Received a very nice phone call from Dan this afternoon. He called to compliment me on the VI Corps site and especially the music. We talked about 15 minutes and he then sent me the following info. Please take a look at their site.
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Marion,
Nice chatting with you just a few minutes ago. Sent you the World War II
Discussion List <WWII-L@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU> where your music was
mentioned - Spike Jones was one of my favorite entertainers - saw his
stage show just after WWII - never laughed so much from the opening
curtain which was many hotel towels.
How did the VI Corps Combat Engineers get to where they served with all
they needed - fuel, ammunition, weapons, food, mail, etc., etc., etc.
Check out - American Merchant Marine at War - www.USMM.org - for all
wars with focus on WWII.
We need your - all your - help - please go to ----
http://www.usmm.org/urgent.html and help us with cosponsors of your
Senators and Members of Congress - have them check out mini history of
the WWII Merchant Marine and reasons to support H.R. 23 and S. 1272 at
Thanks for the music and entertainers -
See Bob Hope's Christmas 1944 Broadcast to the U.S. Merchant Marine
Everywhere - http://www.usmm.org/hope.html
How did you do the music? to make it small enough -- what programs did
you use?
Dan Horodysky,
Communications Director, American Merchant Marine Veterans
American Merchant Marine at War - www.USMM.org
POB 2361, Berkeley, CA 94702-0361
telephone 510-540-8472 (Pacific Coast Time)
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The Canadians recently issued a Battle of the Atlantic stamp. They know their history.
The most critical battle of World War II was the Battle of the Atlantic. That battle insured the supply to Great Britain and our Allies, the Normandy invasion, and eventual end of the war. If that failed the planned German invasion of Great Britain may have happened AND there would have been no D-Day.
If that Battle failed, there would have been no United States of America.
"But once the war was won, what the bureaucrats in Washington did to the
merchant mariners was reprehensible. They treated them like second-class
citizens, and worse." "Battle For The Atlantic: America's Forgotten Heroes," American History, Nov./Dec. 1993
If it were not for the USMM we could very well be eating "ersatz bratwurst with chopsticks."
Dan Horodysky
Proud Daughter of Walter (Monday) Poniedzialek
540th Engineer Combat Regiment, 2833rd Bn, H&S Co, 4th Platoon
There's "No Bridge Too Far"