SIUSLAW NEWS ❚ WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 7 B The Florence Senior Center once again is offering the chance to win a gourmet prime rib dinner for 10. Tickets are now available for the annual fundraiser for $10 each. Only 300 tickets will be printed. The raffle is open to the community and all ages are encouraged to participate. Since this is a fundraiser, there are no restrictions on who can buy tickets or who can attend the winning meal. Tickets are available at the senior center, 1570 Kingwood. The senior center is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. week- days. Reserve tickets by call- ing 541-997-8844. Chef Larry Osgood will pre- pare the five-course feast for the winner and nine guests. The winner of the raffle will be drawn on St. Patrick’s Day. B Y C AL A PPLEBEE Special to the Siuslaw News A quiet word about your hearing. We’re very good listeners. N ot being a veteran, my only rides in helicop- ters over the years have been in smaller, civilian and recreational choppers. I had watched the M.A.S.H. TV series and observed mede- vac choppers there, and multi- ple Vietnam era movies and books demonstrated uses they found in that war. But it wasn’t until I was recently reading “The History of the Vietnam War” by Douglas Welsh that I started to realize just how much in its infancy helicopter warfare actually was at that period of time. I dug into my library to learn more. With aviation itself still in its infancy since the Wright Brothers first powered flight at Kitty Hawk in 1903, almost simultaneously aviation enthu- siasts around the world were working on an aircraft capable of hovering. Bi-planes and air- ships continued to improve in technology and capabilities over the next few decades, par- ticularly during WWI, but the evolution of a true helicopter seemed stalled. It wasn’t until the late 1930s and early 1940s that success was finally realized by pio- neers such as Igor Sikorsky, who would enjoy great success, as well as by various individu- als whose design would end up as Bell Aircraft helicopters — and Frank Piasecki, with his tandem rotor “flying banana.” Although the American armed forces didn’t fully adopt NOW BUYING USED CARS & TRUCKS Brad Smith, Au.D. Sandi Ybarra, Au.D. Gail Leslie, Au.D. Doctors of Audiology Under 100,000 miles. 541-686-3505 401 East 10th Avenue, Suite 110 www.hearingassociates.net 2150 Hwy. 101 • Florence (541) 997-3475 • 1-800-348-3475 Hearing is believing b u S e c n e r o Fl ab Crack Cr kin’! c a r c Let’s get s k n a T t h o our Sponsors! In Memory of Patsy Ferguson Florence Elks Lodge 1858 Pacific Seafood R & R King Logging Peace Health Ladies of the Elks Lodge 1858 Oregon Pacific Bank Burns Riverside Chapel Best For Hearing Koning Family Resurrection Lutheran Church Florence Dental Clinic Central Coast Disposal Chad Clement D.D.S. Ray Wells Radio KCST/KCFM Florence Lions Club Tony’s Garage Waste Connections, Inc. Holloway & Associates In-Kind Sponsors BJ’S Ice Cream/Bakery Florence Sign Shop Grocery Outlet Morgan’s Country Kitchen On The Coast Printing Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission Red Rose Catering Shipping Solutions Shoreline Customized Apparel Susan Lyons Silent Auction Sponsors Stuart Matthews Huntingfish Charters C&M Stables APEXHELI Oregon INC. Bill & Marybeth Hodgson Fresh Harvest Cafe & Bakery Lovejoy’s City Lights Cinema Jane Erwin Pam Hyman Kitchen Klutter Susan Gilday Nature’s Corner Cafe Michael MacDuffee Outlaw’s Custom Creations Blubell Vanderpool Gene Olson Last Resort Players Seacoast Productions I visited with one Vietnam veteran who fought on the ground who stated that he and his fellow soldiers loved get- ting dropped close into a battle via helicopter, but more often than not had to hike back out on foot because the choppers became attractive targets when they came back in to extract them. As with most subjects we touch on in the Chronicles, there simply isn’t space to do such a subject justice; I haven’t even touched on the current developments and tactics enjoyed by helicopter warfare. But just as we saw the evolu- tion of both the machine and the tactics employed with it back in the 1940s and 1950s, today we’re witnessing a simi- lar evolution with the advent of UAV’s and drones and their usefulness in warfare. It will be interesting to look back 50 years from now and see what impact they have on what we think of as conventional war- fare today. To learn more about military heritage in general, visit the Oregon Coast Military Museum website at www.ocm hm.com Find a treasure at FEC’s Indoor Yard Sale Jewelry, household items, fishing gear, antiques and more will available during the indoor yard sale at the Florence Events Center, Saturday, Feb. 21. The Friends of the FEC are sponsoring this walk through indoor bazaar, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nonprofit groups and individuals are invited to rent a FLORENCE: 541-997-7617 1525 12th Street, Suite 2 EUGENE: the helicopters until the late 1940’s, an incident in the clos- ing months of WWII would demonstrate its capabilities and usefulness when a newly oper- ational Sikorsky flew a mission to rescue a downed Tenth Air Force flyer who had crashed in an extremely remote jungle area in northern Burma. The Korean conflict in the early 1950s would further enhance the capabilities of the chopper, particularly in the role of a medevac vehicle and the evolving Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. The Vietnam war starting in the early 1960s would see a phenomenal leap in capabilities and tactics of the helicopter as it grew beyond just a medevac role — although that continued — and expanded its role as a gunship and tool for insertion of troops into battle zones. Not only did the guerrilla- style tactics of the North Vietnamese army challenge and impact the traditional tacti- cal approach to combat, the helicopter itself contributed greatly to responding to that challenge by allowing U.S. forces to be inserted quickly and close to action when need- ed — and in some cases extracted as well. booth space to display their goods. Space will be available up until Thursday, Feb. 20, at 5 p.m. for any group or individ- ual to participate in the sale. For more information on purchasing a booth, come in to the Florence Events Center office at 715 Quince St., or contact Jennifer Connor at the FEC at 541-997-1994. R ene w r o e b i Tod scr ay Siuslaw News A ND REGISTER TO WIN A Floral Arrangement once a month for a year! FREE Delivery in the Florence Area (Wire orders excluded) $360 Value Flowers by Bobbi Full Service Flower Shop 1234 Rhododendron Dr • 541-997-5391 www.flowersbybobbi.com Basic Plan – $18 every 10-weeks (20 issues) Annual Plan - $71 -52 weeks (104 issues) Three ways to subscribe or renew 1) Call 541-997-3441 2) Online www.thesiuslawnews.com 3) Mail PO Box 10 Florence OR 97439 Name: ____________________________________ Address ___________________________________ __________________________________________ Phone number: _____________________________ Amount: _________________ Check#___________ CC# ______________________________________ Exp:________ Security Code: __________________ CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Win a gourmet dinner M ILITARY H ERITAGE C HRONICLES — for 10 at Senior Center Helicopter warfare