Busy MTMC battalion finds time for training.In a busy work schedule, it is sometimes hard to find time for training--but members of the 839th Transportation Battalion have solved that problem. For the third year in a row, members of the unit met at the battalion's Livorno Livorno (lē vôr`nô), Brit. Leghorn, city (1991 pop. 167,512), capital of Livorno prov., Tuscany, central Italy, on the Ligurian Sea and on the Aurelian Way. It is a busy commercial, industrial, and tourist center and is one of the most important ports of Italy., Italy, headquarters for a range of training classes. The success of the training required planning and commitment. For one thing, the battalion is busy. Its members have made more than a dozen deployments to the Balkans in the past two years. There is more: You have to consider the geography. The battalion's subordinate elements include the 953rd Transportation Co., Piraeus Piraeus, Greece: see Piraiévs., Greece, and the MTMC Azores Azores (əzôrz`, ā`zôrz), Port. Açores [Port.,=hawks], islands (1991 pop. 241,592), 905 sq mi (2,344 sq km), in the Atlantic Ocean, c.900 mi (1,448 km) W of mainland Portugal. Detachment, Lajes Field, Azores. "Contingency operations often call for 839th members to leave their home stations in Italy, Greece and the Azores, and come together to open and operate pons 1. any slip of tissue connecting two parts of an organ. 2. that part of the central nervous system lying between the medulla oblongata and the midbrain, ventral to the cerebellum; see brainstem. pons he´patis an occasional projection partially bridging the longitudinal fissure of the liver. in faraway locations," said Staff Sgt.
Gloria Green."By first meeting and training together in Italy, unit members get a chance to develop teamwork in a more controlled environment." The training, from Oct. 23 to 27, included such subjects as force protection, equal opportunity, the Army Physical Fitness Test, and qualification on the 9mm-pistol range. "We accomplished 90 percent of our annual mandatory training requirements during the week," said Lt. Col. Gary Stanley, Commander. The training week culminated in the annual 12-kilometer run from Camp Darby to the Leaning Tower of Pisa Pisa (pē`sä), city (1991 pop. 98,928), capital of Pisa prov., Tuscany, N central Italy, on the Arno River. It is now c.6 mi (9.7 km) from the Tyrrhenian Sea, which once reached the city. Pisa is a commercial and industrial center; manufactures include auto and truck parts, glass, pharmaceuticals, and processed food., which attracts American military and civilians from all over Italy. For the third consecutive year, the 839th won the Commander's Trophy for having 100 percent unit participation. This year, the 7.4-mile run was accomplished in the rain. "Unit members were ecstatic about the award and the training week in general," said Stanley. "It was an opportunity not only for quality training, but also to build relationships that will carry over when we meet again at a remote port site." Unit members were ecstatic about the award and the training week in general. This year's training included a terrain walk to Elba Elba (ĕl`bä), island, 86 sq mi (223 sq km), Tuscany, central Italy, in the Tyrrhenian Sea, 6 mi (9.7 km) from the Italian mainland, part of the Tuscan Archipelago. Iron ore has been mined there since Etruscan and Roman times, and there are ironworks at Portoferraio, the island's main town. Island, the site where Napoleon Bonaparte Carlo Buonaparte, 1746–85, a petty Corsican nobleman, was a lawyer in Ajaccio. He supported (1768–69) Pasquale Paoli, then changed sides and became one of the staunchest leaders of the pro-French party in Corsica. He sent his sons to be educated in France. Napoleon's mother, Letizia, or Laetitia, Ramolino Bonaparte, c.1750–1836, was given the title Madame Mère at Napoleon's court. was exiled. The journey to Elba included a ride on an ocean ferry. "Some of the unit members were struck by the irony of a ship-loading unit actually sailing on a ship," said Sgt. 1st Class Frank Price. The battalion's 41 members include military, civilian and local national employees. Maj. Daniel Miller Operations Officer 839th Transportation Battalion |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion