Yearly Archives: 2011

Alice Cooper is a Christian

Alice Cooper is a Christian.

  1. Photo By Heavy Metal Rockers—Before They Were Stars
     
    THEN: Alice Cooper Senior Year 1966 at Cortez High School, Phoenix, AZ. NOW: Alice Cooper, born Vincent Furnier in 1948, released his first album in 1969; his most recent effort, Welcome 2 My Nightmare, dropped on September 13, 2011. He also has a syndicated radio show, was recently inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and still performs live. In a video on his website, Cooper said, “I will always be doing something in this business until the moment I pass my last breath, if God’s willing.” And he may get his wish from the big rocker in the sky since Cooper is also a born-again Christian.View the entire gallery at Snakkle.com
    Photos: Seth Poppel/Yearbook Library, Chiaki Nozu/WireImage
    Take a look at this article below:
     

    Darren Hirst met up with one of the most colourful figures in the whole pantheon of rock music, ALICE COOPER

    Alice Cooper

    Alice Cooper

    Sitting opposite Alice Cooper is an unnerving experience. It takes me back to my childhood. Top Of The Pops. Summer of ’72. Back then, Top Of The Pops seemed very innocent. We hadn’t discovered what Gary Glitter was really like. And everything was silver and glitz and glamour. The Sweet and Slade before they were “heavy”. Before even Alvin Stardust in black leather had dawned upon the scene. There was Donny Osmond and David Cassidy for the girls to swoon over and they were as saccharine as their smiles. No-one would blink an eye if “Amazing Grace” should top the charts. But then more troubling than Granddad’s thoughts about Bowie’s apparent androgyny was the nightmare vision of Alice Cooper. When Alice Cooper told a seven year old that “School’s Out”, the seven year old just knew that Alice had been holding the dynamite when the deed was done and that School was, indeed, “out for ever”. Welcome to my Nightmare!

    Fast forward to 2007 and I’m still sitting opposite Alice Cooperwondering what to say. A few days before, I’d been leading Christian Union at a Very posh independent boys’ school. And when the subject of Alice Cooper and his faith came up, they left me in no doubt about his credibility and standing. 35 years since “School’s Out” and at school, Alice is very definitely in. Witnessing him on his current arena tour of the UK, he draws an audience which ranges from five to 65 and everyone to a man (or woman) admires his showmanship, his ability to hold an audience in the palm of his hand and take his entire audience on a journey from grim horror and death to victory and life. There are no altar calls at an Alice Cooper show. There is no church. But this is not someone trading on his past. Not a whiff of nostalgia. Alice Cooper is still very relevant to his audience today. He still rocks. Alice is cool. And your church elders are not going to understand how Christian faith and Alice’s show fit together. And your Granddad still won’t like it.

    Alice has thought about this: “As a Christian, I don’t declare myself as a ‘Christian rock star’. I’m a rock performer who’s a Christian. Alice Cooper is the guy who wants to entertain the audience – it happens that he’s a Christian. Alice (the character I play on stage) began life as a villain and he remains one. There’s a villain and a hero in every Shakespeare play. Alice is no more dangerous than a villain in a cartoon or a Disney film. We have fun with him. He snarls and wears make up. He’s punished for his crime and he comes back on the stage in white top and tails. We put on a good show. I’ve always put limits on Alice because I believe there’s a certain amount of Alice that’s a gentleman. He’d slit your throat, but he’d never swear at you. And there’s always a punchline; he may kill you, but he’ll slip on a banana peel. I get right-wing Christians down on me and I always ask them the question: ‘If I was doing Macbeth, would it be OK?’ And they always say that’s Shakespeare so of course. I say that’s about four times more violent than anything I do on stage.”

    On one level, that Alice should find faith is no surprise. His father converted and became a pastor in later life. His wife’s father was a Baptist pastor. When he was struggling with alcoholism, it was to Christian counsellors that he and his wife turned to. They needed help with his drinking and help with their relationship. Therefore, his life has always been in touch with the church – albeit sometimes at arm’s length. On another level, that a shock rocker like Alice who was described as a Satanist in more than one book by an evangelist in the ’70s and ’80s (evangelists who probably knew just enough about rock ‘n’ roll to want the young people in their church to avoid it) should embrace faith and continue in his chosen profession is seen by some as a little strange.

    Interestingly, this is exactly what his foresighted pastor advised him to do: “I said to him I can’t be Alice and a Christian. He said that God doesn’t make mistakes. He said that God had put me in an unusual situation for a reason and now I should let my lifestyle do my talking for me and my beliefs. It wasn’t the answer I was expecting.”

    Alice Cooper: The shock rock pioneer speaks about his Christian faith

    Alice has a new book. It’s called Golf Monster. It describes how he has exchanged one addiction (alcohol) for another far less harmful one (golf) but it is also remarkably frank about how his life has a different perspective now because of his Christian faith. This comes across in his conversation and in his music.

    In his conversation, he is clear that he has no pretensions. He doesn’t see himself as the world’s greatest theologian or think he is ever going to be. He is concerned that his listener understands that the God he is seeking to serve is the “classic” one of the Christian Scriptures and creeds and not some modern amended version. The constant use of “classic” to describe his view of God, Jesus, Satan and the Bible may sound a little too much of the Coca-Cola wars to the listener who isn’t used to the terminology but his point is well made. This isn’t Alice Cooper‘s version of God or some celebrity-invented religion or anything of that kind. He goes to Bible study regularly when he is not on tour because he wants to understand God better and because he wants to know more about what God has to say to his life. He isn’t interested in being a “celebrity-for-Christ”. He wants to be a typical church-going Christian who is learning to love God and love his neighbour. It just so happens that he is Alice Cooper and this brings an interesting twist to the whole process.

    He may not see himself as the world’s greatest Christian thinker but he wants to write classic songs and thoughtful songs that are touched by the content of his faith. He wants his lyrics to say something and what they say should be consistent with who he is. American singer/songwriter T-Bone Burnett once said something along the lines of “You can sing about the light, or you can sing about what you can see because of the light.” Hearing it put in this way, Alice clearly sees himself in the second category. Perhaps surprisingly, he is quite comfortable singing songs from the early part of his career. He remarks that there are three albums he recorded when his alcoholism was at its peek (‘Dada’, ‘Special Forces’, ‘Zipper Catches Skin’) that he doesn’t remember too much about. Even these when he later went back and reviewed he found contained “some interesting, quirky songs”. Some of the songs from this period and from the next few albums (‘Constrictor’, ‘Trash’), he will no longer perform because he considers them too sexual in a way that he now feels was inappropriate or that they just don’t fit in with a worldview he is comfortable in. However, the vast majority of his old songs are ones of which he is justifiably proud.

    His more recent albums clearly reflect his values since he committed his way to Christ. On ‘The Last Temptation’ (1994), he tells a story of a young man’s struggle to see the truth through the distractions of the “Sideshow” of the modern world. It’s Bunyan’s Vanity Fair set out again for the late 20th and early 21st century. The world is full of distractions that will keep you from addressing life’s big issues. However, the album’s hero, a young boy called Steven, declines to live his life that way and pursues a different path. He is determined to find out what life is all about. “Stolen Prayer” talks about the desire to talk to God. “It’s Me” is a divine promise to stay with us through all the stumbling. The final song “Cleansed By Fire” makes a list of all the questions that the modern world would rather you didn’t ask: “What about truth?/What about life?/What about glory?/What about Christ?/What about peace?/What about love?/What about faith in God above?”

    Bob Dylan once wrote that he’d “seen the kingdoms of this world and they’re making me feel afraid,” He also once said he thought that Alice Cooper was an underrated songwriter. Combining these thoughts, Mr Cooper sent his Alice character to see the world’s kingdom at its worst on ‘Brutal Planet’ (2000). You could not wish to see a colder, harder view of our world. Brutal is the right word and there was precious little comfort for the listener as he looks hard at a world that can be devoid of compassion and morality. ‘Dragon Town’ (2001) once again brought Bunyan’s allegorical world to mind. Dragon Town is a society of the lost, an earthly hell, a place where God is denied but everyone wants to take his place. When Alice started to record these albums he intended them to be a part of a trilogy. The third album was never completed. Perhaps it’s better that way – some ideas are just too dark.

    Alice Cooper: The shock rock pioneer speaks about his Christian faith

    Since then Alice Cooper has returned to less thematic albums with ‘The Eyes Of Alice Cooper‘ (2003) and ‘Dirty Diamonds’ (2005). These albums have less of the sense of someone trying to make a point but the pen-pictures they paint have more compassion and they return to the humour of his earlier songs. He’s currently working on another concept piece ‘Along Came A Spider’ which has been delayed to make room for the current tour and family time. He expects it to be in the shops in the spring of 2008. It will be interesting to see where his lyrical muse takes him next.

    “It will be a full-on Alice production,” he said. “The last two albums got back to the songs. The three before that had been heavily apocalyptic and I needed to take a step back from the big themes.”

    Golf is not the only thing that Mr Cooper pursues away from music. Not too long ago there was a ripple of publicity when Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, Arizona decided to award Alice an honorary doctorate. The formerly Southern Baptist college which now describes itself as Christian but non-denominational awarded the honour not because of Alice’s musical work but because of his financial support of the University’s education programme and because of his work amongst troubled teenagers. His involvement with his local neighbourhood educational centre was then deepened when the singer jointly sponsored the building of a new youth centre with the University that began to be developed in 2006. The College granted five acres of land for the building of The Rock, an extension of the work amongst young people that was begun by Cooper’s Solid Rock Foundation in 1995. He says that he wants The Rock to be a place of “safety for kids who otherwise might have nowhere to go.” The centre will be distinctively Christian with counsellors available to those who want to talk but “no-one who just wants to play ball will be beat over the head with a Bible.”

    Not least of Alice’s commitments to this project is to get out there and earn the money for the completion of the building. When you have been a success for over 30 years there is only so much you need to do to guarantee yourself home comforts but his tireless work schedule is fuelled by a desire to make sure that others have those comforts too.

    Surprise! Alice Cooper is a Christian

    You don’t have to look too far on the internet to find some blog by some well-meaning Christian decrying Alice and his profession of faith. However, there can be no doubt that what he describes as “the truth” is something that he clearly believes in and which he is living out in ways that are tangible and where his influence and musical success allow him to realise things that others of us would only dream of and which are changing lives in American inner cities. Alice won’t be fitting any time soon into the requirement of appearance and working life suitable for a Christian that might be offered by a typical conservative churchgoer in a fellowship somewhere near you. Nevertheless, others whose opinion may matter more said that the key things were to love God and to love your neighbour as you love yourself. On that scale, Mr Cooper is living out his faith pretty well. CR

    About Darren Hirst
    Darren HirstDarren Hirst pastors Ravenscourt Baptist Church and provides a support ministry to professional musicians.

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 6 “The Scientific Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 6

How Should We Then Live 6#1

Uploaded by on Oct 3, 2011

How Should We Then Live?

Episode 6 of 12

________

Francis Schaeffer- How Should We Then Live? -6- The Scientific Age

________________

I am sharing with you a film series that I saw in 1979. In this film Francis Schaeffer asserted that was a shift in Modern Science. A. Change in conviction from earlier modern scientists.B. From an open to a closed natural system: elimination of belief in a Creator.1. Closed system derives not from the findings of science but from philosophy.2. Now there is no place for the significance of Man, for morals, or for love.C. Darwin taught that all life evolved through the survival of the fittest.1. Serious problems inherent in Darwinism and Neo-Darwinism.

This is probably one of the most important episodes in the series.

T h e

SCIENTIFIC AGE

I. Church Attacks on Copernican Science Were Philosophical

Galileo’s and Copernicus’ works did not contradict the Bible but the elements of Aristotle’s teaching which had entered the Church.

II. Examples of Biblical Influence

A. Pascal’s work.

1. First successful barometer; great writing of French prose.

2. Understood Man’s uniqueness: Man could contemplate, and Man had value to God.

B. Newton

1. Speed of sound and gravity.

2. For Newton and the other early scientists, no problem concerning the why, because they began with the existence of a personal God who had created the universe.

C. Francis Bacon

1. Stressed careful observation and systematic collection of information.

2. Bacon and the other early scientists took the Bible seriously, including its teaching concerning history and the cosmos.

D. Faraday

1. Crowning discovery was the induction of the electric current.

2. As a Christian, believed God’s Creation is for all men to understand and enjoy, not just for a scientific elite.

III. Scientific Aspects of Biblical Influence

A. Oppenheimer and Whitehead: biblical foundations of scientific revolution.

B. Not all early scientists individually Christian, but all lived within Christian thought forms. This gave a base for science to continue and develop.

C. The contrast between Christian-based science and Chinese and Arab science.

D. Christian emphasis on an ordered Creation reflects nature of reality and is therefore acted upon in all cultures, regardless of what they say their world view is.

1. Einstein’s theory of relativity does not imply relative universe.

2. Man acts on assumption of order, whether he likes it or not.

3. Master idea of biblical science.

a) Uniformity of natural causes in an open system: cause and effect works, but God and Man not trapped in a process.

b) All that exists is not a total cosmic machine.

c) Human choices therefore have meaning and effect.

d) The cosmic machine and the machines people make therefore not a threat.

IV. Shift in Modern Science

A. Change in conviction from earlier modern scientists.

B. From an open to a closed natural system: elimination of belief in a Creator.

1. Closed system derives not from the findings of science but from philosophy.

2. Now there is no place for the significance of Man, for morals, or for love.

C. Darwin taught that all life evolved through the survival of the fittest.

1. Serious problems inherent in Darwinism and Neo-Darwinism.

2. Extension of natural selection to society, politics and ethnics.

D. Natural selection and Nazi ideology.

E. The new authoritarianism: not the crudely dictatorial regimes of Hitler and Stalin. New regimes will be subtly manipulative, based on sophisticated arsenal of new techniques now available.

1. To obtain organs for transplants forces acceptance of new definition of death. Possible abuses.

2. Without the absolute line which Christianity gives of the total uniqueness of Man, people have no boundary line between what they can do and what they should do.

3. Moral and legal implications of Artificial Insemination by Donor (A.I.D.)

4. Skinner’s social psychology and the abolition of Man.

5. Tell people they are machines and they will tend to act accordingly.

6. Each theory of conditioning leads to social application.

a) Koestler: tranquilizer to cure human aggression.

b) Clark and Lee: controlling aggressions of politicians.

c) Kranty: control reproduction through the water supply.

7. Who controls the controllers? —The unasked question.

a) The basic question begged: the psycho-civilizer as King?

b) If people are machines, why should biological continuation have value?

V. Need to Reaffirm That  Which Was the Original Base for Modern Science

Questions

1. Explain the important contributions to science made by biblical principles.

2. How should our knowledge of the biblical view of work and nature affect our own attitudes to research, study of the Bible, and the use of our minds?

3. Does this segment help you to understand how and why men of great intellectual refinement in Nazi Germany could accept what was going on?

4. “Without the absolute line which Christianity gives of the total uniqueness of Man, people have no boundary line between what they can do and what they should do.” Discuss.

Key Events and Persons

Copernicus: 1475-1543

Francis Bacon: 1561-1626

Novum Organum Scientiarum: 1620

Galileo: 1564-1642

Pascal: 1623-1662

Isaac Newton: 1642-1727

Principia Mathematica: 1687

Michael Faraday: 1791-1867

Charles Darwin: 1809-1882

Origin of Species: 1859

Herbert Spencer: 1820-1903

Albert Einstein: 1879-1955

Russel Lee: 1895-

Heinrich Himmler: 1900-1945

B.F. Skinner: 1904-1990

Arthur Koestler: 1905-

Kenneth B. Clark: 1914-

Murray Eden: 1920-

Kermit Kranty: 1923-

Skinner’s Beyond Freedom and Dignity: 1971

Further Study

Robin Briggs, ed., The Scientific Revolution of the Seventeenth Century (1969).

E.A. Burtt, The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science (1932).

Arthur Koestler, The Watershed. A Biography of Johannes Kepler (1960).

Arthur Koestler, The Ghost in the Machine (1967).

C.S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength (1945).

C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man (1972).

D.M. Mackay, The Clockwork Image (1974).

Mathematical Challenges to the Neo-Darwinian Interpretation of Evolution. Wistar Symposium

Monograph, no. 5 (1967).

B.F. Skinner, Beyond Freedom and Dignity (1971).

Related posts:

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 10 “Final Choices” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 1 0   Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode X – Final Choices 27 min FINAL CHOICES I. Authoritarianism the Only Humanistic Social Option One man or an elite giving authoritative arbitrary absolutes. A. Society is sole absolute in absence of other absolutes. B. But society has to be […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 9 “The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 9 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode IX – The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence 27 min T h e Age of Personal Peace and Afflunce I. By the Early 1960s People Were Bombarded From Every Side by Modern Man’s Humanistic Thought II. Modern Form of Humanistic Thought Leads […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 8 “The Age of Fragmentation” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 8 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode VIII – The Age of Fragmentation 27 min I saw this film series in 1979 and it had a major impact on me. T h e Age of FRAGMENTATION I. Art As a Vehicle Of Modern Thought A. Impressionism (Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 7 “The Age of Non-Reason” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 7 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode VII – The Age of Non Reason I am thrilled to get this film series with you. I saw it first in 1979 and it had such a big impact on me. Today’s episode is where we see modern humanist man act […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 6 “The Scientific Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 6 How Should We Then Live 6#1 Uploaded by NoMirrorHDDHrorriMoN on Oct 3, 2011 How Should We Then Live? Episode 6 of 12 ________ I am sharing with you a film series that I saw in 1979. In this film Francis Schaeffer asserted that was a shift in […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 5 “The Revolutionary Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 5 How Should We Then Live? Episode 5: The Revolutionary Age I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Francis Schaeffer noted, “Reformation Did Not Bring Perfection. But gradually on basis of biblical teaching there […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 4 “The Reformation” (Schaeffer Sundays)

Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode IV – The Reformation 27 min I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer makes three key points concerning the Reformation: “1. Erasmian Christian humanism rejected by Farel. 2. Bible gives needed answers not only as to […]

“Schaeffer Sundays” Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 3 “The Renaissance”

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 3 “The Renaissance” Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 3) THE RENAISSANCE I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer really shows why we have so […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 2 “The Middle Ages” (Schaeffer Sundays)

  Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 2) THE MIDDLE AGES I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer points out that during this time period unfortunately we have the “Church’s deviation from early church’s teaching in regard […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 1 “The Roman Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 1) THE ROMAN AGE   Today I am starting a series that really had a big impact on my life back in the 1970′s when I first saw it. There are ten parts and today is the first. Francis Schaeffer takes a look at Rome and why […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 4) THE BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY

The opening song at the beginning of this episode is very insightful. Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 4) THE BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY Published on Oct 7, 2012 by AdamMetropolis This crucial series is narrated by the late Dr. Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop. Today, choices […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 1) ABORTION OF THE HUMAN RACE

It is not possible to know where the pro-life evangelicals are coming from unless you look at the work of the person who inspired them the most. That person was Francis Schaeffer.  I do care about economic issues but the pro-life issue is the most important to me. Several years ago Adrian Rogers (past president of […]

Preview of Real Madrid versus Barcelona battle of Dec 10, 2011 “Soccer Saturday”

Below is a preview of this great matchup:

Real Madrid and Barcelona will battle this Wednesday, for the first time in La Liga this time of year. Actual Madrid currently qualified prospects the Language Group desk, with 1 game less problematic and a 3 details gap from Barcelona. If the Merengues handle to take off a success from the “Clasico”, the headline competition may very well turn out to be a 1-way trip until the end. Actual Madrid, who is currently in a 15-game successful ability (10 in “La Liga”), will coordinator The Barcelona in the best possible moment in time. In the other palm, the Blaugrana decreased 5 details in their last 5 suits for the Language Group, after sketching 2-2 against Running Bilbao in San Mamés and sacrificing 1-0 to Getafe,

in the Coliseum Alfonso Pérez. Actual Madrid captured that chance to takeoff and José Mourinho is certainly more than conscious of the significance of such head benefits. After this Saturday’s “Clasico”, Actual Madrid next fitting in “La Liga” will be against Sevilla, in the “Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán” (17th December) and it could grow to be vital not conceding a reduction to The Barcelona, in the few days before. Cristiano Ronaldo has been saved from the UEFA Winners Group fitting this Friday, against Ajax, and it should be secure to say he can be a beginning against The Barcelona on Wednesday. The Colonial participant will be willing to develop his goalscoring statistics, as he already number with 17 objectives in “La Liga” 2011/2012 and is actually linked with the Argentinian Lionel Messi.

However, we believe that the key changes can and will be influenced in the midfield. With Xabi Alonso coming to his part as a beginning, after having being stopped for 1 go with and enjoying only for 30 minutes against Ajax, he should be the one dictating the Merengues activity “tempo”. It’s normal that Mourinho may also select Sami Khedira, as a way to focus on specific issues, which is exactly where the In german participant performs exceptionally well. But the delight could come next, when determining between Mesut Ozil, who has been charged of not peforming very well lately and being preoccupied with the gorgeous Madrid evening, or Kaká, who is actually finishing his damage restoration strategy. While going with Ozil could allow Actual Madrid to deal with the soccer tennis ball with more key elements, if Kaká is truly fit, he should be able to deliver the swiftness and incisive operates on which the group seems to be specifically reliant from Cristiano Ronaldo so far. As described before, we can also experience an additional delight with the supplement of a 4th “natural” midfielder as it is Ategory Diarra, but that would mean that Mourinho would abdicate of Actual Madrid common enjoying design that has given the group a 15-game successful ability, as a way to create a healthier midfielder that could argument the soccer tennis ball control against Barcelona.

Pearl Harbor 70 years ago (Part 5)

Here is a portion of an article from Pittsburgh Tribune-Review :

Dwindling number of Pearl Harbor survivors recall that fateful day

By Rachel Weaver and Richard Robbin, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Read more: Dwindling number of Pearl Harbor survivors recall that fateful day – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Most Western Pennsylvanians who survived the “date which will live in infamy” are in their late 80s or early 90s. Here are a few of their stories about that day:

Tom Miller of Youngwood

Pfc. Tom Miller, then from Mt. Pleasant, was eating breakfast at Schofield Barracks when waves of Japanese aircraft arrived.

“The dishes started to rattle,” Miller, 93, recalled recently at his Youngwood home with his wife, Angeline. “We quit eating and went out to see what was going on.”

Once they realized what was happening, Miller said he and the rest of the 98th Coastal Artillery Regiment could do little to counter what was happening.

“Because we were supposed to go on maneuvers on Monday, our guns were all in traveling position,” he said.

That night, he pulled watch on a lonely stretch of beach along the eastern shore of Oahu.

“Everyone was scared,” he said. “There were two men at each post, and you kept looking at the ocean.”

Miller imagined Japanese soldiers coming ashore, with the awful prospect of a battle to the death on the beach. He was relieved when dawn broke.

Miller spent the first years of the war on Oahu. Re-christened the 755th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion, his outfit later shipped out to the Pacific island of Tawara.

Steve Jager of Arnold

The attack shook Steve Jager awake.

“When the bombs hit that morning, they were close enough to our building that (it) … was shaken and the flames were shooting up into the air, and I didn’t know what in the world it was,” said Jager, 91, of Arnold.

In the Army’s 24th Infantry Division, Jager installed telegraph and radio communications, setting up defense positions for troops.

A few days later, an article about Jager appeared in the Valley Daily News with the headline “Creighton Boy in Hawaii alive, well.”

He spent the rest of the war as a staff sergeant with duties in Hawaii, Australia, New Guinea and the South Pacific. After his service, Jager worked at West Penn Power in Springdale.

For years, he didn’t talk about Pearl Harbor, until a Valley Middle School teacher asked him to speak to students.

“(She) instilled in me the thought that I’m indebted to the guys who died,” Jager said. “Since I’m alive, I think I should keep their memory alive.”

A member of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, Jager doesn’t hesitate when someone asks him about Pearl Harbor.

“Being alive at my age, I think I am indebted to them to keep it alive for as long as I can.”

Staff writer Rossilynne Skena contributed to this report

Related posts:

Veterans Day 2011 Part 9:Roy “Roxy” Oxenrider survived Korean War’s Toughest Battle

Picture of Roy after he had recovered at the hospital. Picture of Roy below in the hospital recovering from his injuries followed by a picture of Roy encouraging another soldier who was in the hospital:  Below is an article that was published in November of 2010 in the Saline Courier: Saline County War Hero Bryant […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 8 Leon McDaniel of World War II (second post)

Okinawa – At the Emperor’s Doorstep” episode from “WWII: GI Diary”….. This old 1978 TV docu-drama was narrated by Lloyd Bridges and told the stories of real soldiers/sailors/pilots and their first-hand experiences in battle. Archival footage and good background music really made the stories come alive…..about 25 episodes were made. Video converted from really old […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 7:You have heard of Jimmy Doolittle, but what about Leon A. McDaniel?

President Reagan and Senator Barry Goldwater present the fourth star to General Jimmy Doolittle during a White House ceremony in the Indian Treaty room, OEOB. 6/20/85. I love the movie “Pearl Harbor” with Ben Affleck and it tells the story of Jimmy Doolittle.  He was born in 1896 and died in 1993. He is pictured […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 6 (A look back at Okinawa)

This portion below appeared in an article I did for the Saline Courier about 18 months ago: I went to the First Baptist Church in Little Rock from 1983 to 1997, and during that time I became friends with Walter Dickinson Sr. In fact, we used to attend a weekly luncheon together on Thursdays.  Just […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 5 (A look back at the “Battle of the Bulge”)

The Lost Evidence: The Battle Of The Bulge (1/5) This article was published in the Saline Courier about 18 months ago: When we celebrate July 4th we are focusing on the freedoms that so many soldiers have fought for over the last 234 years. That focus has been highlighted for me since my son Hunter […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 4

  This is taken from an article that appeared in the Saline Courier about a year ago: Bravery is not just limited to one generation, but Americans have had it in every generation. It makes me think about those who are currently serving in our military. Jon Chris Roberts who is graduate of Benton High […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 3 (A look back at World War 1)

I was born in Tennessee and everyone in Tennessee knows the name of Alvin York. Above is a clip about his accomplishments in War World I. Cara Gist of Shannon Hills tells me that her grandfather Herbert S. Apple of Salado, Arkansas (near Batesville) fought in World War I. He served in France and fought […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 2 (Bataan Death March)

My longtime friend Craig Carney is originally  from Jacksonville, and  he told me a couple of years ago about a friend of his parents from Jacksonville, Arkansas named Silas Legrow. Legrow  was going to speak at the Jacksonville Museum of Military History on April 17, 2008 about his experience in the March of 1942 when […]

Veterans Day 2011 (Black Hawk Down and North Little Rock’s Donavan “Bull” Briley)

The Background Facts of The Black Hawk Down (1/7) Uploaded by WarDocumentary on Feb 14, 2011 The movie Black Hawk Down was based on an actual event that took place in Mogadishu, Somalia. This documentary explains the event. _______________________________ On October 3, 2003 my son  played quarterback at the Arkansas Baptist High School Football game […]

War Hero Joe Speaks and D Day pictures

 Below I have the story of Joe Speaks who fought in Europe and was captured twice by the Germans. Photo by Associated Press American GI’s clamber into a landing craft as they prepare to hit the beaches along France’s Normandy coast in June 1944. The World War II operation was part of the massive Allied […]

Coldplay North American Tour Schedule 2012

Here is what you have been waiting for:

Coldplay Tour Dates, Cities – Schedule for 2012 North American Tour Announced (List)

By Staff
Dec 9, 2011

Coldplay have announced a 2012 tour of North America.

The ‘Every Teardrop is a Waterfall’ group are set to play a string of dates in support of their latest album, ‘Mylo Xyloto’, from April to August 2012, their first tour in the US and Canada in three years.

Talking about the album, frontman Chris Martin told MTV news: “It’s definitely a schizophrenic album – it keeps changing sounds. That’s why we called it such a strange thing, Mylo Xyloto.

Dates, Cities Revealed for 2012 Coldplay North American Tour.

Dates, Cities Revealed for 2012 Coldplay North American Tour.

“Because we felt like so many people have already made up their minds about us, both good and bad, that we can sort of start again from scratch and try and reflect all the music we listen to and we love.”

The band’s North American tour dates will be a huge change from earlier this week when the group played an intimate show for 500 fans at the Camden Dingwalls venue in London, England, a venue they had last played in 1998, as they released their debut ‘Safety’ EP.

Coldplay also had teething problems with their new set, as they had a couple of false starts playing new track ‘Hurts Like Heaven’ at the show.

After finally getting through the song, Chris laughed to the crowd: “This is worse than 14 years ago. We f***ed that up as well. Come on, we’re aprofessional band for f**k’s sake.”

The band will also fly back to Europe at the beginning of June for five dates in the UK.

Coldplay North American tour 2012:

April 17 – Edmonton, Canada – Rexall Place

April 18 – Calgary, Canada – Scotiabank Saddledome

April 20 – Vancouver, Canada – Rogers Arena

April 24 – Portland, America- Rose Garden Arena

April 25 – Seattle, America – KeyArena

April 27 – San Jose, America – HP Pavilion At San Jose

May 1 – Los Angeles, America – Hollywood Bowl

May 2 – Los Angeles, America – Hollywood Bowl

June 22 – Dallas, America – American Airlines Center

June 25 – Houston, America – Toyota Center

June 28 – Tampa, America – St. Pete Times Forum

June 29 – Miami, America – American Airlines Arena

July 2 – Atlanta, America – Philips Arena

July 5 – Philadelphia, America – Wells Fargo Center

July 8 – Washington, America – Verizon Center

July 23 – Toronto, America – Air Canada Centre

July 26 – Montreal, America – Bell Centre

July 29 – Boston, America – TD Garden

August 3 – East Rutherford, America – Izod Center

August 7 – Chicago, America – United Center

August 11 – St. Paul, America -Xcel Energy Center

© Bang Showbiz

Related posts:

in’

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 13)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 13) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: My son Hunter Hatcher’s 8th favorite Coldplay song is  ”Warning Sign.” He notes, […]

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 4)

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 4) Woody Allen interview 1971 PART 4/4 Uploaded by captainvontrapp on Jul 21, 2008 Woody Allen interview from 1971, just after the worldwide release of ‘Bananas’ ________________________ David Mishkin God and Carpeting: The Theology of Woody Allen by David Mishkin March 1, 1993 This is an […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 12)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 12) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference. My son Hunter Hatcher’s 9th favorite Coldplay song is “Clocks.” Hunter noted, […]

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 3)

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 3) Woody Allen interview 1971 PART 3/4 Uploaded by captainvontrapp on Jul 21, 2008 Woody Allen interview from 1971, just after the worldwide release of ‘Bananas’ ________________________ Looking at the (sometimes skewed) morality of Woody Allen’s best films. In the late ’60s, Woody Allen left the […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 11)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 11) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: My son Hunter Hatcher’s 10th favorite Coldplay song is “In My Place.” […]

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 2)

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 2) Woody Allen interview 1971 PART 2/4 Uploaded by captainvontrapp on Jul 21, 2008 Woody Allen interview from 1971, just after the worldwide release of ‘Bananas’ ________________________ Looking at the (sometimes skewed) morality of Woody Allen’s best films. In the late ’60s, Woody Allen left the […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 10)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 10) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: My son Hunter  Hatcher’s 11th favorite Coldplay song is Amsterdam. The Best […]

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 1)

“Woody Wednesday” Allen acts silly in 1971 interview (Part 1) Woody Allen interview 1971 PART 1/4 Uploaded by captainvontrapp on Jul 21, 2008 Woody Allen interview from 1971, just after the worldwide release of ‘Bananas’ __________________________ Looking at the (sometimes skewed) morality of Woody Allen’s best films. In the late ’60s, Woody Allen left the […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 9)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 9) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: My son Hunter Hatcher   has picked “life in technicolor II” as […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 5)

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 5) This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: Hunter picked “Don’t Panic,” as his number 16 pick of Coldplay’s best […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 4)

Dave Hogan/ Getty Images This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: For the 17th best Coldplay song of all-time, Hunter picks “42.” He notes, “You thought you might […]

Documentary on Coldplay (Part 2)

The best band in the world. Below I have linked some articles I have earlier about the search for meaning in life the band seems to involved in. Chris Martin, Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman, and Will Champion formed Coldplay in 1996 while going to University in London. The young band quickly established themselves in the […]

Review of New Coldplay song with video clip

I am presently involved in the counting down of the best Coldplay songs of all time, but I am also in a series here reviewing the upcoming songs on Coldplay’s new cd that will be released soon. Here is a review from Rolling Stone: Coldplay Debut new song ‘Charlie Brown’ June 6, 2011 Coldplay debuted […]

Documentary on Coldplay (Part 1, the song “Yellow” featured)

Great documentary on Coldplay. I have written a lot on Coldplay the last few years and I see something spiritually happening with the group as they continue to search for a deeping meaning in life. Coldplay Max Masters – Part 1 of 7 Uploaded by thepostbox on May 6, 2009 The ASTRA Award winning music documentary […]

“Woody Wednesday” Will Allen and Martin follow same path as Kansas to Christ?

Several members of the 70′s band Kansas became committed Christians after they realized that the world had nothing but meaningless to offer. It seems through the writings of both Woody Allen and Chris Martin of Coldplay that they both are wrestling with the issue of death and what meaning does life bring. Kansas went through […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 3)

 This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference:   Hunter has chosen the song “Viva La Vida” as his number 18 pick. Hunter noted, “The violin synth is a […]

Review of New Coldplay songs (video clip too)

Coldplay – Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall Published on Jun 28, 2011 by ColdplayVEVO The new single, taken from Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall EP (featuring two more new tracks). Download it from http://cldp.ly/itunescp Music video by Coldplay performing Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall. (P) 2011 The copyright in this audiovisual recording is owned by […]

“Woody Wednesday” Allen is searching for satisfaction in wrong place jh17

Coldplay – 42 Live Coldplay perform on the french television channel W9. In 1992 Woody Allen took up with one of his adopted kids and lived in with her. He was given over to the pursuit of pleasure. Actually he has made that a major focus of his life. In the latter part of his […]

Is something spiritually going on with Coldplay? BTW Coldplay on Letterman tonight!

In the past three years I have written many posts concerning the spiritual meaning of the Coldplay songs. There is something going on with them. Even with one of the songs on their upcoming album there is something spiritual they are driving at. Tonight on Letterman the band will perform. Elusive: Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris […]

Barrett Jones wins Outland Trophy

Knoxnews.com reports:

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — Alabama’s Barrett Jones has won the Outland Trophy as the nation’s most outstanding interior lineman.

The announcement was made during the College Football Awards show at Disney World. Stanford’s David DeCastro and Penn State’s Devon Still were the other finalists.

Jones is the third Alabama player to win the Outland, joining Chris Samuels in 1999 and Andre Smith in 2008.

___________________

Here is a post I wrote earlier:

Barrett Jones of Alabama Crimson Tide has spent time the last two years ministering to earthquake victims in Haiti. Actually I wrote about Barrett’s faith in Christ and you can read my article at this link.

I am hoping my Arkansas Razorbacks win the game tomorrow, but Barrett Jones is a winner in life because of his relationship with Christ. He has been a Christian leader on that team and even Coach Saban has noticed.

For the second straight year, Alabama right guard Barrett Jones spent his spring break helping people in Haiti.
TUSCALOOSA – Barrett Jones felt a compelling need to return to Haiti one year after he traveled there to volunteer following the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake.
Alabama’s right guard traded the chance to relax for another week, an annual college tradition. In return, he traveled with 31 people, including 13 UA classmates and his family, to help people still struggling with daily life. They worked on a school and an orphanage, and helped feed people in need.
More than a year after the earthquake rattled the Haitians’ world to dust, Jones was still trying to make sense of his own.
“We have problems day-to-day and week-to-week in our lives,” Jones said. “We make such a big deal about them and we think they’re so extreme. You go over there and you literally see somebody who has nothing and lives under a tin roof and a mud hut, and you think how fortunate am I to come home and have food.”
Despite the passage of time, Jones still painted a bleak scene.
“I saw a little progress, but honestly not much,” he said. “There’s so much damage over there it’s like where do you start? As we know, they don’t really have the infrastructure in place to really rebuild it. It’s still a bad situation.”
 

Like this:

Be the first to like this post.

Related links: 

Aaron Douglas played for Vols and Bama before dying because of drugs jh39

Aaron Douglas played for Vols and Bama before dying because of drugs jh39 Aaron Douglas was a lineman for Alabama and I have already written about another Bama lineman by the name of Barrett Jones who was a teammate of Aaron’s. Here are the two links below: Barrett Jones of Alabama Crimson Tide (Part 1 […]

 

Barrett Jones of Alabama Crimson Tide (Part 1 of series “Christians in Athletics”)

Today I am starting a new series called “Christians in Athletics.”  Barrett Jones grew up under the ministry of Adrian Rogers at Bellevue. Below is a clip from the Memorial Service for Dr. Rogers.   Barrett Jones of Alabama Crimson Tide has spent time the last two years ministering to earthquake victims in Haiti. Actually […]

 

Bama’s star lineman Barrett Jones puts ministry first

Barrett Jones of Alabama Crimson Tide has spent time the last two years ministering to earthquake victims in Haiti. Actually I wrote about Barrett’s faith in Christ and you can read my article at this link. I am hoping my Arkansas Razorbacks win the game tomorrow, but Barrett Jones is a winner in life because […]

Do you think protectionism would help, in the long run, if we don’t implement pro-growth reforms?

Do you think protectionism would help, in the long run, if we don’t implement pro-growth reforms?

Sometimes I wonder what are the motives of those who oppose free trade.

Eight Questions for Protectionists

Posted by Daniel J. Mitchell

When asked to pick my most frustrating issue, I could list things from my policy field such as class warfare or income redistribution.

But based on all the speeches and media interviews I do, which periodically venture into other areas, I suspect protectionism vs. free trade is the biggest challenge.

So I want to ask the protectionists (though anybody is free to provide feedback) how they would answer these simple questions.

1. Do you think politicians and bureaucrats should be able to tell you what you’re allowed to buy?

As Walter Williams has explained, this is a simple matter of freedom and liberty. If you want to give the political elite the authority to tell you whether you can buy foreign-produced goods, you have opened the door to endless mischief.

2. If trade barriers between nations are good, then shouldn’t we have trade barriers between states? Or cities?

This is a very straightforward challenge. If protectionism is good, then it shouldn’t be limited to national borders.

3. Why is it bad that foreigners use the dollars they obtain to invest in the American economy instead of buying products?

Little green pieces of paper have little value to foreign companies. They only accept those dollars in exchange for products because they intend to use them, either to buy American products or to invest in the U.S. economy. Indeed, a “capital surplus” is the flip side of a “trade deficit.” This generally is a positive sign for the American economy (though I freely admit this argument is weakened if foreigners use dollars to “invest” in federal government debt).

4. Do you think protectionism would be necessary if America did pro-growth reforms such as a lower corporate tax rate, less wasteful spending, and reduced red tape?

There are thousands of hard-working Americans that have lost jobs because of foreign competition. At some level, this is natural in a dynamic economy, much as candle makers lost jobs when the light bulb was invented. But oftentimes American producers can’t meet the challenge of foreign competition because of bad policy from Washington. When I think of ordinary Americans that have lost jobs, I direct my anger at the politicians in DC, not a foreign company or foreign workers.

5. Do you think protectionism would help, in the long run, if we don’t implement pro-growth reforms?

If we travel down the path of protectionism, politicians will use that as an excuse not to implement pro-growth reforms. This condemns America to a toxic combination of two bad policies – big government and trade distortions. This will destroy far more jobs and opportunity that foreign competition.

6. Do you recognize that, by creating the ability to offer special favors to selected industries, protectionism creates enormous opportunities for corruption?

Most protectionism in America is the result of organized interest groups and powerful unions trying to prop up inefficient practices. And they only achieve their goals by getting in bed with the Washington crowd in a process that is good for the corrupt nexus of interest groups-lobbyists-politicians-bureaucrats.

7. If you don’t like taxes, why would you like taxes on imports?

A tariff is nothing but a tax that politicians impose on selected products. This presumably makes protectionism inconsistent with the principles of low taxes and limited government.

8. Can you point to nations that have prospered with protectionism, particularly when compared to similar nations with free trade?

Some people will be tempted to say that the United States was a successful economy in the 1800s when tariffs financed a significant share of the federal government. That’s largely true, but the nation’s rising prosperity surely was due to the fact that we had no income tax, a tiny federal government, and very little regulation. And I can’t resist pointing out that the 1930 Smoot-Hawley tariff didn’t exactly lead to good results.

We also had internal free trade, as explained in this excellent short video on the benefits of free trade, narrated by Don Boudreaux of George Mason University and produced by theInstitute for Humane Studies.

Uploaded by  on Aug 31, 2011

According to Prof. Don Boudreaux, free trade is nothing more than a system of trade that treats foreign goods and services no differently than domestic goods and services. Protectionism, on the other hand, is a system of trade that discriminates against foreign goods and services in an attempt to favor domestic goods and services. In theory, free trade outperforms protectionism by bringing lower cost goods and services to consumers. In practice, the benefits of free trade can be seen in countries like America and Hong Kong. Both countries have a relatively high degree of free trade, and, as a consequence, have experienced an explosion of wealth.

________

Free Trade v. Protectionism

My closing argument is that people who generally favor economic freedom should ask themselves whether it’s legitimate or logical to make an exception in the case of foreign trade.

Duggars mourn miscarriage

I read  on the Arkansas Times Blog this morning this sad news about Duggar’s miscarriage. Michelle said, “I feel like my heart broke telling my children…” Below is the article from People Magazine:

Michelle Duggar Miscarries

By Alicia Dennis

Update Thursday December 08, 2011 08:25 PM EST Originally posted Thursday December 08, 2011 04:30 PM EST

Michelle Duggar Miscarries

Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar

Kris Connor/WireImage

A day of joyful anticipation has turned to anguish for Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar.

At a routine check-up Thursday to find out the sex of their 20th child, their doctor was unable to find a heartbeat and told the couple they had miscarried in the second trimester.

“After the appointment, we came back home and told the children,” says Michelle, 45.

“We had just been talking about baby names last night and they were getting excited about naming a boy or a girl. It has been a real sad disappointment.”

She says the family will select a name after they know if the baby was a boy or girl, and then plan to have a funeral service.

“I feel like my heart broke telling my children,” says Michelle. “They have all been so excited about this baby and looking forward to April coming around and having a new little one in our arms. That was the most difficult. The Lord is the giver of life and he can choose when that life is ready to go on and be with Him.”

The stars of TLC‘s 19 Kids and Counting previously weathered a medical ordeal with their youngest daughter, Josie, who was born in December 2009.

This was their second miscarriage; Michelle lost her baby during her second pregnancy. She was taking oral birth control at the time and cites this as one reason the couple together decided to leave the number of children they have “up to God.”

Related links:

Duggars expecting another baby (related links to Duggars)

The Arkansas Times Blog reported today: EXPECTING 20th: Michelle Duggar People magazine reports that Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar are expecting their 20th child this spring. She’s 45 and had a rough time with her 19th, Josie, born prematurely weighing 22 ounces Link includes video to TLC, where the Duggar-based reality show airs. ______________________ Related […]

Crowd at Occupy Arkansas pales in comparison to annual pro-life march

Demonstrators march through the streets of Little Rock on Saturday in a protest organized by Occupy Little Rock. (John Lyon photo) Occupy Arkansas got cranked up today in Little Rock with their first march and several hundred showed up. It was unlike the pro-life marches that I have been a part of that have had […]

Pro-life marchers turn to prayer

What Ever Happened to the Human Race? Jason Tolbert told a  story about pro-life marchers and their tactic of prayer: OWNER TURNS SPRINKLERS ON PRO-LIFE PRAYER VIGIL In July, I wrote about a new movement springing up in Arkansas that seeks to combat abortion not with violent protest, but with peaceful prayer demonstrations.  It is called “40 […]

Duggar’s first grandson born

TLC stars Josh and Anna Duggar with their newborn son — TLC I was walking at the Another Duggar Baby! Josh & Anna Duggar Welcome Baby Boy Yahoo News reported: The Duggar family continues to grow! Josh Duggar, 23, – the eldest son of Jim Bob and Michelle – and wife Anna, 22, welcomed their […]

Atheists confronted: How I confronted Carl Sagan the year before he died jh47

In today’s news you will read about Kirk Cameron taking on the atheist Stephen Hawking over some recent assertions he made concerning the existence of heaven. Back in December of 1995 I had the opportunity to correspond with Carl Sagan about a year before his untimely death. Sarah Anne Hughes in her article,”Kirk Cameron criticizes […]

Fox 16:Biased reporting on Marches

Rep. Tim Griffin and Lt. Gov. Mark Darr at the Arkansas March for Life in Little Rock from Tolbert Report. Go to Fox 16 website and you will read this story below and watch a video clip on both marches. What you will not read is the fact that only 150 people showed up for […]

33rd ANNUAL MARCH FOR LIFE:Little Rock Sun 2pm begins at Capital and Louisiana Streets

HALT:HaltingArkansasLiberalswithTruth.com President Obama on abortion Adrian Rogers (former President of Southern Baptist Convention): “I am not as afraid of the Communist, the Russians, the Chinese, as much as I am afraid of God.  If God be for us, who can be against us?  If God be against us, then who can be for us?  It […]

Pearl Harbor 70 years ago (Part 4)

Here is a portion of an article from Pittsburgh Tribune-Review :

Dwindling number of Pearl Harbor survivors recall that fateful day

By Rachel Weaver and Richard Robbin, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Read more: Dwindling number of Pearl Harbor survivors recall that fateful day – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Most Western Pennsylvanians who survived the “date which will live in infamy” are in their late 80s or early 90s. Here are a few of their stories about that day:

Nelson Ferguson of Plum

Nelson Ferguson of Plum remembers sirens blaring, and then a shell whizzed by.

Serving in the Army’s 24th Infantry Division, he was staying at a boarding house in Honolulu, planning to do some Christmas shopping.

“We heard something whistle by the roof,” said Ferguson, 91. “You could hear it sizzling. … And we got out of there in a hurry.”

He hopped a bus back to Schofield Barracks, where guards scrutinized him at the gate to make sure he wasn’t a spy.

Because Ferguson worked with messages and codes, he stayed at the command post in Oahu, sleeping on a cot.

“They would be afraid that if I got captured, they would force me to tell the code,” Ferguson said.

He once risked friendly fire when delivering messages across the island. “If something moved after dark, it would get shot at,” he said.

Ferguson grew up in Monroeville, the oldest of 11 children. He worked in the Civilian Conservation Corps for two years and joined the Army at 18, serving from 1938 to 1945. He later worked for U.S. Steel Research.

“(Nelson) spent a lot of time devoted to his country,” said his wife, Joyce. “And he’s very proud of that.”

Rose Marie Jewart of Vandergrift

Rose Marie Jewart and her family arrived home from church that morning and were climbing the 45 steps to their veranda when they saw a plane approaching Pearl Harbor.

It flew so low that Jewart, then 8, saw the pilot and red circle beneath the wings. She said to her granddad: “That’s not Americans.”

“He turned on the radio, and the voice came on: ‘We are being attacked. All civilians go up to the mountains. We are being attacked.’ ”

Jewart, 77, of Vandergrift remembers planes circling and people panicking. She was scared for her father, who worked as a civilian on ships tearing down and rebuilding boilers. He evacuated the USS Arizona on a dinghy.

Other family members worked on a California Packing sugar plantation, where tides brought bodies ashore.

“They told the kids, ‘All right, go pick it up and put it in the ambulance,’ ” Jewart said. “Everybody had a job.”

Life was tough after the attack. Most food was imported and “they couldn’t allow the ships to come through because of the enemy submarines.”

She didn’t understand why many of her Japanese friends ended up in detention camps behind barbed wire. “Mom said, ‘Well they don’t know who the enemy is.’ I said, ‘But they’re children.’ ”

In 1956, Jewart moved to Pennsylvania with her husband, Jack, whom she met in Hawaii. She worked for Kiski Area School District in the cafeteria and as a crossing guard.

She cannot forget Pearl Harbor.

“It never leaves. It becomes part of your life.”

Staff writer Rossilynne Skena contributed to this report

Related posts:

Veterans Day 2011 Part 9:Roy “Roxy” Oxenrider survived Korean War’s Toughest Battle

Picture of Roy after he had recovered at the hospital. Picture of Roy below in the hospital recovering from his injuries followed by a picture of Roy encouraging another soldier who was in the hospital:  Below is an article that was published in November of 2010 in the Saline Courier: Saline County War Hero Bryant […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 8 Leon McDaniel of World War II (second post)

Okinawa – At the Emperor’s Doorstep” episode from “WWII: GI Diary”….. This old 1978 TV docu-drama was narrated by Lloyd Bridges and told the stories of real soldiers/sailors/pilots and their first-hand experiences in battle. Archival footage and good background music really made the stories come alive…..about 25 episodes were made. Video converted from really old […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 7:You have heard of Jimmy Doolittle, but what about Leon A. McDaniel?

President Reagan and Senator Barry Goldwater present the fourth star to General Jimmy Doolittle during a White House ceremony in the Indian Treaty room, OEOB. 6/20/85. I love the movie “Pearl Harbor” with Ben Affleck and it tells the story of Jimmy Doolittle.  He was born in 1896 and died in 1993. He is pictured […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 6 (A look back at Okinawa)

This portion below appeared in an article I did for the Saline Courier about 18 months ago: I went to the First Baptist Church in Little Rock from 1983 to 1997, and during that time I became friends with Walter Dickinson Sr. In fact, we used to attend a weekly luncheon together on Thursdays.  Just […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 5 (A look back at the “Battle of the Bulge”)

The Lost Evidence: The Battle Of The Bulge (1/5) This article was published in the Saline Courier about 18 months ago: When we celebrate July 4th we are focusing on the freedoms that so many soldiers have fought for over the last 234 years. That focus has been highlighted for me since my son Hunter […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 4

  This is taken from an article that appeared in the Saline Courier about a year ago: Bravery is not just limited to one generation, but Americans have had it in every generation. It makes me think about those who are currently serving in our military. Jon Chris Roberts who is graduate of Benton High […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 3 (A look back at World War 1)

I was born in Tennessee and everyone in Tennessee knows the name of Alvin York. Above is a clip about his accomplishments in War World I. Cara Gist of Shannon Hills tells me that her grandfather Herbert S. Apple of Salado, Arkansas (near Batesville) fought in World War I. He served in France and fought […]

Veterans Day 2011 Part 2 (Bataan Death March)

My longtime friend Craig Carney is originally  from Jacksonville, and  he told me a couple of years ago about a friend of his parents from Jacksonville, Arkansas named Silas Legrow. Legrow  was going to speak at the Jacksonville Museum of Military History on April 17, 2008 about his experience in the March of 1942 when […]

Veterans Day 2011 (Black Hawk Down and North Little Rock’s Donavan “Bull” Briley)

The Background Facts of The Black Hawk Down (1/7) Uploaded by WarDocumentary on Feb 14, 2011 The movie Black Hawk Down was based on an actual event that took place in Mogadishu, Somalia. This documentary explains the event. _______________________________ On October 3, 2003 my son  played quarterback at the Arkansas Baptist High School Football game […]

War Hero Joe Speaks and D Day pictures

 Below I have the story of Joe Speaks who fought in Europe and was captured twice by the Germans. Photo by Associated Press American GI’s clamber into a landing craft as they prepare to hit the beaches along France’s Normandy coast in June 1944. The World War II operation was part of the massive Allied […]

Friedman Friday” Free to Choose by Milton Friedman: Episode “What is wrong with our schools?” (Part 6 of transcript and video)

Here is the video clip and transcript of the film series FREE TO CHOOSE episode “What is wrong with our schools?” Part 6 of 6.

 
Volume 6 – What’s Wrong with our Schools
Transcript:
FRIEDMAN: But I personally think it’s a good thing. But I don’t see that any reason whatsoever why I shouldn’t have been required to pay back that money. Individuals pursuing their separate individual interests also provide public benefits. Of course I think that the public benefited from my getting an education, but the primary beneficiary was me. I was the one who got the benefit from it. I was the one who had the higher income.
COONS: We know you benefited from it.
FRIEDMAN: I know I benefited, I don’t know about the public.
McKENZIE: I’d like others of you to react to the idea of moving from state education at the higher level, which is based upon low fees in state universities, in favor of a loan system. This has been hotly debated in many other countries, too. What’s your own feeling about that?
COONS: Being a tenured professor at a state university I suppose you’ve really put me on the spot. I hope none of my friends are listening. But I tend to agree in general with Milton Friedman that we ought to find a way to open up to all classes, all income classes the kinds of opportunities that the middle class have at my university. And I cannot give you __ we don’t have time to go through all of the kinds of ways in which we would do it, but I would just personally, it seems to me we ought to let people come free at the beginning and pay it back out of their income over their life span, so if they make a lot of money, they pay back a lot of money. Perhaps we can run the whole university in the future on their success, to which we contributed with our teaching. And if they don’t make any money, they don’t pay anything back, and that’s okay too.
FRIEDMAN: And you ought to share in the losses if they don’t.
SHANNON: I can’t think of anything __
COONS: Exactly.
SHANNON: I can’t think of anything that would frighten poor people more than the thought at the end of the four years or six or seven or eight years of higher education, they have this albatross around their neck __
COONS: Only if they’re rich. Only if they become rich.
FRIEDMAN: There’s no albatross __ would you say the same thing about people in this country who start private businesses every year. Many of them lose money. Many of them make money. Would you say that nobody is gonna start a business because he might end up with an albatross? You ought to let people decide that for themselves. What I really want to know is a very different thing. How do you justify taxing the people in Watts, to send the children from Beverly Hills to college? That’s a demagogic statement, but it happens to be empirically a correct statement. How do you justify it?
SHANKER: Well I don’t know how we justify taxing all the people of this country to send the GI’s under the GI Bill, but I’m very grateful that we did it. I don’t know what this country would have done in a postwar period without a huge number of educated people in a whole bunch of fields that opened up after that. I doubt very much that the GI’s would have come back at the age that they were and everything else, and would have decided that now they’re gonna take out loans in order to go to college.
VOICE OFF SCREEN: And a lot of them were poor.
SHANKER: Yes, they were poor, and they went because they had government support to go, and because basically there were a lot of state-supported low-tuition schools, and if you didn’t have the state schools, and if you didn’t have the government support we wouldn’t __ we would have been without those people, and I don’t know what would have happened either to our strength or to our economy.
FRIEDMAN: The history of this country goes back a little bit before 1945. It goes back 200 years. The state schools, universities, were a minor part of the total higher educational system for a long time. That educational system did generate a great many educated and schooled people, a great many people who made great contribution to this country.
SHANKER: What percentage of people went to college before World War II in this country?
FRIEDMAN: The percentage that was going to college was going up and rising. You know __ let me tell you one __ another statistic __ I hate to introduce statistics. But let me tell you one more. Do you know that the percentage of the students at private universities who come from low-income classes is higher than the percentage of students at state universities, at government universities that come from the lowest income families.
SHANKER: Because they are there with government assistance.
FRIEDMAN: Most cases they are there with __
SHANKER: They are there with government assistance which in many cases favors the private as against the public schools.
FRIEDMAN: In most cases they are there with private scholarships that have been contributed by people __
SHANKER: Some of them, some of them, yes.
FRIEDMAN: __ which is all to the good.
McKENZIE: Dr. Anrig on this.
ANRIG: We come back to the point that I tried to make earlier with Dartmouth, the reason the public higher education system developed, the reason that you have the UCLA’s and others is not simple that government went amuck or bureaucrats went that way; but because eight of those students were not getting into Dartmouth, and there was not a place for them. And it was public higher education that opened up its doors to those students. Those are the youngsters that now have an opportunity they wouldn’t have had before. I think on the issue of loans that it’s as with all complex human tasks, it’s not an either/or situation. You need a mix of strategies on the issue of alternatives for youngsters in schools. I think you can have, as indeed you do have, alternatives within public school systems. I think you can have alternatives within schools. I think you can have competition through open enrollment kinds of arrangements. I am fearful, however, always for those eight youngsters than can’t get in to something which is basically selective and exclusive. If you can assure us __
FRIEDMAN: Well, let’s go back __
ANRIG: __ that those eight youngsters all will be provided with equal attention, equal opportunity and equal rights. Then I would begin to be more interested in the alternative.
FRIEDMAN: But I want to suggest to you that we’re not proposing, neither Jack Coons nor I, to dismantle anything. We’re only saying, put up or shut up. Either show that you can produce the kind of education people are willing to go and get, or reduce your size, go out of business. We are only proposing that there be a wider range of alternatives. Now, it is not true __ let me put a different point to you. There are a small minority of people who are problems. Is it desirable to impose a straightjacket on a hundred percent of the people, or ninety percent of the people, in order to provide special assistance or special help to four or five or ten percent of the people? Not at all. I think that there’s a big difference between two kinds of systems. One kind of system in which the great bulk of parents have effective freedom to choose the kind of schools their children go to, whether it’s the lower or the higher level. And there are programs and provisions for a small minority. That’s one kind of a system. That isn’t what we have now. What people in the public school system, people like yourselves do, they do not want to give up the monopoly of the public school system any more than the Post Office want to give up the monopoly of delivering mail.
ANRIG: I think you attribute the monopoly desire to the bureaucrat. And I don’t think that’s right. The concern of the public school is for being sure that every youngster in this country gets access to a public education.
FRIEDMAN: Excuse me. You have had an attempt to introduce voucher experiments around the country. Every one of those attempts, as at Alamrock (phonics) and elsewhere, has been prevented by the opposition of the educational bureaucracy.
ANRIG: Oh, but, no, no, you can’t __ that’s a glittering generality.
FRIEDMAN: That was true in New Hampshire, it was true in Connecticut.
SHANKER: It was not true in Alamrock (phonics) because Alamrock was not what you might call a voucher system, it was a kind of a system of free choice within public schools.
FRIEDMAN: I agree, I agree.
SHANKER: And whether one school did better in its scores, others did worse, and when you measured the whole system when it was all over, the scores were exactly the same as they were before, except that some students had moved to other schools and the grades were better in one school as against another. We do very strongly oppose a voucher system which will end up with public schools being abandoned and thereby destroyed. largely. They will become the schools for those who can’t get in anywhere else, or who are expelled elsewhere.
VOICE OFF SCREEN: So if you had a voucher system __
SHANKER: Because if you compel public schools to educate all children, including the most difficult, and if you have other schools, that have _
FRIEDMAN: It isn’t compelling public schools, it’s compelling parents _
SHANKER: No, no, it’s public schools. The public school cannot say to a parent, “Your child is very difficult. Your child throws things. Your child screams & yells. Your child takes all the attention of the teacher, therefore, get out and go find a private school.” On the other hand, you have hundreds of private schools in this country where when they get a very disturbed child, out that child goes. And where does that child go? The public schools must take him.
FRIEDMAN: But look at __
SHANKER: And that’s what we have. We have one system of schools which cream, and which throw out the most difficult __ you know, it would be like the hospital throwing out all the sick patients and keeping the healthy ones.
McKENZIE: Well, there we leave this week’s discussion. We hope you’ll join us for the next episode of Free to Choose.