VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, INC

LZ WEBBER BENNINGTON CHAPTER 601

P. O. BOX 4146

BENNINGTON, VERMONT 05201

NEWSLETTER 157                        A NOT-FOR-PROFIT VETERANS SERVICE ORGANIZATION                        June 1, 2008

CHAPTER OFFICERS JOHN J. MINER - PRESIDENT - PHIL YOUNG -VICE PRESIDENT ADMINISTRATION -JAMES DAWSON - VICE PRESIDENT OPERATIONS -DENNIS GAUTHIER - TREASURER - BOB FRITZ - SECRETARY - TOM MCDONOUGH - CHAPLAIN -BRIAN VESPER - CHAPTER COORDINATOR -MIKE DIMONDA - JIM SWEET - BILL CANNAVAN - AT - LARGE BOARD MEMBERS - SUE COOK - AVVA ASSOCIATE CHAPTER LIAISON - BRUCE NILES - MIKE DIMONDA - JIM DAWSON - DELEGATES TO VERMONT STATE COUNCIL

PRESIDENT’S REPORT

May was a very big month for us. As we kicked off many funding idea’s for this year as you will see in this newsletter. The first event that we have been reporting on is the "Voice’s for Veterans " radio show that was started on May 8 with Bob Hannan as host and Rev. Robin Greene, Rev James MacIntyre , and Ron Elwell as guest speakers. Our chapter put Rev. MacIntyre up the night before as he came down from Burlington to be our guest. Then on May 22nd I was asked to host the talk show with our Guest being Clayton Clark, from the state office of Veterans Affair in Montpelier, and our other quest was coming from the White River Jct VA benefits side but a problem developed up there and they could make it. We will be sure and bring them down at a latter date.

This radio show we are hoping will continue every other week, we will be having different speaker come in and talk about veterans problems and how to get the help that they or their families need. Also we will have a call in show and a mail call so if you listen to the show which is on very other Thursday morning at 9:30 AM till 10:00 am you can send your questions to MFCN220@yahoo.com and we will get the answer for you and also air it on the radio the next show.

Now, this past month our expenses were very high as we started so many different fund raiser that we needed to do. Some we did ourselves as that saved us money. So please take the time and read this newsletter and check out what we are doing not only in May but all summer...

Each event you will see pictures that I have taken at them. Remember June meeting is on the 17th at 7:00 PM at the Vermont Veterans Home......

     

          Robin, James, Ron, Bob                                                         Clayton, John

 

MAYFEST MAY 24TH, 2008

 

This year we had a great location for our booth. We were the second booth in from the first. And boy did that make a difference to last year. I want to thank Brian Vesper who picked up all of the stuff from my house and took it down to our location. Then he stayed the whole day with me. Also David Therrien was there to help set up also and he stayed the whole day. Linda Armstrong, Sue Cook, Bill Bradley, Charlene Martin, Bob Hannan, Bob Wilson, Tom McDonough, Tom Bluto, and Robert Fritz who stayed the whole day also. So you see we had a lot of help and we passed out a lot of good information to a lot of Veterans and their families, plus we sold a few things and got donations for our Honor Roll all in all it was a great day. Thanks again to every one that came out to help and just stop by and say hi.

  

       Our Booth at the MayFest                                                      Looking up the street 9:30 AM

ABOVE & BEYOND

 

This month we had two request for our feature story. One a Iraq Veteran who just received the Medal of Honor and the other one is for the only SeaBee to get the Medal of Honor in Vietnam.

SHIELDS, MARVIN G. *

Rank and organization: Construction Mechanic Third Class, U.S. Navy, Seabee Team

Place and date: Dong Xoai, Republic of Vietnam, 10 June 1965

Entered service at: Seattle, Washington

Born: 30 December 1939, Port Townsend, Washington

Citation:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. Although wounded when the compound of Detachment A342, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), 1st Special Forces, came under intense fire from an estimated reinforced Viet Cong regiment employing machine guns, heavy weapons and small arms, Shields continued to resupply his fellow Americans who needed ammunition and to return the enemy fire for a period of approximately 3 hours, at which time the Viet Cong launched a massive attack at close range with flame throwers, hand grenades and small-arms fire. Wounded a second time during this attack, Shields nevertheless assisted in carrying a more critically wounded man to safety, and then resumed firing at the enemy for 4 more hours. When the commander asked for a volunteer to accompany him in an attempt to knock out an enemy machine gun emplacement which was endangering the lives of all personnel in the compound because of the accuracy of its fire, Shields unhesitatingly volunteered for this extremely hazardous mission. Proceeding toward their objective with a 3.5-inch rocket launcher, they succeeded in destroying the enemy machine gun emplacement, thus undoubtedly saving the lives of many of their fellow servicemen in the compound. Shields was mortally wounded by hostile fire while returning to his defensive position. His heroic initiative and great personal valor in the face of intense enemy fire sustain and enhance the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.

Here is one of three things that have been named in his honor.

        

MASTER-AT-ARMS SECOND CLASS (SEA, AIR AND LAND) MICHAEL A. MONSOOR , UNITED STATES NAVY

For service as set forth in the following

CITATION:

FOR CONSPICUOUS GALLANTRY AND INTREPIDITY AT THE RISK OF HIS LIFE ABOVE AND BEYOND THE CALL OF DUTY AS AUTOMATIC WEAPONS GUNNER FOR NAVAL SPECIAL WARFARE TASK GROUP ARABIAN PENINSULA, IN SUPPORT OF OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM ON 29 SEPTEMBER 2006. AS A MEMBER OF A COMBINED SEAL AND IRAQI ARMY SNIPER OVERWATCH ELEMENT, TASKED WITH PROVIDING EARLY WARNING AND STAND-OFF PROTECTION FROM A ROOFTOP IN AN INSURGENT HELD SECTOR OF AR RAMADI, IRAQ, PETTY OFFICER MONSOOR DISTINGUISHED HIMSELF BY HIS EXCEPTIONAL BRAVERY IN THE FACE OF GRAVE DANGER. IN THE EARLY MORNING, INSURGENTS PREPARED TO EXECUTE A COORDINATED ATTACK BY RECONNOITERING THE AREA AROUND THE ELEMENT’S POSITION. ELEMENT SNIPERS THWARTED THE ENEMY’S INITIAL ATTEMPT BY ELIMINATING TWO INSURGENTS. THE ENEMY CONTINUED TO ASSAULT THE ELEMENT, ENGAGING THEM WITH A ROCKET-PROPELLED GRENADE AND SMALL ARMS FIRE. AS ENEMY ACTIVITY INCREASED, PETTY OFFICER MONSOOR TOOK POSITION WITH HIS MACHINE GUN BETWEEN TWO TEAMMATES ON AN OUTCROPPING OF THE ROOF. WHILE THE SEALS VIGILANTLY WATCHED FOR ENEMY ACTIVITY, AN INSURGENT THREW A HAND GRENADE FROM AN UNSEEN LOCATION, WHICH BOUNCED OFF PETTY OFFICER MONSOOR’S CHEST AND LANDED IN FRONT OF HIM. ALTHOUGH ONLY HE COULD HAVE ESCAPED THE BLAST, PETTY OFFICER MONSOOR CHOSE INSTEAD TO PROTECT HIS TEAMMATES. INSTANTLY AND WITHOUT REGARD FOR HIS OWN SAFETY, HE THREW HIMSELF ONTO THE GRENADE TO ABSORB THE FORCE OF THE EXPLOSION WITH HIS BODY, SAVING THE LIVES OF HIS TWO TEAMMATES. BY HIS UNDAUNTED COURAGE, FIGHTING SPIRIT, AND UNWAVERING DEVOTION TO DUTY IN THE FACE OF CERTAIN DEATH, PETTY OFFICER MONSOOR GALLANTLY GAVE HIS LIFE FOR HIS COUNTRY, THEREBY REFLECTING GREAT CREDIT UPON HIMSELF AND UPHOLDING THE HIGHEST TRADITIONS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVAL SERVICE.

SIGNED GEORGE W. BUSH

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            LOYALTY DAY AND MEMORIAL DAY PARADE

     We want to thank Brian Vesper, James Dawson and Mike diMonda for taking part in the Manchester Loyalty day parade for us. Then for Memorial day parade we want to thank David Therrien, Sue Cook, Linda Armstrong, Andre Fonteneau and John Miner for taking part in the Memorial Day parade in Bennington. Below is a few pictures of the Bennington parade and the flags at the Veterans Home and the Cemetery at the Home.

  

       

        

Governor Douglas to Enact Law Authorizing a Gold Star License Plate at the State’s Annual Memorial Day Ceremony on May 30th

Vermont will recognize the sacrifice of those men and women who have paid for our freedom with their lives during a Memorial Day Ceremony at the Vermont Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Randolph Center on Friday, May 30th, at 3:00 p.m.

During the ceremony, Governor Jim Douglas will sign S.241, which will create a Gold Star License Plate to be available to the families of military members who die in the service of their country. The bill will also expand the license plate options for veterans. Both changes will go into effect in January 2009.

The tradition of Memorial Day began shortly after the Civil War when General John Logan, the Commander of the Great Army of the Republic, declared that May 30th was a day to remember the fallen soldiers on both sides. The state has held a Memorial Day ceremony at the veterans’ cemetery since it opened in 1993. Although Vermont recently adopted the federal standard of observing Memorial Day on the last Monday in May, the cemetery will still conduct its ceremony on the traditional day.

This year’s ceremony will be held in a new location at the cemetery. Instead of taking place at the main entrance, it will be held in the natural amphitheater directly in front of the cemetery chapel

 

BLUE WATER NAVY TAKES ON THE CHIN

I report a short time back that the blue water navy won a ruling from the courts on it claim of agent orange. But just in the past month the VA appealed this ruling and the court has reversed itself and agreed with the VA. The lawyers for the blue water navy veterans are getting ready to appeal this ruling to the whole 9th circuit court .

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POW/MIA REPORT

U.S. - JAPAN SEARCH FOR WWII JAPANESE MIAs IN ALASKA

The Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that a small team of Japanese and U.S. specialists is visiting Attu Island, Alaska, in search of burial locations of the Japanese soldiers who are still missing from a 1943 World War II battle there.

The Department of Defense, the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are supporting a team of three Japanese and 11 Americans. The team departed from Kodiak today via a C-130 on a flight to the U.S. Coast Guard Station on Attu Island. Some engineering equipment will be flown to Eareckson AFS on a U.S. Air Force C-17 and from there, the Coast Guard will move the equipment via C-130 to Attu Island

The team's work on Attu Island will be supported by Army engineers from Ft. Richardson, Alaska, who will also employ ground-penetrating radar to help locate remains and guard against unexploded ordnance.

While visiting the island, the team is being housed at the long range navigation station and will be supported by the U.S. Coast Guard garrison. Attu Island is under the management and protection of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service which administers the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. At the end of Alaska's Aleutian island chain, Attu is the westernmost point of land of the United States.

In June 1942, a unit of the Japanese Army occupied Attu, capturing and imprisoning many of its inhabitants. U.S. forces began action to recapture the small island in May 1943, where fierce hand-to-hand battles led to about 540 American and 2,300 Japanese deaths. It was the site of the only land battle in WWII in North America.

In 1953, 235 sets of Japanese remains were recovered on Attu and reburied at Ft. Richardson, near Anchorage, Alaska. The Japanese later disinterred those remains, cremated them as part of a religious ceremony and reburied them at the same location.

The Japanese government assisted U.S. investigators in June 2007 in a visit to Iwo Jima in search of information related to American WWII MIAs. This 14-day deployment to Attu Island follows a similar four-day investigation there in July 2007.

                     SOLDIERS MISSING FROM THE KOREAN WAR ARE IDENTIFIED

The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office announced today that the remains of two U.S. servicemen, missing from the Korean War, have been identified and are being returned to their families for burial with full military honors.

They are Sgt. 1st Class George W. Koon of Leesville, S.C.; and Sgt. 1st Class Jack O. Tye of Loyall, Ky.; both U.S. Army. Koon will be buried in Leesville, and Tye will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C.

Representatives from the Army met with the soldiers' next-of-kin to explain the recovery and identification process, and to coordinate interment with military honors on behalf of the Secretary of the Army.

In late November 1950, Koon was assigned to the Medical Company, 9th Infantry Regiment, and Tye was assigned to Company L, 38th Infantry Regiment. Both were members of the 2nd Infantry Division advancing north of Kunu-ri, North Korea. On Nov. 25, the Chinese Army counterattacked the Americans in what would become known as the Battle of the Chong Chon (River). This combat was some of the fiercest of the war, and the 2nd Division initiated a fighting withdrawal to the south. Koon and Tye were captured by Chinese forces during the intense enemy fire, and subsequently died while in captivity from malnutrition and medical neglect.

In 2002, two joint U.S./Democratic People’s Republic of Korea teams, led by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC), investigated and excavated a mass burial site located 20 miles northwest of Kunu-ri, along the route taken by captured U.S. POWs being moved to permanent POW camps along the Yalu River. The teams recovered remains at the site believed to be those of several U.S. servicemen, including Koon and Tye.

Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory and JPAC also used mitochondrial DNA and dental comparisons in both Koon’s and Tye’s identification.

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House Passes Hare’s Legislation to Establish Director of Physician Assistant Services at the VA

WASHIGNTON, DC-The House of Representatives today passed Congressman Phil Hare’s bipartisan legislation to establish a Director of Physician Assistant (PA) Services at the Veterans Health Administration. The bill now moves on to the Senate.

The VA currently has an Advisor of Physician Assistants who works part time and is based in the field. Hare’s legislation would elevate this position to full-time Director and require that it is based out of the VA’s Central Office in Washington DC. The VA is the largest employer of PAs in the country—numbering around 1,600. About one-quarter of all primary care patients in the VA system are seen by PAs.

"In many rural areas in my district, PAs are the only full-time health care providers," Hare said. "Establishing a Director of PA Services will allow veterans in these communities to receive a level of care commensurate with their sacrifices."

"With 40 percent of all PAs in the VA system projected to retire in the next five years, this legislation will also serve as a critical tool in the recruitment and retention of future providers," Hare added.

"The American Academy of Physician Assistants applauds the leadership of Congressman Phil Hare for introducing and promoting HR 2790, legislation to establish a full time Director of Physician Assistant Services in the VA Central Office," said Gregor Bennett, President of the American Academy of Physician Assistants. "As a veteran and a physician assistant, I know this position is long overdue and will surely result in better utilization of the VA’s PA workforce and improved patient care for our nation’s veterans."

"We appreciate the leadership of Mr. Hare in introducing this bill," said Joseph Violante, National Legislative Director of Disabled American Veterans. "VA was historically the innovator of the profession of Physician Assistant (PA), and nationally it is the largest single employer of PAs, so it is ironic that VA has been dragging its feet in designating a full time PA manager in VA Central Office. We thank Mr. Hare for his forward thinking, and we pledge to support enactment of his bill."

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JUNE 14, 2008 FORREST WARD TRAIL DEDICATION

We have been asked to take part in this special event on flag day at 1:00 PM I need at least four people to come forward and help me with this event. it will take place at the Forrest Ward School on Houghton Lane.

40 years ago on June 13, 1968

CPL - E4 - Army - Selective Service

25th Infantry Division

Length of service 0 years

His tour began on Feb 17, 1968

Casualty was on Jun 13, 1968

In GIA DINH, SOUTH VIETNAM

HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY

MULTIPLE FRAGMENTATION WOUNDS

Body was recovered

In Tribute to Cpl Forrest Edward Ward, with So Much Gratitude for his Courage, Service and Dedication to our Country and for Freedom. Rest well and know that you will NEVER BE FORGOTTEN. I am the sister of such a young hero, who also made the Supreme Sacrifice in Vietnam 1967....."NOR SHALL YOUR GLORY BE FORGOT, WHILE FAME HER RECORD KEEPS, OR HONOR POINTS TO THE HALLOWED SPOT, WHERE VALOR PROUDLY SLEEPS" ~ Theodore O''''Hara ~

Mar 24, 2008

 

Until next month, remember stay low

Your editor - John Miner