Thursday, June 7, 1973 TFHE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Luftwaffe's largest air base is near Phoenix, Arizona - By HERBERT F. SURRETT LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (UPI) - West Germany's planned switch to a newer fight- er plane over the next few years could phase out one of the most unique cooperative pilot training programs in Air Force history. Since 1964, the Luftwaffe has given its F104 fighter pilots their initial combat training at this desert air base near Phoenix, un- der a contract with the U.S. gov- ernment. With the current trainees, a total of 627 pilots will have earned membership in the elite "Cactus Starfighter Squadron" of the German A i r Force. THE F104 PROGRAM has made Luke a larger Luftwaffe b a se than Germany maintains within its own borders. Germany has had as many as 90 jet fighters here at one time, a permanent management staff of 14, and a backup repair and maintenance support crew numbering nearly 700. Lt. Col. Horst Wilhelms, t h e present commander of the squad- ron here, says West Germany will soon begin a gradual trans- ition from the F104 aircraft to the newer, more sophisticated F4. Instructions in flying t h a t type of plane will start in July at George AFB, Calif. He said it is possible the changeover eventually may bring an end to German pilot train- ing at Luke, but that a similar program probably would be con- ducted at another base in t h i s country. WILHELMS SAID Germany would be loathe to give up train- ing in the U.S. altogether, for purely economic reasons. The primary decision to estab- lish a training program so far from home was Arizona's near- perfect flying weather. Pilots rarely are grounded by any type of weather problem here, and can complete their training in the least amount of time neces- sary. By contrast, rain and fog in Europe would nearly double the time needed to give pilots their required 125 hours of gunnery and combat training missions. A spinoff benefit of the Arizona weather is one of the lowest training aircraft accident rates in the world. THE GERMAN pilots have be- come an integral part of the community around Phoenix and would be missed. Squadron leadersare constant- ly called upon for personal ap- pearances at civic and school functions, and the pilots and their wives annually participate in .fond-raising events for local char- ities. A series of soccer games be- tween the Germans and the U.S. Air Force Academy has raised a total of $26,000 for the benefit of the Glendale Boys Club, enab- ling the organization to move from an old ramshackle ware- house into a modern, well-equip- ped facility. AND, SOME of these German 'unofficial diplomats," as Wil- helms calls them, have establish- ed permanent ties with the area by marrying local girls. Gubernatorial secrets Gov. Ronald Reagan of California (left) carries on a little chat with West Virginia's Arch Moore dur- ing yesterday's final session of he National Governor's Conference at the Sahara Tahoe Hotel in Stateline, Nevada. This is Newsprint. 40 Harmless looking, isn't it? i All by itself, this innocuous square of paper hardly ems important. But every week about 170,000 ounds of newsprint comes into Ann Arbor as news- papers or to be made into newspapers. Well-packed, that would make a square pile 20 feet on a side and 10 feet tall, solid newsprint. After the news is read, the paper is buried and both are forgotten. But the pile of old newsprint will grow until it no longer can be ignored. Fortunately, there is a solution. Old newsprint can be recycled and made into paper products, thus sparing the landscape and trees that would other- wise have been cut. In Ann Arbor the Ecology Center has a recycling station on South Industrial Highway, off Stadium, just south of the Coca-Cola bottlers. It's open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednes- day thru Saturday. Advertising contributed by The Michigan Daily