Search Results for: denig

War Shots book features combat cameramen in WWII

War Shots: Norm Hatch and the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Cameramen of World War II (Hardcover)
A book by Charles Jones is finally available and features the story of how military photographers got their shots while storming beaches and assaulting pillboxes with combat troops. It also describes how long time member Norm Hatch filmed With the Marines at Tarawa, which won the 1944 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject and was Person of the Week on ABC World News with Diane Sawyer in March 2010. There are new details on the controversy surrounding the famous photo of the flag raising on Iwo Jima. It should interest the fans of “Flags of Our Fathers,” “Letters from Iwo Jima,” and HBO’s “The Pacific”

Jones, a former staff writer for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, has also written “Boys of `67,” which the New York Post called “riveting and entertaining” and which won the Military Writers Society of America’s Gold Medal for Best Biography, and “Red, White, or Yellow?,” for which he embedded with a military unit in Iraq.
 
“Watch for Bob Jordan’s review in Leatherneck’s March issue”

Some of our members have already placed reviews on Amazon.com about the book:

Review: HERO OF THE PACIFIC: The Life of Marine Legend John Basilone

HERO OF THE PACIFIC: The Life of Marine Legend John Basilone.
By James Brady. Published by John Wiley & Sons Inc. 272 pages.
Stock #0470379413. $23.36 MCA Members. $25.95 Regular Price.

We knew from conversations just prior to his sudden death in January 2009 that Parade Magazine’s James Brady was working on a book covering the life of the legendary Marine, “Manila John” Basilone. What we did not know was how Brady would approach his subject. Brady followers, me among them, thought he would fictionalize Marine history as he did in various novels, including “Marine,” “Warning of War” and “The Marines of Autumn.”
What we have in “Hero of the Pacific” is more akin to Brady’s “Why Marines Fight,” only with a sharper eye on the actual fiction that surrounded this Marine hero. Brady had this sharper eye. After all, as a decorated Marine platoon leader who fought in the cold of the second Korean winter, he had some insight as to what an infantry platoon and, more importantly, what a machine-gun section could and should do. As a veteran newsman, he also knew how to “mine” a story.

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Marines Pay Tribute to Fallen Heroes at Arlington

MGySgt Phil Mehringer at grave of Col. Ortiz Peter J. Ortiz, Arlington National Cemetary.

MGySgt Phil Mehringer at grave of Col. Ortiz Peter J. Ortiz, Arlington National Cemetary.

Story and photo by Don Knight, Awards Chairman

The seemingly endless rows of headstones shelter the remains of more than 320,000 veterans from every war and major conflict in United States history. They cover 624 rolling acres at Arlington National Cemetery, overlooking the nation’s capital.

Each granite stone and tomb has its own story, often involving tales of great valor and heroism.  The stories comprise no small part of our nation’s history.

And so it would seem appropriate that 40 Marines from headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps and new students from the Defense Information School at Ft. Meade in nearby Maryland would journey to Arlington on a warm, cloudless day in October.  Their mission:  to pay tribute to three fallen Marines, one from World War II and two from the war in Iraq.

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Book Review: Command Attention: Promoting Your Organization the Marine Corps Way

We have 100 books that we will be selling at the conference for $20 each. First come, first served. The proceeds will be donated to the USMCCCA. Keith Oliver will most likely be on hand to sign them.

By special arrangement with the Naval Institute, we will get 100 of the books prior to official release and they will be on sale at a special price of $20 each at our annual conference in Hampton, VA this month. When released to the public the price will be $26.95. Keith will be available for a book signing; his royalties for all conference sales have been designated for the USMCCCA.

By Jack Paxton, Executive Director, USMCCCA

We don’t normally do book reviews even though we read constantly. We do write letters to the editor when provoked and stories on our favorite space-a flying trips for Leatherneck from time to time. Keith Oliver’s just-out “Command Attention” is a whole different matter, however.

Having served 20 years in Marine Corps public affairs, the first 16 enlisted, the last four as a PAO. I have said many times that the first 12 were a struggle, including the early days as a CC in Korea. My teachers were a mix of World War II vets and scribes from newspapers. Some good. Some bad. Until I worked for the late Bob Morrisey in the early 1960s, I had no idea what public affairs really meant.

When I started reading Keith’s “mighty-mite” two nights ago I could have sworn I was back in Mo’s office at Kaneohe Bay in Hawaii. This 129-page tome mirrors many of the things Mo espoused. Why not? Keith freely admits that we had the same great mentor who became the first “PA rabbi” for a Marine Commandant.

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New book for new author, Keith Oliver

Past National President Keith Oliver’s book, Command Attention, will be out in time for the CC Conference in Hampton, according his publisher, the U.S. Naval Institute (www.usni.org).  The tome, with a foreword by Denig Award Winner Joe Galloway, deals with all aspects of telling the Marine Corps story, including hefty […]

2009 Merit Awards Program Underway

OPEN PHOTOGRAPHY  by Cpl. Lendus B. Casey

2007 OPEN PHOTOGRAPHY winner by Cpl. Lendus B. Casey.Tomotaka Sekiguchi, motorcycle mechanic and Japanese national, crouches next to his custom built motorcycle set on display at this year’s 3rd Annual Oshima Motorcycle Camp Meeting.

Hundreds of submissions in the 2009 USMCCCA Merit Awards program are being screened and assembled at the Division of Public Affairs, Marine Corps headquarters, Pentagon.

With a deadline of February 16 the entries are still pouring in.  Another record breaking year in terms of volume in the print, broadcast and photographic competitions may be in the making, says MGySgt. Phil Mehringer, chief of Marine Corps public affairs and liaison to the association. 

His headquarters team for the project includes GySgt. Ronna Weyland, GySgt. Steve Williams (Marines TV), Sgt. Clinton Firstbrook and LCpl. Bryan Carfrey. Association Awards Chair Don Knight met with several members of the team at the National Press Club in December to discuss the recruitment of judges, a judging venue in Washington, D.C. on March 6 and 7, and the presentation of awards at the 2009 Annual Conference of the USMCCCA at Hampton, VA in September.

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Remember the empty chairs at holiday tables

Executive Director Note:  Many of us now getting a bit long in the tooth first met a young pink-cheeked, red-headed, raw-boned Texas reporter/photographer with UPI named Galloway in mid-1965.  He was fresh from the Ie Drang Valley battle with the Army’s 7th Cavalry Division where he was “blooded” and later, decorated.  He was the first civilian reporter to win the Bronze Star with Combat V.  We lost track over the years as we plowed our pursuits in the corporate world and Joe honed his reportage from many of the world’s hot spots.  We hooked up again when our Association awarded him the 2001 Denig Distinguished Performance Award.  We have since been together many times as Joe is always the first to say “yes” when we need someone to enliven a PME panel at the conference.  He was with us this year in San Antonio, signing autographs on his new book, written in collaboration with Army LtGen. (ret.) Hal Moore, “We Are Soldiers Still,” then enlivening our panel, Marines and the Media.    He always tells it like it is and we always enjoy hearing it.  We’re proud to include his Christmas column on our revitalized website and hope you find it of interest as well.

 

Joeseph L. Galloway

Joseph L. Galloway

By Joseph L. Galloway
McClatchy Newspapers

Even in hard times, this is the holiday season and a time when thoughts turn to home and family and dinner tables covered with food and gaily wrapped presents and bright lights.
Save a moment amid the celebrations to give thought to the hundreds of thousands of men and women in uniform in far-flung parts of this world who won’t be sitting down to dinner with their families.
More than 170,000 men and women of our military will spend their Christmas and New Year’s in Iraq and Afghanistan, where killing and dying never take a day off.
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