Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Second Annual Labor Day Weekend KIA Thunder Run in Moss Landing Will Also Have a Military-Vehicle Show and Swap Meet


A message from USAKIA.

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USAKIA's latest press release follows...

I thought the following story would be of interest to you.

Second Annual Labor Day Weekend KIA Thunder Run in Moss Landing Will Also Have a Military-Vehicle Show and Swap Meet

To read the entire story, visit http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/8/prweb429862.htm.


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USAKIA

Monday, August 28, 2006

Mail Tribune - Remembering the fallen - August 25, 2006

Hi _Your Shield_!

Traveling memorial helps an older brother heal in southern Oregon. Ed Mazza was wounded in Vietnam, and his younger brother Robert Mazza was killed in 1967. Read the story from the Mail Tribune. His first cousin, Stephen Mazza, also died there.

http://www.mailtribune.com/archive/2006/0825/local/stories/vietnamwall0.htm

Regards

USAKIA
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August 25, 2006

Remembering the fallen


Traveling Vietnam War memorial contains the names of 58,215 Americans who were killed




Ed Mazza of Rogue River touches the name of his first cousin, Stephen D. Mazza,
at a traveling version of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall at the Southern
Oregon Rehabilitation Center and Clinics in White City. Mazza, whose brother
also died in the war, lost his right arm in a rocket attack.
(Mail Tribune / Jim Craven)

By Paul Fattig
Mail Tribune

WHITE CITY — Ed Mazza ran his artificial right arm decorated with an American flag down panel 21E of a traveling version of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall.

"There he is," he said as he drew a deep breath, adding, "Robert had just turned 19."

Robert W. Mazza was his kid brother. A newly-minted lance corporal in the Marine Corps, he was killed on June 10, 1967, at Quang Tri just south of Danang.

Big brother Ed, 62, of Rogue River, knows about Vietnam: It was where he lost his right arm. A Navy veteran, 1st Class Machinist Mate Mazza had volunteered to serve on a riverboat on the MeKong River delta when it was struck by a rocket on Oct. 17, 1966.

"It hit us dead center," he recalled. "Killed everybody on board except me. I was the only survivor."

The traveling tribute, which contains the names of 58,215 Americans killed in the war, opened to the public at noon Thursday at the Department of Veterans Affairs' Southern Oregon Rehabilitation Center and Clinics (SORCC). The SORCC is at 8295 Crater Lake Ave. off Highway 62 in White City.

The 370-foot long wall, a replica of the stationary Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C., will be open 24 hours a day until Sunday evening. There is no charge.

Ed Mazza, one of several people who had earlier addressed the crowd of more than 100 people during the opening ceremony, noted he had three comrades-in-arms and two relatives on the wall.

"This wall has brought a measure of healing for me," he told those assembled. "I can only hope it can help all veterans heal from the horrors of war, no matter in which campaign they served."

Later, Mazza, who spent his childhood in Atascadero, Calif., said he will never forget his younger brother.

"He was a star athlete," he recalled. "When he was still in high school, the Dodgers were going to draft him as a pitcher. He was really good. He was supposed to start spring training with them when he got out of high school.

"He went to Vietnam instead," he added.

The Navy veteran said he returned home wounded late in 1966.

"He wanted to go," he said. "Our parents tried to talk him out of it. He went anyway. He wasn't over there very long. He had only been there three or four months."

He stopped talking to look at his brother's name.

"When I see this, I feel sick to my stomach, absolutely sick to my stomach," he said. "First time I went to the wall in D.C. was in '95. I broke down for about four days. I couldn't function."

Farther along the wall on panel 38E is the name of Stephen D. Mazza, Ed's first cousin.

"His mother and dad were killed in a car wreck so my dad took him in," Ed Mazza said. "We raised him."

His cousin, a Spec. 4 in the Army, was killed Feb. 10, 1968, near the village of Tay Ninh.

Ed Mazza, who credits the SORCC for his physical and emotional recovery and where he has volunteered for years, said he feels a special closeness to veterans of all stripes.

"There are a lot of names that aren't on the wall," he said. "A lot of veterans died after the war, suicides and other things."

"But this wall helps," he added. "It helps heal us."

Farther along the wall, former Marine George Zavala, 60, of Medford, was looking for his friend Thomas E. "Tom" Combs on the wall. Combs, a lance corporal, died April 5, 1967.

A retired police officer, Zavala was only 18 when he arrived in Vietnam in the late 1960s.

"I was recovering from wounds when Tom died," he said. "I had shrapnel in my legs."

Garland and Eula Arnaud of Sams Valley spent a few moments in silence before the name of Steve M. Hastings, a young man that Eula knew as a child in Baldwin Park, Calif.

"He was a family friend," she explained. "All I know is that Stever was on a rescue helicopter in the Army when he was killed."

"We just wanted to pay tribute to him, and all those who are continuing to answer the call," said Garland, 56, a Vietnam veteran who served as an enlisted man with an armored cavalry unit in the Army in 1969-70.

"I'd do it all again today if I could," he concluded.

Reach reporter Paul Fattig at 776-4496
or at mailto:pfattig@mailtribune.com?subject=Remembering

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Thursday, August 24, 2006

After six decades, a submarine's fate may surface

Reporters do also claim a war never ends for KIA families.
The submarine U.S.S. Grunion was lost during World War II with 70 on board. Now the skipper's sons may have finally found the sub "deep in frigid Alaska waters."

______________________________________________

The following appeared on Boston.com:
Headline: After six decades, a submarine's fate may surface
Date: August 17, 2006

"There was no distress call, no indication of enemy depth charges exploding or bulkheads breached, just a dead silence that stretched from a few days into 60 years."
______________________________________________

To see this recommendation, click on the link below:

Boston Globe Article

______________________________________________

This message was sent by USAKIA [mailto:usakiadowff@aol.com]through Boston.com's email recommendation service. If you have questions or comments about this free service, please email us at feedback@boston.com.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

E-mail-A-Friend: Fallen soldier leaves legacy of brotherhood

Comment:
American Legion post makes plaques for kin of KIA in Texas.

Story:
Fallen soldier leaves legacy of brotherhood

When Charles Boatright remembers his nephew, he recalls a proud soldier who served his country and honored the personnel that made up his unit.

Just as Frisco High School grad Sgt. Michael Luke Boatright honored his fellow soldiers in life, he'll salute them in death. After all, it's in his name that family members opted to launch the Fallen Soldier Memorial Plaque program, in which Texas families who lost someone in military service will receive a plaque commemorating their loved one's sacrifice

For more of this story, click on or type the URL below:

http://www.friscoenterprise.com/articles/2006/08/23/frisco_enterprise/news/news47.txt
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Friday, August 18, 2006

Boonton Twp. sign honors fallen soldier

You have been sent the following article from USAKIA as a courtesy of Morris County's Daily Record Newspaper!

"Boonton Twp. sign honors fallen soldier"

To view this article on www.dailyrecord.com, go to:

http://www.dailyrecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2006608180351

The following is a short message from USAKIA:

A New Jersey township honors Maj. Charles Robert Soltes Jr., KIA in Iraq two years ago, by dedicating a street sign in his name. His parents, Nancy Soltes and retired Col. Charles R. Soltes, both attended the ceremony.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

USAKIA Reinstates Its Popular Free KIA Flag Program

Design of KIA Flag

3ft x 5ft KIA Flag Flying Right of U.S. Flag

Dear Your Shield Blog:

The USA KIA/DOW Family Foundation (USAKIA) will reinstate its popular free KIA flag program for all killed in action (KIA) and died of wounds (DOW) families. Because of a donation, kin can again request a free 3' x 5' red KIA flag as soon as we obtain more stock. It includes free shipping via Priority Mail. Make a tax-deductible donation to help with programs such as this one at our Web site, www.usakia.org.

Thank you,

Vincent H. Bartning
for USAKIA

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

E-mail-A-Friend: Baucus's nephew dies in Iraq

Comment:
Montana senator's nephew, a U.S. Marine, brings Montana's total dead to 11 in our operations in Iraq.

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Story:
Baucus's nephew dies in Iraq

HELENA - The nephew of Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., was killed during combat operations in Iraq over the weekend, the senator's office confirmed Tuesday.

Marine Cpl. Phillip E. Baucus, 28, of the Helena area, died Saturday in the province of Al Anbar, the U.S. Department of Defense said. It did not immediately release any further information.

For more of this story, click on or type the URL below:

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2006/08/01/news/state/28-baucus.txt

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