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  EAA Airshow - West Branch, MI
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 07-01-2007, 04:22 PM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - No Replies


When Lee and I attended an airshow at our local airport, they had a few WWII trainer planes as well as a replicated Zero that was featured in Tora, Tora, Tora, the TV show Baa-Baa Blacksheep, and the film Midway. We were able to talk to the pilot of the Vultee BT-13 and of the Zero. The Zero did several fly-overs and it was a thrill. Very, very cool. The pilot even had the guns screaming out, and that sounded very, very realistic. We both felt like we were at Hickam Field in Hawaii on December 7th. Goosebumps. :pdt34:

 

The Alger Market (our store) was one of the proud sponsors of the EAA event, and we had a great time. They had a raffle and drew to see who would win a ride in the Zero. Lee really had his hopes up, but unfortunately his name was not drawn. :( Darn!!

 

Here's the official site for Tora101

 

http://www.tora101.com/

 

Here's a site for the Vultee

 

http://www.bt-13.org/

 

Here is the variant of the BT-13, the BT-15, Valiant

 

http://www.dfwwing.com/BT_15.html

 

The Alger Market (our store) was one of the proud sponsors of the EAA event, and we had a great time. They had a raffle and drew to see who would win a ride in the Zero. Lee really had his hopes up, but unfortunately his name was not drawn. :( Darn!!

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  800 Days on the Eastern Front - Litvin
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 07-01-2007, 02:02 PM - Forum: WWII Books & Magazines - No Replies


We stumbled upon this review while reading our Wall Street Journal this week. I found the review online also, so was able to share it with you.

 

====================

 

A Red Army Memoir of World War II

By BERTRAND M. PATENAUDE

June 30, 2007; Page P6

 

800 Days on the Eastern Front

By Nikolai Litvin

University Press of Kansas, 159 pages, $24.95

 

 

It is June 1944, and the Red Army is pressing its offensive against the German Wehrmacht in the Soviet Republic of Belarus, roughly 200 miles east of what is now the Polish border. In the late afternoon of June 29, a Russian assault battalion reaches the outskirts of the city of Bobruisk, along the Minsk highway, where thousands of German defenders have been caught in a Red Army noose. The only escape route for the Germans is across the highway and into the woods beyond, but first they must traverse a large field of rye overlooked by Soviet machine-gun emplacements.

 

One such emplacement is manned by Nikolai Litvin, a Russian soldier (then 21, now 84) who recounts the experience in "800 Days on the Eastern Front." Mr. Litvin's memoir is a vivid reminder, for those of us understandably transfixed by D-Day and the Battle of Normandy, of the brutal fighting that was taking place on the other side of Europe in the final phase of World War II.

 

Intense gunfire, on that June day, signals the start of battle. Mr. Litvin looks out and sees a large mass of German soldiers, "perhaps 10,000 strong," emerging from a village and moving toward the highway. "They were marching in a column, as if on a parade ground." When this "human wave" rushes forward, the Soviet machine guns begin their deadly business. "The Germans were packed so tightly together, and in such a mass, that it was simply impossible to miss." A Soviet antitank battery moves up in support, with 12 cannons opening fire. Fierce fighting continues until nightfall, leaving perhaps half the German force dead.

 

"In the morning, we woke up and looked out upon the field of carnage," Mr. Litvin recalls. "It was quiet. There was no shooting. The rye field was a mousy color from all the fallen Germans in their field gray uniforms. The corpses lay piled upon one another. It was another hot day. Our machine gun remained pointed toward the village to where the remnants of the trapped German force had retreated. By 11:00 a.m., a stench began rising into the air."

 

A grim aftermath to this mass slaughter unfolds as Mr. Litvin and his comrades enter the village and find German soldiers sitting around everywhere, looking up at them in wary resignation. Grisly episodes follow, including the savage revenge killing of a German soldier by aggrieved villagers and the summary execution of a Soviet collaborator. Mr. Litvin, already distressed over the rye field's carnage, recalls that he was afterward "tormented by these cruel and gory scenes of violence." But the gore does not end there.

 

Farther on, Mr. Litvin and a comrade are ordered to escort six German prisoners of war to corps headquarters, though the divisional commander has obliquely sanctioned their execution. En route, Mr. Litvin -- yielding, he says, to the pressure of his importuning comrade -- manages to convince himself that "six more prisoners were worthless, especially in this brutal war." The doomed Germans, mobilized reservists, are led away from the road and understand what is about to happen. "They showed us their calloused hands." Like Mr. Litvin's father, they had evidently been metal workers before the war, and he feels sorry for them. Some cry for mercy. Machine guns are raised. Mr. Litvin's comrade fires first. Then Mr. Litvin himself pulls the trigger. He passes out briefly, waking up to find that he has fired several rounds. For days he is haunted by what he has seen and done. "I was sickened by this war," he writes. His memoir, although hardly a pacifist tract, is in its most intense passages a personal record of war's horror.

 

Born in 1923 to a peasant family in Siberia, Mr. Litvin was sent to the front in February 1943, after the war's tide had turned. He fought in the Battle of Kursk that summer -- a second major German defeat on Soviet soil, after the Battle of Stalingrad -- and then moved westward into Poland and across northern Germany. At various times he served as an antitank gunner, a machine gunner, a driver and a chauffeur. Three times he was wounded in action.

 

Mr. Litvin -- now living in Krasnodar, Russia, near the Black Sea -- completed his memoir in 1962, during the Khrushchev thaw, but the political temperature had cooled again before he could find a publisher. "800 Days on the Eastern Front," translated into English by Stuart Britton, appears now for the first time in any language. Mr. Britton has supplemented the original text with contextual commentary, maps, passages from his interviews with the author and explanatory endnotes.

 

While Mr. Litvin's understated style can be affecting, it can also induce tedium when he moves away from combat. The running account of his heroic efforts to resuscitate and maneuver his Willys Jeep -- an American import, thanks to Lend-Lease -- tends to bog down in detail. When Mr. Litvin crosses into Poland and beholds scenes of affluence that belie the Kremlin's propaganda about the death agony of capitalism, his prose is disappointingly terse. His snapshot of prosperous Polish farms and the "spirit of individualism" feels more prompted than remembered. We know from the research of historians that this late phase of the conflict on the Eastern Front was marked by rampant looting, rape and killing -- as if the Russians were claiming retribution for the 1941 invasion and the Nazi occupation. Mr. Litvin handles such aspects of the war briefly and, one senses, dutifully. He does, though, include a rape scene, a rarity in Soviet war memoirs.

 

The Russian lust for revenge had long been inflamed by Konstantin Simonov's hugely popular wartime poem, "Kill Him!", and by Ilya Ehrenburg's widely known exhortation: "If you have killed one German, kill another. Nothing gives us so much joy as German corpses." Mr. Litvin killed the enemy in combat without hesitation, but his memoir makes plain that he took no pleasure in making corpses out of German prisoners. "After all," he tells a fellow Red Army veteran who complains when the Germans are allowed to erect a monument to their fallen servicemen at Stalingrad, "they were only soldiers, just like us."

 

Mr. Patenaude is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution.

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  Chris Earns the names Puddles!
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 07-01-2007, 12:35 PM - Forum: Reenactors Corner - Replies (3)


Chris earns the nickname of Puddles! :pdt12: Thanks Moose!

 

Hey Sappered, love the photo! The truth is out. LOL!

post-2-1183304141_thumb.jpg



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.jpg   chris_earns_the_nickname_of_puddles..jpg (Size: 97.5 KB / Downloads: 0)
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  Bill Barnes
Posted by: 3_7_I_Recon - 07-01-2007, 09:37 AM - Forum: Current Events - Replies (1)


GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. - Bill Barnes says he was scratching off a losing $2 lottery ticket inside a gas station when he felt a hand slip into his front-left pants pocket, where he had $300 in cash.

 

He immediately grabbed the person's wrist with his left hand and started throwing punches with his right, landing six or seven blows before a store manager intervened.

 

"I guess he thought I was an easy mark," Barnes, 72, told The Grand Rapids Press for a story Tuesday.

 

He's anything but an easy mark: Barnes served in the Marines, was an accomplished Golden Gloves boxer and retired after 20 years as an iron worker.

 

Jesse Daniel Rae, the 27-year-old Newaygo County man accused of trying to pick Barnes' pocket, was arraigned Monday in Rockford District Court on one count of unarmed robbery, a 15-year felony.

 

Barnes said he had just withdrawn the money from a bank machine and put it in the pocket of his shorts before driving to the Marathon service station and Next Door Food Store in Comstock park, a Grand Rapids suburb.

 

He remembers noticing a patron acting suspiciously, asking the price of different brands of cigarettes and other items. While turned away, Barnes felt the hand in his pocket, so he took action.

 

"I guess I acted on instinct," he said.

 

Kent County sheriff's deputies said the store manager quickly came around the counter. The three of them struggled through the front door, where two witnesses said the manager slammed Rae to the ground and held him there.

 

"There was blood everywhere," said another manager on duty, Abby Ostrom, 25.

 

Barnes was a regional runner-up in Golden Gloves competition in the novice and open divisions before enlisting in the Marines in 1956.

 

He lived most of his adult life in Comstock Park with his wife, Patricia, before recently moving to Ottawa County. The couple have three children.

 

After retiring as an iron worker, he now works part-time as a starter at a golf course.

 

Barnes said he'd probably do the same thing again under the same circumstances, if for no other reason than what he would face back home.

 

"I wouldn't want my wife to give me hell for lettin' that guy get my money," he said with a smile.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070626/ap_on_...pocket_pummeled

 

Here's the video:

http://www.wmur.com/news/13586105/detail.html#

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  RIP - Maurice Shane - 36th Combat Engineer
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 06-30-2007, 04:35 PM - Forum: Announcements, Get Well Wishes & Farewells - No Replies


The only bad part about keeping the roster is that I have to hear some bad news too often. Maurice Shane just passed away. He had been a regular at our reunions until he was no longer able. I remember that one year he came to Lebanon one week too late for the reunion. He was on time after that. May he rest in peace.

 

 

36 Engineers are rugged......John Fallon II. Capt. USA Ret.

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