USARA News

The USARA News Blog presents news stories related to USARA; other Ranger community news is posted under Ranger News.  USARA News is public; anyone visiting this website has access.

  • 07/06/2015 12:31 PM | Anonymous

    Charles Merrill “Charlie” Johnson passed away on Wednesday, June 17th while on a fly fishing trip in Montana. He is survived by his wife of 44 years, Katrin “Kathy” Brun. He was born in New York City on November 2nd, 1941 to Dorthy Cooperrider and Daniel W. Johnson, a career FBI agent. In 1945, the family moved to Columbus, Ohio. Charlie attended local schools and earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration from Ohio State University, where he met his bride to be.

    From 1964 – 1967, Charlie served in the United States Army. He completed both Officers Candidate and Army Ranger schools. The completion of Ranger training was one of Charlie’s proudest moments. He saw combat in Vietnam and concluded his military service as a First Lieutenant. He distinguished himself by earning the Bronze Star for Valor, Purple Heart, Vietnam Service Medal, and Presidential Citation.

    In 1967 Charlie joined Wells Fargo Bank and his storied banking career began. First he served as a personnel officer recruiting MBAs for the bank and then he went into International Banking. With “Kathy” he served abroad in Managua, Nicaragua and Hong Kong. In 1975, Charlie relocated to San Francisco, Wells Fargo’s headquarters, where he began working in the Real Estate and Commercial Banking groups. The bank nominated him for the “Sloan Fellow” program at Stanford University and he obtained his Master’s degree from Stanford’s Graduate School of Business. Charlie was eventually promoted to Vice Chairman and supervised all of the bank’s wholesale activities, real estate lending and commercial banking from his offices in Orange County. In 1998 Charlie retired to pursue his hobbies of hunting, fishing, automobiles, wine and race horses.

    An avid outdoorsman, Charlie made a practice of living his life with integrity and fairness, the coveted attributes of true sportsmen. These qualities made him a great leader and also guided his charitable and volunteer efforts. Charlie served on the Orange County Red Cross Board of Directors and received the Red Cross Spirit Award in 1988. He was very active with the Orange County United Way and was on the Hoag Hospital, 552 Club Board of Directors. He was also part of the Newport Harbor Art Museum Business Council and active in Big Brothers/Big Sisters. Charlie was a member of The Tuna Club of Avalon, Balboa Angling Club, Newport Harbor Yacht Club,  Big Canyon Country Club, Trout Unlimited, Buckeye Farms, The Duck Club and The Ventura County Game Preserve. Charlie was also a member of the Coldwater Conservation and the Bessemer Trust Boards. Most recently, he was very involved in supporting the Navy Seal Foundation, Army Rangers and Special OPS Survivors. He was a Life Member of the U.S. Army Ranger Association.

    Charlie’s sense of purpose, dignity and compassion are rare qualities, which served him well during his 73 years.

    In lieu of flowers donations in Charlie’s name can be sent to:

    SPECIAL OPS WARRIOR FOUNDATION
    P.O. Box 89367 
    Tampa, FL 33689

    or the

    St. Luke’s Wood River Hospital Foundation
    P.O. Box 7005
    Ketchum, Idaho 83340
    Expanding Oncology Infusion Services

     

  • 05/29/2015 6:23 PM | Anonymous

    From ARMY TIMES

    After a second attempt at the first phase of Ranger School, none of the eight female students will be moving forward to the mountain phase of the course, officials from Fort Benning, Georgia, said Friday.

    Read more...

     

  • 04/28/2015 10:28 PM | Anonymous

    CPT Stanley E. White, 2d Platoon Leader, A Company, 2d Ranger Battalion, passed away in his sleep Monday morning, 27 April 2015. Stan was one of the original members of the 2d Ranger Battalion when it activated at Camp Forrest, TN in 1943. He participated in the Normandy Invasion on 6 June 1944, where he was severely wounded.

    Stan’s military career began as an enlisted soldier in the Pacific Theater. He saw action as a machine gunner in the 25th IN Division during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. He attended OCS in 1943 before joining the 2d Ranger Battalion later that year. During D-Day his platoon landed on Omaha Beach (Dog Green sector). During combat action on Omaha, he directed fire from a recently arrived tank from B Company, 743d Tank Battalion to eliminate fire of a German machine gun raking the beach. He was subsequently wounded by German artillery fire and evacuated from the beach.

    After WWII, Stan served in the Korean War before being medically retired from the Army as a captain.

    Stan’s awards and decorations include the Bronze Star Medal, Purple Heart, Distinguished Unit Badge (2d Ranger Battalion), European-African-Middle Eastern Theater Medal (with Bronze Star for Normandy Campaign and Bronze Arrowhead for the Normandy Invasion), Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon (with two Bronze Stars for Pearl Harbor and the Midway Campaigns), American Theater Medal, American Defense Service Medal (with two Bronze Stars), WWII Victory Medal, and the Combat Infantry Badge.

    France awarded Stan its Legion of Honor Medal on 28 April 2014. France previously awarded Stan the Medaille de la France Liberee and the Croix de Guerre for his service in the liberation of France.

    Stan was truly a Ranger hero who played a critical role in the liberation of France and the Allied victory in Europe during WWII.

    Stan will be interred in Arlington National Ceremony at a date to be determined.

    Rangers Lead the Way! And Stan was at the front of the pack!

  • 04/09/2015 6:47 PM | Anonymous

    click on REGISTER to get signed up for the Go to the U.S Army Ranger Association (USARA) Annual Ranger Muster (ARM) 2015 from June 22-25, 2015.

    Go to www.ranger.org to read about the USARA 2nd Annual Ranger Soldier Appreciation Night -- a good time for all.

     

  • 04/02/2015 9:29 PM | Anonymous

    Raymond Noel Dye, 90, died on March 8, 2015 in Florida. Ranger Dye is survived by his wife Theresa Dye, son Richard Meyer and daugher Tondra Mineo.

    A memorial ceremony will be held on April 9, 2015 at the National Ranger Memorial on Fort Benning, Georgia. The family of Ranger Dye invite you to attend the memorial ceremony, which will begin at 6:00 p.m.

    Ranger Raymond Noel Dye was inducted into the Ranger Hall of Fame in 2010. According to his Ranger Hall of bio, Private 1st Class Raymond Noel Dye joined the Army November 12, 1942 and was a member of the Armed Forces at Fort Knox, KY. He shipped out to Oran, North Africa in April of 1943 and volunteered under Col. Darby. He was assigned to the 1st Ranger Battalion until just before the Sicily Invasion. With the 4th Ranger Battalion, he made three invasions to include Sicily, Salerno and Anzio, Italy.

    The 4th Ranger Battalion made a 12 mile raid behind the German lines where his Ranger Buddy Charles Roby was killed in action on November 4, 1943. At Chiunzi Pass, Ranger Dye was chosen to join a British observer to pinpoint targets for naval guns that netted the explosion of the German Ammo Depot, among other targets. Going AWOL from hospitals on two occasions to return to his Rangers, he fought until he was wounded a fourth time at Anzio.

    Ranger Dye's awards and decorations include the Bronze Star, Purple Heart with three oak leaf clusters, Good Conduct Medal, European-Africa-Middle East Campaign Medal with Arrowhead, National Defense Service Medal, World War II Victory Medal, Presidential Unit Citation and the Combat Infantry Badge.

    Noel Dye was a founding member of the U.S. Army Ranger Association, serving as a Life Member since the association’s charter on June 13, 1973.  He was the last WWII era founding member.  He will be missed by all members.

     

  • 03/18/2015 3:25 PM | Anonymous

    Gen. Joseph Thomas Palastra Jr. (November 10, 1931 - March 3, 2015)

    General Joseph Thomas Palastra Jr, age 83, of Highlandville, passed away Tuesday, March 3, 2015. He was born November 10, 1931 in Kittery, Maine, the son of Joseph and Isabelle (Lamson) Palastra.

    He graduated from West Point, and retired from the U.S. Army as a 4-Star General. During his career he served three tours of Vietnam, at the Pentagon, and the Pacific Rim. He was a humble man, always caring about the troops and enjoying being with them as a friend. 

    Following retirement he and his wife, Anne, moved to Myrtle, Missouri, where he enjoyed living on the farm, and being “Joe”. After 25 years on the farm, they moved to Springfield and then Highlandville.

    He is survived by his wife, Anne; three daughters; a son; and eight grandchildren. A daughter preceded him in death. According to the wishes of General Palastra, no services are planned.

    He was inducted into the Ranger Hall of Fame in 2010 and a member of USARA.

     

  • 02/03/2015 2:12 PM | Anonymous

    USARA Mid-Term Board Meeting

    The USARA Board of Directors will meet from 8:00am to 2:00pm on Sunday February 8, 2015 at the following location:

    Courtyard Marriott Airport North

    3399 International Boulevard

    Hapeville, Georgia 30354-1346

    (404) 559-1043

    Refer any questions to:

    Tom Evans

    Executive Vice President

    U.S. Army Ranger Association

    ranger06tom@aol.com

    (310) 704-4410

     

  • 12/29/2014 9:12 PM | Anonymous

    USARA member and friend CSM (Retired) Joe Heckard, 66, died on Sunday, December 21, 2014 in Arlington, Texas.  CSM Heckard enlisted in the Army on June 30, 1967 at Fort Benning, Georgia where he completed Basic Training, AIT, and Airborne School. His 30 years of military service started with an assignment in Vietnam with the 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division.

    CSM Heckard served in every leadership position from Squad Leader to Command Sergeant Major. Units of assignment include the Airborne Department; Ranger Department; 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Ranger Battalions; 10th Mountain Division; 1st Battalion, 509th Infantry Regiment; 1st Battalion, 325th Brigade Combat Team, Italy; 2nd Infantry Division; Ranger Training Brigade; and the 11th Infantry Regiment. CSM Heckard concluded his distinguished 30 year career as the CSM of the 11th Infantry Regiment.

    As the Ranger Training Brigade Command Sergeant Major, Heckard empowered the Noncommissioned Officers with responsibility for training decisions, instituted a Quality Assurance team to ensure Training Standards were the same across the Brigade, and improved the quality of life for students and cadre by incorporating new gym equipment, swimming pools, and an upgrade to the dining facilities. 

    Heckard was a combat seasoned Soldier that contributed greatly to the success of the original 1st Ranger Battalion in 1974, and whose dedicated service in all three modern day Ranger Battalions and the Ranger Training Brigade contributed greatly to the success of the Ranger community.

    His awards and decorations include the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Air Medal, Army Commendation Medal, Army Good Conduct Medal, Ranger Tab, Master Parachutist Badge, Pathfinder Badge, and Drill Sergeant Badge.

    CSM Heckard was inducted into the Ranger Hall of Fame in 2012.

    The funeral for CSM Heckard will be held on Friday, January 2, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. at the Infantry Center Chapel on Fort Benning. Ranger Heckard will be buried at the Fort Mitchell National Cemetery with full military honors. Contact Sconiers Funeral Home for more information.

     

  • 12/16/2014 5:21 AM | Anonymous

    LOS ANGELES (AP) Phil Stern, an award-winning photographer who lugged his camera into combat during World War II and later became known for candid shots of Hollywood stars like Marlon Brando, has died. He was 95.  

    Stern died Saturday in Los Angeles after being hospitalized, said David Fahey, co-owner of the Fahey/Klein Gallery that displayed the photographer's work for decades.  Stern, who shot for Life, Look and other magazines, honed his skills as a war photographer during the 1943 Allied invasion of Sicily.

    "His pictures of the invasion and its aftermath remain among the most outstanding documents in the annals of combat photography in any war, before or since," author and journalist Herbert Mitgang wrote in "Phil Stern: A Life's Work," a 2003 collection of Stern photos.

    Stern was inducted into the U.S. Army Ranger Hall of Fame earlier this year during his 95th birthday celebration in California; click here for that news story.   Stern was an original member of Darby's 1st Ranger Battalion in WWII and was a life member of the U.S. Army Ranger Association.

    After the war, Stern gained fame for photos of icons like Marilyn Monroe, Judy Garland and Frank Sinatra in unguarded moments. Unlike the movie-studio portrait photographers whose images were idealized and airbrushed, Stern typically photographed stars candidly on the set, at home and at private gatherings.

    "He made them seem real," Robert Cushman, photography curator for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences told the Times in 2003.

    One of his most memorable images is of Brando, in jeans and black leather jacket, walking the set of "The Wild One."

    Another captures John Wayne chatting with a cigar-chomping John Ford while shooting "The Alamo."

    Stern, who began working for Life in 1941, told the magazine in a 1993 interview that he rarely became friendly with the stars he photographed.

    "I was like the plumber who comes to fix your toilet, then you don't see him again," he said. Besides, he said, "I didn't care to know them, usually undefined so many of them were frankly a pain."

    For several decades, Stern also shot album covers and was a familiar presence at recording sessions with Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie and other jazz greats. He was also the official photographer of President John F. Kennedy's inaugural gala.

    In 1945, Stern married Rose Mae Lindou, a model with the John Robert Powers agency. She preceded him in death, as did his daughter, Lata, and son, Philip.  His survivors include sons Peter Stern and Tom Stern, and eight grandchildren.

  • 12/08/2014 2:10 PM | Anonymous

    LTC (Ret) William Lee Schwartz, former International Director of USARA, died on Friday, 5 December, of multiple medical complications.  He was born March 2, 1937. LTC Schwartz will be buried at West Point at 1:30 on December 15th, and there will be services on the West Coast at a date and time (TBA) sometime in early January.  More information will be posted when available.

     

     

     

     

HOME | ABOUT US | CONTACT US | DONATE | SCHEDULED EVENTS | HEADLINE NEWS | Terms & Conditions

Copyright 2014 - US Army Ranger Association, Inc. - P.O. Box 52126 - Fort Benning, GA 31995-2126  All Rights Reserved.

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software