Showing posts with label Medal of Honor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medal of Honor. Show all posts

Monday, July 13, 2015

Massachusetts: Charlie Baker, Marty Walsh field unique requests


U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano has never been afraid to blast political enemies or even those in his own party like Hillary Clinton, waxing that her rollout offered more of a fizzle than a bang.
Turns out the former Somerville mayor’s had a lot of practice sparking explosions.
Capuano said he got a federal license back in 1973 to light fireworks, and worked behind the scenes on municipal fireworks shows throughout the state.
“I thought I could make a killing during the bicentennial. I was wrong,” the Democratic congressman joked during an in-studio visit with Boston Herald Radio.
Capuano didn’t spend a lot of time working the fireworks circuit, but said he gleaned one big takeaway.
“Everyone who worked there, they all had a little something missing,” he said.
Charlie’s chopper
Gov. Charlie Baker threw out his notes at a ceremony honoring the arrival of “The Wall That Heals” last week and instead regaled a veteran-heavy crowd with a slew of stories, including one during which he struggled to contain his emotions.
This one, however, got the most laughs:
Recalling a meeting with the Congressional Medal of Honor Society — which is holding its annual convention in Boston in September — Baker described himself as breezing into his “15th meeting” that day, quickly shaking hands amid introductions and pledging to do whatever he could to help.
One elderly gentleman had a request, Baker said: He wanted to go for a helicopter ride — a notion Baker laughed off. When it came time for a group photo, the same man sidled up next to him, and repeated his request. Baker told him he’d take “note of that” with an eye roll.
“Then he looks up at me like this,” Baker said, leaning back and turning his eyes toward the sky, “and he goes, ‘You know? You’re a pretty big guy.’ ... I used to fly with a guy who’s about your size. We used to call him Too Tall.’
“And so I looked at him and said, ‘You know, there’s a guy named Too Tall. His name’s Ed Freeman.” Freeman, Baker described, was a Medal of Honor recipient who bravely flew a helicopter in and out of a Vietnam War battle zone to bring supplies to soldiers and carry the wounded to safety.
“He probably saved dozens of lives,” Baker said. “I said (to the elderly man), ‘His flying buddy in that battle was a guy named Bruce Crandall.’
“This guy looks at me and says, ‘Yeah, me! Bruce Crandall! That’s what I said when I came in!’ ”
Baker, breaking into a wide smile, told Crandall — also a Medal of Honor recipient — that he was honored to meet “a real American hero.”
“So,” Baker said, “he looked at me and said, ‘So do I get my helicopter ride?’ ”
Pitching Marty
Since he took office in January 2014, Mayor Martin J. Walsh has gotten dozens of direct messages on Twitter. The majority are constituents offering complaints or compliments. More than a half-dozen address him simply as “Marty” or even “Martin.”
One, however, was an outright solicitation from a man who said he owns his own “pavement marking company.”
“... just wondering if you could help me maybe get a few contracts?” the DM reads.
Walsh didn’t respond, according to documents Herald reporter Jordan Graham obtained through a public records request. In fact, Walsh’s account had no outgoing DMs, according to his office.
Hillary Chabot and Jordan Graham contributed to this report. State House reporter Matt Stout can be reached at matthew.stout@bostonherald.com.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Ex-soldier receives historic Medal of Honor for valor in Afghan battle Published: October 14, 2013 Updated 2 hours ago

US NEWS MEDALOFHONOR 1 ABA — President Barack Obama will make history Tuesday by bestowing a Medal of Honor on a second living serviceman for selfless gallantry beyond the call of duty during a 2009 battle with Taliban insurgents in the eastern Afghanistan valley of Ganjgal.
Former Army Capt. William Swenson is receiving the nation’s highest military award for heroism a little more than two years after Obama decorated Marine Sgt. Dakota Meyer in a pomp-filled White House ceremony. Swenson is the first living officer who served in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars to be awarded the honor and the 13th recipient of the medal in the two foreign conflicts.
Swenson, 34, of Seattle was nominated for his role in extracting U.S. and Afghan forces who were trapped in an ambush by some 60 Taliban hiding on the ridgelines and in a village at the end of the U-shaped valley. He then returned repeatedly to the battlefield – including for a final run with Meyer, two other Marines and an Afghan translator – to recover American and Afghan casualties under fire.
What’s extraordinary, however, is not only the two Medals of Honor and the slew of other decorations bestowed on American servicemen who fought at Gangjal, but also how the clash has been dogged by controversy from the moment it erupted on Sept. 8, 2009, to this very day.
The Army narrative of Swenson’s deeds and sworn statements by American participants in the battle conflict with details of Meyer’s 2012 memoir and the Marine Corps and White House versions of his actions prepared for his Sept. 15, 2011, award ceremony.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/10/14/205355/ex-soldier-to-receive-historic.html#storylink=cpy






Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/10/14/205355/ex-soldier-to-receive-historic.html#storylink=cpy

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