CfheMocR-Up Naval Amphibioustreasurecoastgenealogicalsociety.org/Navy_Seal_PDFs/Vol... ·...
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United States Naval Amphibious CfheMocR-Up
Training Base
VOL 4-NO 24 FORT PIERCE FLORIDA 15 JUNE 1945
Present Citations Awards To 63 Demolitionaires Exira (ash War Bond CotcLant Inspects Honor Guard at Headquarters Five Silver Stars Bronze
Drive Purchases Begin
With pulchases already being made daily the Navy Independshyence Day Extra Cash War Bond Drive will begin officially next Friday and the campaign organishyzation was announced today
In a memorandum to all hands Capt C Gulbranson USN Base CO emphasized the importance of saving money for the future and pointed out as he has done on many prior occasions that war bonds are the best investment in the world today
The Navy Extra cash drive is being conducted in conjunction with the Mighty Seventh War Loan currently under way
All war bonds purchased during the Navy drive will bear a special souvenir validating stamp and only those war bonds purchased for cash through the Navy will bear this stamp Lt John S Carshyter War Bond Officer said
Advance purchases for investshyment purposes already made inshyclude $5000 by Chief Edgar D Deshyhart of NDRU and Ashland Ky $4000 by Comdr S A Isquith $2000 by Comdr C V Hatchette Senior Medical Officer and $1000 by Harold L Hornreich RM3c Faber Cove
Unit chairmen will hold a meetshying Monday to complete drive arshyrangements and insure that each man on the Base has an opporshytunity to make all voluntary cash purchases he wishes
Already named as unit chairmen are Lt (jg) H E Simpson Janshyet Lt (jg) H S Spencer Central Recognition Lt E R Hayes Physical Training Lt (jg) T H Roberts Gunnery Training Lt (jg) J R Eide Attack Boats First Lt J W Dixon Army Ordshynance Lt (jg) R L Gold Disshybursing Lt (jg) H A McHale NDRU Lt (jg) K M Gibbs Seashyman Guard Lt (jg) D W Smith Amphibious Scouts Lt C L Scott CBMU 570 Lt (jg) J H Lewis Supply Lt A W Mackashyman Camp One Lt (jg) R G Gohn Classification Lt (jg) E F Marum Public Works Others are still to be named
Rear Admiral C F Bryant USN left Commander Atlantic Fleet Operational Training Command inspects an honor guard at USNATB headquarters during a three-day visit to the Base Capt C Gulbranson USN Base CO center was hismiddot host while here At right Comdr P M Fenton Executive Officer
Fort Pierce Sub-Base Established in Pacific
From Col Glen B Wood Army Liaison Officer Alumnus of the USNATB now Staff AdComPhibsPac comes the sug~ gestion that an appropriate shinshygle outside those Pacific headshyquarters could be inscribed Fort Pierce Sub-Base
In a letter to Comdr W S Heald Base Training Officer Col Wood says I believe I would be safe in saying that I have met from one to a half dozen officers from Fort Pierce each day It is hard to realize at times that I am many miles away from Fort Pierce
Col Wood had newly seen Capt J C Hammock former Training Officer and Comdr George C Griffin ex-BB CO when writing the letter in which he sent best regards to friends here
bullbullUS NATB4 CHOIR SINGERS NEEDED More singers are needed for the
Sunday 0930 Protestant Choir at the Base Chapel Rehearsals are held Fridays at 1800 in the Faber Cove Chaplains Office
Robert Lee Morris To Rank Of Captain
Promotion of Robert Lee Morris USN Administrative Officer of the Janet Board to rank of Capshytain was announced Tuesday after Capt C Gulbranson USN Senior Member of the Janet Board exshytended congratulations and affixed the eagles of the new rank at Base headquarters
Capt Morris only recently reshyceived recognition at a Base cereshymony with receipt of commendashytion from Fleet Admiral Chester W imitz for action in the Marishyanas and Bonin island campaigns
A 1928 graduate of the U S Naval Academy from Pasadena Cal Capt Morris has had World
Stars lo 58 at Ceremony _L__
Recognition to USNATB alumni who have performed with heroism and bravery in successful Pacific operations against the Japanese and have now returned to the Base for further assignment will come at ceremonies to be held on the parade ground west of Gulbranson Hall at 1000 Saturday
Capt C Gulbranson USN Base Commanding Officer will present citations and awards to 63 members of demolition teams and four additional awards for a total of 67 in all
Of the 63 to go to demoshylitionaires five silver stars will be awarded to NCDU officers and bronze star to 58 heroic men
Commendations with bars will also go to Lt W F Flynn NCDU Officer-in-Charge whose record for training demolition men here has been outstanding and to Lt Joseph R Hanson Attack Boat OinC for bravery in action prior to duty here
Walter Yakim Slc now at Ships Service will receive the Navy and Marine Corps Medal and Abraham Hopes NCDU StshyMlc the Purple Heart
NCDU officers all civil engineer corps members to receive the Silshyver Star include Lt (jg) Yan F Carr Ensigns Herman H Bement John E Brandt William P Fulshyton and Thomas F Jackson
Awards to NCDU enlisted pershysonnel A J Albrecht MM3c Henshy
War II duty as Executive Officer ry C Anderberg SFlc B E Arshyof the USS Bagley at Pearl Har- mer GM2c Carl J Ayers Slc bor nine months as Assistant Ma- Woodford M Babbitt CCM Sishyrine Superintendent at Panama gurd Bergesen CCM T R Blair Canal five months at the Army GM2c W H Boyer GM2c Gershyand Navy Staff College in Wash- 1aid B Branom Slc Paul W ington and Commanding Officer Brown Slc of the USS Bradford from its com- R T Caldwell Mlc William c missioning He reported for duty Cary MM2c James L Collins here on 14 April Cox Martin E Coulter GM2c
Capt anil Mrs Morris and their R lII Deets MM3c W W Dilshysons Robert Lee Jr 13 and Rich- lard Sr CCM Robert F Eagle ard 10 reside at 113 S 21st St (Continued on Page 4)
PAGE TWO THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
THE MOCK-UP United States Naval Amphibious Training Base Fort Pierce Fla
VOL 4-NO 24 15 JUNE 1945
COMMANDING OFFICER - - - CAPT C GULBRANSON U f NoiVY EXECUTIVE OFFICER - COMDR PERRY M FENTON USNR EDrTOR - bull - bull bull - - LT C HERSCHEL SCHOOLEY USNR PHOTO EDITOR - LT (TG) E J FINLEY USNR Art Editor R D Force Sic Sports Editor F X McPhillips Slc Photographers R L Lane PhoMlc R J Jonas PhoM3c W N
Blakeney Slc R A Bonstell Slc
THE MOCK-UP is published each iimiddotiday for all Base personnel It is reviewed for security and is disshytributed without charge Contribushytions and criticisms invited All pictures are Navy Photos (Male Call and The Wolf from Camp Newspaper ampervice)
WHY PEOPLE BUY BONDS
You hear different arguments why people should bur war bonds
Some are moved consciously or unconsciously by selfish interest War bonds are a good investment They are a safe investment They return nearly three per cent interest andmiddot constitute therefore the safest and best savings nest-egg anyone can build up
With some a mere mention of the word duty is sufshyficient General Robert E Lee noted that duty was the sublimest word in the English language Such a man is driven by a sense of duty without regard to personal or selfish interest Show him where duty lies and that is all thats necessary
Others are actuated by a sense of loyalty and perhaps this is the most numerous class Loyalty to the nation loyalty to loved ones in the service loyalty to ideals
By whatever motive moved Americans always have come through handsomely in supporting the war by purchase of bonds It hasnt been necessary to use strong-armed tactics that nearly always backfires The part played by sheer ballyhoo-the tactics of the sideshow and the circus-is questionable
But mostly the success of the war bond drives is a tribute to the good sense the loyalty and the sense of duty of the great masses of the American people Because of that loyalty and good sense the success of the Mighty Seventh drive at the USNATB and wit_h all Naval personnel is assured The Navy is not expected to fight the war and finance it too but earns its Well Done with bond purchases just the same
Navy Vesper Service Given Sunday Night
Another of a series of Navy vesper services was held at the Presbyterian Church 9n Sunday night followed by a social hour Chaplains K D Perkins E C He1mich and A J Schutz took part in the service with special organ selections by W A Setter- strom Slc S M Robertson Sp (W) 2c and Zane Cjrey Slc of the LST 980
+USNATB+
-rJe clip1s Next
CHAPLAINS CORNER Chaplain William J Walsh
BLOOD and GUTS There is a little Church out
there where I was baptized and confirmed God has been good to me and Id like to go there to give thanks to Him These are the words General George S Patton Jr spoke to reporters after his
8 He was look-Boston on June reception i n ing forward to a ten-day leave and a chance to visi~ his parish Church in Los Angeles
After reading middot those words of
a fighting Genshyeral - who is
known as Blood and Guts - it is rather amusing to listen to the barracks moron who laughs and scoffs at the idea of God of reshyligion or at a shipmate who has guts to say some prayers each day It usually happens that those who ridicule religion are the very ones who lack blood and guts when the real showdown comes
There are a good many brave men wholl never get a decoration for their special kind of bravery Theres the fellow whos brave enough and has guts to say No when he knows that No is the only answer to give to the shipmate whose only idea of fun is going out and getshyting boiled when he asks him to go along and develop his dark brown taste his- tomorrows headshyache his sickening hangover to the slick gambler who has been c llecting the money of less practiced associates when he proshyposes a game that he cannot afshyford to join to the indecent girl who throws herself at him and and who would make him unworthy of the girl he hopes someday to make his wife and the mother of his chilshydren
Theres the fellow who has blood and guts to do what he knows he ought to do and what would make his mother and his future wife mighty happy to say his prayers without shame and without ostentation even though the barracks bully laughs to act in time of war as a Christian gentleman is expected to act in times of peace War he knows does not repeal the Ten Commandments
Theres the fellow who has the courage to admit he is sure of a lot of important things
AT THE MOVIES
GULBRANSON HAtL Friday
CALL OF THE ILD Saturday
TWICE BLESSED Sunday and Monday
WONDER MAN Tuesday
PATRICK THE GREAT Wednesday
RHYTHM ROUNDUP Thursday and Friday
THE CORN IS GREEN
SUNRISE THEATRE Friday and Saturday
HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN Sunday and Monday
NATIONAL VELVET Tue~day and Wednesday
PAN AMERICANA Thursday
SNOW WHITE AND 7 DWARFS
RITZ middotTHEATRE Friday and Saturday
SONG OF THE RANGE Sunday and Monday
BETRAYAL FROM THE EAST Tuesday
ESCAPE IN THE FOG Vednesday and Thursday
MEET MISS BOBBY SOCKS
TENTH STREET USO Friday
TIME FOR LOVE
INDIAN RIVER USO Saturday and Sunday TOPPER RETURNS
Wednesday CHRISTMAS IN JULY
- that there is a God and His
law which must be respected that men and women were meant for important responsibilishyties and not merely for careless good times that what he does now in days o~ war will have a profound effect on what he will do later in time of peace
Yes we all admire the man who is brave in battle But we all have to take our hats off to the man who is brave among his fellows in the barracks We all admire the courage it takes to keep ones ideals high and ones principles firm all the year round especially in the service That is the true courage It doesnt require any particular courage to use filthy language - get drunk or act inshydecently - but it does require blood and guts to live up to our Christian ideals in the face of opshyposition
+USNATB+ California Hall at Polk and
Turk Streets in San Francisco California has been set aside as transient officers quarters This provide quarters and mess facilishyties for transient officers in themiddot Twelfth middot Naval District
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE THREE
REAR ADMIRAL BRYANT NEWS FLASHES FROM AROUND THE BASE PLEASED AT STAY HERE
Rear Admiral Carleton F Bryshyant USN Commander Atlantic Fleet Operational Training Comshymand completed a three-day visit to the USNATB Saturday and deshyparted for Miami and New Orshyleans well pleased with operashytions and training carried on here at the Base
Rear Admiral Bryant thanked Capt C Gulbranson USN Base CO and officers and men under his command for military courteshysies shown him and accompanyshying staff officers and for smartshyness of bearing and appearance of all hands
Rear Admiral Bryant becameCotcLant last October 31 when he relieved Rear Admiral Donald B BeaJy USN who had headed the organization from its estabshylishment in March 1943
Prior to becoming CotcLant Rear Admiral Bryant was comshymander of a battleship division comprising the USS Texas USS
middotk USS N d d USSN Yew or eva a an Arkansas
He was also task force comman-
Rear Admiral Bryant
braces more than 40 operational middot middot tmiddot middottmiddot d t d tt rammg ac iv1 ies coor ma e o
ff middot t pImiddoteshycarry out the mos t e ic1en middot middot middot h k d dcomm1ss1omng s a e- own an
middot middot f 1ref resher t rammg or nava vesshy1 b middotit t d th Atse s m or conver e on _e shy
antic and Gulf Coasts and mland waterways
COTCLant Hea~quarters are at the Naval Operatmg Base Annex
t Off bullth th Ad ICamp Allen the former Sea Bee ~ Yt t icerCnow wd1 Ae hb~m- I Year Ago This Week lstation at Norfolk is ra ive omman mp I 10us
No 1 report of the week though lacking confirmation is that Lt Comdr J Kittelle Base Supply Officer has received tempting offer from Ed Wynn to take a key spot on the Fire Chief Program complete with firemans hat axe and badge of authority In any event since Rear Admiral C F Bryants pop inspection of his departshyment and resulting fire drill hes Ed middotwynn to his associshyates ACKNOWLEDGED with thanks
is a leaflet The Chapel of My Soul by Lt Phillip Johnson (ChC) USNR Fresno Cal minshyister on leave in the Navy Chapshylain Corps who was the first Protestant Chaplain assigned to the USNATB And is now in the Pacific as chaplain aboard the USS Kenneth Whiting No late word from Lt W J Spinney first Catholic Padre who had dushyty here at the same time and am wondering where he is
COMES too another roundup of news from Lt ComdrFrancis H Pearson USNR formeI Secur-
Home of the 52_year-old rear Forces Pacific Fleet who sees der for numerous troop convoys to admiral is Searsport Me where many USNATB alumni who follow England and commanded the his wife Mrs Elizabeth Raltran Horace Greeleys advice Late ~eaVJ fire support group for ~he Bryant resides A son Carleton Ivisitors at AdComPhibsPac inshymvas1on of Normandy the action F Jr middot ff middot h elude Capt J C Hammock USNCh b 1s a nava1 o 1ce1 as is 1s off er ourg and the land1~gs on son-in-law Lt Harry Kelley Iformer Base Training Officer Southern France Earl~er m _the 1 Mike Crowell Al Snook Rudy war he was commandmg officer j I Johnson Chief Peeples once of of the USS Arkansas and was in command of the follow-up support convoy for the invasion of North Africa
Gallantry in action and leadershyship of naval units in the Atlantic won Rear Admiral Bryant two forshyeign decorations two Legions of Merit and a Letter of Commendashytion The British government apshypointed him to the Distinguished Service Order and the French beshystowed on him the Legion of Honor
The rear admirals first duty after graduation from the Naval Academy in 1914 was aboard the USS Wyoming a battleship which operated with the British Grand Fleet for 13 months during the first World War The Wyoming is now a gunnery training ship and is a unit of his present command
Rear Admiral Bryants service between the wars included assistshyant fire control officer USS Pennshysylvania gunnery officer USS Asheville commanding officer USS Oahu USS Stewart Cavite Ammunition Depot and the USS Charleston
With recent transfer of all Atshylantic amphibious training bases from AT_C to COTCLant Rear Adshymiral Bryants command now emshy
_
Skipper Still think it was a porpoise
middotmiddot--and here Pvt Williama ia your honorable didured
shy
Not overlooked just previously unrecognized are these winners of the special sprint for officers that featured the recent Memorial Day athletic events At right Lt (jg)
Even Camera Shuttered
D L Arnold PhoM2c and R A Bonstell Slc are shown demonshystratinl the Amphibious DUCK (not the four-wheeled variety however) This two-legged type is none other thoan G P Pulley CPhoM Pulley recently made his Chief rate so to keep middot his head from swelling too large for his new Chiefs cap the boys at the Base Photo Lab dunked him in the cooling waters of the Inlet an old custom among the men who make with the camera
Lt (jg) John R Tripson Navy Cross wearer and longtime Scouts and Raiders instructor here at USNATB commanded a landing boat which rescued survivors from another craft blown up by a mine 400 yards off the French coast on D-Day Greatest Navy wave of bond buying looked for in openshying of campaign 1 July Three Ensigns were promoted to Lt (jg) in a recent AlNav Promoted were Ens Jack Martin Carr Ens Hershyman Cecil Moon and Ens Eugene J Hurley Base varsity baseshyball team thrice defeated in week Tenth Beach Battalion Plashytoon C-9 captured the Battalions Softball tourney Base Ships Company basketball team chalshylenged the powerful CB 1011 Five to a game for the championship of the island
Two Years Ago ~ase observes Flag Day with
T R Frazell winner by a step fittmg c~remomes ATB War with Ens Bill Daley at left a Bond Drive opens middot middot Camp Two close runnerup h lds Happy Hour program 0
Four officers of 234th Engineers the Shore Patrol and others promoted ATB nine defeats Others include Doncaster North 1119th Engr 5-2 in arc light game African landings veteran who was Beach Party team moves out a Bas-e transportation man for in front in ATB Softball Tourney many months now on an APA Boxing bouts scheduled for A note of thanks for the ICamp One Ties dispensed with Mock-Up from Col Glen B Wood of AdComPhibsPac staff
-tbull Us NAT B The Mck-U_micro when mailed
home lS Just bke another letter U s N AT B +
~he SEVENTH WAR BOND Drive 1s now on-support lt
during working hours in hot seashyson Navy Wives urged to assist Red Cross in making surgishycal dressings and bandages
+ U s N A TB+ Then there was the GI cook who
asked for extra pay for fr in time Y g
PAGE F OUR
OUR LETTER BOX Dear Captain
After four months as SMO and surgeon at NOB Iceland Dispensshyary have been transferred here as SMO of the Dispensary Advanced Amphibious Base Southhampton England A good many men have passed through here from Fort Pierce and it is well spoken of here My duty in Iceland was an experience worth having Quarters
food recreation were excellent Have been receiving The Mock-Up in bunches and learned with great satisfaction of your Legion of Merit I know how deserved it was and please accept my belated conshygratulations Sincerely
Lt Comdr F C Nichols (MC)
Dear Editor I am in receipt of your kind letshy
ter about my sonmiddot George (Capt G H Bright Jr former Army inshystructor at Scouts and Raiders) He was on duty in Burma where he was severely wounded After several months in the General Hospital No 142 Calcutta due to very fine treatment his life was spared ltnd he is now in the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington DC He was hit with shrapnel and still has a lot of it in his body I am sure he will be glad to get The Mock-Up once more George has been married and his home address is 700 Hendren street Roxboro Philadelphia We are now sure of his ultimate recovery although he had a tough time and Mrs Bright and I thank you for your interest in him
Very sincerely G Howard Bright
Princeton N J
Officers and Men USNATB We are deeply grateful for your
expression of sympathy and flowshyers My father (the late P rofessor N H Bullard St Lucie County Superintendent of Schools) often spoke of pleasant associations with the Naval personnel stationed here He was intensely interested in affording your children with a good and proper education Your kindness is of particular worth and adds again to my great personal debt to the Navy
Hudson Bullard Lieutenant USNR
+ USNATB +
He Wont Go Horne 1il Japs Are Licked
E10 (CNS)-V$gt Witliam D Stern a mess sergeant with an infantry company turned down a chance to r eturn middot to the U S under the Armys redeployment plan Said Stern I have a brothshyer fighting the J aps Hes not getshyting out I guess I can stick to it
THE MOCK-VP
FIRST ALL-NAVY WEDDING HELD AT BASE
middot
An a ll-Navy wedd ing f irst at the Base was held with Ensign Nan Vanderbeek E nglewood N J as the bride and Lt Joel C McCormick Jr Fort White Fla Faber Cove OinC as bridegroom At left they are shown with Chaplain E C Helmich who read the mar~iage vws P~oto at right shows Lt and Mrs Richard D Guy cuttmg their weddmg cake Lt Guy of M and R is from Salem Va His bride is a Fort Pierce girl
Lt Comdr H E Peters Senior Dental Officer
The new Senior Dental Officer at the Base Dental Clinic is Lt Comdr H E Peters USNR The officer reported aboard USNATB on 21 Januaiy 1945 after serving ten months as Senior Dental Ofshyficer at Bainbridge NTC
Lt Comdr Peters graduated f r o m Temple bull University i n 1924 and immeshydiately took up his dental pracshytice in Hazelshyton Pennaand practiced there for 20 years until he was called for actshyive duty on 8 May 1944 Be- H E Peters fore reporting for active duty the mild mannershyed doctor ~erved as Dental Ofshyficer for Draft Board No 1 in Hazelton for two and a half years
The Senior Dental Officer is married and lives with his -wife and family at 1411 Orange Ave here The couPle has two sons Norman 8 and Howard 7 who recently finished their school terms in Pennsylvania and came down to Fort Pierce to be with their father
+ USN AT 8 middotmiddot Watches clocks and Dunhill
lighters will be featured Monday at Ships Service Unit No 1
+ USNA T B + He I wouldnt marry a girl
without experience She Well - er - how much
experience would you want + US N AT B middotbull
Conceit is a form of I-strain
Citations and Awards To63 Demolilionaires (Continued from Page 1)
MM3c middot Roy Ellis MM3c middot Carl G k MMl E t E Esterbroo c mme wan
s~a~ John _A Fancena GM3cWilham F Fmley MM3c Edward A Fish MM2c James L Fox MM2c B G Gathers MMlc H W Guenther MM3c W W Hamshyilton SF3c
Donald L Hanson Cox Thomas F Heiler GM2c ODell F Henshyderson Slc M C Henry MM3c Guy 0 Hilton CM2c W W Hieshydechuk GM2c J G Horan Slc Junior Johnson SF2c Rennie Jim King GMlc E M Kinsella MM
15 JUNE 1945
Sunday Worship
Schedule
Chaplaina K D Perkltll Camp 1 E C Helmich Camp 2 W J Walsh Cam11 2 A J Schutz Camp a
BASE SUNDAY SCHEDULE Protestant Services
Communion Base Chapel 0845 Service Base Chapel bull 090 North Island DRU Service bull 1100 Brig 1630
Catholic Services Masses 0700 and 1045
Jewish Sabbath Eve Service Fridays in Methodist Church Annex 2000
CATHOLIC WEEK DAY SCHEDULE Mass daily at 0700 in Base Chapel with
Confessions before and after PROTESTANT WEEK DAY SCHEDULE
Bible Class Wednesdays at 1930 in Camp Two Chaplains Office Instruction Baptism and other ministrations on apshyplication
Fort lierce Churcheo PROTESTANT
Methodist bull 1100 amp 2000 First Presbyterian bull bull bull bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 Parkview Baptist bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 First Baptist 1100 amp 2000 St Andrew Episcopal bull bull 0800 amp l100 First Christian bullbullbullbull1100 amp 2000 Church of Christ llOO amp 2000 Church of God bull bull bull bull bull 1130 Christian Science bull bull bull 1100
CATHOLIC St Anastasia OROO 0900 1000
CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST J J Torpey wartime minibullter Pleasant
View RFD 2 Fort Pierce Phone 184-W
ISpecial liberty (1000-1300) to attend the 1100 church service 111 East Orange half block from Indian River USO+ u s N AT B +
1 What Did You Do Todaylbull
What did you do today my friend From morning until night
How many times did you complain The rationing is too tight
When are you going to start to do All the things you say
A Soldier would like to know my friend
What did you do today We met the enemy today
And took his town by storm le W 0 Kissinger WTlc F L Happy reading it will make Llausmeier SF2c Wayne D Lampson GMlc R E Landriault CCM L F LeMarinel GMlc Hugh N Lindsey GM2c Edward A Loyle SF3c
Ivan G Ostling CMlc Carl J Paternostro Cox Charles Fortney CSK Artie C Ramsey SF3c Wilshyliam H Riley MMlc Robert R Schneider SF2c L W Schottel MM2c E E Sparkman SF2c B G Supplee SF2c Dale K Todd Slc W J Williams EM3c James C Winget Slc A D Wold GM2c Douglas E Yeatts SF2c
bulll- U s N A T B + Ships Service units have many
items that will make ideal eleventh hour Fathers Day purchases
+ U s NAT B bullbull
For you tomorrow morn Youll read with satisfaction
The brief communique We fought but are you fighting
What did you do today My gunner died in my arms today
I feel his warm blood yet Your neighbors dying boy gave
out A scream I cant forget
On my right a tankmiddotwas hit A flash and then the fire
The stench of burning human flesh Still rises from their pyre
What did you do today my friend To help us with the task
Did you work harder and longer for less
Or is that too much to ask What right have I to ask you this
We often wonder at what age You probably will say-a bachelor becomes confirmed IMaybe now youll und~rstand
+USNATB+ middot h b l You see I DIED TODAYA fli tr 1s a woman w o e ieves (W tt b Lt D F Ch tl middot its every man for herself n ~n ~ middot middot middot a am+ u s N AT e middotmiddot while lymg mJured m a battleshy
Dont put off till tomorrow what field in Italy Taken to a field you should do today-buy a bond hospital he later recovered)
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE FIVE -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
JOAN BRANDON AND MAGIC MUSIC HERE
MONDAY TUESDAY Glamorous beautiful vivacious
Joan Brandon known as Americas First Lady of Magic with her sensational show of stars and mushysicians will be at USNATB for a two-day stand starting Monday night at 1800 when she and her Magic Music Orchestra put on a variety show at Gulbranson Hall
Following the performance at Gulbranson Hall on Monday Miss Brandon and her company will apshypear at Jaycee Field for a Music Under the Stars showing at 2030 and will play for dancing at a dance for enlisted men at 2130 at Legion Hall On Tuesday night the blonde magician will appear on the stage of Gulbranson Hall at 1800 and will play for dancing at 2030 at a dance for Officers their wives and lady friends at Legion Hall Arrangements are being made for a hundred young ladies from the Fort Pierce and West Palm areas to serve as hostesses
This presentation stars Miss Brandon with her Orchetra plus a variety of versatile performers from the night spots and theatres of New York and Chicago
The orchestra has played coast to coast in key theatres and hotels of every big city and over the Coshylumbia Broadcasting System sevshyeral nights weekly Besides leading the orchestra Miss Brandon grand-daughter of the Great Branshydoni performs so cleverly in the art of magic she is compared with the top rankilg magicians in the country
Following the Magic Music Orshychestra in W ampRs parade of hits will be Music that Wins with the McFarland Twins known for their sweet music and novelties on June 25
USN ATBmiddotJ
Lost Found Buy Sell I I And Trade Department
LOST White Plastic rimmed glasses in a black leather case with a flap cover at one end If found please turn in to the Security ofshyfice at the Administration Bldg FOR SALE Ladies bicycle available for inspection 100 Aveshynue D Practically new Wire par-
LUSCIOUS MARILYN MILES HERE 25 JUNE
Beauteous Marilyn Miles is the featured feminine vocalist with the McFarland Twins orchestra due to visit the USNATB on 25 June for program dates at Gulbranson Hall and at the Music Under the Stars Theatre Jaycee Field Marilyn is obviously quite im atshytraction with the McFarland troupe stylists in sweet swing
Entry List Climbs For Base Tennis Tournament Entries in a Base Tennis t oulJ1shy
ament will be accepted until 2400 23 June is was announced today All those inter~sted in entering the tourney are asked to file an entry either with the man on duty at the Tennis Courts or at the Welfare and Recreation office
The tourney will be played at Pinewood Park on the South Dixie Highway opposite Jaycee Field and there will be three divisions One division will be for all Enlistshyeel Men another for Officers and the third for all servicemens wives
The first prize in each grup will be a first grade tennis ra_guet while the runner-up in each dishy
cel carrier $30 Lt C P Hagen- vision will receive one dozen grade sen A Pennsylvania tennis balls
NAVAL Officers wife driving The raquets and tennis ball s to Texas wants couple or V1ife used in the tourney will be furnshyto share expenses Leaving after ished by W and R June 15 Call 439-W +USN AT B +
WANTED Men with bartender 1 Lt Doc Allen of Amphibious experience wishing to work after Scouts from the Lone Star State hours at Officer Club to apply to believes the United States is atshyLt (jg) John W Hamilton Club Itached to Te~as for rations and Manager at 9169 or 547 quarters
Base Alumnus in Far Pacific Writes For Poems
By Service Gels Them The truth of the saying the
pen is mightier than the sword may be hard to justify in these wartime days but at least one warrior - an alumnus of the Amshyphibious Base here - has not forshygotten the influence of the pen
Although participating in the adventures of a war - which would outrival most of Robert W Services poems of Alaskan advenshyture - S2c Walter Shea aboard an LST in the South Pacific is still impressed by The Shooting of Dan McGrew and Songs of a Sourdough to which he was inshyitiated when he chanced acro~s a volume of Services poems in the USNATB library while in trainshying here
Shea unable to find a copy of Services works either in his ships library or at his advanced base wrote back to Mrs Emily C Norwick Base Librarian to see if he might purchase a copy Mrs N orwick discussed the request with the Field Directors ofiice of
U S Trains Russian Crew to Take Over
Cruiser Milwaukee U S Naval officers and enshy
listed men trained a Russian crew to man the light cruiser USS Milshywaukee when that U S warship was loaned to the Russian Navy on April 20 1944 the Navy anshynounced today
American instructors were all Russian interpreters - the same men who aided at the Crimean Conference
After boaidino the cruiser in a British port one officer and one enlisted man were assivned to a department which they studied thoroughly Officer-enlisted men teams worked in the Construction and Repair Supply Communicashytions Engine Room Gunnery and Navigation sections
Upon arrival at Murmansk shyafter a voyage which included conshytact with U-boats -_ the Milwaushykee moYed into the dock under her own power She was the first U S warship to enter that port during this war
For five weeks the ships various compartments were classrooms Russian officers and men bomshybarded the U S Navy men with questions They wanted to know the purpose of every lever bolt and valve Sometimes the quiz lasted until late hours of the night On two occasions the Russhysian pupils pressed a red button on the ships bridge The Milwaushykee crewmen were sent scurrying to their battle stations The Soshyviets out of curiosity had pressed the General Quarters alarm butshyton
When indoctrination was comshypleted the ship went out on a shakedown cruise and later it was turned over with ceremonies to her Soviet skipper
bulll-USNATBbulllshyPEACE IS WONDERFUL
Peace its wonderful But only eight percent of time since the beginning of recorded history has been peaceful In 3521 years only 286 have been warless
the American Red Cross on the base and as a result of the confershyence two volumes of poetry are on their way to Sheas ship plying South Pacific waters
Other cooperative agents in this service rendered Shea are the St Lucie County Red Cross Chapter and its Camp and Hospital Comshymittee Funds from Camp and Hospital service were provided for purchase from a local store of the complete poems of Robert W Service and a companion book a compilation by Ted Malone -of servshyicemens ballads also recommendmiddot ed by Mrs Norwick
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
PAGE TWO THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
THE MOCK-UP United States Naval Amphibious Training Base Fort Pierce Fla
VOL 4-NO 24 15 JUNE 1945
COMMANDING OFFICER - - - CAPT C GULBRANSON U f NoiVY EXECUTIVE OFFICER - COMDR PERRY M FENTON USNR EDrTOR - bull - bull bull - - LT C HERSCHEL SCHOOLEY USNR PHOTO EDITOR - LT (TG) E J FINLEY USNR Art Editor R D Force Sic Sports Editor F X McPhillips Slc Photographers R L Lane PhoMlc R J Jonas PhoM3c W N
Blakeney Slc R A Bonstell Slc
THE MOCK-UP is published each iimiddotiday for all Base personnel It is reviewed for security and is disshytributed without charge Contribushytions and criticisms invited All pictures are Navy Photos (Male Call and The Wolf from Camp Newspaper ampervice)
WHY PEOPLE BUY BONDS
You hear different arguments why people should bur war bonds
Some are moved consciously or unconsciously by selfish interest War bonds are a good investment They are a safe investment They return nearly three per cent interest andmiddot constitute therefore the safest and best savings nest-egg anyone can build up
With some a mere mention of the word duty is sufshyficient General Robert E Lee noted that duty was the sublimest word in the English language Such a man is driven by a sense of duty without regard to personal or selfish interest Show him where duty lies and that is all thats necessary
Others are actuated by a sense of loyalty and perhaps this is the most numerous class Loyalty to the nation loyalty to loved ones in the service loyalty to ideals
By whatever motive moved Americans always have come through handsomely in supporting the war by purchase of bonds It hasnt been necessary to use strong-armed tactics that nearly always backfires The part played by sheer ballyhoo-the tactics of the sideshow and the circus-is questionable
But mostly the success of the war bond drives is a tribute to the good sense the loyalty and the sense of duty of the great masses of the American people Because of that loyalty and good sense the success of the Mighty Seventh drive at the USNATB and wit_h all Naval personnel is assured The Navy is not expected to fight the war and finance it too but earns its Well Done with bond purchases just the same
Navy Vesper Service Given Sunday Night
Another of a series of Navy vesper services was held at the Presbyterian Church 9n Sunday night followed by a social hour Chaplains K D Perkins E C He1mich and A J Schutz took part in the service with special organ selections by W A Setter- strom Slc S M Robertson Sp (W) 2c and Zane Cjrey Slc of the LST 980
+USNATB+
-rJe clip1s Next
CHAPLAINS CORNER Chaplain William J Walsh
BLOOD and GUTS There is a little Church out
there where I was baptized and confirmed God has been good to me and Id like to go there to give thanks to Him These are the words General George S Patton Jr spoke to reporters after his
8 He was look-Boston on June reception i n ing forward to a ten-day leave and a chance to visi~ his parish Church in Los Angeles
After reading middot those words of
a fighting Genshyeral - who is
known as Blood and Guts - it is rather amusing to listen to the barracks moron who laughs and scoffs at the idea of God of reshyligion or at a shipmate who has guts to say some prayers each day It usually happens that those who ridicule religion are the very ones who lack blood and guts when the real showdown comes
There are a good many brave men wholl never get a decoration for their special kind of bravery Theres the fellow whos brave enough and has guts to say No when he knows that No is the only answer to give to the shipmate whose only idea of fun is going out and getshyting boiled when he asks him to go along and develop his dark brown taste his- tomorrows headshyache his sickening hangover to the slick gambler who has been c llecting the money of less practiced associates when he proshyposes a game that he cannot afshyford to join to the indecent girl who throws herself at him and and who would make him unworthy of the girl he hopes someday to make his wife and the mother of his chilshydren
Theres the fellow who has blood and guts to do what he knows he ought to do and what would make his mother and his future wife mighty happy to say his prayers without shame and without ostentation even though the barracks bully laughs to act in time of war as a Christian gentleman is expected to act in times of peace War he knows does not repeal the Ten Commandments
Theres the fellow who has the courage to admit he is sure of a lot of important things
AT THE MOVIES
GULBRANSON HAtL Friday
CALL OF THE ILD Saturday
TWICE BLESSED Sunday and Monday
WONDER MAN Tuesday
PATRICK THE GREAT Wednesday
RHYTHM ROUNDUP Thursday and Friday
THE CORN IS GREEN
SUNRISE THEATRE Friday and Saturday
HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN Sunday and Monday
NATIONAL VELVET Tue~day and Wednesday
PAN AMERICANA Thursday
SNOW WHITE AND 7 DWARFS
RITZ middotTHEATRE Friday and Saturday
SONG OF THE RANGE Sunday and Monday
BETRAYAL FROM THE EAST Tuesday
ESCAPE IN THE FOG Vednesday and Thursday
MEET MISS BOBBY SOCKS
TENTH STREET USO Friday
TIME FOR LOVE
INDIAN RIVER USO Saturday and Sunday TOPPER RETURNS
Wednesday CHRISTMAS IN JULY
- that there is a God and His
law which must be respected that men and women were meant for important responsibilishyties and not merely for careless good times that what he does now in days o~ war will have a profound effect on what he will do later in time of peace
Yes we all admire the man who is brave in battle But we all have to take our hats off to the man who is brave among his fellows in the barracks We all admire the courage it takes to keep ones ideals high and ones principles firm all the year round especially in the service That is the true courage It doesnt require any particular courage to use filthy language - get drunk or act inshydecently - but it does require blood and guts to live up to our Christian ideals in the face of opshyposition
+USNATB+ California Hall at Polk and
Turk Streets in San Francisco California has been set aside as transient officers quarters This provide quarters and mess facilishyties for transient officers in themiddot Twelfth middot Naval District
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE THREE
REAR ADMIRAL BRYANT NEWS FLASHES FROM AROUND THE BASE PLEASED AT STAY HERE
Rear Admiral Carleton F Bryshyant USN Commander Atlantic Fleet Operational Training Comshymand completed a three-day visit to the USNATB Saturday and deshyparted for Miami and New Orshyleans well pleased with operashytions and training carried on here at the Base
Rear Admiral Bryant thanked Capt C Gulbranson USN Base CO and officers and men under his command for military courteshysies shown him and accompanyshying staff officers and for smartshyness of bearing and appearance of all hands
Rear Admiral Bryant becameCotcLant last October 31 when he relieved Rear Admiral Donald B BeaJy USN who had headed the organization from its estabshylishment in March 1943
Prior to becoming CotcLant Rear Admiral Bryant was comshymander of a battleship division comprising the USS Texas USS
middotk USS N d d USSN Yew or eva a an Arkansas
He was also task force comman-
Rear Admiral Bryant
braces more than 40 operational middot middot tmiddot middottmiddot d t d tt rammg ac iv1 ies coor ma e o
ff middot t pImiddoteshycarry out the mos t e ic1en middot middot middot h k d dcomm1ss1omng s a e- own an
middot middot f 1ref resher t rammg or nava vesshy1 b middotit t d th Atse s m or conver e on _e shy
antic and Gulf Coasts and mland waterways
COTCLant Hea~quarters are at the Naval Operatmg Base Annex
t Off bullth th Ad ICamp Allen the former Sea Bee ~ Yt t icerCnow wd1 Ae hb~m- I Year Ago This Week lstation at Norfolk is ra ive omman mp I 10us
No 1 report of the week though lacking confirmation is that Lt Comdr J Kittelle Base Supply Officer has received tempting offer from Ed Wynn to take a key spot on the Fire Chief Program complete with firemans hat axe and badge of authority In any event since Rear Admiral C F Bryants pop inspection of his departshyment and resulting fire drill hes Ed middotwynn to his associshyates ACKNOWLEDGED with thanks
is a leaflet The Chapel of My Soul by Lt Phillip Johnson (ChC) USNR Fresno Cal minshyister on leave in the Navy Chapshylain Corps who was the first Protestant Chaplain assigned to the USNATB And is now in the Pacific as chaplain aboard the USS Kenneth Whiting No late word from Lt W J Spinney first Catholic Padre who had dushyty here at the same time and am wondering where he is
COMES too another roundup of news from Lt ComdrFrancis H Pearson USNR formeI Secur-
Home of the 52_year-old rear Forces Pacific Fleet who sees der for numerous troop convoys to admiral is Searsport Me where many USNATB alumni who follow England and commanded the his wife Mrs Elizabeth Raltran Horace Greeleys advice Late ~eaVJ fire support group for ~he Bryant resides A son Carleton Ivisitors at AdComPhibsPac inshymvas1on of Normandy the action F Jr middot ff middot h elude Capt J C Hammock USNCh b 1s a nava1 o 1ce1 as is 1s off er ourg and the land1~gs on son-in-law Lt Harry Kelley Iformer Base Training Officer Southern France Earl~er m _the 1 Mike Crowell Al Snook Rudy war he was commandmg officer j I Johnson Chief Peeples once of of the USS Arkansas and was in command of the follow-up support convoy for the invasion of North Africa
Gallantry in action and leadershyship of naval units in the Atlantic won Rear Admiral Bryant two forshyeign decorations two Legions of Merit and a Letter of Commendashytion The British government apshypointed him to the Distinguished Service Order and the French beshystowed on him the Legion of Honor
The rear admirals first duty after graduation from the Naval Academy in 1914 was aboard the USS Wyoming a battleship which operated with the British Grand Fleet for 13 months during the first World War The Wyoming is now a gunnery training ship and is a unit of his present command
Rear Admiral Bryants service between the wars included assistshyant fire control officer USS Pennshysylvania gunnery officer USS Asheville commanding officer USS Oahu USS Stewart Cavite Ammunition Depot and the USS Charleston
With recent transfer of all Atshylantic amphibious training bases from AT_C to COTCLant Rear Adshymiral Bryants command now emshy
_
Skipper Still think it was a porpoise
middotmiddot--and here Pvt Williama ia your honorable didured
shy
Not overlooked just previously unrecognized are these winners of the special sprint for officers that featured the recent Memorial Day athletic events At right Lt (jg)
Even Camera Shuttered
D L Arnold PhoM2c and R A Bonstell Slc are shown demonshystratinl the Amphibious DUCK (not the four-wheeled variety however) This two-legged type is none other thoan G P Pulley CPhoM Pulley recently made his Chief rate so to keep middot his head from swelling too large for his new Chiefs cap the boys at the Base Photo Lab dunked him in the cooling waters of the Inlet an old custom among the men who make with the camera
Lt (jg) John R Tripson Navy Cross wearer and longtime Scouts and Raiders instructor here at USNATB commanded a landing boat which rescued survivors from another craft blown up by a mine 400 yards off the French coast on D-Day Greatest Navy wave of bond buying looked for in openshying of campaign 1 July Three Ensigns were promoted to Lt (jg) in a recent AlNav Promoted were Ens Jack Martin Carr Ens Hershyman Cecil Moon and Ens Eugene J Hurley Base varsity baseshyball team thrice defeated in week Tenth Beach Battalion Plashytoon C-9 captured the Battalions Softball tourney Base Ships Company basketball team chalshylenged the powerful CB 1011 Five to a game for the championship of the island
Two Years Ago ~ase observes Flag Day with
T R Frazell winner by a step fittmg c~remomes ATB War with Ens Bill Daley at left a Bond Drive opens middot middot Camp Two close runnerup h lds Happy Hour program 0
Four officers of 234th Engineers the Shore Patrol and others promoted ATB nine defeats Others include Doncaster North 1119th Engr 5-2 in arc light game African landings veteran who was Beach Party team moves out a Bas-e transportation man for in front in ATB Softball Tourney many months now on an APA Boxing bouts scheduled for A note of thanks for the ICamp One Ties dispensed with Mock-Up from Col Glen B Wood of AdComPhibsPac staff
-tbull Us NAT B The Mck-U_micro when mailed
home lS Just bke another letter U s N AT B +
~he SEVENTH WAR BOND Drive 1s now on-support lt
during working hours in hot seashyson Navy Wives urged to assist Red Cross in making surgishycal dressings and bandages
+ U s N A TB+ Then there was the GI cook who
asked for extra pay for fr in time Y g
PAGE F OUR
OUR LETTER BOX Dear Captain
After four months as SMO and surgeon at NOB Iceland Dispensshyary have been transferred here as SMO of the Dispensary Advanced Amphibious Base Southhampton England A good many men have passed through here from Fort Pierce and it is well spoken of here My duty in Iceland was an experience worth having Quarters
food recreation were excellent Have been receiving The Mock-Up in bunches and learned with great satisfaction of your Legion of Merit I know how deserved it was and please accept my belated conshygratulations Sincerely
Lt Comdr F C Nichols (MC)
Dear Editor I am in receipt of your kind letshy
ter about my sonmiddot George (Capt G H Bright Jr former Army inshystructor at Scouts and Raiders) He was on duty in Burma where he was severely wounded After several months in the General Hospital No 142 Calcutta due to very fine treatment his life was spared ltnd he is now in the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington DC He was hit with shrapnel and still has a lot of it in his body I am sure he will be glad to get The Mock-Up once more George has been married and his home address is 700 Hendren street Roxboro Philadelphia We are now sure of his ultimate recovery although he had a tough time and Mrs Bright and I thank you for your interest in him
Very sincerely G Howard Bright
Princeton N J
Officers and Men USNATB We are deeply grateful for your
expression of sympathy and flowshyers My father (the late P rofessor N H Bullard St Lucie County Superintendent of Schools) often spoke of pleasant associations with the Naval personnel stationed here He was intensely interested in affording your children with a good and proper education Your kindness is of particular worth and adds again to my great personal debt to the Navy
Hudson Bullard Lieutenant USNR
+ USNATB +
He Wont Go Horne 1il Japs Are Licked
E10 (CNS)-V$gt Witliam D Stern a mess sergeant with an infantry company turned down a chance to r eturn middot to the U S under the Armys redeployment plan Said Stern I have a brothshyer fighting the J aps Hes not getshyting out I guess I can stick to it
THE MOCK-VP
FIRST ALL-NAVY WEDDING HELD AT BASE
middot
An a ll-Navy wedd ing f irst at the Base was held with Ensign Nan Vanderbeek E nglewood N J as the bride and Lt Joel C McCormick Jr Fort White Fla Faber Cove OinC as bridegroom At left they are shown with Chaplain E C Helmich who read the mar~iage vws P~oto at right shows Lt and Mrs Richard D Guy cuttmg their weddmg cake Lt Guy of M and R is from Salem Va His bride is a Fort Pierce girl
Lt Comdr H E Peters Senior Dental Officer
The new Senior Dental Officer at the Base Dental Clinic is Lt Comdr H E Peters USNR The officer reported aboard USNATB on 21 Januaiy 1945 after serving ten months as Senior Dental Ofshyficer at Bainbridge NTC
Lt Comdr Peters graduated f r o m Temple bull University i n 1924 and immeshydiately took up his dental pracshytice in Hazelshyton Pennaand practiced there for 20 years until he was called for actshyive duty on 8 May 1944 Be- H E Peters fore reporting for active duty the mild mannershyed doctor ~erved as Dental Ofshyficer for Draft Board No 1 in Hazelton for two and a half years
The Senior Dental Officer is married and lives with his -wife and family at 1411 Orange Ave here The couPle has two sons Norman 8 and Howard 7 who recently finished their school terms in Pennsylvania and came down to Fort Pierce to be with their father
+ USN AT 8 middotmiddot Watches clocks and Dunhill
lighters will be featured Monday at Ships Service Unit No 1
+ USNA T B + He I wouldnt marry a girl
without experience She Well - er - how much
experience would you want + US N AT B middotbull
Conceit is a form of I-strain
Citations and Awards To63 Demolilionaires (Continued from Page 1)
MM3c middot Roy Ellis MM3c middot Carl G k MMl E t E Esterbroo c mme wan
s~a~ John _A Fancena GM3cWilham F Fmley MM3c Edward A Fish MM2c James L Fox MM2c B G Gathers MMlc H W Guenther MM3c W W Hamshyilton SF3c
Donald L Hanson Cox Thomas F Heiler GM2c ODell F Henshyderson Slc M C Henry MM3c Guy 0 Hilton CM2c W W Hieshydechuk GM2c J G Horan Slc Junior Johnson SF2c Rennie Jim King GMlc E M Kinsella MM
15 JUNE 1945
Sunday Worship
Schedule
Chaplaina K D Perkltll Camp 1 E C Helmich Camp 2 W J Walsh Cam11 2 A J Schutz Camp a
BASE SUNDAY SCHEDULE Protestant Services
Communion Base Chapel 0845 Service Base Chapel bull 090 North Island DRU Service bull 1100 Brig 1630
Catholic Services Masses 0700 and 1045
Jewish Sabbath Eve Service Fridays in Methodist Church Annex 2000
CATHOLIC WEEK DAY SCHEDULE Mass daily at 0700 in Base Chapel with
Confessions before and after PROTESTANT WEEK DAY SCHEDULE
Bible Class Wednesdays at 1930 in Camp Two Chaplains Office Instruction Baptism and other ministrations on apshyplication
Fort lierce Churcheo PROTESTANT
Methodist bull 1100 amp 2000 First Presbyterian bull bull bull bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 Parkview Baptist bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 First Baptist 1100 amp 2000 St Andrew Episcopal bull bull 0800 amp l100 First Christian bullbullbullbull1100 amp 2000 Church of Christ llOO amp 2000 Church of God bull bull bull bull bull 1130 Christian Science bull bull bull 1100
CATHOLIC St Anastasia OROO 0900 1000
CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST J J Torpey wartime minibullter Pleasant
View RFD 2 Fort Pierce Phone 184-W
ISpecial liberty (1000-1300) to attend the 1100 church service 111 East Orange half block from Indian River USO+ u s N AT B +
1 What Did You Do Todaylbull
What did you do today my friend From morning until night
How many times did you complain The rationing is too tight
When are you going to start to do All the things you say
A Soldier would like to know my friend
What did you do today We met the enemy today
And took his town by storm le W 0 Kissinger WTlc F L Happy reading it will make Llausmeier SF2c Wayne D Lampson GMlc R E Landriault CCM L F LeMarinel GMlc Hugh N Lindsey GM2c Edward A Loyle SF3c
Ivan G Ostling CMlc Carl J Paternostro Cox Charles Fortney CSK Artie C Ramsey SF3c Wilshyliam H Riley MMlc Robert R Schneider SF2c L W Schottel MM2c E E Sparkman SF2c B G Supplee SF2c Dale K Todd Slc W J Williams EM3c James C Winget Slc A D Wold GM2c Douglas E Yeatts SF2c
bulll- U s N A T B + Ships Service units have many
items that will make ideal eleventh hour Fathers Day purchases
+ U s NAT B bullbull
For you tomorrow morn Youll read with satisfaction
The brief communique We fought but are you fighting
What did you do today My gunner died in my arms today
I feel his warm blood yet Your neighbors dying boy gave
out A scream I cant forget
On my right a tankmiddotwas hit A flash and then the fire
The stench of burning human flesh Still rises from their pyre
What did you do today my friend To help us with the task
Did you work harder and longer for less
Or is that too much to ask What right have I to ask you this
We often wonder at what age You probably will say-a bachelor becomes confirmed IMaybe now youll und~rstand
+USNATB+ middot h b l You see I DIED TODAYA fli tr 1s a woman w o e ieves (W tt b Lt D F Ch tl middot its every man for herself n ~n ~ middot middot middot a am+ u s N AT e middotmiddot while lymg mJured m a battleshy
Dont put off till tomorrow what field in Italy Taken to a field you should do today-buy a bond hospital he later recovered)
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE FIVE -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
JOAN BRANDON AND MAGIC MUSIC HERE
MONDAY TUESDAY Glamorous beautiful vivacious
Joan Brandon known as Americas First Lady of Magic with her sensational show of stars and mushysicians will be at USNATB for a two-day stand starting Monday night at 1800 when she and her Magic Music Orchestra put on a variety show at Gulbranson Hall
Following the performance at Gulbranson Hall on Monday Miss Brandon and her company will apshypear at Jaycee Field for a Music Under the Stars showing at 2030 and will play for dancing at a dance for enlisted men at 2130 at Legion Hall On Tuesday night the blonde magician will appear on the stage of Gulbranson Hall at 1800 and will play for dancing at 2030 at a dance for Officers their wives and lady friends at Legion Hall Arrangements are being made for a hundred young ladies from the Fort Pierce and West Palm areas to serve as hostesses
This presentation stars Miss Brandon with her Orchetra plus a variety of versatile performers from the night spots and theatres of New York and Chicago
The orchestra has played coast to coast in key theatres and hotels of every big city and over the Coshylumbia Broadcasting System sevshyeral nights weekly Besides leading the orchestra Miss Brandon grand-daughter of the Great Branshydoni performs so cleverly in the art of magic she is compared with the top rankilg magicians in the country
Following the Magic Music Orshychestra in W ampRs parade of hits will be Music that Wins with the McFarland Twins known for their sweet music and novelties on June 25
USN ATBmiddotJ
Lost Found Buy Sell I I And Trade Department
LOST White Plastic rimmed glasses in a black leather case with a flap cover at one end If found please turn in to the Security ofshyfice at the Administration Bldg FOR SALE Ladies bicycle available for inspection 100 Aveshynue D Practically new Wire par-
LUSCIOUS MARILYN MILES HERE 25 JUNE
Beauteous Marilyn Miles is the featured feminine vocalist with the McFarland Twins orchestra due to visit the USNATB on 25 June for program dates at Gulbranson Hall and at the Music Under the Stars Theatre Jaycee Field Marilyn is obviously quite im atshytraction with the McFarland troupe stylists in sweet swing
Entry List Climbs For Base Tennis Tournament Entries in a Base Tennis t oulJ1shy
ament will be accepted until 2400 23 June is was announced today All those inter~sted in entering the tourney are asked to file an entry either with the man on duty at the Tennis Courts or at the Welfare and Recreation office
The tourney will be played at Pinewood Park on the South Dixie Highway opposite Jaycee Field and there will be three divisions One division will be for all Enlistshyeel Men another for Officers and the third for all servicemens wives
The first prize in each grup will be a first grade tennis ra_guet while the runner-up in each dishy
cel carrier $30 Lt C P Hagen- vision will receive one dozen grade sen A Pennsylvania tennis balls
NAVAL Officers wife driving The raquets and tennis ball s to Texas wants couple or V1ife used in the tourney will be furnshyto share expenses Leaving after ished by W and R June 15 Call 439-W +USN AT B +
WANTED Men with bartender 1 Lt Doc Allen of Amphibious experience wishing to work after Scouts from the Lone Star State hours at Officer Club to apply to believes the United States is atshyLt (jg) John W Hamilton Club Itached to Te~as for rations and Manager at 9169 or 547 quarters
Base Alumnus in Far Pacific Writes For Poems
By Service Gels Them The truth of the saying the
pen is mightier than the sword may be hard to justify in these wartime days but at least one warrior - an alumnus of the Amshyphibious Base here - has not forshygotten the influence of the pen
Although participating in the adventures of a war - which would outrival most of Robert W Services poems of Alaskan advenshyture - S2c Walter Shea aboard an LST in the South Pacific is still impressed by The Shooting of Dan McGrew and Songs of a Sourdough to which he was inshyitiated when he chanced acro~s a volume of Services poems in the USNATB library while in trainshying here
Shea unable to find a copy of Services works either in his ships library or at his advanced base wrote back to Mrs Emily C Norwick Base Librarian to see if he might purchase a copy Mrs N orwick discussed the request with the Field Directors ofiice of
U S Trains Russian Crew to Take Over
Cruiser Milwaukee U S Naval officers and enshy
listed men trained a Russian crew to man the light cruiser USS Milshywaukee when that U S warship was loaned to the Russian Navy on April 20 1944 the Navy anshynounced today
American instructors were all Russian interpreters - the same men who aided at the Crimean Conference
After boaidino the cruiser in a British port one officer and one enlisted man were assivned to a department which they studied thoroughly Officer-enlisted men teams worked in the Construction and Repair Supply Communicashytions Engine Room Gunnery and Navigation sections
Upon arrival at Murmansk shyafter a voyage which included conshytact with U-boats -_ the Milwaushykee moYed into the dock under her own power She was the first U S warship to enter that port during this war
For five weeks the ships various compartments were classrooms Russian officers and men bomshybarded the U S Navy men with questions They wanted to know the purpose of every lever bolt and valve Sometimes the quiz lasted until late hours of the night On two occasions the Russhysian pupils pressed a red button on the ships bridge The Milwaushykee crewmen were sent scurrying to their battle stations The Soshyviets out of curiosity had pressed the General Quarters alarm butshyton
When indoctrination was comshypleted the ship went out on a shakedown cruise and later it was turned over with ceremonies to her Soviet skipper
bulll-USNATBbulllshyPEACE IS WONDERFUL
Peace its wonderful But only eight percent of time since the beginning of recorded history has been peaceful In 3521 years only 286 have been warless
the American Red Cross on the base and as a result of the confershyence two volumes of poetry are on their way to Sheas ship plying South Pacific waters
Other cooperative agents in this service rendered Shea are the St Lucie County Red Cross Chapter and its Camp and Hospital Comshymittee Funds from Camp and Hospital service were provided for purchase from a local store of the complete poems of Robert W Service and a companion book a compilation by Ted Malone -of servshyicemens ballads also recommendmiddot ed by Mrs Norwick
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE THREE
REAR ADMIRAL BRYANT NEWS FLASHES FROM AROUND THE BASE PLEASED AT STAY HERE
Rear Admiral Carleton F Bryshyant USN Commander Atlantic Fleet Operational Training Comshymand completed a three-day visit to the USNATB Saturday and deshyparted for Miami and New Orshyleans well pleased with operashytions and training carried on here at the Base
Rear Admiral Bryant thanked Capt C Gulbranson USN Base CO and officers and men under his command for military courteshysies shown him and accompanyshying staff officers and for smartshyness of bearing and appearance of all hands
Rear Admiral Bryant becameCotcLant last October 31 when he relieved Rear Admiral Donald B BeaJy USN who had headed the organization from its estabshylishment in March 1943
Prior to becoming CotcLant Rear Admiral Bryant was comshymander of a battleship division comprising the USS Texas USS
middotk USS N d d USSN Yew or eva a an Arkansas
He was also task force comman-
Rear Admiral Bryant
braces more than 40 operational middot middot tmiddot middottmiddot d t d tt rammg ac iv1 ies coor ma e o
ff middot t pImiddoteshycarry out the mos t e ic1en middot middot middot h k d dcomm1ss1omng s a e- own an
middot middot f 1ref resher t rammg or nava vesshy1 b middotit t d th Atse s m or conver e on _e shy
antic and Gulf Coasts and mland waterways
COTCLant Hea~quarters are at the Naval Operatmg Base Annex
t Off bullth th Ad ICamp Allen the former Sea Bee ~ Yt t icerCnow wd1 Ae hb~m- I Year Ago This Week lstation at Norfolk is ra ive omman mp I 10us
No 1 report of the week though lacking confirmation is that Lt Comdr J Kittelle Base Supply Officer has received tempting offer from Ed Wynn to take a key spot on the Fire Chief Program complete with firemans hat axe and badge of authority In any event since Rear Admiral C F Bryants pop inspection of his departshyment and resulting fire drill hes Ed middotwynn to his associshyates ACKNOWLEDGED with thanks
is a leaflet The Chapel of My Soul by Lt Phillip Johnson (ChC) USNR Fresno Cal minshyister on leave in the Navy Chapshylain Corps who was the first Protestant Chaplain assigned to the USNATB And is now in the Pacific as chaplain aboard the USS Kenneth Whiting No late word from Lt W J Spinney first Catholic Padre who had dushyty here at the same time and am wondering where he is
COMES too another roundup of news from Lt ComdrFrancis H Pearson USNR formeI Secur-
Home of the 52_year-old rear Forces Pacific Fleet who sees der for numerous troop convoys to admiral is Searsport Me where many USNATB alumni who follow England and commanded the his wife Mrs Elizabeth Raltran Horace Greeleys advice Late ~eaVJ fire support group for ~he Bryant resides A son Carleton Ivisitors at AdComPhibsPac inshymvas1on of Normandy the action F Jr middot ff middot h elude Capt J C Hammock USNCh b 1s a nava1 o 1ce1 as is 1s off er ourg and the land1~gs on son-in-law Lt Harry Kelley Iformer Base Training Officer Southern France Earl~er m _the 1 Mike Crowell Al Snook Rudy war he was commandmg officer j I Johnson Chief Peeples once of of the USS Arkansas and was in command of the follow-up support convoy for the invasion of North Africa
Gallantry in action and leadershyship of naval units in the Atlantic won Rear Admiral Bryant two forshyeign decorations two Legions of Merit and a Letter of Commendashytion The British government apshypointed him to the Distinguished Service Order and the French beshystowed on him the Legion of Honor
The rear admirals first duty after graduation from the Naval Academy in 1914 was aboard the USS Wyoming a battleship which operated with the British Grand Fleet for 13 months during the first World War The Wyoming is now a gunnery training ship and is a unit of his present command
Rear Admiral Bryants service between the wars included assistshyant fire control officer USS Pennshysylvania gunnery officer USS Asheville commanding officer USS Oahu USS Stewart Cavite Ammunition Depot and the USS Charleston
With recent transfer of all Atshylantic amphibious training bases from AT_C to COTCLant Rear Adshymiral Bryants command now emshy
_
Skipper Still think it was a porpoise
middotmiddot--and here Pvt Williama ia your honorable didured
shy
Not overlooked just previously unrecognized are these winners of the special sprint for officers that featured the recent Memorial Day athletic events At right Lt (jg)
Even Camera Shuttered
D L Arnold PhoM2c and R A Bonstell Slc are shown demonshystratinl the Amphibious DUCK (not the four-wheeled variety however) This two-legged type is none other thoan G P Pulley CPhoM Pulley recently made his Chief rate so to keep middot his head from swelling too large for his new Chiefs cap the boys at the Base Photo Lab dunked him in the cooling waters of the Inlet an old custom among the men who make with the camera
Lt (jg) John R Tripson Navy Cross wearer and longtime Scouts and Raiders instructor here at USNATB commanded a landing boat which rescued survivors from another craft blown up by a mine 400 yards off the French coast on D-Day Greatest Navy wave of bond buying looked for in openshying of campaign 1 July Three Ensigns were promoted to Lt (jg) in a recent AlNav Promoted were Ens Jack Martin Carr Ens Hershyman Cecil Moon and Ens Eugene J Hurley Base varsity baseshyball team thrice defeated in week Tenth Beach Battalion Plashytoon C-9 captured the Battalions Softball tourney Base Ships Company basketball team chalshylenged the powerful CB 1011 Five to a game for the championship of the island
Two Years Ago ~ase observes Flag Day with
T R Frazell winner by a step fittmg c~remomes ATB War with Ens Bill Daley at left a Bond Drive opens middot middot Camp Two close runnerup h lds Happy Hour program 0
Four officers of 234th Engineers the Shore Patrol and others promoted ATB nine defeats Others include Doncaster North 1119th Engr 5-2 in arc light game African landings veteran who was Beach Party team moves out a Bas-e transportation man for in front in ATB Softball Tourney many months now on an APA Boxing bouts scheduled for A note of thanks for the ICamp One Ties dispensed with Mock-Up from Col Glen B Wood of AdComPhibsPac staff
-tbull Us NAT B The Mck-U_micro when mailed
home lS Just bke another letter U s N AT B +
~he SEVENTH WAR BOND Drive 1s now on-support lt
during working hours in hot seashyson Navy Wives urged to assist Red Cross in making surgishycal dressings and bandages
+ U s N A TB+ Then there was the GI cook who
asked for extra pay for fr in time Y g
PAGE F OUR
OUR LETTER BOX Dear Captain
After four months as SMO and surgeon at NOB Iceland Dispensshyary have been transferred here as SMO of the Dispensary Advanced Amphibious Base Southhampton England A good many men have passed through here from Fort Pierce and it is well spoken of here My duty in Iceland was an experience worth having Quarters
food recreation were excellent Have been receiving The Mock-Up in bunches and learned with great satisfaction of your Legion of Merit I know how deserved it was and please accept my belated conshygratulations Sincerely
Lt Comdr F C Nichols (MC)
Dear Editor I am in receipt of your kind letshy
ter about my sonmiddot George (Capt G H Bright Jr former Army inshystructor at Scouts and Raiders) He was on duty in Burma where he was severely wounded After several months in the General Hospital No 142 Calcutta due to very fine treatment his life was spared ltnd he is now in the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington DC He was hit with shrapnel and still has a lot of it in his body I am sure he will be glad to get The Mock-Up once more George has been married and his home address is 700 Hendren street Roxboro Philadelphia We are now sure of his ultimate recovery although he had a tough time and Mrs Bright and I thank you for your interest in him
Very sincerely G Howard Bright
Princeton N J
Officers and Men USNATB We are deeply grateful for your
expression of sympathy and flowshyers My father (the late P rofessor N H Bullard St Lucie County Superintendent of Schools) often spoke of pleasant associations with the Naval personnel stationed here He was intensely interested in affording your children with a good and proper education Your kindness is of particular worth and adds again to my great personal debt to the Navy
Hudson Bullard Lieutenant USNR
+ USNATB +
He Wont Go Horne 1il Japs Are Licked
E10 (CNS)-V$gt Witliam D Stern a mess sergeant with an infantry company turned down a chance to r eturn middot to the U S under the Armys redeployment plan Said Stern I have a brothshyer fighting the J aps Hes not getshyting out I guess I can stick to it
THE MOCK-VP
FIRST ALL-NAVY WEDDING HELD AT BASE
middot
An a ll-Navy wedd ing f irst at the Base was held with Ensign Nan Vanderbeek E nglewood N J as the bride and Lt Joel C McCormick Jr Fort White Fla Faber Cove OinC as bridegroom At left they are shown with Chaplain E C Helmich who read the mar~iage vws P~oto at right shows Lt and Mrs Richard D Guy cuttmg their weddmg cake Lt Guy of M and R is from Salem Va His bride is a Fort Pierce girl
Lt Comdr H E Peters Senior Dental Officer
The new Senior Dental Officer at the Base Dental Clinic is Lt Comdr H E Peters USNR The officer reported aboard USNATB on 21 Januaiy 1945 after serving ten months as Senior Dental Ofshyficer at Bainbridge NTC
Lt Comdr Peters graduated f r o m Temple bull University i n 1924 and immeshydiately took up his dental pracshytice in Hazelshyton Pennaand practiced there for 20 years until he was called for actshyive duty on 8 May 1944 Be- H E Peters fore reporting for active duty the mild mannershyed doctor ~erved as Dental Ofshyficer for Draft Board No 1 in Hazelton for two and a half years
The Senior Dental Officer is married and lives with his -wife and family at 1411 Orange Ave here The couPle has two sons Norman 8 and Howard 7 who recently finished their school terms in Pennsylvania and came down to Fort Pierce to be with their father
+ USN AT 8 middotmiddot Watches clocks and Dunhill
lighters will be featured Monday at Ships Service Unit No 1
+ USNA T B + He I wouldnt marry a girl
without experience She Well - er - how much
experience would you want + US N AT B middotbull
Conceit is a form of I-strain
Citations and Awards To63 Demolilionaires (Continued from Page 1)
MM3c middot Roy Ellis MM3c middot Carl G k MMl E t E Esterbroo c mme wan
s~a~ John _A Fancena GM3cWilham F Fmley MM3c Edward A Fish MM2c James L Fox MM2c B G Gathers MMlc H W Guenther MM3c W W Hamshyilton SF3c
Donald L Hanson Cox Thomas F Heiler GM2c ODell F Henshyderson Slc M C Henry MM3c Guy 0 Hilton CM2c W W Hieshydechuk GM2c J G Horan Slc Junior Johnson SF2c Rennie Jim King GMlc E M Kinsella MM
15 JUNE 1945
Sunday Worship
Schedule
Chaplaina K D Perkltll Camp 1 E C Helmich Camp 2 W J Walsh Cam11 2 A J Schutz Camp a
BASE SUNDAY SCHEDULE Protestant Services
Communion Base Chapel 0845 Service Base Chapel bull 090 North Island DRU Service bull 1100 Brig 1630
Catholic Services Masses 0700 and 1045
Jewish Sabbath Eve Service Fridays in Methodist Church Annex 2000
CATHOLIC WEEK DAY SCHEDULE Mass daily at 0700 in Base Chapel with
Confessions before and after PROTESTANT WEEK DAY SCHEDULE
Bible Class Wednesdays at 1930 in Camp Two Chaplains Office Instruction Baptism and other ministrations on apshyplication
Fort lierce Churcheo PROTESTANT
Methodist bull 1100 amp 2000 First Presbyterian bull bull bull bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 Parkview Baptist bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 First Baptist 1100 amp 2000 St Andrew Episcopal bull bull 0800 amp l100 First Christian bullbullbullbull1100 amp 2000 Church of Christ llOO amp 2000 Church of God bull bull bull bull bull 1130 Christian Science bull bull bull 1100
CATHOLIC St Anastasia OROO 0900 1000
CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST J J Torpey wartime minibullter Pleasant
View RFD 2 Fort Pierce Phone 184-W
ISpecial liberty (1000-1300) to attend the 1100 church service 111 East Orange half block from Indian River USO+ u s N AT B +
1 What Did You Do Todaylbull
What did you do today my friend From morning until night
How many times did you complain The rationing is too tight
When are you going to start to do All the things you say
A Soldier would like to know my friend
What did you do today We met the enemy today
And took his town by storm le W 0 Kissinger WTlc F L Happy reading it will make Llausmeier SF2c Wayne D Lampson GMlc R E Landriault CCM L F LeMarinel GMlc Hugh N Lindsey GM2c Edward A Loyle SF3c
Ivan G Ostling CMlc Carl J Paternostro Cox Charles Fortney CSK Artie C Ramsey SF3c Wilshyliam H Riley MMlc Robert R Schneider SF2c L W Schottel MM2c E E Sparkman SF2c B G Supplee SF2c Dale K Todd Slc W J Williams EM3c James C Winget Slc A D Wold GM2c Douglas E Yeatts SF2c
bulll- U s N A T B + Ships Service units have many
items that will make ideal eleventh hour Fathers Day purchases
+ U s NAT B bullbull
For you tomorrow morn Youll read with satisfaction
The brief communique We fought but are you fighting
What did you do today My gunner died in my arms today
I feel his warm blood yet Your neighbors dying boy gave
out A scream I cant forget
On my right a tankmiddotwas hit A flash and then the fire
The stench of burning human flesh Still rises from their pyre
What did you do today my friend To help us with the task
Did you work harder and longer for less
Or is that too much to ask What right have I to ask you this
We often wonder at what age You probably will say-a bachelor becomes confirmed IMaybe now youll und~rstand
+USNATB+ middot h b l You see I DIED TODAYA fli tr 1s a woman w o e ieves (W tt b Lt D F Ch tl middot its every man for herself n ~n ~ middot middot middot a am+ u s N AT e middotmiddot while lymg mJured m a battleshy
Dont put off till tomorrow what field in Italy Taken to a field you should do today-buy a bond hospital he later recovered)
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE FIVE -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
JOAN BRANDON AND MAGIC MUSIC HERE
MONDAY TUESDAY Glamorous beautiful vivacious
Joan Brandon known as Americas First Lady of Magic with her sensational show of stars and mushysicians will be at USNATB for a two-day stand starting Monday night at 1800 when she and her Magic Music Orchestra put on a variety show at Gulbranson Hall
Following the performance at Gulbranson Hall on Monday Miss Brandon and her company will apshypear at Jaycee Field for a Music Under the Stars showing at 2030 and will play for dancing at a dance for enlisted men at 2130 at Legion Hall On Tuesday night the blonde magician will appear on the stage of Gulbranson Hall at 1800 and will play for dancing at 2030 at a dance for Officers their wives and lady friends at Legion Hall Arrangements are being made for a hundred young ladies from the Fort Pierce and West Palm areas to serve as hostesses
This presentation stars Miss Brandon with her Orchetra plus a variety of versatile performers from the night spots and theatres of New York and Chicago
The orchestra has played coast to coast in key theatres and hotels of every big city and over the Coshylumbia Broadcasting System sevshyeral nights weekly Besides leading the orchestra Miss Brandon grand-daughter of the Great Branshydoni performs so cleverly in the art of magic she is compared with the top rankilg magicians in the country
Following the Magic Music Orshychestra in W ampRs parade of hits will be Music that Wins with the McFarland Twins known for their sweet music and novelties on June 25
USN ATBmiddotJ
Lost Found Buy Sell I I And Trade Department
LOST White Plastic rimmed glasses in a black leather case with a flap cover at one end If found please turn in to the Security ofshyfice at the Administration Bldg FOR SALE Ladies bicycle available for inspection 100 Aveshynue D Practically new Wire par-
LUSCIOUS MARILYN MILES HERE 25 JUNE
Beauteous Marilyn Miles is the featured feminine vocalist with the McFarland Twins orchestra due to visit the USNATB on 25 June for program dates at Gulbranson Hall and at the Music Under the Stars Theatre Jaycee Field Marilyn is obviously quite im atshytraction with the McFarland troupe stylists in sweet swing
Entry List Climbs For Base Tennis Tournament Entries in a Base Tennis t oulJ1shy
ament will be accepted until 2400 23 June is was announced today All those inter~sted in entering the tourney are asked to file an entry either with the man on duty at the Tennis Courts or at the Welfare and Recreation office
The tourney will be played at Pinewood Park on the South Dixie Highway opposite Jaycee Field and there will be three divisions One division will be for all Enlistshyeel Men another for Officers and the third for all servicemens wives
The first prize in each grup will be a first grade tennis ra_guet while the runner-up in each dishy
cel carrier $30 Lt C P Hagen- vision will receive one dozen grade sen A Pennsylvania tennis balls
NAVAL Officers wife driving The raquets and tennis ball s to Texas wants couple or V1ife used in the tourney will be furnshyto share expenses Leaving after ished by W and R June 15 Call 439-W +USN AT B +
WANTED Men with bartender 1 Lt Doc Allen of Amphibious experience wishing to work after Scouts from the Lone Star State hours at Officer Club to apply to believes the United States is atshyLt (jg) John W Hamilton Club Itached to Te~as for rations and Manager at 9169 or 547 quarters
Base Alumnus in Far Pacific Writes For Poems
By Service Gels Them The truth of the saying the
pen is mightier than the sword may be hard to justify in these wartime days but at least one warrior - an alumnus of the Amshyphibious Base here - has not forshygotten the influence of the pen
Although participating in the adventures of a war - which would outrival most of Robert W Services poems of Alaskan advenshyture - S2c Walter Shea aboard an LST in the South Pacific is still impressed by The Shooting of Dan McGrew and Songs of a Sourdough to which he was inshyitiated when he chanced acro~s a volume of Services poems in the USNATB library while in trainshying here
Shea unable to find a copy of Services works either in his ships library or at his advanced base wrote back to Mrs Emily C Norwick Base Librarian to see if he might purchase a copy Mrs N orwick discussed the request with the Field Directors ofiice of
U S Trains Russian Crew to Take Over
Cruiser Milwaukee U S Naval officers and enshy
listed men trained a Russian crew to man the light cruiser USS Milshywaukee when that U S warship was loaned to the Russian Navy on April 20 1944 the Navy anshynounced today
American instructors were all Russian interpreters - the same men who aided at the Crimean Conference
After boaidino the cruiser in a British port one officer and one enlisted man were assivned to a department which they studied thoroughly Officer-enlisted men teams worked in the Construction and Repair Supply Communicashytions Engine Room Gunnery and Navigation sections
Upon arrival at Murmansk shyafter a voyage which included conshytact with U-boats -_ the Milwaushykee moYed into the dock under her own power She was the first U S warship to enter that port during this war
For five weeks the ships various compartments were classrooms Russian officers and men bomshybarded the U S Navy men with questions They wanted to know the purpose of every lever bolt and valve Sometimes the quiz lasted until late hours of the night On two occasions the Russhysian pupils pressed a red button on the ships bridge The Milwaushykee crewmen were sent scurrying to their battle stations The Soshyviets out of curiosity had pressed the General Quarters alarm butshyton
When indoctrination was comshypleted the ship went out on a shakedown cruise and later it was turned over with ceremonies to her Soviet skipper
bulll-USNATBbulllshyPEACE IS WONDERFUL
Peace its wonderful But only eight percent of time since the beginning of recorded history has been peaceful In 3521 years only 286 have been warless
the American Red Cross on the base and as a result of the confershyence two volumes of poetry are on their way to Sheas ship plying South Pacific waters
Other cooperative agents in this service rendered Shea are the St Lucie County Red Cross Chapter and its Camp and Hospital Comshymittee Funds from Camp and Hospital service were provided for purchase from a local store of the complete poems of Robert W Service and a companion book a compilation by Ted Malone -of servshyicemens ballads also recommendmiddot ed by Mrs Norwick
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
PAGE F OUR
OUR LETTER BOX Dear Captain
After four months as SMO and surgeon at NOB Iceland Dispensshyary have been transferred here as SMO of the Dispensary Advanced Amphibious Base Southhampton England A good many men have passed through here from Fort Pierce and it is well spoken of here My duty in Iceland was an experience worth having Quarters
food recreation were excellent Have been receiving The Mock-Up in bunches and learned with great satisfaction of your Legion of Merit I know how deserved it was and please accept my belated conshygratulations Sincerely
Lt Comdr F C Nichols (MC)
Dear Editor I am in receipt of your kind letshy
ter about my sonmiddot George (Capt G H Bright Jr former Army inshystructor at Scouts and Raiders) He was on duty in Burma where he was severely wounded After several months in the General Hospital No 142 Calcutta due to very fine treatment his life was spared ltnd he is now in the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington DC He was hit with shrapnel and still has a lot of it in his body I am sure he will be glad to get The Mock-Up once more George has been married and his home address is 700 Hendren street Roxboro Philadelphia We are now sure of his ultimate recovery although he had a tough time and Mrs Bright and I thank you for your interest in him
Very sincerely G Howard Bright
Princeton N J
Officers and Men USNATB We are deeply grateful for your
expression of sympathy and flowshyers My father (the late P rofessor N H Bullard St Lucie County Superintendent of Schools) often spoke of pleasant associations with the Naval personnel stationed here He was intensely interested in affording your children with a good and proper education Your kindness is of particular worth and adds again to my great personal debt to the Navy
Hudson Bullard Lieutenant USNR
+ USNATB +
He Wont Go Horne 1il Japs Are Licked
E10 (CNS)-V$gt Witliam D Stern a mess sergeant with an infantry company turned down a chance to r eturn middot to the U S under the Armys redeployment plan Said Stern I have a brothshyer fighting the J aps Hes not getshyting out I guess I can stick to it
THE MOCK-VP
FIRST ALL-NAVY WEDDING HELD AT BASE
middot
An a ll-Navy wedd ing f irst at the Base was held with Ensign Nan Vanderbeek E nglewood N J as the bride and Lt Joel C McCormick Jr Fort White Fla Faber Cove OinC as bridegroom At left they are shown with Chaplain E C Helmich who read the mar~iage vws P~oto at right shows Lt and Mrs Richard D Guy cuttmg their weddmg cake Lt Guy of M and R is from Salem Va His bride is a Fort Pierce girl
Lt Comdr H E Peters Senior Dental Officer
The new Senior Dental Officer at the Base Dental Clinic is Lt Comdr H E Peters USNR The officer reported aboard USNATB on 21 Januaiy 1945 after serving ten months as Senior Dental Ofshyficer at Bainbridge NTC
Lt Comdr Peters graduated f r o m Temple bull University i n 1924 and immeshydiately took up his dental pracshytice in Hazelshyton Pennaand practiced there for 20 years until he was called for actshyive duty on 8 May 1944 Be- H E Peters fore reporting for active duty the mild mannershyed doctor ~erved as Dental Ofshyficer for Draft Board No 1 in Hazelton for two and a half years
The Senior Dental Officer is married and lives with his -wife and family at 1411 Orange Ave here The couPle has two sons Norman 8 and Howard 7 who recently finished their school terms in Pennsylvania and came down to Fort Pierce to be with their father
+ USN AT 8 middotmiddot Watches clocks and Dunhill
lighters will be featured Monday at Ships Service Unit No 1
+ USNA T B + He I wouldnt marry a girl
without experience She Well - er - how much
experience would you want + US N AT B middotbull
Conceit is a form of I-strain
Citations and Awards To63 Demolilionaires (Continued from Page 1)
MM3c middot Roy Ellis MM3c middot Carl G k MMl E t E Esterbroo c mme wan
s~a~ John _A Fancena GM3cWilham F Fmley MM3c Edward A Fish MM2c James L Fox MM2c B G Gathers MMlc H W Guenther MM3c W W Hamshyilton SF3c
Donald L Hanson Cox Thomas F Heiler GM2c ODell F Henshyderson Slc M C Henry MM3c Guy 0 Hilton CM2c W W Hieshydechuk GM2c J G Horan Slc Junior Johnson SF2c Rennie Jim King GMlc E M Kinsella MM
15 JUNE 1945
Sunday Worship
Schedule
Chaplaina K D Perkltll Camp 1 E C Helmich Camp 2 W J Walsh Cam11 2 A J Schutz Camp a
BASE SUNDAY SCHEDULE Protestant Services
Communion Base Chapel 0845 Service Base Chapel bull 090 North Island DRU Service bull 1100 Brig 1630
Catholic Services Masses 0700 and 1045
Jewish Sabbath Eve Service Fridays in Methodist Church Annex 2000
CATHOLIC WEEK DAY SCHEDULE Mass daily at 0700 in Base Chapel with
Confessions before and after PROTESTANT WEEK DAY SCHEDULE
Bible Class Wednesdays at 1930 in Camp Two Chaplains Office Instruction Baptism and other ministrations on apshyplication
Fort lierce Churcheo PROTESTANT
Methodist bull 1100 amp 2000 First Presbyterian bull bull bull bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 Parkview Baptist bull bull bull 1100 amp 2000 First Baptist 1100 amp 2000 St Andrew Episcopal bull bull 0800 amp l100 First Christian bullbullbullbull1100 amp 2000 Church of Christ llOO amp 2000 Church of God bull bull bull bull bull 1130 Christian Science bull bull bull 1100
CATHOLIC St Anastasia OROO 0900 1000
CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST J J Torpey wartime minibullter Pleasant
View RFD 2 Fort Pierce Phone 184-W
ISpecial liberty (1000-1300) to attend the 1100 church service 111 East Orange half block from Indian River USO+ u s N AT B +
1 What Did You Do Todaylbull
What did you do today my friend From morning until night
How many times did you complain The rationing is too tight
When are you going to start to do All the things you say
A Soldier would like to know my friend
What did you do today We met the enemy today
And took his town by storm le W 0 Kissinger WTlc F L Happy reading it will make Llausmeier SF2c Wayne D Lampson GMlc R E Landriault CCM L F LeMarinel GMlc Hugh N Lindsey GM2c Edward A Loyle SF3c
Ivan G Ostling CMlc Carl J Paternostro Cox Charles Fortney CSK Artie C Ramsey SF3c Wilshyliam H Riley MMlc Robert R Schneider SF2c L W Schottel MM2c E E Sparkman SF2c B G Supplee SF2c Dale K Todd Slc W J Williams EM3c James C Winget Slc A D Wold GM2c Douglas E Yeatts SF2c
bulll- U s N A T B + Ships Service units have many
items that will make ideal eleventh hour Fathers Day purchases
+ U s NAT B bullbull
For you tomorrow morn Youll read with satisfaction
The brief communique We fought but are you fighting
What did you do today My gunner died in my arms today
I feel his warm blood yet Your neighbors dying boy gave
out A scream I cant forget
On my right a tankmiddotwas hit A flash and then the fire
The stench of burning human flesh Still rises from their pyre
What did you do today my friend To help us with the task
Did you work harder and longer for less
Or is that too much to ask What right have I to ask you this
We often wonder at what age You probably will say-a bachelor becomes confirmed IMaybe now youll und~rstand
+USNATB+ middot h b l You see I DIED TODAYA fli tr 1s a woman w o e ieves (W tt b Lt D F Ch tl middot its every man for herself n ~n ~ middot middot middot a am+ u s N AT e middotmiddot while lymg mJured m a battleshy
Dont put off till tomorrow what field in Italy Taken to a field you should do today-buy a bond hospital he later recovered)
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE FIVE -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
JOAN BRANDON AND MAGIC MUSIC HERE
MONDAY TUESDAY Glamorous beautiful vivacious
Joan Brandon known as Americas First Lady of Magic with her sensational show of stars and mushysicians will be at USNATB for a two-day stand starting Monday night at 1800 when she and her Magic Music Orchestra put on a variety show at Gulbranson Hall
Following the performance at Gulbranson Hall on Monday Miss Brandon and her company will apshypear at Jaycee Field for a Music Under the Stars showing at 2030 and will play for dancing at a dance for enlisted men at 2130 at Legion Hall On Tuesday night the blonde magician will appear on the stage of Gulbranson Hall at 1800 and will play for dancing at 2030 at a dance for Officers their wives and lady friends at Legion Hall Arrangements are being made for a hundred young ladies from the Fort Pierce and West Palm areas to serve as hostesses
This presentation stars Miss Brandon with her Orchetra plus a variety of versatile performers from the night spots and theatres of New York and Chicago
The orchestra has played coast to coast in key theatres and hotels of every big city and over the Coshylumbia Broadcasting System sevshyeral nights weekly Besides leading the orchestra Miss Brandon grand-daughter of the Great Branshydoni performs so cleverly in the art of magic she is compared with the top rankilg magicians in the country
Following the Magic Music Orshychestra in W ampRs parade of hits will be Music that Wins with the McFarland Twins known for their sweet music and novelties on June 25
USN ATBmiddotJ
Lost Found Buy Sell I I And Trade Department
LOST White Plastic rimmed glasses in a black leather case with a flap cover at one end If found please turn in to the Security ofshyfice at the Administration Bldg FOR SALE Ladies bicycle available for inspection 100 Aveshynue D Practically new Wire par-
LUSCIOUS MARILYN MILES HERE 25 JUNE
Beauteous Marilyn Miles is the featured feminine vocalist with the McFarland Twins orchestra due to visit the USNATB on 25 June for program dates at Gulbranson Hall and at the Music Under the Stars Theatre Jaycee Field Marilyn is obviously quite im atshytraction with the McFarland troupe stylists in sweet swing
Entry List Climbs For Base Tennis Tournament Entries in a Base Tennis t oulJ1shy
ament will be accepted until 2400 23 June is was announced today All those inter~sted in entering the tourney are asked to file an entry either with the man on duty at the Tennis Courts or at the Welfare and Recreation office
The tourney will be played at Pinewood Park on the South Dixie Highway opposite Jaycee Field and there will be three divisions One division will be for all Enlistshyeel Men another for Officers and the third for all servicemens wives
The first prize in each grup will be a first grade tennis ra_guet while the runner-up in each dishy
cel carrier $30 Lt C P Hagen- vision will receive one dozen grade sen A Pennsylvania tennis balls
NAVAL Officers wife driving The raquets and tennis ball s to Texas wants couple or V1ife used in the tourney will be furnshyto share expenses Leaving after ished by W and R June 15 Call 439-W +USN AT B +
WANTED Men with bartender 1 Lt Doc Allen of Amphibious experience wishing to work after Scouts from the Lone Star State hours at Officer Club to apply to believes the United States is atshyLt (jg) John W Hamilton Club Itached to Te~as for rations and Manager at 9169 or 547 quarters
Base Alumnus in Far Pacific Writes For Poems
By Service Gels Them The truth of the saying the
pen is mightier than the sword may be hard to justify in these wartime days but at least one warrior - an alumnus of the Amshyphibious Base here - has not forshygotten the influence of the pen
Although participating in the adventures of a war - which would outrival most of Robert W Services poems of Alaskan advenshyture - S2c Walter Shea aboard an LST in the South Pacific is still impressed by The Shooting of Dan McGrew and Songs of a Sourdough to which he was inshyitiated when he chanced acro~s a volume of Services poems in the USNATB library while in trainshying here
Shea unable to find a copy of Services works either in his ships library or at his advanced base wrote back to Mrs Emily C Norwick Base Librarian to see if he might purchase a copy Mrs N orwick discussed the request with the Field Directors ofiice of
U S Trains Russian Crew to Take Over
Cruiser Milwaukee U S Naval officers and enshy
listed men trained a Russian crew to man the light cruiser USS Milshywaukee when that U S warship was loaned to the Russian Navy on April 20 1944 the Navy anshynounced today
American instructors were all Russian interpreters - the same men who aided at the Crimean Conference
After boaidino the cruiser in a British port one officer and one enlisted man were assivned to a department which they studied thoroughly Officer-enlisted men teams worked in the Construction and Repair Supply Communicashytions Engine Room Gunnery and Navigation sections
Upon arrival at Murmansk shyafter a voyage which included conshytact with U-boats -_ the Milwaushykee moYed into the dock under her own power She was the first U S warship to enter that port during this war
For five weeks the ships various compartments were classrooms Russian officers and men bomshybarded the U S Navy men with questions They wanted to know the purpose of every lever bolt and valve Sometimes the quiz lasted until late hours of the night On two occasions the Russhysian pupils pressed a red button on the ships bridge The Milwaushykee crewmen were sent scurrying to their battle stations The Soshyviets out of curiosity had pressed the General Quarters alarm butshyton
When indoctrination was comshypleted the ship went out on a shakedown cruise and later it was turned over with ceremonies to her Soviet skipper
bulll-USNATBbulllshyPEACE IS WONDERFUL
Peace its wonderful But only eight percent of time since the beginning of recorded history has been peaceful In 3521 years only 286 have been warless
the American Red Cross on the base and as a result of the confershyence two volumes of poetry are on their way to Sheas ship plying South Pacific waters
Other cooperative agents in this service rendered Shea are the St Lucie County Red Cross Chapter and its Camp and Hospital Comshymittee Funds from Camp and Hospital service were provided for purchase from a local store of the complete poems of Robert W Service and a companion book a compilation by Ted Malone -of servshyicemens ballads also recommendmiddot ed by Mrs Norwick
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE FIVE -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
JOAN BRANDON AND MAGIC MUSIC HERE
MONDAY TUESDAY Glamorous beautiful vivacious
Joan Brandon known as Americas First Lady of Magic with her sensational show of stars and mushysicians will be at USNATB for a two-day stand starting Monday night at 1800 when she and her Magic Music Orchestra put on a variety show at Gulbranson Hall
Following the performance at Gulbranson Hall on Monday Miss Brandon and her company will apshypear at Jaycee Field for a Music Under the Stars showing at 2030 and will play for dancing at a dance for enlisted men at 2130 at Legion Hall On Tuesday night the blonde magician will appear on the stage of Gulbranson Hall at 1800 and will play for dancing at 2030 at a dance for Officers their wives and lady friends at Legion Hall Arrangements are being made for a hundred young ladies from the Fort Pierce and West Palm areas to serve as hostesses
This presentation stars Miss Brandon with her Orchetra plus a variety of versatile performers from the night spots and theatres of New York and Chicago
The orchestra has played coast to coast in key theatres and hotels of every big city and over the Coshylumbia Broadcasting System sevshyeral nights weekly Besides leading the orchestra Miss Brandon grand-daughter of the Great Branshydoni performs so cleverly in the art of magic she is compared with the top rankilg magicians in the country
Following the Magic Music Orshychestra in W ampRs parade of hits will be Music that Wins with the McFarland Twins known for their sweet music and novelties on June 25
USN ATBmiddotJ
Lost Found Buy Sell I I And Trade Department
LOST White Plastic rimmed glasses in a black leather case with a flap cover at one end If found please turn in to the Security ofshyfice at the Administration Bldg FOR SALE Ladies bicycle available for inspection 100 Aveshynue D Practically new Wire par-
LUSCIOUS MARILYN MILES HERE 25 JUNE
Beauteous Marilyn Miles is the featured feminine vocalist with the McFarland Twins orchestra due to visit the USNATB on 25 June for program dates at Gulbranson Hall and at the Music Under the Stars Theatre Jaycee Field Marilyn is obviously quite im atshytraction with the McFarland troupe stylists in sweet swing
Entry List Climbs For Base Tennis Tournament Entries in a Base Tennis t oulJ1shy
ament will be accepted until 2400 23 June is was announced today All those inter~sted in entering the tourney are asked to file an entry either with the man on duty at the Tennis Courts or at the Welfare and Recreation office
The tourney will be played at Pinewood Park on the South Dixie Highway opposite Jaycee Field and there will be three divisions One division will be for all Enlistshyeel Men another for Officers and the third for all servicemens wives
The first prize in each grup will be a first grade tennis ra_guet while the runner-up in each dishy
cel carrier $30 Lt C P Hagen- vision will receive one dozen grade sen A Pennsylvania tennis balls
NAVAL Officers wife driving The raquets and tennis ball s to Texas wants couple or V1ife used in the tourney will be furnshyto share expenses Leaving after ished by W and R June 15 Call 439-W +USN AT B +
WANTED Men with bartender 1 Lt Doc Allen of Amphibious experience wishing to work after Scouts from the Lone Star State hours at Officer Club to apply to believes the United States is atshyLt (jg) John W Hamilton Club Itached to Te~as for rations and Manager at 9169 or 547 quarters
Base Alumnus in Far Pacific Writes For Poems
By Service Gels Them The truth of the saying the
pen is mightier than the sword may be hard to justify in these wartime days but at least one warrior - an alumnus of the Amshyphibious Base here - has not forshygotten the influence of the pen
Although participating in the adventures of a war - which would outrival most of Robert W Services poems of Alaskan advenshyture - S2c Walter Shea aboard an LST in the South Pacific is still impressed by The Shooting of Dan McGrew and Songs of a Sourdough to which he was inshyitiated when he chanced acro~s a volume of Services poems in the USNATB library while in trainshying here
Shea unable to find a copy of Services works either in his ships library or at his advanced base wrote back to Mrs Emily C Norwick Base Librarian to see if he might purchase a copy Mrs N orwick discussed the request with the Field Directors ofiice of
U S Trains Russian Crew to Take Over
Cruiser Milwaukee U S Naval officers and enshy
listed men trained a Russian crew to man the light cruiser USS Milshywaukee when that U S warship was loaned to the Russian Navy on April 20 1944 the Navy anshynounced today
American instructors were all Russian interpreters - the same men who aided at the Crimean Conference
After boaidino the cruiser in a British port one officer and one enlisted man were assivned to a department which they studied thoroughly Officer-enlisted men teams worked in the Construction and Repair Supply Communicashytions Engine Room Gunnery and Navigation sections
Upon arrival at Murmansk shyafter a voyage which included conshytact with U-boats -_ the Milwaushykee moYed into the dock under her own power She was the first U S warship to enter that port during this war
For five weeks the ships various compartments were classrooms Russian officers and men bomshybarded the U S Navy men with questions They wanted to know the purpose of every lever bolt and valve Sometimes the quiz lasted until late hours of the night On two occasions the Russhysian pupils pressed a red button on the ships bridge The Milwaushykee crewmen were sent scurrying to their battle stations The Soshyviets out of curiosity had pressed the General Quarters alarm butshyton
When indoctrination was comshypleted the ship went out on a shakedown cruise and later it was turned over with ceremonies to her Soviet skipper
bulll-USNATBbulllshyPEACE IS WONDERFUL
Peace its wonderful But only eight percent of time since the beginning of recorded history has been peaceful In 3521 years only 286 have been warless
the American Red Cross on the base and as a result of the confershyence two volumes of poetry are on their way to Sheas ship plying South Pacific waters
Other cooperative agents in this service rendered Shea are the St Lucie County Red Cross Chapter and its Camp and Hospital Comshymittee Funds from Camp and Hospital service were provided for purchase from a local store of the complete poems of Robert W Service and a companion book a compilation by Ted Malone -of servshyicemens ballads also recommendmiddot ed by Mrs Norwick
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
15 JUNE 1945THE MOCK-UPPAGE SIX
Jax NATTC Red Raiders Play Amphibs Here Tonight VISITING AIR RAIDERS
BRINGING STRONG CLUB The Amphibs will encounter the
Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders tonight at Taycee Field in an arc light contest that promises to be a thriller
Boasting one of the strongest service teams in the upper part of the state the Red Raiders invade Fort Pierce with the expectations of stopping the long growing string of consecutive wins set by the Amphibs
The Air Raiders have a season mark of eleven wins and five deshyfeats and have a league record of five victories out of six starts The Marine-Sailors have several
Raton Bombers long 9all hitters on thefr club The Avon Park Bombers are dueand should prove troublesome to
to put in an appearance at Jayceethe hurlers of the local combine Field next Wednesday night in aJohnny Bittner ace moundsman return match between the twoof the Raiders will probably get clubs The first contest ended inthe starting assignment and Preshyfavor of the Amphibs 10-9 in tensavanto will do the receiving Mashyinnings early in April Johnnyrines Johnny Killough former inshyMaloney mentor of the Bombersfielder for Beaumont in the Texas and former Hartford shortstop inLeague and third baseman on the the Eastern League will probablyJax squad and Dan Ferazan will start his leading hurler Raylead the Raiders on the offense
On Sunday the Amphibs will Beach against the Navy The J ax NATTC Red Raiders a re disshyjourney to West Palm Beach where t inct from Lt Charley Gehringe1s J ax
they will cross bats with the Boca NAS Fliers who play here on 4 July
AVON PARK AAF BOMBERS WITH STARS
Avon Park Army Air Field BOMHERS one of the outstandshyin~ service clubs in Florida line up on the flight line with Colonel Clint rr Johnson commanding officer The Bombers will invade Jaycee Field next Wednesday night to cross bats with the willowshywielding Amphibs in an arc lig-ht contest scheduled for 2030 In an earlier meeting of the two clubs the Navy aggregation had to go all out to win 10-9 in an extra inning ball game The B-17 baseshyballers many of whom have been in combat and returned to the states are left to right T Sgt Bob McAndrew Cpl Jack Rodgers
Barfow AAF Paper Has Amphib Baseballers Add Praise For Amphibs Wins Over Pinellas Fort
The MUSTANG bas~ paper of Lauderdale and Hendricks the Bartow Army Air Field
Capturing three victories duringBartow Florida paid complishythe week the Amphibs stretchedments to the Navy Amphibs in their string of consecutive victories the recent Jun-e 3 issue to 20 while compiling a record ofSeldom seen in these parts is 25 wins out of 26 games for thea baseball team of the caliber seasons playof the Fort Pierce Amphibs who
The hard hitting Sailors annexedpaid us a visit last week It has a 9-0 win over the Pinellas AAFbeen reported that six of their nine last Thursday night before aplayers have been signed this capacity crowd including Rea1middotseason by big league scouts Adm C F Bryant Commander ofThis puts them slightly out of the Fleet Operational Trainingour class was the comment of Command stopped the Fort Laudshythe sports editor Sgt R A erdale AS nine with a 6-3 score onMorris Sunday and added an 11-0 triumphIn another section the sports over the Hendricks Fieldbull Bombirds page states It was simply a on Wednesdary nightcase of stepping up into major
Behind the superb two-hit pitchshyleague class of service team ing of Curt Mitchell the Amphibscompetition last Saturday when ran rampant over the scrappythe Navys Fort Pierce Amphibs Hencfricks Field Bombers 11-0 onhauled into town and proceeded Wednesday night at Sebring Mitshyto pour in on a hapless Mustang chell not only hurled a near perfectnine by a tally of 10-2 at Bartow game but also led the offense withcity park The Navy lads led by a single and double to bat in twotheir center fielder Ray Goolsshyruns and score twice himselfby who got two singles and a
For five and two thirds inningshome run put on the finest Mitchell set down the opposingexhibition seen in the local park batsmen in order before Krautzelin two years
+USNATB+ left fielder of the Bombirds drop-Have you written home lately ( Continued on Page 7)
IN LINEUP HERE NEXT WEDNESDAY -
Sgt Frank Petrillio Cpl Ralph Elsass Sgt Angelo Loffredo S Sgt Walt Schmidt Col Johnson S Sgt Jack Maloney playingshymanager and former Hartford Eastern leaguer Pfc Billy Speigel Pfc Al Angus Sgt Jack McGltilderick TSt Mike Olexa Pfc Jasper Holt Rear row Lt Sam Schwartzkopf PT officer and forshymer Nebraska All-America mention gridder Sgt Vern Hanson Pfc Glenn Reynolds Sgt Felix Stranges TSgt Charles Surls Sgt Howard Coleman Sgt Ray Ford and Maj W D Bunton public relations officer
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
15 JUNE 1945 THE MOCK-UP PAGE SEVEN
Amphih Nine Adds Sports Chatter About Athletes From Here and There I Six Decision BoutsJ
Three Wins to Streak FRANCIS x McPHILLIPS Slc 26 June andmiddot baseball fans are Feature Show of Week (Continued from Page 6)
ped a scratch single into left field rhe imiddotight handel only allowed one Hendlicks man go as far as second base and let four reach first in one of his finest pitching exhibitions Second Bombird bingle came in the seventh when Catcher Joe Monjar was safe on a close play at first Mitchell fanned seven and issued but one base on balls
The Amphib batters slammed four Hendricks hurlers for a total of fourteen base hits to tally their eleven runs Lefty Sykes a leading chucker in the Florida West Conshyference was the starting hurler for the losers and went eight inshynings Although giving up seven runs the lean left hander pitched much better ball than the score shows His team mates put him in holes time after time with errors During his stay on the mound Sykes was touched for 12 hits sevshyen runs gave up one walk and fanned three Amphib hitters his team mates made five erorrs The ninth inning found Landreth Bush and Branca coming to the hill for the losers with the two first ones being lifted for ineffectivenes In the last stanza the Amphibs tallied four runs on four base on balls and two singles
The winners started the game off with three runs in the first and second innings and another single tally in the fourth The final four eame in the walkathon ninth
Mitchell Pat Murphy Bob Founshytain Ray Goolsby and Gene McshyCarty each had two hits while Keehan Swoboda Poole and Makshysimoski had one each
Marshall Wardrop ace right hander of the Sailors gained his ninth victory of the season against no defeats by stopping the Pishynellas aggTegation with five hits Wardrop issued two walks and threw his fast breaking curves past nine Pinellas batsmen
The Amphibs tallied three runs in the second and third innings countered two in the fifth and a single tally in the eighth Gene McCarty who played an outstandshying game in left field led the Amphibs with two hits and two walks in four trips to the plate for a perfect game Paul Swoboda and Jim Poole each had two binshygles in four tries Mel Leslie first sacker and relief burler for the team from St Petersburg helped himself to two safeties to lEhd his club on the offense
Big Bill Siders came back Sunshyday to hang up his sixth straight win by handcuffing the Laudershydale NAS nine with four hits The big right hander fanned four batshyters and walked three
The Amphibs scored a single
DIAMOND DUST Amphib power can be clearly seen in sta tistics that show the high riding team scored 239 imiddotuns in their first fi1st 25 games against their opshypo_nents 64 The team as a whole is batting 331 with 305 base hits in 919 times at bat The score book shows the Avon Park Bombshyers as the team to score the most runs in one game against the Sailors The Bombers tallied nine runs in an extra inning ball game that found the Amphibs emerging victo1middots 10-9 The Orlando Fliers scored second high for a regulashytion game with seven runs in the opening game of the season which ended 8-7 in favor of the Amphibs The lone setback at the hands of Orlando found the Amphibs garshynering eight base hits from the ofshyferings of Tommy Fine while the Fliers could only salvage four hits from the lants of Doswell Olson charged with the defeat and Marshyshall Wardrop The Fliers who are
coached by the fa m 0 us Joe
middotrhe Sailors hold a 2-1 edge over the Fliers to date having taken them into camp twice before the never-to-be-forgotten Sunday at Tinker Field Between now and the end of the month the Amphibs have a stiff schedule facing them Starting tonight when they enshycountH the Jacksonville NATTC Red Raiders the Sailors have games with Boca Raton Bombers at West Palm Beach on Sunday the 17th a game with Avon Park at home next Wednesday a tough weekend bill at home with the Ilartow Mustangs on Saturday the 23rd and the Drew Field Hurrishycanes on Sunday the 24~ Followshying the Drew squad is the Orlando Fliers game Wednesday June 27 at home and on the 29th the Amshyph~bs will journey to Jacksonville to encounter Charley Gehringer and his Jax NAS Flyers The team is ready for the stiff competition and the fans are all looking forshyward to some smart heads-up baseball in the weeks to come Bev Moss who had returned to the
Tinker scraped line-up last week is again side-up five runs on their four sinshygles and seven Amphib errors Since graciousshyly handing the F 1 i er s that
g am e on 22 April the Amshy
phibs have played hard clean baseball and havent lost The same Orlando Fliers will invade the confines of Jaycee Field on
run in the first inning on a triple by Paul Swoboda and a single by Ray Goolsby In the fourth they put together a homer by Gene McshyCarty and successive singles by Poole Maksimoski and Siders to tally two more A single by Swoshyboda followed by a walk to Goolsshyby and a single by Jim Poole registered a single tally in the fifth Murphy who gained first on a fielders choice and Swoshyboda who walked scored in the sixth inning when Goolsby laced a double to left center
The visitors countered two runs in the seventh inning when Smith was hit by a pitched ball Sherman walked and Traeger hit a double to left field The final Lauderdale run was tallied in the eighth when Lovett doubled and scored on an error
Gene McCartys homer cleared the left field fence 340 feet from the plate and was the longest hit of the day Paul Swoboda and Ed Maksimoski combined their talents to perform one of the finest double plays seen on the local diamond in years Jim Poole Amphib second sacker led the team on the ofshyfense with three hits in four trips
lined with a broken finger The stocky catcher who had suffered two broken fingers in a game with Vero Beach a month ago bad the misfortune of trying to catch one of Marshal Wardrops fast breakshying curves with his bare hand and is now suffering with a compound fracture of his right thumb Player-Coach Nick Wasylik who has been laid up the past two weeks with a concussion is middotexpectshyed to be up and about on the weekshyend The fleet right fielder has b e e n running the club from
his bed the last
two weeks while Ray Goolsby has been the field general Jack Stieve CB 1011 veteran is up and about and yearning to get behind the Nick Wasylik plate to handle the slants of his buddy Doswell Olson slender left hander who has a world of stuff Frank Smagacz another catcher on the roster is back in uniform after a leave spent in Neshybraska Fans can look for plenty of chatter from the base paths in the coming weeks with Frank and Nick Wasylik as hecklers of bullenemy hurlers The baseball team will get another shot a-t Bob Wells forshymer Jersey City Giant hurler Sunshyday when they face the big right hander in a game between the Amshyphibs and Boca Raton The game will be the last of a four-game series between the two clubs with the Navy hoiding a 3-0 edge
Six decisions and two draws
highlighted the weekly boxing show sponsored by Physical Training last Wednesday night at the Camp Two Arena
In the first bout of the evening J A Hibdon Flc of Demo won over M Epstein Flc also of Demo N R Colon Slc outpointshyed A W Van Dulman YZc in an all-Demo battle in the second match bull
The third match a 140-pound classic found J W Helton S2c of Flot 76 taking the measure of T W Allen Slc of Amphib Scouts
In a 150-pound encounter T L Hagood GM3c of Demo and anshyother Demo lad P R Moore S2c fought through three sizzling rounds to a draw
Another contest ending in a draw was the 160 pound match between T M Whitsett SoM3c of Demo and (Little Oswald) Alford S2c of Flot 76
The sixth match between A A Buono Flc of Demo and G A Thurman Slc of LST Pool found the former emerging the victor
A 180 pound affair between Dixie Gray CF3c of CB 1011 and C M Kennedy Slc of Demo found the oversea Seabee veteran taking the decision
The special bout of the evening between D C Shannon Slc of Demo and Happy Hannon S2c of Flot 76 was the liveliest affair of the night with Shannon getting the nod from the judges
R W Shaw S2c of Demo has challenged Shannon to a three-round go riext Wednesday night
+ U s N AT B +Ray Goolsby Leads
Amphibs With Stick Ray Goolsby leads the Amphibs
in batting through the first 25 games of the year with the robust average of 525 The big center fielder has hit in all but two games this year and has four home runs to his credit Paul Swoboda fancy fielding first sacker is second on the list with an average of 451 and has scored the most number of runs 43 Ensign Jim Poole flashy second sacker is third with an average of 382
The leaders include NAME Pos G AB R H TB Avg Goolsby cf bullbullbull 25 97 30 51 87 525 Swoboda lb 25 102 43 46 66 451 Poole 2b 19 81 18 31 37 382 Fountain rf 11 34 8 11 13 323 McCarty If 24 92 22 28 41 304 Wasylik rf 13 47 12 14 16 297 Murphy 3b 25 104 30 30 38 288 Keehan-ss 22 100 22 21 33 210 Moss c bull 15 43 4 12 12 279
Maksimpski c 11 39 10 8 8 205 PIlCHING RECORDS W
Wardrop 9 Siders 6 Mitchell 5 Foor 1
Olson 3
L 0
0 0 0
1
Pct 1000 1000 1000 1000 750
Totals bullbull24 960
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext
PAGE EIGHT THE MOCK-UP 15 JUNE 1945
Fourfhof July Holiday CHAPEL ENTIRELY SET APART FOR RELIGIOUS SERVICES
Calendar to Be Evenfful Observance of the annual Fourth
of July holiday will include proshygrams entertainments games and contests with cash prizes to conshytest winners Capt C middot Gulbrason USN Commanding Office anshynounced today
Highlight of the program will be the second annual Alligator Sweepstakes sponsored by middot W elshyfare and Recreation together with training units
At night as an added attraction there will be an all-Navy baseball game between the Amphibs and Charley Gehringers Jacksonville NAS nine The 30-piece USNATB band will furnish musical selecshytions throughout the game
A specialdeg week of previews of top flight movies is being arrangshyed and as a pre-holiday attraction Ada Leonard and her 17-piece AllshyGirl Orchestra will play at Gulshybranson Hall and at Jaycee Field on Monday 3 July
The Supply Dept is ipreparing a special holiday menu and there will be souvenir programs in middot red white and blue Lt Comdr B M Klivans Base Welfare and Recre ation _Officer said
In the week preceedfog the holshyiday a Base Tennis Tournament has been planned with the finals on the Fourth Sevelal N avy-sponshysored ~f-base contests will be held at the Indian River and Tenth Street USOs
+USNATB-o
1Ofh STREET USO A capacity crowd attended the
weekly bingo party last Wednesshyday night with decorated cakes and ice cream as prizes The grand prize of a free telephone call home was won by T5 Michael A Fenishymore who called his family at Brooklyn N Y The regular Thursday night dance was held on the Patio with Manny Lopez and his orchestra supplying the dancshyable tunes A new feature for the club is the outdoor movies held on the patio Friday and Sunday nights The experiment proved so successful that Frank A Brennan director of the club plans to have all the movies shown outdoors weather permitting Special spaghetti and meat ball suppers are being served every Monday and Thursday between the hours of 1530 and 1900 and all servicemen and their wives aJe invited to visit the club and try the delicious meals At the Sunday night movie John Sztaba Slc who called his mother at Naugatuck Conn Home made pies will feature the Wednesday night binshygo games this week with ice eream and coffee being served free t~ the players after the games bull
LONG DESIRED as a building set apart from other Base structures and devoted solely to reshyligious services for personnel of Protestant Catholic or Jewish faith the Base Chapel interior view shown above recently became a reality
Inset is a black and white reproduction of the attractive colored bulletin board erected at the entrance to the Chapel which is located near Camp One where the Faber Cove road forks away from the main Island highway
INDIAN RIVER USO Thursday night a special Flag
Day celebration was held in the auditorium of the club The DAR of Fort Pierce sponsored the speshycial program and presented the Club with a beautiful flag Sevshyeral over-sea veterans assisted in the ceremonies and the new USshyNATE band supplied the music Refreshments were served after the program Sunday Fathers Day will be another special occashysion The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be on hand at the club as hosts and serve refreshments from 1600 to 800 There will also be a specie program and letters will be mailed to servicemens dads all over the country Everyone is invited to this special Fathers Day occashysion Other activities of the week include the Square Dance on Monday night at 2100 The Tuesday night dance sponsored this week by the Employees of the Bell Telephone Company of Fort Pierce Music for these dances by the USNATB dance orchestra Bingo this past week was again one of the most popular activities
G A Darr won the long distance ADMIRALS INGRAM AND call home and other prize winners 1
i~cluded Herman Hansen W S Pierce S S Powell W Cragan and Mrs Markos
bullbullUSN ATB+ Ill go through fire for you Dont put yourself out
bullbull U S N AT B bullbull Never question your wifes judgshy
ment - look what she married
KIRK ON WAR BONDS Here are war bond statements
by Admiral Jonas H Ingram Comshymander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet and Vice Admiral Alan G Kirk Commander U S Naval Forces France They are pertinent to the Navy Extra Cash Drive 22 June to 7 July and now under way at the USNATB
Admiral Ingram No major war was ever won without the support of the home front The men on the battlefronts look back home for support If all Americans buy war bonds now well be all set for the tough final push
Vice Admiral Kirk A war bond has a double power To buy another bond is to strike another blow at the enemy war machine
bull today and drive another rivet in the rising structure of America toshymorrow Present success and fushyture security demand a response from us all
+USNATB+
7Js cmpIsNext