howard Schoppe f :' Roll the presses! . .. These are the mm who look forwarcl to clown if only to relam their lonely vigil, the tasks of the mfglzt complete Abe Pascar We had mail cali today and... 2341 .il 'fy ev! 1. WS 8 thinking man's smoke with a smoking man's taste , , , Bob Corbin The inevitable line . .. D. A. Nadeau, Harry Dunn, Russ Bean, Keith Cunnington, Bobby Bushong. Iii port, the after-hours aboarcl are, perhaps, a time to be alone . . . to write that special letter . . . ' ' ' ' s ace . . . to watch, imperfect smoke rings swirl and CZZHZLSG iii p A time to retitrrt from a clay on the beach A time to liit the pact . . . U? '1Ti 1 1 It's a thinking man's smoke with a smoking man's taste , , , Bob Corbin 54 The inevitable line . . . D. A. Nadeau, Harry Dunn, Russ Bean, Keith Cunnington, Bobby Bushong. In port, the a fter-hours aboard are, perhaps, 't that s eeial letter . . . a time to be alorie . . . to iuri e p If ' .9 swirl and dijfitse in space . . . to watch imper feet Smo e ring A time to return from at clay on the beach A time to hit the pad . . . 235 Silent iron birds at rest Who Dat? Topside, fhe wincl-bujfefl lights of INDEPENDENCE burn, in clclrkness . . . and slzivnmefr on the arvnov' of winged warriors at rest . . . While clown below, CL palvolman walks his beat through the reel glow of deserted passagewclgs . . . All is secure . . . The captive passengers and crew of the Portuguese luxury liner, Santa Nlaria, seized and held for days by flamboyant, political pirates, are freed off the coast of Brazil... FEBRUARY European-based servicemen and their fami- lnternational educators call on President Kennedy to give education top priority in the U.S. foreign aid program in order to help sup- port the educational ventures of underdeveloped countries... lies hail President Kennedy's cancellation of The four-year idyll of screen queen Marilyn the cutback of military dependents overseas... Monroe and playwright Arthur Miller legally ends on the ground of incompatability in Juarez, Blown by gale winds, Winter's third vicious Nlexico... snow storm buries New York and New England under 10-foot drifts, clogging expressways, bog- Congressional sponsors drive for a 35,000,- ging down commuter transit, and paralyzing air 000.-a-year program to attract more foreign traffic... visitors to the United States... Fashion critics gush as Paris salons preview Heavyweight champion, Floyd Patterson, prac- the new Spring look for ladies, which indeed TiC9S niS Dnle Winning peek-H-boo DUnCn f0f his seems to parallel the old flapper lines of the NlHfCn lille bout in Nlinnii with 3W9diSn 00n- , roaring twgntieguf' tender lngemar Johansson... Dapper golfer, Afnold Palmer' accepts a .Greenwich llillage's Chamber of Commerce 510-000. dgamandaazziad Hickok Belt pre. luck-off campaignto prove that their renowned sented him as the outstanding professional quarter is not primarily a haven for beatmks, athlete 0f1960--1 but rather a hub of arts and education . .. l yi nd Stripes . Forever A . . The StarENS John Jensen 23 7 238 E of 1 DEPE DENCE - euuuunndef :twain To THE orrxcsms AND MEN or 'rx-me . When your mighty aircraft Carrier ,Mediterranearn I watched withinterest was ready and capable or living up While she has been inthe Slxth'Fleet I occasions to appraise thls shippand its visitor, I have seen outstanding Ulntricateand delicate operations, some and wearying. As Fleet Commander, I your ship taking the lead inINATO'and exercises in the Mediterranean. I And 1 itors from nations rimming the out by the thousands to tour the p p noticed the expressions ofawe and respect visitors returned ashore. I havettalked with clvilian leaders of many nations who were lavish withtheir' and I heard the same from leaders of military, the United States and other nations. I 'I ' , As you depart the Medlterraneanf I say .withasin-ff cex-ity and conviction that the INDEPENDENCE has truly? lived up to her name. Your ship, and each of you,', are . V A truly fitting representatives ofthe rnostlpowerfnl navy, A 'I I fi' E in the world and the greatest nation in the worldp' A ' Good luck and Godspeed. I h -., ,fx - ,fra f ett 1 fav:- till i,La41Ca.Sx?'1-c.ff, I GEORGE w. ANDE.QB.SON,k Jr. e ' ? w ' . V. 2,55 Y , . A -rfznfgez s , , Sgt? I ' I ffl -X ,K M, ,2 -X fy: ,- ui.-4 - Izqgfg , . . ,, ,,.. ,V . , Q 'Ci - j--xjlit ifqii - iff . i -ill. te:-gifs? :,?v.T uagfsat ::g.e.......t.,..5 ,..,4,.,...n,,,,..,.,..n.,. .. , , , A V - ,.. I'- ',r .I ,Q I 'N U 1 O L N VICE ADMIRAL GEORGE W ANDER59 ...HER DEPARTM T HEAD fs OPERATIONS OFFICER NAVIGATION OFFICER ENGINEERING OFFICER CDR I- M- ROWEI-L CDR E. C. GRIFFIN CDR E. K. LAUBACH -Il qRIgIII to Leng AIR DEPARTMENT OFFICER, CDR w. DREWELOW, ASSISTANT AIR DEPARTIVIENRE CGMMUNICATIONSQIIIIQER OFFICER, CDR F. T. CDCKRELL LCDR N- G- HOD GUNNERY OFFICER CDR J. W. DAVIS H1 N. com 'VIUNICATIONS OFFICER L CDR J- C. HoLBRooK SUPPLY OFFICER CDR L. D. WHITCHER SENIOR MEDICAL OFFICER CAPT R. D. NAUMAN SENIOR DENTAL OFFICER CAPT A. J. KOENIG 24I ig ...HER AIR GROUP... CVG7 QQ, vAH-1 OFFICER IN CHARGE OF VFP-62 f . CO, VA-75 CO VA-72 . CDR S. MONTUNNAS, USN CDR C. A. HILL, ADMIRAL H. P. SMITH ,.,.. - 5,v...,.. . K CO, VF-41 CDR L. T. WARD 5 'r 1 A 2 I A YCl x g 5 fiuuf. vi - A OFFICER IN CHARGE VAW-12 LCDR J. LAVRA CO VA-86 CDR C. B. SHUFF CO VA-86 LCDR S. ROREX CO, VNIA-224 MAJ D. L. FENTON 243 if if 'S km - 1 t fl 1 x , 1 A t A r I f' ' F.,- k x. ' 9, 1' ., 4 .hw 1 N. - 4 .Q Q-Q 1 V' l if . . '. 1 ' f 1: '- YI uf' ' y in 'iff ' . L 9 If IL qA,l: , F . In l .,-- 1 - 4 tal v 2 Q ' I' . JN P.-r . In Q 9 ,, 4 X.: I f I Q 'lj . . 4 , ' v , gun- 'l . 1 ....L.. xl ' ' A I A 5 1 xg : Y L ,, Q r,,, N! f ' l' .x ' V I . i ' I A :tl x . fi 1 H: 'F '-Q 4 f X .Ir 7 , 'L . ' FX! 15 'X 'f ' i fill-,woo M I A-'Z Yi L gJ' .pix il of xI,Ij.'0f RFQ . QNX, gg ' .1 . ru! I -M wr. . 1 S ' L, tg fy I, I I A , ' I . , 1 ' X ,f , is X .1 It I 1 f .Phi E I f' nl I I l I 'L I 'Ile -Sf' 2 R . 'fr .Sf in V ',, ki, It I .x E M 'Q' f' . 'N ' r V ' 2 ,:. JI - - - .rhvrftl .V I E .ji h , ' V V- M f Q , ' . f , ,' ff , 2 , ,, R J H ,T I B . 5 www. vrwim 41 kg, 132. if if j I- 7 - . fu ' I r I ,,. O ' ,, .1-4 nf' Yq,,'l - ,rm nc' u 1 i 5 A ,O , .- , 7- , 32 ' 5:41 ' IF S. I I x ,ygriffr J I , Z ,Q wi .J I , ' 2 f 4 X - iii , U ...M f' I - F ' 1 - ' - . . -P M-I-.' 4, 3 I 1 ' I , Q f 9 QP . iv att .........- ' ' I - 3 s i ,W Xt' I K lv W' S N' L' f 5 , I . . ' I t ' ai R s ' A 1 . . V t ' I 5 x Kid' f ya 1 - - 4 A v ' ,Ks 7 ' J v '-' w R , ig J' 1 ' F' 5' iiiiii W B I W A it I y 'J I 1 i R EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT X DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: CWO V. C. Bell, ENS. J. F. Bledsoe III, ENS. W. C. Richards, LTJG R. C. Brinn, ENS. J. A. Murphy, LTJG. R. E. BANMAN, LT. J. C. ECHOLS, LT. W. CAMBPELL. Row 2, Lett to Right: E. W. Lovely, R. T. Crozier, D. A. Devlin, A. Paskar, R. L. Muir, R. L. Chicoine, G. K. Ries, R. A. Deschenes, J P. Turner, D. R. Babiok. Row 3, Leit to Right: W. L. Swann, G. E. Solter, R. L. Monk, G. B. Quinn, W. Brabham, A. A. Mielke, T. J. Homan, J. C. Swan, R. Jelardi, C. P. Frith, J. W. Johnson. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT X DIVISION Front Row, Left to right: T. C. Heath, B. J. Cranshaw, R. Grundstrom, O. H. Mitchell, W. E. Gibson, U. S. Higginbotham, L. A. Loewen, A. L. Roberts, J. C. Phillipson, R. A. White, N. L. Patterson, F. O. Deligero, H. E. Sham- beou, G. P. Sagal, Jr. Row 2, left to right: D. L. Bowman, R. L. Weilage, R. A. Van Meter, G. F. Van Meter, W. l. Cox, L. L. Dike, B. D. Rumey, E. H. Caldwell, Jr., E. J. Dunn, N. N. Silva, J. M.- Hartmire, B. P. Strader, R. B. Sanford. Row 3, Lett to right: M. W. Tooker, S. Gibs, R. R. McDonald, F. W. Weidert, D. F. Molnar, P. M. Danko, Reick, H. L. Feinmon, R. N. Hull, L. K. J. S. Lynch, W. L. Jones, C. R. Mollery. W. J. Mills, NAVIGATION DEPARTMENT N DIVISION Front row, Iett to right: J. E. Jones, R. G Hobeeb, G. O. Beyer, C. P. Eichorn, J. J Casey, LT W. C. Koehler, B. K. Srhwider F. K. Sarver, S. H. Walker. M- P: Ndve, H J. Erwin. Second row, left to right: J. J Rupp, D. E. Barth, R. R. Westermon, D. J Campeau, R. S. Uhl, R. G. Ward. J. W Bittner, M. A. Krencik, W. K. Scott, G- R Albright, D. J. Simpson. 245 OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT OPERATIONS OFFICERS Left to Right: ENS E. R. Darcy, LT R. I.. Bennett,LTJG B. Smallridge, LCDR T. F. Went- worth, LCDR B. R. Smith, CDR I. M. Rowell, CDR M. R. Ethrldge, LT F. J. Merril, CWO T. R. Carroll, ENS C. E. Decker, LT P. D. Smith, ENS B. Harris. OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT lljyl I, OA DIVISION 1 Front Row, Len to nfgm. K. L. Kean, D. A. .., h ..-J, Burnell, LCDR D. B. Holland, J. J. Zawatsky, V -9, , , I . -I X J 5 f M. L. Bolles. Back Row: N. H. Washburn, nw - Q I RQ? -' I J. M. Elder, R. W. Metcalf, R. L. Orton, B. A- ' Lf .h Q, ' ' by ,I in R. Allard, v. L. Dorsey, w. F. Fick Jr., K. L. 'q 'Y If '.3.:,n,j.- 3101 Kempa. Z Q-' 41 if ig Jig 41 'I f gg.. jg, A 'Y ' M.. ,...r..,- V Y ,VJ r A K. gy r N 1 gtg . . 1 Gif 07 I A Y Il ... ... ey 1, Yr I 1 Q L , I A I f R A OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT OC DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: N. M. Plaza, W. L. Sherlow, S. R. Reed, J. C. Foley, F. J. Merrill, P. F. King, E. J. Curtin, E. W. Widger, L. D. Berg, C. P. Williams. 2nd Row, Left to Right: D. S. Chovan, B. L. Jarvis, N. A. Santarone, R. F. Penry, H. H. Holmes, S. C. Hart, F. A. Fortune. 3rd Row, Left Io Right: J. A. Mul- lerm, P. Kiritsy, R. L. Mitchell, H. W. Boyd, R. D. Hofmann, W. E. Day. 246 -. . : 'b f I' 1 I - 1. C iv-' ? 2' A lg fa- GJ Li if -1 5 3 4 is 11 l . . :' xl' ?f A Q ' vt ll' it 5 ,r QSC. 5 f .1 2. I YW Z' A .ia I I E -. P .. S .p v l w I -2 4 . I2 E Y , IM. . I ll v .x 5 I f-ft Q., . , :Qi S J- Y E, Q 3, Q 'L x - ,L 4 - .9 1 V, . Q 8 R' J I it - 7 A . , - , w ' -Q.: . . Y .1 Mt E in - A'..k'iii . .4 LG J 'Ad--f ll- P- R I -3 ' s ' 'Y' -va- ' . '1- I V .. it I, 4 R L . 3 1 -V ' f v -1 . v f V 4, . - -f 1 1 4 .fs w . '11 - 5 '-' : 1 - -I ' LQ . . 5 1,311 - .. ' J V' 1 1 1 4 XL iff v gf' , 5 vs to . .V 1. . ii ,. Q . 4 4' .3 . 9 ' 'il K., H 4. E g , ,ol 4 .A Q v A V ' ,,, S-42.1 Wg? ,D ' V 1 T bv., YQ VS V- N nw' ! ,ir De V T , X ,Lira K 4 F ffl ,V H .Y 3 . A. A fit! lg JA Q 11 ,Yi g-QT! f t -1 .I if 11 -4'l I f-. , A if f . -g If U f! .3 S r 'Wil ' . ' -- I 3 t f- t . l .1 I 1- v MI, - f .iq K- J . J. .V L . I Q fs. Mxi . M... 4. OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT OE DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: C. W. Cammer, D. G. Opacki, P. E. Miller, J. M. Mazeski, L. G. Montegue, C. E. White, F. D. Graves, LT. D. J. Kreutzberger, WO T. R. Carroll, V. A. Orbish ,S. D. Gossett, W. L. Kemp, J. A. Jenners, M. W. Meagher, J. P. Collins. 2nd Row, Left to Right: J. E. Kahney, J. S. Cromer, J. A. Leo, M. J. Ballard, R. L. Blix, A. F. Lenkiewicz, D. C. Spencer, R. N. Pasley, R. J. Schietzelt, E. N. Arnott, D. A. Langley, R. E. Huber, D. E. Hanlin. 3rd Row, Lett to Right: M. J. Conlon, M. L. Mahovich, D. R. Thedford, M. B. Morris, E. J. Zimany, K. E. Kopia, P. H. Palacios, G. M. Thatcher, J. R. Mugro, C. E. Williams, R. D. Johnson, D. D. Johnson, P. L. Wocdcock. OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT Ol DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: D. V. Sweeney, E. C. Hinds, 5. P. Rucker, G. B. Brock, ENS W. F. Carey,, LT S. E. Harrison, G. W. Wynn, J. C. Abernathy, J. L. Saboski. 2nd Row, Left to Right: R. C. Richmond, J. E. Stuart, L. M. Redferning, G. B. Sholes, J. M. Keating, J. J. Navaria, W. L. Claycomb, F. P. Urler, L. S. Mokrohaisky, G. W. Smoot. 3rd Row, Left to Right: J. M. Scott, G. L. Demetriades, D. K. Heiser, J. C. Benning, J. H. Eddy, I.. E. Burgess, F. D. Schrader, F. L. LaFeve, T. E. Pressel, W. A. Musick, J. Sharp. OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT Ol DIVISION fm' Row' lf 'O Rishi ' D5 Efi-i?YM?.1.f' Tull, R. Macros. F- M' 9m95 P, R, Yow, J. S. Olson, H. E. Inman, J. D McGee, K. E. Zimmerman, A- -lgpaloclllm D. L. Kennedy. 2nd Row, I-UH to R'9l1lfR- M' Harris, R. P. Moxson, R. F. Leatherwood, D. W. Partain, J. L. McLain, F. W. ThomP50 - H. A. Kennedy, L. L. Parker, D. M. Ruther ford, S. A. Girouord, I. E. Wright. R..l-- Moulden. 3rd Row, Lett to Right: Delano. R, R., R. M. Gray. E- W- Canflon' J' E' Dqvis, J. A. Klein, K. A. Dushion. T- Pierce, R. W. Cannon, D. F. Ginn, J. - Rqpsys, R. L. Morro, R. W. Joslyn. 1 247 I X OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT OP DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: I. T. Henry, S. J. Smith, R. D. Corbin, E. C. Duncan, W. C. Richards, LT B. R. Smith, LCDR J. J. Parker, R. W. Conrad, R. H. Jobmann, E. P. Lee, R. H. Nelsen. Second Row, Lett to Right: L. H. Sinnot, H. Gibbs, T. A. Stratton, J. J. Fried' man, A. K. Boutelle, B. F. Bagdonal, X. R. Ekshian, N. D. Nelson, L. W. Rowe, D. D. Nachtsheim, A. D. Montgomery, H. W. White, D. R. Dugger, T. J. Wetzel, E. M. Black, W. L. Adams. Third Row, Left to Right: W. T. Gibbs, S. Ramirez, T. E, Stack, J. M. Bruce, F. E. Smith, R. G. Lantl, W. L. Sturgill, J. E. Zuba, L. G. Andrews, A. W. Wismer, R. J McKeever, C. C. Russell, R. A. Ryder, R. R Myers, R. A. Vannozzi, J. Kelly, J. L. Teague COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT CS DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: K. H. Ball, D. R, Lindsey, ENS G. J. FAEHER, G. F, Lacy, R, J. Groeber, H. J. Maner. 2nd Row, Left to Right: F. J. Summers, L, W. Nelson, P, B. Hag- ferty, M. Zwolenilc. 3rd Row, Left to Right: E. D. Kelly, T. L. Rebik, D. H. Williams, R. L. Chapman. COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT CR DIVISION Front row left to right: R. W. Speakman, H J. Kuckinski, R. H. Dentz, F. J. Arbrose, R. R Smith, H. C. Johns, E. Williams, R. E Ransdell, W G. Barbee, W. C. Trexler, C. D Terry, D. E. Lemery, H, R. Myers, R. J Allison, K. P. McCarville, L. K. Lance, J. W Williams. Second row left to right: W. A Dempsey, E. K. Hartman, R. G. Baker B. P. Strader, T. L, Tonnesen, L, M, Johnson O. R. Whitaker, G, A. Burkley, R. G, Head S W. Carte, W. L, Hughes, T. L. Kaltl, H. D Wyatt, W. L. Smith. Third row left to right L. K. Sanders, J. F. Smith, J. W. Brown. T W. Huber, W. M. Pickerill. G. F. Housler R. E. Hoagland, R. C. Valentine, J, G Edwards, J. R. Williams. 248 N ., ,N Xf AIR DEPARTMENT Front Row L tl,-l Dllvflorq . ' e 0 ' : l.. . lgrckerson, M. Jennings, J. Wllglrlzres, W. W. Myers, C. T. Hart, LCDR Rouse, LCDR D - W- Tilghman, Jr., J. N. Mcoefmon, H, A, UNI. D. E. Bowman, R. Taft, J, E, Cone D. M. Schales. 2nd Row, Lett to Right: R, Lf wrrgan, E. A. Curths, B. G. Welch, D, A, U eau' A- l-UYNB. F. R. Wilcox, A. J, Vol- logh, C. D. Femstrom, J. L. Pridemore C. J w'l5on' R-,G- Gore. D. R. Cleaver, R. Fox, C- Pg MCGIHIY, E. L. Rowsey. 3rd Row, Len 'O R'9 'f P- T- Allan. w. R. Pnppan, 0. G. Thayer. R. J. Sfaly, A. R. smith, D. R. Ragi- nowski, C W. Eve, J. T. Jorgensen, T. V. GI-llen, D. J. Jordan, G. W. Bosley, A, J, MIIYOS. J- Q. Ricketts, A. L. Hughes R. T Spurling. ' ' AIR DEPARTMENT V-2 DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: J. Rodriguez, J. D. DuBose, F. A. Carter, B. J. Ganis, LCDR E. J. Hofstra, LTJG D. W. Hamblin, J. T. Feeney, V. Brennan, W. L. Jemison, R. A. Beam, C. F. McAfee, G. A. Gay, J. Cordice. 2nd Row, Left to Right: J. S. Harris, A. R. Stephas, P. A. Cipriano, R. G. Guertin, A. V. Roman- tine, R. E. Kuminski, B. J. Martin, D. J. Davis, R. E. Worthington, J. E. Coomer, S. E. Ritzgerald, J. C. Parisi, E. Bobin, G. I.. Becker, W. C. Taylor, D. H. Temple. Jrd Row, Left to Right: A. D. Huls, R. W. Ho- ward, G. Bachas, W. A. Myers, R. D. Ricci, W. E. Luchsinger, W. W. Staples, G. W. Teeter, R. M. McCarthy, R. C. Smight, C. H. Hurford, L. D. Harrison, J. W. Lansdon, T. W. Allison, D. E. McElroy. AIR DEPARTMENT V-2 DIVISION Lf t Ri ht S J Thibodeaux, Front Row, et o g: . . R. V. Somerville, W. A. Burden, E. H. How becker, B. G. Cox, C. P. Alloe, W0 J. I.. Chambers, LCDR W. S. Doody, H. A. Fischer, J. H. Thompson, J. D. Kelly, T. N. Glover, H. V. Callahan, C. M. Dunlap. 2nd Row, Lelt to Right: A. Grabbe, P. Morgan, D. J. Ahearn D L. Smith, G. L. Lutes, W. Winum,' P. V. Walton, T. J. Beach, D. Rotrofl, R. D. Hagen, S. J. Darmofal, R. E Kuminslci, M. H. Glass, J. M. Campbell R. A. Malechc, W. V. Pollison, 0. D. Smith 3rd Row, Left to Right: M. C. Johnson, D. D Olson, D. M. Sheehan, R. M. Butcher. J- H Brentlinger, H. M. Hunt, R. E. Benner, N. R Schlieper, R. E. Bryan, S. R. Smith, R. G Mrcu, J. L. Miller, J. C. Severns, J. DeSnoo S. J. Marrone, M. I. Towns, J. L. Kuhn P. I. Corry, J. A. Nicoletti. 249 AIR DEPARTMENT V-2 DIVISION Front row, Lclt to Right: A. J. Stiles, C. B. Dawson, LT F. W. Hill, T. J. Hoover, A. M. Condit. Second row, Left to Right: G. M. Freeman, A. E. Caccacari, W, A. Crevello, T. E. Sims, J. J. Perri, H. C. Pherigo, R. C. Tischcr. Third Row, Left to Right: G. W, Polilzc, R. P. Schoning, V. L. Welsh, J. A. Brandt, L. D. Solie, G. W. Rector, E. E. Stone, M. J. Woodward. AIR DEPARTMENT V-3 DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: H. H. Gregory, G. G. Green, F. D. Curry, K. G. Awes, J. A. Clancy, ENS R. B. Martin, LCDR G. R. M. Pearson, ENS R. P. Eswein, J. R. Robbins, L. L. Clark, F. D. Murrell, R. O. Pritchard, W. E. Burris,, R. J. Dalrymple. 2nd Row, Lett to Right: D. J. Trombley, B. D. Rives, A. C. Aul, W. C. Bowman, J. A. Blaine, R. H. Woodruff, T. F. Bell, M. W. Westray, N. R. Kuiawo, E. A. Hatcher, C. G. Folken- back, C. J. Bartolomi, S. P. Rozier, A. Baez, P. F. Brunk Jr., A. Ventrone Jr., M. A. Byront, V. J. Lighty, A. B. Robertson. 3rd Row, Left to Right: J. A. Zoremba, R. 0. Driver, R. Trocke, A. T. Green, T. J. Hol- land, W. B. Contento, A. P. Lairo, J. L. Baumer, H. L. Chapman, M. E. Hasch, J. H, Arden, J. E. Neath, G. G. Lewis, R. J. Bibeau, R. A. Strand, V. J. Hilliard, B. S. Conrad, L. A. Turner, J. J. Mendez. AIR DEPARTMENT V-4 DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: W. A. Tyler, W. R. Cruickshank, G. R. Parish, C. F. Johnson, R. W. Robida, C. H. Humer, K. E. Snead, C. W. Puckett, L. E. Butcher. 2nd Row, Left to Right: J. L. Bennett, A. J. Jonesich, D. A. Haggerty, M. D. Freeman, J. M. Doubleday, G. E. Walsh, L. Rutledge, R. McManus, A. J. Bulone, G. E. Wolski. 3rd Row, Left to Right: K. A. Houck, V. F. Jonas, R. H. Brewer, J. P. Green, J. B. Williams, O. E. Cupshaw, S. T. Alvis, E. E. Peterson, L. W. Boggs, G. M. Hollis, R. A. George. 250 . f I I Alu... ,. . ,.., it ' 1 - .-f P-' Rf- , W .. ...s I K ..1 -- ...tt ,,,. ' fr f 7 g ft' 'xr' Q' ' 'J '. LY... '62 if r f if f I I J I 1 T' tn' ' 1 I 9' E' L ' V AJVW .Ego gl lv S lil X tad? di I E' T 1. 'll 'll 3 r I . l '-' - I E' . . ll Qi' 4 -t ,y 5 it M 'r A a 38 ? f 5 hz, I I E ,- ' ,fr f'f,p rr... '...-1 '-'. I I.. 4. , I gg Q ' -1. lf.-lv WI3f,Il 'WHY .li Q4 J I :ff II 'YEL' AIR DEPARTMENT V-4 DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: J. A. Kok D J Hartzler, D. C. Turner, D. L. Piper! A: L Whitaker, T. R. Wismer, G. A. Armour, J, K R S Picuri, J. S. Phillips, J, 5, Kearns M Kfhlerf D' C- Bifbee, R. D. Johnsoh, R-ley, H. R. one, H. L. Daniel. 2nd Raw Lelt to Right: R. Viates, L. A. Ladwig P. C Roeber, K. A. Brewington, P. E. Greenl L. D. Hutto, M. D. McCann, R. H. Paffenroth, J. W. Holman, R. L. Klopfenstein, W. C. Douglas, P' A- sfhmlf-'lf' A. Bodnar, J. F. Whalen. 3rd Row, Lelt to Right: P. T. Rossi, H. L. Reed, J. E. Redus, R. E. Francisco, M. D. Lacey, J. W. Wheeler, V. Anepete, W. B. Gothard, J. W. Kelly, J. P. Donley, H. L. Brandt, J. W. Manka, J. G. Duncan. 1 AIR DEPARTMENT V 6 DIVISION Front Row Left to Right R J Muller E R Mllstead V C Erchberger J A Hatcher C B Stom R E Sheldahl ENSA P Smith son LCDR B B Sheppard F E Asbell R W Shealey D Bronson F J Hardgraves A R Beach J L Hochstetler Row? Lett r I R E Ross J K Greenaw McCoy J H Bradford R C Schffner F raham J E well J Pm nes C C se M Rate Kennedy B R Fraysuer Row 3 L f t J H Llnke H E Grantham oward E Smkovec R Terrell IS W W oop R Hu rroll L J Tmgle J R Mats Hagen J D Brooks AIR DEPARTMENT V 6 DIVISION Front Row Left to Right D I. Reeves C I- Eagleton J R Robinson C E Troutman CWO2 E C Uhlhorn T Cotchaleovltch R A Shelton R A Martin R D WamP0le R w 2 Lett to Right T T Owens C M McEIlresh R E Johnson H M Pelhdm C Howard F W Brown R l.lmares F Maksymczuk Row 3 Left to Right R Wright N L Towner E C Rosebrock Dewitt R G Gauthier J B E E Harwell J P Merl yr 1. I I I I . I , . L AIR DEPARTMENT HELICOPTER UTILITY SOUADRON TWO IHU-QI DM. 41 Fror1IRow, Left to Right: V. Christine, LTJG R. W. Homutlw, LCDR J. H. Sin:-ckonius, LT T. W. Bryant, ENS T. R. Scrrurr-nan, J Nicastro. 2nd Row Loft Io Rl ht: J W. Bar- r . Ion, Jr., D. E. Stlxmid, J. D. Tl1ompson,C. A Blcccher, W. C. Jol1r1son, M. J. Mingo, W, H Andersen, L. E. McDaniel, Jr., H. R Buchanan, R. R. Harlaux. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT IST DIVISION Front Row, Left lo Right: C. G. Vanarsdale W. Thomas, R. G. Joros, R. W. Bahrenfuss J. L. Biuing, T. C. Doyle, H. W. Grimm, A I. Berman, R. Clark, G. H. Luster, E. William son, L. D. Wiley. Second Row, Lefl lo Right: C. W. Pridemore, J. H. Hoffman, B, W. Eckenroad, W. T. Clark, J. V. Caught, J. H Carte, W. H. Pinchheck, R. E. Russell, G. H Lentx, D. C. Maior, R. S. Sheffield, H. W Puch, J. D. Holler, E. G. Mize, M. Jones W. T. Hatten, R. N. Fuari, J. L. Mallon. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT IST DIVISION Front Row, Lal! to Right: J. C. Gramling, Nickolson, A. C. Russell, J. C. Stewart, J. U. Kelly, P. J. Murphy, T. C. Doyle, W. K. Beasley, G. W. Kimberlim, E. Blake, C. W. Thomas, J. T. Castell. Second Row, Lei! to Right: R. A. Engle, F. Grann, J. D. Twigg, F. L. Driver, F. Cango, R. J. Hayes, C. G. Vanarsdale, R. U. Randell, J. D. Vacca, E. T. Arthur, D. H. Jacobs, E. H. Price, R. G. Rich, T. Mclouderman, F. J. Tucker, J. W. Andrade, M. A. Ackarey. 252 IJ L 1 ' HH Q Q. , -1f 'T' 1,1 4. 1 V 7 Z4 Q f -' l A I A I i il III . DW B, iw X 5 M if , 'I 1 W ' -'I Ik .J K. , 15 , fflxg. l K WV X ' I -Q FS,- 'i-':r Q JI..- nl ,,. Lease. s- GUNNERY DEPARTMENT mn Division Front Row, Left to Right: L. L. Warren L Phelps, R. J. sfophy, w. J. Benford, ofw' Holder, ENS W. H. Kopp, J. K. Miles, R, R, Lewis, K. V. Hallman, A. D. Second Row, Left to Right: F. Heir?1:r?3:rTkcl A. D. Placente, D. M. White, C. L Pyer C. R. Sturm, J. N. Quarles, J. A. Wilson W o. McNair, H. E. waiter, R. sander., wf w' Kolleff M- J- PQIQQC, C. Villanueva. Thin-i Row, Left to Right: R. P. Warren T B Rogers, L, Carter, L. Banks, R. L. Rose' W4 R. Lockwood, W. C. Rheinhold, K. M. Seeleyi E. L. Abercrombie, D. R. Crawford C Rl Elledge, R. J. Golding. ' ' ' GUNNERY DEPARTMENT 3RD DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: C. E. Shonka, D. C. King, G. J. Teneyck, W. A. Russell, J, L. Corder, L. E. Young, B. M. Harrouff, A. L. Smith, E G. Williams, W. F. Herrick, A. E. Bloomfield, J. F. Martin. Second Row, Left to Right: ENS R. C. Price, L. J. Durbin, H. H. Nelson, T. W. Grimwood, R. D. Fitzgerald, T. E. Cross, R. L. Jones, C. H. Lister, M. E. Brown, J L. Doran, H. R. Ney, D. G. Ellison, R. I. Ronning, R. A. Blue, ENS E. F. Hammel. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT 4TH DIVISION Front Row, Left lo Right: R. E. Good, B. . ' ' H r, D J Saskiewicz, D. E. Young, J- UYIENS W V Hayes, L. Abang, ENS A. Shatten, Ablowich, J. J. Pratt, J. Moser, - Demeritt, J. D. Belonie, J. E. Gunter. Second Row, Lett ro Right: M. E. DickeYf R- I-- Agnew, C. McCauley, D. L. Enyard. T- R- Marlin, L. H. Amos, J. R. Salyer, W. MolloYf H. L. Hoover, G. M. smnh. H. A. Befm R. A Coy, R. L. Benzinger, J. E. Smllh Th' d Row, Lett to Right: W. J. Souza, R. J ir Goellner, J. C. Compher, G. C. Stilwell. -l- E. Newsome, J. H. Craddock,J. F. Dolohanty, D. Morris, D F. Ball9Y. F. A. Meadows, M. - 1 ' R. N. Canter, G. W. Petersen, A. Ccsticlrone C J. Smith. 1 V DFW' .JBL-. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT STH DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: D. R. Simmons, R. , ' A. Ruhl, W. J. Ealer, J. J. Scott, M. E. Bell ENS A. J. Medaglia, Jr., R. Bryce, T. C James, J. B. King, M, J. Vinske. 2nd Row Left to Right: D. L. Freet, M. Bella, J. M Exum, W. I. Allen, J. E. McCarter A Wawley, E. A. Kasper, R. P. Rotondo, J: Zielinski, W. Andrews D. E. Stiffler S Johnson. 3rd Row, Left lo Right: S. J. Riloak, I l L. K. Morris, H. L. Moseley, D. C. West, H C. Standiford, P. M. Sullivan, D. H. Lyman P. R. Sposito, R. H. Mapes, N. 5. Flood R. C. Lange. J d TY 7 S Yr X33 f 1 f I fi . f rg if , f , ' I F' 1 A i 5 2 K V. f T sz. ,f . N f , .L ., ' 1 if ., , 7 , 4 5 4 ' If . l'--.film gf 1 if v . A . lie ......f., :Q V l -1 jaw' I i qi? ..mYsfJi.v.:.ilf: GUNNERY DEPARTMENT G DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: F. J. Englebracht, J. R. Bagwell, F. Moultrie, J. M. Ehrhart, T. J. Lyden, V. L. Ebersole, ENS R. G. Nanney, J. 0. Lence, R. Huff, L. Depasquale, D. R. Pugh. 2nd Row, Left to Right: W. H. Ross, A. C. Johnson, R. F. Meyer, R. A. Howie, T. J. Ward, R. E. May, J. A. Rowe, T. W! Cerar, W. F. Croson, D. E. Durant, H. R. Slimmer, R. E. Howell, T. G. Madsen, D. E. Dunlap. 3rd Row, Left to Right: H. G. Shu- maker, J. C. Albee, E. Praslick, J. A. Sroka, E. I. Plath, S. J. Harper, R. F. Holmes, J. C. McCoy, K. C. Williamson, M. M. Wakefield, R. C. Oxley, J. F. Steelman, A. E. Adams, R. A PII . A. J. MUSW' GUNNERY DEPARTMENT G DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: R. R. Boucher, R. E. O'Brien, W. O. Swain, R. W. Mouser, T. J. Lyden, V. L. Eversole, R. G. Nanney, J. O. Lence, R. Huff, V. D. Dennedy, R. M. Pinterich. Second Row, Left to Right: F. W. Baker, W. T. Nettles, S. B. Twiggs, P. W. Phillips, C. R. Wharton, W. P. Fowler, R. D. Cummons, F. X. Wernet, W. J. Coffey, S. Isaacs, L. J. Schwab, R. L. Smock, W. E. Griffith. Third Row, Left to Right: C. W. Shaw, A. S. Mangiapane, B. E. Fowler, L. M. Gorham, J. L. Fogarty, R. L. Hersey, G. T. Baer, P. J. Galarneou, M. L. Penna, W. Thomas, L. A. Curthoys, K, J. Mullaney, G. E. McMullen, S. J. Harper. 254 ic Y 1 fi, 5 1' L 'i'Q 93 A V. 'Ofc ' 7 5 F5 in Z S ' A pf ,gi,,fl gg: If ,I 1' I : il -'gl 'I' fl Q e he f .N u 4 Pl 'F' '.rQr' '97 , . I Q17 A RV? T. af 'III c 5 . r I lr ' . I my 52. , + I X il' 1 , A I EPP I L I ' V v v I5 L L . L ' 5 . 1 if V ' 'Y I r M 'Aff .qi 3 , In I l. . I .1 ' X6 gl A I i I ,A I X11 I A l I O Q l L D , L I I l kj' ,'-:v T- TV' 2. .gf In rg' ' 9 ' pn, A 1 wi h ' , . 1 u , xl V Y 3, l, W 5 V' Wiatr v 9 ' 'N .-. 6 H, Rig 1' .' 44 A cumwsrzv osmzrmswr FOX DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: P. L. Cootney J, H. Swart, C. F. Mclernore, D, B, Bartlett, ENS G. R. Curtis, CWO J. R, Case' C4 W- Johns, J. L. Ennis, R. C. W. Gorman, Second Row, Lett to Right: E. G. Samsel, J, J, O'Shea, W. D. Ogle-shy, D. G. Reedy, C, O. Francis, H. M. Franxoni, R. F. Schoenfeld, F. Brunet, T. H. O'Neel. Third Row, Lett to Rrghtr J. D. Morrow, D. J, Davis, J. W. Held, B. E. Pierce, R. L. Blek, R. A. Baker, D- P- -IOYUUI1, R. D, Speck, H. L. Sworl. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT GM DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: R. L. Therrien, W. B. Tremont, E. J. Lamb, R. A. Rosica, LT W. M. Phillips, LT C. L. Gibson, R, T. Johnson, J. A. Puckett, R. B. Coll, W. W. Franks. 2nd Row, Left to Right: J. C. Patti, D. R. Rath, T. J. Crooks, G. D. Jedlicku, I. L. Stout, Lf' I .W J. L. Jackson, S. Crooks, H. E. Cameron, D. I Ir, ' Gr E. Schricker, R. L. Young, R. W, Rylander, 1 F J, H. Scates, R. W. Scranton. 4 5 If . L , tt, t wx . , . 5 Q .',. I44 . . 'KL H 4... GUNNERY DEPARTMENT W DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: L. F. Griftin, L. D. Gallman, R. R. Cuninqham, S. Slaughter, WO C. E. Howie, WO N. R, Shaw, WO C. L. White: LTJG L. Bates, LCDR R. J. Clare, Jr., LTJG P. A. Alix, ENS B. 5, GATH, wo F. C. Donneels, F. E. Ford, Jr., R. M. Verlander. W. M. Russ, P. Vega. 2nd Row, Lelt to Right: S. L. Davis, R. E. Reed, E. L. Colella, W. S. Rowan, G. R. Vantleven, G. W. Schmitt, R. J, Bureker, K. D. Fedders, G. H. Shelley, K, W. Craft, M. J. Starek, F, G. Geltz, Jr., R. L. Thomas, J. K. Owens, M. F. Madden, R, L. Workman, A. F. Smith, D. F. Klee, F. Austin, L. R. Bandy. 3rd Row, Left to Right: K. R. Pence, J. N. Finlayson, G. W. Duryea. G D. Brewer, V. M. Sielski, C. A. Hoyt. R. Ni. Fitzpatrick, D. G. Robinson. J. A. Mackie- vicz, G. D. Sanders, K. E, Anderson, J. E. Schmitt, J. V. Dusang, J. H. Burrkhkart, G. E. Sandburg, F. J. Dorlcy, W. H. Ur 97 255 fH '.sXXXXXI 5 U GUNNERY DEPARTMENT BOAT DIVISION Front Row, left to Right: C. L. Kingsbury, H. R. Hoyt, F. L. Pitts, C. F. Landreth, F. Myer, Jr., N. A. Wallace, A. M. Palaghty, R. J, Finnegan, P. D. Manning, J. H. Crad- dock. Second Row, Left to Ric1ht:W. E. Little- iohn, E. G. Williams, C. W. Skiles, J. P. Miller, G. E. Benham, B. W. Johnson, H. L. Fisher, R. W. Michaucl, W. E. Greene. C. E. Powell, R. G. .Rosser. Third Row, Left to Right: C. D. Elliot, L. J. Czsrnecki, R. G. Corcoran, D. D. McKee, Coy, J. S. Whitlock, R. L. Williams, J. F. Kramer. G. P. Henry, l. B. Simcox, E. P. Dondelli, D. J. Price, J. W. Bourassa. GUNNERY DEPARTMENT MARINE DETACHMENT Front Row, Left to Right: S. W. Holtz, M. J. Murphy, H. A. Bennett, R. A. Heath, R. L. Kline, L. G. W. Chevers, J. A. Pierce, J. C. Hergert, F. E. Sisley, A. N. Watkins, A. J. McKinney, J. 5. Cope, C. A. Hanna, W. C. Ellis, G. L. Whitehead, J. R. Malloy, K. F. Kemp. Second Row, Left to Right: C. W. Milby, Jr., C. E. Richardson, Jr., T. K. McGuire, D. M. Hanna, R. F. Gallagher, E. L. Green, F. C. Lightfoot, J. D. Trott, P. W. Moore, J. E. Mulvey, J. P. Tellier, W. Bucha- nan, P. S. Land, J. E. Mahoney, Jr., D. B. Fontaine, C. lmbriani, J. E. Hamilton. Third Row, Left to Right: P. F. Rousseau, S. T. Briand, B. J. Snider, T. A. Cunningham, D. H. Hrubes, W. P. Moon, J. M. Smith, Jr., S. L. Elrod, S. Eboli, R. R. Carter, T. A. . Johnson, C. A. Barnowski, G. D. A. Hukos, R. L. Torrence, K. A. Adair, B. A. Taylor, l G. D. Segars. I I ENGINEERING DIVISION R DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: R. F. Anderson, I M. F. Gensamer, J. T. Draughan, C. R. -I Kelly, R. R. Copenhaver, E. E. Luke, ENS H. C. Stanley, ENS H. Krieger, ENS J. S. Winter, L. E. Hardin, W. T. Munkacsy, F. C. Friedel, , W. J. Smith, D. F. Strode, J. D. Spicer, Jr., J. R. Webster. 2nd Row, Left to Right: A. J. I Saba, L. D. Cain, R. Dixon, R. C. Erickson, 5 I v. o. Baker, J. A. Taylor, K. r. Jacoby, E. . . ', Wolfe, C. V. Young, W. D. Eller, D. W. , , q H 5 V, 4, , I1 Chambers, J. L. Grau, L. D. Carr, G. Wolfe, ' ' . 'I rf v .-'f'i'i, :K '?ii'f9 I w. i. Kozlowski, R. F. Kotalik, R. a. Koioih, ' , I to- y Q- I of ' 1' ., Bi Ji Biumgawir, V. V. Goshorn, W. E. J. ' I , Y x ly ' V . , KY I Car e, . . I iams, D. L. Buxhfielx, H. -' ' ' ,. ' gp K' Q ' f- , I I J. Holwimki. D. F. PUPP. J. w. Jackson. ani ' . ' ' ir ' . 'Ii 1 TI A-,I 1:14,-F F! ir ' Row, Lott to Right: D. R. Mltchel, R. S. . l 1 ' Q , X' ,' ' '7 61 If ' .I Caldwell, J. E. Wieland, W. D. Wickham, v 5 V V A Q ' vi! ' , . f E. R. Hamilton, R. Kuchenbrod, J. R. John- . of - ff 1 -1 , 'nl R R at 'Eg' , , A son, R. J. Jacobsen, R. L. Sanders, G. E. Q '. ' f' 'W W L HZ. J' P, 'x . J Hg ' Sanders, G. E. Dion, J. D. Testa, J. W. ' 9? J, , my ' , -0,5 N64 Nr of ' lt-Q wi g rhompfoo, J. v. wobor, Jr., J. M. Gilbert- ,Y o - ' 1 J' if 4' 'J 'f K ' 'f sen, R. J. Richard, D. C. Woltman, R. L. 'f 3 -1 . 5 ' ' 5 Q L I 2:53, R. HJ.E Ngoeck, R. R. McCall, O. I V Y E fe -.1 Q X , 3 I I 'GSS' . . enft, C. E. Johnson, R. D. ' ' I ' ' 2 ', . . 'K' fd - '- V Mofgon, B. H. Emon. ily .rw J -15 'gf 445.5-V Q .yy -Q 4- 4. we Xa. ' . H. i l I 1 1 A 1 . L . r . r Q . :J 'L 256 BZ I- 1.9 fx If Y V get . 1- -r-:32 ' I g, . 5 A :- G J -Y' L L Z I 2' all I 1 I g I '. -1 'Y ' .. .. ' we W? N W - ' lla-ri: lf:-2 l ., It at ' 'us l af at r .. , . . , l f?1 . -. , 1 1 r 4 - 1 Y NV L .f I Y QV 19 . 1 V. A ' . f L- ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT A DIVISION Fwnv Row, Len to Right: r. s. Evans, J. R. Hunt, G. B. Dixon, ENS W. P. Haworth E R. cnnfaeld, F. c. cwwdef, H. J. Cole, Jfw' WOY- 7116 Row, Left to Right: F. D. Howard. -lg R- Boflwli. D. A. Massimino, G. D. Hour: huns, C. S. Nemeth, E. D. Young, G. Barnes, T.. F. Futch, R. F. Armer. Jrd Row, Left to Right: J. E. Duncan, E. R. Byrd, W. Keriotis, D. E. Wahl, W. T. CcCauley, J. L. Welch, R. L. Gunter, F. L. Rodriquez, W. J. Ryan. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT A DIVISION Front Row, left to Right: J. J. Brain, R. K. Swanson, A. L. Storm, L. R. Bennington, G. C. Houston, J. Roberts, G. E. Allen, J. Ketelhut, J. Fugolli, W. D. Mulnix, R. Stein- haus. 2nd Row, Left to Right: M. R. Hladio, W. R. Gilbertson, W. A. Whitmore, D. J. Sinnaeve, L. D. Naugle, R. D. White, J. R. White, J. R. Seppanen, H. F. Richt, L. J. Ritzer, J. S. Whitlock, R. F. Barthel, M. A. Lamanowski, J. Fleming, J. H. Noble. 3rd Row, Lett to Right: C. I. Lee, L. Moschella, R. F. Rain, G. R. Haynes, R. L. Liston, W. D. Jones, G. J. Lander, C. L. Kingsbury, A. E. if Barrett, A. Raupp, M. A. Vitacco, C. R. L! .. I I ' . if . . ' If I I L u x A il, .4 .ft ' l r J I . g .. A. r y'C7 w-'V' : 4 t 1 fs 'ti' I I A -.ew w . ii 'Q . A 3 lf!! ' gl if V vi. 4 L i. 1. :.K,Y1.i I :. 5 I f Q :Vt lf-ijt AVE.. I ' . xii V ' -I Y I I Q L- Lediegh, A. J. Rieker, W. F. Snodgrass, R. J. Joncas. I . ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT B DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: R. J. Church, S. M. Parrish, E. M. Logrimas, D. L. Bordenet, F. E. Florida, P. E. Maher, ENS L. F. McPherson, J. W. McDaniel, R. R. Gamble, K. G. O'Connor, W. G. Knox, J. M. McGuire, E. Bagwell, W. E. McKinney, J. H. Andrews. Second Row, Left to Right: H. W. Hillegass, J. L. Bonner, W. H. Elkins, R. L. Jackson, C. J. Vesper, L. E. Suhr, S. Walker, W. Taylor, A. E. Cunningham, G. E. Fairley, L. Snipes, R. Roundtree, D. A. Blaxek, E. H. Lycke, R. J. Meade, C. T. Jarkson. Third Row, Lett to Right: L. R. Banta, W. R. Molnar, W. H. Wuobio, K. Brockett, H. J. Wilson, R. C. Spore, J. A. Mueller, J. M. Herrity, J. E. Darnell, H. E. Delarnotte, E. M. Hennicle, A. Pechman, L. R. Wudkiewicz, L. A. Jarrett, C. W. Messick, R. F. Holford, D. H. Thomas, F. C. Gasner, G. L. Anderson. 257 ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT B DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: J, D, Welling, J, C Cruz, F, H. McCafferty, C. L. Teel, L. J Birchell, LTJG J. J. Garvey, E, W. Baker, E L. Kennedy, C. L. Pederson, J. N. Moody S. F. Tedford. Second Row, Lett to Right P. G. Curcio, R. J. Cicorio, A. D. Savage F. H. Grimm, J. S. Clackum, W. A. Landon J, W. Chestnut, A. P, Hutchison, W. G Moog, L. R. Lewis, Third Row, Lett to Right R J Hawle L B Rischlin A N Honkin- . . y, . . g, . , son, M. T. Lear, M. D. Crowe, J. A. Snider J, J. Starkey, R. M. Dooley, C. D. Varnadore L. D. Johnson, E. G. Alexander. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT B DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: P. M. Krukas, D. L. Mendenhall, R. G. Tinney, M. J. Souther- Iand, R. Robb, J. Shish, A. L. Rollo, C. B. Beagle, R. D. Jones, G. D. Polk, G. T. Waite. Second Row, left to Right: D. B. Shreve, B. R. Keller, J. P. Beecham, I. K. Keefer, R. M. Duronte, J, A. Murdock, A. E. Johns, Jr., R. L. Williams, E. W. Leach. Third Row, Left to Right: G, M. Turner, T. l.. Fisher, W. T. McCroskey, M. D. Siebenthal, R. M. Corn, A. W. Cyphert, J. J. Sperrlng, E. Martin, D. G. Rockwell. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT V7 M DIVISION Front Row, Lett to Right: B. H, Curlee, P. M. '2 my Roberts, H. E. Thomason, W. F. Bowden, W. W. Carlisle, CWO J. G. Dauber, LCDR -i. S. W. Krohn. CDR E. K. Loubach LTJG J. E Dwnlds, :Ns L. E. Sevier, H. Pfnodgefs, J. CHQ. E. Degenais, F, L. Tebbe, J. J. Young, H. G. Broun. Second Row, Left to Right: F. E, Hutchins, R. E. Descamp, K. R. Peterson, L. R. Mylan, R. L. Genereux, D. R. Romero, J. R. Chest, D. W. Portwood, A. K. Hender- son, D. J. Horan, D. L. Henderson, S. W. Kirton, N. C. Franckowick, C. F. Miller, M. C. Adams, P. A. Farmer, D. L. Burton. Third Row, Left to Right: J. W. Lytle, L. G. Nelson R. A. Bekc, G. L. Morgan, J. Naqy, P. E. Hamilton, J. A. Mueller, K. T. Esworthy, S. C. Headford, R. J. Hawley, H. K. Hyde, C. L. Brogin, W. H, Nafe, G. C. Parr, W. A Grigsby, R. J. Guizzordi, R. F. Zimmerman. I 258 1 -4 Q- iv IL.-if - L-lvl Il '- If 'ii --.,,-f.4f-- --,. in-l jr - . -1 fr ,-. ff ig -'I'-'w -, , 3 'Q' 'L , . liflll E : ?i!lgplQ . - 1 I, I I T ' ' ' L 4 - 3, N ? - l I . '--f'-' - 111 - A Q .- 'l'i'-I f ., 5' - rg,- L--5, , RB .llgr Yi? Jitqfyfrgnlillili ffl ' A Z, ., ' A I I-:'.' if Qi, . -it F' - If-'f All . -HT L14 gi Q :K gs' l4 l. in LC E9-Q 6 L ! If W ' ff' ,,',,'4 . .-Ei. ...Eb 534 AA, .J , f l..o'..LfItJ :L1.f.i'4i . . . gk? Yi 3- T Tlipwc xg jx 1' Milf s 1 . x uv' X W' QQ QQ ' , ,J Y L x 1 sv IT'l4 EE, F1 7 W QQ .Inf-W 1 'V . Q r Q L ill . 'Q' .4 'fl 'elif'Z.f .1?LtL'il All ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT F , R L IM DIVISION 'Of' ow, et to Ri ht: L. E. o' R. S. whmock, J. Magma, A. Leoriegiiellltlil A- MCCMI-wr. cwo J. G. Douber, Lcorz s. W- Kwhn. CDR E. K. Laub.-ich, LTJG J. E. Donolds' ENS L- E- SEYIGY. R. H. Thomas, W. C. Newcomer, L. Marshall, G. E. Downes. Second Row, Lett to Right: M. Blackmon, H. W- Hllll9U55. T- R. O'Brian, W. N, Kendall, J. J. Geddis, M. S. Barnett, D. E. Stone, B- F- Slattery. M. F. Warren, T. I, Sweat- man, R. L. Ward, R. C. Millner, A. L. Bushek, P. V. Gell, F. H. Bailey, M, F. Drumsta, H A. Sparks, D. F. Lincoln, Q. F. Wiscott, R. E -l0hf1wn.A.R.Compti, M. G. Fisher, D. Ives W. R. Bero. Third Row, Lelt to Right: M. J Brockett, S. A. Kolta, F. W. Morgan, H. W Mobley, C. E. Miller, R. A. Garland, L. H Frey, P. M. Lloyd, R. A. Antcliff, W. H. Hogan, C. C. Sweet, M. A. Donofrio, R. E. Lewis, M. Bradey, H. W. Milliman, J. R Mahler, J. H. Coleman, W. G. Carroll, W. H. Johnson, B. J. Matchette, R. G. Nagy, F. B. Bolton, L. E. Carrignan, C. J. Evans, J. R. Fatzinger. r ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT E DIVISION Front Row, left to Right: H. R. Owens, 0. Latimer-Ortiz, Z. C. Williams, R. E. Klopp, J. C. Moore, C. F. Belver, ENS R. A. Dietfen- boch, LTJG W. E. Silvey, C,O. Hollis, J, H. Robinson, J. E. Sommers, E. E. Corrigan. R. J. Martens, G. W, Drumm, H. B. Payne. 2nd Row-Lett to Right: D. Stea, R. A. Vargo, H. N. Kolcemor, C. A. Couture, N. F. Rusyniak, H. C. Poston, A. W. Sitler, R. P, Bergtold, J. Fcrnagiel, G. E. Sexton, H. D. Rhodes, D. Ives, L. W. Shaw, J. D. Benson, A. R. Petty, G. T. Matty, J. E. Busch, N. K. Verwiebe, T. C. Lally, W. E. Rudd. 3rd Row, Lett to Right: E, Merhlander, L. D. Fredrick, H. F. Tebbe, D. J. Johnson, W. W. Hutch- inson, C. E. Ward, L. E. Thompson, T. V. Wright, R. R. Snow, C. S. Sproul, J. R. Jones, P. S. Perea, B. J. Perry, J. E. Jacobs, H. D, Pierson, B. Little, G. N. Schmitz, J. H. Winstead, J. R. Summers, R. W. Strickland, G, E. Niedbalski. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT E DIVISION Front Row, Lelt to Right: S. E. Crogg, L. D Neese, J. L. Lerew, F. E. Norton, E. C Norman, S. D. Durbin, T. J. Reilley. C. A Miles, F. J. Bess, G. Swanner. A- F- Realdon E, L. Michaels, J. R. Howe, D. L. Slaydon M. E. Holupka. 2nd Row, Left to Right: D. P Knorr, J. H. Alvarado, W. R. A. Wells. G. 5 Graczyk, J. E. Lynn, W. F. Bell, T. R. Boyle G, W. Lewis, C. G. Anderson, W. L. Brown h . C l', M, S. B ett. D. J. Smith, D A R amp' n Uml' P Carney K E J. Stoops, J. E. Tur er, . . 3 D - Maynard, H. W. Daugherty, R. B.-Willrams J. B. Whisnant. 3rd Row, Lett to Rr9l lf C- E Collins, D. H. Maurer, N. R. Nilsen. F. D Ahner, A. R. Hall, J. A. Conner, R. D. Hol brook, G. A. Brown, J. L. Clemens, D. J CavancU9hf WL R- Hunt. R. N. Montgomery T, G. Louderback, R. N. Souza, J. V. Wood ,i,.,m, w. c. Mosher, M. L. Lamb. R. G Osorio. 259 I l SUPPLY DEPARTMENT 5-I DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: A. Wielond, J. Patton, F. Giordiano, H. Tomarelli, F. Ramos- Alverio, J. Marcantel, D. Finlan, C. Black r R. McGarvey, W. Hickman, S. Slay, F. Petti- H1 ' . natio, A. Yarbrough, C. Rogers, C. Jones, D. gg Qt 3- . Schmidt, S. Miller. 2nd Row-Lelt to Right: 4 ' I 'Q I' I N. Wortman, R. Welden, R. Yevchak, J. ' V 'V 6 ,r M v f Buchmer, J. Banaag, C. Carr, D. McKeny, jr -I ' A ' 5 by f W. Fowler, S. Watson, R. Suray, L. Ulandy, Qi? ' ,r ' h - 2' fs R. urrgos, D. Mornrr, ls. Farrell, J. whale, ,.,r.,,,r-. x L JJJ D. Laurain, J. Rohn, R. Sirek, R. Delafuente. 1 ' ,g . lf I ff , N xl L 3rd Row, Lett to Right: L. slrlfflen, D. Haney, ,otot ,. , . Lf Y ' . 9, ' A ,r A. Campbell, R. Bruno, P. Hoffman, s. f 0' 1. I IQ Q Strzelecki, D. Ribbe, J. Cregin, W. Ericksson, ' v rw' L 1 'ill N-I V r' ' ' ' J. Carman, G. Wagaman, L. Jenkins, D. I ,r , 3 A 1. r ' , ' wqlrllrelrr, R. Klrlr, M. Knetsch. s ' S K - 1' SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S-2 DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: D. W. Allen, A. R. Spruill, G. L. Sanders, C. J. Harrison, T. P. 0'Brien, N. G. Jarrell, T. F .Dillon, R. E. Kinker, B. D. Beard, LT G. H. Lampton, J. H. Sieg, H. L. Spring, J. R. Ellison, D. Whit- taker, N. C. Scott, M. A. Brula, A. M. Reynolds. Second Row, Left to Right: C. S. Morello, W. T. Gardner, J. K. Watts, F. R. Bumholser, R. A. Mobilia, F. G. Sanders, R. L. Boyd, L. Adams, C. N. Jordan, J. M. Foster, F. Singer, J. W. Trotter, W. G. Myers W. D. Hudson, J. L. Brown, C. A. Stefanski. f ' . I L. Clark, A. E. Sak, J. P. Whalen, G. E. ' I . -- , J , , . . I Kemery, E. P. Tanguilig, F. Haven, Jr. Third ,V - V if Ki' Q: ' Q L Row, Left to Right: H. G. Sykes. W. H. 1' f, ,, - '. L' Moore, R. lvl. comm, J. H. Coffield, s. A. J , . ' , r . , , I - ,J . , ' 4 I . 1 3, 4 McCabe, H. H. Miller. R. A. Vargo, G. T. V, , i V 1 V ' It-, 4 ' A7 lr V, Q' . , .' ' Dalton, B. J. Richardson, R. W. McCutcheon, l ,- l f -, - 1, , f Y M. L. Saunders, D. A. Andreasen. K. W. I f , - ' . ' ' ' ' 5 r V ' Kalck, J. P. Pallotta, L. R. Cearlock, G. G. , K- I I 1 ,- - y Y., f ' f ff l ef I 1 .L Girard, K. E. Bobo, J. D. Rogers, K. R. ll, ' 'Y' ' ' ,l wulrlerr, c. w. Calp, P. R. Ransom . f 7' A A J if Q I .' - ,lf .Wg . . , 1 -' Q f J V X if :IK F V ..., H - N -J X M 5 S' f, v 1 KJ ' V Q I 0 B I . . Y 5' i 1 I . 1 SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S-3 DIVISIOIN Front Row, Left to Right: W, L. Rodgers, R. F. Rodgers, R. L. Boldon, R. J. Demons, R. F. Callahan, W. L. Holifield, C. R. Davis, R. L. Williamson, W. F. Bowen, LT W. P. 0'Donnell, A. L. Lepage, T. G. Egan, W. D. Linnen, G. E. Rollins, W. 0. Garrison, B. Nodado, J. K. Rutherford, P. S. Badua. 2nd Row, Left to Right: V. L. Wager, Jr., R. A. Pelkey, C. M. Parker, W. R. Harper, C. E. Cagle, J. D. Bryant, C. L. Dunston, R. D. , -, ' Q-4 , rf' 5 fl . , fjrf -gif VonRuden, F. L. Campbell, D. C. Gault, 1 , Yi ' ' 'F YEA ' J. W. Mahon, J. A. Jaeger, D. J. Beaudoin, 31 ' A r Y ,Fiqh T. A. Cream, J. L. Clemens, E. H. Kunze, fir T , . ff if E ' ,J ,f- c. A. Marsh, R. v. slarrley, J. H. Place, c. R. f , l ,,,l pr' Pgl .,.. . U' ' . Valleios. 3rd Row, Left to Right: B. J. Town- 3 X 'I L l 'F,'- I ' 8 ', Q3 ' 1 I send, H. Hoffman, P. M. Foster, J. P. , ' .I rr Y , rf' v V ' ,II Y l 4 Bateman, B. J. Freeman, R. F. Prims, G. K. VW IA , , F ' V , D1 rl f al ' Prims, G. K. Hysell, H. H. Clark, H, R. 1, r ' , ffl , 'Nl l F ' X5 Robinson, L. Harris, G. T. Crane, H. J. , ' c ' J' ,Tru ' ' 1, I l ' Krrriewrkl, Jr., w. F. lclelrrseelber, R. H. H l , ,f f H' g f l L f 'l Burt, T. G. Money, J. B. Carpenter, G. C. r 'f j L '-C ', -Y gr we w fs , Durham. X . - I 5 '. .. f Q J F Y J 7 V , ,- ,. 'V P . - ,r r X at .5 Q l s Y'-Y 3 11 - lf? b vm JY' l fl I I . fl L L Xl .L i 1 I J' l KT. 4 A I .L ' A J' J .r 260 5- , N! Q 4 I ' Q 'Rf K l ing! 'I EJ .f,F'5 5 Ulu Q if SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S-4 DIVISION v' I1 Front Row Left to Righp- F H An ' ' ' - 99 , G. V J W jgttolrn gr.,HENS H. M. Lovett, H, Bgjmnge, J ,C . o.r avens. 2nd Row, Left to Right: . M mo, J. R. Lerzcaic, B. H, Coopeh D' P- KDUPP, T. E. Rose, L. L. Swiderski, SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S-5 DIVISION Front Raw, Left to Right: S, L. Smith, W. ' ' D. R d ers, Davis, J. Kea, Jr., A. Herring, o g ENS R. J. Bithell, ENS W. L. Hunt, R. 0. Edmunds, W. N. Scott, J. B. Stevenson, J. N. Noel, Jr. 2nd Row, Left Io Right: J. B. Porter, Jr., H. Finley, I. Carey, III, T. R. Telfair, I. James, C. Fletcher, D. F. Moddax, J. Hamil- ton, R. Rapada, L. F. Panganiban, K. E R A Dixon H 0 Sledge, J. E. Tucker, . . , . Simon, C. L. Ladson, 3rd Row, Left to Right A. Dixson, S. Wheeler, J. F. Washington Springs, ew xg I' Iffmf Mfgtfffif mi J mr N mn4'I'3i K-O , fe, Flod, c.: ref Bu ks,, Jf L. Hay , . . Harris, J. D. Ry I M. J- pal ,.,IVIq ,'.'H.'oIIaI.J.JI Righ: '. LQ illlertwe - ' f, I fPP,r Rf R. Ravel I Ji E- i:ss'1er,'-I' - 'PDF' 4, T. G. or i , H. . .n0Id, I - . 'r WQIIZIEI 47 ttf' .ff'n..ri . I 5 I 5 r, 4 , . . , -54 . rf .p ' ' ' . . . ' 9,1 . . I ' ' ' ' R.F I ., 51 , I. I DI ,,J.Rnk,J.R. gh, I qi . E U.: lr, I I ' I Decker, J. W. Puckett, F. M. ge . R- C I . ly K gg Y Vg , , . e Castillo, J. N. Ken N x I 5 V , '- P :Ho I ' ' ITF? ,II 34 JJ' 1. W, N ' ' xv 4 r - r I I V ' ' I fy N J, N x gp! in' V A-, . , - Q - 2 . 2 'J - ' 1 ' r Y ' ' ' J V 26I L. E. Massey, W. Williams, J. Castillo, F Gab Jac H .Ir J. ' s, E. W. kson, A. unt, ., W. W. J. Brown, J. Lacy, M. Zimmerman. SUPPLY DEPARTMENT S 6 DIVISION Fr nt Row Lett! Right M Santos D A QQ YC ing W den P L GH Johnson B G Murphy T R TUYPIV' E W Uk M L unce C H nd Kxnstler G W Hyde Second Row Left to B Nicely J Cru s I B M D Chavers R G Chburn P T Nuedzwueckl O Sp A Ll K dk W Ar A D Hans f d K L Ruiey J V Robinson D E Mum or rd Row Left to Right S L Fra Irs R Mg gen R A McCoy H E Moore W Sherman D E KlrkPU7'Ifk R G N'ckI Bolton R GY Hx 95 e nhouten F A DI nedy Jr .AH A-J ' 'Q A , .. . T. .1 4 2 5' if .ff ' Msmcrxi DEPARTMENT .4 Q g i , 'L Front Row, Left to Righl: R, B. Mallory, M. fr ,,,: Q. fr s T A, Lentiniq, W. E. Potts. LT R. R. Palumbo N, , A .. - .,,..,,.4....,ash.-asv ...J --+- nr ,-Q 1' fl -ohm...-.,f LT G. J. Barrow, LT V. E Farnsworth, CAPT A 4' 'H-in-ri' 4, .V --pl. -1 J' ' ' 4, if 3 MJ' R. D. Neuman. LT H. s. siursm, LT P. L. , - -4' Q 1 - ' . ' ' f Mossman, E. C. Howard, R. P. Borgfzs. J E. 'I -J I V 7 K I ' , v Barlow. 2nd Row, Len to Right- L. D. Phil- A ' a ' Y ' I lips, L. A. Yoakum, F. V. Patchofsky, M. R, Y Ti Y Y ' -x A , -,et -fl uf! T 91,1 11 -nr ' Waldman, G. O'Kec-fe, C. J. Mackouage, . ' ' 'IV i I J 'Q l ,, 'T ,Lf 1 1 f TP 5' G 9 L O. Hetzman, J. B. Jackson, R. Thorn, A. D. I' 3 ',1 l ' I 7 , J x f K Marston, A. L. Simmons, J F. Stewart, F. 5 M, f J xy- ' w , , 1' I , A W Schultr, T. B. Evans, D. R Patterson, O. W, - Af- f JZ' '- -L Q 4 ' 'ii I'!- I Sine. 3rd Row, Left to Riqht: A. B. Abraham, , H i ,A l ' i I 44 'f ' I I D. R. Brewer. A. J. Chalmers, K. E. Waller. 3 Z1 -' I gg 9, Q0 -' - ' P KP' 1 if f G. C. Gemberling, J. A. Capps, C. I. Garber. 1 T J -Q, .,.. 3 4 R. G. Dunn, W. M. Rose. R. M. Perkins. -MQ 3 N r M, 'l 1 M. L. Smith, H. G. Pero, R. Vaserberg, O, A V ' I Q n rm r ' I F. Feiock. F -, fx V ,- - V X- if . Q' 4 - I J 1 - ,Q 1 L. R 1 ix I I fs . MA. i ,, x, T - i . I , M 1 1 V ' ,1 ' J ,X ,4 ,, t, -. 1 , 1 ' W '::g. ' will qu DENTAL DEPARTMENT Front Row, Lett to Riqht: V. R. Burke, LT W. A. Grimsley Jr,, CAPT A. J. Koenig, LT C. G. Evans, LT V, L. Chesser, 2nd Row, left to Right: D. J. Eisenhower, M. J. Dietrich, E. 0. Pierce, V. S, Savana Jr., J. S, Gaffney. W. E. Fellows Jr., D. R, McClimate, R. Echols, P. E. White. i 1' A , Y I . X T7 I u xf W, 'il E ni X E -K T 1 . l . I ' T r fl L' 'V 5 Qt ,L We M 14 MASTER AT ARMS FORCE Front Row, Left to Right: R. F. Campbell, J. D. Pearson, R. L. Botcheller, J. W. Jenkins, A. E. Vandal, W. J, Clover, E. D. Jennings, L. W. Harrison, F. E. Moser, J. D. Scheetz, T. J. Whitaker, J. H. Campbell. Second Row, Left to Right: E. W. Sutter, E. C. Hinds, H R. Ney, K. W. Van Pell, S. W. Hadley, C. Johnson, T. H. Moran, H. R. Godfrey, L. E Portin. 262 -4 1 : MESS DECK MASTER AT ARMS Front Row, Left ta Right: W. B. Nicholson. . . rs, H. Spatcs, A. L, Rollo, E. V, B0llOY'l. G. Shearer, J. Dilfuric. Second Row 0 9l'lI R. F. Ruin, L. M C C 5 ref, c, H. Mcslrfesh, R. Ekshgihl, J. sl ements, T. E. Belair, R, E. Plc1uney,G, C, Banser. COMCARDIVTWO Stolf Officers Front Row, Left to Right: LCDR John S. Kearns, CDR E. D. Jones, CDR W. L, Adams, CAPT F. E. Nussle, RADM R. C. Needham. CAPT F, B. Stone, CDR G. F. Kube, CDR L. W. Harrison, LCDR N. G. Hodgkins, LCDR E. H. Weilond. Second Row, Left to Right: LT R. M. Robinson, ENS P. J. Kenney, LCDR A. J. Weil, LCDR C. L. Wilcox, LCDR J. A. Black- well Jr., LT D.D, DeWitt, CAPT C, H. Steven- son, USMC, LT J. B. Dobbins, ENS E. D. Kocen. Front Row, Left to Right: J. Bradley, J. E. Follin, F. A. Suckow, A. R, Peterson, B. J. Haller, G. A. Phillips, C. D, Brunies, A. A. Giancola, P. K. Bordun, E. B. Terry, J. Kimble, C. A. Mixon. Second Row, Left to Righr: J. J. Harrison, T. N, Thompson, J, Woods, H. E. Mitchell, J. T. Hinks, G. M. Johnson, W. M, Burris, N. D. Shayotovich, L. W. Mullcey, W. R. Boswell, M. R. Kohn. P. J. LaFata, R, T. Ferris, J. W. McMichael. Third Row, Left to Righl: J. T. McElroy, D. l.. A. B Tuv J M. Smith, M. D. Brcckett, M. . y, . Crimmins, M. C. King, K. H, Stetson, C, E Belcher M E Winkclmcn, T. J. Pratt, . Pmn, a, sf Carroll, L. G. swim, L. Villegos, C. W. Mattheas, A. Bircibent. 263 DE: CARRIER AIR GROUP SEVEN Front Row, Left to Right: H. W. Wise, J. F. Klein, LTJG W. E. Parshall, LTJG D. L. Edwards, LCDR F. B. Koch, CDR H. F. Lang. LCDR E. W. Keegan, LT M. H. lsaacks, LT J. J. Barron, T. R. Straub, J. S. Pcnzenhagen. Second Row, Left to Right: A. L. Halse, J. J. Kubacki, R. P. Borges, M. T. Springborn, A. H. Roberts. VAH-1 OFFICERS First Row, Left to Right: LT H. E. McCumber LCDR W. F. Tilghman, LCDR M. D. McPher- son, LCDR G. G. Zimmerman, LCDR H. A. Moreland, LCDR G. W. Kimmons, CDR C. B. Smith, CDR D. A. King, CDR C. A. Dunn, LCDR B. W. Bartholomew, LCDR R. S. Satre, LCDR R. J. Provencher, LCDR W. L. Ralston. Second Row, Left to Right: LTJG J. D. Koeh- ler, LT L. Higginbotham, LT T. P. Stewart, LTJG B. J. Gallagher, LTJG M. Otto, LTJG S. S. Roberts, LTJG W. R. Burdsall, LTJG A. Perrella, LTJG A. W. Martin, LTJG H. E. Fisher, LTJG D. F. Schultz, LT W. W. Powell, LT C. Hodgate, LT K. L. Coskey, LTJG L. J. Hall, ENS R. D. Lund. Back Row, Lett to Right: LTJG E. D. Stahel, CWO G. A. Hoff- man, ENS F. G. Clarke, ENS T. D. Vincent, LTJG D. G. Schaefer, LTJG P. L. Jensen, ENS J. H. Dunlop, LTJG D. E. Ethell, LTJG W. T. Blakemore, LTJG W. J. Wormell, LTJG A. J. Huth, LTJG J. A. Mackey, LTJG J. E. Goss, LTJG W. D. Derryberry, ENS K. M. Tourney, LT C. V. Choyce. VAH-1 Front Row, Left to Right: P. W. Simpson, A. H. Stolba, L. J. Anderson, C. W. Penrod, R. B. Lee, M. E. Harrell, CDR C. B. Smith, CDR D. A. Klng, L. M. Donn, N. B. Rapp, R. E. Dean, L. J. Hughes, D. E. Carnes, R. W. Demoret. Second Row, Lett to Right: J. C. Herndon, B. M. Putnam, E. W. Motuck, P. Maliniak, G. W. Sanders, T. G. Mattair, W. P, Dennis, J. F. Elders, J. F. Uhr, G. R. Spicer, T. E. Farrow, R. Chilton, B. F. Har- rison, R. L. Mumrnert. Y' I ,H X t is . i 9 FXR: ,fr +- X s X . Us-L-... x ff- '-H. 71 X - L.. Al i 7 gps .i , 1........ '-fi, 3 .v'. ........i.....---- ...-, 26A 5275 .Ro l VAH-I POWER PLANTS DIVI Front Row, Left to Right: F. C. Ferilgrlc Jr Q. E. Bertrang, R. L. Gunthorp, A, D 'wifi Irams, J. C. Herndon, LT W. W. Powell. J F EIPEU' R' E- Cvnville. B. L. Blackford IH- LY Krrtzberger, V. Elliott, J, Hay' T- A' Ga ' Second Row, Left to nigmf R. n, v',,.,,,,,f T' E- Pl 'IllP5f P. G. Procell, R, K, Word J. B. Schumacher, J. P. Mineweqger J, J sr. Crowder, r. L. Blose, w. E. wolkof V' J Elienrnan, B. R. Mason, C. E. Stonecypher Back Row, Left lo Right: O. D, Schneider, J B. Tucker, L. Erivin, D, E. 0wing,, G. D. -IUYICSOH. B. J. Turrentine, B. F, Mgddox J. J. Afohomboolr. R, L. Eogloy, J. E. Rosen' B- A- Snow. N- A. Ritchey, W. V. Chancyi VAH-'I ARMAMENT CONTROL DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: J. M. Davis, D. A. Baldwin, M. P. Pellegrino, C. C. Kaufmqn, C. W. Penrod, N. B. Rapp, CWO G. A. Hoffman, T. E. Farrow, A. H. Stolba, H. V. Fisher, J. H. Mosteller. Second Row, Left to Right: G. B. Ashley, E. E. Lemay, G. W. Looney, D. G. Keene, W. S. Miller, J. L. Humphrey, L. L. Anker, G. K. Leetsch, R. W. Postak, L. D. Aske, D. J. Crago, T. B. Miller, J. H. Hinson. Third Row Left to Right: J. H. Haywood, P. D. Dean, R. Sassi, B. R. Penry, W. E. Tomlinson, R. R. Cherington, R. E. Bertrand, J. K. Hohn, J. A. Manzullo, K. M. Slarer, G. A. Steele, D. T. Mellott, J. H. Rothenberg. VAH-I AIR FRAMES DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: N. M. Sleeper. 5- -I- Dofopou, P. A. Harlan, H. G. Bw- D- 5- Coon A. Adams. E- W- Moluck' LT C' Hod- gqte,l L. H. Scarsella, J. F- Robeilff Blair, v. B. Muzfhood, L. M- Qdevtra mel Hall. Second Row, Left to Rvghl- - 'J M gn R, L. Burrell, J. E. Alexander. - - m ' F. T. M lun, w- Deceder, J. B. MartonY0I'- P F Thzjyer H ' , A. M . - - ' ' H. Guese, :V F BmoIzianA J Goan, R. S. i4'oflZ'lEi'P. rfoooao. Thiid now, Lon to Right: T D .Hobbsl F. T, Williams, W. T. Bartley, M. s. Moda, c. E. cooler. M- D- 5'UB fffe'1' D. L. whores. c. D. TfGl10 '-,M- L- ' G. A. Nhwbergin. 0. A. Tavernner, R. D- Von Brunt. A. E. Troester. R- A- B'I5-lhl' 2 1 i i. i 1 H ' Y' I I M. in 6, 2 ' .I - X! 'I ,K il P I :il ,I , ii Lili la 'Q .il Q. lr -' Q' . l il .lggli :ill 1'li l'. 1,1 ini fi 11 if 'I .. I '4 I I I VAH-'I LINE CREW DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: C. Ard, L. D. Roach R. E. White, Le Claridy, B. H. Fisher, J. O Simmons, H. G. Stockhouse, LCDER R. sf Satre, E. A. Geis, D. L. Toylor, S. T. Driskill J. R. Norris, J. W. Unger, F. L. Vogel, L. D Jones. Second Row, Left to Right: A. E House, R. S. Hamilton, W. W. Penny, T. J Brandon, R. J. Thomas, J. D. Norwood, W L. Wilson, L. J. Hall, F. Graf, D. A. Boker, J. A. Keller, J. J. Allred. Third Row, Left to Right: W, G. Meyer, L. E. Colley, J. W. Donahoo, C. R. Eldridge, J. W. Bush, R. E. May, J. C. Courington, H. T. Bennett, K, W. Morgan, G. C. Eakes, D. W. Pedri, M. D. Teal, J. E. Streetmon, F. Peters. VAH-I AVIONICS DIVISION Front Row, Left to Right: W. G. Vickers, R. C. Webb, J. D. Ashe, R. L. Martin, M, O. Smith, G. R. Spicer, J. F. Uhr, LT T. P. Stewart, B. F. Harrison, C. A. Basinger, C. W. Tripp, J. N. Costner, J. C. Fronius, M. E. Stroud, R. R. Landry. Second Row, Left to Right: J. T. Dusenbery, C. M. Cordrey, R. G. Seddon, D. D. Perrymon, J. A, Woodard, J. L. Matthews, R. D. Ross, J. B. Dyson, C. A. Messmer, R. J, Lee, R. L. Ayer, L. H. Akright B. H. Smith, W. H. Menosco, G. W. Simcox, B. P. Arnold, W. C. Jackson, H. K. Fuller, G. E. Vickers, J. O. Woodey, J. H. Walder, R. G. Kondracki. Third Row, Left to Right: D . King, W. D. Donaldson, 0. A. Hues, A. Kovoch, T. F. Fields, D. L. Booker, 0. . Sneeringer, J. R. Hawk, R. E. Codding- ton, R. D. Shroder, J. V. Swiderski, W. J. Dulek, M. F. Cremin, R. L. MCEIFFGSI1, J. H. Daley, J. W. Heath, A, M. Perdome, W. L. Bone, E. J. Holt, L. D. Henderson, D. H. Kruger, J. K. Peasgood. r 032 VAH-'I OPERATIONS AND SUPPLY SUPPLY-Front Row: J. W.' Dade, J. D. Jen- nings, W. M. Brasher, B. M. Putnam, and LT K. L. Coskey. OPERATIONS-H. L. Widener, C. T. Golloher, LTJG D. G. Schaefer, W. P. Dennis, D. F. Patterson, F. F. Combee, C. W. Demosev and C. D. Moss. Second Row: P. S. Risley, J. F. Fitzpatrick, C. R. Robertson, A. B. Freemon, R. A. Hilliard, C. l. Wood, H. J. Craven, R. K. Larson, W. E. Argo, B. G. Sandefur, R. F. Powell, C. H. Winship and J. L. Johnson. Third Row: J. H. Gilliland, W. G. Mitchell, W. A. McDaniel, W. R. Van Fleet, P. J. Kearney, R. P. Magyar, J. W. Magee, J. Graf, D. E. R. Wilson, J. S. Sandifer, S. S. Roberson and R. G. Gorday. 266 All I' b i f Y i V IQ.. ,, E., -U . fx i P , .fi 5-ef R f. :haf ,l 1 - 'Rakim-3 - Si ,la- in Cx . Pip, - BYE PTR Jak , R Q H592 If df. 5-Q S L X .lun A I 'L , ,fd lj f ' O VAH-1 Front Row, Len to R' p,,. R L .F grooks. K. J. BrinkeiFR.' Lf Morrell, LrJc'w. sz. aufafell. LTJG, J..A afkfYr R. Chilton, L. Hughes, P. L Ga non bk Mm.. R. s. shunahun, J. F. naeLne.gJ T Kr:1C:mmon. Second Row, Left to Right: P. D H F 139- A- 1-Herman, D. H. Powell, L. M vfrnk . F. Bergen, R. J. Halpin, H, L, gggie Burg 5 kMtcIung' D' G' Bmnffvrd. J. T. win as, G. R. Schroeder, R. V. Bowhay, r r M. G. Hovda R Palmer L T J Alle ' ' r - - - n, W. 'Y:llUrId,lA. M. Coen. Third Row, Lett to T9 ' - - Wood' J- F- Bel. 1. H. Hill, J. 6 Ruckeg, M. J. Dobson, E. E. Overton, R. A. ' 'Ona' - J- MOJW, L. M. Rivera, L. F. Mon- UNO, T. E. WIHKIHSOH, J. H. Buckman, C, A, Sharron. L. G. whmen, J. L. Moss r A Rochester, J. D. Padgett. ' ' ' VAW-12 Front Row, left to Right: C. T. Sieling, R. H. Jordan, E. R. Bennett, J. H. Clamer, B. C. Morrk, V. D. Dyer, J. P. Lalonde, L. 0. Todd, R. P. Miias, H. D. Messer. Second Row, Left to Right: K. E. Low, K. T. Newell, R. J. Cox, T. P. Campbell, R. J. Bennetts, D. D. Dunkelberger, D. Glass, A. J. Vogt, R. E. Martin. Third Row, Left to Right: E. J. Mabey, W. F. Reich, A. E. Victor, D. W. Stubbs, M. J. Verner, J. Laura, H. G. Boei- man, L. Evrard, J. B. Jones, L. W. Rausch- meier. FIGHTER SQUADRON FORTY ONE I Front Row, Lett to Right: LTJG D. N. Elliott, LT w. H. MILLER, LT R. P. RICHTER. LT T. n. Kuiqwski, LCDR N. Sabin, CDR L. T. Wardr LCDR R. M. Tvede. Jr-. LT J- B- le 5'f f '-T w. A. Everett, LTJG G. L. Murray. LTJG C- R. wanton, me D. r. want, Luc c. L. Lavinder, Jr., Mr. G. W. Hollenbeck. Second Row, Left to Right: J. A. Hamptvm JI'-1 J- A- Pinter, G. W. Davis, J. B. Woods, J- H- Reese, R. R. McCausIand, L. M. Mohnr P- J- Flannery, R. E. Becker, W. Kinganr H- R' Ross, R. L. Scarbrough. Third Row, Left to Right: S. E. Andrewsr J- D- MaY'm'd' Eva' suggs. A. L. Carmgdygr lg. F-IHfmNrfwG-Loe- , . OU C I ' ' ' Hass, F. L. Abney, N smug J C mneon' W. W. Lunn, D- 0- e 'H.'E. Mcluugh- E. G. Nelson, Z. C. Rcsberry, lin, R. R. Howell. Q i l i FIGHTER SOUADRON FORTY ONE Front Row, Left to Right: J. J. Hughes, J, P White, J. M. Flores, W. H. Yengr, C, L Revier, F. J. Herring, C. P. Smith, J. D Payton, H. Thompson, B. L. Gardner, H. F Butler, C. R. Jackson, A. Coppola, C, F Snow, J. P. Graham, W. S. Lanier. Second Row, Left to Right: L. E. McKenzie, G. A. Paul, T. J. Yencha, E. J. Daiosio, D. W. Yvfwv, H. w. Tucker, G, c. Lowe, K. E. McKennie, H. E. Kennedy, E. A. Easter J. J Andrews, R. L Lambert, F L. McMichael ' - . , T. E. Allen, D. W. Dansby, W, M, Weather- lngton. Third Row, Left to Right: D. A. Hammie, D. L. Reeser, R. E. Plavney, L. W. Masters, R. A. Kopp, R. E. Donnelly, J. M. Anderson, P. A. Haynes, R. A. Rolston, L. E. Donahue, W. P. Wilson, R. H. Adsit, H. L. PeV Y, T. N. Dudlik, J. W. Murphy, D. J. Regalio, J. C. Kennedy. FIGHTER SQUADRON FORTY ONE Front Row, Left to Right: V. L. Wallace, C. F. Dempsey, Jr., E. Honkus, L. M. Hapgood, G. Partin, P. M. Grant, R. C. Stout, L. W. Kubiak, F. D. Lovelace, W. J. Lilly, A. W. Hunter, J. W. Kluttz, J. W. White, K. L. Vaux, J. A. Ostler. Second Row, Lett to Right: R. J. Couture, J. C. Hasenfus, E. L. Slusser, R. J. Lambert, C. M. Barrows, Jr., G. J. Fiegel, E. D. Foley, P. A. Rainey, B. A. Tipcke, D. R. Taliman, D. E. Rummer, H. K. Cooper, L. E. Graff, W. M. Schuster, F. Briggs. Third Row, Lett to Right: J. H. Mc Donald, P. E. Milford, D. W. Comstock, B. H. Burris, H. F. Rugenstein, D. J. Gettings, J. G. Hildabridle, W. C. Andrews, G. L. Clark, R. V. Affinita, L. F. Johnson, J. R. Bish, C. W. Slay, J. D. Brosseau, A. E. Fredricks. FIGHTER SOUADRON FORTY-ONE First Row, left to Right: R. D. Gates, H. F. Brown, R. E. Harris, G. E. Kriner, J. D. Stevens, A. Rusnak Jr., E. F. Golik, W. E. Kelley, LT J. F. Dorsey Jr., LT J. C. Ellison, LCDR W T. Broughton, Mr. F. P. Jackson lAllison Rep.l, LTJG D. W. Lynch, L. P. Bell, G. T. Browne, R. T. Knowles, B. L. Williamson, H. Noparstek, A. A. Drew, W. A. Spear. Second Row, Left to Right: C. H. Mills lll, J. D. Howard, G. W. Burnett, D. H. Grenshaw, W. D. Wheeler, H. H. Sweet, C. H. Brown Jr., M. D. Ganzlinger, J. L. McDonald, S. L. Gooch, R. L. Steckly, J, J. Cherichetti, G. M. Shatzer, G. Hankison, M. M. McLane, D. D. Madison, H. F. Hatfield, H. M. Hill, J. E. Burne, R. L. Demas, E. R. Kuiken. Third Row, Lett to Right: J. F. Krueger, G. P. Brown, P. M. Mikulanetz, G. L. Roberts, C. E. Miller, M. Capozzoli, W. D. Howard, W. K. Pierce, J. A. Wills, S. J. Duchok, D. E. Campbell, C. W. Boulware, J. M. Daniels, J. W. Mayo, R. C. Olsen. 1 Wm J... . J - ' 1 1. I! f' . 4 157' if 1 Vr- X .Z ri' I sg? . 1 J J f D4,4,,:l JE .eu ..4 -'Q 26 8 1,2 f- .,v't'7 ' ,av- ',4f .--'de NlE'Al .n-f' -..sf ..-- ,I- Zu , ,,,. lf, --,N rr fi x '3 ,L 5. if R .- I Nr. J. ,, - '-fr Ld S . X-V 1- 1 L-Q ,, ,gi 'im I '- 4 r L4 vFP-62 DET 4160 Front Row Lell lo Rii I - I ghl: K. W. H L D Ward, c. c. Falls, LTJG a. c. Lece' off B' X' clark, LCDR J. c. Barrow, LUG J 'F J li b' Ezalfr LTJG R. Ls. Hrrmg. R. o. clreL1,aJ,UH' sesisflmllllmdck A' Pi'l'ibe r V. D. Blake W . oo . Second Row, Lell lo Righfg D R .SS-Jaanson, P. L. Bessie, F. W. Schrader, ' ' udd' C' D- Houiefr D. H. Sullnn J R grhuinmanr C. P. Worley, J. R. Mizell,,V,. G, SC '.U?f Ds L' Yours, E. J. Adler, v. p rrbrrkr, P. r. wsnarrrrrr, R. w. Cooper. Third Row' len 'O M9572 J- O. Richardson, C, E, Calhoun, E. B. Agee, T. W. Thompson, C, G, Bonser' l' L' Klghl, D. H. Hendleman F P Slollenberg, J. L. Howard, R. P. srrralh 'M' T- Nelson, D. L. Perrdlerorr, w. J. Kerr., ' ATTACK SQUADRON SEVENTY-TWO IVA-72l Front Row, Lefl lo Righl: LT G. G. Clark, LT R. H. Weidman, LT G. L. Baxter, LCDR L. C. Baldwin, LCDR J. E. Hansen, CDR C. A. Hill, Jr., LCDR J. Freeman, LCDR A. E. Miller, LT H. C. Arnold, LT A. Finch. 2nd Row, Lei! Io Riglrl: LTJG J. D. Tale, W0 R. D. Duff. LTJG C. D. Miller, LTJG M. L. Jines, LTJG R. F. Brennock, LTJG C. B. Arnell, LTJG J. E. Hosletler, LTJG R. J. Bournique, ENS L. C. Black. 3rd Row, Lei? fo Right: LTJG M. E. Fellham, W. R. Mulvaney, H. E. Pyne, J. A. Franke, F. A. Cox, J. Thomas, F. G. Zumhro, M. F. Roberson, LTJG A. P. Green. N SEVENTY TWO lVA-721 ATTACK SQUADRO . ' . Fronl Row, Lei? lo Rlgmf J- A' sulhvan' Ligayl R, O. Davis, R. H. HarP0fr E- ,- Hermes, LCDR A. E. Miller, W0 R- D- D? 5 F, G. Nealheryr Er- olelflff a , i1l.'ri'a2ir1girii7n. J. rare, R- B- MfK 'h7 f Row, LeH ro Righli J- 5- T'0 ' ' ' W P Russ Jr., R- D- HorkeY,DJ.TL.oEkLLL?nsj. Besdawn' E- cwss' Lliylilarrralrorr, J.LP.'2qlov9gf'J iz-as Cl1'f, ?3 . e. w'lk . A- - 'HS' ' : lifgmr cl LilsTiPl0l'1r Jfrf W' A- L R' 1 J M. Chiricos, T. CGM-'Van' ' 1 r- hp Kerfoolr - R D. L, .L -rf ' .f I - Y J M. Green, P- G- 955' r n rv L L . C, I 8 T gc::z:1cl:z,N.- Teegufdin, F. W. Slamper, Jr., nf A A Y ' rr E' 5 Alineriur B. T, Krusefr D- L- 5e 'd' v ' 4 ' ' ' 4 .,, ,, Q A, M. P ssavanh. Q l P, me-P :fl N ,,.,1l , : I J G , 'J ' f 5 r, - F4 3, L' . L 1 V , , , 1 ,Y Arg' C' n v v fb: X 4 1 ' X F, J M, l L W A ,rr rf ' M r 1 1 YB J , 4 ' , ' f 4 L , 4 V 1, of Q' ' I 1 v 1 ' v ' L 1 ff . ' 4 -es, f ,r N N 0 Ti J r - , ,X A , cl, -. -Q fx, Q ' w ' X ff? i X f h . XSL? 5 'W I A 1 1 L .Ah ' xl Lf L, A 269 Y 1 i i i l 1 .,l ,l il il l . l . ll i l i li I l l ll e l 1 I l V . , Y i A 4 ll ATTACK SOUADRON SEVENTY-TWO lVA-721 Front Row, Lett to Right: J. W. Jonkine, Jr., R. E. Stinson, T. E. Rice, H. H. Hatcher, J. M. Diderence, B. W. Lasher, LCDR J. Freeman, LCDR L. C. Baldwin, B. R. Risner, J. W. lngold, J. Di Furia, G. R. Nubol, I. W. Witt- struck, H. E. Bailey, J. L. Brittian. 2nd Row, Left to Right: J. L. Little, B. K. Kniebush, J. E. Jahnke, A. F. Hinoioea, T, E. Crornin, Jr., M. R. Schoack, C. C. Tutorow, A. D. Herlihy, F. A. Bull, J. H. Saltzer, H. R. Jolin, Jr., J. S. Junio, W. S. Corrico, E. G. Baker. W. Z. Blocker, C, W. Stephens, Jr., W. F. Hermann, J. R. Dacier, J. F. Murphy, S. W. Rozanski. 3rd Row, Left lo Right: T. D. Bayden, D. E. Williams, D. C. Colander, D. G. Wiggins, R. G. Cherioli, J. R. Weeden, W. E. Colvin, E. A. Wall, R. L. Stewart, D, H. Poplin, E. A. Roney, J. M. Grubb, R. N. Chambers, L. W. Trumbach, W. H. Wright, A. J. Cadorio, B. L. Wheeler, W. C. Dam- mert, A. G. Schmid, Jr., R. P. Lindsey, J. F. Cummings. VA-75 Front Row, Lett to Right: J. B. Johnson, B. E. Side, J, L. Garbanini, C, D. Jensen, A. S. Spangenburg, J. McCorkle, A. G. Smith, Mefford, K. L. Clark, L. P. Bunch, D. L. Payne, P. E. Carpenter, H. H. Hibner, D. E. Williams, J. H. Hannan. Second Row, Left to Right: L. L. Williams, J. E. Stout, LT W. W. Mellette, LTJG R. G. Carlson, LTJG A. D. Mangelsen, LTJG G. E. Simerly, LTJG I. A. Waters, LCDR J. G. Carroll, CDR S. Montun- nas, LCDR R. S. Donovan, LT R. M. Maratea, LT V. E. Osher, LTJG J. P. Campbell, J. P. Newkirk, J. C. Turner, F. C. Taylor. Third Row, Lett to Right: J. A. Harris, W. J. Denham, M. C. Jones, S. B. MacPherson, W. J. Squire, A. N. Benisch, E. S. Martine, M. J. Wodiyla, S. A. Evans, R. E. Kumm, G. W. Long, S. B. Costello, L. A. Settle, 0. L. Hall, J. B. Callendar, F. V. Potchofsky. Fourth row, Left to Right: G. A. Brown, R. E. Hixson, R, L. Abernathey, O. K. Anthony, L. G. King, C. M. Harding, R. E. Katau, W. J. Austin, R. L. Redd, M. L. Priddy, R. Kincade, K. L. Sherman, R. E. Lee, E. T. Stephan, R. E. Johnson, VA-75 Picture fill Front Row, Lett to Right: R. B. Pinnelyl, J. H. Conwell, J. E. Jenkins, R. H. McCrary, A. Lundberg, G. G. Gillette, T. Wade, D. Baird, T. J. Whitaker, J. W. Hilly, H. W. Gilbert, J. E. Duerr, R. E. Davis, C. E. Nutter. Second Row, Lett to Right: J. E. Grillo, R. F. Morris, LCDR H. D. Parade, LTJG R. Richter, LT F. M. Graham, LT F. H. Duffield, Jr., LTJG L, L. Huprich, LCDR J. C. Mape, LTJG R. J. Adams, LTJG J. C. Campbell, ENS A. E, Maye, LT C. D. Morrow, L. W. Canterbury, R. N. Avers. Third Row, Lett to Right: T. W. Meyers, K. A. Speck, O. E. Savage, C. O. Linville, G. Castle, G. D. Marlin, A. J. Noel, W. J. Scott, S. Smith, J. E. Stefan, W. J. Stoltz- man, R. E. Jackson, L. Levy, D. E. Reeves, R. L. Johnson, E. O'Connor. Fourth Row, Lett to Right: J. J. Nally, N. K. Wilson, G. W. Duncan, G. A. Kliner, M. R. Cipriano, P. O. Barker, R. L. Vlasak, K. Adams, J. R. Markle, F. Phillips, L. D. Unversawild, R. Jamison, K. L. lrin, H. E. McAfee, F. C. Fillipponi, H. Fitzpatrick. 270 tk' . ' ' ' s 1 ' 'l'f't-' V 'l I 1 gg ,,fiV ,i rc, ii, , X i.. FeDlil,ewQ'.f'. ' -I ,I , , , .. flilllll iliflfllilll ', 'ig' 35.13 L O Mi, Y. .5 9 P ri 0 f.Q:.ig..w . :J-ed -f '.... ..r....-.-s,y f :if .es .fas w 7'. le. W if 1 ! gmgqmwgfyfhwmg W A-ml-. ,. 41,'.h ffm iffaN'..-if .' Q it avr-1' , .4 JM -'rj ognfmi- 'Q J- - 2 . r gQfw?9. . U.ghxQUlg 'UI Q UI We . 'JJ - Q I ' 1- if N .sl 'J' If i Q -' 1 ir , ' ,eff ,, lralfafr. LQ r I , I .. ,L 's . V ,Q EHJ ATTA Fronl EVAASM grace' ST-ll? 63glilflBHE1or:ee'rbLTJG R.MRoyIH r ..Br'yl,L'r. Rush, LCDR n. J. Sample, LCDQSQI W T F CD . H ll, HI HJ. w. shaff, Lcorz s. nam., r,,, LCDQHA .nzwmxmeeeuhema . . I I D. R ' naw, Lan ro mgm. a. E. Fah:,snrlfn,lfngf:,'f :audi D' Gc'ul'n9Yr W. T. Machamer T , wma, 'w. R. Harkoom, A, H. Atwell 'JL E. w, nam, s. o. wmzamsan, sz. A oalvaui' lil.HA. Simons, J. P. Dillon. G. R. Myers, Rl L FSF , W. J. Marlel, A. P. cavern, R. rw, Rem. r., J. F. Shzymqmkil B4 G. whim' 3rd ow, Lefl lo Rrghl: D. E. Nanney J, J Nagle. W. J. Galbrailh, W. C. Boypl R L' HolrOYd. M. E. Wilson, W. H. Hanna' P- K' Laadsran, R, L. Baker, R. o, Flint 'n' 5' Childers. A. G. Combs, G, F, Bang' Jr: J' E' vom' W' J' Gobbeflr G- L. Beucher. I r ATTACK SQUADRON EIGHTY-SIX lVA-86 Front Row, Leh to Righl: LTJG R. D. More- land, LTJG G. K. Haapar, LTJG R. R. Ryu, LTJG G. R. Vezina, LT R. B, Brislol, LT T. F. Rush, LCDR R. J. Sample, LCDR B. W. Hull, CDR J. W. Slmff, LCDR S. Rorex, Jr., LCDR J. H. Thayer, LT W. A. Burgess, LT L. D. Nagel, LT K. B. Russell, LTJG J. D. Ras- mussen, LTJG R. L. Fisher, lkneelingl LTJG W. S. Miller. Second Row, leh lo Righl: N. R. Ledoux, E. C. Wirl, W. R. Cooper, R. T. Schmick, C. T. Wiley, R. L. Cline, P. M. Ellis, J. N. Blake, M. L. Boyce, S. C. Pecker, M. L. Emerick, D. H. Lewis, W. D. Nunley, D. H. Sl Sing, J. I. Lee, E. N. Reyna, R. C. Morton, Jr., B. D. Stubblelield, C. J. Hick- man, Jr., J. D, McCool, J. R. Boulerice, R. H. Woodruff, R. T. Marlin, E. B. Caylor. Jr., R. W. Bracey. Third Row, lell lo Righl: J. A. Booker, T. J. Keaney, G. Bobbell, C. L. Kill, W. C. Foster, R. L. Jackson, C. R. McConnell, F J. Lallus, J. F. Curelon, P. Senesky, W. H. Hanna, W. R. Kohler, C. E. McKoy, L. J. Thimmesch, J. L. Mallhew. R, L, Loudin, R. E. Kimmel, L. McCloud, J. S. Capone, W. R, Dicks, K. L. Tyner, J. H. Carter, Jr. VMA-224 D L H veY Front Row, Lell lo Rlflhlf Capl' ' ' U' . ' ' . F. J Sr Malo' CUPV- H- A' shag? Cap C onJEr. CaPl D. L. Fenlon, MDI0' H' Fqgusgnii Roiv, Lefl , C I J. S. Ohina. I1 F. XR'Cl'l7?g'l si ULF: J. F. Hickman, Jr.. CAPT lo I9 -W . h LT J W Deyton, CAPT G. LLfHHAAawgpgqgg1 ' ., CAPT s. J. in er. 1 - - l:r2:3Fl'3ll:l Row. lvl! lv Righrflasiwtllrlruig chrmaasen, J'-f ' LT B' As Ssilh ilr LT LT R- A- 5l 'P' MAJOR E ' 1 :LT n L RV L' Cam 15, L-r R,E,M8lfll1eW, s . . Hoffman. ind LT J' H' Dams' 27l Nitty. I . ,, . I+ , A-K .- . he Lf- . L1 Phn- VMA-'224 Front Row, Left to Right: F. D. Spencer, R. H. Layton, S. S. Engarto, J. W. Marlowe C. F. Benoit, Jr., D, P. Stafford, R. P. Wilson, A. G. Glassco, W. C. Butler, Jr., H. McKinzie. 2nd Row, Left to Right: P. H. Hendricks, C. T. Forrester, R. S. Haggcrton, R. E. Crutch- field, B. L. Marsh, H. R. Lee, J, A. Ward, T. J. Barrington, M. J. Music, R. P. Monthey. Jrd Row, Left to Right: J. J. Colcolough, H. T. Westbrook, C. Moore, R. C. Sanders, W. J. Thomas, R. M. Joos, R. E. Howard, D. T. Martin, G. O. Boudreaux, T. G. Shown. Y 11...- VMA-224 , Front Row, Left to Right: G. R. Childs, W. E. Q Childs, W. E. Hall, E. E. Zmuda, C. l. if Muender,Muender, W. J. Harrington, J. C. Talley, Jr., T. J. Zalrielarz, W. D. McCormick, F D. D. Williams, R. R. Sellitsch. 2nd Row- I, Left to Right: B. D. Merrill, W. A. Delano, U R. F. Montgomery, J. G. Mates, V. A. Mal- 'L S x -. colm, R. A. Proot, J. S. Clements, S. Mc Graph, M. L. Reisch. 3rd Row, Left to Right: W. Overton, R. G. Young, R. J. Wood, B. J. Strickley, E. Emery, W. J. Clover, R. C. 4- Custer. T. F. Jones, P. S. Carson. 'N .UJSLJIC7 VMA-224 Front Row, Left to Right: J. T. Olson, Jr., J. E. Kester, S. C. Abrams, E. C. Holly, D. C. . Huss, L. M. Dolan, O. S. Shealey, W. Cole- J' man, F. A. Rockey, R. J. Levosseur. 2nd Row, Lett to Right: W. C. Earley, Jr., C. W. Daw- ' kins, R. D. Addison, F. D. Ruble, D. T. Por dan, c. E. Turner, T. P. oodechufk, c. of A i, Hulse, Jr., P. J. Delapouyade. 3rd Row, Lett l 7 fo Rfght: F. D. Metcalf, E. F. Hardwick, H. 4 H. Livingston, H. J. Callahan, J. A. Duniho ' R. L. Bailey. K. H. Coonley, F. E. Daley. i 272 - f I VMA-224 lb-, 50351, .fl ES mam Fronl Row, Left lo Righl: J. W. Roberts, F. D. Melious, J. E. Penler, L. R. Cigna, C. E. Miller, J. W. Mitchell, R. A. Miller, D. M. Cliclmer, H. E. Holliday, C. 5. Perreoult Second Row, Le!! lo Righlz F. W. Wilson, G M. Ridley, G. E. Brennan, J. W. Meskauskas Jr., E. F. Ross, R. B. McLaughlin, J. M Voigt, J. W. Harvlilc, J. R. Evans. Third Row Lell lo Righl: R N. Gould, J. F. Mclinden L. D. Delerrari, J. A, Plan, Jr., J. Felchen Jr., E. B. Clark, Jr., D. R. Huckaby, G G Lambert, Jr., J. R. Boker, Jr. ,ff 'fm i Y f P' N 1 0 .Z Y ...ffl vox W, an .D 1 Y' L Ar , P + ,KVM alfa ff- wgfa, A wfffifl-' D 1 -Q .-al' .-11 -af N,-, ,,.:-H 'v' .-. KR, ' -1-481 'Q-Q gl n Q- -ivl-n'-iQ' flil-Q - ,,. ,,.. ., -A,-i..ggf ..- L iga ...Q ' -fi' aw f .,:tg,g Pat Allen Tony Coppola A.J. Dale John Hekbst Mac lVlcCoy Bill Reyn Bob Rolston Bill Ryan John Shuff Brad Simcox Howie Thayer he ace 0 c. , f , f I DEPE DEN CE 276 -The Editors Reflections of CVA-62's First Mediterranean Deployment 4 August 1960-3 March 1961 s Adviser: LCDR Jack Harlow Co-Editors: LTJG Ronn Brinn, Text. ENS Jack Bledsoe, Photography. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks. ..to our super shoot-em-up field phototeam of Dan Nachtsheim, Mac McGowan, Fran Smith, Rolland Nelsen, Dick Con- rad, Bob Corbin, Larry Hills, lsaac Henry, Doyne Dugger, Bill Gibb, and Chico Ramirez... and to their ace, rapid-fire lab assistants down below including Noland Nelson, Ron Jobmann, Herb Gibbs, Bernard Bagdonas, Alan Wismer, Jim Greenwald, Jim Kelly, Larry Sinott, Robert Ekshian, Mike Cutler, Dick McKeever, and Henry White...for caring enough to give LCDR Barney Smith...and us. . .their very best . .. Thanks . . .to all the other l-men whose favorite transparencies have been reproduced to highlight the color pages of this book . . . Thanks . . .to ENS Al Smithson for his dynamic ship's story and his vivid account of Christmas abroad . . . and to ENS Kirk Newell and LTJG John Hayward for their striking profile of CVG-7 in and out of the air . . . Thanks . . . to LT Red lsaacks, our Associate Editor and his wing of squadron reporters: 1!LT Bob Carr, LT Charlie Choyce, LT Bill Mellette, LTJG Ray Huttig, LT George Clark, LT Bob Bristol, LT L D Nagel, LT Bill Miller, LTJG Bill Rauschmeier, and LT George Neal. . . PlO's all... Thanks. . .to George Sagal and Tom Saunby, and assistants Bob Crenshaw and Tom Heath, for their neatness, speed, accuracy and endurance in typing and retyping the text of this book. . . Thanks.. .to ENS AI Ablowich, our Business Manager, and to all his departmental agents for their can do salesmanship in selling a product sight unseen . . . Thanks . . .to Bill Earley our Marine tracer of lost names, for his many photo-identifcations . . . and to ENS Joe Lang and ENS Al Col- lamore, our contemporary guides, for their timely research . . . Thanks. . .to our Welfare and Recreation Fund for assuming approximately one half the cost of this book . . . Thanks. . .to Faith and Howard Wohl and Frank D'AnnunZio of H. G. Roebuck, our publishers, for their patient, polished and profes- sional assistance in making this publication possible . .. Thanks . . . to our readers who were andfor are the faces of INDE- PENDENCE . . . lt is to these men that this book is dedicated. . . LCDR JACK HARLOW LTJG RONN BRINN ENS JACK BLEDSOE , --+- 1 1. . ,f .A ,,:,'! ,, 42 ,:.5,' fff-.2 ij Asa. E- 1 v k. - 11.5 . 4 1 ff, e. ,f MTE- . f ,fi ' 4. 1.5513 i jf ' ,jf , J pmfl'-1.-fm 1 .-, -1. www X , v 2.-.-Affssfv ,nj ifiizf If 1? 7 434 1. .zwf . V. mt 1 . ,. ,,,,.,Q, , 5 . ,Nw-4 tr,k.1.3, -e- mam, 1 i '- T512 xg, ,. f -Wlffxf , . . , .Q .7--K fr. W, 3... r 5.4 Q ::.,,i,,5f,-1 Afxty- A. ., Q. iff ,12 -1 . . .Quiz-112,gfL.,i2Q'-.41 . 1 lr-.1 if ' f 1, ,Z W .-, 3 L. ., X ,g3r1'f:f'--- 1 A 'rf' , 9-.Q KE? if 4 1 Q ' t4,i,.l.' R, . 1 .V A 3 I 3 P..-Qffap-+ 11: '1' if 1 A , W 15. .11 , ' 1'- iggftinii :iii ' - .if ' .,., Jw 'Aww .,-.,K': :j 57'? ' t-35555135-I2-:gg'?f iffiifi ' 55.15 1f1xf'iVff9,'-1251, 7 . 'I '3'-ggvwb-n.,-.F f 5- f' ,lag .5-gr fgi.jF:Efv'Z. . A - ' '- new fav. iff 1 'YF' 4 , . , w 1 . .- Lx,-. x ,w,3'.i1y,.:,,,J51, ,-Q 43551-fun.: gf .5 -4? 'fE:1'T:ffUlx2L4?- A .-Khin -V H- L-- ,T 11 . .Ujfg ', ' 2' .-111' 5 -1.1: . . ' 1u'T'V3'f'5'J-.Z 3' .. .fail ' 'Afwiggzfrsw .ia ,., iffj-Aw 'lifgug . 5 'W mfqxgi.-'1 4. 51:91--?-' ' W. 555 4' 5125 f .-:Af1'1f- .1 ' A iff: ,Qjllj L V A 1 N -Q5 I , f E:m.:'H4'f'6 -f -' f .. Q .H -,y..,35'.. .45 fy.--5 V ., .,,. v. ide-iku1'f.j .2 A-X ' ' '-ri ...,,,4,5v. J- I .- ,gl ,X- I U64iE.L:f 'A N' 'ear vi- . Q 2 A '13 . F .-. ,. W J ' is-'59 sa: f-. ' - . ,p. '. Ff -:ii - 1. A--J' .Q-31:0 if t .J ,,g+,.n f , .T-E f-, . ia gg. 3-1 -.:,-gr. - , A v . M Y ' N' v 4. -'--2-..,'z,.gv 1 1. ,gx J 4' 5.3 .- 1 'Hun -1' if .T 1 1 , n 1 i A ' gtk., .x.1..?I' lf'-4 4 4 5 if-q, MSE, rfA 's' 'f?'f .'1f ' '. iffX2T LIBRARY 'I' V .f 'X. Q Eff-gfffilk NAVY YARD 1 5 at 'l-XMI ,,. I. H xiLg1e1n?c:Nw'c'fra.o,C. 20374-0571 1 ,, ...ac-,'Q:, 4.2 f ., ,Le I ...-4 i 1 . Legg , . ?. 1 , ,g J,
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.