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For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 1 FREE Volume 35 • Iss ue 4 • Februa ry 15, 2011 Serving Active and Retired Military and D oD Workers for Over 34 Years NEWS I SPORTS I ENTERTAINMENT & MORE

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Page 1: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 1

FREE

Volume 35 • Issue 4 • February 15, 2011 • Serving Active and Retired Military and DoD Workers for Over 34 Years Volume 35 • Issue 4 • February 15, 2011 • Serving Active and Retired Military and DoD Workers for Over 34 Years

NEWS I SPORTS I ENTERTAINMENT & MORE

Page 2: Feb 15, 2011

Page 2 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

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Page 3: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 3

Volume 36 • Issue 4 • February 15, 2011MP

In 1975, our publisher Richard Matz was publishing a small Carlsbad community newspaper called The Breeze. It was a very sad time for our military as the Vietnam war ground to a half and our men were coming home. Instead of the celebration they deserved, they were considered war mongers and many were spat upon! Our publisher was outraged and printed as many stories as the paper could hold about our beloved heroic men. His newspaper was in the minority as other publications supported the anti-military stance of many so-called Americans.

An incident aboard Camp Pendleton between five rowdy white and five rowdy black soldiers arose. The black Marines were from the motor pool and stabbed some of the white Marines with screwdrivers. In order to not be disciplined, the black Marines claimed the white Marines were affiliated with the Klu Klux Klan. This brought an immediate negative response from the print and broadcast media. Rev. Jesse Jackson, Yvonne Brathwaite Burke and the NAACP joined in the protest of the white Marines whose charges proved later on to be untrue.

Matz wrote an article in The Breeze about a convoy of four trucks of Marines of all colors that cleared out a field next to his house. They cleared three acres and killed seven rattlesnakes for the Carlsbad Girls Club. Where were the reporters?

Where were the photographers? Where was the media?

It appeared that when the Marines did a good deed, no one cared but when a small problem occurred, the media made a mountain out of a mole hill. Matz wrote that the media and politicians should be put on trial, not the Marine Corps. This article appeared in The Breeze on Thursday and by Friday morning, the Commandant of the Marine Corps, General Wilson, called Mr. Matz to thank him for supporting the Corps. He had the Camp Pendleton commander General Hoffman invite Matz on base for a special luncheon. At that time, General Hoffman asked if he could do anything to help him.

The Breeze was struggling because of the recession at the time. Matz asked General Hoffman if he could put a paper aboard the base. The Scout newspaper was the base paper but was financed by the government. No ads were permitted in The Scout. The general said, “You have carte blanche from General Wilson so of course you can distribute your paper on the base. We will help you with distribution and give you any lcoations you want.

Mr. Matz asked if he could call the paper The Military Press which would feature entertainment, sports and national news. He got the go-ahead and this was the birth of the paper. Now 34 years later, Matz and the Military Press organization strives to provide more than just a military newspaper. We honor the military by attending special events with tons of donations for giveaways just for the active duty personnel. We participate heavily in the Military Appreciation events at Oceanside and MCAS Miramar, the annual Miramar Airshow, Veterans Parade, and more. We provide for our veteran, retired and Wounded Warrior communities by featuring articles relating to their special needs.

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Page 4: Feb 15, 2011

Page 4 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

REAGAN, continued on next page

COMMENTARY By Cal Thomas I MP

On the centenary of Ronald Reagan’s birth, I pause for another historic event: agreement with President Obama, who says of his predecessor in USA Today, “Ronald Wilson Reagan was a believer... he recognized that each of us has the power — as individuals and as a nation — to shape our own destiny. He had faith in the American promise; in the importance of reaffirming values like hard work and personal responsibility; and in his own unique ability to inspire others to greatness.”

Precisely!

I suspect Reagan would be embarrassed by the attempts to elevate him to political sainthood. Even conservatives who now long for another Reagan were sometimes critical of him during his presidency and of those around him they believed were holding him back. “Let Reagan be Reagan,” they cried, as if he wasn’t who he was.

What made Reagan a great president was that he understood America and his countrymen better than any politician of his time, or perhaps any time. He saw that the greatness of the country is not

found in Washington, no matter which party or personality is in power. Rather, it is to be found in the people. Reagan awakened that dormant truth from hibernation.

Ronald Reagan didn’t need to be president to complete himself as a man. He knew who he was before seeking the job. Self-awareness is an essential quality in a leader if he or she is to avoid the siren call of narcissism and the temptations that go with the preoccupation about “legacy.”

Reagan awakened in many

Americans the belief that no matter what the challenge, Americans can meet it. His opponents mocked him for what they regarded as an “old-fashioned” concept. In a time of growing dependency on government, based on the fallacy that we can’t do much on our own (and if we do we must be punished with higher taxes and more regulation), such a notion was offensive to the dominant political culture. Reagan tapped into a principle that is as much a part of our DNA as motherhood and the American flag.

Reagan’s “vision for America” mirrored our vision of ourselves: strong internationally, economically sound at home. He restored our self-confidence at a time when his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, was suggesting America had seen its best days and we should trim our expectations and become “realists.”

Reagan, the eternal optimist, even after discovering he had Alzheimer’s disease, was always thinking about the future. Bill Clinton made the future his theme when he adopted Fleetwood Mac’s “Don’t Stop (Thinking About Tomorrow)” as his 1992 campaign song. After reading a book about Reagan, President Obama tried to channel him in his State of the Union address. It fell flat.

Trying to be Reagan without the substance didn’t fully succeed with Clinton either because of his self-absorption, manifested in the sex scandals. It is even less likely to succeed with Obama because his big government philosophy is the antithesis of Reaganism. A theme must have more than a melody. It must be in harmony with America. Reagan’s was. Obama sings his off-key.

A Google search for Reaganisms finds scores of little phrases that touched principles handed down by previous generations of Americans. These aphorisms were born of Reagan’s own experiences with FDR Democrats and the notion that the bigger government gets, the fewer liberties we enjoy.

Here are just three: “We have a deficit, not because the government taxes too little, but because it spends too much;” “Above all, we must realize

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*Offer valid on purchase agreements for to-be built homes accepted by Centex Homes from 01/10/2011 through 03/31/2011 in this community, and close of escrow must be on or before 09/30/11. Offer is limited to the standard items and features included by Centex Homes in its standard entertainment package, and no substitutions allowed. Approximate retail value of entertainment package is $7,299. This incentive may affect the amount of loan for which a buyer may be eligible, check with your lender for details. In lieu of entertainment package, buyer may receive a credit at closing of up to $7,299 that may be used either toward closing costs or prepaids. If buyer chooses the closing cost credit and participates in the Preferred Buyer Rewards Program with fi nancing through Pulte Mortgage LLC, they will receive a credit at closing in an amount that is up to 3% of the purchase price of the home for payment of approved closing costs and prepaids. Total credit for closing costs and prepaids cannot exceed the lesser of $7,299 or 6% of the purchase price. Any unused amount of either of these credits is the property of Centex Homes and may not be applied to purchase price. All loans subject to underwriting and loan qualifi cation of the lender. Rates, terms and conditions subject to change without notice. Pulte Mortgage LLC is an Equal Opportunity Lender licensed by the Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act. NMLS Entity #1791. Incentive offered may not be redeemed for cash or equivalent. Entertainment package include models and manufacturers shown, but Centex Homes reserves the right to change or modify the manufacturers, products and/or models included at any time. Prices listed are base prices, do not include lot premiums or options, and are subject to change without notice. Square footages shown are approximate. Homeowner association fees are required.**The home buyer tax credit was available for qualifi ed purchases with a binding sales contract in place on or before April 30, 2010 and closed by September 30, 2010. However, for qualifi ed service members who were on a period of offi cial extended duty outside the United States for at least 90 days after 2008 and before May 1, 2010, these dates are extended. For these home buyers, the tax credit applies to sales with a binding sales contract in place on or before April 30, 2011 and closed by June 30, 2011. The extension of time that these credits may be available is based upon dates of “offi cial extended duty” and may not be available in all circumstances. Federal tax credit of up to $8,000 available to qualifi ed fi rst-time homebuyers. Federal tax credit of up to $6,500 available to qualifi ed current homeowners who are purchasing a new principal residence and have owned and resided in a

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Page 5: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 5

READERS I MP

Letters to Military Press

We welcome your comments, critique and opinions. Send to: [email protected]

Publisher Richard T. Matz

Editor / Design Trevor Watson

Customer Service Manager Carol Williams

Advertising Manager Valerie Swaine

Graphic Design / Sports Editor Dayna Gomez

Graphic Design / Web Manager Sandie PowersAccount Representatives:

Michelle Hull, Trina Estes, James Wyatt, Stephanie Martinez,

Chelsea Provatas, Mike Miller

Military Press Newspaper

9715 carroll centre road, suite 104 san diego, ca 92126 Tel 858.537.2280 www.militarypress.com

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Respectfully, DanielPS. My wife sends her thanks as well.

Dear Sirs,I appreciated the Naval Aviation issue (Feb. 1, 2011) and most of the stories,

especially on Bataan and on the disabled Marine hero, John Jones, who is a great inspiration to every citizen.

I read of the suggestion that General Petraeus be awarded a 5th star. For of all, as a historian, I see no reason at all for this move. With the exception of General Pershing, who was designated General of the Armies, and who did not wear more than 4 stars, all of the others were World War II generals and Admiral Nimitz. This practice should end with those who were in World War II. If it continues, it becomes a political football.

Your article saying DADT cost money was absurd. The abolition of DADT will cost infinitely more in terms of lost enlistments degradation, destruction of morals, and conflicts that will grow as the years go by. Obama paid off his crowd, but the costs to the country will multiply in quantum leaps.

Concerning your two-page spread on Capone and the St. Valentine’s Day massacre — I, as an Italian American, am tired of this garbage. The Hollywood-New York axis of phony entertainers has given us enough of this trash. Instead of Capone, give us a story about MSgt. John Basilone, USMC, the hero who received the Congressional Medal of Honor and the Navy Cross, and who died in battle after he returned to combat. John Basilone represents Italians, not the hood Capone. We are fed up with this stuff being thrown in our faces, especially when the New York-Hollywood entertainment industry is dominated by the epicene.

By and large, MP does a really great job. — From Michael Suozzi, Ph.D.

that no arsenal, or no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women. It is a weapon our adversaries in today’s world do not have;” “...there are great advantages to being elected president. The day after I was elected, I had my high school grades classified Top Secret.” Self-deprecation and humility rested comfortably on Reagan’s broad shoulders.

Reagan didn’t promise to do great things for us. He showed us that great things came from within us. Modern Republicans would do well to remind themselves that America’s greatness doesn’t lie within politicians, but within each of its citizens. That is Reagan’s legacy.

On The Cover – Portrait of John P. Jones © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders (www.greenfield-sanders.com)Greenfield-Sanders’ “Injured Soldiers and Marines” portrait exhibition is currently on view at : Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Tx. dbhbg.com

REAGAN, continued on next page

Page 6: Feb 15, 2011

Page 6 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

MILITARY NEWS I MPMILITARY NEWS I MP

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To learn more, visit http://turbotax.in-tuit.com/intuitempowers/

Back Out to SeaU.S. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Daniel

Rawson kisses his daughter Giana Lee Rawson before saying goodbye to his family while on the pier in front of the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan,

Feb. 2, 2011. With the USS Carl Vinson already deployed and the USS Nimitz

undergoing repairs, there will be no carriers at NAS North Island for a while. But the USS John Stennis is scheduled

to arrive in time for the 100th anniversary of Naval Aviation at Coronado on Feb 12. Carrier Air Wing 14, which includes eight

Navy and Marine air squadrons — from jet fighters to anti-submarine helicopters

— will also join the Reagan. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer

3rd Class Kyle Carlstrom

To support National Earned Income Tax Credit Awareness Day, Intuit Inc. is committed to helping more than 1 mil-lion low- to moderate-income ta More than 20,000 veterans, active duty troops and reservists who took out special gov-ernment-backed mortgages lost their homes last year. This is the highest num-ber since 2003.

The housing crisis has hit military families particularly hard because of transfers and the loss of civilian jobs left behind by reservists.

Loans from private banks that are guaranteed by Veterans Affairs have his-torically outperformed other categories

Many Service Personnel FacedForeclosure in 2010

of mortgages, according to the Mort-gage Bankers Association of America. Through programs that include mort-gage counselors, the VA helped 66,000 families avoid foreclosure last year, says Mike Frueh, VA assistant director for loan and property management. “The 20,000 could have been much higher without that help,” Frueh said. xpay-ers preprae and file their taxes for free. The program is available to active duty military with an adjusted gross income of $58,000 or less or who have an ad-justed gross income of $31,000 or less. To learn more, visit http://turbotax.intuit.com/intuitempowers/

Soldiers in four-wheel drive vehicles wait as bundles of fuel are air delivered by a C-17 Globemaster III to Forward Operating Base Waza K’wah in Paktika province, Afghanistan, on Jan. 30, 2011. The soldiers are assigned to the 101st Airborne Division’s 4th Brigade Combat Team. DoD photo by the U.S. Army.

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Page 8: Feb 15, 2011

Page 8 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

VETS NEWS I MP

The Vets ResourceVA Homeless Veterans Program

619-400-5167Women Veterans Coordinator

858-642-3676Iraq/ Afghanistan Transition

Coordinator858-642-3593

Suicide Prevention Line800-273-8255

NAMI (S.D.’s Voice on Mental Health)

www.namisandiego.org

“Not all wounds are visible.”

Community:Semper FI

760-519-6984Salute America’s Heroes

951-324-4001Hope for the Warriors

877-246-7349VA Financial Assistance

877-827-3702Hope Now

888-995-4673USA together

[email protected] Mangement Counseling

866-889-9347Nice Guys Of San Diego

858-509-2953Marine Corps League

858-353-4687Army One Source

760-220-8408Heroes to Hometown

619-791-6694Fleet and Family Services

619-556-9866Soldiers Angels858-245-3843

Wounded Warrior Program619-532-9176

Access to Independence619-293-3500

Jobs:Calif. Dept. of Rehabilitation

619-426-3675Calif. Employment Development

619-266-4258County of SD Veterans Service

619-531-4545Dept. of Veterans Affairs Educ.

800-827-1000Club Vet Veterans Support

Service619-449-5513

Regional Office Human Resources

619-400-5403VA Health System Human Res.

858-552-8585 -x7342Veterans Employment Coordination Service

858-641-3807San Diego Sheriff

858-974-2000

Secret VA benefits for seniorsThis is the third in a series of “secrets” revealed by author Victoria L. Collier, JD, in her book

“47 Secret Veterans’ Benefits for Seniors, Benefits You Have Earned... but Don’t Know About”

Trained attorneys who know VA laws and who are accredited by the VA can assist you in preserving your excess resources while still being awarded the pension.

For example, knowing the difference between what the VA counts as part of your net worth and what the VA excludes can make a big difference. One of my clients, Sarah, had a bank account with $120,000 in it. Sarah assumed she was not eligible for any benefits. However, she did not know one important fact — the VA is supposed to reduce her net worth by subtracting out the value of assets that are co-owned by another person who does not live with her. Since Sarah’s daughter, Jodi, and her son, Jason, were both co-owners on the bank account, Sarah’s portion was only one-third of $120,000, or $40,000. This is well below the $80,000 guideline and assuming Sarah’s age analysis does not bar her eligibility, she should be awarded the pension.

There are many other laws like the ones above that the VA is not going

to tell a claimant about. And the laws change regularly. Therefore, if you think you might be eligible for VA benefits, or COULD be eligible for benefits, it is incumbent upon you to seek out a competent elder care attorney who is accredited by the VA. The attorney will have YOUR best interest in mind when devising a specific plan based on your situation. Everyone’s asset situation, health care situation, and family circumstances are different. The above is just one “tool” in the toolbox that competent attorneys are familiar with when creating an asset preservation plan for you. Preserving the assets you have while also obtaining the VA benefit will provide you the flexibility to live the quality of life you deserve while also getting the level of care you need.

Medical Qualifications for Improved

PensionNow that you understand how to

qualify for the VA pension financially — by meeting the income and asset requirements — it is important for you to understand how to qualify medically. Each level of Improved Pension requires different levels of medical need.

Low Income PensionLow income pension is the basic

level of Improved Pension. This benefit is the equivalent of Social Security’s Supplemental Security Income (SSI). Veterans who are under the age of 65, disabled to the extent that they are unemployable, cannot maintain gainful employment, and it is not expected that their condition will improve, may receive low income pension from the VA. The veteran must prove his or her disability. If the veteran ha been deemed disabled by Social Security, this determination can be used as presumptive evidence to the VA. The VA may, however, require the veteran to have a medical examination by a VA physician.

To purchase this book, contact Victoria Collier, Attorney, at 160 Clairemont Ave., Suite 440, Decatur, GA 30030, www.elderlaw georgia.com.

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Page 9: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 9

VETS NEWS I MP

Group Looking for “Rosies”The American Rosie the Riveter Association membership is collecting names and

stories from women who worked or volunteered during WWII by riveting planes, welding ships, making parachutes or as clerical workers, assembly line workers and entertainers — doing what was needed for the war effort.

Call 888-557-6743 or email [email protected] to have Rosies included in the national archives for the next generations.

Budget Cuts to Greatly Affect VeteransTalk at the governor’s office is that funding will be eliminated for a program that

helps new veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. The money to be saved, about $10 million, will be from cutting the “Welcome Home” program. The program was created to help connect veterans with the federal benefits they are entitled to. There’s a lot of confusion as to what benefits they are eligible for and what paperwork needs to be submitted to get those benefits.

Without this program, federal dollars that veterans are entitled to will not flow into San Diego, affecting the economy. It is estimated that for every $100 spent helping veterans obtain deserved benefits garners about $100 in federal money.

Veterans to MeetThe Veterans Association of North County will meet at 10:30 a.m. Saturday,

Feb. 19 at the Oceanside Senior Center, 455 Country Club Lane. The organization was established to provide a meeting hall and one-stop resource center for military veterans and their families to be connected to resources; aid and assistance; and social/patriotic functions. Call 760-967-7254 or 760-730-5291 or visit www.vancnorthcounty.org .

Drivers Needed to Help VeteransThe Disabled American Veterans organization is seeking volunteer drivers to take

veterans from their homes in coastal North County to doctors’ appointments at the VA Hospital in La Jolla. Volunteers are needed one day a week for six to eight hours. A van will be provided for transportation. The DAV is at 3350 La Jolla Village Drive in San Diego. Call 858-552-7470.

Concert Serves to Thank VeteransThe Valentines 4 Veterans concert with music legends Florence La Rue and the

5th Dimension will be held at 2 p.m. Feb. 13 at the Balboa Theater, 868 Fourth Ave., in the Gaslamp District. Veterans, their families and the community are invited to this free event. Reservations: 858-642-3622 or visit sandiego.va.gov.

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Page 10: Feb 15, 2011

Page 10 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

Theodore Roosevelt’s ideas on Immigrants and being an American in 1907

“In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person’s becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American...

There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn’t an American at all.

We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language.

And we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.”h

— Theodore Roosevelt 1907

COMMENTARY & STORIES THAT CAME ACROSS OUR DESK I MP

The opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by the various authors and forum participants in this publication do not necessarily reflect the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints of the Military Press. We invite you into a discourse, and would like to hear your thoughts.email: [email protected]@militarypress.com

By AARON EDWARDS, Associated Press

LONDON — The BBC has apologized to Mexico’s ambassador for remarks on its “Top Gear” program that described Mexicans as lazy and oafish.

The BBC wrote to Ambassador Eduardo Medina-Mora Icaza on Thursday, saying that national stereotyping is part of British humor — and that the presenters did not intend to be vindictive.

“Our own comedians make jokes about the British being terrible cooks and terrible romantics, and we in turn make jokes about the Italians being disorganized and over dramatic; the French being arrogant and the Germans being over organized,” the statement read. “We are sorry if we have offended some people, but jokes centered on national stereotyping are a part of ‘Top Gear’s’ humor.”

The remarks came in a segment in which presenter Richard Hammond claimed that cars imitate national characteristics.

“Mexican cars are just going to be a lazy, feckless, flatulent, oaf with a mustache leaning against a fence asleep looking at a cactus with a blanket with a hole in the middle on as a coat,” he said. Presenter James May mocked Mexican food, while Jeremy Clarkson suggested the ambassador would be too busy sleeping to register his outrage.

The ambassador in turn, wrote to the BBC earlier this week, complaining about the “bigotry and ignorance,” of the presenters.

BBC Sorry for Anti-Mexican Remarks on ‘Top Gear’

The BBC received thousands of other complaints about the anti-Mexican comments, particularly from people outside of Britain.

Hammond, Clarkson and May are known for frequent and irreverent quips The BBC has fielded complaints in the past after Clarkson made a joke linking truck drivers with prostitute murders and described former Prime Minister Gordon Brown as a “oneh-eyed Scottish idiot.”

The show’s mix of outlandish jokes and auto worship has made “Top Gear” a British institution, broadcast in more than 100 countries. More than 6 million viewers saw the episode in question.

Page 11: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 11

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A Speech Every American High School Principal Should Give To the students and faculty of our high school:

I am your new principal, and honored to be so. There is no greater calling than to teach young people.

I would like to apprise you of some important changes coming to our school. I am making these changes because I am convinced that most of the ideas that have dominated public education in America have worked against you, against your teachers and against our country.

First, this school will no longer honor race or ethnicity. I could not care less if your racial makeup is black, brown, red, yellow or white. I could not care less if your origins are African, Latin American, Asian or European, or if your ancestors arrived here on the Mayflower or on slave ships. The only identity I care about, the only one this school will recognize, is your individual identity — your character, your scholarship, your humanity. And the only national identity this school will care about is American. This is an American public school, and American public schools were created to make better Americans. If you wish to affirm an ethnic, racial or religious identity through school, you will have to go elsewhere. We will end all ethnicity, race and non-American nationality-based celebrations. They undermine the motto of America, one of its three central values — e pluribus Unum, “from many, one.” And this school will be guided by America’s values. This includes all after-school clubs. I will not authorize clubs that divide students based on any identities. This includes race, language, religion, sexual orientation or whatever else may become in vogue in a society divided by political correctness.

Your clubs will be based on interests and passions, not blood, ethnic, racial or other physically defined ties. Those clubs just cultivate narcissism — an unhealthy preoccupation with the self — while the purpose of education is to get you to think beyond yourself. So we will have clubs that transport you to the wonders and glories of art, music, astronomy, languages you do not already speak, carpentry and more. If the only extracurricular activities you can imagine being interested in are those based on ethnic, racial or sexual identity, that means that little outside of yourself really interests you.

Second, I am uninterested in whether English is your native language. My only interest in terms of language is that you leave this school speaking and writing English as fluently as possible. The English language has united America’s citizens for over 200 years, and it will unite us at this school. It is one of the indispensable reasons this country of immigrants has always come to be one country. And if you leave this school without excellent English language skills, I would be remiss in my duty to ensure that you will be prepared to successfully compete in the American job market. We will learn other languages here — it is deplorable that most Americans only speak English --but if you want classes taught in your native language rather than in English, this is not your school.

Third, because I regard learning as a sacred endeavor, everything in this

COMMENTARY By Dennis Prager I MP

school will reflect learning’s elevated status. This means, among other things, that you and your teachers will dress accordingly. Many people in our society dress more formally for Hollywood events than for church or school. These people have their priorities backward. Therefore, there will be a formal dress code at this school.

Fourth, no obscene language will be tolerated anywhere on this school’s property — whether in class, in the hallways or at athletic events. If you can’t speak without using the f-word, you can’t speak. By obscene language I mean the words banned by the Federal Communications Commission, plus epithets such as “Nigger,” even when used by one black student to address another black, or “bitch,” even when

addressed by a girl to a girlfriend. It is my intent that by the time you leave this school, you will be among the few your age to instinctively distinguish between the elevated and the degraded, the holy and the obscene.

Fifth, we will end all self-esteem programs. In this school, self-esteem will be attained in only one way — the way people attained it until decided otherwise a generation ago — by earning it. One immediate consequence is that there will be one valedictorian, not eight.

Sixth, and last, I am reorienting the school toward academics and away from politics and propaganda. No more time will be devoted to scaring you about smoking and caffeine, or terrifying you about sexual harassment

or global warming. No more semesters will be devoted to condom wearing and teaching you to regard sexual relations as only or primarily a health issue. There will be no more attempts to convince you that you are a victim because you are not white, or not male, or not heterosexual or not Christian. We will have failed if any one of you graduates this school and does not consider him or herself inordinately lucky — to be alive and to be an American.

Now, please stand and join me in the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag of our country. As many of you do not know the words, your teachers will hand them out to you.

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Page 12 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

COMMENTARY I MP

I always thought they had it hard in those days...Little known tidbit of Naval history

The USS Constitution (Old Ironsides), as a combat vessel, carried 48,600 gallons of fresh water for her crew of 475 officers and men. This was sufficient to last six months of sustained operations at sea. She carried no evaporators (i.e. fresh water distillers).

However, let it be noted that according to her ship’s log, “On July 27, 1798, the U.S.S. Constitution sailed from Boston with a full complement of 475 officers and men, 48,600 gallons of fresh water, 7,400 cannon shot, 11,600 pounds of black powder and 79,400 gallons of rum.”

Her mission: “To destroy and harass English shipping.”Making Jamaica on 6 October, she took on 826 pounds of flour and 68,300 gallons of

rum.Then she headed for the Azores, arriving there November 12. She provisioned with 550

pounds of beef and 64,300 gallons of Portuguese wine.On November 18, she set sail for England . In the ensuing days she defeated five British

men-of-war and captured and scuttled 12 English merchant ships, salvaging only the rum aboard each.

By January 26, her powder and shot were exhausted. Nevertheless, although unarmed she made a night raid up the Firth of Clyde in Scotland . Her landing party captured a whisky distillery and transferred 40,000 gallons of single malt Scotch aboard by dawn. Then she headed home.

A whole new meaning to yo ho ho and a bottle of rum

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Page 13: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 13

“Where angels and Marines fear to tread,

there you’ll find a Corpsman dead.”

This was a dying Marine’s tribute to his corpsman.

To combat Marines, there are three kinds of doctors---corpsman, Corps-man, and CORPSMAN.

In time of disparity they look left and look right as they shout “Doc, can you fix me?” or “Doc, man down!” I’m sure those words have been heard many times over by HM2 (FMF) Tyler T. Burdick, Hos-pital Corpsman 2nd Class Unit: 3rd Battalion 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Di-vision, a four-year Navy vet. Tyler comes from a family of doctors. His in-tention was to enlist into the Marine Corps until he learned that the medi-cal side of the military is the Navy.

Tyler was nearing the end of his third deployment. He was in Helmand Province Afghanistan, the largest opium-producing region in the world. The terrain is mountains of dirt, sand, a river and fields of poppies in bloom. It is known to be a Taliban stronghold.

With one week left before their turn over on July 22, 2010, Tyler, along with one other corpsman, a gunner and driver, were conducting road mounted operations. The vehicle was a heavily armored and very reliable. Locals were yelling and warning them of bombs in the roads ahead. Usually this was a means to coax the soldiers from their vehicles to have open opportunity to shoot. Not this day. Their vehicle hit a bomb that went off right under Ty-ler’s seat. The entire truck was lifted into the air, crashing back down into the crater created by the explosion. Three of the four remained conscious through the entire event. The driver had head injuries, broken foot and a sprained ankle. The gunner had gashed his head into his machine gun. Tyler, being directly over the impact, had both feet ripped open. His ankles shattered. The pictures showed black looking holes in the bottom of his feet. The soft tissue had all been torn away Considering every nerve ends in the foot, the pain would have had to be horrific. He walks around now with rods stabilizing his legs.

He has an incredible outlook and praises all those whose injuries are far worse for their resilient attitudes. He has been so very touched by the outpouring of love and graciousness from our communities. He knows his country is grateful and proud. He mentions a new friend from Ventura County, Gary Hensley who is a wood carver. Gary invited Tyler to his home for dinner and to present him with a specially carved cane with incredible detail. Tyler has been awarded the Purple Heart and was visited by all the top commanders, which meant the world to him. His smile is awesome and so inspiring. I hope we all take something from these stories of these outstanding service men and women.

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COMBAT VETERANS FEATURE I MP

Marine Still Giving For Vet BrothersChristopher Lawrence,

24-years-old and eloquently spo-ken, is an Iraq Combat veteran who served with the 2nd Battalion 4th Marines, 5th Marine Regiment. He deployed to Iraq with the 3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion in 2007, where he received a Purple Heart. He retired from the Marine Corps in 2009 after five years of service and the rank of Sergeant. He joined the Warrior Traditions team in April of 2010.

The skies on the day Christo-pher was injured were not unlike the beautiful sunny Southern Cali-fornia skies today. The normally 120 degree heat had not risen much above 90; in Iraq terms... a perfect day. He marveled at the good fortune of it while brushing his teeth that morning, only mildly curious as to why the two medal-lions he wore daily had just broken free from their chain.

Soon after getting squared away and ready for the day, Chris-topher was carrying the unit’s radio (he called it a “10-foot shoot me sign”) and crossing a foot bridge from Alus Island in the Anbar Prov-ince back toward the mainland. That’s when he heard the click which would change his life life forever. A bomb detonated under his feet throwing him as high as the palm trees lining the Euphrates River be-low. He didn’t wake up until a week later.

He credits everything from God to the helicopters that just happened to be patrolling his area, with being alive today. The doctors who performed his surgeries had a lot of work to do. Chris-topher’s injuries were horrific. One leg was broken to pieces, which was better than the other one that had been virtu-ally liquified. Christopher still had all his

limbs up to five months after the blast, but decided that his mobility was more important than keeping his leg. He now has a metal prosthesis and enjoys run-ning and biking.

Christopher works for Veterans Vil-lage of San Diego (VVSD) as an outreach specialist. He knows from experience how important it is to reach out to tran-sitioning combat veterans. Christopher has experienced himself the addictive nature of the pain medication the injured

are prescribed. Fortunately for him, there was someone to talk to about it. When he was having flashbacks that kept him awake night after night, he had someone to talk to. And that’s who Christopher wants to be for his fellow Marines.

The VVSD provides a confiden-tial, off-base support group called Warrior Traditions. The North County location where Christo-pher works offers group on Mon-day and Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m.. Christopher leads the meet-ing along with a licensed clinician who is also a combat veteran. OIF/OEF service members can come in, enjoy some food (mainly pizza I understand), camaraderie, and maybe see that they can reach out for help in a safe environment.

Christopher’s message to any-one who hasn’t been in a combat situation is to not condemn the be-havior of combat vets until you first try to get them help. When your loved one comes back from a com-bat situation, they aren’t the same person as when they left. The non-characteristic behavior needs to be addressed.

When asked what are the obsta-cles to combat vets getting help, he said the first one is the Corps itself. Some combat veterans stay in and keep deploying because

it gives their wounds a purpose. They mask the pain that someday will have to go somewhere. The other obstacle is the Marine himself not dealing with the pain, maybe by abusing drugs and/or alcohol, or resorting to suicide.

Christopher did find out later from a friar visiting from the local monastery in Bethesda — Brother John — that when blessing medals fall off, it’s the saints putting their blessing on you.

Page 14: Feb 15, 2011

Page 14 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

COVER FEATURE I MP

By Nicolaus Mills, Dissent Magazine

When we think of photographs from the Second World War, we think of Robert Capa’s D-Day pictures of American infantrymen struggling to

get ashore at Normandy. When we think of Vietnam War photographs, we think of Larry Burrows’s pictures of U. S. Marines bogged down in the mud and dense growth of the Vietnam highlands. Now comes Iraq, and this time the photographs that best capture the war are the pictures by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders.

Greenfield-Sanders’s Iraq photographs are already well known. They were made to accompany the HBO documentary, Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq, which James Gandolfini, the star of the Sopranos, produced. The documentary revolved around interviews that Gandolfini conducted with ten wounded soldiers, who talked about the Iraq war and their memories of “alive day,” the day they narrowly escaped being killed.

In contrast to Capa and Burrows, who made their marks as combat photographers, Greenfield-Sanders owes his reputation to portrait photography. Painters, fashion models, even porn stars have been the subjects of his books, and in “Alive Day Memories,” he brings his portrait skills to bear in the thirteen 16” x 20” photos that take up a room of their own at the Steven Kasher Gallery.

When once asked who is his favorite photographer was, Greenfield-Sanders answered that it was Rembrandt. His reply was a joke, but the joke captures the spirit of his work. He is out to reveal the inner life of his subjects. For Greenfield-Sanders, this means giving his subjects the freedom to appear as who they think they are. Unlike other portrait artists, Greenfield-Sanders does not want to surprise his subjects and catch them in a moment that reveals something they would rather conceal.

Invariably Greenfield

Sanders’s subjects stare directly into his camera and make eye contact with the viewer in a frame free from distractions. The approach is one that works particularly well with such established figures from the art world as the painters Robert Rauschenberg and Roy Lichtenstein, but it also works with the porn stars Greenfield-Sanders photographed for his book XXX. The porn stars in XXX are never objectified by Greenfield-Sanders’s lens. In his pictures, they are vulnerable in their nakedness but neither coy nor seductive. They stare at, rather than away from, the viewer, making it, in turn, impossible to look only at their bodies.

This same preoccupation with dignity is central to Greenfield-Sanders’s portraits of wounded Iraq War veterans. In a photo that Greenfield-Sanders has said is his favorite, Dawn Halfaker, a West Point graduate and star basketball player, stands before the viewer holding the prosthesis for her missing right arm. John Jones, a decorated Marine, sits dressed in his uniform from the waist up, but from the waist down he is wearing shorts that display the two robotic legs he must now use. And in what is, in many ways, the most disturbing of all Greenfield-Sanders’s portraits, Mike Jernigan, another Marine,

appears in a close up that shows his left eye socket empty and his right eye socket with a plastic eye studded with the diamonds from the wedding ring his wife gave back to him when they divorced after his return from Iraq.

In none of Greenfield-Sanders’s Iraq portraits—all except for John Jones’s portrait done against a black background—do his subjects avoid contact with the viewer. Their relaxed postures suggest they have begun to come to terms with what has happened to them. But for the viewer the photographs are still painful. There is a before-and-after narrative implicit to them. They leave no doubt about the costs of the Iraq War or why the president

has gone to such lengths to avoid being pictured with the wounded.

“Alive Day Memories” is no substitute for the political analysis of the Iraq War found in George Packer’s The Assasins’ Gate and Thomas Ricks’s Fiasco, nor is it an alternative to Dan Baum’s brilliant reportage on the wounded in his 2004 New Yorker article, “The Casualty.” Still, when it comes to arguing that the time has come to bring the Iraq War to a close, nobody has made the case in a way more likely to convince the undecided than Greenfield-Sanders. His visual politics forecloses debate.

At the end of the Second World War our image of the wounded vet was epitomized by Harold Russell, a disabled vet, who played the navy double amputee Homer Parrish in William Wyler’s Academy Award-winning 1946 film, The Best Years of Our Lives. While in the service, Russell lost both his hands in a demolition accident, and early in The Best Years of Our Lives, in the role of Homer Parrish, he demonstrates that he can cope with his accident by lighting a cigarette with the hooks that substitute for his lost fingers. His worry is that others, particularly his girlfriend Wilma, will not see him as whole.

Bringing Home Iraq

DANIELLE GREEN-BYRD, Specialist, U.S. ArmyDAWN HALFAKER, First Lt., U.S. Army

CRYSTAL DAVIS, Specialist, U.S. Army

JAKE SCHICK, Marine Corporal

SUE DOWNES, Specialist, U.S. Army

Page 15: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 15

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ portraits are in the collections of numerous museums. In 2004, seven hundred of his art world portraits were accepted into the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern Art and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

In 1997, Greenfield-Sanders produced and directed Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart, a feature documentary about the legendary rock musician. The film aired in April 1998 on the PBS Series ‘American Masters’ and premiered in the US at The Sundance Film Festival and in Europe at The Berlin Film Festival. Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart screened at over 50 film festivals worldwide and won a Grammy Award.

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ published books include: The Black List (Atria 2008), Movie Stars (Skira 2007), Face to Face (Skira 2006), Look (Powerhouse 2006), XXX (Bulfinch 2005), Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, (ACS Editori 2001), Timothy Greenfield-Sanders (Mazzoli 2000), Art World, (Fotofolio 1999).

Greenfield-Sanders’ directed and produced in 2004 the documentary Thinking XXX, a film about the making of his XXX book. It aired on HBO in 2004. The project included a soundtrack CD, a DVD and a traveling portrait exhibition.

In 2005, Timothy Greenfield-Sanders was profiled on the

American T.V. show, “60 Minutes.” From 2008-2010 he produced and directed The Black List: Volume 1,

Volume 2 and Volume 3, which aired on HBO. The project also included a book, a DVD and exhibitions of his portraits at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, The Brooklyn Museum, The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, and the Paley Museums in Los Angeles and New York.

Greenfield-Sanders’ is a contributing photographer at Vanity Fair Magazine.

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders was born in Miami Beach, Florida. He received a B.A. in Art History from Columbia University and his Master’s Degree in film from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.

www.Greenfield-Sanders.com

The Best Years of Our Lives ends happily. Homer marries Wilma and is able to put the Second World War behind him. In Greenfield-Sanders’s portraits, we have no such assurances about the future. His vets appear every bit as resilient as Harold Russell was more than sixty years ago, but the jury is still out on their long-term recovery from a war that has left so many who fought it, as well as the country, filled with second thoughts.

Nicolaus Mills is professor of American Studies at Sarah Lawrence College and author of the forthcoming Winning the Peace: The Marshall Plan and America’s Coming of Age as a Superpower (Wiley).

Greenfield-Sanders’ “Injured Soldiers and Marines” portrait exhibition is currently on view at : Devin Borden Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston, Tx. dbhbg.com

BRYAN ANDERSON, Sergeant, U.S. ArmyMARISSA STROCK, Specialist, U.S. Army

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 15

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COMBAT VETERANS FEATURE I MP

Combat VetResources

Benefits/CompensationCA Dept. of Veterans Affairs www.

veterans.ca.govVA Claims & Benefits Rep.

8810 Rio San Diego, San Diego, CA 92108, 619-400-0070

California Disability Insurance www.edd.ca.gov/Disability/ Disability_Insurance.htmLegal Help for Veterans

http://swords-to-plowshares.org/ legalHelp

Family SupportCalifornia Family Caregiver

Support Programwww.agingh.ca.gov/programs/fam-

ily_caregiver.aspMilitary Homefront

www.militaryhomefront.dod.mil/Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society

www.nmcrs.orgVeterans of Foreign Warswww.vfwca.org/home.html

Tragedy Assistance Program for Sur-vivors (TAPS)www.taps.org/

HousingOperation Homefront

www.operationhomefront.net/SoCal/Cal-Vet Home Loans

www.cdva.ca.gov/CalVetLoans/ Default.aspx

National Coalition for Homeless Veterans

www.nchv.org/index.cfmVeterans Village of SD

www.vvsd.net

Education & TrainingEducational Resources for Vetswww.cdva.ca.gov/Resources/

Education.aspxTroops to Collegewww.cccco.edu/

EmploymentHire A Hero

www.hireahero.org/Job Opportunities for Disabled

American Veteranswww.jofdav.com/

Troops to Teacherswww.dantes.doded.mil/dantes_Web/troopstoteachers/index.asp

Hire Heroes USAwww.hireheroesusa.org/

American Heroes at Workwww.americasheroesatwork.gov/

HealthNational Center for PTSD

www.ptsd.va.gov/Naval Medical Center San Diegowww.med.navy.mil/sites/nmcsd/

Pages/default.aspxCourage to Call

Veteran-staffed 24/7 Helpline/www.mhsinc.org/courage-to-call

OtherUSMC Wounded Warrior

Regimentwww.woundedwarriorregiment.org

The United States Navy and Marine Corps have been prominent members of the San Diego Region for over 100 years. We are home to the largest con-centration of military in the world. Many do not realize that the Department Of Defense sustains more than 328,000 jobs here. We are home to more than 136,000 service members, 47,000 retir-ees and 244,000 military veterans.

The military community is our par-ents, children, brothers & sisters, co-workers, members of our churches, classmates, they are our neighbors and they are our family. Our support means the world to them. There are so many ways to show them our appreciation, our support and how proud we are of them.

If you are a business owner you may contact the local MWR, Morale Welfare Recreation De-partments, they have events throughout the year from Air Shows, Beach Bashes to 5K runs and pizza parties. There are sponsorship op-portunities ranging from $100 to $25K you may contact the following: Camp Pendleton, Cathy Monroe at 760-763-0680, Mira-mar, Melanie London 858-577-1696 and for the Navy Region Southwest, Irene Wells 619-556-7464.

I have highlighted the following or-ganizations which directly work with our community’s service members. Busi-nesses and Individuals can donate or volunteer:

• Armed Forces YMCA, Cherri.Barnswell, militaryymca.org 619-532-8156

• Wounded Warriors, Charitable Donations Liaison, 760-815-6194

• Veterans Village, vvsd.net, 619-497-0142

There are so many great organiza-tions out there helping our military. You can research them through websites and the Better Business Bureau.

To send letters of appreciation, prayers, etc., send them to:

Letters c/oMilitary Press9715 Carroll Centre Rd., Suite 104San Diego, CA 92126 If you have a preference on whom

you wish to receive your letter just note it on your address: Letters/Active Duty, Letters/Veterans, etc., and we will for-ward them to the appropriate places. We may use your letters for print and post on our new website. Sometimes one let-ter can touch thousands.

If you are an organizer, you can cre-ate any kind of fund raising activities to help our local organizations. Neighbor-hood rummage sales, car washes, spe-cial runs or walks the ideas are endless

and they will be so grateful. You can do it in honor of someone.

If you have children in school you could have their class or classes create cards; Thank you – You’re Our Hero, Val-entines or Holidays.

Invite a military service person or veteran to come and speak to your child’s class.

If you are involved with a church, have your church leader hold a special offering once a month to go to one of the organizations. Find the families with-in your church that have someone de-

ployed and see what they may need. Get your prayer warriors working for them. Are there any veterans, acknowledge them during a service. Be aware of any who may be having a hard time. Have your church leader offer time to listen to them. Have a pot-luck for a group of lo-cal veterans.

Do you make quilts? Are you in a quilt club? Make a patriotic quilt or quilts and present them to a wounded warrior, veteran or to a military family.

A group of wood carvers in Ventura County are making canes for our ampu-tees. Contact the ASYMCA and see if your group can contribute, too.

Employers: Host a special luncheon for all your veterans. Recognize their service to your company & your country. Do you have a web site? Post a flag, em-blem of a certain service branch, place links to websites that honor our military.

Business Owners: Hang a sign and invite veterans and military in for a free cup of coffee, or a special discount.

If you see a military member in the same restaurant as you, send them a drink, pay for their desserts or pay for their meal. You can always just stop by their table and say thank you for their service.

Teach your children a patriotic song, like America the Beautiful or the Star Spangled Banner. Instill patriotism early.

Fly your flag 365 days a year. Don’t’ forget to lower it when appropriate and follow the general rules.

Wear a flag on your coat, wear pa-triotic clothes or put supporting bumper

stickers on your vehicles.Vote. Don’t let them sacrifice for

naught. Be a good citizen and do your part to protect the freedoms our service-people have fought and died for.

Spot a DoD sticker on a car? Leave a note of thanks.

Find out which businesses in your community truly support our military and veterans — become their customer.

November is Military Family Month. By thanking the family, you thank the veteran.

For our Veterans:Take a veteran out

to eat. Tell them why you are bringing them and let them tell you their story.

Is there a disabled veteran in your neigh-borhood? Help with the raking of his leaves or mowing the lawn.

Do you bake? Make an apple pie and bring it over to a neighbor veteran.

Call them. A grandpar-ent, uncle, aunt, mother, father. Take time to call them, especially if they live far away, and find out how they are doing.

Nearly 40% of our veteran population is 65 or older. Give a veteran your phone number and ask them to call if they need help around the house. Make a note to call them once in a while to see how they are.

Recognize Veteran’s Day in church.Offer to baby sit for a veteran fam-

ily. Let the husband and wife get out to-gether.

Find out how you can help with a community service project through your local VFW.

Attend a local parade or ceremony on Veteran’s Day.

Not every veteran is lucky enough to have someone at home to honor and thank them for their service.

Do you know the parent’s of a vet-eran? Thank them for raising one of America’s heroes.

In the market to hire? Seriously con-sider a veteran.

Visit a veteran’s grave. Even if you simply stand there for a moment of quiet reflection, you’re honoring their service and you’re rededication yourself to the freedoms we enjoy as a citizen of this country.

Give them a big smile as you walk by.

Call the local VA hospital and Navy Medical Center to see about volunteer opportunities.

Do a random act of kindness for a vet or their family. Remain anonymous.

Open your house on holidays to a few veterans that don’t have any family in the area. Make it a holiday none of you will forget.

To truly honor our veterans make the best of the opportunity the sacrifices of our fighting men and women have provided. Love your country with passion,

and do what you can to make it a better place.

Page 17: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 17

Naval Medical Center San Diego

How does a Marine in Iraq have an IED detonate under the bridge he’s crossing — blowing him 15 feet into the air and back — live to tell about it? With injuries including shattered limbs, head trauma, burns and severe internal bleeding, Marine Sgt. Christopher Lawrence was very blessed. He had God, his Navy Corpsman, his Marine brothers and the Navy’s medical facilities to put him back together. And together they did. The God part I get, but for the rest… how? He went from that bridge in Iraq to riding a Harley-Davidson in San Diego. It could not have happened without the Naval Medical Center San Diego (NMCSD). It has achieved national acclaim for its clinical and research programs, including refractive surgery, post-traumatic stress, and hearing and balance disorders. This facility is also recognized as an amputee center of excellence.

NMCSD is “The Pride of Navy Medicine” and is rich in history and tradition. A team of over 6,000 military and civilian professionals provides state of the art health care to the military community. “We are privileged to care for the wounded from Operations IRAQI FREEDOM and ENDURING FREEDOM, as well as Sailors and Marines preparing to deploy, their family members, and those who have served our nation in the past.

The Navy is responsible for all the medical needs of our Navy and Marine Corps active duty, retirees and their dependents. The Navy sees to our troops’ wounds as they stand by side Marines in combat and back home they help deliver the babies of our heroes, and see to the health of our elderly veterans.

For more information about NMCSD, visit www.med.navy.mil/sites/nmcsd.

Armed Services YMCA

Since 1982 Armed Services YMCA (ASYMCA) provides assistance to patients and their families at Naval Medical Center San Diego (NMCSD). ASYMCA office is easily accessible, located in the main hospital building 1-G. They have eased the stress of illnesses and injuries and contributing to the healing and wellness of thousands of active duty and to their dependents.

Medevacs that arrived to NMCSD from around the world are greeted by caring ASYMCA volunteers. Medevacs are given appreciation gifts from the community such as quilts and backpacks filled with get well cards, snacks and necessities.

Those who have served in Operation Enduring Freedom or Operation Iraqi Freedom and are currently in active treatment for illness or injury are qualified, along with their families, participate in Community Recreation Opportunities. The ASYMCA partners with the San Diego community to provide meaningful experiences such as sport fishing, ticketed events, barbecues, golfing, are just a few examples.

For more information or donations, visit them at militaryymca.org

Veterans Village of San Diego

On the battlefield, when a soldier “goes down outside the wire,” their buddies will do everything they can to save them. VVSD does the same for our veterans, giving them hope and restoring their lives.

Each year VVSD provides services to more than 2,ooo military veterans, men and women, who have served and sacrificed for our country.

“These programs set the bar and is the gold standard of veterans transitional housing,” James Nicholson, former Secretary of Veterans Affairs.

“We get more bang for our buck out of Veterans Village than anything else we do, bar none. The success rate is greater than any other program I am aware of.” Mayor Jerry Sanders, City of San Diego.

You can contact the VVSD at 619-497-0142 or by visiting their website at vvsd.net. They are located at 4141 Pacific Highway, San Diego, CA 92110.

For Warrior Traditions group sessions in San Diego for OIF/OEF combat veterans, call 619-393-2075. North County Warrior Traditions can be reached at 760-433-9033.

Wounded Warrior Battalion, CamPen

The mission of Wounded Warrior Battalion-West is to provide and facilitate assistance to wounded/injured/ill Marines, Sailors attached to or in support of Marine units, and their family members, throughout the phases of recovery.

A concept of the Wounded Warrior Battalion was placed into action during the Iraqi War when Lieutenant Colonel Tim Maxwell was wounded by schrapnel. Following hospitalization he was sent back to his unit’s baracks at Camp Lejeune, NC but his unit was still

in Iraq so like other wounded Marines he was essentially unsupervised in empty buildings. With the approval of the 2nd Marine Division Commanding General he gathered the wounded Marines into a single barracks building. Eventually it became the Wounded Warrior Battalion where they got help with their recovery, assistance with medications and appointments and advice on personal matters. A second battalion was stood-up at Camp Pendleton, CA and the two became part of the Wounded Warrior Regiment headquartered at Quantico, VA. New barracks were built for the battalion at Camp Lejune and were dedicated, “Maxwell Hall.” The Army and Air Force now have similar units.

Many Americans are proud of the Marines and Sailors of the armed forces and want to show their gratefulness for the sacrifices of these wounded warriors. The Marines and Sailors of the Wounded Warrior Battalion West are active duty

personnel and by regulation and ethics laws are not allowed to accept gifts.

If you or your organization wishes to make arrangements for donations or gift-giving, please call the Charitable Donations Liaison at 760-815-6194.

Wall Street Warfighters

Wall Street Warfighters is an organization focused on benefiting Service Disabled Veterans. Its mission is to identify, develop, and place disabled veterans in long-term professions in the financial services industry following their military service. They believe the community of veterans is a pillar of the free market, a cornerstone of the business community, and a foundation of healthy neighborhoods and households

The Wall Street Warfighters Foundation (WSWF) prepares disabled veterans for careers in the financial services industry. We are committed to identifying, training and placing those with both an interest and aptitude for

the industry. The Foundation identifies with the challenges of recently returned veterans who return home and face difficulty starting new careers. With above average wages and minimal physical requirements, we believe the financial services community is well suited to provide jobs to many returning soldiers with limiting disabilities. Unfortunately, many of those who might otherwise excel in this industry lack the requisite training, certification, familiarity or access to initiate such a career.

The Wall Street Warfighters Foundation will facilitate the necessary training and certification for disabled veterans to enter the industry.

For information, call 888-439-3935 or visit their website at wallstreetwarfighters.org.

COMBAT VETERANS FEATURE I MPCOMBAT VETERANS FEATURE I MP

Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Chris L. Stirk rises (left) and Quartermaster 2nd class Robert M. Persi (right) run through a mud pit as a fire team rush at Naval Medical Center San Diego during a Tac-tical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) field exercise course. Photo by Mass Com-munication Specialist 3rd Class Saman-tha A. Lewis.

Page 18: Feb 15, 2011

Page 18 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

SPORTS NEWS I MP

The Eastern Conference starters feature Miami's LeBron James and New York's Amar'e Stoudemire at forward, Miami's Dwyane Wade and Chicago's Derrick Rose at guard and Orlando star Dwight Howard at center.

The injured Yao Ming was voted in as the Western Conference starting center, but he will miss the game. His

replacement will be an-nounced by David Stern after the reserves are re-vealed. Los Angeles' Kobe Bryant and Chris Paul of New Orleans will be the West guards, while Den-ver's Carmelo Anthony and Oklahoma City's Kev-in Durant will be the start-ing forwards.

Kobe Bryant was the top vote-getter in the NBA All-Star balloting with 2,380,016 votes.

amar'estoudemire

derrickrose

dwighthoward

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carmeLoanthony

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2011 All-Star Weekend, Feb. 18-20Staples Center, Los Angeles

• Friday: Celebrity All-Star Game, (ESPN, 7 ET)• Rookie-Sophomore Game, (TNT, 9 ET)

• Saturday: All-Star Saturday Night, (TNT, 8 ET)• Sunday: 2011 NBA All-Star Game, (TNT, 8 ET)

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Page 19: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 19

Important information about the $3.4 billion Indian Trust Settlement

For current or former IIM account holders, Owners of land held in trust or restricted status, or their heirs

For more Information: 1-800-961-6109 www.IndianTrust.com

Legal Notice

There is a proposed Settlement in Cobell v. Salazar, a class action lawsuit about individual Indian land held in trust by the federal government. This notice is just a summary. For details, call the toll-free number or visit the website listed below.

The lawsuit claims that the federal government violated its duties by (a) mismanaging trust funds/assets, (b) improperly accounting for those funds, and (c) mismanaging trust land/assets. The trust funds include money collected from farming and grazing leases, timber sales, mining, and oil and gas production from land owned by American Indians/Alaska Natives.

If you are included in the Settlement, your rights will be affected. To object to the Settlement, to comment on it, or to exclude yourself, you should get a detailed notice at www.IndianTrust.com or by calling 1-800-961-6109.

Can I get money?There are two groups or “Classes” in the Settlement eligible for payment. Each Class includes individual IIM account holders or owners of land held in trust or restricted status who were alive on September 30, 2009.

Historical Accounting Class Members

• Had an open individual Indian Money account (“IIM”)anytime between October 25, 1994 and September 30, 2009, and

• Theaccounthadatleastonecashtransaction.

• IncludesestatesofaccountholderswhodiedasofSeptember30, 2009, if the IIM account was still open on that date.

Trust Administration Class Members

• HadanIIMaccountrecordedincurrentlyavailabledatainfederal government systems any time from approximately 1985 to September 30, 2009, or

• OwnedtrustlandorlandinrestrictedstatusasofSeptember30, 2009.

• Includesestatesof landownerswhodiedasofSeptember30, 2009 where the trust interests were in probate as of that date. This means you have asked a court to transfer ownership of the deceased landowner’s property.

An individual may be included in one or both Classes.

What does the Settlement provide?• A$1.5billionfundtopaythoseincludedintheClasses.

• A$1.9billionfundtobuysmallinterestsintrustorrestrictedland owned by many people.

• Upto$60milliontofundscholarshipstoimproveaccesstohigher education for Indian youth.

• A government commitment to reform the Indian trustmanagement and accounting system.

How much can I get?• HistoricalAccountingClassMemberswilleachget$1,000.

• TrustAdministrationClassMemberswillgetat least$500.

• Ifyouownasmallparceloflandwithmanyotherpeople,the federal government may ask you to sell it. You will be offered fair market value. If you sell your land it will be returned to tribal control.

If you believe you are a member of either Class and are not receiving IIM account statements, you will need to call the toll-free number or visit the website to register.

What are my other rights?• Ifyouwishtokeepyourrighttosuethefederalgovernment

about the claims in this Settlement, you must exclude yourself by April 20, 2011.

• IfyoustayintheSettlementyoucanobjecttoorcommenton it by April 20, 2011. The detailed notice explains how to exclude yourself or object/comment.

TheU.S.DistrictCourtfortheDistrictofColumbiawillholda hearing on June 20, 2011, to consider whether to approve the Settlement. It will also consider a request for attorneys’ fees, costs,andexpensesintheamountof$99.9million.However,Class Counsel has fee agreements that would pay them 14.75% of the funds created for the Classes, which could result in an awardof$223million.TheCourtmayawardmoreorlessthanthese amounts based on controlling law. If approved, these payments and related costs will come out of the Settlement funds available for payment to Class Members.

If you wish, you or your own lawyer may ask to appear and speak at the hearing at your own cost. For more information, call or go to the website shown below or write to Indian Trust Settlement,P.O.Box9577,Dublin,OH43017-4877.

By Cal Thomas

The turmoil in Egypt must not be seen in isolation from other events in the world. Neither is it an aberration. It is the next scene in a long-running play whose final act is the domination of the world by radical Islamists.

The Obama administration has been delusional in its belief that dictators and religious fanatics can be coddled. It has also been dangerously wrong in thinking exposure to our way of life will make them more like us. In fact, such exposure has confirmed what they have been taught: that America and the West are secularists who mock God, sexualize women and live only for the pleasures of this world.

The history of radical Islamist movements is being repeated in our time. First there is infiltration and when their numbers are large enough, domination. Next comes subjugation, followed by eradication of nonbelievers. To think things will be different this time is folly.

The Muslim Brotherhood, which was founded in 1928 by Egyptian schoolteacher, Hassan al-Banna, is egging on the protestors in Egypt. The group’s goal is to impose Islam on the world; its motto is: “Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader. Qur’an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope.” No mosque-state separation there.

Western secularists either don’t believe this, or stupidly think these beliefs can be overcome. In fact, the Muslim Brotherhood and their growing adherents, plan to overcome us and prove it daily.

“Not all Muslims are radicals.” True. “Islam is fundamentally a peaceful religion.” Also true. But the growing threat of radical Islam is real enough that we should be mindful of the exceptions, not the rule. To do otherwise dulls the senses and lulls us all into a false sense of security, which is exactly what our enemies want.

Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum, notes, “Islamists wish to repeat their success in Iran by exploiting popular unrest to take power.” That strategy worked in Russia a century ago when the communists exploited grievances against the czar to grab power. It worked in Germany when the Nazis used German humiliation following World War I to ride to power. Now it is Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Jordan and Lebanon with more to come.

In her book, “Londonistan,” Melanie Phillips writes, “we have long contracted our understanding of the extremists to the extremists.” She means that instead of pursuing a policy to defeat radical Islamists, we have welcomed them among us. They are at the Department of Justice and Homeland Security, giving “sensitivity training” to people who are supposed to be protecting us from them. They are in prisons, organizing the disaffected into “hate America” cadres. They are military chaplains and in polling organizations, shaping the way questions are asked and manipulating results to further their interests.

This isn’t “bigotry.” It is provable fact,

which the Islamists believe we will ignore.One of our many errors occurred in the ‘90s when the clueless State Department thought the Palestinian Authority

should have a democratic entity. It got behind Hamas (which the Muslim Brotherhood supports) and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as he perpetuated the mirage called the “the peace process.” After all, State must have “reasoned,” Hamas leaders speak English, attended schools in the West, understand the media and can be trusted to run AID projects. It was all wishful thinking. We now call Hamas a terrorist organization. Too late. For more background visit http://counterterrorismblog.org/.

If Egypt falls — immediately, or ultimately — to the Muslim Brotherhood, it will embolden other fanatical revolutions throughout the region and world. Then they’ll come after the big prizes: Europe, which is almost gone, and America, which still has time to save itself, if it will climb out of denial which, as the joke goes, is not just a river in Egypt.

Last week, U.S. border guards got a surprise when they discovered the radical Muslim cleric, Said Jaziri, trying to sneak into the United States across the Mexican border. They’re coming to America.

Rep. Peter King (R-NY) will soon hold hearings on the radicalization of Muslim communities in the U.S. Will he probe deeply enough? Muslim Brotherhood sympathizers will try to prevent him from doing so.

Direct all MAIL for Cal Thomas to: e-mail Cal Thomas at [email protected].

EgyptAflame

COMMENTARY I MP

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Page 20 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

There’s no limit to what a motivated Sailor can do, and Petty Officer First Class Delvon Garrett is living proof. Recently, while proudly serving as an IT1 at NCTS San Diego NMCI Detachment, he proved himself a warrior in the cage by defeating Ty Holder to become the California Amateur Mixed Martial Arts Light Heavyweight Champion. Delvon was thrilled to have his family and biggest fan, his wife Erika, there to cheer him on and celebrate the victory with him.

Delvon began training in mixed martial arts almost five years ago while looking for a way to relieve stress and get a great workout. After his first few training sessions, he knew Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) was the perfect sport

for him. Fortunately, San Diego is home to one of the premier MMA gyms in the country, Victory MMA and Fitness. Home to fighters from the UFC like Dean Lister, Jeremy Stephens, and Shannon Gugerty, the gym offers some of the best training in the world. With striking coaches like Tony Palfox and Jahnex Alviz, and grappling coaches like Elias Gallegos and Dean Lister, who all train professional fighters, it is no surprise Delvon has become exceptional in all aspects of MMA.

According to Delvon, MMA workouts are extremely engaging. Anyone who has ever ran on a treadmill, done time on an elliptical machine, or spent tedious hours doing repetitive, meaningless exercise movements knows some workouts can get boring. Delvon hasn’t seen that at all with MMA. Instead he feels that in MMA, “You never stop learning and it will always challenge you not to get complacent.”

That being said, MMA is a physical sport and some strength and conditioning must be done. Delvon is able to get that training as well at Victory MMA, where there is a variety of cardio machines, a full weight room, and a CrossFit area with six Olympic lifting platforms, pull-up bars, rings, and kettlebells.

With a 3-0 record as an amateur fighter, including two knockouts, Delvon is on pace to achieving his goal of, “Being an exciting fighter for the fans and becoming the champion of a professional organization. He won’t be on that road alone. MMA might be an individual sport, but it’s a sport filled with camaraderie. Just as in the military, hard work, together as a team, results in victory.

At Victory MMA there are no inter-service rivalries. Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines all train side-by-side to make themselves better, faster, stronger, and more skilled warriors. In fact, the gym is owned by two retired Navy SEALs who are on the mat everyday coaching, teaching techniques, or sparring in the cage.

MMA training isn’t just for fighters. Yes, Delvon is pursuing his dream of being an MMA champion, but anyone that wants to improve their health, increase their confidence, learn real techniques, and be involved in the fastest growing sport in the world should give it a try. Who knows, you might just turn out to be another Delvon Garrett.

visit: victorygyms.com

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Page 22 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

HIDDEN HISTORY By Robert Watson I MP

The romanticized story of “Custer’s Last Stand” is indelibly etched in American memory. Yet, the true story is anything but heroic. Indeed, Custer was an unlikely leader, whose ego and recklessness cost him his life and the lives of more than 200 soldiers.

George Armstrong Custer was born in Ohio in 1839 and raised by relatives in Michigan. He graduated from West Point at the bottom of his class. Later in his career, Custer was court-martialed for taking an unauthorized leave to visit his wife.

Custer graduated in 1861, the year the Civil War began, and was commissioned in the Union Army. Displaying calm in the face of fire, Custer soon commanded his own mounted unit, served under McClellan and Grant, and saw action in many important battles, including Gettysburg. Custer stayed in the Army after the war and enjoyed a growing reputation.

With flowing golden locks and bedecked in flashy uniforms and buckskin, Custer cut a dashing image. However, his chief characteristics were self-promotion, vanity, and flamboyance. Longing for fame, Custer both sought out the press and wrote about his own heroic deeds.

A decade after the Civil War, the Sioux and Cheyenne nations, angered over continued white encroachment on their lands in the Dakotas, moved off the reservation and began an armed revolt. Numerous nations gathered in Montana in a grand alliance under the celebrated chief, Sitting Bull.

Custer was sent to defeat the alliance. Eager to engage the enemy, an overconfident Custer foolishly rejected offers of additional soldiers and a suggestion to equip his command with the military’s new, formidable Gatlin

guns. On June 25, 1876, while leading some

650 men of the 7th Calvary across the plains of Montana, he

encountered what he believed to be a small Indian village near Little Big Horn.

Rather than waiting for reinforcements or bothering to determine

the strength of the enemy, Custer split his command into three groups

of roughly 200 men and ordered them to surround the village. Custer set off after some 40 braves, but was led into a trap. While attempting to escape, he was blocked by a force commanded by Crazy Horse and trapped on a desolate, high ridge. It took less than one hour for Custer’s men to be routed. The image persists of Custer, pistols blazing, standing tall next to the flag as his men fought valiantly to the bitter end. But no one knows what happened. Custer likely ordered his men

to shoot their horses and pile them like a wall for protection on the open prairie. Other evidence suggests that it was anything but a “stand.” Shell casings and bodies were strewn over a large area, indicating that many men were riding or running in panic for their lives.

Two days later, on June 27, what remained of the other two companies discovered the mutilated bodies of their comrades. Custer had been shot in the left temple and chest but accounts state that his body alone was not scalped or mutilated. Perhaps the Indians believed he was not a soldier because he wore buckskin, but history books perpetuate the belief that Custer fought so valiantly that the Indians spared his body. Either way, a shocked nation wondered how “savages” could destroy a modern army.

The incident known as “Custer’s Last Stand” became one of the most embarrassing military disasters in American history, but it ended up being the last stand for the American Indian. The grand alliance fell apart shortly after this battle and settlers and troops poured into the region after gold was discovered.

Three days after the battle, a hasty burial was arranged for Custer and his men on the site where they died. One year later, however, what was believed to be Custer’s body was exhumed and given a military funeral at West Point. Custer was 36 when he died, but he achieved his dream of national fame.

Robert Watson, Ph.D., is professor and coordinator of American Studies at Lynn University.

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The Sullivan brothers were five siblings who were all killed in action during or shortly after the sinking of the light cruiser USS Juneau (CL-52), the vessel on which they all served, on November 13, 1942, in WWII.

The Sullivans, natives of Waterloo, Iowa, were the sons of Tom and Alleta Sullivan. They were:

• George Thomas Sullivan, 27 (born December 14, 1914), Gunner’s Mate Second Class (George had been previously discharged in May 1941 as Gunner’s Mate Third Class.)

• Francis “Frank” Henry Sullivan, 26 (born February 18, 1916), Coxswain (Frank had been previously discharged in May 1941 as Seaman First Class.)

• Joseph “Joe” Eugene Sullivan, 24 (born August 28, 1918), Seaman Second Class

• Madison “Matt” Abel Sullivan, 23 (born November 8, 1919), Seaman Second Class

• Albert “Al” Leo Sullivan, 20 (born July 8, 1922), Seaman Second Class

The Sullivans enlisted on January 3, 1942 with the

stipulation that they serve together. The Navy had a policy of separating siblings, but this was not strictly enforced. George and Frank had served in the Navy before, but their brothers had not. All five were assigned to the light cruiser USS Juneau.

The Juneau participated in a number of naval engagements during the months-long Guadalcanal Campaign beginning in August 1942. Early in the morning of November 13, 1942, during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, the Juneau was struck by a Japanese torpedo and forced to withdraw. Later that day, as it was leaving the Solomon Islands’ area for the Allied rear-area base at Espiritu Santo with other surviving U.S. warships from battle, the Juneau was struck again, this time by a torpedo from Japanese submarine I-26. The torpedo likely hit the thinly-armored cruiser at or near the ammunition magazines and the ship exploded and quickly sank.

Captain Gilbert C. Hoover, commanding officer of the USS Helena and senior officer present in the battle-damaged US task force, was skeptical that anyone had survived the sinking of the Juneau and believed it would be reckless to look for survivors, thereby exposing his wounded ships to a still-lurking Japanese submarine. Therefore, he ordered his ships to continue on towards Espiritu Santo. Helena signaled a nearby US B-17 bomber on patrol to notify Allied headquarters to send aircraft or ships to search for survivors.

Approximately 100 of Juneau’s crew had survived and were left in the water. The B-17 bomber crew, unwilling to disobey orders not to break radio silence, did not pass the message about searching for survivors to their headquarters until they had landed several hours later. The crew’s report of the location of possible survivors was mixed in with other pending paperwork actions and went unnoticed for several days. It was not until days later that headquarters staff realized that a search had never been mounted and belatedly ordered aircraft to begin searching the area. In the

meantime, Juneau’s survivors, many of whom were seriously wounded, were exposed to the elements, hunger, thirst, and repeated shark attacks.

Eight days after the sinking, ten survivors were found by a PBY Catalina search aircraft and retrieved from the water. The survivors reported that Frank, Joe, and Matt died instantly, Al drowned the next day, and George survived for four or five days[1] before being driven insane with grief at the loss of his brothers, finally going over the side of the raft he occupied. He was never seen or heard from again.

Security required that the Navy not reveal the loss of the Juneau or the other ships so as not to provide information to the enemy. Letters from the Sullivan sons stopped arriving at the home and the parents grew worried.

The brothers’ parents were notified of their deaths on January 12, 1943. That morning, the boys’ father, Thomas, was preparing to go to work when three men in uniform, a lieutenant commander, a doctor and a chief petty officer, approached his front door.

“I have some news for you about your boys,” the naval officer said. “Which one?” asked Thomas. “I’m sorry,” the officer replied. “All five.”

The brothers left a sister, Genevieve. Albert was survived by a wife and son. The “Fighting Sullivan Brothers” were national heroes. President Franklin Roosevelt sent a letter of condolence to Tom and Alleta. Pope Pius XII sent a silver religious medal and rosary with his message of regret. The Iowa Senate and House adopted a formal resolution of tribute to the Sullivan brothers.

Thomas and Alleta Sullivan made speaking appearances at war plants and shipyards on behalf of the war effort.

Later, Alleta participated in the launching of a destroyer USS The Sullivans, named after her sons. The USS The Sullivans os an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer

As a direct result of the Sullivans’ deaths, the U.S. War Department adopted the Sole Survivor Policy.

HIDDEN HISTORY I MP

The Sullivan Brothers

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Page 26 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

SPORTS NEWS I MPHISTORY I MP

Billy Wilkerson - The Flamingo Founder

The myth that Bugsy Seigel was the great visionary who single-handedly created modern day Las Vegas is bull hockey. Contrary to popular belief, the Flamingo wasn’t the first casino on the Strip - though it was the first casino that used a Beverly Hill’s style, instead of the western themes of the downtown casinos and the El Rancho and Last Frontier.

The Hollywood influence, on Las Vegas, came from Billy Wilkerson and his long-time architect George Russel,(who later designed the Desert Inn).

New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker chose Billy Wilkerson to operate his NYC 1930s nightclubs.

Wilkerson, from the Jazz Age to Swing Age, was a powerful force, in American nightclub operations.

During the 1940s-’50s Wilkerson became one of Hollywood’s most influential and powerful people, being the founder and publisher of the renowned ‘Hollywood Reporter’ daily newspaper. During the 1940’s Wilkerson owned & operated LA’s (Sunset Strip) Trocadero and Ciro’s nightclubs, later taking his Hollywood inspired concept to Las Vegas.

Flamingo Founder, Billy Wilkerson (a major Hollywood starmaker for three decades) seen being visited, in his Trocadero Nightclub, by Carole Lombard and Cary Grant in the thirties. Also shown giving life advice to Frank Sinatra, in the fifties, at the Sands Casino (which was modeled after his Club La Rue Nightclub).

As the publisher of the Hollywood Reporter, the main media source for movie news, Billy Wilkerson was the virtual King of Hollywood, whose favor was courted by movie studios, producers, actors and agents alike. Wilkerson’s huge Hollywood influence on popular nightlife and on Las Vegas should never be under-valued.

Bugsy Siegel was a very minor figure compared to Wilkerson, who was in the top league of media publishers with the likes of William Randolph Hearst . Siegel was simply a short-lived hood who over-stepped his limits.

Seigel was a murderer, thief and thug with zero vision. His 41 years of life was spent killing and stealing. Meanwhile — history professors, book writers and myth spreaders give Seigel credit for all that Las Vegas is today.

Here is an excerpt from Wallace Turner’s book “Gambler’s Money”:

“Seigel irrevocably set the pattern for Las Vegas’ development as a gambling center. In a sense he was the Christopher Columbus for the Mob; he went exploring and found the New World in the desert.”

UNLV professor (Hal Rothman) likewise perpetuates the Bugsy myth by claiming Seigel to be a “visionary” — while reducing Wilkerson to being a mere “footnote in history.” All Bugsy did was steal an on-going construction project. His vision was nil, null and void. He was neither an entrepreneur nor a designer.

He never built anything, just merely stole other’s projects. What architectural vision did he ever possess? He might have changed a choice in rug pattern — for the already-designed and started Flamigo. And he might have had changed a wall to add a window. But, the Flamingo’s name, design, logo and advertising was already well-established by Wilkerson, Russel and his staff. All Bugsy did was steal the project and attempt to run it.

Ben Seigel’s only importance — in the history of Las Vegas — is that he was a colorful personality. To give sole credit to an assassinated gangster for single-handedly envisioning modern day Las Vegas is stupid. Yet, for 50 years, writers with vested interests to protect, have turned historical facts into fairy tales.

Credit can be given to Ben Seigel for somehow being the person that Tony Cornero turned his S.S. Rex Club over to in 1945. Ben Seigel also took over Wilkerson’s earlier Trocadero Club in 1938.

Then he took over the Flamingo in 1946. So, in that regard, Seigel was an excellent “take-over artist.” But to call Bugsy the “great visionary who invented modern Las Vegas?” That story is pure myth and fabrication.

The invention and design of Las Vegas did not spring full-blown from the mind of any one man (especially not Bugsy Seigel) nor from a handful of insignificant, non-designing, thug-like, mob operators.

The outdated belief that Las Vegas was “a Mafia-made town” needs to be put to rest once and for all. Las Vegas has always been a city filled with inventive pioneers, designers, publicity makers and hospitality pros. To focus on shifty casino operators, Teamster money, Bugsy, Lefty or Moe misses the true Vegas story; which is a story of design, service, artistic vision and the way those factors unfolded — for all the world to enjoy. As far as this website is concerned — the real Early Vegas story is the story of Architecture & Hospitality.

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Benjamin “Bugsy” SiegelBirth: Feb. 28, 1906Death: Jun. 20, 1947

Born Benjamin Siegelbaum in Brooklyn, New York, he was the son of Russian Jewish immigrants. He began his early criminal career extorting protection money from local pushcart merchants before moving on to more serious crimes. By the age of 21 his list of crimes had already included acts of murder, rape, drug trafficking, extortion, bootlegging, bookmaking, burglary and armed robbery. During the early 1930s he was involved in bootlegging operations in New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, and also worked as a contract killer against rival mob bosses. In 1937 he was assigned by the New York syndicate to California to develop and oversee gambling rackets in the Los Angeles area. While living in southern California, he was introduced to various Hollywood actors and directors through his close personal friend actor George Raft. Utilizing Raft’s contacts, he began extorting the motion picture studios to finance his own lavish Hollywood lifestyle. Facing murder charges in 1939 for the death of fellow gangster Harry Greenburg, a police informant, Siegel and three mob associates managed to kill two of the state’s star witnesses before the case could be brought to trial. Lacking sufficient evidence to prosecute, the state was forced to drop all charges against Siegel. In 1941

Siegel turned his attention to the small gambling community of Las Vegas, Nevada. Seeing financial opportunities in the small desert town, Siegel convinced mob heads to invest three million dollars into the building of a hotel and casino

on what is now the famous Las Vegas strip. Considered by many as the father of modern day Las Vegas, Siegel’s Flamingo Hotel and Casino opened on December 26, 1946 after countless construction delays and cost overruns. Included in the construction of the 77 room Flamingo Hotel was Siegel’s private suite, complete with bulletproof glass and five separate escape exits. With costs exceeding six million dollars and shortfalls in projected revenues, mob members began to suspect Siegel of skimming construction funds and gambling revenues into an overseas bank account. On orders from the mafia hierarchy, Siegel was gunned down at the home of his girlfriend in Beverly Hills, California while reading the evening newspaper. He was pronounced dead at the scene with three fatal wounds to the head. In 1991 the motion Picture “Bugsy” was released to theaters starring Warren Beatty in the title role of Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel. (bio by: Nils M. Solsvik Jr.)

Burial: Hollywood Forever Cemetery Hollywood Plot: Beth Olam

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the Brooklyn Bridge. Early Vegas’ intent is to show the origins and logic of Roadside Architecture in Southern Nevada.

Las Vegas has always been a city of recreation and re-creation, whether using the prototypes of

Seattle’s Space Needle for the design of the Landmark Hotel or the Stratosphere. Whether rebuilding new versions of

the Statue of Liberty or the Eiffel Tower, Las Vegas Design always brings an unusual twist of its own. A look thru this website will show the many examples of the unique history of “Las Vegas Style.”

Who Really Made Las Vegas?

Las Vegas is the, 100 year, result and culmination of thousands of experts in various fields ranging from inventive casino owners, visionary architects, interior designers, hotel managers, entertainment directors, headline entertainers, hospitality experts, choreographers, showgirls and a variety of lounge acts. Add in the exceptional work of culinary pros, restaurateurs, neon sign designers, publicity staffs, civil engineers, transportation workers, junket planners, news reporters, postcard makers, photographers, billboard makers, wedding chapel operators, friendly bartenders, desk clerks, bell-hops, cab drivers, waitresses, dealers, keno runners, change girls, dime-a-dance clubs, as well as over 200,000 burlesque dancers, strippers, hookers and glamor girls; and you’ll better understand all the necessary components that formed ‘modern-day Las Vegas’. If credit, for the development of Las Vegas, is to be handed out properly - it should first go to those at the very top - the casino owners, architects and sign designers.

The Southern California Influence on the Las Vegas Strip

The influence of Hollywood’s ‘Miracle Mile’ and the ‘Sunset Strip’ played a large role in Las Vegas Design in the 1940s and 50s. The Hollywood Brown Derby was an early example of the Roadside Art of Gigantism. Las Vegas architecture and signage adopted the use of car inspired design, using super-signs meant to catch a motorist’s eye while driving 40 miles-per-hour down the highway.

Californians were long familiar with ‘mimetic architecture’...the exaggerated, novelty, kitsch stylings which included buildings shaped like giant oranges, hot dogs, donuts and coffee pots (now popularly known as Roadside Architecture). The 1950s brought the futuristic modernism of (what is now labeled as) Googie and Populuxe Design.

Googie design used upswept roofs, bold use of glass, steel and neon along with ‘science inspired and space age’ geometric shapes (amoebas, boomerangs, sputniks, etc) The influence of the 1949 Motorama and 1954 Disneyland also set trends for Las Vegas motel and hotel cartoon-like design.

‘Disneyland in the Desert’ is still the predominant proto-theme for all Las Vegas Design. This website’s intent is to show the assorted influences at work that lead to today’s use of Pyramids, Castles, Gondolas, and even

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SPORTS NEWS I MP

LOS ANGELES — Jack LaLanne, the fitness guru who inspired televi-sion viewers to trim down, eat well and pump iron for decades before diet and exercise became a national obsession, died at age 96.

LaLanne ate healthy and exercised every day of his life up until the end.

He maintained a youthful physique and joked in 2006 that, "I can't afford to die. It would wreck my image."

"The only way you can hurt the body is not use it," LaLanne said. "Inactivity is the killer and, remember, it's never too late."

Fitness Guru Jack LaLanne Dies At 96

"I never think of my age, never," LaLanne said in 1990. "I could be 20 or 100. I never

think about it, I'm just me."

Age 60

• His workout show was a television staple from the 1950s to the '70s

• Founded his own chain of fitness studios

• In 1957, at age 43, he performed more than 1,000 push-ups in 23 minutes on the "You

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Page 32: Feb 15, 2011

Page 32 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

Chappy’s On Eagle’s Wings

The Art of Communication I don’t know about you, but I have experienced difficulty with the “art of

communication” on many an occasion. It seems that no matter how much education or experience with people you may have, you still may find yourself to be the cause of awkward and sometimes hurtful situations when you fail to communicate well.

I think we all know that WORDS have power, yet have you ever thought of how astonishing it is that we are able to communicate our thoughts and feelings to another, even to foreign people of a different tongue? We can say so much with our bodies, facial expressions, eyes, tone of voice, etc… without ever actually speaking an understandable word. Language in all its various forms has power. And it has been said, that of all the skills we ever acquire in life, the use of words and language is among the most critical.

We probably have all read the Constitution or Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, or glanced at a tabloid magazine at the checkout stand, and pretty well knew the difference in the intensions and feelings of the writers. In reality, it is our language that pretty much reveals to others who we are and how we think. Our culture, education, morals, and respect for others as well as ourselves, are all displayed through our language. We often carry these from one generation to another, as family traditions are passed on.

SPORTS NEWS I MPSEMPER FI By Chaplain Ringo www.yourchappy.com I MPWhen I think of the great story “Roots” and how one family’s history was passed on through the careful retelling of their story to each new generation, I am reminded that language can even link us to those who have been long dead.

Awhile back, I was doing some family history research and came across many personal writings of my great-great grandfather. These gave me a much greater insight into the man he was and helped me feel connected to him, even though he died long before I was ever born. I learned of his values, his manner of speech, and what was most important to him. Even his handwriting told me much about his personality. It helped me recognize again the importance of recording our thoughts and feelings in written form, for our children and grandchildren to one day read.

Our language is an important foundation upon which we build our relationships and much of our society. Most of us have been in a gathering of people where we could tell almost immediately which of the smaller groups we would feel most comfortable joining, just by hearing a few words of their conversation. Their body language, facial expressions, tone of voice, overall demeanor and looks of acceptance or disinterest, all influence our decision to make contact with them or not. Understanding these subtle elements of communication can help us cultivate healthier relationships. The woman who complains that others think she is “snobbish,” or the man who hears others describe him as “gruff,” can consider how their manner of communicating with others is conveying these things. It can be as simple as changing the tone of voice used, to choosing kinder words or using friendlier facial expressions.

That being true, it is vitally important to choose our words and other forms of language ever so carefully. We need to remember how powerful they really are. We know they can have lasting positive emotional impact or cause tremendous hurt to others and ourselves. We have each experienced the kind word that has calmed our troubled heart or the harsh unkindness that has caused pain indescribable. The sad thing is, we all too often do the latter to those we most want to be close to. And for us guys, we tend to step on ourselves all too frequently. Here is a story recently sent by a family member, which is a great example of language in action, but having the wrong effect.

It is entitled, “How Typical.” A man asked his wife what she’d

like for Mother’s Day. “I’d love to be six again, “ she replied. On the morning of Mother’s Day, he arose early, got up made her a nice big bowl of Lucky Charms and then took her off to the local theme park. What a day! He put her on every ride in the park: the Death Slide, the Wall of Fear, the Screaming Monster Roller Coaster, everything there was. Five hours later she staggered out of the theme park. Her head was reeling and her stomach felt upside down.

Right away, they journeyed to a McDonald’s where her loving husband ordered her a Happy Meal with extra fries and a refreshing chocolate shake. Then it was off to a movie, the latest Star Wars epic, a hot dog, popcorn, a soda pop, and her favorite candy, M&Mhs. What a fabulous adventure!

Finally she wobbled home with her husband and collapsed into bed exhausted. He leaned over his precious wife with a big smile and lovingly asked, “Well, Dear, what was it like being six again?” Her eyes slowly opened and her

expression suddenly changed. “You idiot, I meant my dress size!”

The joking moral of the story is that even when a man is listening, he is still going to get it wrong . . . The intension was right, but the understanding of the language used was mistaken for something other than what was intended.

The story is told of an Army general speaking in Japan, who told a story with the punch line, “Show me, I’m from Missouri.” His translator knew the audience wouldn’t understand, so he said in Japanese, “The general has made a joke and I’ll be in trouble if you don’t laugh.” The people obligingly laughed. But, again because some things don’t translate well, the general had failed to communicate his point, much like the woman in the previous story.

Communicating with others, especially those we love can present some of our greatest challenges. We should keep in mind that the way we give our message has everything to do with the way it is received. I constantly have to remember this in my home and often spend great amounts of time in counseling others on this very point. The real “art of communication” is not only to say the right thing in the right way at the right place and time, but to also leave unsaid the wrong thing at the very moment you are tempted to lash out with things you will want to take back later. Sir Walter Scott is quoted, “O! Many a shaft, at random sent, Finds mark the archer never meant!And many a word, at random spoken, May soothe or wound a heart that’s broken!”

May we ever realize the critical role that all forms of language and communication play in our day-to-day lives and happiness. In all my counseling and teaching, this is one of the most, if not the most, important tools I try to share with others. In Matthew 12:37 it reads, “For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.” If we carefully communicate to others with respect and love, we can rebuild broken bridges and give a message of hope to all people in our circle of influence. May we seek to do so is my hope this week.

As always, it is my hope that this message will help you this week to, “mount up as on eagle’s wings,” and renew a little of your strength to keep moving forward and find joy…(Isaiah 40:31)

Until next time, may God bless you and God bless our great nation. SEMPER FIChaplain Ringo, is the Command Chaplain at MCRD H&S BN,holds a Doctorate of Philosophy in Counseling, and is a Certified Trauma Specialist.www.yourchappy.com

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Page 32 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

Page 33: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 33

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Page 34: Feb 15, 2011

Page 34 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

CARS & MORE thanks to topspeed.com (check ’em out) I MP

2011 Cadillac CTS-V Black Diamond Edition

After the Porsche Boxster S Black Edition was revealed just yesterday, Cadillac brought their own “Black” edition based on the CTS-V models, sedan, coupe and station wagon models. The new Black Diamond Edition adds an extra a $4,850 over a standard CTS-V model, but it offers much better personalization list.

“The CTS-V Black Diamond Edition is like a finely crafted, tailored tuxedo,” said Michelle Killen, Cadillac exterior paint designer. “The base color may be a simple black, but the details and richness of the material set it apart.”

“Auto makers and consumers are looking to differentiate the color black, an ubiquitous color in automotive,” said John Book, Custom Color Solutions product manager at JDSU. “Black Diamond offers the discerning Cadillac customer a special option color that stands out and remains true to their sense of luxury and style.”

“We’ve already established V-Series as a serious sub-brand for Cadillac,” said Rich Pinto, Cadillac creative designer. “Black Diamond further establishes V-Series in the market as a performance-minded line of vehicles with a luxury twist.”

2011 Porsche Boxster S Black EditionBlack is undoubtedly the color most often worn to any elegant affair and Porsche

is taking full advantage of that fact with another special edition model dressed to impress in a sleek black exterior. Mimicking the Carrera Black Edition revealed just a few days ago, the Boxster S model is taking its turn in the spotlight with the same package. However, unlike the Carrera, the Boxster S Black Edition will be limited to only 987 units with U.S. prices starting at $65,200. Sales will begin in March 2011.

The Black exterior carries the dark horse theme around to the model lettering at the rear, the roll-over bars, the rear side air intake grilles, and the twin tailpipe of the

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The color also rolls in to the interior to mold itself onto the standard, three-spoke Sport Design steering wheel, the trim strips of the dashboard and of the gear shift lever or PDK selector, the dials on the instrument cluster, and the partial leather seats.

The color change won’t be the only thing distinguishing this model as Porsche is providing three optional packages to further customize this special edition: “Comfort,” “Infotainment,” and “Design.”

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For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 35

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Page 36: Feb 15, 2011

Page 36 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

AT THE MOVIES with Movie Maven I MP

Opening in theatres this Friday from director Kevin Macdonald and Focus Features comes a film based on Rosemary Sutcliff’s novel in “The Eagle.”

This film tells the story of Marcus Aquila (Channing Tatum), a young officer in the Roman army who is living in the shadow of his father. Feeling he must prove himself, he commands a garrison in the outreaches of Scotland.

During a fight Marcus is seriously wounded and cannot return to his men. Devastated by it he takes up the journey to find out what happened to his father, the legion and most of all the symbol of Rome, the eagle.

Against his Uncle Aquila (Donald Sutherland) wishes, Marcus is accompanied by his slave Esca (Jaime Bell). Marcus begins a journey that will take him into his past, into his culture and into a friendship he could never have imagined.

FINAL WORD: Tatum does well as Marcus. This role required a strong character but to be believable it requires a strong face and presence. Tatum has just that! The look of a determined Roman soldier comes through strongly.

Bell as Esca is perfect casting. The quite slave who watches everything around him in order to find freedom is well done. As Esca, Bell brings to the screen a mystery about this character, never really being sure of his

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motives.It is always such a pleasure to see Sutherland on the screen.

As the Roman’s uncle, Sutherland is that trusting and wise person that Marcus needs. There are smaller but well-done roles by Denis O’Hare as Lutorius and Mark Strong as Guern, someone who has answers for Marcus about his father and the Ninth.

SEE EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH CHANNING TATUM IN OUR NEXT ISSUE

Page 37: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 37

HEARD THE ONE ABOUT THE . . . I MP

It was a dark, stormy, night. The Marine was on his first assignment, and it was guard duty. A General stepped out taking his dog for a walk. The nervous young Private snapped to attention, made a perfect salute, and snapped out, “Sir, Good Evening, Sir!” The General, out for some relaxation, returned the salute and said “Good evening soldier, nice night, isn’t it?” Well it wasn’t a nice night, but the Private wasn’t going to disagree with the General, so the he saluted again and replied, “Sir, Yes Sir!” The General continued, “You know there’s something about a stormy night that I find soothing, it’s really relaxing. Don’t you agree?” The Private didn’t agree, but then the private was just a private, and responded, “Sir, Yes Sir!” The General, pointing at the dog, “This is a Golden Retriever, the best type of dog to train.” The Private glanced at the dog, saluted yet again, and said, “Sir, Yes Sir!” The General continued “I got this dog for my wife.” The Private simply said, “Good trade, Sir!”

The reason the Air Force, Army, Navy and Marines bicker amongst themselves is that they don’t speak the same language. For instance, Take the simple phrase “secure the building.”

The Army will post guards around the place.The Navy will turn out the lights and lock the doors.The Marines will kill everybody inside and set up a headquarters.The Air Force will take out a 5 year lease with an option to buy.

Airman Jones was assigned to the induction center, where he advised new recruits about their government benefits, especially their GI insurance. It wasn’t long before Captain Smith noticed that Airman Jones was having a staggeringly high success-rate, selling insurance to nearly 100% of the recruits he advised. Rather than ask about this, the Captain stood in the back of the room and listened to Jones’ sales pitch. Jones explained the basics of the GI Insurance to the new recruits, and then said: “If you have GI Insurance and go into battle and are killed, the government has to pay $200,000 to your beneficiaries. If you don’t have GI insurance, and you go into battle and

get killed, the government only has to pay a maximum of $6000. Now,” he concluded, “which group do you think they are going to send into battle first?”

On some air bases the Air Force is on one side of the field and civilian aircraft use the other side of the field, with the control tower in the middle. One day the tower received a call from an aircraft asking, “What time is it?” The

tower responded, “Who is calling?” The aircraft replied, “What difference does it make?” The tower replied, “It makes a lot of difference. If it is an American Airlines flight, it is 3 o’clock. If it is an Air Force plane, it is 1500 hours. If it is a Navy aircraft, it is 6 bells. If it is an Army aircraft, the big hand is on the 12 and the little hand is on the 3. If it is a Marine Corps aircraft, it’s Thursday afternoon.”

Depression is merely anger without enthusiasmEagles may soar, but weasels don’t get sucked into jet enginesEarly bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheeseI’m not cheap, but I am on special this weekI almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met

Page 38: Feb 15, 2011

Page 38 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

“Another Year”

(Human comedy, PG-13, 129 minutes). Tom and Gerri (Jim Broadbent and Ruth Sheen) are long and happily married. Their frequent visitor is Mary (Lesley Manville), an unhappy woman with a drinking problem who needs shoring up with their sanity. Mike Leigh’s new film is one of his best, placing as he often does recognizable types with embarrassing comic and/or dramatic dilemmas. One of the year’s best films. Rating: Four stars.

“The Green Hornet”

(2011) is opening this weekend to fair reviews. Reviews are mixed. • Roger Moore wrote in the Orlando Sentinel, “A violent, clumsy, jokey, badly-plotted and miscast mess... an epic miscalculation.” Rene Rodriguez wrote in the Miami Herald, “...a big, boisterous action-comedy... exciting and intentionally goofy... Gondry keeps spinning the giddy fun, including an impressive 3D upconversion — the best I’ve seen... irreverent, immensely likable

entertainment...” And Peter Keough wrote in the Boston Phoenix, “...the usual numbing, postmodern pastiche... Put on a pair of 3D glasses and it’s like watching 118 minutes of noisy trailers from underneath a thin, dark blanket. Okay, it’s not that bad. There are one or two action scenes that unroll with satisfying logic and ingenuity.” The figures will change as more reviews are added. More coming.

“The Rite”

(Horror, PG-13, 112 minutes). Anthony Hopkins plays an experienced exorcist in Rome who mentors a student priest (Colin O’Donoghue). Alice Braga plays a journalist who joins them. Dark, atmospheric, well-acted, evocative cinematography, and of course much thrashing about. Rating: Three stars.

“The Company Men”(Drama, R, 115 minutes). Three men face hard economic times at a big corporation: a junior executive (Ben Afleck), a senior executive (Chris Cooper) and the co-founder (Tommy Lee Jones). The film sees them more as economic units than people, which is also the corporation’s POV. Affleck becomes a cog in the “placement industry” and gets a cubicle, a phone and help with his resume. Rating: Three stars.

NOW PLAYINGAT THE MOVIES with Movie Maven I MP

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Page 39: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 39

AT THE MOVIES with Movie Maven I MP

2011 Ram Hemi Haulerby Hurst Performance VehiclesHurst Performance Vehicles has already built a pretty impressive roster of aftermarket muscle cars to its name, including a number of Camaros, Mustangs, and Challengers.Not to be boxed into one specific segment, Hurst is thinking big for their next project. And by big, we mean a 2011 Ram 1500 pick-up. Limted to only 50 units with each model coming with its own letter of authenticity, these customized Ram pick-ups come with some pretty impressive new digs.Aesthetic upgrades on the Ram 1500 R/T regular cab includes Hurst’s traditional white and black exterior paint finish to go along with a numbered dash plaque and interior badging, and a set of 22” wheels. In terms of performance, Hurst spared no expense in supercharging the Ram’s already monstrous 5.7-liter Hemi V8 engine. On top of the addition of a supercharger, Hurst also put in a performance exhaust system. Unfortunately, Hurst is still keeping the spec numbers under wraps and as sure as the sun is hot and the sky is blue, we’re already waiting anxiously for the figures to be released.Just like the performance specs, Hurst has yet to release the price tag for each of the 50 Hemi Hauler’s. We’re going to make a stag at the dark and say that it’s going to come at a cost of somewhere around $80,000.

2011 MINI Cooper SDThere are so many different variations and tuning packages for the Mini Cooper, sometimes it’s difficult to keep track of which Cooper is which. It has a style and shape that plays well with new additions, updates, trim levels, and packages so the most obvious thing to do is add another for greedy consumption. Mini’s latest toy is a new SD version which just so happens to be their most powerful diesel Cooper ever, and yet another reason the Mini Cooper is so darn popular.The Mini Cooper SD is powered by a 2.0-liter four-cylinder turbodiesel engine that delivers an impressive 143 hp at 4,000 rpm and a peak torque of 225 lb-ft available between 1,750 and 2,700 rpm. This leaves the other diesel variants in the Cooper line in the dust since the Cooper D only produces 112hp and the Cooper One D only delivers 114hp. U.S. customers need not start jumping for joy just yet; Mini has yet to decide whether the diesel SD will be taking a trip across the ocean to see us.Whether we get a piece of this action or not, Mini will be bringing the SD trim level to different Mini models, including the Cooper, Cooper Convertible, Clubman, and Countryman versions. The Mini Cooper SD will be making its world debut at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show with sales beginning shortly thereafter.

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Page 40: Feb 15, 2011

Page 40 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

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NEWS I MP

Military, Civilian Partnerships Improve Troop Care

By Fred W. Baker III American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The photo splashed onto the two large screens in the conference room looked scary.

The man’s black hair was choppy and tousled. Looking straight into the cam-era, his eyelids drooped abnormally, re-vealing the dark-red tissue deep in the sockets. His swollen lips sagged to bare his bottom teeth. Scars cut across his face.

“This soldier would have been very welcome last Saturday night at Hallow-een,” said Marine Corps Gen. James F. Amos, then assistant commandant of the Marine Corps. “The kids in his neighborhood would have said ‘Great costume. Who did your makeup?’” The photo was not, however, of a soldier made up for Halloween. He was a disfig-ured casualty of war.

And while internally his wounds may have been well on their way to recov-ery, on the outside his scars would have

made it difficult to return to any measure of normal life.

“We were sending him out into civil-ian life saying, ‘This is as good as it gets. Thanks for serving your country,’” Amos said.

The next slide Amos projected showed the same soldier without most the disfiguring facial features. His lips were not as swollen. The scars were not as deep, and most of his nose was in-tact. His face was not the same as it was before his injuries, but the improvements

were dramatic, and ongoing. “He can walk out and go to his child’s

school play or PTA conference and with-out terrifying the kids,” Amos said.

The general used the slides to illus-trate the best of the military’s partner-ship with civilian medical doctors.

Amos opened the Partnership for Mil-itary Medicine symposium which aimed to bring together top military and civil-ian medical practitioners in an effort to boost the cooperation between the two to help troops recovering from the more advanced war wounds. About 150 doc-tors, nurses, scientists, military and civil-ian officials, and a handful of wounded warriors, turned out for the symposium. It offered panelists speaking on topics ranging from infectious diseases to hu-manitarian aid to traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Already, around the world, civil-ian experts have teamed with medical treatment facilities to provide historical breakthroughs in treating some of the complicated wounds suffered in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Still, there is more to be done, Amos said.

It was a civilian medical practice that restored the soldier’s facial features. The general acknowledged that the military simply cannot afford to train and keep the more highly skilled, specialized medical practitioners. “We can’t afford to keep them, yet they reside out there in civilian medicine and at great medi-cal universities and hospitals across this country. And you know what I found? They want to help,” Amos said.

Amos has seen his share of troops

Gen. James F. Amos, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, speaks at the Partnership for Military Medicine symposium in Washington, D.C. Nov. 6, 2009. His slides showed before-and-after photos of troops whose disfiguring scars where improved by civilian doctors willing to offer their services. The symposium sought to bring top military and civilian medical practitioners together to collaborate on improving care for the war wounded. DoD photo by Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Molly Burgess

Page 41: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 41

Important information about the $3.4 billion Indian Trust Settlement

For current or former IIM account holders, Owners of land held in trust or restricted status, or their heirs

For more Information: 1-800-961-6109 www.IndianTrust.com

Legal Notice

There is a proposed Settlement in Cobell v. Salazar, a class action lawsuit about individual Indian land held in trust by the federal government. This notice is just a summary. For details, call the toll-free number or visit the website listed below.

The lawsuit claims that the federal government violated its duties by (a) mismanaging trust funds/assets, (b) improperly accounting for those funds, and (c) mismanaging trust land/assets. The trust funds include money collected from farming and grazing leases, timber sales, mining, and oil and gas production from land owned by American Indians/Alaska Natives.

If you are included in the Settlement, your rights will be affected. To object to the Settlement, to comment on it, or to exclude yourself, you should get a detailed notice at www.IndianTrust.com or by calling 1-800-961-6109.

Can I get money?There are two groups or “Classes” in the Settlement eligible for payment. Each Class includes individual IIM account holders or owners of land held in trust or restricted status who were alive on September 30, 2009.

Historical Accounting Class Members

• Had an open individual Indian Money account (“IIM”)anytime between October 25, 1994 and September 30, 2009, and

• Theaccounthadatleastonecashtransaction.

• IncludesestatesofaccountholderswhodiedasofSeptember30, 2009, if the IIM account was still open on that date.

Trust Administration Class Members

• HadanIIMaccountrecordedincurrentlyavailabledatainfederal government systems any time from approximately 1985 to September 30, 2009, or

• OwnedtrustlandorlandinrestrictedstatusasofSeptember30, 2009.

• Includesestatesof landownerswhodiedasofSeptember30, 2009 where the trust interests were in probate as of that date. This means you have asked a court to transfer ownership of the deceased landowner’s property.

An individual may be included in one or both Classes.

What does the Settlement provide?• A$1.5billionfundtopaythoseincludedintheClasses.

• A$1.9billionfundtobuysmallinterestsintrustorrestrictedland owned by many people.

• Upto$60milliontofundscholarshipstoimproveaccesstohigher education for Indian youth.

• A government commitment to reform the Indian trustmanagement and accounting system.

How much can I get?• HistoricalAccountingClassMemberswilleachget$1,000.

• TrustAdministrationClassMemberswillgetat least$500.

• Ifyouownasmallparceloflandwithmanyotherpeople,the federal government may ask you to sell it. You will be offered fair market value. If you sell your land it will be returned to tribal control.

If you believe you are a member of either Class and are not receiving IIM account statements, you will need to call the toll-free number or visit the website to register.

What are my other rights?• Ifyouwishtokeepyourrighttosuethefederalgovernment

about the claims in this Settlement, you must exclude yourself by April 20, 2011.

• IfyoustayintheSettlementyoucanobjecttoorcommenton it by April 20, 2011. The detailed notice explains how to exclude yourself or object/comment.

TheU.S.DistrictCourtfortheDistrictofColumbiawillholda hearing on June 20, 2011, to consider whether to approve the Settlement. It will also consider a request for attorneys’ fees, costs,andexpensesintheamountof$99.9million.However,Class Counsel has fee agreements that would pay them 14.75% of the funds created for the Classes, which could result in an awardof$223million.TheCourtmayawardmoreorlessthanthese amounts based on controlling law. If approved, these payments and related costs will come out of the Settlement funds available for payment to Class Members.

If you wish, you or your own lawyer may ask to appear and speak at the hearing at your own cost. For more information, call or go to the website shown below or write to Indian Trust Settlement,P.O.Box9577,Dublin,OH43017-4877.

NEWS I MP

disfigured by war. He has traveled to Iraq, Afghanistan and all parts in be-tween, meeting with troops and families in military treatment facilities. He praised military medicine, but said it was simply unprepared for the volume of injured troops that infused their overflowing fa-cilities during peaks in the two wars.

“When I say we were ill-prepared, it’s not because our hearts weren’t right, but the magnitude of the numbers became staggering,” he said. But military medi-cine, science and technology stepped up to the task, he added, and he praised advancements in amputee and burn-victim care.

Amos said he is hardly concerned now about simple gunshot wounds. They’ll be well cared for, he said. Even some amputations -- such as a single, below-the-knee amputation -- have, sadly, become routine, and are no lon-ger the threat they were at the start of the wars.

Two weeks ago, Amos visited a young Navy SEAL who lost his leg in the war.

“I can look him in the eye and tell him, and be completely honest, he will be fine,” Amos said. “He will run again. He will serve again. And he will continue with a very happy and fruitful life be-cause of the capabilities that we have.”

But Amos’s slides pointed to the more seriously injured troops, where military medicine stops, and the special-ized skills found only in the civilian mar-ket start. Probably the starkest example was Marine Corps Capt. Josh Maloney, whose right hand was destroyed by a bomb in Iraq in 2007.

A civilian transplant specialist successfully attached a new hand to the Marine in March. Amos met with Maloney after the transplant. “Josh walked up to me, grabbed my hand and shook it as firmly as I’d shake the hand of anybody in this room, and I went ‘Holy smokes!’” Amos said.

It was Amos’s final few slides, how-ever, that pointed to he need for greater collaboration.

One picture, taken two years ago, showed Amos with a few young, healthy Marines, standing in the sun, looking very Marine-like. It was a celebration photo taken on one of Amos’s trips to Iraq. The three Marines had survived the blast of a 200-pound bomb. The mine-resistant, armor-protected vehicle in which they were riding was mangled. But the three walked away with no apparent injuries. “We sat out there when we had that pic-ture taken and we high-fived each other, and it was great,” he said.

Amos attributed their survival to the MRAP and to the billions of dollars spent by the Defense De-partment to provide the vehicles. “I felt good. I said ‘America saved your life,’” he said. “This is the reason we did it. Those three young men went home to their wives and families. They’re OK.”

The general paused. “Not yet,” he said. Months later, Amos again met with

one of the Marines in the picture. This time, it was at the National Naval Medi-cal Center in Bethesda, Md. Amos’s final slide showed the once smiling and fit Marine lying in a hospital bed, swollen and disheveled, with wires strung from monitoring machines taped across his body.

When the Marine survived the blast, there were no scans in place to en-sure there was no internal damage. He looked healthy on the outside. It turns out the Marine suffered a traumatic brain injury. It was the seventh blast the ord-nance specialist had endured.

The young Marine’s endocrine sys-tem was knocked “haywire,” Amos said. The endocrine system is similar to the body’s nervous system, but regulates metabolism, tissue function and internal functions such as temperature and wa-ter balance. His back also was broken. The Marine finished his deployment, but needed heavy painkillers to make it home.

For two years, it was one problem after another, Amos said. Now he stood before the Marine again, this time with

his wife by his bed in tears. “He lost his life in the two years that

followed,” Amos said. “I’ll be honest with you, we let him down. And I’ll just leave it at that.”

Now, though, the Marine is receiving treatment at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Maryland, reportedly one of the best facilities for endocrine system treatment. Navy medicine “has their arms around him,” Amos said, but they have to go outside to a civilian hospital for the care.

“That’s collaboration. That’s where

that really, really deep talent on the bench resides,” Amos said. “The wounds are so severe that we need your help.”

Amos said he is sometimes frustrat-ed by the resistance of some in military medicine to reach out to their civilian counterparts. But those walls are com-ing down, he promised. Now is the time to talk collaboration, the general said.

“If you’re not wearing this uniform … but you’re out there [as] just a regular American scientist or doctor or tech-nician, … we need your help,” he ap-pealed. “We can’t do this without you.”

Page 42: Feb 15, 2011

Page 42 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

URBAN MYTHS I MP

Military urban legends versus true tales: real life stories prove more interestingBy Staff Sgt. Jon Cupp, MND-B PAO

CAMP LIBERTY, Iraq — For decades there were urban legends floating around that Jerry Mathers, who played the title character on Leave It to Beaver, died in Vietnam and that Fred

Rogers from the PBS show Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood was either a Navy SEAL or a U.S. Marine sniper.

None of those legends are true, but they serve a purpose of leaving people unable to tell fact from fiction. It’s still a mystery as to why someone would make them up.

But in many cases, it might be said that truth is stranger than urban legend, and real life stories of celebrities who wore combat boots are much more interesting. You could never make this stuff up!

Take for example, the case of Werner Klemperer, an accomplished classical musician who was also a television and stage actor. Klemperer, a native-born German, was forced to leave Germany in 1935 with his family, shortly after Hitler’s Nazi Party took power, due to Klemperer’s father being Jewish.

After immigrating to the U.S., Klemperer fell in love with his new home

and upon the nation’s entry into World War II, he quickly joined the U.S. Army to fight for his country. Many people may

not know the name Werner Klemperer, but if someone were to say Col. Klink

of Hogan’s Heroes, you would know exactly who Klemperer is.

Another actor who served his country during World War II and ended up with an interesting tale that could rank up there with urban legend, was Jimmy Stewart. His real-life story reads like a legend-but it’s all true.

Stewart joined the Army in 1941. Beginning his service as an enlisted Soldier, he quickly received a commission after completing 400 hours of flying time. He rose from the rank of private to the rank of colonel in just four years. As a pilot on a B-24 Liberator, Stewart flew 20 successful combat missions over Europe during the war, earning two Distinguished Flying Crosses, the Croix de Guerre, and the Air Medal with three oak leaf clusters.

Stewart continued serving in the Air Force Reserves, eventually retiring in 1968 after attaining the rank of brigadier general. A lot of people act pretty amazed when they find that out, but it’s one of those true facts that seems stranger than fiction only because of who Stewart was as an actor.

And then, there’s Rocky Blier, who after completing his first year as a rookie in the NFL, was drafted by the Army and sent to Vietnam, where he earned a Bronze Star and received a Purple Heart. Blier was seriously wounded in an ambush by both small arms fire and shrapnel from a grenade. Military doctors told Blier that he would never

Page 43: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 43

play football again.When Rocky returned from the war,

he went back to training camp with the Steelers after just one year — weighing only 180 pounds and in incredible pain from his war wounds. Many people might not have been able to do what Blier did; working through the pain and pushing himself hard everyday even with the knowledge that he might never be able to play on the active Steeler roster.

It wasn’t until 1974, after years of hard work getting his weight back to well-over 200 pounds, that he was put in as a starting running back. Millions of people still remember Blier as a running back who played for a Pittsburgh Steelers team that won four Super Bowls, but they might not remember the important sacrifices he made for his country. Even so, today Rocky’s story continues to inspire others-and it’s just another example of true life events that are much more interesting than fictionalized accounts or made-up rumors.

Along with Blier, some other famous people whose true-life exploits read like an action novel include; Academy Award-winning actor Charles Durning, a survivor of the June 6 D-Day invasion who received a Silver Star and three Purple Hearts, and Eddie Albert of Green Acres fame who earned a Bronze Star for rescuing Marines during the Battle of Tarawa.

Although most Americans find tales about celebrities who served in boots interesting, there are many legends about their daring in the military that never happened-like the Beaver killing 7,000 Viet Cong before biting the dust.

There’s nothing that can replace the spirit or sacrifices of real unsung heroes-those who fought and died to keep the U.S. free.

They’re the ones who aren’t famous, they’re the ones who don’t have urban legends told about them, they’re the ones who have never actually heard a word of thanks for their ultimate sacrifice, and they’re the ones who the famous celebrity veterans, along with the rest of us, look up to. Up to $8,000 federal tax credit, extended for qualifi ed service members!**

get your game on! hurry, don’t miss out!

The Centex Homes Deluxe Entertainment Package includes: Samsung® 55” 3D LED-LCD TV, 3D Blu-ray Disc™ Player, Xbox® 360 with Kinect™,

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*Offer valid on purchase agreements for to-be built homes accepted by Centex Homes from 01/10/2011 through 03/31/2011 in this community, and close of escrow must be on or before 09/30/11. Offer is limited to the standard items and features included by Centex Homes in its standard entertainment package, and no substitutions allowed. Approximate retail value of entertainment package is $7,299. This incentive may affect the amount of loan for which a buyer may be eligible, check with your lender for details. In lieu of entertainment package, buyer may receive a credit at closing of up to $7,299 that may be used either toward closing costs or prepaids. If buyer chooses the closing cost credit and participates in the Preferred Buyer Rewards Program with fi nancing through Pulte Mortgage LLC, they will receive a credit at closing in an amount that is up to 3% of the purchase price of the home for payment of approved closing costs and prepaids. Total credit for closing costs and prepaids cannot exceed the lesser of $7,299 or 6% of the purchase price. Any unused amount of either of these credits is the property of Centex Homes and may not be applied to purchase price. All loans subject to underwriting and loan qualifi cation of the lender. Rates, terms and conditions subject to change without notice. Pulte Mortgage LLC is an Equal Opportunity Lender licensed by the Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act. NMLS Entity #1791. Incentive offered may not be redeemed for cash or equivalent. Entertainment package include models and manufacturers shown, but Centex Homes reserves the right to change or modify the manufacturers, products and/or models included at any time. Prices listed are base prices, do not include lot premiums or options, and are subject to change without notice. Square footages shown are approximate. Homeowner association fees are required.**The home buyer tax credit was available for qualifi ed purchases with a binding sales contract in place on or before April 30, 2010 and closed by September 30, 2010. However, for qualifi ed service members who were on a period of offi cial extended duty outside the United States for at least 90 days after 2008 and before May 1, 2010, these dates are extended. For these home buyers, the tax credit applies to sales with a binding sales contract in place on or before April 30, 2011 and closed by June 30, 2011. The extension of time that these credits may be available is based upon dates of “offi cial extended duty” and may not be available in all circumstances. Federal tax credit of up to $8,000 available to qualifi ed fi rst-time homebuyers. Federal tax credit of up to $6,500 available to qualifi ed current homeowners who are purchasing a new principal residence and have owned and resided in a

principal residence for any fi ve-consecutive-year period during the last eight years. Qualifi cation for tax credit based upon fi rst-time homebuyer status/current homeowner status, modifi ed adjusted gross income, purchase price of home, and other IRS qualifi cations. Both tax credits are subject to conditions and restrictions. Both tax credits are only available for a limited time. General information is available at www.FederalHousingTaxCredit.com. Pulte does not advise on any personal income tax matters or issues. This information is provided for general awareness only and is not intended for the purpose of providing legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, or consulting advice of any kind. See a tax advisor for complete details. We strongly urge that before you purchase a home, you seek advice from a professional that is familiar with your personal facts and circumstances. They can assist you in determining whether you qualify for the new credit, any possible extension of time that the credit may be available to you, and the amount available to you. This material shall not constitute a valid offer in any state where prior registration is required or if void by law. This offer is subject to change or withdrawal at any time without notice. Some conditions, limitations, and restrictions apply. See a Centex Homes sales associate for details. © 2011 Centex Homes. All rights reserved. Pulte Home Corporation is a licensed California real estate broker (lic. #00876003) 1/6/2011

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Page 44: Feb 15, 2011

Page 44 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

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Credit FriendlyGranite, W/D & (optional) garages, fplc’s, gated, resort size pool, fitness center, tennis, theatre

& more. Prominence

601 S. Twin Oaks Valley Rd.760-798-2794

Millcreek Apts.1 & 2br's Starting from $895

$99 dep oAc w/this adPool/Spa, W/D select units,

Ac, fplc, patio/balc's D/W, cats ok2130 S. Santa Fe Ave., Vista

760.727.2907

Angelina Terrace½ mo. OFF an Immed. Move-inOffers very spacious 2Br townhomes filled/w features you will appreciate, incl. pool & sauna - all in a beautiful

landscaped park-like setting.

Starting at: $1325 - $1450Phone: 619-426-5393

181 E Orange Ave, Chula Vista, CA 91911

PArADisE For rENt:Point Loma living at a price you can

afford at Pacific Breeze Apts!Move In Ready at Reduced Rental

Rates and Specials. Stop Looking and Start Living!

(619) 523-4325

619-286-5407

College Area/El Cerrito1Br $885 - Studio $725

1st MONtH FreeGated Community, Minutes

from SDSU. Fridge, Stove, PoolUniversity terrace apts

3699 Barnard Dr.Oceanside

SHADOW RIDGE APARTMENTS1 & 2br's avail. 815sf - 1015sf

$999 to $1300/mo.Many Amenities , Pet Friendly.

$99 deposit on OAC

Call for Move-in Specials

760.231.9477

AttEND collEgE oNliNE -From Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance.

Computer available.Financial aid if qualified.

cAll 877.206.7665www.cENturAoNliNE.com

Grove Condosimperial Beach

½ oFF 1st Months Rent0 Security Deposit (OAC)

$1195.00 2Br/2BaEach unit comes w/gas stove,

refrigerator, dishwasher,fplc, W/D hook ups, balcony/patio & extra storage.

Gated comm. w/underground parking.1471 Grove Ave

Imperial Beach, CA 91932

(619) [email protected]

ImperIal BeachLarge 1Br/1BaOn quiet cul-de-sac,

Close to Beach, Bay & BasesFrom $795/mo1042 15th Street

CAll Mgr. 619-429-9338

oCeanside/Vista

2 BEDROOMFree Rent or Garage

Call alisa - 760.941.6975www.groverrealty.com/forrent

naTIonaL CITyquiet neighborhoodLarge 1 Bedroom - $775

deposit $600 + $35 cred. checkPool, Laundry room, BBQ area. Near 3 major Fwys - 54, 805 & 5. Off Street

parking. No Pets. Near Base.619-477-8000

hillsidE gardENswelcomes all

military1, 2BR’s starting @ $885

$199 Sec. dep. Pets WelcomeCall foR SPECialS.

OPEN DAILY760-722-3620

WElcomEs homE all military

Lump Sum CaShFor Your penSionWe buy Pensions , Even Qualified Non-Assignable Plans. No Credit Required.

CASH for your Pension in less than 1 week. Your Search is Over !

CaLL mark Corbett: 714.267.4342

Casa loMa aPtsin Fallbrook - Studios,

1br/1ba, 2br/2baStarting at $630

760-723-9791

Right COLLege, Right DegRee,Right NOw

Get your degree in the fast-growing field of Healthcare Now.

IT, Business & Graphic Arts also avail.California College San Diego

Call 888-751-6129 today.

Rent:$1,695

3Br's, EZ Fwy access, minutes toCamp Pendleton. Lg. pool & Jacuzzi.

Call us at: 760-434-5257 662 Tamarack Ave. Carlsbad, CA 92008

$500 OFF1ST MONTH'S RENT

Address:

Chapter 7 BankruptCy as low as $499 (attorney fees).

Honest, Affordable,Professional, Quality Attorneys.

FREE Consult.a Debt relief agency.katz & Ostin LLp

619.209.6116

CheaP RiMsWe Finance!

$0 down for all models& all credit.

MilitARy DisCounts,Delivered in Days.

1-888-334-8781 x101

27 ft Nomad RV5th wheel travel trailer.Desert ready. Great condition.

Generator, Satellite, Solar Panel.Sleeps up to 6. Comes w/a cover.$14,500/oBo 619.501.0075

hiriNG ON-callSecUriTY OFFicerS

hSa prOTecTiVe SerViceS$15.00/HR Free Uniforms

Must have current California Guard CardTo apply: www.hsaguards.com

associate FilmProducers needed

Film project America,We Salute the Military.

For inquiries, meet Feliz or see her;WHERE? 32nd St. Naval Base food Ct.

WHEN? feb. 17, 18, 23 or 24th

TimE? 2:30 - 3:30pmLet us know: [email protected]

Film shoots: SD, Hawaii, Guam,Hollywood & Hong Kong.

americawesalutethemilitaryfilmproject.com

VA Home Loans for Veterans by

a Veteran•100% Financing on Home Purchases

•No Expense to Veteran Ability for Seller to Pay All Fees

•Property Tax/Funding Fee Exemption for Disabled Vets

For Members of the Military –$8000 Tax Credit Still Available!

Nick Cowan "Iraq Veteran"DRE# 01772819 NMLS# 245789

Page 45: Feb 15, 2011

For advertising information call: (858) 537.2280 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS Page 45

Helping dreams come true for 90 Years!

www.cdva.ca.gov/CalVetLoans(800) 952- 5626 or (916)503-8362

CalVet Home Loans is one of the Benefits offered by

the California Department of Veterans Affairs

Page 46: Feb 15, 2011

Page 46 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

Military Press Café

The greatest family musical of all time, “The Wizard of Oz,” is touching down in San Diego as Broadway/San Diego — A Nederlander Presentation brings this national treasure to the San Diego Civic Theatre Feb. 15-20.

This magical production, based on the Royal Shakespeare Company’s celebration of the 1939 MGM movie, is presented with breathtaking special effects that will sweep audiences away, from the moment the tornado twists its

way into Kansas.Twelve children from the San Diego

area will be performing the roles of “munchkins.” The group will be chosen immediately following local auditions (details tbd). Singing timeless classics such as “Ding Dong the Witch is Dead,” the local children with help bring this beloved classic to the stage of their hometown as part of their continuing performing arts education.

Director Nigel West, choreographer

Leigh Constantine and set and costume designer Tim McQuillen-Wright utilize the glamour and elegance of art deco Hollywood as the visually stunning technicolor backdrop for “The Wizard of Oz.” Dorothy, Toto and their friends the Cowardly Lion, Tin Man and Scarecrow are transported “Over the Rainbow” to adventures in Munchkin Land, the Haunted Forest and the Emerald City.

Featuring the classic songs, as composed by Harold Arlen, “Over the Rainbow,” “Ding Dong the Witch is Dead”

and “If I Only Had A Brain,” along with the beloved characters, THE WIZARD OF OZ will have the entire family captivated as they travel down the yellow brick road for an unforgettable evening at the theater.

For more information, www.wizardofozontour.com or BroadwaySD.com

Send listings / event news items to:[email protected]

We’re Not In Kansas Anymore…“The Wizard of Oz” Travels Over the Rainbow To San Diego Civic Theatre,Feb 15-20

Discovering AtlantisHow often have you attended a

convention and only spent time in meetings, the elevator or your room? You know the drill: opening reception, next day chock full of seminars, big lunch, cocktails followed by dinner, then start over the next morning. Well, here’s an admission. At a recent conference, I played hooky and made a discovery: Atlantis. Not the mystical city of the Greeks, but the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in Reno, Nevada.

Atlantis Casino Resort SpaI had to plan my escape carefully. I

started by wandering through the hotel for ideas. Since poker is a passion, the card room was a logical stop. Fortunately, there was a Hold ‘em tournament just beginning and a chair was open. It was a $30 buy-in, there were nine tables and the participants were a mixture of hotel guests and regulars. Free coffee, water and soft drinks were available for the players, as well as a platter of donuts. The game began promptly and after a good start, including quad queens, by noon I was short-stacked. I shoved all-in with an ace-jack suited, but lost when the hand didn’t pair up. I finished out of the money (missed the final table by one) but it was an excellent start to the day.

Poker Room By that time, I was ravenous and

headed to lunch. The Manhattan Deli & Restaurant took good care of my hunger. It’s a traditional New York style deli with a huge menu and portions to match. Their not-to-be missed signature dish is the “piled-high” pastrami sandwich. It is served on thick-cut rye bread designed to better hold the giant stack of meat together. The classic New York cheesecake for dessert was sublime. All bakery goods are made in-house. Rightfully, the place has become a local favorite.

I decided that a visit to the spa would be the perfect way to end my adventure. In 2010, the Spa at Atlantis was listed in the SpaFinders Reader’s Choice awards. Upon entering, I was transported to a zone of tranquility. I “took the waters” at the Aqua Lounge, then rested in the Laconium Relaxation area and finished with a superb hot-stone massage. Now I understand why the Spa won its award.

Additional Information: For information, specials and packages, logon to www.atlantiscasino.com or call 1-800-723-6500.

TRAVELS WITH HIAN www.Travels-with-Hian.com

Page 47: Feb 15, 2011

Page 44 February 15, 2011 THE MILITARY PRESS

in Mission Valley

2011chevymalibu

2011chevytraverse

2011chevysilverado

msrp ...........................$22,890Courtesy disC .............$1,215manuf. rebate .............$2,500usaa rebate .............. .....$750

net cost $18,425$4,465 off MSRPStk#110380 VIN 231999

msrp ...........................$30,439Courtesy disC .............$1,711manuf. rebate .............$2,000usaa rebate .............. .....$750

net cost $25,978$4,461 off MSRPStk#110250 VIN 196913

msrp ...........................$32,080Courtesy disC .............$2,200manuf. rebate .............$2,500ally dpa ........................$2,005usaa rebate .............. .....$750

net cost $24,625$7,455 off MSRPStk#110550 VIN 253824

2011chevy

cruze

2011chevy

camaro

2011chevy

aveo

msrp .............................$17,095Courtesy disC ................ ..$750usaa rebate ......................$750

net cost $15,595$1,500 off MSRPStk#110628 VIN 155917

msrp .............................$24,675Courtesy disC ................ ..$900usaa rebate ......................$750

net cost $23,025$1,650 off MSRPStk#110600 VIN 144344

msrp .............................$14,820Courtesy disC ................ ..$850manuf. rebate ............. ..$1,500usaa rebate ......................$750

net cost $11,720$3,100 off MSRPStk#110479 VIN 150874

20%Off

call today! 888-440-4308750 Camino del Rio N., • San Diego CA 92108

www.courtesysandiego.comLocated in Mission Valley Auto Circle

*o.a.C. must finance w/ally for d.p.a. most financing @ standard rates.all advertised prices exclude government fees an dt taxes, andy finance charges, any dealer document preparation charge and any emisssion testing charge. all vehicles subject to prior sale. offers expire close of business day 2/28/11.

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OK

Prepared by The Digital Studio | Goodby, Silverstein & Partners. All rights reserved. 415.392.0669

Released on mm.dd.yyPrinted at None Round 4

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Mechanical SpecsChevrolet Retail

CHEVY-RET 60

CHEVWRV4G

4RET60WG

Feb Retail - Malibu

CHEVY-RET 60_CHEVWRV4G_Military Press.indd

Adobe InDesign

2-7-2011 11:52 AM

4/C NP

2.7.11

2.14.11

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A CONSUMERS DIGEST “BEST BUY” THREE YEARS IN A ROW.

1 Examples based on survey. Each dealer sets its own price. Your payments may vary. Must show proof of current ownership or lease of a 1999 or newer GM vehicle. Payments are for a 2011 Malibu LS with an MSRP of $22,695. 38 monthly payments total $7,334. Payments are for a 2011 Cruze LS with automatic transmission with an MSRP of $17,920. 39 monthly payments total $6,190. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at lease signing. Ally Financial, Inc. must approve lease. Take delivery by 2/28/11. Mileage charge of $.20/mile over 39,000 miles. Lessee pays for excess wear. Payments may be higher in some states. Not available with other offers. 2 Requires a subscription sold separately by XM after trial period. Available only in the 48 contiguous United States and District of Columbia. Visit gm.xmradio.com for details. 3 EPA estimated. 4 Always use safety belts and proper child restraints, even with air bags. Children are safer when properly secured in a rear seat. See the Owner’s Manual for more safety information. 5 Eligible military personnel includes active duty members, retirees and Reserves of the U.S. Air Force, Army, Navy, Marines, National Guard and Coast Guard. 6 Excludes Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 and Volt. 7 Visit onstar.com for coverage map, details and system limitations. Not available in certain areas. OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. Visit onstar.com for details and system limitations. ©2011 OnStar. All rights reserved. ©2011 General Motors.

EVERY BIT AS NICE AS YOUR NEIGHBOR’S LUXURY CAR, BUT FOR A WHOLE LOT LESS.The 2011 Chevrolet Malibu

BEST MILITARY DISCOUNT FROM ANY CAR COMPANY.With the GM Military Discount Program,5 active duty members and Reserves can get even better deals on most 2011 Chevrolet vehicles.6 Register and get your GO code at gmmilitarydiscount.com. Bring it, along with your military ID, to your Chevrolet Dealer.

3 4

2

2011 CRUZE LSLOW-MILEAGE LEASE EXAMPLE FOR QUALIFIED OWNERS/LESSEES OF A 1999 OR NEWER GM VEHICLE

$159 PER MONTH

39 MONTHS1 $899 DUE AT SIGNING

No security deposit required. Tax, title, license and dealer fees extra. Mileage charge of $.20 per mile over 39,000 miles.

2

43

2011 MALIBU LSLOW-MILEAGE LEASE EXAMPLE FOR QUALIFIED OWNERS/LESSEES OF A 1999 OR NEWER GM VEHICLE

Tax, title, license and dealer fees extra. Mileage charge of $.20 per mile over 39,000 miles.

$193PER MONTH

39 MONTHS1

SECURITY DEPOSITFIRST MONTH’S PAYMENTDOWN PAYMENTDUE AT SIGNING

TO GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY, WE BACK IT

100,000-MILE/5-YEARPOWERTRAIN WARRANTYWhichever comes first. See dealer for limited warranty details.

CHEVYDEALER.COM

ONSTAR®7 – STANDARD ON MOST MODELS

Safely connecting you in ways you never thought possible

• AUTOMATIC CRASH RESPONSE

• STOLEN VEHICLE ASSISTANCE

• VEHICLE DIAGNOSTICS

• REMOTE DOOR UNLOCK

Standard 6 months on most 2011 models.

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2.6

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