4 TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 2003 FAMILY FROM PAGE 1 ed the same barracks that housed soldiers during World War 11. Over time the base developed, and Mary’s job flying utility heli copters turned out to be more excit ing than she expected. The traffic control job meant Mary spent much of her time jumping out of planes. And though she planned to step out of her position to focus on HP*vp. 1 ' f! DTH/BRIAN CASSELLA Chris applies a bandage to Claire's knee while Mary comforts her after a fall. Although Claire now spends more time with her father, she still seeks Mary's assistance when her mother comes home from Fort Bragg. l§>OUtl)lDtrij m Course "1 Open to the Public $22 Weekday Special: 18 hole green and cart fees $25 Weekend Special: call 919-942-0783 18 hole green and cart fees for tee times www.SouthwickGolf.com Directions: Take 54 West 20 miles to a stoplight. Take a left on Swepsonville Rd. and go 1 mile to a stop sign. Take a right on Swepsonville-Saxapahaw Rd. and go 17. miles. Take a left on Boywood Rd. We re 1 Va miles on the left. 3136’Southwick Drive • Graham, Nf 27253 _ VALID WITH THIS AD AND STUDENT, STAFF, OR FACULTYLP. OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30, 2003 Writing the South ■ ■ iraH Mu UK ai wk A Award-winning authors LEE SMITH & HAL CROWTHER kick off "Writing the South" TONIGHT at 7:30 p.m. in 08 Gardner Hall. Admission is free. Refreshments served. Sponsored by UNC’s Center for the Study of the American South. Call 962-5665f0r more information. liUjf Education Job Fair Cosponsored by University Wednesday, March 26, 2003 from 9:00 am - 12:30 pm Career Services and the Carmichael Auditorium UCST School of Education A// students and majors are welcome! The Wendy P. and Dean E. Painter Career Center • The Career Center of the Future on Your Campus Today! Division ofStude „, Affairs being a mother, the children were longer in coming than both Chris and Mary expected. This gave Mary the opportunity to fly longer than anticipated. She later would say her air traffic con trol job was the best she’s ever had. Even after Mary was sidelined by a 1990 car accident, she returned to fly planes, which she could more feasibly manage after sustaining back injuries in the wreck. From Page One Flying “fixed-wing” as opposed to “rotary-wing” also happened to be a higher-profile job. “Helicopters take you to a tent in the woods; airplanes take you to the Holiday Inn,” Mary said. “And tents sound good when you’re young, but the Holiday Inn sounds a lot better when you’re 40.” Mary flew fixed-wing on active duty during the Persian Gulf War but was stationed at Fort Bragg and did not leave the country. After Daily Smokers ages 18 through 24 Earn a minimum of S7O for less than 3 hours of your total time by helping with a Duke/UNC study on smoking attitudes and behavior. Tasks involve completing short surveys and watching a 4-minute video. No classes, medication, or counseling involved. If interested, and to see if you qualify, please call 919-956-5644 or email mccoyo26@mc.duke.edu IRB#: 000487-02-4R2ER UNC Student's Pizza Headquarters Lunch, Dinner, Late Night XjJ-VSiCIsLEI s-i jrixT’Y -wmr ■ycjcj Wl-VXfX nOXi $9-99 i-iujj cm fSfXSIS/jSTY nn£L-IJJ an nan We accept Master Card, Visa, American Express and UNC One Card the war she immediately stepped down from active duty and into the National Guard. Matthew, the first of three chil dren, followed in 1995, and Mary began her career as a mom. Meanwhile, Chris was still busy working full time for the National Guard, flying Apache helicopters, which are attack helicopter models. In 1996 he switched to piloting Kiowa Warriors, an older model designed for armed scout missions. Whereas Apaches fly missions nearly every time they take flight, Kiowas often are used for pilot training and drug search missions. Chris’s role will keep him home —and without the support of a full-time wife. This means he has been getting his own share of training from bal let practices, doing laundry and paying bills. Mary has come home from Fort Bragg to visit her husband and chil dren about once a week since being activated the first week in February. But she says signals from her supe riors indicate that the 30th Corps Support Group —of which she is the commanding officer likely will fly out of Pope Air Force Base for the Middle East by Wednesday. After a prolonged seven-week period of gas mask checks, gun range certification tests and seem ingly endless vaccinations, the 30th CSG finally finished its validation process at Fort Bragg on Friday. Troops in the 30th CSG have been able to see their families only on a limited basis for the last seven weeks, but all of them had the weekend off for what they expect- ed would be their last goodbyes for as long as 10 months. The unit was activated for a one-year period, which will bring them home sometime before next February. Mary noted that when she has been home to visit over the last two months, the boys Matthew and Alex have been rowdier and her 3-year-old daughter, Claire, has been more “clingy.” In one display of her hewly developed monkey skills at the family’s home Sunday, Claire was climbing on her father only to fall and skin her knee. Chris went to get a washcloth and ice for Claire’s knee, but Mary teased him for not realizing he needed to dampen the cloth so the ice would make it cold. “Mommy’s got the ‘mommy drug,' and Daddy doesn’t,” Mary teased, soothing Claire. Chris grinned and conceded, “When Claire wakes up in the morning she says ‘Daddy, come here.... Where’s Mommy?’” Mary said she has had a won derful life as a housewife. And that is part of what makes it strangely Jjjgj Ft df. HMkh * • Wlk ttSHKw ' IllL JS DTH/BRIAN CASSELLA Alex and Claire play with Lincoln Logs with their father. Since Mary's mobilization, Chris has spent more time with the children at night. Scholarships Come discover what opportunities await you Rhodes Truman Luce Churchill British Marshall Goldwater Beinecke Mitchell Carnegie Cooke Udall Gates-Cambridge Come to an information session on Wednesday, March 26, at 4pm in Greenlaw 101. UNC scholarship national nominees/winners will be available to answer your questions. For more information, contact Robert Greenberg, Director, Office of Distinguished Scholarships, 219 Graham Memorial Hall, 843-7764. Email: scholarships@unc.edu. Web site: www.unc.edu/scholarships Must have a GPA of 3.5 or higher. The Student's Choice for Great Apartment Living! • Booker Creek Townhouse Apartments 919.929.0404 Estes Park Apartments 919.967.2234 Carolina Apartments 919.929.2139 Franklin Woods Apartments 919.933.2345 Kingswood Apartments 919.967.2231 Pinegate Apartments 919.493.2488 University Lake/Royal Park Apartments 919.968.3983 Ridgewood Apartments 919.929.3821 Apartments available now! Ask about our great special offers!* vmr (Tfyr SatLj (Lor Hwl coincidental that she is being deployed for her first time. For the last four years, Mary had been part of a unit in the N.C. National Guard that was unde ployable —one that had her work ing in an office, typing alerts for activations of other units around the state. Late last year she told her com manding officers that she wanted a chance to work in the field in a more active role. She was trans ferred to the 30th CSG about the turn of the year. A superior officer from her old unit convinced Mary to do some part-time work typing the increas ing number of activation alerts. One day in late January, a fellow officer handed her a black note book containing the information for a unit’s activation. “I went to take it from her, and she wouldn't let me take it,” Mary said. “I asked her Who’s it for?’ and she just stared at me. “It’s for the 30th CSG isn’t it?’ I said.... And I broke down.” Contact the State O National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu.