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thedrifter
10-25-05, 02:11 PM
October 31, 2005
Marine News Briefs

Dog tag back from Vietnam

After 37 years, a Vietnam veteran was reunited with the dog tags that a corpsman removed while treating the wounds he suffered after a bullet entered his arm and exited his chest, according to an Oct. 18 report in the Enid (Okla.) News and Eagle newspaper.

Former Marine Staff Sgt. Gerald Belcher received a phone call in late September from a California firefighter who had bought a handful of American dog tags from a Ho Chi Minh City museum during a trip to Vietnam. He was attempting to return the tags to the veterans who once wore them.

“It kind of came as a shock,” Belcher said. “They must be the original dog tags they issued me when I went into the Marines. It’s just like a part of you. They still had mud on them from Vietnam.”

Belcher said he hadn’t seen the dog tags since April 20, 1968, when he served with 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines, near Khe Sanh.

Band entertains on the bay

When Fleet Week came to San Francisco in early October, so did 42 Marines stationed in California’s high desert, according to an Oct. 14 Marine Corps news release.

The band from the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center at Twentynine Palms drove 11 hours each way for a five-day excursion to the city by the bay, to perform for visiting and retired military officials, political and foreign dignitaries, business executives and San Francisco’s social elite, according to the release.

Sgt. Keith Cavey, piano and bass drum player, said he had played for veterans groups in San Francisco before and that playing in the city as a Marine was a defining moment in his service.

“That’s because what really separates us apart from any other armed service is our traditions,” Cavey said. “I’ll never forget the first time that I went up to San Francisco with the band, there was a Marine who had fought in Guadalcanal and lost both of his legs, but he pushed himself up on his wheelchair and still stood at attention while we played the ‘Marine’s Hymn,’ which is when I realized that I wanted to make a career out of the Corps.”

Wrestler is Athlete of Year

A sergeant serving at the Camp Foster travel management office on Okinawa, Japan, recently returned from a visit to Quantico, Va., where Commandant Gen. Mike Hagee and Sgt. Maj. John Estrada, sergeant major of the Marine Corps, named him the Marine Corps Athlete of the Year, according to an Oct. 18 news release.

In addition to winning the 84-kilogram Greco-Roman and freestyle competitions at the Armed Forces Wrestling Championships on April 8, Sgt. Jacob A. Clark created Team Okinawa, a wrestling club open to anyone interested in competing.

Clark toured the world before arriving at Quantico for the awards presentation. He was introduced to former Marines Walter Cronkite and Drew Carey, according to the release.

Hagee to hold services

The commandant of the Marine Corps will hold a service at the Washington National Cathedral on Nov. 6 to celebrate the Corps’ 230th birthday, according to an Oct. 18 news release.

The archbishop of Washington, D.C., will join Commandant Gen. Mike Hagee as an honored guest, the release said.

“The President’s Own” Marine Band’s brass ensemble is scheduled to perform a pre-worship concert at 3:30 p.m.; all are welcome.

Marines attending the service should leave their medals at home. Service alphas and dress blues are acceptable, as are ribbons and badges, the release said.

Marines wishing to dazzle others with their collection of shiny post-deployment medals are directed to buy a ticket to their respective unit’s Marine Corps Ball, where that is tradition.

Movies to show both sides

When Clint Eastwood completes principal photography on his film about Marines at Iwo Jima next month, he will begin a movie that details the battle from the Japanese perspective, according to an Oct. 16 Time magazine article.

Eastwood’s current movie, “Flags of Our Fathers,” is based on a book by James Bradley and Ron Powers about the leathernecks who fought on Iwo Jima and eventually were photographed in the famous flag-raising atop Mount Suribachi.

The movie he plans to produce about the Japanese side of the battle is tentatively titled “Lamps Before the Wind.” Eastwood plans to release it at the same time “Flags of Our Fathers” debuts next fall, according to the report.

Together, the movies are intended to depict the World War II battle as a clash of cultures as much as a clash of arms, the report said.

Thousands attend mud run

Reservists with Marine Aircraft Group 41 held a 10-kilometer “Mud Run” at Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth, Texas, on Oct. 15, according to a Marine Corps news release.

More than 1,600 participants slogged through the course, which consisted of tons of mud and more than 30 obstacles.

“We like mud and we like running, and it just seemed great to combine the two,” said Ellie Slack, a member of the Dirty Darlings team. “Instead of walking through the mud, if it was deep enough, we swam.”

The event served as the kickoff for the 2005 Dallas/Fort Worth Toys for Tots campaign, according to the release.

Ellie

thedrifter
10-25-05, 02:13 PM
October 31, 2005 <br />
News breaks <br />
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Man gets nearly 17 years in shooting case <br />
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The second of two brothers involved in the shooting death of a Marine officer at a football game was sentenced Oct. 19 to...

thedrifter
10-25-05, 02:15 PM
October 31, 2005
Portraits of the fallen
Former Marine determined to draw every service member killed in war on terrorism

In Tennessee, a grandmother says good morning to the portrait of her smiling grandson. In Virginia, a mother reflects on a picture of her young son holding the daughter he never met and never will. The images were drawn by Edmonds, Wash., artist Michael Reagan, who has penciled more than 160 portraits of troops who died in Iraq.

As part of his Fallen Heroes Project, Reagan seeks to draw all the troops killed in any other conflict he considers the “war on terror,” he says.

More than 1,900 have died in Iraq, but Reagan is not deterred. “I’m not going to stop until I’m done. Or when I can’t do it any longer,” the 58-year-old said while taking a break at his home north of Seattle.

There’s always a stack waiting to be completed.

Most of the drawings are portraits of the individual soldier, but there is the rare special request.

Many families come to Reagan to recapture what they’ve lost.

Some of his latest works include drawings of Army 1st Lt. David Giaimo, a 24-year-old from Waukegan, Ill., who was killed Aug. 12 when his Humvee struck a land mine in Tikrit, Iraq.

On Reagan’s kitchen counter sit three photo albums filled with copies of his portraits, as well as hundreds of thank-you notes and letters from families.

Reagan began drawing 40 years ago to pass the time after breaking his left arm in a high school football game.

When he joined the Marine Corps in the mid-1960s, he was trained as a rifleman and sent to Vietnam. Drawing there, he said, helped fill the long lulls between fighting. He would hunker down in battle trenches to sketch pictures of his comrades’ girlfriends or mothers.

The soldiers’ portraits are different, though.

“If I can spend a couple hours of my time ... and I can help somebody start healing, even just a little bit, I don’t have a choice,” he said.

— The Associated Press

Ellie

thedrifter
10-25-05, 02:18 PM
October 31, 2005
Around the Corps
Compiled from military and other public sources.

Philippines

Leathernecks train Filipino troops

Deep Reconnaissance Platoon Marines with the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit conducted live-fire training with Philippine Marines and airmen at Clark Air Base, the Philippines, on Oct. 18, according to a Marine Corps news release.

All service members fired 200-300 rounds from both pistols and rifles on a short-distance firing range. They began firing from 30 yards away and moved to as close as three yards from their targets.

Following the live-fire drills on the short-distance courses, the service members took their focus to the “Kill House” facility, a simulated close-quarter battle site used for urban-warfare training.

The U.S. Marines ran through the “Kill House” in several live-fire drills while the Philippine service members watched and studied their methods.

The Philippine forces then ran through the facility following the Americans’ example.

Iraq

70 enemy fighters killed in airstrikes

Coalition forces operating in Iraq’s Anbar province killed an estimated 70 insurgents during two Oct. 15 airstrikes, according to an Oct. 17 Marine Corps news release.

In the early afternoon, U.S. forces observed 20 men at the crater site of a previously detonated explosive that killed five U.S. service members and two Iraqi soldiers Oct. 14.

The insurgents were in the process of placing another explosive when coalition aircraft engaged them with a precision-guided bomb, killing all the insurgents on the ground, the release said.

Around 7:30 p.m. the same evening, a Marine UH-1N Huey and AH-1W Cobra helicopter team near Ramadi observed a group of “military-age males” gathering at a suspected insurgent safe house, according to the release.

The Marines estimate that the airstrikes against the safe house killed 50 insurgents.

Marines provide security for voters

The 2nd Marine Division wrapped up Operation Liberty Express recently, which provided security for 139 polling sites throughout Iraq’s Anbar province during the Iraqi Constitutional Referendum, according to an Oct. 20 Corps news release.

Iraqi Security Forces were responsible for the innermost security around polling centers, the release said.

Leathernecks of the 2nd Marine Division were responsible for the outer areas, enforcing the ban on traffic and individual weapons, and maintaining a watchful eye for any insurgent activity.

North Carolina

Remembering the bombing in Beirut

Marines from Camp Lejeune and residents of Jacksonville, N.C., were to gather at the city’s Beirut Memorial on Oct. 23 for a ceremony to remember the 22nd anniversary of a bomb attack against the Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon.

Marine Commandant Gen. Mike Hagee was to deliver the memorial address honoring the 241 Lejeune Marines who were killed by terrorists in 1983.

Lejeune spokesman 1st Lt. Clark Carpenter said the bombing was an event that not only “brought our nation together, but it cemented the bond that Camp Lejeune shares with the city of Jacksonville.”

He said the first memorial made for the Marines who died in Beirut was a city project that planted 241 pear trees along the base’s main entrance and that each one is “a living monument to a Marine.”

Devil dogs teach tactics to Chileans

Chilean Marines are visiting their U.S. counterparts at Camp Lejeune, N.C., for the annual Centauro Exchange Program, in which the United States and Chile exchange detachments of Marines in order to cross-train their troops and create a sense of camaraderie, according to an Oct. 19 Marine Corps news release.

An intense training regimen for the Chileans, covering varied aspects of combat, was developed for their one-month stay at Lejeune, said Lt. Col. Christopher Mayette, commanding officer of 10th Marines, which was selected to host the Chilean detachment this year.

The Chilean Marines were set to begin diving into the training schedule Oct. 24, when the infantrymen were to attend a heavy machine-gun course and artillerymen were to attend an artillery training session designed to show how U.S. Marines use their howitzers.

Ellie