Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Combat Vets Motorcycle Association Member Hospitalized After Accident

Veteran recovering from serious motorcycle crash after visiting Chattanooga shooting memorials
WRCB TV
By Sara Sidery, Reporter
Aug 04, 2015
The ride was a way for the retired Army Colonel to help channel his grief and frustration for what happened -- and to show his support for the military.
CHATTANOOGA, TN (WRCB) - A veteran traveled to Chattanooga to show his support for the servicemen killed in last month's shooting rampage, and ended up in a fight for his own life.

Jim Bachman is a member of the Combat Vets Motorcycle Association. He was one of more than 100 bikers riding in support of the five servicemen gunned down at a military installation last month.

Bachman was on his way back to Nashville when he crashed in Marion County on July 25, suffering serious injuries. He has been upgraded from critical condition. He's still in pain, but has a long recovery ahead of him -- and says he considers himself "extremely lucky" to be alive.

"The road wasn't that bad, we weren't going that fast. I'm convinced the heat exhaustion played a part in it," Bachman said on Day 11 of his hospital stay at Erlanger on Tuesday.

He suffered 10 broken ribs, a broken shoulder and a collapsed lung after crashing his motorcycle on the way home from visiting the Chattanooga memorials.

The week after the shooting, the Vietnam veteran organized a ride to Chattanooga for 125 members of the Combat Vets Motorcycle Association out of the Nashville area.
read more here
WRCBtv.com | Chattanooga News, Weather

Navy Corpsman Remembers Vietnam and Bounty on His Life

Veteran recalls Vietnam tour as a Navy corpsman
Killeen Daily Herald
JC Jones
Herald staff writer
August 5, 2015

In the Army-dominated city of Killeen, retired Petty Officer 2nd Class James Henry said it’s rare to meet many Navy corpsmen.

Henry joined the Navy out of high school, in 1965, and when given the option in boot camp of what route to go, he chose hospital corpsman, equivalent to an Army medic, and prepared to go overseas to be part of the war in Vietnam.

He was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines, 3rd Marine Division, from 1966 to 1968 in Vietnam. Before he began his tour, Henry was given 30 days of leave to go home. That would be the last time, he said, for many corpsmen to see their families.

“Hospital corpsmen over there in the Marines had a very low chance of survival because we were the only ones without a very noticeable weapon. ... The prime targets in Vietnam were the officers, the radiomen and then the corpsmen. The North Vietnamese had a bounty on corpsmen. My life was worth, I think it was 700 piastres, which is about $70,” he said.

Very quickly after his arrival in-country, Henry was confronted with his first casualty, when he saw a young Marine die just a week before the Marine’s tour was complete.

The incident stuck with him, and he later wrote about the event in an essay titled “Helplessness.”
read more here

Veteran Speaks After Police Car Video

News 4 Investigates: Vet with PTSD that allegedly erupted in police car speaks
KMOV News
By KMOV.com Staff
Aug 03, 2015
(KMOV.com) - A veteran suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder allegedly erupted in the back seat of a Metro East police car. The veteran, Brad Lavite, spoke to News 4 Investigates' Craig Cheatham after the video surfaced.
KMOV.com

Veteran Suicide: Brain Scan Showed the Scars, Bars Showed Scorn

Another soldier spurned by Army dies of apparent suicide
USA TODAY
Gregg Zoroya
August 4, 2015
Since non-medical management took over, 90 soldiers have committed suicide within three months of receiving substance abuse treatment.

This is Georgia National Guard Spc. Stephen Akins. On July 2, six months after he was expelled, Chrystal Akins found her son in the basement bedroom of her home in Austell, just west of Atlanta, dead of an apparent suicide by overdose, according to police. Michael A. Schwarz, USA TODAY
For a U.S. Army where failures to treat soldiers with substance abuse problems have been linked to suicides, Georgia National Guard Spc. Stephen Akins was another tragedy waiting to happen.

Scans of his brain showed scars, and he had a history of seizures, combat blast exposure and suicide attempts. All were indisputable evidence that the soldier needed a medical retirement — despite erratic behavior that led to punishable infractions, his lawyer and psychiatrist argued. Such a move would offer a smooth transition from the Army to the care of the VA.

But the Army didn't see it that way. A two-star general with no medical background concluded that the 31-year-old soldier's behavior — drunken driving, speeding, missed appointments and urinalysis cheating — had nothing to do with traumatic brain injury or emotional problems and kicked him out of the Army.

On July 2, six months after he was expelled, Chrystal Akins found her son dead in the basement bedroom of her home in Austell, Ga., just west of Atlanta, victim of an apparent suicide by overdose, according to police. "It totally blew me away," she said about prying open his bedroom door and finding his body on his bed. "I'll live with this the rest of my life."
read more here

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Australia Claims "First World-Study on Vietnam Veterans With PTSD"

They say it is the first study in the world? Seriously? Then I guess this didn't really happen in 2008 or any of the other studies already done and undone to be redone again.
Persisting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms and their Relationship to Functioning in Vietnam Veterans: A 14-Year Follow-Up

The authors examined the longitudinal association between persisting posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and multiple domains of life functioning in a community sample of 1,377 American Legionnaire Vietnam veterans first assessed in 1984 and followed-up 14 years later. Almost 30 years after their return from Vietnam, 10% of veterans continued to experience severe PTSD symptoms. At all levels of combat exposure, persisting severe PTSD symptoms were associated with worse family relationships, more smoking, less life satisfaction and happiness, more mental health service use, and more nonspecific health complaints at the 14-year follow-up. Further investigation is needed to determine whether the PTSD-functioning relationship is causal and if successful treatment of PTSD is associated with improvement in functioning.
In this study, we first examine whether the association between higher combat exposure and worse functioning documented in 1984 is still evident in 1998. We then test whether persisting PTSD symptoms are associated with deficits in four important areas of current functioning: family relationships, negative health behaviors, personal well-being, and nonspecific health problems, after stratifying by combat exposure.
Plus this
The association of PTSD with current smoking and nonspecific health complaints deserves further attention. A smaller proportion of veterans with persisting PTSD quit smoking between 1984 and 1998. Over 50% of veterans with PTSD in the medium and high combat groups were current smokers in 1998 compared to 30%−40% of those exposed to similar levels of combat, but who did meet criteria for severe PTSD symptoms. The significant association between combat-related PTSD and current smoking is consistent with other studies of veterans (Beckham, 1999; Eisen et al., 2004; Koenen et al., 2006; Schnurr and Spiro, 1999). Moreover, smoking has been posited as a mediator of the consistent association between PTSD and worse health and may be one reason veterans with PTSD had more nonspecific health complaints. Growing evidence suggests veterans with PTSD are at higher risk for future tobacco-related diseases including coronary heart disease and lung and other cancers (Boscarino, 2004, 2006; Kubzansky, Koenen, Spiro, Vokonas, and Sparrow, 2007). However, PTSD appears to have direct negative effects on self-reported health and coronary heart disease that are independent of the PTSD-smoking association (Kubzansky et al., 2007; Schnurr, Ford, et al., 2000; Schnurr and Spiro, 1999). In fact, path analytic studies suggest the direct effect of PTSD on health accounts for more of the variance than the indirect of PTSD through smoking (Schnurr and Spiro, 1999). Further longitudinal research aimed at clarifying the relationships among PTSD, smoking, and health problems in veterans is needed.

Remember as you read the following they have been doing research on PTSD for 40 years!
World-first study looks at PTSD's toll on Vietnam veterans' bodies
ABC Australia
By Tom Fowles
Posted about 10 hours ago

World-first research into the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder on Vietnam veterans, including Test cricketer Tony Dell, will be unveiled in Brisbane next month.

The study looked at 300 veterans, half of them with PTSD, to work out the physical impact of the disease.

Former Test cricketer and PTSD sufferer Mr Dell, who served in Vietnam in the late 1960s, was one of the first to take part in the study.

"Lots of people with PTSD actually die younger from the physical ailments that you actually become more susceptible to," he said.

He said he hoped the research provided encouragement for the Federal Government to take action against the debilitating condition.

"We hope to go back to the Prime Minister and the Defence Minister and say 'You have to do something'," Mr Dell said.

"In army terms, you've marked time for too long. It's flown under the radar. It's underfunded, it's misunderstood and here's a definite way forward for you."

The full extent of the physical toll that PTSD places on the body will be announced at the PTSD 2015 international forum in Brisbane between September 10-11.
read more here

Shots Fired At Camp Shelby Soldiers

Shots fired at Camp Shelby soldiers 
Clarion Ledger
Therese Apel
August 4, 2015
WDAM reported that Lt. Col. Christian Patterson at Camp Shelby said shots were fired as the truck drove past the base and soldiers were in the area.
2:24 p.m. update

WDAM reporter Ryan Moore is reporting that Perry County sheriff deputies are questioning a pair of white male suspects who "pulled up from driving another truck" while authorities were at a residence investigating a vehicle matching the description of the truck used in the Camp Shelby shooting.

2:22 p.m. update

While Camp Shelby soldiers participated in an exercise drill, an unidentified pickup truck passed by and fired shots. Lt. Col. Christian Patterson, director of public affairs at the Mississippi Military Department, said that no one was injured and that the soldiers on site reported the incident to civilian authorities. Patterson said that the incident was not being viewed as an active shooter situation and that increased security measures have been taken recently to protect soldiers. The Perry County Sheriff’s office is handling the case.

Perry County Sheriff Jimmy Dale Smith said investigators are following up on a few leads at this point. There are officials at a residence in Perry County that has a vehicle that matches the description of the one used in the shooting, Smith said.

Sheriff Smith said he needs to speak to the soldiers who were shot at to find out more about the incident, but that at this point the shooters could be charged with anything from simple to aggravated assault.
read more here

‘National Anthem Girl’ Sings Anthem 24 Times in 24 Hours

‘National Anthem Girl’ Sings Anthem 24 Times in 24 Hours to Raise Funds for Wounded Vets
Daily Signal
Leah Jessen
August 03, 2015
The charity, which was founded by a group of Maryland high school students in 2012, has raised close to one million dollars since its inception. This weekend the group brought in $23,975.
Performer Janine Stange has made history for a second time.
Stange, also known as the “National Anthem Girl,” first made headlines in August 2014 when she became the first person to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” in all 50 states.

This past weekend, the Los Angeles resident sang the national anthem 24 times in 24 hours.

The performances were held in conjunction with a tournament hosted by Shootout for Soldiers, an organization that hosts 24-hour-long lacrosse events to raise money for wounded American military members. Throughout those 24 hours, 24 lacrosse teams from the region played hourly games. Stange kicked off each game with a rendition of the anthem.
read more here

PTSD Researchers Need More Money To Figure Out What Didn't Work?

Can we get serious? Seriously, isn't over 4 decades long enough to wait for these yahoo researchers to get their act together? After all, you'd think they would want to help ease the suffering of 8 million Americans with PTSD. That is what we're talking about. Isn't it?

For all the old researchers found treating veterans after combat trauma, they ended up helping regular folks with PTSD from other causes instead of just ignoring their pain while prescribing "get over it" and call them when there was a real problem.

This is what got me started, Cures for PTSD often remain elusive for war veterans on MedicalXPress August 4, 2015
In a review of medical literature over a 35-year period, researchers from the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Center for Post-Traumatic Stress and Traumatic Brain Injury—a program in the Department of Psychiatry at NYU Langone Medical Center—and other institutions found that non-medical approaches to treat PTSD were effective in some patients but not in others, suggesting a need for broader, more personalized approaches to care.
OK, how about we start with what kind they are talking about? If the "non-medical" means they are doing talk therapy to address the real issues behind most of the suffering, like survivor guilt, forgiveness along with every other aspect of the spiritual part of the veteran, then they have a lot of success provided the practitioner actually understands the difference between "spiritual" and "religious" approaches. Two totally different disciplines.

Then add in the question of if the practitioner incorporates physical activities to help bring the body's reaction back to relative calmness instead of allowing PTSD to fuel the rush of adrenaline?

The folks doing this rehash of research must have skipped those parts. But what can we expect from these folks when they come up with a great way to get funding to do a study like this one? Scientists find why bad memories stay with us while not studying humans,,,,,,
"The protein, called beta-catenin, transmits early signals in species ranging from flies to frogs to mice that separate an embryo into front and back or top and bottom. It also acts like Velcro, fastening a cell's internal skeleton to proteins on its external membranes that in turn connect them to other cells."
Back to the MedicalXPress article
Understanding the underlying mechanisms that occur in specific patients is key. A novel five-year multicenter study led by NYU Langone's Cohen Veterans Center is looking into objective biological markers of PTSD and TBI in returning soldiers of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The goal is to transform the way mental health disorders are diagnosed by identifying specific brain imaging and blood and other biological markers that can tell clinicians definitively that a person is suffering from PTSD or TBI or a combination. Presently, there is no single valid diagnostic test that can independently confirm either diagnosis. Stanford University, Emory University and the U.S. Department of Defense Systems Biology Program at Fort Detrick, Maryland are partners in this research.
God these studies really frosts my cookies but it all comes down to funding for research into what boils down to studying why something isn't working instead of taking a look at what worked and then coming up with another study to figure out how they can get more money for more research. Like this one
University of Cincinnati expert on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will play a leading role in a 17-site, $9 million study that will compare the two leading evidence-based treatments for PTSD.

Kathleen Chard, PhD, will be one of three co-principal investigators for the trial, which is expected to launch later this year. She is an associate professor of clinical psychiatry in the UC Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience and director of the department’s PTSD division, based at the Cincinnati Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center facility in Ft. Thomas, Ky.

The grant is sponsored by the VA’s Cooperative Studies Program, the division of the VA’s Office of Research and Development that is responsible for the planning and conduct of large multicenter clinical trials and epidemiological studies.

Hey, the money keeps coming and veterans keep dying so they end up getting more money to study what they studied for 4 decades. This makes sense to member of Congress? It must considering they just keep writing the checks.

Ok, so moving on to another study they forgot was already done in 2008 and found they still didn't know which came first like the chicken or the egg.
“The size reduction in the hippocampus seems to occur sometime after the initial exposure to stress or trauma in childhood, strengthening the argument that it has something to do with PTSD itself or the stress exposure,” said Dawson Hedges, an author in the study and a BYU neuroscientist.

Previous studies have shown adults who suffered maltreatment as children had volume deficits in the hippocampus, the region of the brain associated with memory, but had not determined if the PTSD caused the deficit or if people born with such a deficit were more at risk for PTSD.

Back to the article
In fact, recently released findings from another study led by Dr. Marmar and published July 22, 2015 in JAMA Psychiatry —the National Vietnam Veterans Longitudinal Study—found that over 270,000 Vietnam veterans—40 years since the end of that war—are still suffering from clinically important levels of PTSD symptoms, and one-third of those have a current, major depressive disorder.

This article came out last month
Brain Scan Can Tell PTSD Apart from Traumatic Brain Injury
Healthline Written by R. Sam Barclay Published on July 11, 2015
When it comes to treating TBI and PTSD, it’s important to be able to tell the two apart. The treatments for one can be harmful for people with the other.


But in 2012, UCLA researchers thought they were right when it turned out they were wrong and millions of veterans ended by being mistreated as if TBI and PTSD were the same.
UCLA scientists report link between traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder
15/02/2012

By Stuart Wolpert - UCLA life scientists and their colleagues have provided the first evidence of a causal link between traumatic brain injury and an increased susceptibility to post-traumatic stress disorder.

Their new study, published Feb. 15 in the in the journal Biological Psychology, also suggests that people who suffer even a mild traumatic brain injury are more likely to develop an anxiety disorder and should take precautions to avoid stressful situations for at least some period of time.

The motivation behind the study, which was conducted in rats, was the observed correlation of traumatic brain injury, or TBI, and PTSD, particularly in military veterans returning from service overseas, said Michael Fanselow, a UCLA professor of psychology and the senior author of the study.

The reasons for this correlation are unknown. It could be simply that the events that cause brain injury are also very frightening and that the link between TBI and PTSD could be merely incidental. Fanselow and his colleagues, however, hypothesized that the two "could be linked in a more mechanistic way."
The motivation behind the study, which was conducted in rats, was the observed correlation of traumatic brain injury, or TBI, and PTSD, particularly in military veterans returning from service overseas, said Michael Fanselow, a UCLA professor of psychology and the senior author of the study.

And back to the article again,,,,,
"There is a pressing need for innovation in treatments for PTSD and TBI to protect a new generation of veterans," adds Dr. Marmar.

NEW GENERATION OF VETERANS? WTF? They haven't figured out how to take care of the older veterans yet!

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans Increased Risk of Skin Cancer

Soldiers returning from combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan at increased risk of skin cancer
News Medical Net
Published on August 4, 2015
"Our study has identified factors that put veterans at risk for skin cancer, including melanoma, but we need to better understand the 'why' of sun protection in the field," Powers said. "There is a suggestion that there are times when the lack of availability was associated with lack of use. Understanding how to provide practical and effective sun protection to servicemen and women in warm climates is the next step.

Soldiers who served in the glaring desert sunlight of Iraq and Afghanistan returned home with an increased risk of skin cancer, due not only to the desert climate, but also a lack of sun protection, Vanderbilt dermatologist Jennifer Powers, M.D., reports in a study published recently in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology.

"The past decade of United States combat missions, including operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, have occurred at a more equatorial latitude than the mean center of the United States population, increasing the potential for ultraviolet irradiance and the development of skin cancer," Powers said.

There were several factors contributing to the increased risk, including not only the desert and more equatorial latitudes, but also the length of sunlight exposure day to day, and, among many service members, a lack of training regarding the dangers of sun exposure and limited access to sunscreen.

For the study, Powers and her colleagues analyzed anonymous survey data from 212 veterans regarding sun exposure and protection during their last deployment.
read more here

Funeral Arrangements Set for Officer Sean Bolton

The headline is Suspect arrested in Memphis cop killing but it should be about Officer Sean Bolton, an Iraq veteran "who spent his life serving and protecting others."
Officer Sean Bolton ‘a gentle soul,’ friend says
WREG News
BY KATIE RUFENER AND KELSEY OTT
AUGUST 2, 2015
In Memphis, friends are remembering a man who not only made the ultimate sacrifice Saturday night but who spent his entire life serving and protecting others.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — “He was a great guy. He really was.”

This is how Mike Maharrey remembers his friend Sean Bolton.

People all across the country are rallying around the Memphis Police Department and Officer Bolton’s family. Condolences are coming from law enforcement officers from Los Angeles to New York, and even the White House has reached out.
Officer Bolton joined the Memphis Police Department in October 2010. Before that, he served as a Marine in Iraq.

The veteran was killed in his own community over less than 2 grams of marijuana, something many in the community are struggling to come to grips with.
read more here
Funeral arrangements set for Officer Sean Bolton
MyFOX Memphis
Posted: Aug 03, 2015

Funeral arrangements have been set for Memphis Police Officer Sean Bolton, who was shot and killed during a traffic stop Saturday night.

Visitation for Officer Sean Bolton will be held on Wednesday, August 5 from 5-8 p.m. at Hope Church, located at 8500 Walnut Grove Road.

Bolton’s funeral will be Thursday, August 6 at 11 a.m. at Bellevue Baptist Church, located at 2000 Appling Road.

The Memphis Police Association is asking the public to donate to the “Sean Bolton Fund” at any SunTrust bank. All of the proceeds will go to Bolton’s family.
read more here

Monday, August 3, 2015

Lima Marines Not Forgotten 10 Years Later

Families struggle 10 years after Ohio Marines killed in Iraq 
The Associated Press
By Dan Sewell
August 1, 2015
Two memorial events are scheduled for this month for the 23 people Lima Company lost over a 5-month period of 2005.

In this July 28, 2015 photo Pat Murray, left, and Ken Kreuter sit beneath a portrait of their son Marine Sgt. David Kreuter, top right, at the traveling Eyes of Freedom Lima Company Memorial currently displayed at the Cincinnati Masonic Center. (Photo: John Minchillo/AP)

CINCINNATI — Some people look surprised and tell him they just can't believe it's been 10 years already. For Keith Wightman, time hasn't passed quickly at all.

It ticks by slowly as he thinks every day of the loss of his only son — gazing at the spruce tree planted a decade ago in his yard and now marked with a cross, plaque and spotlight. He's seen his son's high school friends and former teammates start careers and families while he daydreams about what might have been for Lance Corporal Brett Wightman, whose future was blown away with those of 10 other members of Columbus-based Lima Company on Aug. 3, 2005.

Wightman promised that his dead son wouldn't be forgotten, a pledge that other families of the lost members of Lima Company have also taken to heart, establishing scholarship programs, foundations and other benefits to help others in the names of the young men — sons, brothers, husbands, fathers — lost that summer. Two memorial events are scheduled for this month for the 23 people Lima Company lost over a 5-month period of 2005.

Aug. 3 was the company's darkest day.

Wightman remembers vividly, "like yesterday," the early morning hours he spent looking at a moonlit sky wondering what his son was up to. Lance Cpl. Wightman had gone on a mission to flush out enemy combatants who had attacked six Marines two days earlier when his amphibious assault vehicle rumbled onto explosives. Eleven members of Lima Company and three other Marines were killed along with an Iraqi interpreter.
read more here

Fort Hood Soldier's Body Found at Lake Belton

UPDATE From Army Times
Spc. Brenton Wade Blume had served with the Hood-based 20th Engineer Battalion, 36th Engineer Brigade, since June, according to a news release from the installation.
Spc. Brenton Wade Blume (Photo: Army)
Body of Ft. Hood Soldier Recovered from Lake Belton
KCEN News
Posted: Aug 02, 2015

The body that was recovered from Lake Belton has been identified.

Twenty-one-year-old Brenton Wade Blume was said to have jumped off the ledge at the area known as "Hole in the Roof" in Oakmont Park.

When he didn't resurface, officials were contacted.

Morgan's Point Dive Team located his body in 27 feet of water, laying on a boulder.


Justice of the Peace G.W. Ivey gave the time of death as 7:20 p.m.
read more here

Did Congress Care About These Veterans?

Every other year there is a crisis for our Veterans and it just doesn't end up getting fixed. How many times do we have to read about yet another shortfall for the VA? How many more times are we willing to allow members of Congress to make campaign promises they always forget about as soon as they get our votes? They House Veterans Affairs Committee has had since 1946 to do the right thing for veterans. When do they have to explain why they haven't done it?
VA extends funds for vets on verge of losing care
Norfolk Daily News
Steve Liewer
World-Herald service
August 2, 2015

The VA Nebraska-Western Iowa Health Care System will continue to fund all skilled and nonskilled care services for veterans who already are receiving them through Sept. 30, VA officials announced Friday. But they also said it remains a question mark whether such care will continue when a new budget year begins Oct. 1.

In June, the local VA had begun terminating the reimbursement for some veterans who receive home care and adult daycare through outside organizations like Comfort Keepers and the Franciscan Centre in Omaha. Funding for the program had run out because of a shortfall in the Department of Veterans Affairs’ health care budget.

After angry public hearings with VA Secretary Robert McDonald, Congress passed legislation late this week giving authority to move money from another fund to plug the shortfall. Without that authority, McDonald had said, some VA medical facilities might have to close temporarily. The president signed the bill on Friday.

In Nebraska and western Iowa, reimbursement for home care and adult daycare services for up to 1,900 veterans had been scheduled to end Saturday. Friday’s 11th-hour announcement was a welcome reprieve. “They are faxing us renewals like crazy,” said Jennifer Dil, a business development consultant with Comfort Keepers in Omaha. “This is fabulous news.”
read more here

Army Specialist Caleb Collins Died Trying To Save Friends

Selfless Soldier St. Aug Alum Remembered As A Hero
Eyewitness News WWLTV
Thanh Truong
August 2, 2015


NEW ORLEANS -- The funeral for a local soldier who died while trying to save a fellow service member from drowning in Hawaii is now set for next week.

Caleb Collins was assigned to the Army's 25th Infantry Division, but before that, he was a member of the St. Augustine Purple Knights, a high school his father says helped mold his son into a soldier ready to sacrifice.

With children, you hope they'll grow up to do great things.

"It's very common for them to say, 'When I grow up, I want to be like my dad.' Well, isn't a blessing that I get to say I want to be like my son," Ernest Collins.

It's been less than a week since Ernest Collins lost his only son. On July 25, Army specialist Caleb Collins was with friends taking pictures near the eastern shoreline on the island of Oahu. That's when a massive wave rolled in, knocking one of his friends into the water. Caleb immediately dove in.

"He had actually reached his friend, and the two of them were actually making their way back to safety, when a second huge wave came in and swallowed them up," said Ernest Collins.


Their bodies were found the next day.
read more here

VIetnam Veterans Welcomed Home With Parade in Texas

Vietnam veterans relish greeting at ‘Welcome Home’ event 
Dallas Morning News
Paulina Pineda
August 1, 2015
Soldiers were told not to wear their uniforms in public, said Linda Schwartz, the assistant secretary for policy and planning at the Veterans Affairs Department. “I smile when I see people walking down the street in uniform, because we couldn’t,” she said. “Never again will America hide our troops. We promised veterans we would never turn our backs on other vets.”
Nathan Hunsinger/Staff Photographer The Granbury Lions club float members wave to the crowd during a welcome home event for Vietnam War veterans.
WHITE SETTLEMENT — Veteran Lynn Wolf left behind his 3-month-old son when he was drafted into the Vietnam War.

While overseas, he’d listen to a recording of his son’s babbles to stay connected. By the time he returned, Lynn Wolf Jr. was already a year old. “I didn’t want to go to Vietnam,” he said. But it’s an experience Wolf Sr. wouldn’t trade for the world.

 The 71-year-old and his son drove about 300 miles from the South Texas town of Cuero to attend the “Welcome Home” event at White Settlement’s Veterans Park on Saturday. The event commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War. read more here