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Finding Sgt. Hutchinson: The Meaning of Memorial Day

Memorial Day—like Christmas, some would say— has lost some of its true meaning for most people who observe it.

Memorial Day weekend has become the unofficial beginning of the summer season.  Nearly everyone attends a picnic, parade, or family gathering and enjoys the warm weather. Too few remember that the holiday is intended as a day of remembrance of those who died in the defense of our nation. Even fewer take the time to decorate the graves of the fallen.

Last year, as guilty as anyone, I attended a neighborhood barbeque in Troy, New York, on Memorial Day weekend. Somehow the conversation turned to a book I’ve been working on concerning US airmen shot down over Yugoslavia during World War II. Do you know, one neighbor asked, that an airman who was killed in Yugoslavia is buried nearby, in Elmwood Hill Cemetery?

Soon my girlfriend Heather and I were off to find the grave. The man’s name was Staff Sgt. Martin C. Hutchinson, and he shared a gravestone with his parents, Irene and Charles Hutchinson. We shopped for a small flag—a surprisingly difficult task considering it was Memorial Day weekend—and placed it at the site. I also resolved to use the resources at my disposal to find out more about him.

Marty Hutchinson, it turns out, was a pleasant young man with an artistic bent who looked something like the actor Colin Hanks. Like most kids in the 1930s, he was an aviation enthusiast and enjoyed making model airplanes. A year after graduating from Watervliet High School in 1941, he volunteered for the Army Air Forces hoping to become a pilot.

Hutchinson’s mediocre eyesight disqualified him from flight training. He did, however, possess remarkable mechanical aptitude. He trained at the Boeing aircraft plant in Seattle and became a B-17 flight engineer. As such, Hutchinson was the chief enlisted man on the heavy bomber’s ten-man crew. His importance in keeping the aircraft aloft was second only that of the two pilots.

Hutchinson planned to marry his girlfriend Norma before he shipped overseas. When his leave fell through, Norma flew to Texas and married him. Two days later, she followed him to Nebraska, his final staging point. There they enjoyed a few more days of married life. Norma wrote to Martin’s parents, exalting that their time together was “too wonderful to be true and too good to last.”

Hutchinson’s crew was assigned to the 2nd Bomb Group stationed in Italy. They began flying combat missions on January 24, 1944. Most of his targets were aircraft factories and transportation facilities in northern Italy, Austria, and Germany.

Hutchinson’s most costly mission occurred on February 22, 1944, during the “Big Week” all-out air offensive against the Luftwaffe. Thirty-Five B-17s from his Bomb Group took off that morning against an aircraft factory in Styr, Austria. Fourteen failed to return. Hutchinson happened to be flying in the middle of the formation. Nearly every plane to his rear was shot down by fighters, including the two directly behind him. No doubt, he felt very lucky to have survived.

On March 18, 1944, Hutchinson’s target was a vital airfield in Villaobra, Italy. Enemy fighters, determined to defend the airbase, rose and swarmed all over Hutchinson’s formation. Sometime during the dogfight, a JU-88—a German twin-engine aircraft—launched its rockets. One struck Hutchinson’s B-17 and exploded on contact, nearly severing its tail. The plane jerked violently, turned on its back, and fell into a spin.

Hutchinson was likely stationed in the upper machine gun turret, the position that flight engineers took when fighters approached. He and most of the crew were trapped inside.

Only two crewmen reached an escape hatch in the B-17’s nose. Lt. Adam Pryzyna, the bombardier, bailed out and survived.  Lt. Charles Evert, the navigator, managed to claw his way out of the hatch, but too late. By then the plane was too close to the ground and his parachute did not have time to blossom.

Yugoslavians from Gerovo, Croatia, found the wreckage the next day. Their sympathies were with the Partisan underground. They carried the airmen’s bodies to the nearest town and gave them an ornate Catholic funeral with full military honors. Every villager attended. They garlanded the graves with flowers and wreaths.

Sgt. Hutchinson is not buried at the gravesite in Troy that bears his name. A few years after his death, officials from the American Graves Registration Commission reinterned the crew’s bodies. They gave Hutchinson’s mother, Irene, the option of having his body brought home. She decided that he would have wanted to be buried with his crewmates. His final resting place is the American military cemetery in Florence, Italy: Plot H, Row 11, Grave 34.

Later, the Gold Star Mothers asked Irene if she wanted to march in a Memorial Day parade in Altamont. They told her that they wanted to honor her for giving her son to the war. “I didn’t give my son to war,” Irene snapped, “it took him.” She did not march.

Still, I like to think that Irene would not begrudge us a picnic on Memorial Day weekend—so long as the true meaning of the holiday is not forgotten. After all, one such picnic led to a better appreciation of her son’s sacrifice.

And didn’t men like Sgt. Martin C. Hutchinson give up their lives so that the rest of us could enjoy the blessings of freedom? 

May 27, 2017 Charles Stanley
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Book Review: “Crisis of Character” Discloses Hillary’s Temperament

Crisis of Character is a tell-all book by former Secret Service agent Gary J. Byrne that reminds us—as if we need reminding—of the personal characteristics that make Hillary Clinton unfit to be President.

Byrne gained a measure of fame when he courageously told the truth about the Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinski affair in 1998 despite intense pressure to the contrary. In fact, there is more about Bill Clinton in the book than Hillary, and Byrne’s recounting of his role in the investigation is the most riveting part of his story.

It almost makes one wonder why no one has made an All the President’s Men-type movie about the Clinton scandals and impeachment. Well, we know that liberal Hollywood would never do such a thing, but there are some good independent filmmakers out there.

If you were to believe the promotion campaign for the book, you would think that it is all about Hillary Clinton. It is not, but what’s in it about her is revealing.  Without disclosing any spoilers, the presumptive Democratic nominee is shown, through several examples, to be two-faced, arrogant, manipulative, calculating, temperamental, vindictive and tyrannical.

None of this is surprising to any of us who have been paying attention to the Clintons for the past 25 years. Nevertheless, the book manages to provide an interesting and well-told view of life in the White House during the 1990s.

The latter part of the book describes Byrne’s time in as a US Air Marshall in the post 9-11 years. While these chapters have their value, they have nothing to do with the Clintons. Political junkies would do well to skip them.

If you want a better summary of the reasons why Hillary Clinton should not be President, try Clinton Cash by Peter Schweizer. But if you want a light, summer read that sheds light on her personality flaws, Crisis of Character is just the ticket.

https://www.amazon.com/Crisis-Character-Discloses-Firsthand-Experience/dp/1455568872/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1468525235&sr=1-1&keywords=crisis+of+character+gary+byrne

July 14, 2016 Charles Stanley
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UALBANY Racial Violence Hoax Takes a Turn Toward Justice

Justice may soon be served against the three African-American women who recently perpetrated a racially-based hoax in Albany, New York.

On January 30, 2016, the three students at the University at Albany, made national news when they alleged that they had been assaulted during a racially-motivated incident on a public bus.

Now Asha Burwell, Ariel Agudio, and Alexi Briggs will face a Grand Jury that will decide whether to prosecute them on twenty accounts of assault and of falsely reporting a crime.

In early April, all three turned down a plea bargain deal that would have required an apology from them. Now a Grand Jury investigation has begun.

The women claim that they are being unfairly prosecuted by Albany County District Attorney David Soares (who happens to be black). They are supported by the Upstate Chapter of New York Black Lives Matter.

The three were also supported initially by UAlbany President Robert J. Jones, who issued a statement declaring that he was “deeply concerned, saddened, and angry about the incident. He added that “there is no place in the UAlbany community for violence, no place for racial intolerance, and no gender violence.”

Hillary Clinton contributed a Tweet, sermonizing that “There is no excuse for racism and violence on college campuses.”

Asha Burwell’s brother, San Diego Chargers lineman Tryeek Burwell, fired off a threatening Tweet directed at a young male witness who did not participate in the incident. “Just found out you were one of the dudes that put your hands on my little sister. Hope the police get to you before I do.”

The usual pattern of angst ensued on campus: anguished soul searching and calls for greater “diversity” among faculty and college administrators.

Thousands attended a protest rally (pictured above), during which the three “victims” tearfully pleaded for social justice.

Unfortunately for the Terrible Trio, video from the bus, plus every other eyewitness, contracted their story in full. The videos may be found on any number of Albany local news feeds.

It turn out that that the attacks were indeed racially motivated—that is, the three black women attacked a 19 year old white woman while screaming racial slurs. Police filed charges against them in mid-February.

No apologies have since come forward from UAlbany President Jones, although a disciplinary hearing occurred on campus regarding the false report from the Three. Tryeek Burwell has taken his Tweet down, but not apologized for his threat. Hillary Clinton, of course, just hopes that everyone has forgotten her involvement.

But maybe Clinton was right for once.  Maybe the criminal justice system will prove that “There is no excuse for racism and violence on college campuses,” even when it comes from African-American students.

Tawana Brawley was never prosecuted for her false allegations.  The Reverend Al Sharpton exploited the hoax to the fullest and remains a national figure despite owing $4.5 million in back taxes.

Maybe this time, just once, justice will prevail.

April 15, 2016 Charles Stanley
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The Revenant–An Irreverent Review

The Revenant, this year’s Oscar nominations leader at twelve, is a beautifully-made, stirring movie.  It will no doubt win Leonardo DiCaprio a deserved Oscar for his role as fur-trapping mountain man Hugh Glass. It does, however, have its issues.

Going into the movie, I did not know that it was loosely based on the adventures of a real mountain man who—like our hero in the movie—was left to die in the wilderness after being mauled by a bear. Therefore, I had no problem with the concept that Glass’s Native-American wife and his martyred son are invented characters. Every piece of historical fiction does it.

I didn’t have an issue when Glass fired his single-shot pistol twice in one scene without reloading it. What director wants to stall his movie by making the audience watch his hero jam gunpowder, wadding, and a lead ball down a pistol barrel?

I brushed away the Terrence Mallack-style dream sequences, no doubt instigated by famed cinematographer “Chivo” Lubuzki, which only diverted my attention from the gritty reality of our hero’s physical struggles.

I could overlook the fact that even Mel Gibson could not have survived the massive mangling that Leo DiCaprio endured during his travels, not to mention the compounding effects of hypothermia and exhaustion.

I ignored the film’s consistent predictability: the son’s murder, the Han Solo overnight stay inside an animal; and the fate of our hero’s pal after they split up to chase the bad guy.

I put up with the ridiculously overt symbolism spangled throughout. I tolerated the ambiguous ending. I hate ambiguous endings. To me, they are a cop-out.

No, the thing that I could not get over is a rather obvious geographical problem. The movie has our hero and his friends traverse the snowy high peaks of Rocky Mountains after it clearly establishes that their odyssey starts from a point that is nowhere near there. At the beginning, one character states that the group is fur trapping along the Missouri river. Fine, I said to myself. This is historically good. In fact, the real story took place in 1823 along the banks of the Missouri in South Dakota.

Yes I know that the movie was shot mostly in Canada, but it didn’t have to be. It’s plot expects me to believe that this fur trapping party is attacked by Indians and decides that their best way out of trouble is to scale mountain peaks that are hundreds, if not thousands, of miles away. In the wrong direction. And our much-abused hero manages to follow them all the way up and down the peaks? Hey—I like Lord of the Rings-style mountain scenery as much as anyone, but come on!

There were just too many gimme-a-break moments for me in this movie. Yet the fact is that the Academy loves it when actors suffer for their art in the way that Leo did during the making of this movie. The Revenant also has the year’s most talked-about scene, the overlong (like the rest of the movie) sequence in which DiCaprio loses his battle against a digital bear.

Prediction: A Best Picture Oscar

 

https://www.facebook.com/Catching-Flak-460242060833252/

February 1, 2016 Charles Stanley 1 Comment

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