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December 23, 2006

Michigan couple sends holiday cheer to Iraq

Photo by Spc. Nathan J. Hoskins<br />
December 22, 2006 <br />
Sgt. Rosie Threatt and Staff Sgt. Jamile Dingle decorate one of the two Fraser firs donated by Jim and Beth Nickelson of Ludington, Mich.

Dec 22, 2006 BY Sgt. 1st Class Rick Emert 1st Air Cavalry Brigade Public Affairs


TAJI, Iraq (Army News Service, Dec. 22, 2006) - Though a white Christmas is out of the question, the holiday season will be a little homier for Soldiers deployed here thanks to a couple from Ludington, Mich., and a sergeant major from the 1st Air Cavalry Brigade.

Jim Nickelson and wife, Beth, sent two Fraser fir trees to the 1st ACB to bring holiday cheer to the frontlines, Nickelson said.

"Hopefully it brightens their mood for a period of time while they're away from their families" Nickelson wrote in an email from his home.

The Nickelsons' Needlefast Evergreens farm is adjacent to the childhood home of Sgt. Maj. Della St. Louis, the brigade operations sergeant major.

St. Louis, for the third consecutive year, arranged for the shipment of the holiday trees the Nickelsons donated. The first was during the 1st ACB deployment from 2004 to 2005, and she had trees sent to 3rd Infantry Division which served in Iraq from 2005 to 2006, she said.

"Soldiers are so far away from friends and families, and this is something that brings togetherness around the holidays," St. Louis said. "It's just something that I can do for Soldiers."

The Nickelsons pay for the customs inspection and donate the trees, and St. Louis pays the shipping costs.

The two packages were Christmas in a box when they arrived in late November. Within a couple of days, the trees were up and decorated at the administrative/logistics and tactical operations centers.

"When they opened the boxes, the smell of pine took me home," said Sgt. 1st Class Carlos Hernandez, assistant noncommissioned officer in charge of the Aviation Defense Operations Center. "When I'm home for Christmas, we have a live tree, and we decorate all that we can. It's all about the Christmas spirit."

"I didn't serve in the Armed Forces myself, and my wife and I feel it's the very least we can do to provide a small slice of home, or perhaps some of the Christmas spirit that they might have had if they had been home," Nickelson said.

Meanwhile, over in Korea...

Getting in the Holiday Spirit<br />
Photo by Master Sgt. Sue Harper, 8th Army PAO<br />
December 13, 2006 </p>

<p>8th Army Commander, Lt. Gen. David P. Valcourt places a package into a bin as Command Sgt. Maj. Barry C. Wheeler, USFK, CFC and 8th Army Command Sergeant Major takes package to another bin Monday morning at the Yongsan Post Office. Every year the 8th Army Commander and Command Sergeant Major and members of the 8th Army staff help pitch mail during the Holiday Peak season.


Getting in the Holiday Spirit
Photo by Master Sgt. Sue Harper, 8th Army PAO
December 13, 2006

8th Army Commander, Lt. Gen. David P. Valcourt places a package into a bin as Command Sgt. Maj. Barry C. Wheeler, USFK, CFC and 8th Army Command Sergeant Major takes package to another bin Monday morning at the Yongsan Post Office. Every year the 8th Army Commander and Command Sergeant Major and members of the 8th Army staff help pitch mail during the Holiday Peak season.

Heh. I knew Dave when he was a mere battalion commander and put his pants on one leg at a time. Looky where a little skill will take ya!

Comments on Michigan couple sends holiday cheer to Iraq
J.M. Heinrichs briefed on December 23, 2006 12:04 PM

One leg at a time? True, but he had learned which leg went first.

Cheers

SangerM briefed on December 23, 2006 12:47 PM

1st Air Cavalry! I like that. It was called that when I was in the 1/7th Cav, under tri-cap, but it seemed the "Air" part kind of got put away for a long time. It may have been in use again for a while, but I was unaware. I like the ring always have!

Garryowen!

Justthisguy briefed on December 23, 2006 07:44 PM

I dunno, appreciate the thought, and all, but the folks in the first picture appear to be wearing the new silly AF cammies, which allow one to hide in the "night" scenes in a movie, shot through blue filters, but nowhere else.

I speak as a silly AFROTC person, 1968-1970. We knew it was silly, even then, but some of us envied the ROTC and NROTC guys who got to march to drill, with road guards, and bands, and all. We just dribbled in individually. Very nerdly and induhvidualistic, but not very military.

Young guys are sensitive about that kind of thing, might get the idea that the Air Force is not taken seriously by other folks. Snork.

John of Argghhh! briefed on December 23, 2006 08:01 PM

JTG - those are ACU's, the Army Combat Uniform. The soldiers (per the shoulder patch) being in the First Cavalry Division.

They are a grey-colored uniform, but not the blue AF jobbies.

Justthisguy briefed on December 23, 2006 08:08 PM

They sure look blue on this here monitor. Owhell, sorry to side-track the discussion.

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