Sunday, December 28, 2008

THE NEW YEAR APPROACHES

PPG Center, Ice Rink, Christmas Tree, Downtown Pittsburgh


Macy's, formally Kaufman's, Christmas Window Display.
At the top of kid's favorite list, among local Christmas traditions.

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Yesterday was a wonderful day with 70 degrees touching the record high ever recorded in western Pennsylvania. It was a worthy day for a photo essay using my motorcycle to get me there. This last weekend of the year is going to continue to be exceptionally nice. Now that Christmas has passed, the adult holiday is gearing up for this week. Soon, there will be dancing … the Foxtrot, Tango, and others, will fill the night before the first sunrise of the New Year. 

Brevity is the style during these holidays, as this is a one-man operation. I hope all of you over there have had some semblance of a happy season in one form or another. Beauty is where you find it, and you can find it almost anywhere … if you see. 

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SPORTS UPDATE:

The Pittsburgh Steelers took the Cleveland Browns to the woodshed, again! They even got to pick the branch, as the score was 31 to Zip! I repeat, THIRTY ONE TO ZERO!

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Keep your head down, 

Henry Hill, Plum Pennsylvania

Friday, December 26, 2008

THE CHRISTMAS TREE


I remember the day that we went out to cut down our Christmas tree in the Colorado Mountains. It was sputtering that flighty, cold, chilling and nasty, sizzle-sozzle snow that is so cold it pricks your skin like a thousand needles and makes your nose run like a broken faucet. The old Blazer complained as the key turned to start, as it let out banging sounds of pain, sounding like a black-smith tempering a horse shoe. It wound up tight whilst making feeble attempts to suck up the frozen oil into her heart. Vroommmmmm… 

We arrived at the scene after four-wheeling through deep snow, then trudging through the trees to find that imperfect tree, as most wild ones are … a redeeming quality if I may say so. Little Henry and I finally found it, even though the girls were back in the Blazer nudging the heater vents with both feet, which were nearly frostbit. We did make fun of them as we loaded the tree on the blazer, although I am sure that all concerned would have gladly paid cash on the barrelhead for a pre-cut tree at this point. 

Today, that would not be as such, as the memory of the event is such a pleasant one. Good memories always come from hard work or a little misery, and living in the moment. I hope that all of you do just that on this glorious day. 

Go out, be miserable, and have a great day! The moment is now, and now will never come again… 

MERRY CHRISTMAS

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Keep your head down,

Henry Hill, Plum Pennsylvania


 


Sunday, December 21, 2008

CHRISTMAS 2008


Old Friends, Old Times, Stories being told.

Good OLE Fashioned Christmas Party Fun


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Christmas is almost upon us, with only days to go. This early Sunday morning is the start of pending wintry weather moving in. Those of you who are coming home for Christmas have probably left, or are preparing to do so. The lucky ones who are already here probably are under the warmth of real sheets, in a real bed, and in good company. The many who are still on duty, can take with them the knowledge that they are not the first, nor will they be the last. I will skip all the duty bound clichés and say a heart felt thanks…

 

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The country is doing ok despite the news that you may have seen or heard. I am not saying that these times are not a little more difficult, but we have lived through hard times before. The ‘girl next door’ is still there. Those mountains where your skis ran the gauntlet is still there, as is that place where your mountain bike shuttered and shook over the bumpy dirt trails … with sunshine in both cases burning memories indelibly into your mind’s eye.  Those who love you still do … unconditional love is beyond barter and does not know time. The only thing missing is you, and soon enough you will sort that out. Hang in there tough, and always and I mean always, know that you will be back. War after war those who did, did come back.

 

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This old sailor accepted a gift, a present if you will. I lived in the present today, and took a little time off to partake in a fun Christmas party. I did not let anyone present forget those who are where we were at another time, on another day. I can say with pleasure for all who were present:

 

MERRY CHRISTMAS

HAPPY NEW YEAR

COME HOME SOON

 

KEEP YOUR HEAD DOWN,

 

Henry Hill, Plum Pennsylvania

Sunday, December 14, 2008

CHRISTMAS WISHES

Kids making their Christmas Wishes at Kaufman's Windows, in 2007.

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The ‘Christmas Dinner for the Troops’ program is off and running. The responses to local media articles have brought a very warm response from the Pennsylvanians within earshot of the shout-out! They were so nice they must have fallen from the sky! 

Now comes the hard part … finding the men and women in uniform that are in need of a little Christmas love via dinner and a social gathering with kind supporters. I will put forth my best effort to do so without regard to result oriented thinking. This is a labor of love, and it is already successful seeing such support and a willingness to help those in need. We have already won if you measure success by kind acts of humanity … I do. 

All of you over there can rest assured that despite all the negative events going on around the world, that back home your fellow Pennsylvanians are here for you. They are willing to share such a very private family moment with a complete stranger; then again, you are not a stranger … you are our guardians. Well done! 

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Not since Germany, circa 1939-1945, has the world seen threats to humanity on such a scale. It will take an effort by everyone -- military and civilian -- to address these issues, but you over there are in the most immediate focus point of such. If but for a moment, lets hope that you can make it back home for a very deserved break from the deafening sounds of chaos. If you do, please contact me via the comment box at the end of each week’s column, and I will do my best to match you with one of the many volunteer families that are so kind and willing to share their Christmas with you… 

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Sports Update: 

The Steelers taught the braggadocios bad boys AKA Baltimore Ravens, a little humility. They made them fetch a branch off of a tree, and took'em to the woodshed!!!

Score was 13 to 9! A defensive contest where the Ravens did not score a touchdown, although being in the red zone 3 times! 

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IF YOU KNOW ANY SERVICE MEMBER WHO NEEDS A PLACE FOR CHRISTMAS DINNER, PLEASE ADVISE THEM OF OUR PROGRAM… 

Here is one of the newspaper articles about it: 

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08348/934888-30.stm 

Some of the personal facts in it about me are not accurate, but the point of the program is accurate, and this is the reason I am adding it here tonight. 

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Keep you head down, 

Henry Hill, Plum Pennsylvania

Christmas Colors



Sunday, December 7, 2008

THE ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR


This is the only Japanese Zero in the world with the original Sakae Engine that is still flying!





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(UPDATE: THE 'CHRISTMAS DINNER FOR THE TROOPS' PROGRAM IS OFF AND RUNNING! SUNDAY NIGHT DECEMBER 14, I WILL ADDRESS THE PROGRESS THAT IS CURRENTLY TAKING PLACE)

On this day many young folks write about war, but have never been around one.  Many write about heroes, and later so describe any parent who shows up as one, or someone catching a pass in the end zone as one. Some even write of honor as if it were something that is given to another. In my years working with my Pearl Harbor survivors I have learned that honor is something that is earned when no one is around to see it … it is from within, not from another. It just like the character of man, which is apparent when he does worthy acts when no one is watching. The word hero is and has been watered down with simplistic overuse. A parent who helps his kid with their homework is not a hero … this is what they are supposed to do! A sports hero is not a hero, he does what he does for sport, and failure is a mere embarrassment. The purest form of hero is one who takes potential life ending risks or sacrifices for others knowing that no one may even be aware of such act(s). Most never survive to tell the tale. 

There were untold numbers of Heroes that arose from the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the war that followed, most of which still go unheralded to this day. They were not superheroes or without human frailties, they were person (s) who took actions that they saw as right in moments of horrific and chaotic human acts of cruelty; such cruelty will never be understood by men of reason. This is the day to remember the brave men and women that you do not know, but whose acts have benefited your life in so many ways.

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Station Hospital, Hickam Field: 

“I didn't even take that elevator and I ran up and said, This is War! This is the Japs! Downstairs everybody, now ... NOW! Elevator and all, get down. We didn't have the elevator for a short time, and most of us ran down anyway. Then about that time you can't hear the next person. It is just Irene and I, and Major Lane there. In the mean time they are bringing these patients in. On chairs, doors, anything ... arms off, legs off, bleeding, oh by god!”

 

PT Boat Commander: 

“Anyone who has ever seen a high altitude bomber at 10,000 feet when it drops a bomb, no matter where you are standing, you look up and the bomb looks like it is going to land right between your eyes! The angle of decent is only about a half of degree. You run this way, and you run that way, and you still look up and the bomb is coming right at you! I tell you, that is the only time in my life when I was really scared.”

 

Receiving Station, Pearl Harbor: 

“I came down the stairs to the ground, and looking up in the sky I saw a lot of planes dropping bombs that were coming down like it was rain. The planes that were dropping bombs were so high; all you could see was bombs dropping.  The planes with torpedoes were flying in right over the main gate then down over the water, over what looked like a canal. They had a straight shot down to the ships.”

 

The “Lucky Lou” 

He knew what a periscope looked like, since he built them! He was a Naval Constructor by trade! He shouted,  “Periscope to Starboard!”  Then he saw something worse, and yelled out, “Two Torpedoes to Starboard!”  He knew they were two torpedoes when he saw the impulse bubbles rise to the surface. The St. Louis was doing approximately 20 knots now, in shallow water, with no room or speed to maneuver! 

On shore housing: 

“All military, Army, Navy, Marine Corps, report to your station. The Harbor is under attack!”  Blared from the radio, “I knew now that we were at war,” Jackson said. Jackson, still in civilian clothes, with the only thing he would have to eat--a piece of toast thrust on him by his wife Betty, hanging from his mouth as he ran for the door. He did have his straw hat on, as per orders of Admiral Kimmel. The Admiral wanted all of his officers to look more gentlemanly, so when they were on leave or ashore, they were ordered to always wear a hat. The officers called their hats, “A Kimmel Topper!”

 

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Today, on December 7, 2008, the USS Arizona Survivors that participated in my book project are in Pearl Harbor. This morning at 7:55 am Hawaiian time they stood above that great ship as it still lies below, with it watery shape giving it a ghostly appearance, paying their final respects. This is the final visit by the survivors of the Arizona, as age catches up with us all. I cannot fathom the feelings, the emotions, and the thoughts that must have come to life behind those teary eyes, which are the portal to their souls. This all took place in the presence of the 1177 souls just beneath where they stood together as men of the Arizona, one more time, today.

 

________***________ 

 

Henry Hill, Plum, Pennsylvania

Monday, December 1, 2008

The Holiday Season Has Begun...

Snow, skiing, adjust & overcome!


I hope all of you over there had some semblance of Thanksgiving last week. No matter how good it was, or how creative the symbols were, there is no place like being in your real world again. A world where your girl, or girl to be, is just like the one in your dreams … or even more so. A world where hot showers, a shave, and all the time to do both are common place. A world where you can be alone and you don’t mind one damn minute! A world where hope replaces despair…

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The 15,000 troops returning to Fort Campbell are going to find that world, but they will also find a lot of folks willing to help those who may need a hand. I do not know who put out the numbers, but one in five of the 101st Airborne Division is expected to receive guidance for stress-related issues. They have increased their staff to meet the needs of those who may use these services. This will include the three 101st Airborne combat brigades who have done at least three tours in Iraq. The 3rd Brigade also served a stint in Afghanistan. Good luck to all of you in your return home!

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Weather Update:

As the song goes: “Baby, It’s Cold Outside” as the ski season is about begin, and deer season starts this Monday.

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Sports Update:

The Steelers took the unruly New England Patriots to the woodshed! 33 to 10!

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Henry Hill, Plum Pennsylvania


Shape up, or go home alone.
You are back, so take care of business ... Happy Hunting!

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