SAPR training Feb. 19-20 ... The NASP Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR) program is currently offering SAPR Point of Contact, Data Collection Coordinator and Command Liaison training Feb. 19-20. The Point of Contact class will be held Feb. 19 from 8 a.m.noon, the Data Collection Coordinator class will be Feb. 19 from 1-3 p.m., and the Command Liaison class will be held Feb. 20 from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. All classes will be taught at NASP Fleet and Family Support Center. To register, contact Kristy Malone, civilian victim advocate, at 452-5328; or call NASP Fleet and Family Support Center 452-5990, ext. 0.
Vol. 79, No. 6
VISIT GOSPORT ONLINE: www.gosportpensacola.com
February 13, 2015
NETC announces 2014 Training Excellence Awards Lt.j.g. Michael Hathaway NETC Public Affairs
The commander, Naval Education and Training Command (NETC) announced the winners of the 2014 Training Excellence Awards (TEA) Feb. 3, honoring superior accomplishment in supporting NETC’s mission. These annual awards recognize commands that demonstrate the highest standards of training excellence in meeting fleet established requirements. “Delivering the highest standards of training and education ensures that our Navy continues to be the best in the world,” said Rear Adm. Mike White, NETC commander. “The winners of this year’s Training Excellence Awards epitomize the highest degree of training excellence found throughout the NETC enterprise and represent thousands of instructors and support staff around the globe. They all work exceptionally hard delivering cutting-edge training, ensuring that highly trained, top-quality Sailors are available to meet the needs of the fleet.” The Training Excellence Award competition structure resembles the Battle Ef-
fectiveness (Battle “E”) competition held throughout the fleet; recognizing sustained superior performance in an operational environment within a command. At the end of the year, each NETC training headquarters directorate assesses the learning centers and training support centers based on established performance measures, and total the results. Areas evaluated include results of Inspector General (IG) and safety visits, how well the staff manages training and student throughput, correct handling of specialty items such as ordnance, radiation and highrisk training. TEA Board Coordinator Dorothy Singleton noted that winning in the TEA categories is no easy task. “The 2014 TEA competition details the incredibly hard work performed in and behind the classrooms,” said Singleton. “The bottom line is delivering training that meets fleet requirements, and each of the winners demonstrated significant improvements and accomplishments as they carried out NETC’s strategic goals.” NETC training activities and those that conduct NETC training courses are eligible for TEA awards. The competition is
See TEA on page 2
Lance Cpl. Amanda Serrano (kneeling) and Cpl. Silina Lee (right) from Marine Aviation Training Support Group 21 give Mardi Gras beads to Haley Huggins, a fifth-grader from Lipscomb Elementary during the Escambia Westgate School community Mardi Gras parade Feb. 6. The annual parade is held to give special-needs students the experience of Mardi Gras.
NASP Marines help bring Mardi Gras to Westgate School Story, photo by Ed Barker
Volunteers from NAS Pensacola’s Marine Aviation Training Support Group 21 (MATSG-21) helped bring Mardi Gras to a group of special school children Feb. 6. Escambia Westgate is a school filled with very special people – teachers, staff and personal aides – who work every day to create the best educational experiences possible for their students
who all have severe and profound disabilities – from ages three to 22 years old. For many of these students, going to the downtown parades is just not possible. The Westgate Mardi Gras parade started in 1995 with three teachers pulling carts behind a riding lawn mower and throwing beads. This year, the parade involved hundreds of volunteers from more than 50 organizations.
See MATSG-21 on page 2
NASP conducts active-shooter drill By Janet Thomas Gosport Staff Writer
NMCRS 2015 drive kicks off By Cher Holland Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society
Feb. 17 marks the kickoff of the annual Active Duty Fund Drive in support of the Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society (NMCRS). This fund drive is the main source of funds NMCRS used to help Sailors, Marines and their families. In 2014 alone, NMCRS provided $48.5 million to 63,800 eligible clients. These millions of dollars aided families in basic living expenses, transportation, car repairs, family emergencies,
See NMCRS on page 2
NASP’s crisis response forces got a good work out during an active-shooter drill Feb. 5 aboard Naval Air Station Pensacola (NASP). The drill, which was part of the Navy’s nationwide Exercise Solid Curtain-Citadel Shield 2015, involved a realistic scenario, said Chris Steinnecker, N7 Training and Readiness coordinator at NASP. It started with a suspect, played by GM2 Sean Prior of the NASP Security Department, rushing into Air Operations, Bldg. 1852, at Forrest Sherman Field with an M-14 rifle. The target of the attack was NASP Air Operations Officer Cmdr. Dan Heidt. Prior fired off seven magazines, or about 140 blanks, before security forces moved in to resolve the situation. Steinnecker said the suspect was “neutralized,” and in addition to the deceased
NAS Pensacola Security Department personnel clear rooms at the scene of an active-shooter drill, part of Solid Curtain-Citadel Shield 2015, an annual exercise focused on training and readiness. Photo by Mike O’Connor For more photos of the exercise, see page A4.
shooter, the casualty count was one dead and two wounded, including Heidt, with an arm wound. As part of the response, security and emergency personnel were called to the scene and NASP’s Emergency Operations Center was activated. Basewide emergency alerts to implement activeshooter procedures also were issued. Security officials said a new system called “Single
Officer Response” was used during the drill. The first officers at the scene moved in at once instead of waiting for backup to arrive. NASP Executive Officer Cmdr. David Jasso said the drill was valuable in that it helps to ensure that NAS Pensacola first responders are trained and prepared to respond in a manner that reduces or eliminates loss of life. “While the training
proves invaluable for our first responders, it is also of benefit to the many that work aboard the installation every day; testing our ability to communicate with installation personnel and their planned responses to a scenario like this,” he said. Burt Fenters, emergency manager at NASP, said the active-shooter exercise went very well. “An active-shooter scenario is one of the most challenging, rapidly developing scenarios that is usually over in minutes and, in most cases, has a potential high casualty count,” he said. “One of the largest challenges we face is getting the word out to over 20,000 personnel on board the installation complex (NAS Pensacola, NASP Corry Station, NASP Saufley Field and Blue Angel Recreation Park) within minutes.” Fenters said that to ensure the word gets out and mitigate a potential high
New hours for Urgent Care Center By Jason Bortz NHP PAO
Beginning today, Feb. 13, Naval Hospital Pensacola’s (NHP) Urgent Care Center (UCC) will be open daily from 8 a.m.-8 p.m. The UCC is open seven days a week including holidays and is available for all TRICARE beneficiaries including TRICARE Prime, TRICARE Standard, TRICARE For Life and TRICARE Young Adult. “Our heaviest flow of patients is usually in the morning, so we adjusted our hours to better accommodate our
See UCC on page 2
See SC/CS on page 2
Published by Ballinger Publishing, a private firm in no way connected with the Department of the Navy. Opinions contained herein are not official expressions of the Department of the Navy nor do the advertisements constitute Department of the Navy, NAS Pensacola or Ballinger Publishing’s endorsement of products or services advertised.
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
Military Saves: Budget tips From Military Saves.org
CO signs Military Saves ... At NAS Pensacola Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC), Naval Air Station Pensacola Commanding Officer Capt. Keith Hoskins (seated, center) signs a proclamation declaring the week of Feb. 2328 “Military Saves Week.” The Military Saves program encourages military personnel, their families and government employees to save, invest and pay down debt. With Hoskins are (left-right) Patty Veal, Pen Air Federal Credit Union; Joe Henderson, FFSC PFM specialist; ACC Nathaniel Sobey, NATTC Lead CFS; ABECS Jimmie Wells, CNATT Lead CFS; and Lisa Mclain-Sharp, FFSC PFM specialist. NASP FFSC photo
TEA from page 1
MATSG-21 from page 1
composed of three categories the Learning Center Training Excellence “T” Award, the Training Support Center Training Support Excellence “TS” Award and Functional Excellence Awards. The 2014 Pensacola area award winners are: The Learning Center recipients of the Functional Awards: • Center for Naval Aviation Technical Training, Pensacola, Florida Business Administration and Support (Yellow T) Planning and Programming (Silver T) Logistics Management Award (Blue T): Curriculum Management Award (Black T) Training Production Management Award (Green T) Training Support Management Award (Bronze T) Financial Management Award (Purple T) • Center for Information Dominance, Pensacola, Florida Logistics Management Award (Blue T) Information Technology Management Award (Gold T) Curriculum Management Award (Black T) Training Production Management Award (Green T) Training Support Management Award (Bronze T) A plaque and a burgee will be presented to the award winners. Commands are authorized to display the burgee throughout the 2015 calendar year to indicate their outstanding accomplishments and excellence in delivery of education and training. For more information about Naval Education and Training Command, visit https://www. netc. navy. mil/ and www. navy. mil/ local/ cnet/.
Ed Berry, a retired Navy helicopter pilot and member of the Pensacola Civitan Club has been volunteering with his organization at the Westgate Mardi Gras parade since the early days. “It has become one of the favorite parades of the season for many of the participants,” said Berry. “Over the years we have also learned that this parade is different. We can’t just throw things to the kids, we need to have people to hand the beads or toys to the children, or even put the beads around the necks of the students who need help.” It may be the closeness that makes participation so much more personal for the volunteers.
How can those who currently aren’t saving afford to save money? And how can those saving only a little save more? Here are Military Saves’ top tips for saving money when budgets are tight. Tip 1: To find small savings that add up to big savings over time, keep a careful record of all (and we mean all) of your expenditures for a month. You may be surprised to learn how much you are spending on such things as a daily latte or restaurant meals. Tip 2: For necessary purchases – such as food and transportation and insurance – comparison shop. Remember your commissary and exchange can offer you savings year-
round. Utilize these savings opportunities as you would your other military benefits. Tip 3: Restrain spending for birthdays and holidays, especially Christmas. A few well-chosen gifts are likely to be more appreciated than a more costly pile of gifts chosen thoughtlessly in a shopping mall foray. Tip 4: Interest rates on credit card debts and other retail credit lines can easily run 25 percent. You can save hundreds, perhaps thousands, of dollars a year by paying off these highcost debts. If you are located at a military installation you can get assistance at the family readiness center for free. Personal financial managers and counselors are there to help and can be a
Marine Corps Cpl. Silina Lee, from Marine Aviation Training Support Group 21 onboard NAS Pensacola, acknowledged that she initially didn’t know the details of the Mardi Gras parade, but as soon as she saw the children, she was hooked. “Being there was such a great experience; to see the joy on the faces of those kids just from us giving them beads, and shaking hands,” said Lee. “They made me happy knowing I made their day special. They had so much energy that even when my energy started to die down, they brought it back up with their smiles, and laughter.” The 2015 parade included krewes, businesses, law enforcement, ambulances, vintage cars, motorcycles, horses, clowns, military service men and women and decorated golf
great asset in getting a debt repayment plan in order. Another resource is NASP Fleet and Family Support Center (452-5102); they also offer free financial counseling. Tip 5: Build an emergency fund to avoid having to take loans to pay for unexpected purchases. That fund is usually best kept in a savings account, despite the low interest rates such accounts pay right now. But do try to keep a high enough balance in the account to avoid monthly fees many on-base banks and credit unions participate in Military Saves Week and offer great savings options during the Week and throughout the year. To learn more visit http:// www. military saves.org.
carts. Every vehicle had someone throwing beads and toys. Other volunteers walked the parade route to hand out beads to those who were not physically able to catch them. “The kids have known the parade was coming for a while now and they arrived very excited,” said Terry Colburn, Escambia Westgate’s principal. “Over the years this mini-parade has grown to be an amazing show of community support for our students, their teachers, and our support staff. We also are so happy when the special education classes from McArthur Elementary and Lipscomb are able to come over and join in.” To learn more about volunteer and mentoring opportunities with local schools, visit the Escambia County Schools website: https://ecsd-fl.schoolloop.com/volunteers.
SC/CS from page 1
UCC from page 1
casualty count, the customer – i.e. base personnel – has to do their homework. “Trying to figure out what to do when an active-shooter event is occurring is too late,” he said. Here are two key recommendations from Fenters: • Have good contact information in the Installation Mass Warning System known as AtHoc. If you have an NMCI account, you can self-populate your information. If you are not Navy or Navy DoD, you can still have your information entered easily through a spreadsheet that the installation can provide. If you need help, contact your command emergency management coordinator. If you do not know who your coordinator is, ask the chain of command. If you still have questions, contact Fenters at the emergency management office, and he will help you. You can reach him by phone at 452-4481 or by e-mail at alan.fenters@navy.mil. • Personnel should have already practiced a drill in their work environment. They should be familiar with at least two ways to exit their work space, how to barricade themselves in their work area, and what to do once they are barricaded, such as silence cell phones and pull shades over windows. Fenters said multiple training aids are available, but timely notification, alerts, training and awareness are the most important tools personnel can use to increase the odds that they will not be a victim. Exercise Solid Curtain-Citadel Shield is the largest Force Protection exercise across the Department of Defense and is conducted by Commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command and Commander (USFF), Navy Installations Command (NISC). It consists of roughly 130 simultaneous field training exercise attacks across the country. NASP, Corry Station and Saufley Field participated in the exercise, which started Feb. 2 and is scheduled to end today, Feb. 13. Other operations included gate events and increased Force Protection. Exercise Solid Curtain-Citadel Shield is a regularly scheduled event and is not a result of any specific threat, officials said.
beneficiaries,” said Cmdr. Carolyn Rice, director of Medical Services, NHP. “We analyzed the data and listened to comments from our beneficiaries to make the decision to change the hours.” TRICARE beneficiaries can visit the UCC for acute care symptoms such as minor lacerations and injuries, fevers, sore throats and cough. Beneficiaries with severe or life threatening injuries or illnesses such as head trauma, strokes or heart attacks should call 911 or visit the closest emergency room. TRICARE’s Nurse Advice Line is also available 24/7 at 1-800-TRICARE, option 1, to assist beneficiaries in deciding if a visit to an ER is appropriate. One of the benefits of using NHP’s UCC is that it is located within a hospital, which means beneficiaries with more serious conditions such as appendicitis, pneumonia, gallbladder pain or infections could be immediately admitted to the hospital and treated. While the UCC is open to all TRICARE beneficiaries, those enrolled with a Medical Home Port Team at NHP or one of its local branch clinics are highly encouraged to contact their Medical Home Port Team during normal hours before visiting the UCC. The Medical Home Port Team offers same day appointments and provides beneficiaries with continuity of care by its team of healthcare providers. Evening and weekend appointments can be made at UCC by either calling the UCC at 505-6731 or by visiting www. TRICARE online. com.
Vol. 79, No. 6
February 13, 2015
Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla.: A Bicentennial Defense Community Commanding Officer — Capt. Keith Hoskins Public Affairs Officer — Patrick J. Nichols The Gosport nameplate pays homage to the 100th anniversary of naval aviation in 2011: the Centennial of Naval Aviation, or CONA. The image on the left side of the nameplate depicts Eugene Ely taking off in a Curtiss pusher bi-plane from the USS Pennsylvania Jan. 18, 1911. While Ely had taken off from the USS Birmingham two months earlier after his plane had been loaded on the ship, the USS Pennsylvania event was the first time a plane landed on and then took off from a U.S. warship.
The image on the right side is the Navy’s most modern fighter aircraft, the F-18 Super Hornet. Established in 1921 as the Air Station News, the name Gosport was adopted in 1936. A gosport was a voice tube used by flight instructors in the early days of naval aviation to give instructions and directions to their students. The name “Gosport” was derived from Gosport, England (originally God’s Port), where the voice tube was invented. Gosport is an authorized newspaper published every Friday by Ballinger Publishing,
NMCRS from page 1
funeral expenses, household setups, medical/dental expenses, education and more. Founded in 1904, the Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society is a private, non-profit charitable organization. It is sponsored by the Department of the Navy and operates about 250 offices ashore and afloat at Navy and Marine Corps bases throughout the world. The Pensacola office of Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society, located aboard NAS Pensacola in Bldg. 191 at 91 Radford Blvd., is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays (except for holidays) and can be reached at 452-2300.
The Rhodes Building, 41 North Jefferson Street, Suite 402, Pensacola, FL 32504, in the interest of military and civilian personnel and their families aboard the Naval Air Station Pensacola, Saufley Field and Corry Station. Editorial and news material is compiled by the Public Affairs Office, 150 Hase Road, Ste.-A, NAS Pensacola, FL 32508-1051. All news releases and related materials should be mailed to that address, e-mailed to scott.hallford@navy.mil. National news sources are American Forces Press Service (AFPS), Navy News Service (NNS), Air Force News Service (AFNS), News USA and North American Precis Syndicate (NAPS). Opinions expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of the Department of Defense, United States Navy, officials of the Naval Air Station Pensacola, or Ballinger Publishing. All advertising, including classified ads, is arranged through Ballinger Publishing. Minimum weekly circulation is 25,000. Everything advertised in this publication must be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to rank, rate, race, creed, color, national origin or sex of the purchaser, user or patron. A confirmed rejection of this policy of equal opportunities by an advertiser will result in the refusal of future advertising from that source.
For classified ads, call: (850) 433-1166, ext. 24 For commercial advertising: Simone Sands (850) 433-1166, ext. 21 Simone@ballingerpublishing.Com Visit Us On The Web At: Ballinger Publishing.Com Mail To: Gosport, NAS Pensacola, 150 Hase Road, Ste.-A, Pensacola, FL 32508-1051
Gosport Editor
Scott Hallford 452-4466 scott.hallford@navy.mil Gosport Associate Editor
Mike O’Connor 452-2165 michael.f.oʼconnor.ctr@navy.mil Gosport Staff Writer
Janet Thomas 452-4419 janet.thomas.ctr@navy.mil
February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
COMMENTARY
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Now is the time to write your chapter of naval history By MC2 Eric Lockwood Naval History and Heritage Command, Communication and Outreach Division
W
ASHINGTON (NNS) – If you haven’t started, now’s the time to begin gathering together your command’s Command Operations Report (COR) in preparation for the March 1 deadline, and to make the process easier, commands can now submit their reports electronically. Additional information about Command Operations Reports as well as a COR template can be downloaded: go to www.history.navy.mil/about-us/instructions-and-forms/submit-a-command-operations-report.html. By policy, all ships, submarines, squadrons and Navy commands listed in the Standard Navy Distribution List are required to submit a COR to the Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC) operational archive. The COR archive permanently records command operations and major achievements for future generations. For shore commands and squadrons, it’s the only record that remains reliably on file for future reference as they, unlike ships, don’t use deck logs. “In previous years, NHHC didn’t have reliable electronic storage capacity to receive all of the reports commands submitted via e-mail,” said Joe Gordon, NHHC’s lead reference archivist. This year, that limitation has been removed. It’s also been simplified. “In the past, we have had three smaller
How to submit a commentary
electronic mailboxes for Unclassified COR submissions. This year, we would like all unclassified COR submissions sent to archivemail@navy.mil in order to avoid confusion and decrease duplicate submissions. Confidential and secret CORs should be sent to the classified electronic mailbox, archives@navy. smil.mil.” However, Gordon said, “Top secret CORs should be forwarded via courier to NHHC, and SCI CORs and supporting materials should be forwarded via courier to the Office of Naval Intelligence. Reports and enclosures too large to be sent electronically may still be mailed-being careful to follow the guidelines for submitting classified material.” When e-mailing CORs, commands should use this subject heading: “Title of Command) COR Submission.” For example: “USS George Washington (CVN 73) COR Submission.” Additionally, said Laura Waayers, an NHHC archivist, “If people are sending photographs, CD-ROMs, or any other hard copy item, those need to be sent via
UPS or FedEx, not via the postal service. Our incoming mail is subjected to security measures and this process tends to damage just about everything. Unfortunately in the past, we have received historically valuable items in the mail that have been completely ruined. Photographs have been stuck together, ink has peeled off of documents, CD-ROMs have been damaged, etc.” For those who may never have written a COR before, the guiding instruction is OpNav 5750.12K. While the entire document should be read and understood, the heart of it is section three, the monthly chronology and narrative. The chronology includes major operational and other significant events by month, and the narrative provides details and context for each major event. Note: the listed e-mail address in the instruction has been replaced by the e-mail address for providing NHHC with unclassified material. When writing and compiling the report, commands should include any documents related to their primary activities, like deployments, underway periods, qualifications achieved and awards earned. Accuracy is essential. According to the archives staff, in the past, some important activities and information have been left out and “unpleasant” information deliberately omitted altogether, distorting the historical record. “A piece of advice to keep in mind is to use plain language,” said Waayers.
Spell out acronyms, describe operation names, etc. “The people who will be using these reports, for the most part, do not know what all the acronyms and abbreviations mean. I’ve been working for the Navy for five years, but I’m still learning ‘Navy speak’,” she said. These records retained at NHHC are a key source to respond to questions from veterans, Congress, scholars, media and the public about general naval history as well as historic details from specific ships and commands. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests are common, as well. When there’s no report to refer to, there is a gaping hole in the Navy’s historical narrative which also means the hard work and efforts of Navy commands and people go unrecognized. What’s worse is a missing COR may have contained the piece of information a veteran needed to acquire essential benefits such as medical care. To help compile a report, authors may consider keeping a diary throughout the year and have access to key documents and reports. Exceptions to the March 1 deadline are possible, but commands need to contact NHHC in order to get this extension. For more information, contact John Greco at John.Greco1@navy.mil, Laura Waayers at laura.waayers@navy.mil, or Dale “Joe” Gordon at dale.gordon@ navy.mil, or call the NHHC Operational Archive front desk at (202) 433-3224.
Commentaries are the opinion of the writer and should not be interpreted as official government, Navy or command policy statements. Reader submissions are welcome but should not exceed 800 words. Submissions must be bylined and include a daytime phone number or e-mail contact for the writer. All submissions are subject to editing to comply with policy and standards. Send Commentary submissions to Janet.Thomas.ctr@navy.mil.
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
e s i rc
N I A T R U C D I D L L O E S DEL SH5I A 1 T I 0 C 2 exe
During Navywide force protection Exercise Solid Curtain-Citadel Shield, held Feb. 2-13, NAS Pensacola security and emergency personnel demonstrated force readiness and abilities to prepare for – and defend against – any and all threats.
During an active-shooter exercise Feb. 5, the “gunman” – enacted by NASP Security’s GM2 Sean Prior – sprints across the parking lot and into Bldg. 1852. Photo by Mike O’Connor
‘ACTIVE SHOOTER’ exercise in Air Ops
Members of the emergency response team at NASP gather around a map in the NAS Pensacola Security Department personnel move in at the scene of an activebase’s Emergency Operations Center during an active-shooter drill for Exercise Solid shooter drill. Under “Single Officer Response” doctrine, these officers – first at the Curtain-Citadel Shield 2015. Photo by Janet Thomas scene – move in at once. Photo by Mike O’Connor
NAS Pensacola Security Department personnel sweep A simulated victim lies Emergency responders from NAS Pensacola’s Fire & Emergency Services Gulf Coast hallways and rooms in a search for the gunman. Photo sprawled. Photo by Mike arrive at the scene of an active-shooter drill, part of Exercise Solid Curtain-Citadel by Mike O’Connor O’Connor Shield 2015. Several “casualties” were treated. Photo by Mike O’Connor
GOSPORT
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NHP: Responding to all situations Story, photo by MC1 James Stenberg NHP PAO
N
ormally, a rapid response team (RRT) consists of health care providers trained in early resuscitation intervention and advanced life support who respond to hospitalized patients with early signs of clinical deterioration in non-intensive care units to prevent respiratory or cardiac arrest. Naval Hospital Pensacola (NHP) utilizes its RRT to respond to any medical emergency that may occur at NHP. “The team responds to any sort of acute emergency that might happen in the hospital,” said Lt. Amy Starling, division officer, intensive care unit, NHP. “The purpose of our rapid response team is to bring critical care expertise to the patient whenever or wherever it’s needed.” With the conversion last year of the emergency room at NHP to an Urgent Care Center, the priorities of NHP’s rapid response team have shifted to encompass new areas of responsibilities. “Traditionally, the rapid response team was an inpatient function,”
said Starling. “If there was a patient admitted to one of the wards and the nursing staff felt the patient had a concerning change in their status during a regular assessment, they could call the rapid response team to get extra eyes on the patient. “When the emergency room (converted), we were faced with the situation of where to send a patient if they (needed immediate medical care). The rapid response team allows immediate triage and discharge of the patient. If a patient does have a life-threatening issue, the rapid response team can quickly assess and treat the patient.” When the rapid response team is called, three possible outcomes
Veranda
could occur. The team will both treat the patient and inform them to follow up with their provider, admit the patient and treat the patient at NHP or stabilize the patient before transporting the patient to another medical care facility. The availability of NHP’s rapid response team to the entire hospital has had positive effects on the patients as well as the staff. “I’m proud of the new initiative that expands rapid response to outpatient care,” said Lt. Cmdr. Gabrielle Crane, department head, 5 West Medical-Surgical Ward, NHP. “I think it encourages a lot of team work across the hospital and it’s a great resource that anyone can call upon. It increases patient safety
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Naval Hospital Pensacola (NHP) rapid response team members respond to a call. Since the conversion of the emergency room to an Urgent Care Clinic, the RRT has been available to respond to any medical situation in the hospital in a hurry.
and encourages a culture of teamwork.” The hospital conducts regular training to make sure all staff members are able to recognize the signs of patients in distress and how to properly call for the rapid response team. “One of the most meaningful stories since the implementation of
the rapid response team was a response from the general surgery clinic,” said Starling. “A patient was walking past the general surgery clinic with obvious facial drooping and slurred speech. A staff member immediately recognized the warning signs for a stroke, even though the patient had not, and acti-
vated the rapid response team. The team arrived and immediately got the patient (transferred) to a facility that specializes in stroke care.” Due to the efforts and training of the rapid response team, patients like this one and others are able to get the critical attention they need in a timely manner.
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
Travel road show coming to NASWF Feb. 24 By Ens. Jon Spoehr NAS Whiting Field Public Affairs
M
ore than 20 vendors from across the region will descend on Naval Air Station Whiting Field (NASWF) Feb. 24 to bring the best, most exciting and exotic in travel opportunities to members of the Whiting Field community. The Amazing World of Travel Expo will provide three hours of opportunities for discounts, travel information and door prizes in the base atrium from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. This event was set up by Information Tickets and Travel (ITT) director Marcy Allen and this is the third time the expo has come to NAS Whiting Field, although similar events have been running for more than 15 years at other area bases “This is a travel show that will be informative and fun. It is a great chance for base personnel
to speak with different travel establishments all in one place,” she said. “Tourism, hotels, activities and other venues will be represented. It is a wonderful time to ask representatives about new events, what they have to offer, various specials and more.” Given the geographic location of the base, many of the vendors will be Central Florida oriented, but vendors from other states in the area including Louisiana, Alabama and Georgia, will be on hand as well as some national travel companies. Participants
Information Tickets and Travel (ITT) Manager Marcy Allen speaks to one of the vendors at a previous year’s travel expo at Naval Air Station Whiting Field. U.S. Navy file photo
will include companies such as: Sandals Resorts, Universal, Busch Gardens, Emerald Coast Tours, Wonderworks, first time attendee Carnival Cruise Lines, and many more. All of these vendors are specifically chosen because they provide military discounts to travelers. Most of the attending travel companies
are supplying gifts for the door prizes and they will include gift baskets, tickets, vouchers and free hotel stays. There may even be some spontaneous prizes given away throughout the event. Allen and her co-worker in the ITT office, Cynthia Meyers, have been working for several months to make this event happen, and
they are excited at the prospect of supporting this event to benefit the base populace. “We are really looking forward to bringing an awareness to Whiting Field about travel opportunities and the services that ITT provides. It’s going to be well worth the effort,” Allen emphasized.
Bass being stocked in NASWF waters Story, photo by Lt.j.g. Laurence Clemente NAS Whiting Field Public Affairs
Things in the retention ponds along USS Intrepid Street are set to get a lot fishier over the next few months. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) released 75 largemouth bass in the retention pond Jan 20. This is in an effort to recover that ecosystem and ensure it thrives for years to come. The ponds were surveyed last year and there was found to be an overwhelming presence of bream, which range from one to six inches in length. “The presence of so many bream as opposed to other species was indicative of an ecosystem out of balance,” said Ron Cherry, natural resources manager at Naval Air Station Whiting Field. Largemouth bass are a natural predator of the bream, and will bring their presence in the retention ponds back to a reasonable level. The 75 largemouth bass were added
Largemouth bass are released in retention ponds at Naval Air Station Whiting Field. Approximately 75 bass were released Jan. 20 in the attempt to cultivate a healthy pond ecosystem. While largemouth bass are still currently catch-and-release only, these bass will grow to be 12-18 inches in length.
based on the size of the ponds, which can support 50 bass per acre according to FWC biologist Matt Wegner. “The bass that were added are currently eight to 12 inches long and may
grow as big as 16 inches in the months to come,” said Cherry. The increased predation by the bass on the bluefin populations will also cause the bream average sizes to increase as well, pleas-
ing local anglers. The ponds remain catch-and-release only, but this may change in the coming months. “As the bass populations in the ponds thrive, they may reach levels that will allow fisherman to keep some of the fish that they catch,” said Wegner. As to whether the fish will be suitable for human consumption is still open to conjecture. The retention ponds accrue runoff from the runways, however water first percolates through the wetland that is closer than the ponds. This percolation promotes a healthy ecosystem for the ponds, which appear healthy by accounts of the vegetation present. “The fish in the retention ponds have never been directly tested for toxicity levels” said Cherry, “But next year when the (FWC) return they will test the fish.” This could mean a lot of good eating for anglers at Naval Air Station Whiting Field in the coming years.
To advertise with us, call Simone Sands at 433-1166 ext. 21
February 13, 2015
PARTYLINE
PA G E
7
GOSPORT
Production to feature six short plays
Pensacola Little Theatre’s Studio 400 Production of Short Attention Span Theatre will feature six short plays about love, life and relationships. Performances are scheduled for Feb. 13-15 and Feb. 1921 at the M.C. Blanchard Courtroom Theatre. Thursday, Friday and Saturday performances are at 7:30 p.m. and the Sunday performance is at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 for general admission and $17 for café seating. Pensacola Little Theatre is located inside the Pensacola Cultural Center, 400 South Jefferson St. For more information, call 432-2042 or go to www.PensacolaLittleTheatre.com.
Chorus delivering singing valentines
The Fiesta Barbershop Chorus will fan out along the Gulf Coast today, Feb. 13, and tomorrow, Feb. 14, to sing to your wife, girlfriend, husband or boyfriend. They will also sing to mothers, fathers and children. For $50, a quartet of men will present a rose and a card and serenade your valentine with two songs in Escambia or nearby counties. Visa, MasterCard and Discover are welcome. For more information or to place an order, call Dave Cassens at 529-6222 or e-mail dcassens@cox.net.
PCARA presenting gospel stage play
PCARA Productions will present the gospel stage play, “How Johnnie Mae Got Her Groove On!” Feb. 13-15 at Pensacola Little Theatre. Tickets are $22 general admission. A $5 off Sweetheart Special is being offered for a limited time. Discount group rates are available for 10 people or more. Tickets can be purchased at Lifeway Christian Bookstore, 1654 Airport Blvd., Pensacola Little Theatre Box Office, or online at www.pcaraonline.com. For more information, call Leroy Williams at 293-5345 or e-mail willroy85@aol.com.
Sea Cadet group enrolling teens Enrollment is open for NAS Pensacola’s U.S. Naval Sea Cadet Corps (13-18 years old) and U.S. Navy League Cadet Corps (10-14 years old). The unit meets one weekend per month throughout the year. The cadets participate in civic activities and training events to develop a sense of pride, patriotism, courage and self-reliance. The program is open to both military and nonmilitary affiliated youths. Adult volunteers are welcome. Navy uniform donations are also being accepted. For more information, go to www.seacadets.org or contact Luis Sepulveda at asiso@yahoo.com.
Coin collectors to meet Feb. 19
Members of the Pensacola Numismatic Society (coin club) will meet at 6:30 p.m. Feb.19 at Sonny’s Real Pit Bar-B-Q restaurant, 630 North Navy Blvd. There will be a presentation and a coin auction will be conducted after the meeting. There is no cost to attend unless you plan to have dinner. For more information, call Mark Cummings at 332-6491.
Classes scheduled for military spouses
A Lifestyle, Insights, Networking, Knowledge, Skills (L.I.N.K.S.) for Spouses training classes is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Feb. 28 and March 28 in the Commanding Officer’s Conference Room at MATSG-21 Headquarters, Bldg. 3450. Classes are free and all military spouses are welcome. L.I.N.K.S. for Spouses training provides an overview of the Marine Corps structure, services and benefits. Participants also get an opportunity to meet other spouses, participate in fun and informative activities, and learn about resources that are available. The training also includes an introduction to what the local area has to offer. Preregistration is required, and child care reimbursement is available. To register, contact Lisa Duvall, MCFTB trainer, by phone at 452-9460, ext. 3012, or by e-mail at lisa.duvall@usmc.mil.
Color Vibe 5K scheduled for Feb. 28 Pensacola Color Vibe 5K Run is scheduled for 9 a.m. Feb 28 at the Maritime Park, 301 West Main St. The run will include a color throw and dance party. For more information, go to www.thecolor vibe.com/pensacola.php.
Theater group presents ‘Night Watch’
Panhandle Community Theatre will present the suspense thriller “Night Watch” Feb. 26-28 and March 5-8. Evening shows are at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday matinee are at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are $12. Seating is limited for each show. For reservations, call 221-7599 or e-mail panhandle _community_theatre@yahoo.com. The non-profit Panhandle Community Theatre is located one mile off Highway 90 in Pace, in the Storage Masters Center, 4646 Woodbine Road. For more information, go to www.panhandlecommunity theatre.com.
Partyline submissions
NASP VITA office offers free tax help Free tax help is available at the NAS Pensacola Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) office and online. The NASP VITA self-serve office is located in Bldg. 680, Room 225E (on Cuddihy Street across from the NEX mini mart). Hours of operation are 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Friday through the April 15 tax deadline. The service is available to active duty and dependents, retirees and dependents with an adjusted gross income of less than $57,000, reservists (activated 30 days plus and pre-demobilization) and entitled former spouses. For more information, call 452-2209 or 452-8753. Military OneSource also offers no-cost tax consultation and no-cost tax preparation and filing to active duty and family members, as well as to reservists, survivors, and separated service members until 180 days after their retirement, discharge or end-of-tour date. For more information, call 1 (800) 342-9647. Trained tax consultants are available seven days a week from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. (CST). Information also is available online at www.militaryonesource.mil/taxes.
Fight diabetes by taking a bike ride The 2015 Gulf Coast Tour de Cure to support the American Diabetes Association is scheduled for March 21. Cyclists will gather at the Margaritaville Beach Hotel, 165 Fort Pickens Road, on Pensacola Beach. Routes range from a four-mile bike trail ride to a 60-mile route along the beaches of Northwest Florida. The bus will leave for starting locations at 8 a.m. All routes offer rest stops, support and gear vehicles. Riders return to a party, lunch and entertainment at Margaritaville Beach Hotel. The registration fee is $15, with a fundraising minimum of $200 For more information, contact Lynne Cranford at 492-6100, ext. 3131 or by e-mail at lcranford@diabetes.org.
Group offers introduction to gliders
Members of the Coastal Soaring Association are offering introductory glider flights for $95. Flights can be scheduled on Saturday and Sunday and some weekdays at Elsanor Airport, 21810 Koier Road, about 12 miles west of the state line on Highway 90 in Elsanor, Ala. If you then decide you would like to learn to fly gliders, you can join the association. For more information, contact Emmett Moran by phone at (404) 822-6502 or e-mail at emmettmoran@yahoo.com. You can also find more information on the association’s website at http://Coastalsoaring.org.
Band, drill platoon coming to Pensacola
Pensacola residents will be treated to upcoming performances by the United States Navy Band and the Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon. The United States Navy Concert Band’s performance is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 23 at Pensacola’s Saenger Theatre. All Navy Band performances are free and open to the public. For more information about this concert, go to http://www.navyband.navy.mil/national_tour.shtml. The Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon is scheduled to perform onboard NAS Pensacola at noon March 19 on the Naval Aviation Schools Command (NASC) parade field.
Run to Ride 5K scheduled for March 28 Alethia Christian Academy has scheduled a Run to Ride 5K run/walk for 9 a.m. March 28. Check in is at 8 a.m. The race will start at the academy, 1700 Woodchuck Ave. Proceeds will help fund a new school bus. Registration fee is $25 for adults and $12 for ages 12 and younger for those who sign up by March 6. For more information, go to www.acalions.org.
AeroFest to be March 20-21 in Mobile
AeroFest is coming to Mobile March 20-21 at the Mobile Aeroplex at Brookley Field. The festival’s mission is to actively improve the lives of America’s injured warriors through a confluence of talent, vision and technology. The festival will feature music, arts, sports, educational information, festivities and fun. For more information, go to www.mobileaerofest.com.
Rock N Fly run to take place March 21
The second annual Blue Angels Rock N Fly Half Marathon and 5K (3.1 miles) is scheduled for March 21 aboard NAS Pensacola. Both races will start at 8 a.m. at the corner of Radford and Fred Bauer roads
(in front of Starbucks). There is a registration limit of 3,000 people and the race sold out in 2014. Proceeds from the race will benefit the Navy Ball and Navy Marine Corps Relief Society. To register or volunteer, go to www.runrocknfly.com. For more information, e-mail runrocknfly@gmail.com or call 505-7086 or 505-6020.
Golf tournament supports lighthouse The second annual Scramble for the Light Golf Tournament is scheduled for April 13 at the A.C. Reed Golf Course aboard NAS Pensacola. Lunch will be served at noon and a shotgun start is scheduled for 1 p.m. Tournament cost per person is $100. All proceeds go towards the restoration of the Pensacola Lighthouse tower. For more information, call 324-6415 or go to www.pensacolalighthouse.org.
T-6 Texan Trot scheduled for April 25 The 455th Flying Training Squadron Booster Club has scheduled the T-6 Texan Trot for 8 a.m. April 25. The timed run will follow a course around the taxiways and runway of NAS Pensacola’s Sherman Field. The race is open to DoD cardholders and those who can be sponsored on base by DoD cardholders, it will be capped at 1,500 participants. Cost is $25 until April 1. Cost is $30 from April 1 until race day. For more information, go to www.facebook. com/T6TexanTrot and to register, go to https://secure.getmeregistered.com/get_information.php?eve nt_id=120669.
Dates announced for Senior Follies The theme for the 18th annual Pensacola Seniors Follies will be “Those Were the Days.” The two-hour song-and-dance comedy review is scheduled for March 13-15 at WSRE-TV Jean & Paul Amos Performance Studio. Performances are scheduled for 7 p.m. March 13 and 2 p.m. March 14 and March 15. Proceeds will go to support various senior programs in the community. Tickets can be purchased at Bayview Senior Center and West Escambia Senior Center. Ticket information is available by calling 453-3016 or 417-7736.
Walk to bring attention to epilepsy
A Walk the Talk for Epilepsy is scheduled for April 11 at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium. Registration is scheduled for 8 a.m., and the walk will start at 9 a.m. Proceeds from the race will go to support Pensacola’s Epilepsy Resource Center. To register in advance, go to www.epilepsyfla.org. For more information, call 433-1395.
Soccer program for girls announced Perdido Bay Futbol Club (PBFC) has proclaimed 2015 as “The Year of the Girls.” Organizers are looking for girls younger than 8 and younger than 11 to join the Girls Academy Soccer Program. The club meets at the new Southwest Escambia sportsplex off of Bauer Road. Professional and nationally licensed coaching staff work with players. For more information, go to www.perdidobayfc. com/academy-U8-U11.html.
Spots open at academic boot camps
The Warrior-Scholar Project (WSP) is accepting applications for more than 150 spots in its 2015 academic boot camps. The boot camps, scheduled at 11 major U.S. universities in 2015, are designed to help military veterans develop and rediscover the skills and confidence necessary to successfully complete fouryear undergraduate degrees. WSP boot camps are open to enlisted veterans and transitioning service members who plan to enroll in or transfer to a four-year undergraduate program. Donors cover all program costs except transportation. To apply for a spot in the program go tohttps://warrior-scholarproject.slideroom.com/# /permalink/program/23562. Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis, and students may be asked to complete an additional phone interview. Applications will be accepted until March 16, and all students will receive responses in early April.
Military loved ones gather monthly Members of the “silent ranks,” people who love and support someone in the military, are invited to attend Military Loved Ones Day from noon to 2 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month at the Pensacola Yacht Club. The gathering offers an opportunity for military spouses and other loved ones to network. Active duty or retired are welcome. Participants can order off the menu, but you do not have to eat lunch. For more information, contact Susan Lewis by e-mail at susanlewisbooks@yahoo.com.
You can submit information for possible publication in Partyline by sending an e-mail to Janet.Thomas.ctr@navy.mil. Submissions must include the organization’s name and details about events including times, dates, locations and any costs involved. Contact information also is required. All submissions are subject to editing to comply with established standards. Items should be submitted at least one week in advance. The deadline is noon Friday for the next week’s publication.
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
SECTION
LIFE
B
February 13, 2015
NMOTC CPO 365 volunteers aboard USS Alabama; See page B2 Spotlight
GOSPORT
Presidents Day: Washington’s, Lincoln’s legacy of leadership resounds through the ages ccording to the federal government, the holiday observed on the third Monday in February is officially Washington’s birthday (Feb. 16 in 2015). To most Americans, this holiday is commonly called “Presidents Day,” in honor of two presidents, Washington (born Feb. 22) and Lincoln (born Feb. 12).
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mother country grew acute, he moderately but firmly voiced his resistance to the restrictions. When the Second Continental Congress assembled in Philadelphia in May 1775, Washington, one of the Virginia delegates, was elected commander in chief of the Continental Army. On July 3, 1775, at Cambridge, Mass., he took command of his ill-trained troops and embarked upon a war that was to last six long years. He realized early that the best strategy was to harass the British. He reported to Congress, “We should on all occasions avoid a general action, or put anything to the risk, unless compelled by a necessity, into which we ought never to be drawn.” Ensuing battles saw him fall back slowly, then strike unexpectedly. Finally in 1781 with the aid of French allies – he forced the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown. Washington longed to retire to his fields at Mount Vernon. But he soon realized that the nation under its Articles of Confederation was not functioning well, so he became a prime mover in the steps leading to the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia in 1787. When the new Constitution was ratified, the Electoral College unanimously elected Washington president. He did not infringe upon the policy making powers that he felt the Constitution gave Congress. But the determination of foreign policy became preponderantly a presidential concern. When the French Revolution led to a major war between France and England, Washington refused to accept entirely the recommendations of either his Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, who was pro-French, or his Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, who was pro-British. Rather, he insisted upon a neutral course until the United States could grow stronger. To his disappointment, two parties were developing by the end of his first term. Wearied of politics, feeling old, he retired at the end of his second. In his farewell address, he urged his countrymen to forswear excessive party spirit and geographical distinctions. In foreign affairs, he warned against long-term alliances. Washington enjoyed less than three years of retirement at Mount Vernon, before he died of a throat infection Dec. 14, 1799. For months the nation mourned him.
George Washington On April 30, 1789, George Washington, standing on the balcony of Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York, took his oath of office as the first president of the United States. “As the first of every thing, in our situation will serve to establish a precedent,” he wrote James Madison. “It is devoutly wished on my part, that these precedents may be fixed on true principles.”
George Washington Born in 1732 into a Virginia planter family, he learned the morals, manners and body of knowledge requisite for an 18th century Virginia gentleman. He pursued two intertwined interests: military arts and Western expansion. At 16 he helped survey Shenandoah lands for Lord Fairfax. Commissioned a lieutenant colonel in 1754, he fought the first skirmishes of what grew into the French and Indian War. The next year, as an aide to Gen. Edward Braddock, he escaped injury although four bullets ripped his coat and two horses were shot from under him. From 1759 to the outbreak of the American Revolution, Washington managed his lands around Mount Vernon and served in the Virginia House of Burgesses. Married to a widow, Martha Dandridge Custis, he devoted himself to a busy and happy life. But like his fellow planters, Washington felt himself exploited by British merchants and hampered by British regulations. As the quarrel with the
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HEART JEWELRY KISSES ROMANCE ROSES
Abraham Lincoln The son of a Kentucky frontiersman, Lincoln had to struggle for a living and for learning. Five months before receiving his party’s nomination for president, he sketched his life: “I was born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Ky. My parents were both born in Virginia, of undistinguished families – second families, perhaps I should say. My mother, who died in my 10th year, was of a family of the name of Hanks ... My father ... removed from Kentucky to ... Indiana, in my eighth year ... It was a wild region, with many bears and other wild animals still in the woods. There I grew up ... Of course when I came of age I did not know much.
Gosling Games
Word Search ‘Valentines’ A Q J C F F F W E I S H S T R
Abraham Lincoln Lincoln warned the South in his inaugural address: “In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you ... You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect and defend it.” Lincoln thought secession illegal, and was willing to use force to defend federal law and the Union. When Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter and forced its surrender, he called on the states for 75,000 volunteers. Four more slave states joined the Confederacy but four remained within the Union. The Civil War had begun.
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L F Y T E S H R O M A N C E X
Color Me: ‘The Oval Office’
Still somehow, I could read, write and cipher ... but that was all.” Lincoln made extraordinary efforts to attain knowledge while working on a farm, splitting rails for fences, and keeping store at New Salem, Ill. He was a captain in the Black Hawk War, spent eight years in the Illinois legislature and rode the circuit of courts for many years. He married Mary Todd, and they had four boys, only one of whom lived to maturity. In 1858, Lincoln ran against Stephen A. Douglas for senator. He lost the election, but in debating with Douglas he gained a national reputation that won him the Republican nomination for president in 1860. As president, he built the Republican Party into a strong national organization. Further, he rallied most of the Northern democrats to the Union cause. On Jan. 1, 1863, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation that declared forever free those slaves within the Confederacy. Lincoln never let the world forget that the Civil War involved an even larger issue. This he stated most movingly in dedicating the military cemetery at Gettysburg: “that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” Lincoln won re-election in 1864, as Union military triumphs heralded an end to the war. In his planning for peace, the president was flexible and generous, encouraging Southerners to lay down their arms and join speedily in reunion. The spirit that guided him was clearly that of his second inaugural address, now inscribed on one wall of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.: “With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds.” On Good Friday, April 14, 1865, Lincoln was assassinated at Ford’s Theatre in Washington by John Wilkes Booth, an actor, who somehow thought he was helping the South. The opposite was the result, for with Lincoln’s death, the possibility of peace with magnanimity died.
– www.whitehouse.gov
Jokes & Groaners Hail to the chief Teacher: “John, do you know Lincoln’s ‘Gettysburg Address?’ ” Student: “No, ma’am. I thought he lived in Washington.” Q: What do you call George Washington’s false teeth? A: Presi-dentures. Q. What did one flag say to the other flag? A: Nothing. It just waved. Q: How did George Washington speak to his army? A: In general terms. Q: Did you hear about the cartoonist in the Continental Army? A: He was a Yankee doodler.
PA G E
B2 GOSPORT
SPOTLIGHT
February 13, 2015
NMOTC CPO 365 volunteers aboard USS Alabama By MC2 (SW) Kaitlyn C. Boland NMOTC PAO
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early 30 chiefs and first class petty officers from the U.S. Navy’s premier training facility for operational medicine and aviation survival training volunteered Jan. 31 aboard a floating piece of U.S. Navy history. Navy Medicine Operational Training Center (NMOTC) service members involved in CPO 365, a Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy initiative designed to foster leadership skills and teamwork, ventured to Battleship Memorial Park in Mobile, Ala., to perform rehabilitation aboard USS Alabama (BB 60). HMCM(SW/FMF) Omar Azmitia, NMOTC command master chief, said the importance of maintaining a link with Sailors of yesteryear cannot be understated, and with the proximity of USS Alabama to NAS Pensacola, the opportunity to involve NMOTC service members in this particular community service project seemed appropriate. “As chief petty officers it’s important to have a good sense of heritage, and as part of CPO 365, we integrate that sense of heritage with community serv-
ice by coming down here to USS Alabama and spending a few hours of our time refurbishing this old warship that truly deserves attention,” he said. NMOTC personnel were tasked with refurbishing a space aboard the vessel, using wire brushes and needleguns to remove layers of paint and rust from the nearly 75-year-old vessel. Naval Survival Training Institute (NSTI) HM1(SW/AW) Elda Rodriguez said the work performed by the nearly 30 service members served as a reminder of her early days in the United States Navy and the necessity of being involved in community service projects. “We were chipping – they’re getting ready to paint downstairs. It was great getting down and dirty; as first classes and chiefs we don’t get to do that enough, and this reminded me
HMCS(SW/FMF) Dexter Lewis, Naval Aerospace Medical Institute senior enlisted leader, uses a needle gun in a space aboard USS Alabama (BB 60) Jan. 31 during a NMOTC CPO 365 community relations event. Photo by MC1 Bruce Cummins
of back when I was an undesignated deck seaman,” she said. “It is important to the Navy to do these sorts of community relations because we are ambassadors everywhere we go, and this is important for me because it brings the team together – we work together and that creates camaraderie.” Alabama citizens formed the USS Alabama Battleship Commission to raise funds for the preservation of Alabama as a memorial to the men and women who served in World War II. The vessel was awarded to the state of Ala-
bama in June 1964 and towed to its permanent berth at Battleship Memorial Park. The ship was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1986. NMOTC, the recognized global leader in operational medical and aviation survival training, oversees NSTI and reports to Navy Medicine Education and Training Command (NMETC). NMETC manages Navy Medicine’s formal enlisted and officer education and training programs, medical operational training for medical and medical sup-
port personnel deploying worldwide, and training that prepares aviators and flight crews to survive in land and water mishaps. NSTI, NMOTC and NMETC are part of the Navy Medicine team, a global health care network of Navy medical professionals around the world who provide high-quality health care to eligible beneficiaries. Navy Medicine personnel deploy with Sailors and Marines worldwide, providing critical mission support aboard ships, in the air, under the sea and on the battlefield.
GOSPORT
PA G E
February 13, 2015
B3
UWF Historic Trust offering series of lectures, tours From University of West Florida Historic Trust
The University of West Florida (UWF) Historic Trust is dedicated to collecting, preserving, interpreting and sharing the history of Northwest Florida. The trust manages the Historic Pensacola campus of UWF, which includes 28 properties in downtown Pensacola and the Arcadia Mill Archeological site in Milton. Upcoming events include: • Friday the 13th Haunted Tours: Feb. 13 and March 13 in downtown Pensacola. Tours leave at 7 p.m., 7:45 p.m., 8 p.m., 8:45 p.m., 9 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children 12 and younger. No reservations required. Tickets available on nights of the tours at the Voices of Pensacola Multicultural Center, 117 East
Government St. For more information, contact Wendi Davis at wdavis4@ uwf.edu or 595-5985. • Black History Month Brown Bag Lunch series: The UWF Historic Trust and the UWF Office of Equity, Diversity and International Affairs is offering a series of brown bag lunch events for Black History Month. The lunch lectures will be presented at the Voices of Pensacola Multicultural Center, 117 East Government St. For more information, contact Wendi Davis at 595-5985 or Eryka Wallace at 474-2953. Vivian Lamont will discuss the origins and successes of the Belmont Youth Band at noon Feb. 17, and Adrianne
Sams, site manager for Arcadia Mill Archaeological Site, will discuss the lives of the enslaved at Arcadia Mill at noon Feb. 24. • Arcadia Mill Archaeological Site Grand Reopening: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March. 14. Event will showcase recent site development with attention on the new bridge and boardwalk. Free and open to the public. Children’s activities will include candle dipping and crafts. Site tours will continue throughout the event. Arcadia Mill is located in Milton, and consists of a 37-acre archaeological site. Visitors must park at Pensacola State College West Lot and trolleys will run between the parking lot and the mill. For more information, contact Adrianne Sams at 626-3084. • 81st Annual Dinner: March 16 at the Museum of Commerce, 201 East
Zaragoza St. There will be a social and dinner from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. for $20 per person with an RSVP and payment to: Annual Dinner, P.O. Box 12866, Pensacola, Fla. 32591. At 6:30 p.m. there will be a free lecture by Roger Smith. The topic will be “Spies, Schemes, and the Sons of Liberty: The Shadier Side of East and West Florida During the American Revolution.” Guests do not need to attend the social and dinner to attend the lecture. For more information, contact Wendi Davis at wdavis4@uwf.edu or 595-5985. Previously known as West Florida Historic Preservation, the University of West Florida Historic Trust is a nonprofit direct support organization (DSO) of the University of West Florida. For more information, go to http://uwf.edu/ offices/historic-trust.
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OFF DUTY
B4
GOSPORT
February 13, 2015
Morale, Welfare and Recreation
A group of visitors explores an area of the Fort Pickens complex at Gulf Islands National Seashore. The historic landmark is on the west end of Santa Rosa Island. Photo by Mike O’Connor
Park entry free this weekend From the National Park Service
In honor of Presidents’ Day, Gulf Islands National Seashore will join national parks across the country by celebrating a fee-free weekend. The fee-free weekend will be Feb. 14 through Feb. 16. On these days, all visitors will be allowed to enter the Fort Pickens, Opal Beach, and Perdido Key areas of the park free of charge. The fee-free designation applies to entrance fees only and does not affect fees for camping or reservations. Fort Pickens and Perdido Key entrance stations will have annual passes available for purchase. A free annual pass is available to U.S. military members and dependents in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard and also, reserve and National Guard members. You can pick up a pass at any federal recreation
site by showing a Common Access Card (CAC) or Military ID. Superintendent Dan Brown encourages visitors and residents to come explore and enjoy the beaches, museums, historic forts and recreational opportunities offered by the park. Camping is available at the Fort Pickens area. All sites are $26 per night with water, electricity, grills/fire rings, and picnic tables. Reservations can be made by calling (877) 4446777, or online at www.recreation.gov. Walk-ins are also welcome on a space available basis. Additional fee free days in 2015 previously announced by the National Park Service include: April 18-19 (National Park Week’s opening weekend), Aug. 25 (National Park Service’s 99th birthday), Sept. 26 (National Public Lands Day), and Nov. 11 (Veterans Day).
For a full description of the facilities and programs currently available, go to www.nps.gov/guis. For more on national park fee-free days, go to www.nps.gov/findapark/feefreep arks.htm. The Naval Live Oaks Visitor Center is temporarily closed for abatement of mold associated with the April 2014 flooding. During the closure visitors can obtain assistance at the Fort Pickens visitor center or at the Fort Barrancas visitor center on Naval Air Station Pensacola. The Fort Pickens and Fort Barrancas visitor centers will remain open seven days a week (8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday). The Naval Live Oaks visitor center is expected to re-open near the end of February. For additional information, call 934-2600 or go to www.nps.gov/guis.
At the movies FRIDAY
“Paddington,” PG, 5 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 7:30 p.m.; “Taken 3,” PG-13, 5:30 p.m.; “The Wedding Ringer,” R, 8 p.m.
SATURDAY
“Into the Woods,” PG, noon; “Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb,” PG, 2:30 p.m.; “Taken 3,” PG-13, 5 p.m.; “Unbroken,” PG-13, 7:30 p.m.; “Paddington,” PG, 12:30 p.m.; “The Imitation Game,” PG-13, 3 p.m.; “The Wedding Ringer,” R, 5:30 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 8 p.m.
SUNDAY
“Paddington,” PG, noon; “Into the Woods,” PG, 2 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 4:30 p.m., 7:30 p.m.; “Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb,” PG, 12:30 p.m.; “Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death,” PG-13, 3 p.m.; “Taken 3,” PG-13, 5:30 p.m.; “The Wedding Ringer,” R, 8 p.m.
MONDAY
“Paddington,” PG, 3 p.m.; “Taken 3,” PG-13, 5 p.m.; “The Wedding Ringer,” R, 7:30 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 4 p.m., 7 p.m.
TUESDAY
“Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb,” PG, 5 p.m.; “Unbroken,” PG-13, 7 p.m.; “Big Eyes,” PG-13, 5:10 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
“American Sniper,” R, 5 p.m., 7:30 p.m.; “Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death,” PG-13, 5:10 p.m.; “The Wedding Ringer,” R, 7:10 p.m.
THURSDAY
“Paddington,” PG, 5 p.m.; “American Sniper,” R, 7 p.m.; “Taken 3,” PG-13, 5:10 p.m.; “The Gambler,” R, 7:30 p.m.
COST Regular: $3 adults, $1.50 children ages 6-11, free for 5 and younger 3D shows: $5 adults, $3 children ages 6-11, free for 5 and younger
Details: 452-3522 or www.naspensacola-mwr.com
The NASP Morale, Welfare and Recreation (MWR) department has a number of upcoming events and activities. For more information, call 452-3806, ext. 3100, or go to the MWR website at www.naspensacola-mwr.com. • Winter Wonderland: Track down your mittens and scarves because it’s going to snow at NAS Pensacola from noon to 4 p.m. Feb. 21 across the street from Mustin Beach Club on Radford Boulevard. Come and enjoy sledding on real snow, penguin bowling, golf chipping, ice fishing, an obstacle course, inflatable games and much more. Sleds will be provided. Food and drinks will be available for purchase. This event is free and open to all MWR authorized patrons: Active-duty, retirees, DoD civilians and their families. • NASP School of Karate: Join Sensei John Wynne for karate classes. Classes begin Feb. 19 at 5 p.m. with an introduction class on Feb. 17 at 5:30 p.m. at the Portside Gym, Bldg. 627. Classes are open to active duty, retirees, reservists, DOD and family members ages 9 and older. For more information call, 452-7810. • Youth Sports soccer and baseball/ T ball: Register your child for soccer or baseball at the NASP Youth Center through Feb. 27 (8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday). The season runs March through May. There is a $50 registration fee per child, which includes a uniform and trophy. Registration open to all dependents of active-duty, retired military, DoD employees, contractors and reservists ages 414. For more information, call 452-3810. • Youth Center Valentineʼs Dance: 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Feb. 14 at the NASP Youth Center. Children from kindergarten-age to 12 years can participate in contests and enjoy food and fun. There will be a $5 admission fee. For more information, call 452-2417 or 452-2296. • Radfordʼs Anti-Valentine Shred, Shed and Spin: 9 a.m. today, Feb. 13, at Radford Fitness Center. Bring a memory of an ex to shred. Spin and shed your resentment and calories. For more information, call 452-9845. • Valentine Special Spin and Row: Enjoy a 90-minute sweetheart spin at 8 a.m. Feb. 14 at the Wellness Center at NASP Corry Station. You can also compete in the row that started Feb 9 and ends Feb. 14. For more information, call 52-6802. • Travel Expo: Are you searching for ideas vacation ideas? Come to the Travel Expo from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 25 at the Mustin Beach Club. Browse through a variety of travel and recreation destinations from across the Southeast. There will be door prizes. Admission is free. For more information, call 452-6362. • Danger Zone Paintball: Sign-up for the Paintball Challenge at Blue Angel Naval Recreation Area. Danger Zone Paintball is now open until 5 p.m. Monday and Friday for challenge events. The cost is $20 for activeduty and $30 for civilians and includes three acres of woodsball play, full equipment rental, 500 rounds of paint and free air refills. Reservations are required two weeks in advance. For details, call 281-5489.
Liberty activities Liberty program events target young, unaccompanied active-duty military. New hours are 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday. Regular events are scheduled at the main Liberty Center in the Portside Entertainment Complex. You must sign up in advance for off-base trips. For more information, call 452-2372 or go to http://naspensacolamwr.com/singsail/liberty.htm.
February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
COMMAND LINES
SAPR If you are a victim of sexual assault, it is not your fault. Help for victims of sexual assault in the DoD community is a call, click or text away: The SafeHelpline provides live, one-on-one crisis support and information by trained staff. Call: (877) 995-5247; click: www.SafeHelpline.org; or text: 55-247, CONUS; (202) 470-5546, OCONUS (may be extra charges for OCONUS). The Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR) Program provides prevention, intervention and a 24/7/365 response to non-intimate partner adult victims of sexual assault. Active-duty and adult family member sexual assault victims have a choice of reporting options, unrestricted and restricted. Unrestricted reporting allows victim to have an advocate, seek medical care, counseling, legal services, safety interventions and/or transfer, etc. To access an unrestricted report, the victim may report to his/her chain-ofcommand, security/law enforcement, NCIS, SAPR VA, SARC, or others. NCIS shall be notified by the CO and/or the VA/SARC in unrestricted cases to begin investigation. Investigation results are provided to the offender’s CO for appropriate action/disposition. Restricted reporting allows a victim to have a confidential report, which does not trigger command or law enforcement notification and the victim may have a SAPR VA and seek medical care and/or counseling. To access restricted reporting, the victim may disclose his/her sexual assault only to the SARC, a current SAPR VA, a health care professional and/or a chaplain. To contact the NASP 24/7 Victim Advocate, call 449-9231/2. For the Civilian Victim Advocate, call 293-4561. To contact the duty SARC, call the SARC cell at 554-5606.
Worship schedule NAS Pensacola Protestant • Communion service, 8 a.m. Sunday, All Faiths Chapel. • Sunday School, all ages, 9 a.m. Sunday, Bldg. 634. • Worship service, 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Naval Aviation Memorial Chapel, Bldg. 1982. • Chapel choir, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, All Faiths Chapel. • Contemporary service, 6 p.m. Sunday, All Faiths Chapel. • Womenʼs Bible study, 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Bldg. 634. • Training Air Wing Six Bible Study, 11:15 a.m. Tuesday, Griffith Hall student lounge. • Bible study (for all), 7 p.m. Tuesday, Bldg. 634, back classrooms; 5 p.m. Wednesday, J.B. McKamey Center. Roman Catholic • Sunday Mass, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, Naval Aviation Memorial Chapel, Bldg. 1982. • Daily Mass, 11:30 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday in the All Faiths Chapel. • Confessions: 30 minutes before services. Latter Day Saints • Service, 10:30 a.m. Sunday, All Faiths Chapel. For information, call 452-2341. NASP Corry Station Protestant • Adult Bible study, 9 a.m. Sunday, fellowship hall vice conference room. • Chapel choir, 9 a.m. Sunday, choir
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Fleet and Family Support Center room vice sanctuary. • Worship service, 10 a.m. Sunday. • Fellowship, 11:30 a.m. Sunday. • Contemporary worship, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, followed by fellowship at 7:30 p.m. • Bible study and dinner, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, fellowship hall. Latter Day Saints • Service, 7 p.m. Wednesday. Roman Catholic • Mass, noon Sunday and 11:30 a.m. Tuesday and Thursday. For information, call 452-6376. NAS Whiting Field Chapel Roman Catholic • Mass, 11 a.m. Friday. Protestant • Bible study, 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. • Weekly chapel service, 11:30 a.m. Thursday. For information, call 623-7212. More services Jewish • Bʼnai Israel Synagogue, 1829 North Ninth Ave., services 7 p.m. Friday and 9:30 a.m. Saturday. For information, call 433-7311. • Temple Beth El, 800 North Palafox St., services 7 p.m. Friday (6 p.m. first Friday of month). For information, call 438-3321 or go to http://templebethelofpensacola.org. Seventh-day Adventist • Seventh-day Adventist Church, 1080 North Blue Angel Parkway, Bible studies at 9:30 a.m. and services at 11 a.m. Saturday. For information, call 453-3442.
The NASP Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC), 151 Ellyson Ave., Bldg. 625, is offering the following: • Personal Financial Management – Donʼt Be Taken, Know a Scam When You See One: 9 a.m. Feb. 18. This one-hour course could help safeguard you from possible scams. For more information, call 452-5609. • Pregnancy 101: 10 a.m. Feb. 20, NASP headquarters, Bldg. 1500. If you are expecting and want to know what comes next, FFSC’s New Parent Support Program has
class that covers the basics of pregnancy. For information or to register, call 452-5609 or 452-4258. • Time Management: 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Feb. 26. Learn how to use your time more effectively. Time management skills reduce stress. For information or to register, call 452-5609. • AmVets ... Understanding Your VA Benefits: The Feb. 26 class is full. The next class with available seats is scheduled for 10 a.m. March 26. To register or for more information, call 452-5609.
Community Outreach NASP Community Outreach volunteer opportunities: • Perdido Spring Fest: A small town fair at 2221 South Blue Angel Parkway. Volunteers needed from March 914. March 9-10 volunteers will be needed midday to assist with event setup; March 1114 volunteers will be needed in the evening to assist with parking. Meals and transportation will be provided. • Mentoring: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at Child Development Center at NASP Corry Station. Volunteers needed to mentor
children after school and assist with homework and study strategies, as well as being a good role model. • Food bank: New Hope Baptist church is looking for six volunteers for monthly food bank. They need six people to hand out food to the homeless and those in need. The NASP Community Outreach office tracks volunteer hours. Report any hours you work to receive due recognition. For information on volunteer activities, call 452-2532 or e-mail SH2 Patricia Cooper at patricia.cooper@Navy.mil.
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT
Your City, Your Magazine Gosport has over 25,000 readers every week. That’s a lot of potential for your ad to be seen every week. How can you not afford to place your ad with Simone Sands? Contact her today at 433-1166 ext. 21
GOSPORT
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Ads placed by the Military are FREE
To place an ad go online at www.gosportpensacola.com or call 433-1166 ext.24.
Marketplace
★ Motor ★ Merchandise ★ Employment ★ Real Estate ★ and more
★ Publication date every Friday except Christmas and New Years.
★ Deadline to place an ad is 4:00 pm Friday, one week prior to publication date.
★ Place your ad online at www.gosportpensacola.com
★ Place your ad by phone at 850-433-1166 Ext. 24 Monday-Friday 8:30 am5:00 pm
Motor
Merchandise Employment
Bulletin Board
Merchandise
Employment
Both Whirpool glasstop stove (3 years old) $350 obo. Side-by-side r e f r i g e r a t o r. Ice/water dispenser, $450 obo. Great condition! 850-458-9743
Disk jockeys wanted, weekends, training, fun, great pay! sales@adjconnection.com. 850968-1968 Active-duty spouses: PT/FT positions, work from home, 100% training at no cost, salary/commission, up to $2,000 monthly bonus! Call 954-368-9000
Garage sales 2/7 – 2/8. 8 to 5. 1 to 5. 1945 Kimberly Dr Atmore,Al 2 Story, 5 BR 2 DR, Art WkMoberg, Hampton, Kincade, Redlin, Winchester, GunSafe, Karastan, Rugs, Civil War memobillia, 2 Frig, Gun accessories, other furniture and household items
Merchandise Pets AKC toy poodles, males, health certificates, second shots. $500. Brown in color. 850-476-1196
Articles for sale Two never been used adult lifejackets. High quality. Size large and x-large. Paid $80 a piece. Will sell for $50 a piece. Call 293-9445.
Merchandise
Motorcycle jacket, yellow neon with liner, like new, XL, $50. Black Joe Rocket motorcycle jacket, XL, $25. Leather vest, new, XL, $40. Electric heated jacket, Proform exercise L44, $50. 251bike and treadmill, 747-7056 take both. $100 obo. 457-8967 Full faced helmet, new, 2X, $40. Conair 1.5 inches, Regular helmet, hot air curling 2X, $15. Orange combo, retail neon visible vest, value $35, new XL, $15. Winter $20. 476-3592 riding gloves, large, $10. 251Best offer over 747-7056 $100 each for either a 42 in. Pro- Bogle Porcelain tron LCD TV or Collectible Plates Schwinn Men’s featuring Native Bicycle. Original Americans for $15 owner. 476-2868 each. Have several. 255-5591. Proform exercise bike and treadmill, 2 posthole diggers both $100. 457- $5 each. 8967. Olympia Anacharis water typewriter an- plant 2 for $1. tique, $25. Fishing Flies 2 for $1. 255-5591 Sofa with pullout mattress, never 4KW (6.6Kw slept on, like new. surge) Genrac $475. 418-4614 or e m e r g e n c y 944-8886 standby generator. 33.3 Amps Two wingback @120v. Like new. chairs, mauve, ex- $300. 477-6272 cellent condition. $125 each. 418- Shotgun, 14 4614 or 944-8886 gauge, official snake charmer, Wedding band, stainless steel, 14K white gold, perfect shape, rare two rows of dia- to find. $125. 497monds, beautiful, 1167 $450. 418-4614 or 944-8886
Merchandise
Motors
2002 Chevy Tahoe, LT edition. white; 135,000 miles, leather, loaded, sunroof, towing package, 3rd row seat. $5,900 obo. 850452-9818 or 450Crossbow, PSE, 0889. like new with arrows, quiver and 2003 Suburban, cocker. Silent and Looks good, runs fast. $500 value good. No major isfor $250. 417- sues. Text for pictures or call and 1694 leave message. Panasonic TV, 748-7361. $1,500 excellent condition, 23”, please Motorcycles call 492-0025. $50 2003 Kawasaki Motors 1600 Vulcan MoAutos for sale torcycle. 17,488 miles. Bags, lockNissan Sentra, ing trunk, w/s & 1992, four door lots more. Very automatic with air. good condition. $1,700. 944-5763 $4500. 255-5591. Pellet gun, single cock, GAMO, shoots 1200 ft per second, easily kill squirrels, coons, rabbits and even coyotes. $100. 454-9486
BMW 325i, 2003, excellent condition, silver blue, 6 cylinder, must sell. $8,000 firm. 492-0025
Misc Motors
2000 Coleman Pop-Up Camper. Excellent condition with many extras. $3,500 1995 Nissan obo. Larry 356300Z. Runs as 6846 good as it looks. All scheduled 2012 Freedom maintenance & Elite 21C RV, records. 994-1030 24ft, Ford engine, clean, sleeps 6, storage, Trucks/Vans extra TV/DVD, Corry /SUV’s Station. $36,000. 2010 28’ Freedom 850-293-0701. Spirit Lite, 5th Call wheel and hitch. 433-1166 Like new. ext. 24 and $22,000. 384this spot could 4366 be yours.
Real Estate
Real Estate
Real Estate
Breeze: Homes for rent Gulf Beautiful 4/3, Ital2/1 duplex, central ian tile throughout heat and air, near except bedrooms, NAS, quiet neigh- huge outdoor livborhood, 3 minute ing area with walk to beach. All screened in pool, utilities included. $800/month plus great subdivision deposit. Non- with sidewalks smokers, no pets and quaint light please. 221-8240 posts. A+ school district, pets welCompletely fur- come!! $1,650. nished 1/1, kitchen 377-6909 & living room condo that faces the Room for rent, water on Bayou close to front gate, Chico. Four miles from NAS Pen- for male or fesacola. $700 + de- male. Nice neighb o r h o o d , posit. 492-7078 protected parking, Near NAS and kitchen included, Corry 2/1 duplex TV room and caCH&A, W/D sual area. hookup, equipped $600/month utilikitchen, hardwood ties included. Infloors, ceiling fans, ternet connection mini blinds, outside and storage, privacy available work area office fence, $600 a month. 944-2235 space. 572-6166 or 417-3370 3/2 brick convenNear all bases – ient to bases. 3/2, 1,500 sqft., Fenced yard, great fenced backyard. s c h o o l s , Near school, great $800/month. $550 home for small family. $800 with deposit, no pets. $800 deposit. 968-6076 Clean. 457-0099 3/1 in Pace, priSunset charm: vacy fence, very $750/per month + clean, covered deposit. Pets nego- p a r k i n g . tiable. Enjoy this $695/month. $500 cozy newly reno- deposit. Non vated 2/1 home. smoking, referCorner lot convenience - 1 min walk ences. Pets negoto bicycle path, t i a b l e . quiet park and re- 850-501-0848 laxing water views Call (510 W Sunset Ave. 433-1166 32506) Details call ext. 24 and Chris: 850-393- this spot could be yours. 7352.
★ Ads placed by the Military are FREE
Real Estate
Real Estate
Large unfurnished room for rent. No smokers. All utilities included, free WIFI and free cable. $390 monthly. Deposit $75. 850485-7318
To w n h o u s e , 1,480 sqft. Overlooking Perdido Bay golf course, 2/1.5, excellent condition, must sell. $83,500. 4920025
Looking for roommate to share a 3/2 home near NAS in quiet neighborhood. $500 includes utilities/$500 deposit. Call 384-3665 Homes for sale Gulf Breeze 2984 Ranchette Square, 3 beds, 2 baths, .48 acres, 1,467 square feet, $160,000. Call 850-733-0397 Beautiful 3,311 SF pool home in NE Pensacola ~ 4/3 ~ large kitchen ~ family room ~ formal dining ~ bonus room ~ screened patio ~ desirable location! Call Nancy @ 850206-5526 for more info. Big open house, Friday and Saturday the 13th and 14th. 10-6. 7201 Mier Henry Rd. Pensacola FL 32506
Move in ready, 7856 Hestia Place, Pensacola, 4/2, 2 car garage, hardwood floors, granite counters, double paned windows, large back porch, detached 14x20 workshop with two doors and more windows. Could be converted to studio. $129,900. Contact Leighton Realty Linda Pinson, 850-7128656
Lots Mobile home lot in George state for sale or lease. All hookups in place. 4556-0233 Bayview Memorial Park. 2 cemetery plots & 1 vault. Call 850994-1931 for details. Beautiful 3-acre lot off Hwy 89. Can be subdivided. Peaceful area. Call 850994-0324 or szimm4@mchsi.c om for more details
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February 13, 2015
GOSPORT