Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Chiến trường Việt Nam - P11: Hòa bình trong danh dự

Chiến trường Việt Nam - P11: Hòa bình trong danh dự Tube. Duration : 58.32 Mins.


Bộ phim tài liệu Battlefield Vietnam ( Chiến trường Việt Nam) thuật lại cuộc chiến tranh Việt Nam ở thế kỷ XX. Trong phim có nhiều tài liệu quý kèm theo phân tích, bình luận, đánh giá dựa trên sự thật lịch sử. Cái này rất phù hợp để học sử Việt Nam giai đoạn Kháng chiến chống Mĩ, Pháp. Episode 11: Hòa bình trong danh dự

Keywords: chientranh, vietnam, vietnamwar, vietnamhistory, royalhau

Friday, March 16, 2012

Interview with Donald G. Martin, WWII veteran. CCSU Veterans History Project

Interview with Donald G. Martin, WWII veteran. CCSU Veterans History Project Video Clips. Duration : 99.30 Mins.


Interview conducted by Vincent Roche. Donald Martin was drafted into the US Navy in the spring of 1944. He went to Bainbridge, MD for basic training, and then received an addition 12 weeks of specialized training as a navy hospital corpsman. His first job was in the Naval Hospital in Bethesda, MD where he worked in the venereal disease ward. After about 8 weeks of hospital duty, he was reassigned overseas to Tinian Island. He was assigned to the Navy Military Hospital #204 where he was promoted to a Pharmacist's Mate 3rd class. The hospital was relatively small, although it was well supplied. This hospital was specifically for Japanese and Korean civilians on Tinian Island, and many of the doctors and nurses in the hospital were Japanese citizens. Although, the war was declared over, Martin was stationed on the island until May of 1946. He was discharged as a Pharmacist's Mate 2nd class by the end of May 1946. He then returned to Penn State to continue his studies as an industrial engineer, at which time he also joined a reserve unit, which he notes was an extremely inactive unit. After graduation he was working in Detroit at the Ingersoll Rand Company, when he was called to report for duty in Sept. 1950. When he reported for duty he was instead inducted into the Marine Corps as a Staff Sergeant, and went to Field Medical Service School at Camp Lejeune for eight weeks of training. By December of 1950, Martin was in Korea and assigned to the Charlie Medical unit, part of ...

Tags: CCSU, VHP, WWII, WW2, veteran, interview, oral history, Korean War

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Rock Rock Rock - Moonlglows & La Vern Baker

Rock Rock Rock - Moonlglows & La Vern Baker Video Clips. Duration : 14.93 Mins.


She was born Delores LaVern Baker in Chicago, Illinois. She is occasionally referred to as Delores Williams because of an early marriage to Eugene Williams; in the late 1940s he was identified in RCA Victor record company files as "DL McMurley." She was the niece of blues singer Merline Johnson and was also related to Memphis Minnie. She began singing in Chicago clubs such as the Club DeLisa around 1946, often billed as Little Miss Sharecropper, and first recorded under that name in 1949. She changed her name briefly to Bea Baker when recording for Okeh Records in 1951, and then became LaVern Baker when singing with Todd Rhodes and his band in 1952. In 1953 she signed for Atlantic Records as a solo artist, her first release being "Soul on Fire". Her first hit came in early 1955, with the Latin-tempo "Tweedlee Dee" reaching #4 on the R&B chart and #14 on the national US pop charts. Georgia Gibbs scored the bigger hit with her version of "Tweedle Dee", for which Baker unsuccessfully attempted to sue her. LaVern did manage to get in a jab, however. When LaVern was flying to Australia, she took out flight insurance at the airport and sent it to Gibbs with a note: "You need this more than I do because if anything happens to me, you're out of business." Baker had a succession of hits on the R&B charts over the next couple of years with her backing group The Gliders, including "Bop-Ting-A-Ling" (#3 R&B), "Play It Fair" (#2 R&B), and "Still" (#4 R&B). At the end of 1956 she had ...

Tags: Television, Radio & Films, Rock N Roll, 1950's, 1960's, 1970's, 1980's, 1990's, australian archive, australian documentary

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Open Ranks... March!

Open Ranks... March! Tube. Duration : 0.45 Mins.


I had to film this platoon leader's hilarious commands, he was the only who called commands like this. This clip was during an open ranks movement. He would call something like "number 2 from the end, move forward.... SSSTTTOOOPPP MMMOOOVVVIIINNNGGG!!!!" and move on to the next row. In this video, after commanding one soldier to move forward, he yells "STAND STILL, AAARRRRR-RIBBA!". Then he moves on and yells something like "YOU DOWN, AAAHHHHH..." then something I can't make out.

Tags: Military, Ceremony

Saturday, March 10, 2012

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Friday, March 9, 2012

Marines make their mark at NASA

Marines make their mark at NASA Video Clips. Duration : 4.73 Mins.


Many of the men and women in NASA's Astronaut Corps come from the ranks of the US military. Sgt. Todd Hunter tells us how Marines have made their mark at NASA.

Tags: USMC videos, Marines videos, Marine Corps videos, US Marine videos, NASA, space, Space Shuttle, Apollo, John Glenn, Fred Haise, Doug Hurley, STS-135, Sgt. Todd Hunter

Thursday, March 8, 2012

forces Medals From World War Ii To The present

I would like to know what types of duties you receive medals for. My students have also come up with some questions. What is the highest ranking Medal you can get? Are there different types of Medals for each branch of the military? For each task or assignment, would there be a different Medal of Honor? Do you know any resources (books, magazines, websites) we can use to further our research?

The highest medal an American forces man can get is the Medal of Honor. Some call it the Congressional Medal of Honor, but the allowable name is just "Medal of Honor". I recommend you read some of the citations for the Medal of Honor, you will be awed at what these men have done.

Marine Corps Ranks

There are different types of medals for each branch of the military, as well as the Coast Guard. This gets a bit complex at times. Think of the awarding of medals like a pyramid: the highest, the Medal of Honor, is at the top. Although each branch of the assistance has a differently designed Moh, they are the same award. Next down is the fine assistance Cross/Navy Cross/Air Force Cross. This is also a valor award. Following that is a whole slew of other medals awarded for "Meritorious performance of duty" that don't necessarily involve combat. The next highest valor award is the Silver Star followed by the Bronze Star (with 'V' means Valor, without 'V' means meritorious service). Each branch then has its own Commendation medals, the Army Commendation Medal, Navy & maritime Corps Commendation Medal, Coast Guard Commendation Medal, and the Air Force Commendation Medal. These can also have a "V" attached, for Valor in combat. Lastly, there are the Achievement Medals, Army Achievement, Navy & maritime Corps Achievement, Air Force Achievement, Coast Guard Achievement medals. They can also have "V" affixed, denoting Valor.

forces Medals From World War Ii To The present

Notice how the pyramid works - the braver the act, the higher the award. You don't have to get the others to get the Medal of Honor. (Some countries do this, most notably Germany during Wwii; but suffice to say a soldier had to earn each level of the pyramid before enchanting on to the next. The highest German medal, somewhat equivalents to our Medal of Honor, was the Knights Cross to the Iron Cross).

For each task or assignment, there would be only 1 Medal of Honor. However, there are very few population who have ever gotten a second Medal of Honor, and most of them were given out during the time duration of the Civil War to World War 1. No second award of the Medal of Honor has been given since then. Usually, once man wins the Moh, they are pulled from the combat zone.

The pyramid was instituted colse to the Wwii time period, basically because it was felt that some acts of valor were of a higher level than others, and vice versa, so they needed a medal to recognize them. There is also the topic of Campaign Medals, awarded for participation in a determined action or theatre of operations. The Wwii duration produced 5 of these types of awards.

1. The American Defense assistance Medal: basically awarded to draftees and volunteers who served prior to the charge on Pearl Harbor.

2-4. American Campaign, Asiatic-Pacific Campaign, and European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medals: Awarded for assistance in these theatres of war. The American Campaign medal was for assistance in the area of the United States

5. World War 2 Victory Medal: awarded to any serving member of the forces during the time duration of Wwii.

Finally, as to awards, most veterans of Wwii came home with at least 2 medals, regularly more. Dissimilarity this to today military, who typically sport 13-15 medals after a tour in the combat zone.

The medals/ribbons that a Wwii Army veteran of the European Campaign would typically have. Good show the way Medal (awarded for staying out of issue for 3 years, not a valor award), European Campaign Medal, Wwii Victory Medal. If the vet was an active infantryman (most guys were not, it takes about 100 men to retain the guy with the rifle in the foxhole), he may have a Bronze Star (every Infantryman in Wwii was issued a Bronze Star Medal in late 1944 for combat service). He would also have a Combat Infantryman Badge, which is a Kentucky flintlock rifle on a blue enamel background, surrounded by a wreath. This signified the man had been in combat. Chances are he may have a Purple Heart as well; this medal is awarded for wounds (or death) due to enemy action (you don't have to be in the Infantry to get it).

forces Medals From World War Ii To The present