Warrior Week Warrior Week
Transcription
Warrior Week Warrior Week
Volume 1, Issue 7 ‘Sharpen the Sword’ June 2007 INSIDE: Schinnen MP MP wins wins Soldier Soldier of of the the Year Year Schinnen Brussels receives receives first first CSM CSM Brussels Soldiers share share ‘street ‘street smarts’ smarts’ Soldiers Iron Shapian Shapian competitors competitors go go for for the the gold gold Iron Earth Day Day observed observed Earth Anti-terrorism training training at at Schinnen Schinnen Anti-terrorism Warrior Week Benelux Benelux Soldiers Soldiers train, train, refresh refresh skills skills June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 1 Nowowiejski Notes There are several ways customers may submit to have their voices and concerns heard. One is through the U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Interactive Customer Evaluation (I.C.E.) system with responses to your questions coming from the service provider. You’ve Been ICEed! Here’s a sampling of what people are saying on the USAG Benelux communities Interactive Customer Evaluation (ICE) system: USAG Schinnen (O&M) DPW Operations and Maintenance “Excellent service! No problems! Thank you!!” “The delivery of my freezer was prompt and professional. Thanks for the great service.” “Fast, efficient, Thank you!” “Quick, professional work!” (USAG BENELUX at SHAPE) USAG Benelux Education Center “Thank you, very polite and helpful.” “The Ed center here at SHAPE has been really helpful in my meeting my deadline for my exams. With no advance notice I was able to not only obtain my exams but complete them within 24 hours.” “Staff is very helpful and courteous. Everyone was real anxious to help.” USAG Brussels Outbound Transportation Assistance “Professional attitude and quick action.” Keep those great comments, kudos, concerns, and questions coming by going to http://ice.disa.mil or http:// www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil and clicking the ICE link to tell us what you think! 2 Summer is here, and with it PCS (permanent change of station) season. We will focus in this set of Notes on a few reminders, and then some information that will help all of us to welcome the new members of our communities, as well as make the quality of life better for those who have lived here for years. First, the reminders for June. June is National Safety Month. In the Benelux, we have two current safety emphases. For all POV (privately-owned vehicle) drivers, please use the POV risk assessment tool, TRiPS (Travel Risk Planning System), whenever you take a trip in Europe this summer. TRiP is designed to be used by service members and civilians of all services. It is a joint tool. The assessment is easy and quick to take, includes travel planning information such as maps and routes, and can be accessed with a link at www.usagbenelux. eur.army.mil. You will receive a personal risk assessment for your own planned trip with TRiPS. Our second safety emphasis is for all motorcycle riders to take the basic or advanced, newly revised Motorcycle Safety Foundation courses available via your local garrison. Contact your local Military Police desk or check the web page for details and schedule. For those of you with school age children, particularly kindergarten, please insure you have visited your local school at SHAPE, Brussels, or AFNORTH and register your children for fall classes. Help your school help you: register your children early, please. The number of teachers at each school is determined by projected enrollments, and this is usually finalized over the summer. If you wait until school starts, your child may be in a crowded class because you didn’t register for school before coming or on arrival. Here’s some information to make your quality of life better: Empower yourself with information. Because of the distributed nature of our communities, it is hard to get the word out about upcoming activities. There is a system of information. You can capitalize on it like this: 1) If you are new, get a copy of The Best COVER PHOTO: PHOTO: Steven Hoover Col. Dean A. Nowowiejski USAG Benelux Commander of the Benelux Newcomer’s Guide from your local Morale, Welfare and Recreation office. 2) Next, everyone should check this Benelux Edge thoroughly for news and announcements for the month. 3) Then, check the U.S. Army Garrison Benelux webpage for daily, newcomers, or sponsorship information. For local information, you can find links to your community web pages on the Benelux main page: Chièvres Garrison (SHAPE area), USAG Brussels Brussels, and USAG Schinnen (JFC Brunssum area). The NATO headquarters across the Benelux have their own installation commands, public information offices, and websites. For daily Benelux news, tune in to AFN Benelux radio on your local frequency. AFN radio and television studios is currently undergoing a comprehensive overhaul of all broadcast equipment that is scheduled for completion June. 23. While the upgrades are ongoing, the only local programming will be the live morning show with Airman 1st Class Tommy Moore, from 6 - 10 a.m., Monday through Friday. Once the new equipment is in place, listen to “The Voice of the Benelux” local programming, or better yet, tune in to Channel 21 on your AFN decoder decoder. AFN Benelux has its own satellite channel with all your local information. Finally, for upcoming MWR events, if you don’t find the information you are looking for, call MWR marketing at DSN 361-5167 or commercial 32 68 27 5167. They can provide you the latest event announcement or flyer. For your own best quality of life, stay informed and take advantage of the opportunities here in the Benelux. Sgt. Rosemary Huff, USAG Schinnen, slips through a tunnel-type obstacle while completing the conditioning course during Warrior Week. www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 MCKIERNAN SENDS Well-Being Survey 2007 In This Issue Commander’s Notes......................inside front cover Schinnen MP wins SOY......................................... 4 Brussels welcomes first CSM................................. 6 Schinnen conducts anti-terrorism training............... 9 Motorcycle Safety................................................. 11 Law Day at Schinnen............................................ 12 Chièvres/SHAPE Town Hall................................ 16 Liberation of Bonsecours..................................... 17 Wereth 11 remembered...................................... 18 Make-A-Wish.................................................. 20-21 Community Events & Services........................ 20-27 Classifieds............................................................ 30 Commanders Col. Dean A. Nowowiejski ....................... .USAG Benelux Lt. Col. Eric D. Tilley ......................................USAG Schinnen Lt. Col. Patrick J. Kilroy ................................. USAG Brussels Lt. Col. John G. Romero ............................... Chièvres Garrison Public Affairs officers and personnel Marie-Lise Baneton ...................................... USAG Benelux Thad Moyseowicz ........................................... USAG Brussels Cis Spook ....................................................... Chièvres Garrison J.D. Hardesty .................................................. Editor LaDonna Davis ............................................... Writer Steven Hoover ............................................... Writer Morale,Welfare and Recreation Marketing Kim Wayland................................................... USAG Benelux Johanna Krause ............................................. Benelux Marketing William Audretsch ........................................ Benelux Marketing Isabelle Gillet ................................................ Brussels Marketing Ellison Meier ................................................. Schinnen Marketing Salvador Espinoza .......................................... Schinnen Marketing The Benelux EDGE is an authorized unofficial newsmagazine published under the provisions of AR 360-1 for members of the Department of Defense. Contents of the Benelux EDGE are not necessarily the official views of or endorsed by the U.S. Government or the Department of Defense, Department of the Army or the USAG Benelux. Editorial content is edited and provided by USAG Benelux, USAG Schinnen and USAG Brussels public affairs and Morale, Welfare and Recreation offices. Submissions are welcome, but will be edited for accuracy, brevity, clarity and journalistic style. Submissions are due on the first day of the month, one month prior to publication date. The Benelux EDGE is published monthly. Printed circulation is 5,000. Our mailing address is Benelux EDGE, USAG Benelux, Unit 21419, Public Affairs Office, APO AE 09708. Telephone: (0032) 068-275419/DSN 361-5419; fax: DSN 361-5106. Policy • We encourage letters to the editor, but they must be signed.We will consider withholding the name of the author upon request. Letters regarding an issue should contribute to informational interest. • We reserve the right to edit all material for style, to fit available space, to resolve libel, force protection and grammar. USAG Benelux is a direct reporting garrison to the Installation Management Command-Europe June 2007 1. Each year we conduct a survey to measure the well-being of the force and to determine whether or not you are satisfied with the programs, facilities, services, and other aspects of working and living in Europe. Last year more than 6,000 Soldiers, civilian employees, retirees, and family members took part in the survey. Thank you for your valuable input! 2. We need your support again. The 2007 Well-Being Survey will be conducted from 14 May though 15 June 2007. This year we want to significantly increase the number of participants. In particular, we would like to have more family members take part in the survey. 3. The survey takes about 30 minutes to complete. Surveys and answer sheets are located at convenient places throughout the community, such as Army Community Service centers, fitness centers, and libraries. Answer sheets must be returned to these facilities or to the administering unit for collection and forwarding. The USAREUR Modular Survey System website at http://www.per.hqusareur.army.mil/ umss/wbs.htm provides more information. 4. As with last year’s survey, you will be asked to rate the services and programs in the following areas: Childcare and Youth Programs Family Readiness Financial Readiness Healthcare Recreation Relocation Schools and Education Spouse Employment 5. I strongly encourage you to participate in the survey and to ask your neighbors, friends, and retirees who may not have heard about it to do the same. This is your opportunity to indicate your level of satisfaction with the communities in which you live and to rate the overall effectiveness of the services they provide. www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 3 USAG Benelux Solider of the Year By LaDonna Davis Schinnen Public Affairs Office A U.S. Army Garrison Schinnen military policeman battled against other Soldiers in tests of mental and physical strength to win the Benelux Soldier of the Year competition April 4, in Chièvres, Belgium. Spc. Christopher Cortez, a native of San Antonio, Texas, went through a rigorous three days of competition April 24, that included physical training testing, land navigation, a six-mile ruck march, and written and oral exams to be named the Benelux Soldier of the Year. “I was excited when I heard I won. I knew that I had messed up on a few things, but I guess I won overall so it was really surprising to hear my name,” said Cortez. “The competition was hard especially because you’re going up against so many other Soldiers who are in such great shape, but I just did my best and fortunately for me, it worked in my favor, but it was definitely hard.” Going through the Army competition takes a lot of strength, a lot of skill and a lot of hard work. But like many challenges in life, having good mentors and a strong support system is a key component to success. “My team leader, Sgt. Thomas Achten really helped me get through the competition. He’s the one that motivated me, helped me study, and made sure I got my uniform right,” he said. “But, really, all of my fellow MPs helped me out. They all cheered me on and helped me get through it.” Although Cortez was competing against other Soldiers across the Benelux, his main competition came from someone right in his own unit. “I just wanted to beat out my homeboy, Sgt. Glen Jones, a fellow MP. It was cool because we would study together, yet we still had some competition within the unit,” he says. “It definitely made the whole challenge that much more interesting.” This marks the second year in a row that a Schinnen Soldier earned USAG Benelux Soldier of the Year award. “The best part about being named Soldier of the Year is that I get to represent Schinnen. People don’t know much about [our garrison] and this is the second Soldier of the Year so we’re making a name for Schinnen,” Cortez says. Schinnen Soldiers continue to represent the garrison well. Last year, Sgt. 1st Class Antonio Mariscal Guzman won the Installation Management Agency-Europe Noncommissioned Officer of the Year award. Even though this marks the Texas natives first Soldier competition, being a contender in the Army-wide challenge seems to run in the Cortez family blood. 4 PHOTO: Staff Sgt. Malcolm Fleming Schinnen MP wins competition Spc. Christopher Cortez USAG Benelux Soldier of the Year “A few years ago my brother went through the competition and got second place for the whole U.S. Army. So, hopefully, if I keep doing well, I will catch up to him-that’s my goal.” The Soldier and NCO of the year competition is an annual Army tradition where the best of the best Army warriors are challenged to test their skills and knowledge against, not only themselves and each other, but against Army standards as well. Cortez competed in May for the Installation Management Command Europe’s Soldier of the Year competition in Stuttgart, Germany in May; however, results were not available at press time. The winners at each echelon continue to battle for the ultimate titles of Department of the Army Noncommissioned Officer and Soldier of the Year. For now though, Cortez is taking his win all in stride, preparing for the next level of competition and hoping to gain a little more exposure for a future challenge. “I’ve been studying, and doing PT to get my PT score up and ruck marching to get that score up too,” Cortez says about his preparation for the IMCOMEurope boards. “I’m going to have the promotion board in June, so this board will prepare me for that, which is good.” www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 USAG USAG Benelux Benelux WARRIOR WARRIOR WEEK WEEK By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office Every Soldier, regardless of Military Occupational Specialty or unit affiliation, is a Soldier first. Never has that been more apparent than since the U.S. military has become engaged in the War on Terror. Many Soldiers, including those in Installation Management Command units around the world, have deployed to either Iraq or Afghanistan; even more have done so two or three times. With that in mind, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Soldiers participated in Warrior Week May 14-18 at Camp Roi Albert, a Belgian Army installation in Marche-enFemenne; about 90 minutes drive southeast of Chièvres. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 5 PHOTOS: Steven Hoover Sgt. Min Huynh, assigned to USAG Schinnen, prepares to scale one of 20-plus obstacles while completing the conditioning course at Camp Roi Albert, a Belgian Army installation. Huynh and Soldiers from all three garrisons across USAG Benelux participated in Warrior Week training May 14-18. Benelux Soldiers train at host nation Army installation The week-long training provides Soldiers with realistic training in order to maintain a combat ready posture. The training was conducted in four lanes, or phases: team building activities such as conditioning courses and combatives (hand-to-hand) training; weapons ranges; Warrior Leader Tasks and Military Operations Urban Terrain (MOUT) training. Michael Laney, the garrison’s host nation liaison officer, coordinated with the Belgian Army giving Benelux Soldiers a place to conduct meaningful training in a conducive environment - the third time Benelux Soldiers had used the Belgian installation. “This was an opportunity to get our Soldiers some training outside, away from the garrison environment,” he said. “We are leveraging our host nation partnership using their installation. In Germany and other places, our Soldiers have U.S.-run training areas to use. Here, we don’t have the capability.” On the first day, the Soldiers were put through a “conditioning course” that included about 20 different obstacles to test their strength and agility. “Each Soldier went through the course twice, the first time for familiarization and the second for speed,” said Sgt. 1st Class Philip Thornton, who served as USAG Benelux noncommissioned officer-in-charge of the course for the day. “Other than some minor bumps and bruises, I think things went pretty well and we got the desired effect from the training.” In the afternoon, the gymnasium at Camp Roi Albert was used for combatives, or handto-hand training. Sgt. Thomas Taylor, from USAG Brussels, 6 teamed with Staff Sgt. Jeffrey Kloss from USAG Benelux, to teach participating Soldiers basic hand-to-hand maneuvers all the way through going full speed combative skills and letting them switch after a victor was declared. Thomas explained how the old Army fighting style had very few ground tactics. The new style, developed at Fort Benning, Ga., focuses “This was an opportunity to get our Soldiers some training outside, away from the garrison environment. We are leveraging our host nation partnership using their installation. In Germany and other places, our Soldiers have U.S.run training areas to use. Here, we don’t have the capability.” Mike Laney Host Nation Liaison Officer USAG Benelux on ground fighting skills and saving energy to “finish the fight” on the battlefield. “A majority of the battles fought in Iraq are in urban terrain, where hand-to-hand combat is very likely,” he said. This fighting style, derived mainly from Gracie Jiu Jitsu from Brazil, allows Soldiers to disable the enemy without lethally finishing them. “This week’s training is especially good and needed for Soldiers who have never been in a field environment,” Kloss said. “And, for those of us who have, it’s good because if you don’t use it, you lose it.” He added that the combatives training is eswww.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Spc. Charles Fridline, assigned to USAG Brussels, makes his way into the building during building clearance training at the Camp Roi Albert MOUT site. pecially needed for those who are not used to defending themselves while on the ground. Day two was spent primarily at the weapons range training reflexive and controlled fire and then firing at pop-up targets, according to Maj. Sonja Granger, Directorate of Plans, Mobilization and Security operations officer. While at the range, they also conducted Improvised Explosive Device training. “Many of the Soldiers in the garrison have experience in identifying and reacting to IEDs from Operation Iraqi Freedom,” Granger said. Days three and four concentrated on some 40 Warrior Leader Tasks, including building clearance procedures, raids and searches at the Military Operations Urban Terrain site. While the Soldiers were training at the MOUT site, civilian employees from all three garrisons visited Camp Roi Albert to witness the training. Even though May 17 was a Belgian holiday (Ascension Day), several host nation employees attended.... Little did they know that they’d be asked to participate. After receiving a briefing by Granger, the civilians were taken to the MOUT site where some were asked to participate as local villagers, while others were members of the opposing forces, or OPFOR. “I had no idea we were going to get to participate in the training,” said Patsy Herbaut, USAG Benelux acting Equal Employment OpportuJune 2007 Sergeant 1st Class David Williams (in soft cap), first sergeant for USAG Schinnen and the training NCOIC at the MOUT site, does a quick After Action Review with Soldiers who completed their first attempt at clearing buildings. Pfc. Gerardo Razo, assigned to USAG Benelux, keeps an eye out for his fellow squad member and the OPFOR during building clearing training May 17 at the Military Operations Urban Terrain site on Camp Roi Albert, a Belgian Army installation. Patsy Herbaut, USAG Benelux acting Equal Employment Opportunity manager, is one of several civilian employees that attended the MOUT training and participated as villagers or OPFOR. Sgt. Jeremy Ringo, assigned to USAG Benelux, practices throwing hand grenades into a building. Opposition forces, including Staff. Sgt. Patrick McDonough, USAG Benelux, did their best to make life difficult for the Soldiers conducting building clearance training at Camp Roi Albert. nity manager. “But, it was fun to do.” Later, some of them were taken to the conditioning course where they had an opportunity to attempt some of the obstacles the Soldiers had done earlier in the week. “I think that Warrior Week was a great success,” said Spc. Charles Fridline, from USAG Brussels, “as not only a USAG Brussels Sol- dier. I am part of the Benelux and was able to bond with the other garrison Soldiers. “The goal of this training was for us to accomplish our tasks and not be trained to do them,” he added. “In my opinion, the greatest accomplishment was being able to bond together as friends and Soldiers as part of the Benelux and not separate garrisons.” June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Throughout the week, USAG Benelux Command Sgt. Maj. Ralph Ford, observed the training. He said that Soldiers who have recently been “down range” sharing their experiences with those who, as of yet, haven’t been is an important aspect during training. “That’s where training like this is beneficial to everyone,” he added. 7 Brussels receives first CSM PHOTO: Isabelle Gillet Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Cordova speaks to guests after his change of responsibility ceremony April 27. Cordova became U.S. Army Garrison Brussels first command sergeant major. By Thad Moyseowicz Brussels Public Affairs office The U.S. Army Garrison Brussels made history of sorts recently as the Installation Management Command Europe’s smallest garrison received its first command sergeant major. Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Cordova assumed his new responsibilities as the garrison’s first-ever command sergeant major during a change of responsibility ceremony April 27. “This is a watershed event in our Garrison’s history,” explained USAG Brussels Commander, Lt. Col. Pat Kilroy, to the many guests and garrison staff assembled for the change of responsibility ceremony. “This garrison and its predecessor activity has always been small, and its very “smallness” has tended to be an argument used to justify a less-thanstandard Army organization. The assignment of Command Sgt. Maj. Cordova is a sign that the U.S. Army recognizes Brussels as a robust, perhaps small, but still robust, Army command. I couldn’t be more delighted.” USAG Brussels has had “acting” command sergeants major in times past, and, in fact, Cordova assumed the responsibilities of his position from Master Sgt. Leroy Lee. Kilroy paid tribute both to Lee and Brussels’ sister garrison, USAG Schinnen, which generously provided Lee to fill an urgent Brussels need. But Cordova is the first centrally-selected command sergeant major in Brussels’ history. Cordova hails from La Mirada, California. He enlisted in the Army at age 18, in 1982, and is frank that he did so because he needed a job. “The recruiter looked me and my test scores over and said I could be an X-Ray technician. Great, I said!” When the recruiter told him it would be 12 months before he could actually put on the uniform, Cordova told him he couldn’t wait that long because of a pressing need to put bread on the table. The recruiter then offered him other specialization options, each of which involved deferred entry on active duty, albeit with decreasing delay. 8 He chuckles: “I was getting desperate. Even the infantry branch involved six months delayed entry. The recruiter must have sensed my desperation, because he finally found me a branch which would put me on active duty within two weeks. And that’s how I became a member of the Adjutant General’s Corps!” After completing basic training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Cordova reported to Fort Bragg, N.C., as a member of the 82nd Airborne Division’s AG Company. The five years he spent at Fort Bragg were notable for two reasons, he says. “First, I found I really enjoyed being a Soldier,” he says. “Sure, the Army provided me a paying job, but, more important, I really appreciated the camaraderie, the caring leadership, and the clear signs that this was an organization in which advancement came from hard work and merit.” The second reason for the assignment’s being memorable is because it was where Cordova met and married his wife, Michelle. “Michelle was the sister of my then-room mate,” says Cordova. “He was getting married, and his family came down from Philadelphia for the wedding, and, well, the rest is history!” The couple now have three children, ages 17, 10 and 8. The Cordovas departed Fort Bragg for their first overseas assignment in 1987 to Neu Ulm, Germany, near Munich. After three years, Cordova was posted to Fort Jackson as a Drill Instructor, or “DI.” “Being a DI was an incredibly intense experience,” he says. “But I gained a new appreciation for the great personal rewards of training Soldiers.” He also earned a promotion to the rank of sergeant first class. Cordova’s status as a newly-minted E-7 also earned him a return to Europe and the operating Army. Assigned to the 1st Armored Division’s Engineer Brigade as the brigade S-1 (personnel), noncommissioned officer-in-charge, the Cordova’s spent four years in Bad Kreuznach one year of which Cordova spent in Bosnia where his unit was deployed in support of NATO’s Implementation Force (IFOR). He recalls the incredible devastation of the Bosnian countryside, and the positive impact U.S. and allied Soldiers had on the locals and their way of life. “My unit built the bridge over the Sava river. You don’t appreciate how much we depend upon infrastructure until you have to help rebuild a country,” he says. The IFOR deployment was also Cordova’s first experience with “Jointness.” “We worked closely, as a team, with Navy Seabees and Air Force engineers,” he says. “It was a really great experience.” Leaving the 1st Armored Division, the Cordovas moved to Heidelberg, where he became first sergeant of 1st Personnel Command for a year. Selected for the prestigious Sergeants Major Academy, Cordova was a student at the Academy when the 9/11 attacks happened. “A fair number of my classmates wanted to quit the academy then and there and return to the ‘muddy boots’ Army,” he says. “But I recall the commandant gathering us together, and telling us that there would be plenty of opportunities to serve the Army and the nation.” Having graduated from the academy, Cordova was then assigned to the National Training Center (NTC) at Fort Irwin. Still an E-8, he received a vote of confidence from his seniors when the retiring garrison sergeant major recommended that Cordova be his replacement. “I really appreciated that sergeant major’s having gone to bat for me,” he says. The confidence must not have been misplaced, for, after a year, Cordova found himself promoted to E-9, and, eventually, selected as Brussels’ first Command Sergeant Major. Cordova says he is delighted to be in Brussels as a part of the Installation Management Command Europe’s team. How does Brussels differ from his last assignment? “At Fort Irwin, the Morale, Welfare and Recreation directorate alone had some 300 people,” he says. “That’s triple our entire Brussels garrison numbers. But we’ve got a high-visibility mission, supporting Americans working at NATO headquarters. And we’re dedicated to serving a very joint community.” www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 Schinnen conducts anti-terrorism training By LaDonna Davis Schinnen Public Affairs Office In an ever-changing warfare climate, it is crucial all U.S. military forces be prepared and educated on what to do in the face of a terrorist threat. On April 27, U.S. Army Garrison Schinnen personnel got a lesson in force protection procedures by simulating a terrorist threat during the garrison’s emergency response exercise. The exercise involved several local emergency response teams from different regions across the Netherlands, including the fire department, a hazardous material (HAZMAT) team, paramedics, members of the Dutch army and Dutch military police. Dutch actors along with Schinnen employees simulated the wounded in an effort to make the exercise as true-to-life as possible. “The intent of this exercise is to test all of the garrison’s resources to the maximum extent possible in cooperation with available Dutch emergency and military resources,” said Randal Garfield, Schinnen’s plans and operations officer. “By conducting anti-terrorism exercises on a yearly basis, we foster a professional and safe environment for all who participate; leading to enhanced working relationships with Dutch emergency services and a safer, more secure garrison.” In the exercise scenario an anti-military radical group gained access to the post and crashed into a fence releasing an unidentified white substance and causing multiple injuries to innocent bystanders. To make the exercise work, the scenario had to play in real-time and all Schinnen employees had to role-play as if the threat were real. This included staying indoors until HAZMAT PHOTO: Jan Maessen Paramedics from the municipality Sittard-Geleen, NL simulate triaging an evacuation victim to get the maximum benefit of the force protection exercises. Local Dutch actors simulate injuries during a mass casualty force protection exercise held April 27 at USAG Schinnen. teams could identify the white substance, closing off access to the base, opening up a casualty collection center and calling the pertinent off-post emergency services in a timely-manner. Working for the military overseas can often times present challenging and unfamiliar situations. That’s why these exercises are so imperative, not just so the employees on post can become familiar with how to proceed in the case of a threat, but so emergency services offpost can also become familiar with what actions to take in the case of a terrorism emergency. “This exercise and any others that follow are precautionary measures in the instance a terrorist attack occurs,” said USAG Schinnen Garrison Commander Lt. Col. Eric Tilley. “Today we are able to see what we’re doing right, what we need to work on and how all of the various players- from the local emergency services, to the Schinnen employees- work together in a worst-case-scenario so that we can be prepared.” “ I think the exercise went really well. Everybody learned a lot and it prepared us for how to plan for next year’s event,” said Garfield. “This year’s exercise really helped us because it was done on such a large scale compared to past years. Schinnen and its Dutch partners are committed to each other to continue these opportunities to train and work together for the protection of all our employees on post and our neighbors in the community.” PHOTOS: Sylvia Bowron Left: Local HAZMAT and Firefighter teams collaborate on rescue efforts during the 2007 USAG Schinnen mass casualty exercise. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 9 Earth Day Editor’s Note: Community members across U.S. Army Garrison Benelux’s three garrisons participated in Earth Day activities. USAG Brussels, USAG Schinnen and Chièvres Garrison Public Affairs Offices provided the following information as a snapshot of the Earth Day celebrations in their communities. Brussels American School students converted environmental talk into action April 27th as they participated in Earth Day “We actually combined a couple of observances into one,” says BAS teacher Donna McVicker. “We celebrated Earth Day with Arbor Day” McVicker engaged her students as well as other teachers in designing a comprehensive half-day program dedicated to campus-wide trash pick-up, planting flowers and other live “greenery,” watching a film on battery recycling, and, finally, putting up the bird, bat and insect “houses” provided by Dumont. Eighth-grader Patrick Morrison’s campus-wide sweep for trash bagged his impressions of Earth Day. “There’s too much plastic trash that blows around campus,” he said as he deposited a plastic scrap he’d found into a trash can. “The plastic, unfortunately, doesn’t decompose.” In Schinnen, elementary students from AFNORTH International School opened the day-long celebration with an assembly which included poems, songs and cheers from the cheerleaders. This year, Schinnen’s Environmental Division provided two different environmental topics: 1) Potential Soil and Groundwater Contamination 2) Trash Sorting Program In Chièvres Garrison, local Boy Scouts teamed with Chièvres Garrison Commander Lt. Col. John G. Romero and community leaders to plant trees around Chièvres Air Base as one of the Earth Day awareness activities within the SHAPE/Chièvres area. Top: PHOTO: Courtesy Schinnen Environmental Division AFNORTH International School elementary students kicked off Earth Day in the Schinnen community with an assembly to “Rock Mother Earth.” Above: PHOTO: Jim Ferris Sixth-graders Megan Lotze and Alex Georges planting flowers as part of Brussels American School’s Earth Day celebration. Left: PHOTO: Cis Spook Chièvres Garrison’s Boy Scouts team with community leaders to plant trees on Chièvres Air Base as just one of the Earth Day awareness activities 10 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 Soldiers share street smarts PHOTO: J.D. Hardesty Director of Emergency Services and SHAPE Harley-Davidison Club member Lt. Col. Dennis Zink leads 31 fellow “bikers” from across the Chièvres Garrison community on a Motorcycle Safety Sunday “road out” and “toy ride” May 20 on Caserne Daumerie. PHOTO: J.D. Hardesty One of the Harley-Davidsons carried its own safety message. Where it matters most… with motorcycle safety By J.D. Hardesty Benelux EDGE Editor Some Soldiers attend the school of hard knocks. Others prefer their street smarts to text books. Still others take the “lessons learn” approach to increasing their operational knowledge. Where does the “book smart” blend with experience…? Where it matters most… with motorcycle safety. According to Rudy Magain, Safety Officer for U.S. Army Garrison Benelux, the number of Soldiers killed on motorcycles has doubled within the past five years. “In 2001, 15 Soldiers were killed Army-wide riding motorcycles, though there were no motorcycle fatalities in the U.S. Army in Europe,” he said. “That number continues to grow every year. In 2005, motorcycle fatalities sur- PHOTO: Cis Spook Gary Wilson, a member of the SHAPE Harley Davidson Club, shows Jordan from the Orphanage La Maison at Ostiches how to play with the toy he just received. June 2007 PHOTO: J.D. Hardesty Hondas, Kawasakis, BMWs, Harley “fatboys” and “Indians” – a total of 32 bikes lined the streets as their owners went through a safety checklist provided by the Safety Office. passed private-owned vehicle fatalities with 40 riders dying in crashes that year.” The Army has armed communities with motorcycle safety campaigns to help save Soldiers lives. Bikers across the three Chièvres Garrison communities joined the SHAPE HarleyDavidson Club on May 20 for a Motorcycle Safety Sunday at Caserne Daumerie as part of a “toy ride” and “road out” and safety day. Many of the members kicked off the motorcycle fellowship by attending a chapel service and barbecue. Hondas, Kawasakis, BMWs, Harley “fatboys” and “Indians” – a total of 32 bikes lined the streets as their owners went through a Safety Office sponsored checklist. Representatives from the Motorcycle Safety Foundation shared a few quick tips for the group ride before the bikers hit the Belgian streets: Arrive on time with a full tank of gas Hold a riders’ meeting to discuss the route, rest and fuel stops, hand signals, etc. Keep the group size manageable Ride in a staggered formation that allows a cushion of safety so motorcyclists have time and space to react to dangers Avoid side-by-side formations As the Director of Emergency Services and a member of the SHAPE Harley-Davidson Club, Lt. Col. Dennis Zink set up the “group ride” with a charity “toy run” to Orphanage La Maison at Ostiches and Orphanage Le Clos at Arbre, both located near Ath, to deliver toys www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil to the children during their ride from Chièvres to Tournai, Belgium. “It is a nice thing to do,” stated Anthony Greco “and we’re bringing them some joy. That’s why it is important for us to stop by these two orphanages.” The USAG Benelux Drivers Testing Station will host several Motorcycle Safety Foundation Classes during this coming spring and summer. Sponsored by U.S. Army in Europe, the classes will consist of a Basic Rider Course and an Experienced Rider Course. The training is offered to all military and civilian personnel riding motorcycles in Europe. Others may attend the classes on a space-available basis. The Basic Rider Course will be offered June 8, 9 and Sept. 14, 15 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Building 105 on Chièvres Air Base. The Experienced Rider Course will be offered July 21 and Aug. 25 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Building 105 on Chièvres Air Base. There were five critical messages the Motorcycle Safety Foundation emphasized to anyone wanting to ride motorcycles in Europe. Get trained and licensed Wear protective gear Ride unimpaired Ride within your limits Be a lifelong learner “I am not aware of any motorcycle fatality in the last few years across the Benelux,” Magain said. “Motorcycle riders need to keep following the basic riding rules.” 11 AFNORTH International School Goldilocks teaches a lesson in law By LaDonna Davis Schinnen Public Affairs Office Elementary school children got a lesson in law and choices May 9, from the Netherlands Law Center Law Day presentation held at AFNORTH International School in Brunssum, NL. Law Day was established in the late 1950s by the American Bar Association to draw attention to both the principles and practice of law and justice in the United States. “We wanted to introduce the students to the practice of law and give them some appreciation for the jury system by letting them weigh the evidence and make a decision for themselves on the guilt or innocence of the defendant,” said Capt. Timothy Gustafson, chief of client services at the NELC and mock trial lawyer for Goldilocks. “We did this by choosing a character that all the kids could relate to and then giving the kids a chance to actually get involved in the trial by being a part of the jury.” PHOTO: LaDonna Davis In order to teach the children about law, the NELC The staff of the Netherlands Law Center conducts a mock trial for the students of AFNORTH acted out a mock trial of a classic children’s fairytale International School Elementary students May 9 in recognition of Law Day. Staff members used novel, Goldilocks and the Three Bears. the children’s fairytale “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” to demonstrate how the legal process During the trial, the children served as the jury works by putting Goldilocks on trial for bad manners. while members of the law center played judge, witnesses, prosecutor and defendant. At the end of the trial, it was up to manners and sentenced her to pay $1 million in damages to the three the students to decide if Goldilocks was guilty of bad manners and what Bears. “Aside from my client being found guilty, I think we at the law center should be her punishment. “I couldn’t believe the reactions of the students. When it came time accomplished what we set out to do and that was get the kids excited for them to make their ruling, they all just started shouting out ‘guilty!’” about the legal process and help them to understand it a little bit better,” said Gustafson. “I could hardly hear myself think; they started yelling said Gustafson. As for Goldilocks, she’ll be working for a long, long, long time to pay before I could even make my closing arguments.” Unfortunately for Goldilocks, the students found her guilty of bad off her fine. Brunssum Cub Scouts host international campout By Tracy Ballard Special to the EDGE Over 150 Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and Scouters from JFC Brunssum, the Netherlands, Geilenkirchen, Germany, Klein Brogel, Belgium and Dutch Scout troop St. Vincentius from Brunssum, gathered at the JFC Brunssum Sports Fields for an inaugural spring camp out April 20-22. Brunssum Cub Scout Pack 100 hosted the event which included knot tying, rope bridge building, Dutch games, Frisbee golf, first aid demonstrations and more. After the opening ceremonies Saturday morning, the scouts were divided into groups which rotated through 10 activity stations. “The kids can’t stop talking about what a good time they had with the Dutch scouts and Pack 100,” said Dale Beaty, cub master for Geilenkirchen’s Pack 442. “I especially enjoyed the time we spent with the Dutch Scout leaders, talking with them and learning new games and fun things for our kids to do. I think overall the event was outstanding and showed what scouting is about worldwide… teaching our kids to grow up to be good, caring citizens.” “The great thing about our troop and pack is that while we all registered as Boy Scouts of America, our organizations are made up of leaders and boys from almost all the NATO nations because of where we are stationed,” said Chris Ballard, coordinator of the event and assistant cubmaster to pack 100. “We have boys in our Boy Scout troop and Cub Scout pack from Germany, Canada, the Netherlands, Japan and Czechoslovakia, just to name a few. This is a great opportunity for our boys to interact with the Dutch Scouts and for the Dutch Scouts to see how Scouting is done in the US.” “This took a lot of effort to coordinate, and it is a unique opportunity to get together with Scouts on an international level,” said Ralf Gers, assistant scoutmaster for troop 100. “This is a chance that many Scouts may never have…a chance to interact with Scouts from other countries, share our experiences, learn their traditions, and all leave looking forward to the next time we can do this again!” 12 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil PHOTO: Charlie Maurer Chris Riedle, 7 a Tiger Cub Scout from JFC Brunssum pack 100 in the Netherlands, plays a traditional Dutch game, Sjoelen, during the scouts first Spring Campout. June 2007 NFL All-Pro Fitzgerald visits the Benelux By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office Arizona Cardinals All-Pro wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald made a lunch time appearance at the Prime Time Bar and Grill on Caserne Daumerie April 30. The 90-minute visit, where he took time to speak with community members and sign autographs, was part of his tour with the U.S. Air Forces Europe “Extreme Summer” program. He also visited SHAPE American High School later that afternoon. This is the third consecutive year Fitzgerald has participated in the program. “Visiting the troops and Family members is the highlight of my off-season,” he said. “I feel fortunate to be a part of this tour. I have so much respect for their (military personnel) strong beliefs and values and I am thankful to have them protecting our freedom.” His visit was the Monday following the National Football League Draft weekend and he admitted right away he hadn’t had much time to keep up with who the Cardinals selected. There were plenty of fans there who got him caught up in a hurry. The youngest visitor to the event was also the only one wearing team colors. Tyler Deiwert, the 18-month-old son of Perry and Sylvia Deiwert, came decked out in his very own Cardinals outfit. Not only was it a Cardinals uniform, but it read Fitzgerald across the back. “I’ve been a Cardinals fan for a long time,” said Perry, originally from Glendale, Az., who is currently a human resources specialist with While community members were placing their food orders, Larry Fitzgerald visited with those in line, including Chièvres Garrison Commander Lt. Col. John G. Romero. the Benelux Civilian Personnel Advisory Center. “We got the outfits for when we watch games during the season. It’s just a coincidence that Tyler’s jersey said Fitzgerald on the back.” Fitzgerald is the most decorated player to come out of the University of Pittsburgh since Hall of Fame running back Tony Dorsett in 1976. In his last season with Pitt, in 2003, Fitzgerald finished second in the Heisman Trophy voting behind Oklahoma quarterback Jason White. PHOTOS: Steven Hoover Arizona Cardinals All-Pro wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald visits with Tyler Deiwert, the son of Perry and Sylvia Deiwert, during his April 30 appearance at the Prime Time Bar and Grill. He was named the winner of the Walter Camp Award which goes to the nation’s player of the year. In addition, Fitzgerald also won the Fred Biletnikoff Award which goes to the nation’s top wide receiver. Cinco de Mayo fiesta PHOTOS: J.D. Hardesty Above: More than 100 of the Chièvres Garrison community members celebrated Cinco De Mayo (Mexico’s victory over Napoleon III’s Imperial French Army in the Battle of Pueblo in 1862), with a fiesta featuring rice, beans, salsa, Cochinta Pibil, Pork Yucatan-style, Pozole Sonora-style, Calabacetas and several other dishes, deserts and music which was co-sponsored by the Chièvres Garrison Family Readiness Group and the Prime Time Bar and Grill. Left: Children took turns taking a wack at the pinata. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 13 PHOTO: Julie Gomez SHAPE Players and supporters take center stage to claim a total of 13 awards during the annual Topper Awards held on April 26 in Heidelberg, Germany. SHAPE Players claim 13 Topper awards SHAPE Entertainment Center The SHAPE Players production of Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple” (Female Version) took top honors for Best Comedy at the 2007 Tournament of Plays “Topper” Awards Show held annually in Heidelberg, Germany. The production also earned Best Actress, Victoria M. Schehl; Best Debut Performance, Sgt. 1st Class Vetta Lynne Stanley; Best Set Design Martin Mutke and Thomas Reich; Best Costume Design, Gwendolyn Whitney; Best Stage Properties, Jennifer Howe; and Best Stage Manager, Elina Kotlyar. The SHAPE Players production of Disney’s “High School Musical,” which was the most nominated musical with 24 nominations, garnered six “Topper” Musical Awards. Those winning include: Best Actor Minor Role, Luke Lumsden; Best Outstanding Male Youth Performance, Bobby Jones; Best Sound Design, Richard Burn; Best Set Design, Thomas Reich; Best Stage Manager, Berwinne Johnson and Gwendolyn Whitney; and Best Technical Director, Thomas Reich. The Awards, sponsored by the Installation Management CommandEurope, included 22 musicals, comedies and dramas produced at communities in England, Belgium, Germany, Italy, and Turkey. SHAPE Entertainment Centre The Odd Couple” (Female Version) Awards Best Comedy Best Actress in a Comedy: Victoria M. Schehl Best Debut Performance in a Comedy: Sgt. 1st Class Vetta Lynne Stanley Best Costume Design in a Comedy: Gwendolyn Whitney 14 Best Stage Properties in a Comedy: Jennifer Howe Best Set Design in a Comedy: Martin Mutke, Thomas Reich Best Stage Manager in a Comedy: Elina Kotlyar “High School Musical” Awards Best Actor in a Minor Role in a Musical: Luke Lumsden Best Outstanding Male Youth Performance in a Musical: Bobby Jones Best Sound Design in a Musical: Richard Burn Best Set Design in a Musical: Reich Best Stage Manager in a Musical: Whitney, Berwinne Johnson Best Technical Director in a Musical: Reich Theatre Summer Camp “HONK Jr.” Based on Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Ugly Duckling” 26 June – 28 July (5 weeks - Mon, Tue, Thu and two Sat) Han’s Christian Anderson’s classic tale has been transformed into a modern musical comedy. Written by George Stiles and Anthony Drewe, HONK! tells the story of Ugly, whose odd, gawky looks instantly incite prejudice from his family and neighbors. Separated from the farm and pursued by a hungry Cat, Ugly must find his way, while his loving mother, Ida, searches for him. Along his journey he not only discovers his true beauty and glorious destiny, but he also finds love and acceptance. Cost: 225,00 € Group I: grades 5 – 8 meets 1230 - 1630 Group II: grades 8 – 12 meets 1730 – 2130 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 First Sgt. Richard J. Haley, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, SHAPE Battalion first sergeant, barks out the countdown as Iron Shapian contestants try to knock out the last of their pushups or situps. PHOTOS: Steven Hoover SHAPE Battalion Commander Lt. Col. Joseph Calloway, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Ronald Leininger, and AFNORTH Battalion’s Sgt. Nina Rodriguez look to be headed for a photo finish during the run portion of the Iron Shapian. They were among the 30 participants that began the four-mile run portion of the competition - 29 of the runners finished. Staff Sgt. Brian Adams and Staff Sgt. Oswald Pascal, both of HHC, SHAPE Battalion, were two of many who served as graders and counters during the Iron Shapian competition May 4. Besides their official duties, they also provided encouragement to each of the participants, pushing them to do their best. Sgt. 1st Class Marshon Broomer, assigned to HHC, USAG Benelux, was one of four participants to finish in the gold during the Iron Shapian May 4. Iron Shapian allows competitors to ‘go for the gold’ By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office For the third consecutive year, the Iron Shapian competition, sponsored by SHAPE Battalion May 4 at SHAPE, saw the field of participants double. And, for the third consecutive year (although not by design), the person who developed the event wound up being the overall champion. The Iron Shapian is a physical fitness testtype competition with categories for pushups, sit-ups, four-mile run, chin/pull-ups and dips. June 2007 The challenge is for participants to achieve personal bests in the events. For instance, the minimum standards for men to attain gold are: 77 pushups; 85 sit-ups; 28 minutes on the fourmile run; 10 chin-ups; and 25 dips. However, extra points are awarded for those who beat those numbers and kept going, raising the bar for the rest of the field. With a total of 124 points, SHAPE Bn. Commander Lt. Col. Joseph Calloway topped the field for the third straight time. Although he has led the field each year Calloway, an admitted physical fitness addict, said www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil the primary reason for the event was so “competitors could push their overall fitness.” Following Calloway, finishing in the Gold were: Capt. Michael Sieber, SHAPE Bn.; Sgt. 1st Class Marshon Broomer, USAG Benelux; and Staff Sgt. Marvin Moore, SHAPE Bn. Bronze category winners were: Spc. Dujuan Hunter, USAG Benelux; Rick Leung, 66th Military Intelligence; Cmdr. David Buonerba, U.S. Navy; Spc. Shawnta Hernandez, AFNORTH Bn.; Staff Sgt. William Miller, AFNORTH Bn.; Cpl. Wezley Vegh, British Army; and Sgt. Chris Winters, USANATO Brigade. 15 SHAPE welcomes Lt. Dan Band PHOTO: Steven Hoover Gary Sinise, aka “Lt. Dan” jams with trumpet player Kirk Garrison during the Lt. Dan Band’s concert at the SHAPE Fest Tent May 12. Sinise, who plays bass guitar, put the band together after visiting military personnel in various locations around the world. By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office Actor Gary Sinise, probably best known for his role as “Lt. Dan” in the 1994 movie “Forrest Gump,” brought the Lt. Dan Band to SHAPE May 12 during their recent European USO tour. The 12-member band performed before a packed house in the SHAPE Fest Tent for about two-and-a-half hours, playing everything from Springsteen to Linkin Park, from Aretha to Hendrix. Sinise, who plays bass guitar and currently stars in the television crime drama “CSI-New York,” formed the band in 2004 with longtime friend and musician Kimo Williams. Williams is a Vietnam War veteran. They had played together with other friends “just for fun” for several years before exploring the possibility of working with Armed Forces Entertainment and the USO. “This is probably one of the most rewarding things I do,” Sinise said after the show. “To get out there (with the band) and support our service members and help them and their Families forget about things for awhile. “I know it makes a difference and I feel it’s my way of kind of giving back...that’s a way I can serve and help people out who are helping me (by serving our country).” Besides his other endeavors, Sinise is cofounder of Operation Iraqi Children, a nonprofit organization that collects school supplies and other donations to give to schoolchildren in Iraq. He said his involvement with television, movies and the band has presented him with opportunities most Americans don’t get. “I’ve seen the military in a way most people don’t get to,” he said. “I think most Americans don’t have a clear picture of who the folks in the military are, or why they do what they do. “Another thing is to be able to play for them and play for their Families and play for the kids and see the kids just jumping up and down and going crazy, smiling and having a great time, and knowing that we are contributing to making a difference of raising some morale and helping some folks out. That’s extremely rewarding.” Following the concert, after a brief rest, he and the band signed autographs and visited with those who remained. Spring Town Hall Community’s voice heard By J.D. Hardesty Benelux EDGE Editor Why? This simplest of words can often brew frustration and anxiety in Families and infect the well-being of entire communities if left unanswered. Chièvres Garrison’s Town Hall forum provides the entire SHAPE/Chièvres footprint community with answers to their concerns. Members of the SHAPE, Chièvres Air Base and Caserne Daumerie communities discussed current issues and answer questions at the Spring Town Hall quarterly meeting on May 24 at the Hotel Le Maisières in Casteau, Belgium. The Town Hall forum is just one of the quality of life venues where Families can talk face-to-face with commanders and decision makers and effect change. Issues such as child care for parents wanting to attend Benelux Headstart classes – free classes provided by the U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Education Center to help Families overcome initial language and cultural barriers upon their arrival. Or, taking on the issue of building a program available 24/7 to serve as a liaison between Families and local hospitals in the area. “We are here to provide you with answers,” Chièvres Garrison Commander Lt. Col. John G. Romero said. “We will staff your issues and concerns locally with our directors and staff for resolution or send it up to the appropriate 16 PHOTO: J.D. Hardesty Members of the SHAPE, Chièvres Air Base and Caserne Daumerie communities discuss current issues and answer questions at the Spring Town Hall quarterly meeting May 24 at the Hotel Le Maisières in Casteau, Belgium. The Town Hall is just one of the quality of life venues where Families can talk faceto-face with commanders and decision makers. chain (of command) to where it may effect change.” Those who could not attend sent in questions via email to be addressed by the command. One of those email queries - “For Soldiers who do not have a vehicle and rely on the bus for transportation, is there a way to change the bus schedule so Soldiers do not have to wake up at 4:20 a.m. to get to first formation by 6:20? - was answered with a change in the www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil bus schedule to better fit Soldiers needs. The following question will have to be sent to the organization and responded to later. “Why did Andrews Federal Credit Union’s Automated Teller Machine fee increase from $1.50 to $1.99? Is the bank not there for our convenience, since we cannot choose a certain branch as we could in the states?” The status of all issues and questions from the Town Hall will be published in the next edition of the Benelux EDGE. June 2007 Liberation of Bonsecours PHOTOS: Cis Spook U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Color Guard Left: U.S. Army Benelux Color Guard members (right to left) Pfc. Gerardo Razo, Sgt. Trevor Sahlstrom, Spc. Benjamin C. Lowrance, Spc. Lance M. LeBlanc march through a downpour May 13 during the Liberation of Bonsecours reenactment ceremony in Bonsecours, Belgium. After the reenactment scenes, the crowd paid tribute to James W. Carroll, the first U.S. Soldier entering Bonsecours on his Harley Davidson at the liberation of the city.The Benelux Color Guard was under the direction of Sgt. 1st Class Thomas E. Jessen. M-8 Armored Vehicle Above: A M-8 armored vehicle reenacts the arrival of the U.S. Soldiers into Bonsecours on Sept. 3, 1944. Evacuation: Bottom: Several war scenes are depicted during the yearly Remember Day at Bonsecours. This scene shows local citizens who, once they heard the Germans were about to invade Belgium, decided to leave most of what they owned and flee with the entire family to France, only a stone’s throw away from Bonsecours. They thought the Germans wouldn’t invade France but they did, except for the Southern part that was declared a “free” zone. Many of these families who tried to escape would never come back. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 17 Wereth 11 remembered in ceremony Brig. Gen. Dennis L. Via, 5th Signal Command commanding general and keynote speaker for the Wereth 11 ceremony April 28, escorts his wife, Linda, Black soldiers killed by German military during World War II By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office Despite the fact that the Wereth 11 – black Soldiers assigned to the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion who were savagely slaughtered by German SS officers on Dec. 17, 1944 during the early stages of the Battle of the Bulge – have been gone for many years, their spirits live on in the tiny village of Wereth, in the eastern part of the country near the Belgium-Germany border. Local townspeople, along with Soldiers and their Family members assigned in Belgium and Germany, were on hand April 28 for a wreath laying ceremony, commemorating the Soldiers. “We are aware of the tragedy…for what happened on Dec. 17th should never be forgotten,” said Brig. Gen. Dennis L. Via, 5th Signal Command commanding general, who served as the keynote speaker. “However, we are not here today to focus on the crime and the pain. We are here today to focus on the heroic lives of these 11 Americans.” However, to help focus on their lives, some historical background is necessary. The following is a combination of several different accounts. After being reactivated in the regular Army as a 155-mm howitzer battalion just a year before their deployment, the 333rd FA Soldiers had spent their first six months in combat hold- 18 and Adda Rikken, current president of the U.S. Wereth Memorial committee, during the procession leading up to the memorial site. ing the front line against German troops in support of the 2nd Infantry Division and VII Corps. At the time of the Battle of the Bulge, the unit was located in the vicinity of St. Vith, Belgium. On Dec. 17, 1944, during the second day of the Battle of the Bulge, the Germans last major counter-offensive of World War II, these 11 members of the Headquarters and Service Battery (HSB) became separated from their unit while escaping and evading pursuing German armor and infantry units. During this evasion, while in search of food and shelter, the men came upon a farm. The head of the family, Matthias Langer, offered the Soldiers some of the families’ last food. snowfall until mid-February 1945 when villagers directed a U.S. Army Grave Registration unit to the site. Unlike similar war crimes committed by German Soldiers, the slaying of these men wasn’t as well documented or prosecuted. After an investigation proved fruitless, not turning up any positive identification of those who committed the murders, the investigation was closed. As a private gesture from the Langer family, a son, Herman, erected a small cross, with the names of the slain Soldiers, in the corner of the pasture and for more than 60 years has maintained the vigil. But, the memorial and the town of Wereth remained basically obscure. The memorial was not listed in any guides or maps to the Battle of the Bulge battlefield. Even “These men were brothers, sons and fathers. They served, because like us, they believed in the values we hold dear – freedom, justice, liberty.” Brig. Gen. Dennis L. Via Commanding General 5th Signal Command At dawn, after receiving a tip from a sympathetic townsman, a group of Nazi SS stopped in front of the Langer house. The Soldiers surrendered and were forced to sit in the cold and mud while their fate was decided. They were then marched to a cow pasture behind the house, where they were tortured and later shot or bayoneted to death. In the morning, villagers saw the bodies of the men in a ditch. Since they were afraid that the Germans might return, they didn’t touch the dead Soldiers. The bodies were covered by the www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil people searching for it had trouble finding it in the small community. However, in 2001, three Belgians, including Adda Rikken, currently the president of the U.S. Wereth Memorial committee, began raising funds to create a more fitting memorial to these men. “We knew we wanted to create a much nicer memorial for these Soldiers, but, at that time, our organization was very small and didn’t have much money,” Rikken said. “It took some time, but we eventually raised enough money to purJune 2007 chase more of the land that surrounded the original monument. And, now we have a nice dedication to those heroic men.” The dedication of the updated memorial was held May 23, 2004. There are now road signs to the memorial and the Belgium Tourist Bureau lists it in its Battle of the Bulge brochures. In 2001, the U.S. Army Garrison Benelux adopted the seven graves of those men who rest in Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery, located in Henri-Chapelle, Belgium. Adoption certificates for the graves of: Staff Sgt. Thomas Forte, Spc. James Stewart, Pfc. George Davis, Pfc. George Moten, Pfc. Due Turner, Pvt. Curtis Adam, and Pvt. Nathaniel Moss, ...and a history of the Wereth 11 are located on the right foyer wall in the garrison headquarters, Bldg. 70030 on Caserne Daumerie in Chièvres. The remains of the other four soldiers: Cpl. Mager Bradley, Spc. William Pritchett, Pfc. James Leatherwood, and Pvt. Robert Green, ...were returned to their respective families. “These brave Soldiers…did not have an opportunity to see the world that they aimed to create,” Via said. “Yet, because of their actions, we enjoy the world they envisioned…the world they fought for. These men were brothers, sons and fathers. They served, because like us, they believed in the values we hold dear – freedom, justice, liberty. They believed in the greater good. For this, we are thankful.” Victory in Europe Day Belgians remember PHOTOS: J.D. Hardesty A U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Color Guard team of four Soldiers presents the colors under the direction of Sgt. 1st Class Thomas Jessen at the “Sword of Justice” memorial honoring British soldiers who died during World War II. As Chièvres Garrison Commander Lt. Col. John G. Romero salutes, the Royal Fanfare of Chièvres band plays America’s national anthem. Chièvres was one of four cities across the Benelux footprint where Benelux Soldiers participated in VE-Day celebrations.The other Belgian cities hosting celebrations with U.S. Soldiers leading processions included Mons, Ath and Brugelette. U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Color Guard team under the direction of Sgt. 1st Class Thomas Jessen leads the procession of Belgian civic leaders, patriot organizations and well wishers celebrating Victory in Europe Day, May 8, in Ath, Belgium. Members of the color guard team (right to left) include Spc. Lance LeBlanc, Staff. Sgt. Larry Fitzpatrick, Sgt. Jake Brice and Spc. Ben Lowrance. PHOTOS: Steven Hoover This is one of three monuments at the Wereth 11 Memorial dedicated to the black Soldiers who were killed by the German SS during the early stages of the Battle of the Bulge. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 19 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Directory USAG Benelux Community Service ACS Chièvres & SHAPE DSN 423-5324; CIV 065-44-5324 Brussels DSN 368-9783; CIV 02-717-9783 Schinnen DSN 360-7500; CIV 046-443-7500 Rotterdam/MWR Coordinator DSN 362-2493; CIV 010-459-2493 Arts & Crafts SHAPE DSN 423-4680; CIV 065-44-4680 Brussels DSN 368-9629; CIV 02-717-9629 Schinnen - JFC Brunssum DSN 364-2454; CIV 045-526-2454 Custom Frame Center - JFC Brunssum DSN 364 – 3821; CIV 045-526-3821 Arts & Crafts Rotterdam DSN 362-2457; CIV 010-459-2457 BOSS Chièvres & SHAPE DSN 423-4606; CIV 065-44-4606 Schinnen DSN 360-7370; CIV 0031-46443-7370 Auto Centers SHAPE Auto Skills Centre DSN 423-4693; CIV 065-44-4693 Brussels Auto Craft Center 368-8743; CIV 02-717-9743 Auto Craft Shop - JFC Brunssum DSN 364-3173; 045-526-3173 Make-A-Wish draws record participation Sixty teams comprised of 2,740 registered participants from the SHAPE and Chièvres community teamed with organizations selling food and beverages to raise more than €30,000 on May 11-12, to grant wishes to at least three children. According to Project Manager Lt. Andy Tutchings of the SHAPE Athletics Office, participants officially completed 23,213 laps around the SHAPE track, which translates to a little over 5,800 miles or 9,200 kilometers. Three wishes were granted that day. To qualify for a wish, the child must be two-and-a-half and under 18 years old at the time of referral. A physician must certify that the child has a life-threatening medical condition. The event’s mass start (above) fea- CYS Chièvres & SHAPE Central Registration (all youth) DSN 423-3874; CIV 065-44-3874 Schinnen Central Registration DSN 364-6221; CIV 045-563-6221 Child Development Center - JFC Brunssum DSN 364-2575; CIV 045-526-2575 School Age Services - JFC Brunssum DSN 364-3004; CIV 045-526-3004 Middle/High School - JFC Brunssum DSN 364-3008; CIV 045-526-3008 School Liaison Services DSN 364-6141; CIV 045-563-6141 Brussels CYS Central Registration Office DSN 368-9651; CIV 02-717-9651 PHOTOS: Steven Hoover 20 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Community Services Benelux ACS on SHAPE tured children from SHAPE International School and others. During the 24-hour event activities such as face painting, a soccer competition, bouncy castles, music and all-night movies were held. Organizations featured a German Beer Garden, British fish and chips and Canadian Moose Milk. The Make-A-Wish Foundation was founded in Phoenix, Az., in 1980. Since its creation, the foundation has granted the wishes of more than 141,000 children with life-threatening medical conditions and has become the world’s largest wish-granting organization. June 2007 Veteran’s Affairs Briefing – Jul. 18, 8 a.m. – noon, Hotel Le Maisières - Briefing on VA benefits, presented by representatives from the Department of Veterans Affairs on education, home loan guarantees, life insurance, vocational rehabilitation, disability compensation, VA health care, and other benefit programs. Registration is required. Job Opportunities Overview – Tue, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m., Benelux Welcome Center, Hotel Le Maisières. Job Opportunities Workshop – Wed, 9 a.m. – noon, USAG Benelux ACS on SHAPE. Benelux Headstart – Jun. 11 – 15 ; 25 - 29 Mandatory instruction for U.S. service members. Enroll during in-processing or call ACS at DSN 423-5324 or USAG Benelux Education Center at DSN 423-3466. Sponsorship Training - Jun. 6, 10:30 – 11:30 a.m., Bldg. 318, SHAPE Make the right move – Jun. 6, 2 – 3 p.m., Bldg. 318, SHAPE - Transitioning briefing for service members and their Families in the process of PCS-ing or who plan to PCS in the near future. Spouse Cultural Adaptation Seminar – Jun. 21, 1 – 3 p.m.; Jun. 22, 8 a.m. – 3:30 p.m., USAG Benelux Welcome Center at Hotel Le Maisières. Open discussion, transitioning advice and a shopping trip to Brussels. Take the Train – Jun.16, 30, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Meet at Hotel Le Maisières for a workshop on using public transportation in Belgium. A bus tour of the city is scheduled, followed by a lunch in one of the local restaurants and a walking tour of the Grand Place. Pre-registration is required. Children are welcome. Anger Management - Tue, Thu, 1:30 – 3 p.m. Available by appointment. Tea Time to Talk About Teens - Wed, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m., USAG Benelux Welcome Center. Love and Logic Parenting – June 6, 13, 20, 6 – 7:30 p.m., ACS Training Room - Register in advance. Active Parenting of Teens – June 6, 13, 20, 2 - 3:30 p.m., ACS Training Room. The Active Parenting of Teens series pays special attention to today’s problems of teen drug use, sexuality and violence, providing parents with clear prevention guidelines. Call DSN 4238217; CIV 065-44-8217 for more information. Brown Bag Lunch – Jun. 13, Jul. 11, 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Luncheon series is held at the USAG Benelux Welcome Center located in the Hotel Le Maisières. Topic for June: Survival Skills for Healthy Families www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Directory Community Service Libraries Chièvres - CAC, Chièvres Air Base DSN 361-5767; CIV 068-27-5767 SHAPE DSN 423-5631; CIV 065-44-5631 Schinnen - JFC HQ Brunssum DSN 364-2110; CIV 045-526-2110 Rotterdam DSN 362-2454; CIV 010-459-2454 Brussels DSN 368-9791; CIV 02-717-9791 Sport & Fitness Chièvres/Benelux DSN 361 – 5643; CIV 068-27-5643 Brussels DSN 368-9667; CIV 02-717-9667 Schinnen DSN 360-7561; CIV 046-443-7561 Schinnen Bowling Center DSN 360-7207; CIV 046-443-7207 Outdoor Recreation SHAPE DSN 423-5380; CIV 065-44-5380 Brussels DSN 368-9775; CIV 02-717-9775 Schinnen DSN 360-7561; CIV 046-443-7561 Restaurants/Clubs Chièvres/SHAPE Prime Time Bar & Grill DSN 361-5504; CIV 068-27-5504 SHAPE Entertainment Center DSN 423-3312; CIV 065-44-3312 SHAPE Events Center DSN 423-5129; CIV 065-44-5129 Schinnen Harry’s BBQ DSN 360-7527; CIV 046-443-7257 Pin Point Café DSN 360-7527; CIV 046-443-7527 Rotterdam Rumors DSN 362-2420; CIV 010-459-2420 Brussels Three Star Lounge DSN 368-9822; CIV 02-717-9822 Trips & Tours SHAPE DSN 423-3884; CIV 065-44-3884 Schinnen DSN 360-7561; CIV 046-443-7561 21 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community PARENTAL ADVISORY New Parent Support Program - This program is available to all military and civilian Families expecting or with children, newborn to three years old. Services offered include: information and referral, home visitations, education on topics relating to maternity and childbirth, parenting classes, playgroups, breast-feeding and more. Call DSN 423-4274; CIV 065-444274 for more information. Playmorning – Jun. 5, 12, 19, 9 - 11 a.m., SHAPE Health Facility, EDIS playroom Playmorning is a two-hour program in which parents and their children play together in a group setting. Infant Massage Class – Thu, 11 a.m. – noon, SHAPE Health Clinic, EDIS Playroom. New Mother Gift Certificates – entitles new moms to a free diaper bag filled with goodies. Pick up a certificate at New Parent Support Program located in Bldg. 318 on SHAPE. Breast-feeding Support Group – Jun. 19, 11 a.m. - noon, SHAPE Health Clinic, first floor Social Work Conference Room Brussels TURN UP THE BASE. Thursday, 7 June SHAPE GB, Parking Area Southern rap artist, seanp infuses hard-hitting bass anthems with smooth flowing lyrics that get audiences bouncing. Hailing from Atlanta, seanp is known for his community contributions, which inspired his personal dedication to the troops. His rabble-rousing tracks will have the whole base bumping! CONTENT MAY NOT BE APPROPRIATE FOR ALL AGES. UNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCOMPANYING PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN. The US Army does not express or imply an endorsement of the sponsor, its products, or services. 22 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Metro Madness Outings – Jun. 22, 9:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. An outing sponsored by Brussels ACS to learn how to travel around the Brussels Capital Region using the public transportation system. Meet at Bldg. 4, top floor at 9:25 a.m. Class is limited to 10 people so please register early. New Parent Support Program Prenatal Classes – Jun. 5, 6:30 – 8 p.m., ACS Conference Room - Topics covered: Having a baby in Belgium, stages of labor, interventions, labor signs, epidural, relaxation techniques, men’s role, and much more. Infant Massage – June 13, 11 a.m. – noon, ACS Conference Room - Learn how to use massage to aid sleep and restlessness. Schinnen Dutch Headstart and Newcomers’ Orientation Tour- Jun 4 – 8; 25-29, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Dutch Headstart and Newcomers’ Orientation Tour is a five-day program teaching beginning Dutch language skills and familiarizes those new to the Tri-border area to other military and civilian sites. Education Center in Treebeek at 75 Horizonstraat. Sponsorship Training - every third Wed of the month, 2 - 3:30 p.m. - Learn about becoming a sponsor. International Spouses Orientation - last Wed of the month, 2 - 3 p.m., ACS Conference Room. Foreign born spouses coping with cultural differences and military life can receive support and assistance at this class. Family Advocacy Program - The program offers free preventive education classes. Call DSN 360-7500; CIV 046-443-7500 Playmorning - every Thu, 9:30 - 11:30 a.m., Schinnen Sports Center - This interactive and educational playgroup is designed to develop parenting skills and give parents and kids a chance to socialize. June 2007 Friday, July 6 Daumerie Caserne Prime Time Bar & Grill 6:30 P.M. band opens June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 23 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Community Services Birth, Breast-feeding Support, and Beyond - childbirth, infant nutrition and newborn care information presented in a Childbirth Series. Call ACS for dates and times. Breast-feeding Support Group Group– meets every third Wed of the month, 10 -11 a.m., ACS Conference Room. Baby Support Group - meets every third Wed of the month, 11 a.m. to noon, ACS Conference Room. New presenter each month instructs on infant care and development. Heerlen Hospital OB Tour – Jun. 4, call for times - English language afternoon tours of the labor, delivery and postpartum units. Meet with OB labor and delivery nurses. Transportation provided by ACS. Transition Assistance Program – Jun. 12 - 14, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m., ACS Conference Room. Learn effective job searching, resume writing and interviewing techniques. Finding Employment Workshop - every Tue, 10 a.m. – noon. Learn job searching skills. Register at ACS. Interviewing Skills and Dress for Success Workshop – Jun. 21, 10 a.m. – noon, ACS Resource Center. Webcams, VTC and morale phone calls - In cases of deployment, temporary duty, PCS move, hospitalization or any other event that might separate Family, ACS now has free live webcams and video teleconferencing available. The service is offered daily, by appointment. Call in advance for the VTC service. Deployed Coffee Hour – ACS Yellow Room - Families and friends of deployed Soldiers get together and socialize over coffee and tea. Call ACS for dates and times. Financial Readiness Class - every third Wed of the month, 10 – 11:30 a.m. Class covers banking and credit union services, budget development, record keeping, debt liquidation, insurance and more. One-on-One Financial Counseling - every second and third Wed of the month, 2 – 4 p.m., AFNORTH Battalion Conference Room - Receive specialized help and support on subjects ranging from understanding your local utility bills to advice on your personal finances. Army Family Team Building – Jun. 8, 29; 1–3 p.m., AFTB level I class Jun. 22, 1–3 p.m., AFTB level II class. ACS Conference Room. Rotterdam NFL football! Jun. 15 - travel to Amsterdam to watch the NFL franchise Admirals take on Berlin. Bus leaves at 5:30 p.m. One-on-One Financial Counseling - Receive specialized help and support on local utility bills to personal finance advice. Call DSN 362-2257; CIV 010-459-2257 for dates and times. 24 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Child & Youth Services Editor’s Note: No information was made available from Child and Youth Services within the Chièvres Garrison footprint that includes SHAPE, Chièvres Air Base and Caserne Daumerie. Brussels Newcomers’ Program is looking for five volunteer youth. Volunteers should be in third through 12th grades to write letters to new students moving to Brussels and who are looking for a sponsor/friend before they arrive. Training offered to interested youth. Contact the Brussels Outreach Director at 02-717-9651 or email slobrussels@imcom-europe.army.mil for an application. Music Summer Camp - 1) Dinosaur Music Camp, 9 a.m. - noon; and 2) Piano and Violin Master Camp, 1:30 -6 p.m. Session I : Jun. 25 – 29. Please register and pay by Jun. 15. Session II : Jul. 9 -13. Please register and pay by Jun. 25. (1) Dinosaur Music Camp - This camp is an intensive musical experience offering children (ages 4 and older) a chance to grow musically. Program activities include rhythmical games, singing/dancing, introduction to piano and violin, learning to read music notes, introduction to the history of classical and jazz music. Participants: min. six children and max. 12 children. Price: € 89 per child. (2) Piano and Violin Master Camp - Classes provide a unique music education program for young musicians (ages 5-18) of all levels. Designed for youngsters who play piano or violin. Program activities include individual lessons of a chosen instrument and plus five ensemble music lessons. Duration of the individual lessons is 30 min; ensemble lessons are 45 min. Participants: min. six children and max.12 children. Price: € 99 per child. Guitar and Tae Kwon Do Lessons - new SKIES instructors will be offering classes in June.. CYS maintains a waiting list. High School Hail and Farewell Dance – Jun. 15, 7:30 – 11 p.m. - Three Star Lounge. Call CTS for more info. Home Schoolers who are CYS members may use the youth 4-H Technology lab every Tue, 10 – 11 a.m. CYS Parent-Youth Lab – every Thu, 6 – 6:30 p.m. Registered youth may use their five free hours to enjoy this program. Program is also open to registered youth and parents. The Keystone Club meets once a month to plan activities for the high school teens in the Brussels community. School dances, movie and pizza nights, all night lock-ins, and special summer trips are some of those activities. For more information on the Keystone Club, call CYS between 2:30 – 6:30 p.m. June 2007 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Community Services Schinnen Family Child Care - Family Child Care Providers are needed. Call for an application or information. Child Development Center - Full daycare services offered for infants - kindergarten children. Part day preschool services offered (3 – 5 yrs. old). Hourly care also available. School Age Services - Before and after school care is available for children in first sixth grades. Children must be registered with CYS. They may receive five free hours of care per month if not enrolled in a regular program. SAS Summer Camp Program will run June 25 through Aug. 17. Weekly camp rates range from $36 to $104. Sign up starts June 4. Middle/High School - Mon – Fri, 3:30 – 6 p.m. (now open until 7 p.m. on Fri) and 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. on school out days. Computer lab available. Youth Services is now open an extra hour on Fridays to support Teen Swim Nights at the JFC Brunssum pool. Youth Sponsorship - Ease your transition to the community by requesting a youth sponsor. Want to become a sponsor? Free training is available. June 2007 Youth Sports & Fitness - Registration for flag football, soccer and cheerleading begins Jun. 1. Sign-up for summer basketball camp Jun. 1- 14. Classes and scrimmages start the second week in July. Martial Arts registration is continuous; 12 sessions cost $60. Call DSN 364-6056; CIV 045-563-6056. Job and Volunteer Opportunities - CYS program assistants work with infants/children through high school. Salary based on training and experience. Free training is provided. Volunteer head coaches receive free and discounted sports enrollment for their children. Call CIV 045-563-6019. Youth Services seeks contracted instructors courses this spring in photography, ballet, horseback riding and other courses. Call DSN 364-3008; CIV 045-563-3008. School Liaison Services - Program info available by calling DSN 364-6141. Arts & Crafts Brussels Soldiers’ Art Initiative Exhibition - The Arts Center is offering free art classes to Soldiers during June as part of its initiative to bet- www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil ter serve Soldiers in the Brussels community. Their artwork will then be displayed and auctioned off for charity at the U.S. Independence Day celebration on July 7 at Brussels American School. Those Soldiers interested should contact their unit first sergeant or commander. Photography Exhibition - Jun. 1 - 31 - The Arts Center presents: The Photography of Albert Aniel. Children’s Introduction to Art - Jun. 2 30, 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. - Children of all ages will ‘adventure’ into Art and Sculpture, exploring different techniques and projects. Cost is $65 and ALL materials are included. Learning “How To” in Ceramics - Jun. 5 -28, Tue/Thu, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. - Cost is $96. Experimental Painting – Jun 5 – 26, 11 a.m. - noon Learn various techniques working with pigments & acrylic painting. Cost is $72. Book Making/Binding – Jun. 5 -26, 1 – 2:30 p.m. - Cost is $72. Afro-Cuban/Brazilian Samba Live Jazz Night – Jun. 23, 7 p.m., Three Star Lounge Concert sponsored by the Brussels Arts & Crafts Center. Ticket - $6 in advance or $7 at the door on the day of the event. 25 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Community Services Schinnen Book Binding and Linen and Leather Workshop – Wed, 6 – 9 p.m. Sign up for three, 3-hour workshops and learn the rare art of book binding. Finish two books. Price: €37, including materials. Basic Matting and Framing Workshop – Wed, 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. - Learn how to frame pictures, prints, artwork and collectibles. Price: €35. Other Custom Frame Center offerings include ready-made frames and mats, special orders, dry mounting, laminating, and shrink wrapping. Assorted Posters for Sale - €5. Sports & Fitness Chièvres Yoga for Everybody - Mon, Wed, Fri, 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. - $2/Tue, 5:45 – 6:45 p.m. - free Step and Strength - Mon, Wed, 9:30 – 11 a.m. - $2 Pilates - Tue, Thu, 10 – 11 a.m. - $2 Women on Weights – Tue, Thu, 9:30 – 11 a.m. - $2 Baby Buggy Brigade – Mon, Wed, Fri, 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. - free Spinning Class – Mon, Wed, Fri, 12 – 12:45 p.m. - free Brussels Basic Belly Dance Class – Every Tue, 10 11 a.m. Yoga Class –Mon, Wed, 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Spin Class –Tue, Thu, 6 - 7 p.m. Step/Aerobic –Mon, Fri, noon - 1 p.m. Abdominal classes –Tue, Thu, noon - 12:45 p.m. Personal Fitness Program – Tone muscles, lose fat, improve your health condition, train for a race or a special sport, by preparing with Brussels sports specialist with a one-on-one personal fitness training program call DSN 368–9652; CIV 02-717-9652. Run for Your Life Program – is selfpaced fitness through running and participants log their miles with the Fitness Center. Patches awarded at 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 750, and 1000 miles. Schinnen Indoor Swimming Pool - a variety of classes are being offered. Call DSN 364-3172; CIV 045-443-3172 for more information. Restaurants/Clubs Chièvres Prime Time Bar & Grill Breakfast: Mon – Fri, 7 a.m. – 9 a.m. Lunch: Mon – Fri, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. Lounge: Wed-Thu at 5 p.m. Schinnen Recreation Plaza Social Hour - Memories Lane Lounge every Friday starting at 4 p.m. 26 Brussels Three Star Lounge - has reopened. Family Night – every Thursday, 5p.m. Adult Night – every Friday, 5 p.m. Libraries Chièvres Get a Clue at Chièvres Library – Jun. 26 – Aug. 3. Summer Reading Program is open to all children of U.S. and Canadian ID cardholders. Registration begins June 1. Program kicks off on June 26th from 1 - 3 p.m. SHAPE Preschool Children’s Story Time - for ages 3 – 5 years old. June 5, 12, 19; 10 a.m. Families are invited to join the Read-to-Me portion of the program. Lap Sit Program - for ages 0 – 2 years old. June 6, 13, 20, 27; 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. Spring Reading Program - for ages 5 – 7 yrs. June 20, 3:45 – 4:45 p.m. Spring Reading Program - for ages 8 – 10 yrs. June 21, 3:45 – 4:45 p.m. Page Turners - Book Discussion Group Jun. 20, 5:30 p.m. - “Land of the Living” by Nicci French. Library Chess Club Ages 9 and up, Jun. 12, 26, 4 p.m. Painting Exhibition Jun. 1 -30, Artist: Helena Orgaz Brussels Summer Reading Program – runs from June to August starting right after school ends and lasting for six weeks. This year’s theme is : “Get a Clue at Your Library!” Visit http:// www.cslpreads.org/ for more information. Children’s Story Hour - for 3 - 5 year olds, Wed, 11 a.m. – noon - Listen, learn and share the world of books and reading. Schinnen Two Summer Reading Programs begin Jun. 26: Get a Clue @ Your Library for 3 -12 year olds and YNK (You Never Know) for teens. Register, read and receive prizes based on the number of books read. Pre-school children may participate by having books read aloud to them. Independence Day Celebrations Chièvres/SHAPE 4th of July Youth volunteers needed In preparation for this year’s Independence Day Celebration scheduled on July 4th at SHAPE, the Directorate of Morale, Welfare and Recreation is looking for youth volunteers from the community to perform at this year’s event. Call DSN 361-5246 and sign up Independence Day Celebration: Celebration Jul. 4, noon – 11:30 p.m., SHAPE. Fireworks start at 11 p.m. www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Brussels Independence Day Celebration July 7 from 3-11 p.m. at Brussels American School; a joint and inter-agency Brussels community celebration featuring a red/white/blue procession, followed by the official opening ceremony with “Salute to the Nation” and “Volunteer of the Year Award” (all four Services/U.S. Color Guards, NATO and Embassy representatives). All members of the Benelux-wide and & TriMission communities are invited to attend. Call 02-717-9753 for information or to volunteer. Schinnen Tri-Border American Fest – July 7, noon – 11:30 p.m., Geilenkirchen NATO Air Base, Sports Field - Food, rides, bands, swimming and fireworks. All nationalities with NATO ID are welcome. All fees are in euros. For more information call DSN 3642626; CIV 045-526-2626. Trips & Tours Brussels Paris – Jun. 16 - See “the City of Lights.” Departing at 5 a.m.,/Return 11 p.m. - Price: $40 for adults and $33 for youth under twelve years of age. Diamonds in Antwerp – Jun. 23 - Antwerp is the world center for diamonds, the city of Rubens, of fashion, of sight-seeing tours, a shopper’s paradise, and much more... Leaving from Sterrebeek. Price is adults $45 and children $35. Spring Pilgrimage to Canterbury - Jun. 30,, we leave Sterrebeek bright and early for Calais, France to take the ferry to Dover, UK. Travelers can eat an English breakfast and shop onboard the ferry. Price: $50 for adults and $39 for children under 12. Schinnen Paris Shopping Trip – Jun. 30 - Register by Jun. 23. Price: $49. Alkmaar and Zaanse Schans – Jul. 13 Visit a cheese market and see the windmills. Price: $32.50. Munich and Dachau – Jul. 20 – 23 - Trip includes three overnights with breakfast in a first class hotel. Register by Jun. 1. Price: $369 pp. in double/triple room, $519 pp in single room, $259 child 11 and under. Weekend in London – Aug. 10 - Three overnights with breakfast in a three star hotel. Cost $339/dbl, $459 single, $259 children 11 yrs. and under. Register by Jun. 30. Day Trip to Luxembourg – Aug. 25 - Includes a stop at the American Cemetery of Hamm and viewing Patton’s Grave. Price: $29. Chièvres/SHAPE Walibi Day Passes - Price: €25. Dover Castle & Canterbury by Ferry June 2007 Morale, Welfare & Recreation...serving the community Jun. 2, Price: €55 Adult, €50 Youth 5-15, €40 Child 0-4. Includes entrance to the Dover Castle War Time Tunnels. Disneyland Park Two Parks -One Day – Jun. 9, Price: €60 Adult, €55 Youth 3-11, €25 Child 0-2. Price includes admission to both parks. Introduction to Brugge - Jun. 10, Price: €40. Rappelling & Rock Climbing - Jun. 10, Price: €25. Castles of the Loire Valley, France - Jun. 15 – 17, Price: €298 per person twin/double room, €286 per person triple room, €347 single room, €194 youth 3-12 years**, €75 child 0-2**. **Sharing a room with two fully paid guests. Chateau of Chantilly - Jun. 16, Price: €50, Children 0-2 are €35. Brugge for Father’s Day - Jun. 17, Price: €65. London - Jun. 23, Price: €45 . Kayaking – Jun. 23, Jul. 21, Price: €35 single person kayak, €29 double person kayak per person. Horseback Introduction and Ride Cuesmes, Belgium – Jun. 24, Price: €25. Horseback Trail Ride Ride, Chaleux, Belgium – Jun. 30, Price: €42. Paris Weekend – June 30 – July 1, Price: €105 per person double/twin room, €122 per person triple room, €158 single room. Beach Day, Oostende, Belgium - Jul. 12, Price: €25. Dinant Citadel and Cruise on the Meuse - Jul. 14, Price: €35 Adult, €33 Youth 4-14, €19 Child 0-3. Grottos of Han, Belgium Underground Caves & Wildlife Reserve - Jul. 19, Price: €39 Adult, €32 Youth 6-12, €22 Child 0-2. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 27 HHC, USAG Benelux welcomes new commander By Steven Hoover Benelux Public Affairs Office Headquarters and Headquarters Company, U.S. Army Garrison Benelux welcomed Capt. Andrew C. Dermanoski as its new commander in a change of command ceremony April 24 at the Community Activity Center on Chièvres Air Base. Dermanoski assumed command from Capt. Kendall P. Adams Dermanoski, originally from Houston, comes to the unit after serving as the V Corps Artillery Deputy G-2 in Schwetzingen, Germany, where he deployed on his third combat tour to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Adams is headed to Fort Riley, Kansas. Chièvres Garrison Commander Lt. Col. John G. Romero hosted the ceremony and passed the unit colors between the commanders. “This statement may be a little biased,” Romero said, “but, in my judgment Capt. Adams has developed and sustained a headquarters company supporting the finest U.S. and international community. “There are many reasons for his success, but I believe first and foremost is that he enjoyed the challenge. You could see it in him as he went about the business of commanding the company. “Enjoying the job you are doing makes a great difference to yourself and those around you…it 28 PHOTO: Steven Hoover Capt. Andrew C. Dermanoski, incoming HHC, USAG Benelux company commander, sings the Army Song with his Soldiers after taking command during an April 24 ceremony at the Community Activity Center on Chièvres Air Base. turns a labor into a labor of love…and that makes good things happen in this business.” During his farewell remarks, Adams thanked Romero for not only being his boss and commander, but, most importantly his mentor. “Besides the Soldiers that stand before you today, you have been the single biggest reason for any success that I may have enjoyed,” he said. He then went on to thank the Soldiers www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil and first sergeants, both current and past, in attendance for their dedication to duty. Dermanoski thanked Romero for “entrusting me to command this company. I am honored to lead these great Soldiers.” Dermanoski, a 2001 graduate of the United States Military Academy, is married to the former Ila Marie White of Donalsonville, Ga. They have one son, Darby Cole, who is three. June 2007 Demand for proctored tests grows PHOTO: Courtesy Benelux Education Center Staff Sgt. Alphonso Wilburn, Headquarters, U.S. Army NATO, is taking his class final online, an open book exam for the English college class he took from Barstow Community College via the Internet. Wilburn is pursuing a degree in Management Studies by taking mostly online classes due to a busy work schedule. Newly installed computer workstations at the Education Center on SHAPE, Bldg. 212, allow four students to take their online exams at once. Benelux Education Center Testing programs administered at the Army education centers are growing bigger every year. The need for proctored exams is fueled by the advances in technology and the increasing number of college classes taken online. The biggest surge is seen, however, in online testing for college classes taken by students online. It is for these students that the U.S. Army Garrison Benelux Education Center on SHAPE has set up computer testing workstations in its testing room to allow several students to test at once. These days it seems that somebody is always sitting in front of the computer taking their midterm or final exam. One of the most popular tests, Defense Language Proficiency Test, determines the level of foreign language proficiency. The Army maintains a wide variety of language tests and, starting last summer, several are now offered online. The Education Center on SHAPE has a separate Language Lab with computers June 2007 configured especially for these tests. Online tests are scored immediately by the computer unlike the old paper-and-pencil versions which are still scored manually. The Army Personnel Test (APT) program helps service members advance their military careers. Other tests in high demand include GT improvement test (in-service ASVAB) and a flight aptitude test for future aviators. College testing is very popular among all college students, whether military, civilians or family members. Tests like CLEP or DSST are worth college credit and cut short the time it takes to earn a college degree. Tests bearing college credit are free of charge for service members and financial aid is available for others. Study guides and diagnostic tests are also available. For more information about testing programs stop by the local education center in SHAPE or Brussels, if you’re stationed in Belgium, or in Treebeek for those stationed in the Netherlands. Call DSN 423-5501, DSN 368-9704, or DSN 364-6013 respectively, for more information. www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil Education Religious News Services Chièvres Garrison Benelux Headstart The Benelux Headstart class, a joint project by the USAG Benelux’s Education Center and Army Community Service, combines French language instruction with information about Belgium, its history, geography, and political system. It also provides survival tips and practical information about living in Belgium. The class is mandatory for U.S. service members. All others are welcome to attend on a space-available basis. There are two classes scheduled in June. The first is offered June 11-15, followed by another five-day class June 25-29. Both classes are held from 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Call DSN: 423-3466/5324; CIV: 065-44-3466/5324 to register. The class starts with a Newcomer’s briefing the first day, followed by French language instruction on days 2-4. On the final day of class, there is a presentation on Belgian life and culture followed by a short class on taking a bus in Belgium. A field trip to a Belgian restaurant ends the class. Dutch Headstart The Treebeek Education Center will offer two Dutch Headstart classes this month; June: 4-8 and 25-29. Call the center for more information. Foreign language proficiency tests moving online The following foreign language proficiency tests are available in an online version as DLPT-5: Spanish, Russian, Norwegian, Urdu, Dari, Pashto, Greek, Albanian, Chinese-Mandarin, Hindi, Korean, Czech, and Polish. Other languages are still administered as before. These tests are no longer administered in a paper version. The new format is longer than the old format and requires 6 hours of actual testing in addition to an hour break taken between listening and reading portions, and administrative time. The entire test is taken online. The results are available immediately upon conclusion of the test. 29 Chapel Services SHAPE International Chapel Sunday 9 a.m. 11:30 a.m. Roman Catholic Collective Protestant Wednesday 12:20 p.m. English Mass (Klar) Daumerie Chapel Sunday 10:45 a.m. Collective Protestant Brussels Chapel Sunday 10:45 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Collective Protestant Protestant Gospel JFC International Chapel (Brunssum) Sunday 10:15 a.m. 12 p.m. Autos for Sale 2001 Honda Civic EX - U.S. specs. Excellent condition, great mileage, 5-speed manual, 4-door, moon roof, CD player, allseason and winter tires. Approx. 79,000 miles. Asking $8,000 (Blue Book value $8145-$8790. Call after 7 p.m.: 067/84.40.25. For sale only to SHAPE ID card holders. 2004 Toyota Corolla, 2.0 liter diesel/5speed, 36,000km, always garaged, air conditioning, European specs. Two years remaining on Toyota factory engine/drive train warranty. Excellent inside and out. Perfect Control Technique. Call 0473-97-0544 for info. 2003 Ford Windstar SE SE, 3.8 liter/6-cylinder engine, automatic transmission, 76,000 miles, tan exterior with tan cloth interior, four Collective Protestant Roman Catholic Miscellaneous/Household Baldwin spinet piano with padded bench. Dark pine, Early American style in fair condition, $550. Gas lawn mower, $50; oak veneer kitchen cart/cabinet on wheels with large storage capacity and towel holders, $20; two wall-mount bathroom cabinets, $15 each. All items U-haul. Call after 7 p.m.: 067/84.40.25. Classified ads: Religious Education SHAPE Chapel 10:30 a.m. 10 a.m. bucket seats and a rear bench seat, DVD player, minor exterior damage, keyless entry, great working condition. Asking $10,000 or best offer. Call (32) 0477638110. 2005 Mini Cooper, Cooper red with black stripes, 12,000 miles, still under warranty, U.S. specs, sport rims, winter tires, excellent condition. $20,200. Call 0049-2451-63-2029. Catholic Religious Education Protestant Sunday School Daumerie Caserne 9:30 a.m. Protestant Sunday School Brussels Chapel 10 a.m. Catholic Religious Education JFC International Chapel -Brunssum Chapel-Brunssum 9 a.m. 10:45 a.m. Protestant Sunday School Catholic Religious Education Men of the Chapel SHAPE Chapel Tuesday 6:30 a.m. Protestant 361-5575/068275575 NAME: _____________________________________________________ SPONSOR’S NAME: ____________________________________________ 1st Sat. of the month Protestant 9 p.m. 368-9677 Women of the Chapel SHAPE Chapel 9:30 a.m. 6:30 p.m. Protestant 423-6020/065446020 Catholic 3rd Wed. each month 1st Wed. each month 423-6019/065446019 Daumerie Caserne Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Protestant 361-5575/068275575 Brussels Chapel Thursday 8 a.m. Protestant 368-9677 JFC International Chapel -Brunssum Wednesday Protestant 9:30 a.m. 364-2940 30 Job Opportunities Miscellaneous Sports Equipment (Please check appropriate box) Brussels Chapel Thursday 9:30 a.m. Autos for Sale Household Goods Volunteers Needed Protestant 423-6020/065446020 Daumerie Caserne Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Category: SPONSOR’S UNIT: ____________________________________________ TELEPHONE NUMBER: _________________________________________ BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF ITEM(S): _________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ SUBMIT VIA FAX TO USAG BENELUX PUBLIC AFFAIRS DSN: 361-5106 OR CIV: (0032) 068-27-5106 DEADLINE FOR SUBMITTING CLASSIFIED ADS IS THE 10TH OF EACH MONTH Please limit submissions to 5 items. NOTE: Classified Ads are provided free of charge for everyone across the USAG Benelux community. Those requesting a classified ad be published in the Benelux EDGE agree all items shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other non-merit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007 Chievres Garrison Presents: 4 th of JULY SHAPE, 1200-2330 SHAPE, GB Parking Area Fireworks start at 2300! www.unitedfurniture.be (068) 65.66.80 www.andrewsfcu.org 068/65.71.19 For More Details Call: (068) 27.5589 The US Army does not express or imply an endorsement of the sponsor, its products, or services. June 2007 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil 31 32 www.usagbenelux.eur.army.mil June 2007