Monthly Archives: September 2009

USAA in Top Spot on ‘Mil Spouse Friendly Employer’ list

USAA had the spot in the past, and then had lost it to other title holders. They are back in the top spot this year, however, and the military spouses who work for them see to agree that they deserve the title. The following was originally posted at MilSpouse magazine:

EXCERPT

With 1,686 military spouses in its ranks, USAA offers special programs to support the unique circumstances they face. Military spouses working at USAA are provided access to a Work Life Referral counselor to help find alternative child care options during deployments. USAA also sponsors intranet sites specifically designed to support deploying employees and spouses with financial, legal and benefits-related information and guidance.

“We know that military spouses sometimes feel corporate America prefers not to hire them because of their transient lifestyle. Well, we’re different,” said USAA CEO Maj. Gen. Joe Robles, USA (Ret.). “USAA was founded by military personnel who were experiencing the same discrimination from insurance companies that thought their transient lifestyles made for a bad risk. That kind of corporate thinking was wrong in 1922 and it’s wrong today, because military service members and spouses are great employees as well as great customers.”

The Home Depot earned the No. 2 spot on this year’s list. Its Operation Career Front program links military spouses to meaningful career opportunities in the stores, distribution centers and at corporate headquarters in Atlanta. For associates who are called up to active duty and their covered dependents, The Home Depot provides continuation of benefits at no cost and supplemental pay for their length of service. In addition, the company offers job portability, and military spouses are eligible to take a leave of absence when the active duty soldier comes home for the “rest and relaxation” period.

Top companies were selected from a pool of approximately 2,500 which earned a minimum of $1 billion in annual revenues. Companies were evaluated on their efforts to recruit military spouses, results in recruiting from them and policies affecting them.

Rounding out the top 10 after USAA – in order of rank – were The Home Depot, RE/MAX International, West Corporation, Health Net Inc., CSC, Army & Air Force Exchange Service, Kelly Services, Adecco and TriWest Healthcare Alliance.

Pentagon Hall of Heroes Inducts SFC Monti

Deputy Secretary of Defense William J. Lynn III, Secretary of the Army Pete Geren, and Vice Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli will participate in a ceremony inducting Army Sgt. 1st Class Jared C. Monti into the Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., EDT, Friday, Sept. 18, 2009, at the Pentagon auditorium (6th corridor, basement level).

Monti will be awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously at a White House ceremony scheduled for Sept. 17. His parents will be present for the unveiling of the Hall of Heroes plaque on Friday, Sept. 18.

Monti is recognized for actions above and beyond the call of duty during combat that cost him his life on June 21, 2006, in Afghanistan. He is the sixth service member to be awarded the Medal of Honor during the Global War on Terror, the second to receive it for actions in Afghanistan.

Overseas Troops, Families to Tailgate Together

It’s not unusual for Packers fans to travel far to tailgate and cheer on the team.

But 7,000 miles may be a record.

To connect families and friends of the Wisconsin National Guard 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team with 3,200 soldiers serving in Iraq, a volunteer group is organizing “Tailgating with the Troops” next month in Madison. With the help of technology, soldiers will be able to watch the Packers battle the Detroit Lions on Oct. 18 with their families through real time audio and video connections.

A number of T1 broadband lines will be brought into the Alliant Energy Center in Madison to handle the connections linking similar setups at some of the U.S. bases in Iraq. Large video screens will show the Wisconsin soldiers watching the game in Iraq who will be able to see their families at the Alliant Energy Center on similar screens.

“Since we can’t bring the troops home we’ll try to make these connections possible,” said Cindy Tomlinson, associate manager of public relations for TDS Telecommunications Corp.

Families can also sign up for one-on-one visits through audio and video links with soldiers set up in private areas at the Center. The deadline for families to register for the event is Thursday at http://www.servingthe32nd.org.

Organized by the volunteer group “Serving the 32nd,” the tailgate will start at 10:30 a.m. and end at 4 p.m. However, private visits scheduled by families may start as early as 8 a.m. and run later than 4 p.m. depending on the soldier’s availability and work schedule in Iraq.

Organizers are seeking donations and volunteers to help with the event which is free and can accommodate as many as 9,000 people. Food and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided. Beer will be sold.

WWII, Korea, Vietnam Veteran Passes On

Found this story buried in the obituaries and didn’t want this going unknown. This hero served his country in WWII, Korea and Vietnam! He was awarded numerous medals for valor. May God bless our combat veterans.

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Colonel Richard D. Humphreys, 85, retired U.S. Marine, attorney-at-law, and real estate agent, of Forsyth Place, died Sunday, Sept. 13, 2009, at 8:10 a.m. at the Stone Pear Pavilion at the Fox Nursing Home in Chester.

Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., March 13, 1924, a son of the late Harry W. and Helen V. Davidson, he was a 1944 graduate of Franklin & Marshall College. He furthered his education in 1949 at the Dickinson School of Law where he earned a J.D. in Law. A Distinguished Graduate of the Naval War College in 1967 and a holder of the Certified Commercial Investment Member designation (CCIM) from the Realtors National Marketing Institute of the National Association of Realtors. He was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the United States Supreme Court, and the United States Court of Military Appeals.

He is past president of the Rotary Club of East Liverpool, and the Columbiana County Board of Realtors, and a former member of the Ohio Job Training Partnership, Inc., the Realtors National Marketing Institute, and the National Association of Realtors. He is a former member of and past chairperson of the Private Industry Council of Mahoning-Columbiana Counties, the Southern Columbiana County Joint Services Employers Committee, and of the Ohio Small Business Council Coordinating Board. He was formerly a member of the Ohio Governor’s Human Resources Advisory Council, the Business Advisory Council of the National Alliance of Business, the Advisory Committee for the Columbiana County Incubator, and a member of the Steering Committee of the Mahoning Valley Incubator. He is a member of the First United Methodist Church of East Liverpool, a member of Chapter No. 126 of the Korean War Veterans Association, a life member of the Korean War Veterans Association, a life member of the Disabled American Veterans, a member of the Dog Company 2nd Battalion Seventh Marines Association, and a member of the American Legion Post No. 374. He is the author of “Triumph on 1240″ the history of the Marines of D Company 2nd Battalion 7th Marines 1st Marine Division in Korea.

Colonel Humphreys’ active military service began with his enlistment as a Private in the U.S. Marine Corps on Dec. 14, 1942, and ended with his retirement on April 30, 1970, as a Colonel of Marines on duty as the Director of Legislative Plans and Coordination, Office of the Secretary of Defense. He joined the Second Battalion 7th Marines in Korea on Dec. 6, 1950, and was a Platoon Commander of the 3rd Platoon and later the company Executive Officer until June 6, 1951, when he was wounded and evacuated to the hospital in Japan. During his active service he received the following decorations and awards: The Silver Star Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Bronze Star Medal with Combat V, the Purple Heart Medal with one Star, the Secretary of Defense Identification Badge, the Good Conduct Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, the Victory Medal (WWII), the Navy Occupation Service Medal, the National Defense Service Medal with one Star, the Korean Service Medal with three Stars, the United Nations Service Medal, the Korean Presidential Unit Citation, the Presidential Unit Citation, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, the Navy Letter of Commendation, the Vietnam Service Medal with one Star, the Vietnam Campaign Medal with device, and the Navy Commendation Medal with combat V.

Since his retirement from the service, he served in several positions in the East Liverpool Area Chamber of Commerce including that of Executive Vice President and Secretary from 1982 to 1987. He was also a member of the Riverview Cemetery Association Board.

His wife, Ann Louise Stewart Kerr Humphreys, survives at home. The couple married June 1, 1980.

There is a daughter, Paula Humphreys Land, and her husband Richard, of St. Jo, Texas; along with two sons, David S. Kerr, and his wife Victoria of Ellicott City, Md., and James R. Kerr, and his wife Marguerite of Medina.

Other survivors include six grandchildren: Catherine Gay, and her husband Matthew, Kenton Hutcherson, Allison Land, Virginia Land, Amy Kerr and Nicholas Kerr; and two great-grandchildren, Taylor and Lauren Gay; one sister, Jane Agriesti, and her husband Carl, of Johnson City, Tenn.; as well as a brother, David Humphreys, and his wife Loretta, of Pittsburgh.

He was preceded in death by a son, Richard D. Humphreys Jr., on July 10, 2009, a sister Marjorie Bright, and a brother Howard Humphreys.

Friends may call Tuesday afternoon and evening at the Dawson Funeral Home where the family will be present from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. The Rev. Dale Sutton of the First United Methodist Church will conduct a funeral service at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.

Burial will be at Riverview Cemetery where full military honors will be conducted.

Following the service, family and friends will gather at the Dawson Family Center for further remembrance.

In lieu of flowers, memorial tributes may take the form of contributions in care of the First United Methodist Church, 200 West Fifth Street, East Liverpool, Ohio 43920 or the Beaver Local High School Marine Corps JROTC, 13187 State Route 7, Lisbon, Ohio 44432.

View this obituary and send condolences online at www.dawsonfuneralhome.com

Debut of Queensryche video, Home Again

A few months ago CJ and I had the extreme pleasure of interviewing Geoff Tate of the hit band, Queensryche. Well here is their just released music video for the song. Hint, you may want a tissue handy.

Recruiting Center Draws Protests

The morons in the peace movement are at it again.

Authorities say there were a handful of arrests as protesters and counter-protesters gathered at a Northeast Philadelphia mall over the presence of an Army recruiting center that features combat-simulating games.

Dozens of protesters marched into Franklin Mills mall on Saturday to demand the shutdown of the Army Experience Center, a military pilot program. And dozens of counter-demonstrators, many of them Vietnam veterans, also filled the courtyard outside along with about 90 Philadelphia police officers.

The two groups shouted and pointed at each other, separated by a line of police.

Bill Deckhart, coordinator of the BuxMont Coalition for Peace Action, says he doesn’t want his tax money used to expose teens to violence. But Capt. Jared Auchey, a recruiter who works at the center, calls it the modern equivalent of the “Uncle Sam” posters—and he says the same types of games are available at a nearby mall arcade.

Warriors of the Week – SFC Sean Bennett & SGT Daniel Jens

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Sgt. 1st Class Sean Bennett and Sgt. Daniel Jens are Soldiers and storytellers. Both are gifted musically, and have teamed up to use their talents to share their experiences through music. Both Soldiers recently participated in reality television music competitions, and are now participating in musical tours across the country. Their families, who supported them unconditionally during their deployments, continue to support them as they take to the road and share their stories with audiences who leave with a view on what it means to be a Soldier and what their families go through to support them.

As a member of the 2nd Battalion, 377th Parachute Field Artillery Regiment, Army Airborne Regiment, Bennett deployed to Iraq in September 2006. While serving as the Noncommissioned Officer-In-Charge, he was responsible for helping provide humanitarian aid and medical support to locals in Karbala, Iraq. He remained focused on the mission at hand, even after his unit was ambushed on Jan. 20, 2007. For continuing to lead his fellow Soldiers even after being wounded, Bennett was awarded the Silver Star Medal and the Purple Heart.

Jens completed a 15-month deployment in Iraq from 2006-2008 with the 82nd Field Artillery, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Calvary Division. While deployed, he primarily served as a convoy escort driver and gunner in Baghdad. However, he also served on a four-month special duty with the Criminal Investigation Division guarding family members of a kidnapped Iraqi-American Soldier. Jens was awarded a Certificate of Achievement for volunteering his time to perform for Soldiers while deployed to Iraq.

After returning home, both Bennett and Jens turned to music to help them express the emotional realities of war and provide an outlet for others to understand their experiences overseas. In 2008, just a year after receiving the Silver Star Medal, Bennett was a top-ten finalist on NBC’s “Nashville Star” show, and had the opportunity to sing with Billy Ray and Miley Cyrus. Jens also found the national spotlight when he made it to the Top 20 on NBC’s “America’s Got Talent” in the summer of 2008, after winning the Army’s Blackjack Idol contest while he was deployed.

More than just performers, Bennett and Jens teamed up to collaborate on the song, “Life of a Soldier.” Wanting to provide a glimpse into Army live, the lyrics speak to topics such as leaving one’s family and missing holidays or special occasions. The Soldiers will perform a concert at the Grand Strand Freedom Fest on Sept. 11 in Myrtle Beach, S.C., in support of Military Family Appreciation Month.

For both Soldiers, who have families of their own, the lyrics about leaving behind loved ones hit close to home. Bennett’s daughter, who has watched her father deploy three times, has provided him with support and encouragement throughout his deployments and injuries. He is currently serving with the 320th Field Artillery at Fort Campbell, Ky. Similarly, Jens, a father of three, knows his deployment was hard on his wife, Caroline. However, after he returned home, she found the strength to help other military wives and is currently working on a book about challenges families and marriages face during deployments. The Jens family currently resides at Fort Hood, Texas.

Do we betray our dead?

I found the following article and wanted to share it here. I can’t say I disagree with what the author says. I wish I could laugh and say it’s all in his imagination, but it’s not. How could we lose so much ground in such a short time?

How can we forget the impact of that day on our Country with the stories of the victims, survivors, and their families circulating. How can we forget as we see the scar on Ground Zero reminding us of the gaping wound called “terrorism” in the world?

I can’t comprehend anyone forgetting the terrifying images that day — or for those of who were near the Towers or the Pentagon, the smells, sounds, and look on the faces of our fellow Americans.

Betraying our dead

Forgetting the vows we made

Last Updated: 3:26 AM, September 11, 2009
Ralph Peters
NYPost

Excerpt:

Eight years ago today, our homeland was attacked by fanatical Muslims inspired by Saudi Arabian bigotry. Three thousand American citizens and residents died.

We resolved that we, the People, would never forget. Then we forgot.

We’ve learned nothing.

Instead of cracking down on Islamist extremism, we’ve excused it.

Instead of killing terrorists, we free them.

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Wake Me Up When September Ends

I post my own recollections of the events I witnessed unfold in Washington DC on September 11, 2001. I was attending National Childhood Cancer Awareness Week in DC that week, and I had landed at Reagan International on September 10 to get ready for our time of work there that week.
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There is an odd turn of events for me this year as was the year before. In 2001 my oldest son was 16 and was a Sophomore in High School. He was in class and watched all of the events unfold on a television, including the announcement of the plane hitting the pentagon. He knew where I was, and when he asked for permission to call me he was told he could not leave the classroom. Later when I finally got a line out I asked my secretary to call each of the schools my guys were in and let them know I was alright, but that I was stuck and would not be home until I could find a vehicle. My oldest son watched and felt helpless.
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He is, today, somewhere between the USA and Iraq. I’ll let you all know once he arrives safely to his destination. Today, I sit by and wait for phone calls. Today I am the one who has sit by and feel helpless when I hear news coming from the area where my son is. It’s a turn of events I could live with out if there were any other way. Unfortunately the War on Terror must continue, because if it doesn’t then history is destined to repeat itself again on our soil.
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Wake Me Up When September Ends

by: Claire Shackelford

If I get a little passionate at times about the War on Terror it is because I can still remember the feeling of sitting helplessly on my hotel bed watching the news that day. I remember sitting and knowing that we were only yards from the Capitol Building as they announced that Fight 93 had been hijacked.

I can hear the news anchors saying it is headed for us. It’s coming for the Capitol Building, and the only place to hide is under the bed.

It does something to your peace of mind for a while when you know how it feels to have a Boeing 757 aimed at you — loaded down with jet fuel, guided by murderous madmen, and traveling fast.

I didn’t know until much later that the phrase “Let’s roll!” was being uttered as I was trying to figure out if I should stay inside or go out and stand in the street. What difference would it all make if we were going to be hit?

To this day I can’t even begin to contemplate what could have happened had the brave Americans on Flight 93 not fought back that day. I seriously can not. I also can not help but remember and honor them in the same way I would honor a fallen soldier. Their bravery and actions stopped that plane, and they stopped it from coming toward me that day. No one will ever know the lives that were spared because of their actions. They defended me… they defended us!

It was 7 years ago and I was sitting in my office planning a very long and much anticipated business trip. I was, at that time, the National Program Administrator for one of the largest funding bodies of pediatric brain tumor research in the world. The week starting September 10, 2001 was Childhood Cancer Awareness week, and we had huge plans. Neither my boss or myself had a clue of the events that were to unfold during that business trip. So, as normal, a few weeks before the event I was confirming our reservations, mailing off the reams of printed media resources I would need to the hotel where we were staying, and making sure that I had enough suits, pantyhose, and other uncomfortable and stiff things to wear to the various events.

I can’t wait to see the hotel! It’s just yards from the Capitol Building! We definitely need to take some tours. This is only my third time being in D.C. and I have a lot of sights to see!

I remember the morning of September 11, 2001 very well. I woke up out of a groggy sleep. I have always been a very anxious flight passenger, so in order to deal with having a job that required me to fly all over the Country I would take a dose of Valium before my flights. I never took it for any other reason or at any other time, but it really took the edge off of my intense anxiety. I would book my flights so that I could just go to my hotel and crash for the night after my flight. I would wake up a little groggy, but after a cup of coffee and a shower the next day, I would be ready to go!

We flew into Washington DC on September 10 so that we could be at the Capitol for the kick off of the week’s events. On the morning of September 11, my boss and I woke up early, got ready and headed down to the Senator’s Lounge, which was the restaurant located in our hotel. We could see the Capitol Building from just outside the door.

We had a full agenda for the day. The major childhood cancer serving foundations and agencies across the Country had agreed to join together and announce a major cooperative coalition that would allow us to more adequately utilize our resources, gain a “gestalt” in our power and influence, and move closer toward our common goal of eradicating various types of childhood cancers. It was to be a grand morning! The good news proclamation of our concerted efforts would not happen though.

It happened over coffee. It happened over breakfast. It happened while we were putting all of the finishing details on the speech to be given on the steps of the Capitol that morning. We were sitting in the Lounge and enjoying our breakfast when the News Flash of the first plane hitting the first Tower came over the screen. We watched in horror as the big screen television played the clip over, and over again. I leaned over a little to whisper to my boss.

“I will never fly out of LaGuardia Airport for that very reason. They fly way too close to the buildings!”

Then the second plane hit. Everyone in the Lounge gasped. I watched it. I couldn’t believe what I was watching. It was intentional! I grabbed my boss’ hand.

“We shouldn’t even be here! We can’t go to the Capitol Building this morning! We need to leave here now!”

We both sat there, eyes glued to the television for what felt like hours, when we learned of what happened just across the way at the Pentagon.

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You Served Radio 9/11 Live Blog