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Oct

25

Posted by : Linda Dennis | On : October 25, 2011

It’s not easy writing captions. You have to get to the point – quickly. NO flowering speeches or multiple sentences. Saying many things in a few words takes skill!

During the workshop day prior to AUSA, our team of military youth spent time “writing”. Learning first how to express themselves (see our website: www.abackpackjournalist.com) and then how to say it in a few words. They spent time training on high quality digital cameras.

The results are here – and on our flickr at flickr.com/backpackjournalist and on our at facebook.com/backpackjournalist.

The A to Z’s of AUSA was a challenge for each youth to go and find each letter of the alphabet on the AUSA Show Floor. Next to take a photograph and write about it! The Youth worked in teams, and each day “voted”. A to Z ™ is one of the finest literary and photojournalism projects we have assigned to date and so pleased with the results!

A to Z’s AUSA range from People and Products to Inspirational and Informational! Click on over to http://www.abackpackjournalist.com/ausa/a-to-z/ to see the work all of the great youth produced. KUDOS to these hard working and talented group of military youth! By the way – be sure and check out our video link at the top! We had multiple cameras shooting the interviews and editors are working now to compile and upload.

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Cover the Assignment – AUSA – completed! (almost)

Ms. D

Oct

12

Posted by : Quincy Winder | On : October 12, 2011

Raytheon (Technical Services Division), Indianapolis, Indiana

Eric K. Moore, Raytheon – RTC Systems Engineer

 

One of the neatest experiences I have
at AUSA is flying an F-16 combat aircraft to test out the new Raytheon Scorpion insert for a Helmet.

Did I say flying?

I’m actually in the demo area in the Raytheon Booth in its 4D simulator in the “situational awareness” suite.  As I’m fitted into the Scorpion Helmet, Ms. D asks if we can record my experience she knows I won’t be able to take notes and “fly” at the same time!

She’s right.

The simulator includes a Down Display, the eye piece and the Helmet non-display with 3-d audio.

I sit in the cockpit where combat pilots sit, helmet on and Eric asks me if I can see the horizon?  The green line?

“Is it level?” Eric asks me.  And I answer, “Well, I don’t think so, but I‘ve never done this before!”

So Eric adjusts the helmet and rotated it a little, and then I can see all the symbols on the down display. As he rotates the helmet, he asks, “Better or worse?  See all these type of symbols on the down display.  Whenever you look at the up display, look at the horizon.  We’re on the ground.”

This is way cool. I’m in the cockpit and I’m the pilot with the Scorpion helmet and we’re getting ready to take off!   I see the horizon.

Eric continues:  “Once you get up in the air, when you actually need to see, ‘we’ (and he means the Scorpion) display more symbols. Let’s take off!  Here’s the throttle, push it forward and leave it there.  Hold onto the stick here. This is your air speed: 110 – 130.   Pull back really fast.  It’s sensitive!”

We’re lifting off!

Eric tells me I’m “doing it like a pro!”

I’m taking off – pushing the throttle – and then – a mass of birds!

Geez, I’m not quick enough!   “BIRD STRIKE!”  I’m the first guy to hit a flock of birds!  “BIRD STRIKE!”

It seems about that time a lot of people start standing around the simulator, watching my Bird Strike. They tell me I’m the first one to have a Bird Strike.  The windshield? “Broken.”

Back to the Scorpion Helmet and what my simulator experience is really about. The Scorpion’s completely digital and high tech. It’s modern technology equipment that connects to the aircraft’s computer system using sound and symbology (Eric used that word a lot!) and a lot more.

The helmet makes the pilot’s response time quicker.   It seems I’ve seen it before in a movie! “Today, the Scorpion’s modernizing the cockpit of the combat airplane,” Eric says.

The 3D system hears the missile as the pilot (me) does. And the 3D system sends a message to the plane’s computer weapons systems.

I’m able to quickly lock down on the missile just by using the direction of my head in the helmet!  So in combat, the Scorpion lets me quickly take care of that missile.

And I don’t even look down at the control panel in the cockpit.

I also learn that pilots can have multiple conversations coming into their ear pieces at once.  The Scorpion allows each conversation to have its own channel, so the pilot can clearly hear each separately.  And the helmet has so much more night vision and lots of digital technology flying support.

Eric decides I should get back to ground and start over!

This time I’m instructed to avoid the birds!

As I take off, I hear Eric tell me, “Full throttle again, avoid the birds.  Get the air speed to 160-170 and then roll back.  Nice, there you go! Nicely done, you’ve avoided the birds! So keep those hills in site.  You should be able to see the symbology on the Scorpion.”

I do, and next I hear the sounds of a helicopter flying around me. I jerk the helmet toward the sound and see it coming. The sound is crisp in front of me, dull from behind.

And it’s only 9:20 a.m. on Day 3 at AUSA!

Do I want to be a pilot now?

Not certain.

But if I could master this “math” that seems to try and conquer me, yes, I’d love to fly…if I could have a Scorpion inside my helmet!

 

Article by Quincy Winder, Edited by Zia Johnson

Oct

10

Posted by : Zia Johnson | On : October 10, 2011

David Swaim is the self-proclaimed oldest man running the race. He is 65 years old and started running the Army 10 Miler in 1980 after he broke his back. He broke his back in a weight lifting accident.

Q: When did you break your back?

A: Broke it in ’79. Went to the VA Hospital in Richmond, Virginia, and a young man named Ike Cook got a lot of the veterans started in racing. He lost his legs in Vietnam. Double amputee. He got quiet a few of us involved in racing.

Q: What is your message to other military service men and women that have been injured?

A: We try to show other veterans yeah you’re hurt or you’re paralyzed, or you’re legless, but you can get out and get involved in something. Don’t be sedentary. And especially a lot of times I talk to the younger guys and they find out I’m 65 years old. “Look, I’m an old codger. If I can do it, you can too. So what’s your excuse?

Q: What type of things do you do to prepare mentally, physically for a race like this?

A: I try to explain to a lot of young racers, I tell them you have to put the mileage in. You don’t do 3 miles a day if you’re going to run a marathon that’s 26 miles. You look at your leg muscles compared to your arm muscles. [Legs] are so much stronger. What we have to do is train for endurance.

Personally I run 26 to 28 miles a day. I do that because I don’t like the younger guys out running me, but I’m also realistic. I’m no longer 29-30 years old. And I just go out and do the best I can, but I tell the young guys to do your best you’ve got to put in the mileage.

Q: One last question, sir. How are you going to celebrate today?

A: What I’m doing now. We just all get together and have a good time. And after it, it’s just comradery. During the race it’s dog eat dog, “You move over! Get out of my way! I’m trying to run!” It’s dog eat dog. But that’s part of the racing. But the comradery no matter if you’re in the Army, in my case the Marine Corps., the Navy; we all served. And there’s a closeness we all face. Some of us are pars, quads, legless but we’re all in the same boat. We’ve served our country and did what our country asked us to do. Now we’re just doing the best we can.

 

Story by Zia Johnson, Photo by Alexus Packwood

Oct

10

Posted by : Zia Johnson | On : October 10, 2011

On Valentine’s Day 2003, love was not on the minds of many Americans. The great debate of our nation was about going to war in Iraq. In the midst of the debate, Deb Rickert wanted to send a simple message of support and love. Rickert is the founder and president of Operation Support Our Troops – America, a military support non-profit organization.

 

Q: What is the mission of your organization?

A: Our mission is to support and improve the morale and wellbeing of our troops serving in harms way, their families, and the returning veterans. We do that through several different programs [such as] a comfort package program; we send 25 lbs packages to our troops all filled with items donated from the community. So a lot of the mission is to keep the community involved under the premise that they are all of our loved ones. You know these aren’t just my sons. These are the sons and daughters of all America, husbands and wives of all Americans.”

 

A mom’s support organization for deported troops. A proud military mom Deb Rickert (left) and son , Lieutenant David Rickert (right) work on their booth at the D.C. National Guard to gain awareness of Operation Support Our Troops - America .

Q: Are there any other programs Operation Support Our Troops – America has?

A: On Veterans Day, Operation Support Our Troops – America launched “America Has Not Forgotten.” This program was created in reaction to research findings that 70% of American asked responded that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan had no affect on them. “We believe that Americans do care about our troops. I truly believe that, but they need to be reminded. They need to be made aware, and when they are made aware they respond appropriately.”

Operation Support Our Troops – America also has partnered up with the U.S. Army Golden Knights to do a program called “Leap of Faith”. The two day seminar starts with a workshop on how families can deal with the grief after losing a service member. The last day participants can take a leap of faith in the form of skydiving with the tandem team of the US Army Golden Knights.

 

Q: Are you currently military? Do you have a husband or a son or a daughter serving?

A:  Two Sons. Here’s one of them, Lieutenant David Rickert currently serving at Fort Benning, well he’s currently standing right here. And I have an older son Captain Dan Ricket currently serving at Fort Bragg.

 

Q: How can Civilians get involved with your organization?

A: The very simple things. Find out who at your job, who in your neighborhood has someone serving. And ask them, “How are you today? How are you doing with this?” You can, through our organization, you can write letters. Mail them to us and well put them [in the care packages]. These are the care packages that we send. Every care package comes with a packet of letters from community members. So remembered that when our troops are gone if they feel like they are forgotten it’s going to make it that much harder for them to come back and reintegrate successfully. But if they’re over there, and they are getting letters of support from average citizens, not just from their mom and dad, but from average citizens then when they come home this is still their America. It’s their community.

 

Reported by Zia Johnson, Photo by Alexus Packwood

Oct

10

Posted by : Quincy Winder | On : October 10, 2011

Recently, Quincy Winder, Youth Challenge Graduate and Backpack Journalist, had an opportunity to sit and interview MG Alan Lynn, Commanding General of Fort Gordon, Georgia. What you are about to read is the transcript of the interview.

Enjoy!

Winder: So your father served in Vietnam, what were some things you learned from him being deployed?

Lynn: He was just my father, and he had this job that I really didn’t understand. What I really learned is when I did my first deployment to Desert Storm, my father who had multiple deployments, told me that this was the hardest thing ever for him!

 

Q: Today’s military use of technology is a lot different. We have many different ways to communicate such as cell phones and Internet. What ways did you stay in contact with your father?

Lynn:  During my father’s deployment, we didn’t even have Internet back then. We would talk “live” to him using a type of “ham radio network” (High Frequency radios).  It was phone to radio and then transmitted. I would talk to my father using all signs of radio speaking; so we would say “I LOVE YOU OVER” just like a walkie talkie. So that’s how we communicated with my father. If I didn’t have time to talk to my father, I would write letters to him. We would also send packages.

Q: What was your favorite package you received when you were deployed?

Lynn: My favorite package was home made cookies! Because we were eating M.R.E’s, so just anything different! They were chocolate chip cookies and my mom made them.

 

Q: I understand that you earned your bachelor’s degree in English. Backpack Journalist are training military youth, and we are helping them by expressing their feelings through writing.  How has your English degree aided you in your military career?

Lynn: Your ability to communicate in written form is critical in any career. What they teach you in journalism is to be succinct in your writing. Writing less has a big impact. If you can tell leadership and soldiers in a much shorter space, you will have a much bigger impact as a leader. We brought in English instructors to teach soldiers and junior leaders how to write.

 

Q: Is there any particular message you would like to send out to the audience at the AUSA meeting?

Lynn: For the Army Family Covenant, we need to put a spotlight on sacrifices of the family and make sure that we take care of our families as they are the strength of the Army!

 

Q: Can you explain a little bit about the Signal Corp?

Lynn: The Signal Corp is the communications company, worldwide for the US Army.  We are responsible for all communications. Fort Gordon is the home of the Signal Corp. We actually did movies about communications and won three Oscars in the 1940s. They were all documentaries.

 

Q: Have you had any special training for maintaining multiple projects? How did you organize yourself to be able to maintain multiple projects?

Lynn: As soon as you come into the Army you become responsible, whether it’s for a whole bunch of vehicles or even systems for example. You have to make them all work together to support your team.  In the Signal Corp the skills of juggling multiple projects starts from the beginning. That’s definitely one skill that the Army gives you – how to handle multiple projects at once!

 

Q: How did you sharpen your organization skills?

Lynn: I grew up in the military family. Organization was built into our DNA. We had to be on time, we had to travel a lot. We kind of had a leg up, being an army brat made me organized.

 

Q: We are curious about your fluency in Italian.

Lynn:  Yes, I was deployed to Italy in my career, and I had to learn to speak the language in order to perform my job requirements.

 

Q: Well thanks Sir for your time today.

Lynn:  Quincy, this is just for you.  Keep moving forward.  Never give up!  You have graduated now from Youth Challenge here at Fort Gordon, and we are proud of you!

 

Report by Quincy Winder, Questions and Additional Reporting by Zia Johnson

Editor’s note:  special thanks to MG Lynn.  Following this interview, he quietly “coined” Quincy.  As he “coined” him, he also shared with him the tradition of the “giving of the coin”.  We’d also like to remember the days of George Washington, and the rumor that we heard also about coining – i.e. he gave a coin to each soldier as they exited the boat at the landing.  Not certain which of accounts are correct, but both sound believable.  We love traditions and especially to pay them forward!

 

 

 

 

 

 


Oct

10

Posted by : Kat Boynton | On : October 10, 2011

Fifty people crowded close around CPT Ivan Castro and his interviewer as Castro told the story that changed his life, his face, and his understanding of what he was capable of.

Castro was deployed to Iraq when his fateful accident occurred. This accident, in September of 2006, would permanently blind him by taking away completely one of his eyes, and losing sight in the other. While home, Castro lay in bed – and that was all he did. He lost so much muscle, and gained so much fat during this time that he had forgotten how to walk. So why then, was he registering for the Army Ten Miler?
CPT Castro - Kat Boynton

Castro had no idea what he was capable of while lying in bed, but he decided to find out. He had to relearn how to walk, but he turned his life around through cardiovascular exercising. He gained back his muscle and lost his fat. But, he would not just stop at learning how to walk; he made two goals, short term, and long term:

to run the Army 10 Miler, and to run a marathon.

Castro continued his training to achieve his goals with the support of his wife and children. Proving to be successful, Castro has overcome all obstacles that were in his way by running five Army 10 Milers, 19 marathons, two 50 Milers, and two triathlons.

“You never know what you are capable of until you have your mind set,” Castro says.

Oct

10

Posted by : DeAnna Stinnett | On : October 10, 2011

A Backpack Journalist program is a program that teaches youth about the aspects of journalism like photography, writing, poetry and songwriting. Recently, this program had the opportunity to interview Adjutant General Edward Tonini of the Kentucky National Guard. In the interview, Tonini discusses how important military support programs are to keeping his command ready. He also offered advice to those who are considering a career in Public Affairs.

1)     I understand that you earned your bachelor’s degree in history. Are there any lessons from history that have aided you in being a military leader?

I look at history as one of the subjects that we as a nation have turned our back on. I would very much like to see us place a higher degree of emphasis on the study of history. I think that you broaden your baseline if you have knowledge of history. It’s something that absolutely is beneficial to youth, not just to be a leader and soldier, but to be a good person.

2)     A Backpack Journalist coaches one on one with military youth in journalistic writing and broadcast journalism. Having over 26 years’ experience in Public Affairs for the Guard, is there any advice you would like to give backpackers interested in pursuing a career in Public Affairs for the military?

I have a great appreciation and a great love of (public Affairs). Place yourself in Public Affairs and you’ll find yourself in the thick of everything, where the action is, so to speak. You have to have a tremendous work discipline; be able to do things when and where you’re needed where and when things happen. It’s a great area that I would recommend highly.

3)     You also have quite an impressive civilian resume when it comes to radio and television. You have worked with ABC, NBC, CBS, ESPN, and HBO to name a few. You also head up Louisville Productions which has produced five programs on PBS. Are there any key differences between civilian broadcast and military broadcast journalism?

Back when I started in the business, every TV station and newspaper would have specialists, (who) would have a full knowledge of what’s going on. As the years have evolved, the media became more competitive. Now the media has generalists, bright young people that are capable of reading with basic skill but have no knowledge of the area they’re working in. Public Affairs staff has to make sure that the message being relayed is the message they want to send out. We basically hand feed the media the message that you want them to carry. It’s based on your interpersonal relationships as to how successful you’re going to be in telling the story that you want them to tell.

4)     You’ve recently made history during the 2011 National Volunteer workshop and Youth Symposium. You hosted the first ever home front USO concert with Montgomery Gentry. Through the Pentagon Channel that concert was broadcast to military servicemen and their families all around the world. Would you like to share any after thoughts about that?

I must say that it was one of the highlights of my career. We presented it to the USO. They were interested in spending more time with the guard and spending more time with families; the people that enable the soldiers to do what they do to protect our country. It was one of the most significant events in their 70 year history, something I’m extraordinarily proud of.

5)     The National Volunteer workshop and Youth Symposium had an emphasis on the support military families give. How do you think family programs make our military stronger and better prepared to defend our country?

With over 14,000 people that have deployed to go into harm’s way (since 9/11), we as a guard could have only done that with the amount of support from family members, employers, communities, and churches. It has become a major element in our success and our ability to be the operational force that we are today. I am a big believer in emphasis of that conference. It’s so important to continue to let soldiers know that we appreciate them, and that the work that they do is important.

6)     You were the creator and director of the Your Guardians of Freedom Program. This program automated a process by which until commanders could send personalized letters of thanks to the family members and civilian employers of Guardsmen and Reservists who were called to duty following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The youth at A Backpack Journalist are encouraged to write letters of thank you to someone significant in their life. Thank you letters seem like such a small act, but in your opinion how much of an impact do the letters sent via the Your Guardians of Freedom program have on those who receive them?

The response that we got back through reply letters will bring me to tears. The one that I remember most vividly was a letter sent out to a young man with a “parent pin” that is usually given to their parents, saying that they were a proud parent of a soldier. The individual that got it was special. It was sent to an airman who was stationed in Korea (whose parents had recently deceased). This airman told me that as soon as he got back to the United States, he was going to super-glue the parent-pin on the tombstone of his parents so they would always wear it with pride. Those are the stories that make me feel good about what I do.

7)     Your state just went through the largest deployment in its history. How often do you visit deployed troops around the world? How do you recommend your troops keep their morale up during deployment?

Every chance I get I make a pledge to all of my units that I will do everything in my power to visit them during their deployment. I’ve been able to do that for the most part. I have found that it is extraordinarily important. It’s something that’s appreciated, not only by the soldiers, but by their families. With the technology we have today, the families are every bit as aware as you would imagine of when the Adjutant General visits people in the field. As for morale, I never have had a problem with morale. The men and women that make up the Army and the Air National Guard today are a different lot than the ones that I remember early in my career. They are professional soldiers and airman in every way. They don’t have a problem in doing their job. The difficult part is having the families adjust, and if the families back home are convinced that they’re being taken care of and that they’re okay, there’s not a problem with morale for the most part.

8)     What advice do you have for other military leaders as they work with soldiers who return from deployment?

One needs to make sure that you have their best interest in mind even though they’re back home. They need to know that there are lots of services and resources that they can bring to bear, from helping them find a job to medical treatment. Whatever it is, we are replete with (for the most part) federally funded services for people that have returned from deployment. It’s our duty to make sure that those services are well-known to the individual who needs them.

9)     What advice do you have for soldiers who are returning back from deployment that can help them adjust to reintegration?

We as an Army and Air force are doing everything we can do to get people employed when they’re back home. All that relates back to the family. If you don’t have income in your family, you’ve got problems. When you have problems in your family, you don’t have as good a soldier as you need in order to produce combat ready units in order to do the things that we do on a state and federal basis.

10)   What advice do you give to families about how they can support their soldier as they return to life in the U.S?

I think it all is built on a stable family situation, which includes a lot of factors. The more kinetic activity we see, the higher instances of divorce, alcoholism, and other factors we want to avoid. It’s our responsibility to analyze that and do whatever is necessary to try to help the situation get resolved.

 

Report by DeAnna Stinnett, Questions and Additional Reporting by Zia Johnson

 

Oct

10

Posted by : A Backpack Journalist | On : October 10, 2011

Note:  A Backpack Journalist – Interns spent time with Sylvia Kidd, Director of AUSA Family Programs on July 26, 2011 at the NGB Volunteer Conference.  We wish to thank her and her staff at AUSA for supporting our request to “Cover the Assignment”!

A Backpack Journalist – Interns:  Pedro Rampolla (Wyoming), Stacey Sharpe (Georgia), Samuel Nein (Indiana), and Zia Johnson (Georgia).

Stacey: “What do you think is your favorite or at least the most beneficial program that AUSA does?”

Kidd: “The most beneficial is our AUSA Family Forums because we have such great reviews about them and people are asking about them all the time.  Now, with budget cuts we’re a little bit concerned. So I think we need to be doubly vigilant that with these cuts we don’t end up sacrificing a lot of what we developed for our families.”

Stacey: “With the budget cuts, how do you see the programs doing? Where do you see the programs going?”

 

Kidd: “I think basically we can maintain where we are and probably still grow. We also do advocacy as part of AUSA’s mission and so I think it’s going to be doubly important that we educate family members on their role in advocacy and how they can work with the command.  Families need to express to the command what they feel they need. We’ve raised expectations very high, during the past years of the war. Although the secretary and Chief say that family programs should not be cut, I’m already seeing some of these things happening! I think it’s important for families to step forward and monitor what’s going on in their areas and voice their concerns.”

 

Stacey: “What exactly inspired your passion for these family programs? I know you mentioned earlier that you were a military spouse, but…?”

 

Kidd: “Well, I know from my own experience, I was 17 years old when my husband and I were married, 3000 miles away from my own family, he was in special ops so I never saw him it was, it was kind of a rude awakening.”

 

Stacey: “Wow, 17 years old…”

Kidd: “Yes, I learned that either I was going to grow myself, and learn things about the military, because obviously it’s very different when it’s your dad then when it’s your husband!  You know I was either going to do that or I wasn’t going to make it as a military spouse or at least not a very happy one. And so I found that as each challenge came up and I found a solution to it and over came it in my own mind. I gained a little bit more confidence.  I’m just a firm believer in helping spouses do that. I was one of the co-originators of the Army Family Team Building program, because I think there are things that spouses, who are going to be military spouses, need to know I wanted very much to make that a mandatory program, or at least a part of it! We were not able to make it mandatory due to a jag review, but the program has grown and served its purpose and continues to grow. I think it is teaching our spouses those military basics that they’re going to need.”

 

Stacey: “If you could tell military families, or military spouses, or military children one thing, what would it be? What would be your advice to them as a military spouse or the child of a serviceman yourself?”

 

Kidd: “Take advantage of what’s offered and be proud of your parent’s service because it takes special people to be able to do serve, to be willing to sacrifice and give up so much of their own lives for the country.  There are just a very small percentage of people that are doing that now but it impacts every single person in the United States and even other countries.  So I think the pride is very important and I also think that we can travel all over, we learn about all different countries and your horizons are just so much expanded and so much wider that the kids that live in one place, though I will admit that as a kid I kind of envied that.  Oh yes, it’s kind of like “When a door closes, another one opens.”

 

And I appreciate all that you’re doing at ‘Backpack’ – I think this is a wonderful program.”

 

Stacey: Well, we definitely enjoy it and thank you for sitting down with us and giving us your time.

 

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