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No Topic. Anything Goes.

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Zipper:
Hi,
I was missing that "No Topic" topic from the HM board so I started this one.
I saw this video and thought you all might enjoy it also.
It's an amazing "Heroic" war story, with very graphic surgery video, but worth seeing if you don't mind actual surgery footage.   

From a Vietnam vet who served as a Marine grunt in 1969:   As you might know, I'm working on the book WAR HEROES: Voices from Afghanistan.  One of the stories is about PVT Channing Moss, who was impaled by a live RPG during a Taliban ambush while on patrol.  Army protocol says that medevac choppers are never to carry anyone with a live round in him.  Even though they feared it could explode, the flight crew said damn the protocol and flew him to the nearest aid station.  Again, protocol said that in such a case the patient is to be put in a sandbagged area away from the surgical unit, given a shot of morphine and left to wait (and die) until others are treated.  Again, the medical team ignored the protocol.  Here's a seven-minute video put together by the Military Times, which includes actual footage of the surgery where Dr. John Oh, a Korean immigrant who became a naturalized citizen and went to West Point, removed the live round with the help of volunteers and a member of the EOD (explosive ordinance disposal) team.  I've interviewed several of the people involved. Moss has undergone six operations but is doing well at home in Gainesville, GA.  To me, this is one of the most amazing stories I've ever worked on.  I think you'll find the video pretty remarkable.
 
http://www.militarytimes.com/multimedia/video/rpg_surgery/

NightmarePatrol:
That's "above and beyond" Zip

Not really related, but I'm glad this guy lives out of range!, A Pennsylvania history buff who recreates firearms from old wars accidentally fired a 2-pound cannonball through the wall of his neighbor's home.

Fifty-four-year-old William Maser fired a cannonball Wednesday evening outside his home in Georges Township that ricocheted and hit a house 400 yards away.

The cannonball, about two inches in diameter, smashed through a window and a wall before landing in a closet. Authorities say nobody was hurt.

State police charged Maser with reckless endangerment, criminal mischief and disorderly conduct.

No one answered the phone Friday at Maser's home. He tells WPXI-TV recreating 19th century cannons is a long time hobby. He says he is sorry and he will stop shooting them on his property, about 35 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.

gore range:


Sixty-five years ago, 1st Lt. Bernerd Harding huddled in a cellar with a few other airmen captured by German farmers and buried his pilot's wings, fearful he'd be beaten or shot as an American bomber pilot.

Now, at age 90, Harding wants his wings back. He's headed to Germany on Sunday and hopes — with the help of a German doctor — to find the farmhouse cellar and dig up the 3-inch-long metal wings that he had proudly pinned to his shirt. The house was in rural Klein Quenstedt (pronounced klyn KWEN'-shted), Germany, southwest of Berlin, he said.


WWII bombing pilot Bernard Harding, 90, poses at his home in Milford, N.H., Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009. Sixty- five years after his plane was shot down in Germany, Harding returns to the small town in hopes he can find the lapel wings he buried in the dirt cellar where he was held captive.

"I know exactly where the wings are. They're not very deep. I won't need a shovel," he said in a firm, clear voice during a telephone interview from his Milford, N.H., home.

A month after the D-Day invasion of Normandy, Harding was a 25-year-old B-24 pilot flying his 14th mission when he was shot down. Harding, a member of the 8th Air Force's 492nd Bomb Group, was leading nine other B-24s in the 859th squadron on a daylight mission to bomb an aircraft manufacturing plant in Bernburgh on July 7, 1944. He was carrying 11 other soldiers on his plane.

He had just dropped his bomb load when the support planes that kept German fighters at bay were diverted to protect bombers in another squadron. Shortly afterward, German fighters crippled his plane, nicknamed Georgette, and Harding ordered his crew to parachute.

"Our inboard engines were on fire. We lost every control. I gave the order for everyone to bail out. I bailed out last," Harding said.

All 10 planes in his squadron, carrying about 100 crewmen and pilots were shot down, he recalled. At least half died, he said. Of the 12 men aboard Georgette, only one died that day, shot in the head by his German captors, Harding found out later. The others were all captured and survived the war, but have since died.

Harding landed in a freshly cut wheat field. Three farmers, two with pitchforks and one with a gun, captured him and herded him into the cellar. They held him until German army officers could take charge.

Two other airmen who had been shot down were already being held when Harding arrived. He dug a hole and buried his wings.

"We were there a while. We heard a wagon rumbling over the cobblestones," he said.

A young German who spoke English ordered the airmen to take the body of a dead American airman off the wagon.

After several hours, German soldiers loaded the captured Americans into a van that took them to Halberstadt Air Force Base. About 100 other Americans had been rounded up from 36 planes shot down that day, Harding said. Three days later, they were loaded onto a train to Frankfurt, interrogated and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in Barth.

After 10 months in the POW camp, the Russian army was approaching from the East. The German captors told the 7,500 prisoners to leave. The next morning, the Germans had fled, Harding said. The Russians freed the prisoners.

As the years passed, Harding didn't think much about his wings. He wasn't sure how the German villagers would treat an American pilot who had bombed their country.

Then last year, he attended services at Arlington National Cemetery for six airmen whose remains had only recently been discovered with the help of German villagers. Harding began to think Klein Quenstedt residents might help him recover his wings and close a chapter in his life.

Early this year, a friend of Harding's found a Web site about an old water mill in Klein Quenstedt owned by Dr. Ulrich Heucke (pronounced HOY'-kuh), a village resident. The friend e-mailed Heucke describing Harding's quest and asked for help.

Heucke, 41, became intrigued because of his interest in history, and wrote back. He began interviewing older village residents who remembered what had happened.

One resident remembered a dead airman with his parachute wrapped around him. That fit Harding's description of the dead man he helped take off the wagon.

Heucke sent Harding pictures of several houses that might be where he was held, but Harding didn't recognize them. The pictures showed the front of the houses, and Harding had entered through the rear.

Heucke plans to take Harding and his family to four farmhouses Wednesday in search of his wings.

"There were some places I definitely know American airmen were in. Others I just suspect," Heucke said.

The village hasn't changed much, but some buildings have been remodeled, Heucke said. Most of the older farmhouses are still standing.

He said chances of Harding finding the pin are slim. But people in the small village of 750 want to help.

"We will just go around. It is the last hope to find the place," he said.

Heucke also has arranged for Harding to fly over the village to see if that helps pinpoint the house.

"I would like to get to know Bernerd Harding after the time we communicated," Heucke said. "It is very interesting that a man 90 years of age is coming here, making a journey to see this place."

Harding just hopes that he finds the right cellar and that no one has poured concrete over the floor in the years since he scratched his shallow hole in the dirt.

....weekend with Bernie ;D ......

Zipper:
Where is the "What are you listening to" topic?

Puffin:
So how do you post a picture? The insert image icon doesn't seem to work for me. I can post a hyperlink no problem, but no joy on images

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