« May 2008 | Main | July 2008 »

June 2008 Archives

June 30, 2008

President Signs GI Bill



WASHINGTON (June 30, 2008) – In a bipartisan action hailed today by the leader of the nation’s largest veterans organization as “an historic event,” the president today signed legislation that provides $162 billion to carry out military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan into 2009 and establishes a GI Bill that mirrors its 1944 predecessor, cited by many as the greatest piece of social legislation ever enacted.

“This legislation is a tribute to our system of government and those who labored to bring it to fulfillment,” said Marty Conatser, national commander of The American Legion. “What a tremendous way to say ‘Thank you’ to our men and women serving so courageously in uniform. Giving them the resources they need to accomplish their mission while providing them with a true GI Bill for the 21st Century in a single piece of legislation is truly an historic event that will benefit America for years to come.

“We applaud Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi who worked relentlessly to develop consensus with the House, Senate, and Executive Branch to bring this bill to fruition. Thanks in large part to her committed leadership, this momentous piece of legislation, will resonate as a landmark in American history.”

The American Legion wrote the first draft of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, the original GI Bill of Rights that changed the course of American history. A generation of heroes was able to join the middle class, achieve home ownership, earn higher education and live the American dream.

The new bill provides servicemembers who served in the military for at least three years full tuition at any in-state public university along with a monthly housing stipend. Benefits can also be used at private schools.

Besides providing equality among active-duty, National Guard and Reserve members by adjusting the benefit scale base on cumulative active service, this bill eliminates the need for each servicemember to pay $1200 to buy into the benefit. Those who have paid into the current GI Bill will not receive a refund but will receive enhanced benefits. Everyone on active duty will receive the benefit from this point forward at no cost.

“Legionnaires are especially grateful to Sen. Jim Webb for authoring the Post-9-11 Veterans Education Assistance Act that led to today’s new GI Bill,” Conatser said. “His commitment and resolve to restore the kind of comprehensive educational benefits that our warriors deserve, and earned, never wavered.

“There were many others in Congress that labored to achieve this success, and we particularly salute Sens. Harry Reid, John Warner and Chuck Hagel and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Minority Leader John Boehner for their leadership.”

The measure includes a provision that allows veterans to transfer education benefits to their spouses or children. The legislation will provide more than $62 billion over 10 years in college funding for veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. It more than doubles the existing benefit from $40,000 today to $90,000.

Continue reading "President Signs GI Bill" »

June 27, 2008

Career Fair for Veterans - Atlanta GA Tuesday, July 1



The military-to-civilian recruiting firm RecruitMilitary will present a free hiring event for job seekers who have military backgrounds in Atlanta, Georgia on Tuesday, July 1, 2008. This event, the RecruitMilitary Career Fair, will take place from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Georgia International Convention Center , 2000 Convention Center Concourse, College Park (Greater Atlanta), GA 30337. RecruitMilitary urges all job seekers who have military backgrounds to attend--veterans who already have civilian work experience, men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life, members of the National Guard and reserves, and military spouses.

Veteran-friendly organizations will conduct one-on-one interviews with the job seekers--organizations that will include corporate employers, law-enforcement agencies and other government employers, educational institutions, veterans service agencies, and veterans associations.

RecruitMilitary will produce the career fair in cooperation with The American Legion; HireVetsFirst, a unit of the United States Department of Labor; and the Military Spouse Corporate Career Network (MSCCN).

More than 500 organizations attended 45 RecruitMilitary Career Fairs in 2007. At those events, an average of 30-plus organizations interviewed an average of over 350 job seekers. RecruitMilitary Career Fairs conducted in 2006 and 2007 generated television coverage by CNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN; radio coverage by ESPN and numerous regional stations; and articles in metropolitan and local newspapers.

The American Legion is an association of veterans who served during times of war. The Legion has 2.7 million members in nearly 15,000 posts throughout the world. The National Commander of The American Legion is Martin F. Conatser, an Army veteran, of Champaign, Illinois. Congress chartered The American Legion in 1919. HireVetsFirst was created by Congress in 2002 to develop awareness among employers of the outstanding attributes of men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life. The Military Spouse Corporate Career Network was founded in 2004 to provide career opportunities and job portability for military spouses. The organization is made up of military spouses, caregivers to war wounded, and retired military personnel.

RecruitMilitary, based in Cincinnati, connects employers with job seekers who have military backgrounds. All of the company's owners, officers, account executives, and retained search consultants are either veterans or active or former reservists. In addition to participation in career fairs, RecruitMilitary offers subscriptions to its database of self-registered job seekers who have military backgrounds, currently numbering more than 185,000, at its Web site, www.recruitmilitary.com, advertising in online and print media, and retained hiring services. The company mails more than 54,000 copies of a quarterly, print newsletter called Incoming! to over 230 military bases throughout the world for distribution to transitioning personnel; employers advertise their job openings in Incoming! The President of RecruitMilitary is Drew Myers, formerly a Captain in the United States Marine Corps. The company was founded in 1998.

Continue reading "Career Fair for Veterans - Atlanta GA Tuesday, July 1" »

June 25, 2008

Street Named For Ohio Airman Killed In Action

U.S. Airforce Photo


About 400 servicemembers gathered at an intersection on an air base in the Persian Gulf region on June 10 to honor a vehicle operator who made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq a year ago. Airman 1st Class Eric Barnes, 20, of Lorain, Ohio, died June 10, 2007, after an improvised explosive device attack on an Air Force convoy about 100 miles south of Baghdad. He was deployed from the 90th Logistics Readiness Squadron at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo.

"Eric was one of the brave, one of the courageous, and one of the dedicated airmen who was committed to making a difference," said Chief Master Sgt. Carl Hunsinger, 386th Air Expeditionary Wing command chief.

"He came to the theater willing and ready to do what he loved and worked side by side with the soldiers and airmen executing this incredibly important mission. He took on the toughest missions as the lead vehicle driver ... he had a bright and positive disposition ... he was a good man who will truly be missed."

Airmen from the 586th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron, 70th and 424th Medium Truck Detachments, and soldiers from the Army's 1st Theater Support Command, 640th Sustainment Brigade, 1144th Transportation Battalion, gathered at the new intersection to pay tribute to Barnes and his family with the naming of Barnes Road.

"Back in October, Chief Hunsinger managed to see my detachment off by having all of us in this very place to see where Eric would be honored before we headed home," said the ceremony's guest speaker, Chief Master Sgt. Richard Bunce of Royal Air Force Mildenhall, England, the 424th MTD chief enlisted manager who supervised Barnes during their deployment. "I'm honored to be here today for those 165 airmen of the 424th Medium Truck Detachment in dedicating this road in his name.

"There's always that one guy out of a group who stands out, and it wasn't hard for Eric because he was about 6-foot-5," said Bunce, recalling the beginning of their six-month rotation. "We only had one returning combat veteran from this type of mission and he was an airman first class - not a staff, not a tech or a master sergeant, an airman first class, and he was this guy. And he shared everything that he knew with his peers and his non-commissioned officers, and that's a true leader and a patriot."

Barnes was a great kid growing up, Bunce said - an Eagle Scout who donated his hair to cancer patients and was loved by his family and friends.

Barnes Road intersects with Jacobson Avenue, named in honor of Airman 1st Class Elizabeth Jacobson, who died near Camp Bucca, Iraq, on Sept. 28, 2005, when her convoy vehicle was hit by an IED. She was the first female airman killed in the line of duty in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Continue reading "Street Named For Ohio Airman Killed In Action" »

June 24, 2008

Legion Post Offers Church Services

Photo by James V. Carroll


Legionnaires and their families and friends gather once a week at American Legion Post 258 in Jonesboro, Ga., with a solemn intent: never forget those who made the supreme sacrifice to protect America's freedoms. On Sunday mornings, people gather in the post's Chapel for God and Country for religious services.

"It's the right thing to do," says the Rev. Don Rusk, a retired preacher who often conducts the services. "We give thanks to the Lord for all that he has given us, and we remember our comrades who have fallen in battle. Yes, it's the right thing to do."

Post 258 Commander Ron Etchinson agrees. "What better place for us to worship?" he says. "After all, the Legion motto is ‘For God and Country.' I can think of no better activity for our post." The chapel is dedicated to the late Chaplain Wilson H. Ollis Sr., who was an original organizer and led the first Sunday services in 1999.

"We usually have 40 to 50 people attend every week," Rusk says. "Special services, such as Memorial Day or Easter, usually draw a hundred or more people. The Legion post is sort of like a one-stop place. We are here to support our active-duty folks and their families, our fellow veterans and their families, and we open our doors on Sundays so that we might fill our souls with God's inspiring words."

Chapel attendees leave the post filled in spirit, but also in body: post members prepare a meal for all to enjoy after the services.

Continue reading "Legion Post Offers Church Services" »

June 23, 2008

Pueblo, Colorado Legion Riders Launch
Operation Enduring Support

Photo courtesy Post 2, Pueblo, Colo.


American Legion Riders at Post 2 in Pueblo, Colo., are a busy group of veterans committed to supporting the military, fellow veterans and their families. And they're a group always up to a challenge.

Recently, in a presentation about his overseas deployment, an Army master sergeant and new Legionnaire said troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan need comfort items the military doesn't provide: toothpaste, toothbrushes, fly swatters, fly strips, smokeless tobacco, "clean" magazines, potted meat, crackers, cookies, etc. The master sergeant also suggested creating a fund to help military spouses in emergencies - a broken water heater, automobile repair, paying for a week's child care.

Post 2's Legion Riders responded by collecting addresses of Pueblo soldiers needing comfort items, then adopted two Army units with 44 soldiers serving in forward operating bases in Iraq. To help raise money, Riders stationed themselves at local retail stores with flyers, asking customers to consider purchasing items for the troops or to contribute cash to be used to assist military families in and around Pueblo.

"We in Pueblo do as much as we can for veterans," says Claude "Big Bro Butch" Chavez, Post 2 Legion Rider vice president. "When we learned of the need for comfort items we sprang into action as quickly as we could, and the community came through for the troops."

Known as "Home of the Heroes," Pueblo has produced four Medal of Honor recipients who were born and raised in the city.

In addition to their latest project, Post 2's Legion Riders participate in every city parade and the local veteran council's annual "Stand Down" event to help homeless veterans get medical attention, dental care and clothing. Riders also visit local VA nursing homes and join the Patriot Guard at funerals to honor Americans who have died in the global war on terrorism. Finally, the Riders are currently constructing two access ramps for a local disabled veteran who earned three Purple Hearts in the Vietnam War.

Continue reading "Pueblo, Colorado Legion Riders Launch
Operation Enduring Support" »

June 20, 2008

President Confers Medal of Freedom on Former Joint Chiefs Chairman Pace

DoD Photo


By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, June 19, 2008 – President Bush presented the Presidential Medal of Freedom to retired Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace during a White House ceremony today. Video Bush honored Pace with the highest civilian award the United States can bestow for a career that went from the streets of Hue City, Vietnam, to the halls of power in Washington.

Pace retired as the 16th chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in October. He was the first Marine to serve in the position.

During today’s ceremony, Bush said one of his greatest privileges as president is to meet servicemembers.

“I’ve been inspired by their valor, selflessness and complete integrity,” he said to an audience that included Vice President Richard B. Cheney and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates. “I found all those qualities in abundance in General Pete Pace.”

Bush called Pace a “skilled and trusted advisor” as the United States fought two wars. Pace helped transform the military into a more effective and efficient force in America’s defense, the president said.

Pace was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., to an immigrant father who often worked two or three jobs, the president said. Pace attended the U.S. Naval Academy, and as a newly minted Marine he arrived in Vietnam at the height of the Tet Offensive. He was assigned to a platoon that had lost three leaders in as many weeks.

“He won the respect and trust of his unit and formed a bond with all those who served with him,” Bush said. “That bond only strengthened throughout his military career.”

Pace performed his duties throughout his 40-year career “with a keen intellect, a sharp wit and a passionate devotion to our country,” the president said. “He won the admiration of all who knew him, and that includes a soldier in Afghanistan who came up to him last year … and said simply, ‘Sir, thanks for your service. We’ll take it from here.’”

The president said that on Pace’s final day in uniform, the general went to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

“He searched the names engraved in sleek granite and then found a spot where he placed the four stars that adorned his uniform,” Bush said. “Along with his four stars, he attached notes addressed to the men who had died under his first command four decades ago. The notes said, ‘These are yours, not mine. With love and respect, your platoon leader, Pete Pace.’

“General Pace ended his military career the same way he began it: with love for his country and devotion to his fellow Marines,” Bush said.

The president also conferred the medal on five other notable Americans: Dr. Benjamin S. Carson Sr., a pioneering pediatric neurosurgeon who became director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins at age 33; Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, an immunologist and leading researcher on HIV/AIDS and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; the late U.S. Rep. Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress; Donna E. Shalala, president of the University of Miami and secretary of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration; and Laurence H. Silberman, a senior judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and co-chairman of the Iraq Intelligence Commission.

Continue reading "President Confers Medal of Freedom on Former Joint Chiefs Chairman Pace" »

June 19, 2008

Gulf War Veterans Given Added Voice at VA
New Committee to Air Veterans’ Concerns

DoD Photo


WASHINGTON - - Veterans of the 1990-91 Gulf War will gain additional access to the leadership of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) when the department’s Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans holds its first meeting today. The 14-member, independent panel will advise the Secretary and the department on the full range of health care and benefits needs of those who served in the conflict.

“I will ask them to take a ‘fresh-eyes’ approach in developing their recommendations and work expeditiously to produce a final report within 18-months,” said Secretary Peake. Serving on the committee are Gulf War and other veterans, veterans service organizations’ representatives, medical experts, and the surviving spouse of a Gulf War veteran. Members were selected to provide a variety of perspectives, experiences, and expertise. Open to the public, the meeting is scheduled for June 17 – 19, 2008 at the Hamilton Crowne Plaza, 14th & K Streets, NW, Washington.

Secretary of Veteran Affairs Dr. James B. Peake will welcome the members and thank them for their service both on the committee and in their lives as citizens, veterans or veteran advocates. He will discuss the importance the department places on the unique issues and challenges faced by Gulf War veterans. The first meeting is designed to give committee members an overview of VA as well as the benefits and services provided to Gulf War veterans. Members will receive briefings on education, home loan guaranty, disability compensation and other benefits. Additional briefings will include health care and veterans’ legal and appeal rights. They will hear public comments June 18 at 2:15 p.m. and June 19 at 3:30 p.m.

Membership
VA Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans
  • Charles Cragin, (Chair) of Raymond, Maine. Currently serves a senior counselor for Maine Street Solutions, LLC.
  • Martha Douthit of Ashburn, Va. Surviving spouse of Gulf War Army veteran, member of the Gold Star Wives of America, currently an international trade analyst with the U.S. Department of Commerce.
  • Dr. Henry Falk of Atlanta. Retired rear admiral and former Assistant U.S. Surgeon General. Currently director for the Coordinating Center for Environmental Health and Injury Prevention with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • Mark Garner of Lorton, Va. A retired Marine Corps chief warrant officer-three and Gulf War veteran who served as a Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Defense Officer.
  • Dr. Lynn Goldman of Chevy Chase, Md. Vice chair of the Institute of Medicine Gulf War and Health Study; currently professor of environmental health sciences at Johns Hopkins University.
  • Dr. John Hart of Plano, Texas. Past president of the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology, currently professor of neurology and psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.
  • William (Rusty) Jones of South Riding, Va. Retired Marine Corps colonel, and veteran of Gulf War and Vietnam War.
  • Kirt Love of Crawford, Texas. An Army veteran of the Gulf War, currently serving as director of the Desert Storm Battle Registry.
  • Daniel Ortiz of Whittier, Calif. An Army veteran of the Gulf War, currently serving as department service director with the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
  • Daniel Pinedo of Oceanside, Calif. Marine Corps colonel currently serving as the comptroller for First Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
  • Thomas Plewes of Annandale, Va. A retired Army lieutenant general and former chief of the Army Reserve. Currently a senior program officer with National Academy of Sciences.
  • Valerie Randall of Savage, Md. A retired Army sergeant first class; currently with the Department of Homeland Security.
  • Edward (Randy) Reese of Washington, D.C. An Army veteran of the Gulf War; currently national service director for the Disabled American Veterans.
  • Steve Robertson of Fredericksburg, Va. A Gulf War veteran who served both in the Air Force and Army National Guard. Currently director of the national legislative commission for The American Legion.

Continue reading "Gulf War Veterans Given Added Voice at VA
New Committee to Air Veterans’ Concerns" »

June 18, 2008

Career Fair For Veterans - Indianapolis, IN
Thursday, June 19th



The military-to-civilian recruiting firm RecruitMilitary will present a free hiring event for job seekers who have military backgrounds in Indianapolis, Indiana on Thursday, June, 2008. This event, the RecruitMilitary Career Fair, will take place from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, 4000 Michigan Rd, Indianapolis, IN 46208. RecruitMilitary urges all job seekers who have military backgrounds to attend--veterans who already have civilian work experience, men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life, members of the National Guard and reserves, and military spouses.

Veteran-friendly organizations will conduct one-on-one interviews with the job seekers--organizations that will include corporate employers, law-enforcement agencies and other government employers, educational institutions, veterans service agencies, and veterans associations.

RecruitMilitary will produce the career fair in cooperation with The American Legion; HireVetsFirst, a unit of the United States Department of Labor; and the Military Spouse Corporate Career Network (MSCCN).

More than 500 organizations attended 45 RecruitMilitary Career Fairs in 2007. At those events, an average of 30-plus organizations interviewed an average of over 350 job seekers. RecruitMilitary Career Fairs conducted in 2006 and 2007 generated television coverage by CNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN; radio coverage by ESPN and numerous regional stations; and articles in metropolitan and local newspapers.

The American Legion is an association of veterans who served during times of war. The Legion has 2.7 million members in nearly 15,000 posts throughout the world. The National Commander of The American Legion is Martin F. Conatser, an Army veteran, of Champaign, Illinois. Congress chartered The American Legion in 1919. HireVetsFirst was created by Congress in 2002 to develop awareness among employers of the outstanding attributes of men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life. The Military Spouse Corporate Career Network was founded in 2004 to provide career opportunities and job portability for military spouses. The organization is made up of military spouses, caregivers to war wounded, and retired military personnel.

RecruitMilitary, based in Cincinnati, connects employers with job seekers who have military backgrounds. All of the company's owners, officers, account executives, and retained search consultants are either veterans or active or former reservists. In addition to participation in career fairs, RecruitMilitary offers subscriptions to its database of self-registered job seekers who have military backgrounds, currently numbering more than 185,000, at its Web site, www.recruitmilitary.com, advertising in online and print media, and retained hiring services. The company mails more than 54,000 copies of a quarterly, print newsletter called Incoming! to over 230 military bases throughout the world for distribution to transitioning personnel; employers advertise their job openings in Incoming! The President of RecruitMilitary is Drew Myers, formerly a Captain in the United States Marine Corps. The company was founded in 1998.

Continue reading "Career Fair For Veterans - Indianapolis, IN
Thursday, June 19th" »

June 17, 2008

Vets Prepare for Annual Wheelchair Games in Omaha



The 28th National Veterans Wheelchair Games, scheduled for July 25-29 in Omaha, Neb., will attract more than 500 veterans with disabilities; it has become the largest annual wheelchair sports competition in the world. Veterans from combat zones in Afghanistan and Iraq will participate in 17 competitive events being offered in Omaha.

The games, sponsored by VA and Paralyzed Veterans of America, are open to all U.S. military veterans who - due to spinal cord injuries, certain neurological conditions, amputations or other mobility impairments - use wheelchairs for sports competition,

The VA Nebraska-Western Iowa Health Care System in Omaha, and the Paralyzed Veterans of America Great Plains Chapter, are hosting the 2008 Games. Veterans competing in the games come from nearly every state, as well as Puerto Rico and Great Britain.

"Like serving our nation, the National Veterans Wheelchair Games are not really about the medals, said Randy L. Pleva, Sr., national president for Paralyzed Veterans of America. "Instead, they're a mix of camaraderie, competition and courage. And they're rehabilitation at its best for our paralyzed veterans. If you are in the Omaha area, please join us this July. You'll be inspired."

At the Games, veterans will compete in diverse sports, including hand-cycling, wheelchair slalom, trapshooting, a motorized wheelchair relay and power soccer. An exhibition event in sled hockey will also take place this year. For the second year, several stand-up events will be held for athletes with amputations who choose to compete using prosthetic devices, instead of competing in their wheelchairs.

The games begin July 25 with a kick-off wheelchair basketball demonstration at Qwest Center Omaha, and with the 2008 Disabled Sports, Recreation and Fitness Expo. Kids Day at the games will be July 27 at Northwest High School, where local children with disabilities will meet athletes and learn about wheelchair sports.

Opening and closing ceremonies will also be held at Qwest Center Omaha, along with many of the week's competitive events. Other events will be held at the Henry Doorly Zoo, the University of Nebraska at Omaha and other venues. Admission is free to the public, and the community is encouraged to attend.

Sports are important in therapy used to treat many disabilities. VA is a recognized leader in rehabilitation, with therapeutic programs available at VA health care facilities across the nation. For many injured veterans, the Wheelchair Games provide their first exposure to wheelchair athletics.

For more information about the National Veterans Wheelchair Games, or to volunteer during the week, click here.

Continue reading "Vets Prepare for Annual Wheelchair Games in Omaha" »

June 16, 2008

Commander Honors Fallen Heroes at Normandy



American Legion National Commander Marty Conatser walked in the boot prints of heroes on June 6. He joined American Legion Auxiliary National President Jan Pulvermacher-Ryan in ceremonies at Omaha Beach and Ste. Mere-Eglise, France, to commemorate the 64th anniversary of the D-Day invasion.

They met with veterans who parachuted into the Normandy countryside in the early morning darkness of June 6, 1944, setting the stage for history's largest and most ambitious amphibious assault. The D-Day invasion ended Nazi Germany's four-year hold on the French Republic.

In the weeks that followed the bloody storming of Omaha and Utah beaches, more than 15,000 American troops were killed in battles to liberate Normandy; nearly a third of them are buried at the American National Cemetery near Omaha Beach. Thus began the march to Berlin and World War II victory in Europe.

Conatser and Pulvermacher-Ryan laid wreaths at the hallowed cemetery and later that day at the church square of Ste. Mere-Eglise. This small French town achieved fame when it was featured in the 1962 blockbuster film, "The Longest Day," with a star-studded cast that included Richard Burton, Sean Connery and John Wayne. During the Normandy invasion, paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division landed in the town; many were killed, but Pvt. John Steele (portrayed by Red Buttons in the film) survived by feigning death as he hung from his parachute, caught on the town's church steeple.

A mannequin of an 82nd Airborne Division paratrooper hangs from the steeple of that 12th-century church during D-Day anniversaries. Thousands of visitors, including many veterans and world leaders, attend festivities that include battle re-enactments, vintage World War II vehicle demonstrations and other activities.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry was among this year's U.S. dignitaries. Dale Dye, a decorated Vietnam War veteran and military adviser for film productions, was also there to pay homage. His credits include the films "Saving Private Ryan" and "Band of Brothers." Dye is currently directing a film about the three-day battle at LaFiere Bridge, near Ste. Mere-Eglise. Hundreds of U.S. soldiers died in that fight, which has been characterized as one of the bloodiest small-arms conflicts in the history of U.S. warfare.

Conatser and Pulvermacher-Ryan participated in a memorial ceremony June 7, near LaFiere Bridge. Events for that day included a re-enactment of the famous nighttime paratroop drops that spelled the beginning of the end for Adolf Hitler and his Third Reich. Paratroopers from the active-duty 82nd Airborne Division, U.S. Air Force, and the armed forces of several countries, including Germany, took part in the re-enactment.

Continue reading "Commander Honors Fallen Heroes at Normandy" »

June 12, 2008

American Legion to Supreme Court:
Terrorists Ruling endangers U.S. military

Photo by John Raughter


The nation’s leading veterans organization reacted to today’s Supreme Court ruling that foreign terrorist have U.S. constitutional rights. The ruling came as the result of a challenge by detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who want hearings in U.S. civilian courts.

“To suggest that foreign terrorists, who have never set foot in this country and respect no civilized laws should enjoy the same rights under our Constitution as U.S. citizens,” American Legion National Commander Marty Conatser said of today’s 5-4 ruling, “must make America’s founding fathers turn over in their graves.”

Conatser pointed out that The American Legion has sent delegations to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. “Two American Legion past national commanders have visited Camp Delta. They found that the detainees were humanely treated, well-fed and provided with medical care that surpasses what many veterans receive. We currently have a distinguished Legionnaire viewing hearings down at Guantanamo. As the deputy commanding general of Guantanamo told our Washington Legislative Conference, if the situation were reversed these terrorists would define mercy as a knife blade on the back of the neck instead of the front.”

Chief Justice John Roberts dissented from the ruling. He wrote that the United States enacted “the most generous set of procedural protections ever afforded aliens detained by this country as enemy combatants.” Justice Antonin Scalia joined the dissent, writing that the majority’s decision “will make the war harder on us. It will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.”

“The Supreme Court has made its ruling,” Conatser said. “It seems that terrorists taken on foreign battlefields will now be entitled to lawyers at taxpayers’ expense and all the other rights that American citizens enjoy. It would have been wonderful if the terrorists had treated Matt Maupin, the U.S. soldier captured and brutally murdered in Iraq, with the same respect. In fact, one of the men on trial, Kahlid Sheikh Mohammed is not only the alleged mastermind of 9/11 but is widely believed to have personally beheaded journalist Daniel Pearl.” Conatser said that The American Legion will look at various ways to protect America within the confines of the latest Supreme Court decision.

Continue reading "American Legion to Supreme Court:
Terrorists Ruling endangers U.S. military" »

A GI Bill Worthy Of Its Name

DoD Photo


BY MARTY CONATSER

When The American Legion wrote the first draft of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, it changed the course of American history. A generation of heroes was able to join the middle class, achieve home ownership, earn higher education and live the American dream. More famously known as the GI Bill, it was hailed by many as the greatest legislation ever. Sadly, as the generations passed and memories dimmed, GI Bill benefits were so drastically reduced by inflation that many veterans either declined or were denied even the opportunity to participate in the program. Few veterans today have the luxury of attending school without also holding a job, and many colleges are totally out of reach.

We need to change history again. Washington needs to make another historic investment. Senator Jim Webb, D-Va, has authored the bipartisan “Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act,” which is, in essence, a 21st Century GI Bill. Under the bill, servicemembers could earn up to 36 months of benefits, equivalent to four academic years. Benefits would cover charges for established programs, including the cost of the most expensive in-state public schools, monthly stipends equivalent to housing costs in their area, and a stipend for books. Incentives would be created to reduce the cost to attend private schools. The bill also provides equity among active-duty, National Guard and Reserve members by adjusting the benefit scale based on cumulative active service. The House and Senate bills are still being reconciled but among the compromises being considered is a provision that will allow servicemembers to transfer the benefits to family members.

The ability to transfer the benefits should alleviate some of the Pentagon’s stated concerns about the GI Bill hurting mid-level retention. The Congressional Budget Office also estimates that even small re-enlistment bonuses can have a positive effect on re-enlistment rates.

Like its World War II predecessor, this GI Bill would not be cheap. But it brings to mind the words of the author of the original GI Bill, American Legion Past National Commander Harry Colmery. “If we can spend 200 to 300 billion dollars to teach our men and women to kill, why quibble over a billion or so to help them to have the opportunity to earn economic independence and to enjoy the fruits of freedom?” he asked at the time.

If you want to see the real cost of war, visit Walter Reed. War is expensive indeed and the bulk of that cost is paid for by the men and women who wear the uniform. Benefits are just a small, small cost of war.

Marty Conatser is national commander of the 2.7-million member American Legion, http://www.legion.org


Millions of Americans have benefited from the old GI Bill and many more have been frustrated with its hollow successors. Either way, The American Legion wants to hear from you. Tells us about your GI Bill experiences by e-mailing us at pr@legion.org. We will share your stories with policy-makers in Washington to ensure that our veterans are truly given the thanks of a grateful nation.

Continue reading "A GI Bill Worthy Of Its Name" »

June 11, 2008

Kenneth Ham: Legionnaire In Space



Hearing that Kenneth Ham, a 1983 graduate of Arthur L. Johnson Regional High School in Clark, N.J., was in NASA's space program, fellow Clark resident and Post 328 Legionnaire William Duffy reached out and invited him to join the nation's largest veterans organization.

That was in 1999. Ham has renewed his Legion membership every year since, and Duffy mails Ham a new membership card each year. The 2008 card will be remembered as something truly special - out of this world, even.

As a part of mission STS-124, Ham piloted the space shuttle Discovery that is docked at the International Space Station to install a new $1 billion lab. Each astronaut is allowed to take 10 personal items on the trip. Ham's 2008 American Legion membership card is one item he chose. Upon the shuttle's return to earth, scheduled for June 14, NASA will issue a certificate stating the card was a part of the mission.

"Every year I sent Kenneth a membership card with a little sticky note on it asking him to please call me," said Duffy, Post 328's membership director and a Department of New Jersey vice commander. "He'd always call, and we'd talk about how his training was going. When I talked to him last year, he told me this assignment was coming up. I'd been e-mailing him a lot since then, and in one of them I told him that it would be a great privilege and honor for The American Legion, this nation's veterans and our posts if he would take his American Legion membership card up with him. He said, ‘Definitely,' and I nearly fell out of my chair."

While Ham is in space, students in Clark are honoring him by wearing "STS-124" T-shirts. A banner also stretches across one of the town's streets, naming Ham as a graduate of the high school.

"Once he gets back, he'll have to go through debriefing and a lot of other things before he can come back (to Clark). It's probably going to be this fall," Duffy said. "So in October, we plan on having a parade for him. He'll be riding in the back of a 1964 Lincoln Continental convertible with his wife and children, and the parade will start in front of the post. He'll be escorted by our post color guard and travel to the front of the high school. It'll be the first time I've ever met him face to face. I will probably have a tear in my eyes."

A few days ago, Ham sent the following e-mail from outer space to family and friends: "Hello from Space! The planet looks absolutely beautiful! The blue and green colors of the oceans and seas look dreamy next to the stark white of clouds. Sometimes the clouds look mean and angry, with lightning aplenty. Sometimes they look like delicate lace on an opal table. Truly stunning.

"We've been very busy converting Discovery from the flaming beast you saw leap from the ground into our spaceship home. We're chasing down Space Station and preparing all the supplies we need to transfer over. In their current situation, I think that we can't get there fast enough for them. There's a little piece of all of you up here. Life is grand."

Continue reading "Kenneth Ham: Legionnaire In Space" »

June 9, 2008

Legion Helps Parkersburg Tornado Victims



When a tornado devastated many homes last week in Parkersburg, Iowa, The American Legion's Department of Iowa immediately responded by securing emergency grants for storm victims. The local Legion post became a community center providing food and comfort to displaced residents, helped out by a department grant. Polk County American Legion members also began to collect clothing and supplies for beleaguered families who had lost everything to the tornado.

Neal Schrage, commander of American Legion Post 285, and the Parkersburg Legion family are working hard to give all the victims good meals and comfortable places to sleep. "It just goes to show that if you have a need, people will help," Schrage told a KCRG-TV reporter. "We have a big need here. And people are pouring in help from everywhere."

The day after the tornado hit, Iowa Department Adjutant John Derner toured the area to assess the damage and facilitate relief efforts. He was soon joined by Howard Hodson, the Legion's Third District commander in Iowa. He began to distribute applications to victims for relief money, provided by The American Legion's National Emergency Fund.

Post 285 is about the only large building left standing in Parkersburg, Derner says. It serves as the command post for FEMA, Red Cross, and Iowa State Patrol rescue and relief workers. The post also feeds about 4,000 people - at a cost of about $10,000 - per day.

"People go through the food line, get Emergency Fund applications, fill them out, and they're delivered to me," said Kathy Nees, programs director for the Department of Iowa in Des Moines. "I process the applications, send them to National Headquarters, and they send us checks." Those checks are then delivered to the folks in Parkersburg. As a matter of fact, National Headquarters has already sent $20,000 in grants and isn't done yet.

"As a matter of fact, some more checks just arrived today at 1 p.m. via FedEx," Nees told the Online Update in a June 3 phone interview. "They will soon be in the hands of people who need the money."

Besides financial help out of Indianapolis, the people of Parkerburg are getting material assistance from groups all over Iowa. For instance, American Legion Riders in Washington, Iowa, delivered a truck filled with supplies last week - including a Legion Riders motorcycle escort - and hand-delivered cash donations to Schrage. "Everybody has been coordinating efforts out of the state Legion headquarters," Nees said. "This whole American Legion of Iowa has really stepped up to the plate and helped out in every way - food, money, clothes, baby blankets, you name it."

Efforts are still underway to gather much-need supplies, especially for the Parkersburg American Legion Post, which has been converted into a disaster relief headquarters. Derner is asking Legionnaires for donations of cash, gasoline for generators, sheets, pillows, blankets, personal hygiene items, diapers, and powdered formula for babies.

While Post 285 feeds tornado victims, members of the Legion, Auxiliary, and Sons of the American Legion are working 24 hours a day to support and feed relief workers. Contact Kathy Nees, Department of Iowa, at knees@ialegion.org if your chapter or post would like to assist. Donations also can be made through the department by calling (800) 365-8387.

Continue reading "Legion Helps Parkersburg Tornado Victims" »

June 6, 2008

Boys Of Pointe Du Hoc



On June 6, 1984, President Ronald Reagan spoke at the Ranger Monument on a cliff overlooking Omaha Beach to mark the 40th anniversary of the historic Allied landing. The following is the text of his memorable speech:

We're here to mark that day in history when the Allied peoples joined in battle to reclaim this continent to liberty. For four long years, much of Europe had been under a terrible shadow. Free nations had fallen, Jews cried out in the camps, millions cried out for liberation. Europe was enslaved, and the world prayed for its rescue. Here in Normandy the rescue began. Here the Allies stood and fought against tyranny in a giant undertaking unparalleled in human history.

We stand on a lonely, windswept point on the northern shore of France. The air is soft, but forty years ago at this moment, the air was dense with smoke and the cries of men, and the air was filled with the crack of rifle fire and the roar of cannon. At dawn, on the morning of the 6th of June 1944, 225 Rangers jumped off the British landing craft and ran to the bottom of these cliffs. Their mission was one of the most difficult and daring of the invasion: to climb these sheer and desolate cliffs and take out the enemy guns. The Allies had been told that some of the mightiest of these guns were here and they would be trained on the beaches to stop the Allied advance.

The Rangers looked up and saw the enemy soldiers -- at the edge of the cliffs shooting down at them with machine-guns and throwing grenades. And the American Rangers began to climb. They shot rope ladders over the face of these cliffs and began to pull themselves up. When one Ranger fell, another would take his place. When one rope was cut, a Ranger would grab another and begin his climb again. They climbed, shot back, and held their footing. Soon, one by one, the Rangers pulled themselves over the top, and in seizing the firm land at the top of these cliffs, they began to seize back the continent of Europe. Two hundred and twenty-five came here. After two days of fighting only ninety could still bear arms.

Behind me is a memorial that symbolizes the Ranger daggers that were thrust into the top of these cliffs. And before me are the men who put them there.

These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc. These are the men who took the cliffs. These are the champions who helped free a continent. These are the heroes who helped end a war.

Gentlemen, I look at you and I think of the words of Stephen Spender's poem. You are men who in your 'lives fought for life...and left the vivid air signed with your honor'...

Forty summers have passed since the battle that you fought here. You were young the day you took these cliffs; some of you were hardly more than boys, with the deepest joys of life before you. Yet you risked everything here. Why? Why did you do it? What impelled you to put aside the instinct for self-preservation and risk your lives to take these cliffs? What inspired all the men of the armies that met here? We look at you, and somehow we know the answer. It was faith, and belief; it was loyalty and love.

The men of Normandy had faith that what they were doing was right, faith that they fought for all humanity, faith that a just God would grant them mercy on this beachhead or on the next. It was the deep knowledge -- and pray God we have not lost it -- that there is a profound moral difference between the use of force for liberation and the use of force for conquest. You were here to liberate, not to conquer, and so you and those others did not doubt your cause. And you were right not to doubt.

You all knew that some things are worth dying for. One's country is worth dying for, and democracy is worth dying for, because it's the most deeply honorable form of government ever devised by man. All of you loved liberty. All of you were willing to fight tyranny, and you knew the people of your countries were behind you.

Continue reading "Boys Of Pointe Du Hoc" »

June 5, 2008

Army Hero Joins Medal of Honor Roster at Pentagon Ceremony

     By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service

     WASHINGTON, June 3, 2008 – Medal of Honor recipient Army Pfc. Ross A. McGinnis joined a select group of military heroes during a Pentagon ceremony here today.

Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England hosted the event that added McGinnis’ name to the roster of other Army Medal of Honor recipients. Army Secretary Pete Geren and Gen. Richard R. Cody, the Army’s vice chief of staff, also attended the event at the library and conference center.

Medal of Honor recipients “are our nation’s most-revered heroes,” England said. “And every time a name is added, that individual’s story enriches the significance of this award.”

McGinnis was an exceptional, selfless soldier who gave his life so that his comrades could live, England said.

Pfc. McGinnis died at age 19 in northeastern Baghdad on Dec. 4, 2006, while protecting his comrades from an enemy grenade that was thrown into his Humvee. McGinnis, who’d been riding topside in the vehicle’s gunner hatch, dropped down and used his body to absorb the effects of the exploding grenade, thus saving four fellow soldiers: Sgt. 1st Class Cedric Thomas, Staff Sgt. Ian Newland, Sgt. Lyle Buehler, and Spc. Sean Lawson.

“From the Minutemen at Bunker Hill to our warriors in Iraq and Afghanistan, our history is filled with stories of individuals sacrificing their own lives to secure for us the profound gift of peace and freedom,” England observed.

U.S. and allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy in northern France during World War II’s D-Day on June 6, 1944, England recalled. The tens of thousands of servicemembers who participated in the successful amphibious landings helped to ensure the collapse of Nazi Germany and the return of freedom to Europe, he said.

“Their courage decisively changed the course of history,” England said, adding that four U.S. troops earned the Medal of Honor for their actions on the Normandy beaches.

“Ross was securing those very freedoms for Americans and the people of Iraq when he made the ultimate sacrifice,” England said.

Ross McGinnis “had decided that the lives of his friends were more important than his own,” Geren observed. “Our duty to Ross and to the memory of Ross and our duty to his family is for all of us to live lives worthy of his sacrifice.”

“His memory will live in this Army forever,” Geren vowed.

McGinnis and his comrades braved insurgents’ bombs and sniper fire almost every day in Baghdad, Cody said, “because they knew we must defeat al-Qaida in Iraq, to keep not only our country safe, but to provide the Iraqis a safe and secure environment so they could rebuild their country.”

When McGinnis acted to protect his fellow soldiers from the grenade, he knew full well he would not survive the blast, Cody said.

“There is no greater act of personal courage, loyalty or selfless service than this,” he said.

McGinnis’ father and mother, Tom and Romayne McGinnis, attended the Pentagon event. Tom McGinnis spoke a few words.

“Ross is the reason that we’re here. And, the reason that Ross is not here is because his Army buddies were more important than life itself,” Tom said. “We appreciate all the memorials, the gifts (and) the special attention that we’ve been given since Ross died.”

Tom said people’s kind words have greatly helped him and his wife cope with the loss of their son. Yet, he added, it’s important to remember U.S. servicemembers that are still serving at home and abroad.

“Our troops … also need our support,” McGinnis’ father emphasized. “They put their lives on the line for us -- sometimes for four years, sometimes for two years, sometimes for 20 years.

“But, when they get home they also need our support.”

President Bush presented the Medal of Honor to McGinnis’ parents yesterday at a White House ceremony.

“The Medal of Honor is the nation’s highest military distinction; it is given for valor beyond anything that duty could require or a superior could command,” Bush said, before presenting the medal to McGinnis’ parents during the East Room ceremony.

“America will never forget those who came forward to bear the battle,” Bush vowed. “America will always honor the name of this brave soldier who gave all for his country.”

McGinnis enlisted in the Army at age 17 on June 14, 2004. At the time of his death, McGinnis was a private first class assigned to 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, in Schweinfurt, Germany. McGinnis was promoted to specialist posthumously. He is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

McGinnis’ family received their son’s Silver Star and Purple Heart medals in December 2006 at a memorial service in their hometown of Knox, Pa., about 60 miles northeast of Pittsburgh.

Continue reading "Army Hero Joins Medal of Honor Roster at Pentagon Ceremony" »

June 4, 2008

Career Fair For Veterans - Foxborough, MA, Thursday, June 5th



The military-to-civilian recruiting firm RecruitMilitary will present a free hiring event for job seekers who have military backgrounds in Foxborough, Massachusetts on Thursday, June 5, 2008. This event, the RecruitMilitary Career Fair, will take place from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Gillette Stadium, One Patriot Place, Foxborough (Greater Boston), MA 02035 RecruitMilitary urges all job seekers who have military backgrounds to attend--veterans who already have civilian work experience, men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life, members of the National Guard and reserves, and military spouses.

Veteran-friendly organizations will conduct one-on-one interviews with the job seekers--organizations that will include corporate employers, law-enforcement agencies and other government employers, educational institutions, veterans service agencies, and veterans associations.

RecruitMilitary will produce the career fair in cooperation with The American Legion; HireVetsFirst, a unit of the United States Department of Labor; and the Military Spouse Corporate Career Network (MSCCN).

More than 500 organizations attended 45 RecruitMilitary Career Fairs in 2007. At those events, an average of 30-plus organizations interviewed an average of over 350 job seekers. RecruitMilitary Career Fairs conducted in 2006 and 2007 generated television coverage by CNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN; radio coverage by ESPN and numerous regional stations; and articles in metropolitan and local newspapers.

The American Legion is an association of veterans who served during times of war. The Legion has 2.7 million members in nearly 15,000 posts throughout the world. The National Commander of The American Legion is Martin F. Conatser, an Army veteran, of Champaign, Illinois. Congress chartered The American Legion in 1919. HireVetsFirst was created by Congress in 2002 to develop awareness among employers of the outstanding attributes of men and women who are transitioning from active duty to civilian life. The Military Spouse Corporate Career Network was founded in 2004 to provide career opportunities and job portability for military spouses. The organization is made up of military spouses, caregivers to war wounded, and retired military personnel.

RecruitMilitary, based in Cincinnati, connects employers with job seekers who have military backgrounds. All of the company's owners, officers, account executives, and retained search consultants are either veterans or active or former reservists. In addition to participation in career fairs, RecruitMilitary offers subscriptions to its database of self-registered job seekers who have military backgrounds, currently numbering more than 185,000, at its Web site, www.recruitmilitary.com, advertising in online and print media, and retained hiring services. The company mails more than 54,000 copies of a quarterly, print newsletter called Incoming! to over 230 military bases throughout the world for distribution to transitioning personnel; employers advertise their job openings in Incoming! The President of RecruitMilitary is Drew Myers, formerly a Captain in the United States Marine Corps. The company was founded in 1998.

Continue reading "Career Fair For Veterans - Foxborough, MA, Thursday, June 5th" »

June 2, 2008

Bush Presents Medal of Honor to Fallen Army Hero’s Family

       By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service

       WASHINGTON, June 2, 2008 – President Bush presented the Medal of Honor to fallen Army hero Spc. Ross A. McGinnis’ parents during a White House ceremony here today.

“The Medal of Honor is the nation’s highest military distinction; it is given for valor beyond anything that duty could require or a superior could command,” Bush said, before presenting the medal to McGinnis’ father and mother, Tom and Romayne McGinnis, during the East Room ceremony.

Then-Pfc. McGinnis died at age 19 in northeastern Baghdad on Dec. 4, 2006, while protecting his comrades from an enemy grenade that was thrown into his Humvee. McGinnis, who’d been riding topside in the vehicle’s gunner’s-hatch opening, dropped down and used his body to absorb the effects of the exploding grenade, thus saving four fellow soldiers.

Presenting the Medal of Honor to McGinnis’ parents was “a high privilege,” Bush said, noting McGinnis was a selfless hero who could easily have jumped off the vehicle and saved himself.

“Instead, he dropped inside, put himself against the grenade and absorbed the blast with his own body,” Bush said. “In that split-second decision, Private McGinnis lost his own life and he saved his comrades.”

McGinnis’ surviving comrades, Sgt. 1st Class Cedric Thomas, Staff Sgt. Ian Newland, Sgt. Lyle Buehler, and Spc. Sean Lawson, as well as some prior Medal of Honor recipients, also attended the ceremony.

Thomas has noted that McGinnis had plenty of time to avoid the exploding grenade, the president said, but instead chose to save his buddies.

“America will never forget those who came forward to bear the battle,” Bush vowed. “America will always honor the name of this brave soldier, who gave all for his country.”

McGinnis enlisted in the Army at age 17 on June 14, 2004. At the time of his death, McGinnis was assigned to the 1st Infantry Division’s 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, in Schweinfurt, Germany. He was promoted to specialist posthumously.

McGinnis’ family received their son’s Silver Star and Purple Heart medals in December 2006 at a memorial service held in their hometown of Knox, Pa., about 60 miles northeast of Pittsburgh.

Continue reading "Bush Presents Medal of Honor to Fallen Army Hero’s Family" »

About June 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Legion Current Events in June 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

May 2008 is the previous archive.

July 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 3.34