FIGHTING SAINTS LEADER

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FIGHTING SAINTS LEADER Initial Week By Cadet Hannah Warner Summer 2014 Fighting Saints Battalion St. John's University, College of St. Benedict & St. Cloud State University Saint Cloud, MN On Thursday, August 28th, 2014, Army ROTC Fighting Saints Battalion (FSB) was joined by family, friends, Cadre, and fellow Cadets to welcomed 17 new Cadets into the program. These brave young men and women took the oath to protect and defend our country, as well as to live the Army Values. For the remainder of their time in college, these Cadets will train to become the future leaders of the Army. We are excited to welcome them into our ranks. During their initial week, the new Cadets were issued their standard issue of U.S. Army ROTC gear and completed their contracting paperwork..i have every confidence that all the new Cadets will serve as excellent additions to the FSB as they work toward the ultimate goal of becoming the next leaders of the United States Army! Cadet Commander s Corner By Cadet David Marschall Welcome all Fighting Saints, incoming and returning Cadets! I hope everyone enjoyed their summer months and are now prepared to balance their tedious academic and training schedules this year. The Cadet Battalion Staff is working diligently with Cadre to develop an exciting and challenging curriculum of training events. Both Ranger Challenge and the Army Ten Mile team have hit the ground running and are striving to repeat the victories achieved last year. The Fighting Saints Battalion (FSB) is a nationally recognized, well respected program, and ranked the second best liberal arts ROTC program in the country. To uphold this standard, Cadets will need to meet and surpass training and academic standards, as well as learn from the experience of Cadre and peers. MSIs, in your intro- Do not be afraid to ask questions and prepare yourself for success in ROTC. MSIIs, begin identifying your leadership style by looking at the actions of your peers and superiors. Take every opportunity to lead and develop skills that will be necessary later in your career. MSIIIs, as the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (LDAC) approaches you need to put your best effort forward in your training and remain motivated throughout the year. Do not be afraid of responsibility and volunteer for every chance to lead and learn. As MSIVs and Battalion Staff, we are taking on the responsibility of facilitating quality training events that prepare Cadets for LDAC. Every Cadet needs to keep a positive attitude and maintain a high level of motivation to build a successful atmosphere in the Fighting Saints Battalion. You should all be proud to call yourselves Fighting Saints and to be a member of this great organization. Inside This Issue: From the PMS From the SMI Warrior Forge CULP Airborne School ROTC Internship CTLT NHRA Army Day Air Assault School AUSA Message Summer Photos pg 2 pg 2 pg 3 pg 3 pg 3 pg 4 pg 4 pg 5 pg 5 pg 5 pg 6

SUMMER 2014 From the Professor of Military Science LTC Darrell Bascom As we start the 2014 Fall semester please take a minute to reflect upon this program s many successes over the past summer. Cadets from the Fighting Saints Battalion excelled all over the world. At the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (a milestone event for ROTC) located at Fort Knox, our Cadets once again performed exceptionally well. In a program ranked by Washington Monthly as #2 in the nation, 43% of the 23 Cadets we sent achieved the highest rating possible. Cadets also From the Senior Military Instructor MSG Donald Hansen Well, once again summer comes to an end and we re opening another exciting chapter in Fighting Saints History! The battalion is back on the campuses and our Cadets are hard at work. The MSIVs conducted an excellent Initial Week in preparation for the start of the semester; setting a standard of excellence for all other Cadets in the program to follow. As I am quite sure every Cadet in the program has realized, last year s statistics will be a tough act to follow; but, I sincerely believe that our new Core of Cadets is up to the challenge. As always, our Cadets are fast moving to consolidate their efforts to meet the goals they have set for themselves for this year s training. The Ranger Challenge team, Army Ten-mile team, Color Guards, and physical fitness tests are a hard and fast reminder of our team performed far above expectations while participating in the challenging training opportunities provided at Airborne School, Air Assault School, Nurse Summer Training Program, Cultural Understanding and Language Program, and Cadet Troop Leader Training. Many of these Cadets performed at such a high level that their leadership personally contacted me to let us know how well our Cadets performed their duties when compared against their peers. I am extremely proud of our Battalion s performance. With over half of our Cadets pushing themselves to the limit as part of these elite organizations we ve been able to effort. Our competition teams are looking strong as ever and will serve the Fighting Saints Battalion with distinction. Sergeant First Class Stonebarger, is head-long into training our Color Guards and assisting our volunteer Cadets in representing this battalion in the local community. As always, I am continually impressed with the dedication and professionalism that the Cadets demonstrate on a daily basis. To be a part of this battalion and assist with the development of these fine Cadets is an honor and a privilege. As we prepare for this semester, I would like to thank our recent graduate, 2LT Garrett, for assisting us with the preparation of our Cadets heading to LDAC this past summer. His dedication clearly demonstrated true commitment to the battalion. Thank you Sir! As we complete the Fall FTX, we will undoubtedly be reminded that winter months are upon us. Remember to consider the effects of the Page 2 field four Ranger Challenge Teams intent on winning the Task Force level competition and obtaining a Brigade level berth for the 3rd straight year, while simultaneously defending its ATM championship in Washington DC for the 5th year. Many of you have heard me say this before, but even though we have already accomplished so much, now is not the time to become complacent. Rather it is a time to take advantage of our past successes by setting conditions to ensure the next generation of Cadets has the opportunity to perform just as well as their predecessor. Let s have a great year!! colder weather as we prepare for the many training events this semester. Safety is paramount to the success of this battalion. We could have just conducted the best training event ever and it would lose its luster if even one Cadet was injured. Whether it is conducting actual training during FTX and labs, or driving to and from campus, remember to exercise good composite risk management in everything you do. You are the future of the Army s officer corps and will soon be entrusted with leading America s sons and daughters; a task not to be taken lightly. I have one last comment that I would like to leave you with. Remember that you, the Cadets of the Fighting Saints Battalion, ambassadors of the Army both on campus and in the local community. Conduct yourselves professionally at all times and make us proud. I am truly looking forward to another great year.

SUMMER 2014 Warrior Forge 2014 By Cadet Noah Gosswiller AIRBORNE ALL THE WAY! By Cadet Joseph Phillippi Page 3 Ft. Knox, KY - Well, the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (LDAC) is finally over. For our first three years of ROTC, we trained, lived and breathed LDAC. Our only goal was to complete LDAC, and complete it we did. Thanks to the training that the Fighting Saints Battalion put us through, we were able to go down to Fort Knox, and not only meet, but exceed the standards set by both the Cadre and other Cadets. For me, the biggest take away from LDAC was one of the most basic concepts of leadership; get the Soldiers under your authority to accomplish the mission. A good Officer is able to work with and command Soldiers of both genders, from all backgrounds, conducting all kinds of missions. I believe that LDAC gave us our first taste of what leading Soldiers will be like, and it provides valuable experience as we prepare to become Platoon Leaders. Cultural Understanding Language Proficiency (CULP) By Cadet Logan Dimmick Indonesia - On May 28th 2014 my CULP team and I departed Fort Knox Kentucky to start our long trip to Indonesia. After twenty plus hours of flying and layovers, we had successfully travelled half way across the world, finally landing in Jakarta (the capital city of Indonesia). Two teams, consisting of 8-12 Cadets from all over the country, were tasked out to teach conversational English to Indonesian Officers for three weeks. At first we were quite apprehensive about the idea of leading experienced foreign Officers in classroom lessons. Each class had officers from multiple branches, all varying in rank. My particular class's focus was to introduce military terminology to help them prepare for a peace keeping deployment to Lebanon in October of this year. In the three weeks we spent teaching Indonesian officers, we built friendly and lasting relationships. On the weekends, we planned trips to different points of interest around the island of Java. Our first weekend, we visited local marketplaces where it was common practice to haggle with vendors. On another weekend, we walked atop an active volcano lined with small trinket shops, and visited a small zoo where we were able to pet and take photos with a komodo dragon. We also spent a day visiting the U.S. embassy and met the U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia. All in all, the trip was an invaluable experience that has deepened my cultural understanding of Indonesia and has broadened my horizons on the world. Fort Benning, GA - Never did I think that with only one school year of ROTC classes under my belt I would get the opportunity to jump out of a perfectly good airplane on an airborne mission. As a Cadet, and not having any prior service experience, I was quite nervous and unsure what I was getting myself into. As the departure date approached my Cadre helped prepare me by answering questions and getting my paperwork squared away. Airborne school is a three-week program, which they claim to be a crawl-walk-run process, and that is exactly what it was. The first week is ground week, which the students are taught everything on the ground. Towards the end of ground week, we began to use the 34-foot towers to master our departure of the aircraft. The tower was a mock up of what the door in the aircraft looks like and when a trooper jumps off they are basically on a huge zip line, the first jump was quite fun! Finishing week one, the Sergeant Airborne made sure that those who passed the landings and the towers moved onto tower week. Tower week consists of a few more contraptions including the swing-landing trainer and the 250-foot towers. Landing skills were learned and tested with the swing-landing trainer because the fall was out of the student s control. Troopers exited a platform about 10 feel off the ground and they swung back and forth like a pendulum and without knowledge the Sergeant Airborne would pull the release and the airborne student would perform a proper Parachute Landing Fall (PLF). Once the students passed PLF it was time for the 250 towers. The 250 towers are the monuments of the training phase. The students get harnessed in and then a parachute that is already opened gets hooked onto the pulley system and hoisted up 250 feet and then released. This is when students get their first feel of a parachute free fall. After getting through all of the tests and training-qualifying troopers are moved onto the final week, Jump week. Jump week consists of very long days and long portions of time waiting in the harness shed for the student s turn to jump. Jump week is the pinnacle of Airborne School because students finally get to test out all of the training they have learned, and jump out of a plane! In order to pass and receive wings students must exit an aircraft five times safely. I was nervous for my first jump, but after I got that one out of the way I was hooked. I had a great experience and am thankful to have had a safe three weeks in Georgia. I really want to thank my Cadre for the opportunity to have gone and receive my wings. It was something that I always have wanted to do and now it is something that no one can take from me.

SUMMER 2014 ROTC Internship Program By Cadet Katherine Blonigen June 1-29, 2014 I travelled to Washington, D.C. to attend the Nurse Summer Training Program (NSTP) at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (WRNMMC) in Bethesda, MD with seven other Cadets from around the United States. During the four week training program, I worked in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) caring for babies and their families. In the NICU, I was able to hone skills in working with ventilators, feeding tubes, and intravenous lines, along with assessment skills. In addition to my time in the NICU, I spent time working in the emergency room, operating room, with the Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter (PICC) team, and at the Wounded Warrior Clinic. In each setting, I cared for service members and their families. During NSTP, there were opportunities to participate in the Officer Professional Development (OPD) program. For OPD days, NSTP Cadets greeted veterans as they arrived to Washington, D.C. on an Honor Flight, went to the Holocaust Museum, toured the Pentagon, and visited Arlington National Cemetery. These days were structured so that Cadets can develop an understanding of what it means to be a leader in the military. As a group, on the eight of June, NSTP Cadets researched the Patient Caring Touch System (PCTS), a model of nursing care created by Lieutenant General Horoho and implemented at Womack Army Medical Center in 2011. The forty five minute presentation to WRNMMC hospital leadership focused on the tenet of enhanced communication and components of shared accountability and peer feedback. NSTP Cadets explained the impact of PCTS on Army Nursing. In my spare time, I was able to explore the Washington, D.C. area. I visited to Smithsonian Museums, Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial, Vietnam Memorial, Capitol Building, White House, and National Archives just to name a few. It was a fantastic experience! Cadet Troop Leader Training (CTLT) Page 4 By Cadet Jacob Nelson Ft. Stewart, GA - Throughout an Army ROTC Cadet s career, we are presented with many opportunities to travel, gain hands on experience, and develop our leadership capabilities. Cadet Troop Leader Training (CTLT), is one such experience. Taking place between our Junior and Senior years of school, CTLT is a two to three week internship which sends Cadets to Army bases across the United States, and some as far away as Korea or Germany. CTLT offers Cadets the opportunity to explore an Active Duty unit. Cadets effectively intern as a Platoon Leader and shadow an Officer, usually a Lieutenant, through all phases of operation. They help plan training, conduct PT, execute training in the field, and work within the Army chain-of-command. It can be very eye opening; for many Cadets, this is their first experience with the Active Component. Experiences vary greatly depending to which location and branch Cadets are sent. Aviation, Infantry, the Engineer Corp, and Medical Services are some examples of branches which hosted Fighting Saint s Battalion Cadets. My personal experience with CTLT proved to be one of the best experiences I have had in ROTC. I was attached to an Aviation Support Battalion in the 3rd Infantry Division based out of Hunter Army Airfield in Savannah, Georgia. I interned specifically with a Blackhawk MEDEVAC platoon. Riding along on flights, and hands-on practice in the aircraft simulator, were great supplements to my experience at Hunter. However, the change of command inventory was by far the most educational part of CTLT. Whenever a new Company Commander assumes command, everything from syringes and drill bits, to entire aircraft, have to be visually inspected and signed for by the incoming Commander. Thus, much of my time was spent developing inventory procedures and laying out gear. Thousands of items and millions of dollars were checked-off during these critical layouts. It may sound tedious, however, the process gave me a very real perspective into the expectations of a 2nd Lieutenant. CTLT is defined as a learning experience; however, I found it to be much more. I walked away from the training with confidence in myself as a leader, insight about my branch choices, and most importantly, a glimpse of what awaits in my future as an Officer in the United States Army.

SUMMER 2014 NHRA Army Day at The Races By Mr. Joseph Peterson Air Assault School By Cadet Jenny Metzler Brainerd, MN - Saturday, August 16 was Army Day at the races at the Brainerd International Raceway. Tony Schumacher, Driver of the U.S. Army DSR Top Fuel Dragster gave a great talk and made the Fighting Saints Battalion Cadet Commander David Marschall an honorary crew member. Cadet Marschall received an U.S. Army racing team shirt and stood at the start line for the days qualifying run. Cadets and staff also supported the Army Strength in Action Zone (SIAZ) and spent time talking to young people and parents about opportunities in the Army and Army ROTC. Plus there was some pretty amazing racing! Ft. Benning, GA - I would like to start this article off my thanking the Cadre members who chose me to do this rigorous course, I cannot thank you enough for the opportunity. I spent 13 days at Air Assault School in Fort Benning, Georgia, where the temperature never dropped below 90 degrees. Throughout my 13 days, my mind and body were being tested: physically, mentally, and emotionally. Zero day they call it, consisted of waking up at 0400, being smoked by the Air Assault Instructors for an hour; next a two mile run in ACU's and then the obstacle course. I was one of the last ones on the course and by 11:00 a.m. the temperature reached 94 degrees and I was physically breaking down. The feeling I got of jumping off that last obstacle knowing I passed the hardest day of the whole course was absolutely rewarding in so many ways. From then on, we went into three phases. Phase one consisted of aircraft knowledge, correctly performing hand and arm signals, and finally a written test. Phase two revolved around sling load operations and identifying defiance's. This phase of air assault school is the most challenging due to the necessity of paying very close attention to detail. Finally, Phase three was where the fun began, I am not sure if you would describe fun as Air Assault Sergeants screaming at you to get off their repel tower, but in my mind that was fine because graduation was only two days away. Phase three we learned to repel and eventually repelled from a UH-60 Blackhawk. As your feelings were at an all-time high, there was still one more challenge, a 12-mile foot march to be completed under three hours. After successfully completing the 12 mile foot march, there was a feeling of great accomplishment and happiness that I completed Air Assault School and represented our battalion in the best way possible. Voice of the Army Support for the Soldier Page 5 Consider joining the Fighting Saints Sub-chapter of AUSA. Since 1950, the Association of the United States Army has worked to support all aspects of national security while advancing the interests of America s Army and the me and women who serve. AUSA is a private, non-profit educational organization that supports America s Army Active, National Guard, Reserve, Civilians, Retirees and family members. AUSA provides our Cadets numerous Professional Development Opportunities at a variety of events both local and national. Visit the MN Vessey Chapter s website at www.vessey5401.org/ or call Mr. DeJesus at (320) 308-3930 to learn more.

SUMMER 2014 Page 6 Sights from Summer 2014 Cadet Logan Dimmick and class wearing traditional Indonesian Batik button downs for CULP program Cadet Knaak and CULP team members during a visit to an orphanage in Mbou, Senegal Cadet Alexander McDonough posing with fellow Romanian counterpart Cadet Jenny Metzler with fellow Cadets and Sergeant at Air Assault School in Fort Benning, Georgia Cadet McClane Campbell trading patches with a Montenegro Soldier-maho Cadet Grant Christian training with a MG3 machine gun during German Marksmanship qualification course Annual welcome back social at the St. Cloud State University Bowling Lanes Cadet Nelson gets ready to rappel down a 60 foot tower at Fort Knox, KY. Cadet Amanda Hillyer of 3rd Platoon of 1st Regiment of LDAC cleaning her weapon Cadet Joseph Phillippi jumping from a plane in Airborne School Major Jeff Nelson & Cadet David Marschall with 7-time NHRA Champion Driver Tony Schumacher

Fall 2014 Calendar Initial Week August 20-24 4th Annual FSB5K October 5 Dining In November 15 Battalion Picnic September 12 Army Ten-Miler October 10-14 Winter Commissioning December 14 Fall FTX September 20-22 Ranger Challenge October 18-20 If you are interested in making a donation please contact (320) 363-2715 or send to Military Science Department, Attn: Cadet Battalion Fund, P.O. Box 7099, Collegeville, MN 56321. 5th Annual FSB5k Run Walk A Team Building Event For All Ages This event is brought to you by the Cadets of If you know a young person who has the potential Do you know a future Cadet? Fighting Saints Battalion Army ROTC & Association of the United States Army (AUSA). Saint John s Abbey Arboretum Trails St. John's University, Collegeville, MN 56321 Saturday October 4th, 2014 7:30A.M. 8:45A.M. Packet Pick-up/Check In ROTC Classroom - Guild Hall, St. John s University Saturday October 4th, 2014 9:00A.M. 5K Run/Walk Start 11:00am - 11:30am Award Ceremony to be an Army Officer, tell them about us! They don t have to be from Minnesota! We have great opportunities for Green-to-Gold; two/three/or four year scholarships (CSB/SJU/SCSU even pay for room & board); and the Simultaneous Membership Program. Call (320) 363-2717 for more information. Fighting Saints Battalion St. John's University, College of St. Benedict Department of Military Science Guild Hall, Room 020 Collegeville, MN 56321 Phone: (320) 363-3218 http://armyrotc.com/edu/mnstjohns E-mail: rotc@csbsju.edu If you are interested in ROTC or have any questions please feel free to visit our offices at either St. John s University or St. Cloud State University campuses. At SCSU we are located downstairs Stewart Hall room 10 and at St. John s we are located downstairs Guild Hall room 20. This issue was compiled by: Cadet Hannah Warner and Specialist Katharine Kampa Page 8 SUMMER 2014