Shown by Appointment Only
.Call
375-2880
After 5p.m. - No Agents
XYPI EX
April 27, 1990
HOUSE FOR SALE
Located on Quiet Cui de sac in
Northwest ~ection oftown.
*Owner Built/l0 mos. old
*1900 sq. ft.l3 bdrm.
*Spacious Island Kitchen
*Master Bedroom Suite with
walk-in closet and extra large
tiled bath with two sinks
*Full Laundry room with
c.abinets and tiled sink
*Front sprinklers installed
*Guest bath with tub/shower
and 2sinks
*All G.E. upgraded appliances
*500 sq. ft. living room with
sixteen ft. ceiling and track
lighting
*Masonry Fireplace with
20 feet of hearth
*Natural gas heating and
dual cooling. (evaporative
& central)
*Block fence with wrought
iron gate.
*1yr. Warranty on
major components.
$157,500
UNIXAND DECTM
Compatible Communication Servers
UNIXAND LATTM
Compatible Shared Printing
Invites You To:
MULTI-PROTOCAL COMMUNICATION SEMINAR
Thursday, May 17, 1990
8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., 1990
at the
Carnage Inn
901 N. China Lake Blvd.
Ridgecrest
Special Guest: GraphOn1M-X-Window Terminal Manufact':lrer
To: Register Call
(213) 540-3260
DEC and rAT are trademarks of Digital EqUipment Corporation
GraphOn are trademarks of GraphOn Corporation
.........------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
..
A ... lOur or all the
DiYiIIioD fa:iIiIies
I:1~Ci:IlI'~5:1J:5 IIIIl.di.'Mij.
will be IftiJIbIe • die CCIIIIiIl
TID UInrJ' facility. Tbe TID
iliff iDvila NWC paaoad 10
.."lIT....- darfora
o! the De. facUity a.
becaDe ......... widlliIlaiJ
"S INn.
IAsl...., Pacific leland
IHIIrltac18 MOlllh
I-Ibnd8dthis May
... ... _ ..............______...;.1
.}~:.~.f" ,_..;~'%:~ ,v ",
NavBf weapons center, Ch{na Lake. cellfomlB 93555-6001 Vol. XLV, No.17, April 27. 1990
A Iite saved:
Clinic corpsman makes right emergency response
Because Hospital Corpsman Second Class
TIm Dillon knew just\ what to do in an emer-
gency, a child's life was saved. Pelly Officer
DitLOn responded immediately with appropri-
ate measures to force oUI a piece of hard
candy lodged in the throat of the two and'a
half year old child and restored normal breath-
ing. For his efforts HM2 Dillon now proudly
wears the Navy Achievement Medal.
LCdr. Rick TIti, officer-in-charge of the
NWC Branch Medical Clinic, presented the
award LO Pelly Officer Dillon last week during
a ceremony at the clinic.
life-saving techniques administered by the
veteran pelly officer made the difference
between life and death for this child.
According to the citation accompanying
the award, HM2 Ditton was standing chief of
the day duty on New Years Day when the
child was rushed into the NWC Clinic's
Urgent Care Center. The rapid and aggressive
The veteran corpsman was also named the
NWC Branch Medical Clinic's Sailor of the
Quarter last week. LCdr. Titi. also made this
presentation as most o(Pelly Officer DitLOn's
co-workers looked on.
FAMILY MAN AND HERO-NWC Branch Medical Clinic's latest Sailor of the
Quarter is HM2 Tim Ditton (center), wh9 was joined by wife Valerie and son
Jason during the ceremony. LCdr. Richard 11t1, clinic offlcer-In-charge, also
surprised the corpsman with a Navy Achievement Medal.
Center leaders recognize five
departments for CFC efforts
Five departments at the Naval Weapons Center
recently received special recognition for outstand-
ing contributions to the Combined Federal Cam-
paign last fall.
Bill Porter, NWC Technical DirecLOr, presented
plaques to the department heads during a recent
Commander's Meeting.
The Aerosystems Department, headed by Milt
Burford, was recognized for a 48 percent increase
in dollars contributed; the Safety and Security
Department, headed by Roy Parris, was saluted for
a 92 percent increase; the Ordnance Systems
Department, now headed by Dan Goss, was hon-
ored for its 45 percent increase in dollars contribut-
ed to the annual CFC fund drive; the Research
Department, headed by Ron Derr was singled out
for their 25 percent increase and the Auack
Weapons Department, headed by Paul Homer, was
recognized for a 39 percent increase in dollars con-
tributed.
Seafarer Club
New leader
excels with
challenges
TIm McCullough, new man-
ager of the Naval Weapons Cen-
ter's Seafarer Club, will use his
20 years of club experience to
rum it inLO a modem, 1990 fami-
ly dining operation serving quali-
ty food at reasonable prices in a
pleasant setting.
McCullough noted 13 of
those 20 years have been in club
management. Since his retire-
ment from the Air Force in 1986,
he has been in charge of two
country clubs and was manager
of the Edwards Air Force Base
Officers' Club for the past three
years.
In addition to his experience,
McCullough has almost two
years of college in hoteVrestau-
rant management and has allend-
ed the Armed Forces Culinary
Program, along with a'number of
other similar hotel/restaurant
programs offered by the Depan-
ment of Defense.
"My goal is LO rid the Seafarer
Club of the black eye it has
received in the past and LO make
the club system at NWC work,"
said McCullough. "I want the
people at NWC LO be proud of
their club," be said.
In an effort to accomplish
this, representatives from the Air
Force, Army and Marines have
observed operations of the club
for the past few months. "They
have made several recommenda-
tions," said McCullough, "which
will help us meet our goals."
One of those goals is LO serve
(Continued on Page 22)
L--_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~
~
~
_ _
~
_ _
~
_ __' .... .. ................. f ••
~
.....
, OCR Text: Shown by Appointment Only
.Call
375-2880
After 5p.m. - No Agents
XYPI EX
April 27, 1990
HOUSE FOR SALE
Located on Quiet Cui de sac in
Northwest ~ection oftown.
*Owner Built/l0 mos. old
*1900 sq. ft.l3 bdrm.
*Spacious Island Kitchen
*Master Bedroom Suite with
walk-in closet and extra large
tiled bath with two sinks
*Full Laundry room with
c.abinets and tiled sink
*Front sprinklers installed
*Guest bath with tub/shower
and 2sinks
*All G.E. upgraded appliances
*500 sq. ft. living room with
sixteen ft. ceiling and track
lighting
*Masonry Fireplace with
20 feet of hearth
*Natural gas heating and
dual cooling. (evaporative
& central)
*Block fence with wrought
iron gate.
*1yr. Warranty on
major components.
$157,500
UNIXAND DECTM
Compatible Communication Servers
UNIXAND LATTM
Compatible Shared Printing
Invites You To:
MULTI-PROTOCAL COMMUNICATION SEMINAR
Thursday, May 17, 1990
8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., 1990
at the
Carnage Inn
901 N. China Lake Blvd.
Ridgecrest
Special Guest: GraphOn1M-X-Window Terminal Manufact':lrer
To: Register Call
(213) 540-3260
DEC and rAT are trademarks of Digital EqUipment Corporation
GraphOn are trademarks of GraphOn Corporation
.........------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
..
A ... lOur or all the
DiYiIIioD fa:iIiIies
I:1~Ci:IlI'~5:1J:5 IIIIl.di.'Mij.
will be IftiJIbIe • die CCIIIIiIl
TID UInrJ' facility. Tbe TID
iliff iDvila NWC paaoad 10
.."lIT....- darfora
o! the De. facUity a.
becaDe ......... widlliIlaiJ
"S INn.
IAsl...., Pacific leland
IHIIrltac18 MOlllh
I-Ibnd8dthis May
... ... _ ..............______...;.1
.}~:.~.f" ,_..;~'%:~ ,v ",
NavBf weapons center, Ch{na Lake. cellfomlB 93555-6001 Vol. XLV, No.17, April 27. 1990
A Iite saved:
Clinic corpsman makes right emergency response
Because Hospital Corpsman Second Class
TIm Dillon knew just\ what to do in an emer-
gency, a child's life was saved. Pelly Officer
DitLOn responded immediately with appropri-
ate measures to force oUI a piece of hard
candy lodged in the throat of the two and'a
half year old child and restored normal breath-
ing. For his efforts HM2 Dillon now proudly
wears the Navy Achievement Medal.
LCdr. Rick TIti, officer-in-charge of the
NWC Branch Medical Clinic, presented the
award LO Pelly Officer Dillon last week during
a ceremony at the clinic.
life-saving techniques administered by the
veteran pelly officer made the difference
between life and death for this child.
According to the citation accompanying
the award, HM2 Ditton was standing chief of
the day duty on New Years Day when the
child was rushed into the NWC Clinic's
Urgent Care Center. The rapid and aggressive
The veteran corpsman was also named the
NWC Branch Medical Clinic's Sailor of the
Quarter last week. LCdr. Titi. also made this
presentation as most o(Pelly Officer DitLOn's
co-workers looked on.
FAMILY MAN AND HERO-NWC Branch Medical Clinic's latest Sailor of the
Quarter is HM2 Tim Ditton (center), wh9 was joined by wife Valerie and son
Jason during the ceremony. LCdr. Richard 11t1, clinic offlcer-In-charge, also
surprised the corpsman with a Navy Achievement Medal.
Center leaders recognize five
departments for CFC efforts
Five departments at the Naval Weapons Center
recently received special recognition for outstand-
ing contributions to the Combined Federal Cam-
paign last fall.
Bill Porter, NWC Technical DirecLOr, presented
plaques to the department heads during a recent
Commander's Meeting.
The Aerosystems Department, headed by Milt
Burford, was recognized for a 48 percent increase
in dollars contributed; the Safety and Security
Department, headed by Roy Parris, was saluted for
a 92 percent increase; the Ordnance Systems
Department, now headed by Dan Goss, was hon-
ored for its 45 percent increase in dollars contribut-
ed to the annual CFC fund drive; the Research
Department, headed by Ron Derr was singled out
for their 25 percent increase and the Auack
Weapons Department, headed by Paul Homer, was
recognized for a 39 percent increase in dollars con-
tributed.
Seafarer Club
New leader
excels with
challenges
TIm McCullough, new man-
ager of the Naval Weapons Cen-
ter's Seafarer Club, will use his
20 years of club experience to
rum it inLO a modem, 1990 fami-
ly dining operation serving quali-
ty food at reasonable prices in a
pleasant setting.
McCullough noted 13 of
those 20 years have been in club
management. Since his retire-
ment from the Air Force in 1986,
he has been in charge of two
country clubs and was manager
of the Edwards Air Force Base
Officers' Club for the past three
years.
In addition to his experience,
McCullough has almost two
years of college in hoteVrestau-
rant management and has allend-
ed the Armed Forces Culinary
Program, along with a'number of
other similar hotel/restaurant
programs offered by the Depan-
ment of Defense.
"My goal is LO rid the Seafarer
Club of the black eye it has
received in the past and LO make
the club system at NWC work,"
said McCullough. "I want the
people at NWC LO be proud of
their club," be said.
In an effort to accomplish
this, representatives from the Air
Force, Army and Marines have
observed operations of the club
for the past few months. "They
have made several recommenda-
tions," said McCullough, "which
will help us meet our goals."
One of those goals is LO serve
(Continued on Page 22)
L--_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~
~
~
_ _
~
_ _
~
_ __' .... .. ................. f ••
~
.....
, China Lake Museum,Rocketeer Newspaper,Rocketeer 1990s,Rocketeer 1990,Rktr4.27.1990.pdf,Rktr4.27.1990.pdf Page 1, Rktr4.27.1990.pdf Page 1