RALEIGH, N.C. -- Jane Strand won't have to wonder how her son is doing as he deploys for the first time with the North Carolina National Guard to Iraq in a few weeks. She'll be right there with him.Sgt. Strand and her son, Pvt. Timothy Strand, are part of the 449th Theater Aviation Brigade, based in Morrisville, N.C. The Guard held a farewell ceremony for the brigade this week, an event designed to honor the families of the service members as much as those in uniform.The 449th is expected to be in Iraq until around Labor Day 2009.Besides Strand and her son, the unit also includes two married couples, along with the brother-in-law of one of those married men.Jane Strand, 48, of Jacksonville, joined the Marine Corps at age 17 and served 11 years. She got out to raise her six children and waited, she said, for her husband -- also a Marine -- to retire. As soon as he did, she joined the Guard.When she did, she says, she also assumed the rank of "mom" to a collection of younger recruits. Some have a lower official rank than her sergeant's stripes, others a higher one.During Thursday's ceremony, Jane Strand was the stoic sergeant, her gray hair in a taut bun at her neck, her brown eyes focused forward on the dignitaries who wished her and her fellow soldiers Godspeed.But after the ceremony, when Spc. Felicia Deandra stepped up with a goodbye hug, Strand's eyes filled with tears."These are my other children," she said of Deandra and other Guardsmen, one of whom rented Strand a room in his house while she was in Morrisville for training.Jane Strand, a computer technician for the Guard in her regular job, will work in human resources when the 449th arrives in Iraq. The 449th is an aviation brigade headquarters unit that will command about 2,500 Army aviation soldiers from several states. The North Carolina soldiers will work for the Army's 10th Mountain Division in southern Iraq.N.C. National Guard spokesman Maj. Matt Handley says soldiers of the 449th will command subordinate units that will conduct reconnaissance and security, air assault and air movement, attack, and combat service support missions.Timothy Strand, the youngest of Sgt. Strand's brood at age 18, joined the National Guard on July 3. He missed the farewell ceremony Thursday because he's in Aviation Operations school in Alabama. He'll rejoin the 449th before the group leaves for Iraq. Strand's oldest son is on active duty in the Army.Jane Strand said her youngest wanted to deploy with her because he needed to keep an eye on her. She'll let him think that, she said, adding that she isn't worried for herself or either of her sons."Things can happen anywhere," she said. "Nothing is guaranteed in this life or the next, and you have to be ready for whatever is in your path."Still, she said she was a little concerned about her retired military husband, Bill, who's staying behind to look after the other kids and grandkids. E-mail Martha Quillin at martha.quillin(at)newsobserver.com.(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
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Mom, son deploy to Iraq in same National Guard unit
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During Thursday's ceremony,
During Thursday's ceremony, Jane Strand was the stoic sergeant, her gray hair in a taut bun at her neck, her brown eyes focused forward on the dignitaries who wished her and her fellow soldiers Godspeed.