Why you should be wearing red on Fridays




By Liv Stecker

In 2005, one of those email chain letters went around. You know, the kind that you get annoyed at all of your friends for sending? Well this one was a little different and something about it stuck with the ones who read it. The original email read thusly:

“The Americans who support our troops, are the silent majority. We are not ‘organized’ to reflect who we are, or to reflect what our opinions are. Many Americans, like yourself, would like to start a grassroots movement using the membership of the Special Operations Association, and Special Forces Associations, and all their friends, simply to recognize that Americans support our troops. We need to inform the local VFWs and American Legion, our local press, local TV, and continue carrying the message to the national levels as we start to get this going. Our idea of showing our solidarity and support for our troops is starting Friday, and continuing on each and every Friday, until this is over, that every RED - blooded American who supports our young men and women, WEAR SOMETHING RED.

Word of mouth, press, TV — let's see if we can make the United States, on any given Friday, a sea of RED much like a home football game at a university.


If every one of our memberships share this with other acquaintances, fellow workers, friends, and neighbors, I guarantee that it will not be long before the USA will be covered in RED - and make our troops know there are many people thinking of their well-being. You will feel better all day Friday when you wear RED!


Let's get the word out and lead by example; wear RED on Fridays.


Please forward this to everyone you know!!


Wear RED on Fridays . SUPPORT OUR TROOPS! WE LIVE IN THE LAND OF THE FREE, BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE. FOR US, THEIR BLOOD RUNS RED!! GOD BLESS AMERICA.”

Apparently somebody forwarded it, because fast forward to 2018 and #REDFriday has officially become a thing. While many family members of deployed troops have been sporting red on Fridays since that fateful day in September of 2001, the public trend took a few years to gain traction. More and more people are donning crimson on Fridays in support of the deployed service members around the world and at home.


In addition to Instagram and Twitter trends steered by hashtags like #remembereveryonedeployed, most veteran owned companies now offer R.E.D. Friday t shirts, hoodies and other paraphernalia. In 2016, the Big Voice made a run of R.E.D. t shirts which you can see your friends and neighbors rocking around the area. We have a few left, in addition to our Veteran’s Day shirts, which are available online at americanfreedomfund.org or you can call me (Liv Stecker) at 509.675.3504 or email thebigvoice31@gmail.com. Remember everyone deployed and get your R.E.D. on this Friday!

The Rest Of The Story: when even death doesn’t end the struggle







By Liv Stecker

Casey Owens was a decorated Marine who served the United States through two deployments. In September of 2004, barely a month into his second deployment in the Al Anbar Province of Iraq, the vehicle in which Owens was riding in en route to aid an injured Marine struck two anti-tank mines. The injuries to Owens’ legs were catastrophic. He was stabilized at a field hospital and then flown to Germany, where his left leg was amputated below the knee and his right amputated just above the knee. But this was only the beginning of Owen’s very long journey.

Upon his return to the United States, Owens received care for complications from his surgeries at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas. His amputations failed to heal properly and resulted in the loss of more of Owen’s right leg. He underwent numerous procedures and therapies, and when his resources through the VA were tapped out, Owens found himself footing the bill with the help of charitable organizations for hyperbaric oxygen therapy in Louisiana as his body continued to resist healing.




In addition to the loss of Owens’ legs, he suffered a traumatic brain injury in the explosion that compounded his mental recovery. Owens battled PTSD and depression in the way that many “recovering” vets do, when all other therapies fail: with a bottle. Interviewed first in 2004, then again in 2009, and finally, in 2012, Owens shared openly his struggle to find help through the available channels at the time, and his return each time to self-medicating. More than a decade later, studies on the correlation between traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and PTSD or other psychological symptoms are just beginning to pick up steam and gain public attention. More data is emerging that ties a direct line between head injuries and depression and suicide demographics.

After Owen’s fourth amputation surgery and self-funded hyperbaric therapy, the Marine was finally mobilized on prosthetic limbs. When he left the clinic in Louisiana in 2009, he shouted jubilantly to the CBS news crew “Free at last!” as he lumbered off on new legs. But his newfound liberty was short lived.

From a wheelchair in Denver in 2012, Owens told CBS that he would never totally released from the experiences that changed his life.

“Nah, no. I don’t think I will ever be free. I don’t think the burden of war is ever gone...I could be in a room with a hundred people, but I’d still be alone,” he confessed. But it wasn’t the people around him who couldn’t see his battle. “I think I didn’t realize what I’d been through, or really what was going on with me.”

When an attempt at college failed due to his TBI, he threw himself into paralympic sports, moving to Aspen, Colorado, where he found an escape from his new reality, one day at a time. But even there, proving himself as an aggressive paralympian, Owens circled back to the thing he confessed helped the most: drinking. After an arrest for drunk driving, Owens went through rehab, and then was able to participate in a recovery program for vets.



 Along the way, Owens crossed paths with Patrick Flanagan, a local Air Force Veteran who had served through four deployments, two to Iraq, one to Afghanistan and one to Kyrgyzstan, as a firefighter for the Air Force. In the time he spent with Owens, Flanagan witnessed the agony of a decade long recovery first hand.

“He used to scream at night because his feet hurt and they weren't there. The Docs couldn't help him because it hadn't been long enough for his meds. It was nuts.” Flanagan’s front line experience resonated with Owens and the two became friends, keeping in contact across the miles and over the years when it was difficult to find veterans with shared experiences nearby. Flanagan explains the daily struggle for vets in finding therapy that helps.

“It's a catch 22. If you get drunk, you have to live with the consequences. If you don't, you have to live in your own PTSD head. There's no coming back home and there's no going back to fight,” says Flanagan. And survivor's guilt might be one of the hardest parts of the battle. “That's the worst thing. Leaving or not being able to go back. I want to be first in and last out. It sucks leaving when boots are still on the ground.”

Owens other friends and family tried to stay connected as he battled through his medical and psychological challenges. But it was not enough. Owens took his own life on October 16 of 2014 at his home in Aspen, ten years after the course of his life was altered in Iraq. He was 32 years old. The news cameras didn’t capture the end of Owens’ story, or the ugly aftermath some years later when another Marine who had served in an adjacent unit to Owens’ borrowed pieces of the late Marine’s experiences to claim charitable benefits for himself.

Former Marine Brandon Blackstone began piggybacking on the story of the anti-tank double mine explosion before Owens’ death, and continued for many years adding layer upon layer of narrative borrowed from the double amputee as he cashed in on a mortgage-free home from a charitable organization and many other perks for his stolen valor. Blackstone was eventually exposed by members of Owens’ unit who recognized the story, and revealed that Blackstone’s brief deployment to Iraq in 2004 was actually cut short by appendicitis. He was there long enough to hear about the terrible explosion that sent Owens back to the states.

Casey Owens sacrificed his life for a nation. When his legs were gone and his body failed him, he laid his soul bare for audiences across the country to hear the heart cry of soldiers and Marines like him who fought the same battles that he did when they got home. When his struggle became more profound than he could bear, the audiences abandoned him, just like hope and health had. Other than his closest circle of friends, some of whom learned of his death only after he had been buried, there was no hero’s fanfare for the fallen warrior. There was only the quiet grieving of an unsurprised family, while a vulture preyed on the bones of Owens’ suffering even after his death, capitalizing on a story that he couldn’t possibly grasp the depth of. Owens’ end was a far cry from the young Marine, saluting in his dress blues from a wheelchair at George W. Bush’s second inauguration.



As a nation we struggle to understand how to recognize the suicides of our veterans as the true battlefield deaths that they are. We cannot see the invisible scars that don’t heal over years, a deadly gangrene that began in combat. Owens demise seems too tragic to herald as a hero’s death, and yet it was. He gave all, even after his return from war, and more than ever we owe it to him to understand that - for the ones that he left behind who are still giving.

Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot…


By Liv Stecker

The Changing of the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

As families across the nations trundle into airports and minivans to make their annual pilgrimage home, I found myself boarding a plane eastbound to Washington DC with my two youngest girls this December, to visit my family and make the obligatory rounds in the District of Columbia.



On our first night in The Capitol, we paid a visit to the Arlington National Cemetery, where we caught the last shuttle through the monument for the day. I hadn’t visited the ANC since I was a little girl, when I remember feeling awestruck at the somber ceremony for the Changing of the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. At the time, my very loose grasp on what it all meant made it difficult for me to sit still, except the sense of peace and tranquility and the respectful energy emanating off of the crowd in the warm, early summer air, made it feel very important to me to keep my restless, eight-year-old mind still. Now, 32 years later, I stand next to my 14 and 17-year-old daughters, knowing they understand more clearly, what the empty tombs in front of them represent.


One is for the unidentified World War I soldier, laid to rest without a name, to honor the thousands of others like him, who, without the aid of DNA identification, were disfigured or destroyed beyond recognition, separated somehow from their dogtags and any other evidence of who they once were. And then, in front of the marble sarcophagus, the three flat gravestones that represent the Unknown Dead of World War II, the Korean War, and one to represent the many thousands of missing service members in all conflicts, whose ends remains unknown. The fourth tomb was formerly the Unknown Soldier of Vietnam, but in 1998, the remains were exhumed and using newly developed DNA analysis, 1st Lt. Michael Joseph Blassie of the United States Air Force, who was shot down near An Loc, Vietnam, was identified and returned to his family for proper burial.


a view of Washington DC from the cemetery
Behind the four tombs, rows upon rows of white headstones sprawl out above the DC skyline. As the sun began to set, the glow backlit the Washington Monument and the Capitol dome that were nestled into the cityscape beyond the eternal flame where John F. Kennedy is buried with his family. These 624 acres hold more story in them than an entire nation can bear to hear. More than 400,000 honored dead find their final resting place at ANC. Nearly 30 burials a day are conducted at the cemetery, some, as aging warriors spend their final hours peacefully at home, and others, younger, who have met violent deaths in far away places - and a few at home.


After we watched the final Changing of the Guard for the day, it was nearly dark and the cemetery staff was eager to escort us all out through the gates so they could close, but I had one last mission to accomplish. I have been working on a story about a friend of a friend. A Marine warrior who lost his life in 2014. A hero who had received a Purple Heart after he lost both legs when two anti-tank mines exploded under his transport in Iraq. A fighter who went on to compete in the paralympics as a skier and a marathon runner with prosthetic legs. Casey Owens died in October of 2014 by his own hand after years of fighting a greater enemy than the one that blew him up in the middle east. He is memorialized by a simple white headstone at Arlington National Cemetery, and after learning Owen’s story, I was intent to find it and pay my respects.


My girls were up for the adventure when we snuck past the cemetery guards ushering guests out and trotted off into the darkening gravesites. The last supermoon of 2017 was rising overhead as we followed the directions to his grave, giving us some light as all of the street lights in the cemetery area were turning off. It was an eerie sight, rows of glowing white marble in the chilly moonlight, our breath puffing out in big clouds was the only company as we moved through the graves.


We passed an open area about the size of half a football field that had exposed dirt and a couple of freshly opened grave spots. I realized that we were in the area where soldiers who were recently killed would be buried, and the space was ready to welcome the latest fallen heroes. My heart tightened at the thought of that space filling up, and the new graves that had just been dug, running through a catalog of the recent fallen in my mind.


My daugther found Owens’ headstone, where a little American Flag sat quietly at the base, as if lying peacefully out of the breeze so as not to disturb the resting Marine. Owens died at his own hand, but he was no less the warrior, and no less dead for his service than any other hero laid to rest in Arlington. He lays among ancient sailors from generations ago, and soldiers from the Revolutionary War. He rests among United States Presidents, astronauts, and I am sure, more than one or two scoundrels in the 400,000 graves interred there with the heroes and their families.


Owens, like so many others, will not be with his family this Christmas. No airports or minivans or sleeping on the couch. But in addition to the warriors like Owens who lie at rest in Arlington, we have more than 1.3 million active duty troops stationed around the world, including my own brother-in-law, and the son of one of my best friends. Most of them are away from their families this holiday season, but our earnest hope and prayer is that it will be one of the last holiday seasons they spend apart from us, and that their place at Arlington National Cemetery will remain empty for a very long time, until, like many of the Cemetery residence, old age peacefully beckons them to the halls of Valhalla.


Until then, remember our troops deployed, or on duty while visions of sugarplums dance in our heads. Remember the ones fallen, and the ones who were overtaken by the enemy after they returned home. Reach out to the soldiers and veterans you know, thank them for the holidays that they have missed so that we never miss one.  

If you’re interested in volunteering for the Wreaths Across America program, placing a wreath at the gravesite of every fallen soldier during the holiday season, visit www.wreathsacrossamerica.org where you can sign up to hang wreaths locally or donate to support the cause. Join us in remember our troops this holiday season.

“The Torch Be Yours To Hold It High”…



By Liv Stecker

It was the War To End All Wars. World War I officially came to a close on June 28, 1919 when the Treaty of Versailles was signed, but it was seven months earlier on November 11th that a broken and defeated Germany requested the armistice that brought an end to the gruesome bloodshed that redefined the rules of warfare for all of time. It was the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918 when the Allies signed an armistice with Germany in allied leader Ferdinand Foch's railway carriage in the remote Forest of Compiègne, north of Paris.  

World War I saw the rise of automatic weapons, tanks, toxic gases, and for the first time in history, warfare in the air as planes and zeppelins were deployed on missions of destruction. Terms like “Shell Shock” and “Trench warfare” came into existence, and with them, the disturbing effects of disease and ongoing trauma that they carry. Nearly 10 million soldiers died in the First World War, soldiers from the sixteen nations involved in the conflict. Civilian losses in Europe reached nearly 9 million during the widespread destruction.

In 1915, from a battlefield near Ypres, Belgium, Canadian surgeon John McCrae penned the words to “In Flanders Field,” a poem that would establish the red poppy as a symbol of veterans, living and dead, over the generations.

In Flanders Fields

by John McCrae

 In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you, from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow,
In Flanders fields.

This coming Veteran’s Day, show your support for the veterans in our local community by purchasing a Big Voice Grunt Style Veteran’s Day t-shirt! If you’ve never worn an authentic Grunt Style t-shirt, you really have no idea what you’re missing. Incredibly soft but durable, Grunt Style is a veteran owned and operated company that takes pride in making t-shirts that you never want to take off. This special Veteran’s Day edition was designed collaboratively by the Big Voice and the vets and Grunt Style.

100% of the proceeds from these shirts will go to fund local veterans to participate in recreational outlets, including all expenses paid local guided hunts, shooting competitions, and sports team sponsorships.

Our goal at the Big Voice is to connect our local (Stevens, Ferry, Pend Oreille Counties) vets with outlets and opportunities to thank them for their service and to make sure they know that we value the sacrifice they have made. We strive to provide the tools to make transition from military service to civilian life better and more fulfilling for our former and current service members.

T-shirts are available online  now with free shipping at https://americanfreedomfund.org/product/support-our-troops-tshirt/. They come in men’s sizes small to 2XL. You can get your Veteran’s Day Grunt Style t-shirt from the Big Voice by calling us at 509-675-3504 or emailing thebigvoice31@gmail.com if you’d prefer to pick up your shirt in Colville at Country Chevrolet.

YOU CAN TAKE IT WITH YOU: HOLDOVERS FROM MILITARY SERVICE IN EVERYDAY LIFE

By Liv Stecker

Real life can be tough. If you’ve served on deployment,  Mother Necessity most definitely birthed some ingenuitive inventions to make living down range a little more comfortable. From wet-sock canteen coolers to terrain based land navigation and the value of a safety pin, tricks of the war trade continue to serve veterans in their civilian lives.  

LINER, WET WEATHER, PONCHO : Hands down, the most loved, oft-heralded, never relinquished piece of military issue known to man, or woman, the woobie stands fiercely at the head of the pack of must-haves in the cold, cruel civilian world. Soldier turned firefighter, sailor turned cop, marine turned coach, all have this in common: love for the woobie. This versatile square of quilted bliss was recently upgraded with a built in zipper and improved insulation technology. As if it needed help.

It’s the most comfortable, awesome, soft, perfect piece of fabric ever invented in the history of military equipment and I love it.” Says Ian Pickett, former marine.




TRI-FOLD ENTRENCHING TOOL (E-TOOL) : Because when it hits the fan, sometimes you’ve got to dig your way out. Whether you’re constructing an emergency latrine or, ahem, covering up evidence… this handle, collapsible tool might be your lifesaver.



FIGHTING/UTILITY KNIFE : Whether you’re still packing your marine issued Ka-Bar, Ontario ASEK, or an MK 3 Navy Issue, you’ll be hard pressed to find a vet who’s done time out of country that isn’t sporting an all-purpose blade of some sort. While most SOF guys go for customized numbers from companies like Benchmade and Gerber there are a growing number of small bladesmith start-ups, many veteran owned and operated. Either way, the consensus is don’t leave home without one.

LIGHT, CHEMILUMINESCENT : OK, so maybe you aren’t packing around a dozen orange glow-sticks in case of sudden blackouts or flash mob raves, but while field going service members might not agree on which form of portable light is the best, they all agree that some form is necessary. The best part about a chemlight is that you can’t accidentally burn out the batteries and they’re cheap.

CORD, FIBROUS, NYLON : Now that everybody’s got their own “survival bracelet” woven out of handy, find-anywhere neon colors, you’ll never be too far out of reach of a decent length of 550, or para cord, another must have in hunting/camping/zombie fighting kits for everyone. We won’t bore you with the millions of applications of this handy stuff. Plus if you’re bored you can braid cute jewelry for gifts.

STOVE, COOKING, GASOLINE : We’ve come a long way since 1942 when the army commissioned the Coleman company to produce 5,000 single burner gas stoves for soldiers on the  African front. But even then, World War II correspondent Ernie Pyle said the “G.I. Stove” was second only to the Jeep in frontline usefulness. Modern operators enjoy a variety of personal camp stoves, and leading the charge is the JetBoil, a lightweight, rapid cooking system that is as hardy as it is practical.

FIRST AID KIT, GENERAL PURPOSE : Any soldier worth his mettle will tell you how important it is to be ready for medical emergencies, but it’s the tried and true warriors that know what really matters when it comes to life saving. Advancements in lifesaving equipment have come a long way since the gauze, iodine and ammonia that soldiers carried in World War I. Tourniquets new on the market like the RATs tourniquet are fast and easy for self  or one-handed application, and most seasoned vets will tell you that there’s nothing that you can’t fix with contractor grade trash bags and safety pins. And every good first aid kid needs a sharpie for marking tourniquet application times. The best part about this bare-bones doctor’s bag is that it’s multipurpose. Throw in some Benadryl, baby wipes and duct tape and you’re ready for anything.

BOX, MATCH, WATERPROOF : If you weren’t lucky enough to get your hands on a Black Crackle Zippo lighter in WWII, you probably had one of these. Matches or a windproof lighter are always a good thing to have on hand.

But it’s really the mental flexibility that military service demands that is the most useful takeaway from time in any branch. Army Ranger turned Hunting Guide Kyle Kowalski says that his training has served him more in civilian life than any of his Army issued tools.

“The biggest thing is probably problem solving, really. Anything can be accomplished. It might be sloppy, but then it will be refined, re-planned rehearsed and re-executed until becoming proficient in that task.” Kowalski says.




Budweiser and Adam Driver Hit a Home Run with Independence Day Ad



While he may have broken hero loving hearts everywhere when he killed Han Solo, Adam Driver isn't all super villain. The 33 year-old actor teamed up with Budweiser to deliver some good news to Hayley Grace Williams, the daughter of a US Army Veteran who applied for a scholarship from Budweiser's Folds of Honor program.

Driver served in the US Marine Corps but was injured just before his unit deployed to Iraq, something he shared in common with William's father, who suffered a back injury and was unable to deploy with his army unit.

Watch the moving mini-documentary that Budweiser released just in time for the Fourth of July, and happy Independence Day!




Kettle Falls American Legion gives back to veterans


By Liv Stecker

Legion Member Bob West presents Dan Litzenberger with a donation for Freedom Has a Face


American Legion Post 146 in Kettle Falls, Washington make up in might what they lack in numbers. The small collection of dedicated veterans who provide a place for service members from all generations to congregate has stepped up to the plate one more time to make a donation to the Freedom Has A Face Foundation (FHAF).

Freedom Has A Face was recently the focus of a fundraising Historical Shootout at Bull Hill Training Ranch outside of Kettle Falls that involved veterans, active duty service members and civilians from all over the area. Kettle Falls American Legion heard about the fundraising effort and voted to contribute to the cause. Legion member Bob West visited Bull Hill Training Ranch to present former Army Ranger Dan Litzenberger with a check for the donation. Litzenberger started the ranch and historical shootouts as a way to not only provide a recreational outlet for veterans but also to raise funds for causes like FHAF.

The Freedom Has A Face foundation is dedicated to the financial and emotional support of family members of service members killed in action. Based in California, the foundation provides resources for families of fallen soldiers all over the United States. Extended family of the founders of FHAF live outside of Northport, Washington, and were on hand at the shootout to help feed the competitors.

Because of generous contributions from dedicated individuals and groups like American Legion Post 146, Bull Hill Training Ranch was able to support FHAF in their mission to care for military families. The Kettle Falls American Legion Post 146 is committed to the well-being of veterans from all generations and welcome all to their monthly meetings and the many social events they have scheduled throughout the year.

Traditional veterans organizations like the American Legion and the VFW (Veterans of Foreign Wars) have seen a steady decline in membership since they burgeoned after the first World War. Changes in social trends and technology have removed the younger generation of veterans from the face-to-face gathering that was so crucial to the veterans of World War 2, Korea and Vietnam. Younger veterans find themselves absorbed in a less personal network of online socialization and often miss the connection that sitting down in a Legion Post or VFW Hall with veterans from other generations can provide. If you are a vet, check into what your local veterans organizations have to offer you, or maybe more importantly, what you can offer them. (Many of them have Facebook pages!)

Kettle Falls American Legion Post 146

Chewelah V.F.W. #2047
PO Box 913, Chewelah, WA  99109           

Frank Starr American Legion #47
103 E. 6th Ave, Colville, WA  99114
509 684-8480 or 509 685-9680

J F Folsom Chewelah American Legion #54
111 W. South Ave, Chewelah, WA  99109
509 935-8464

Kelley O’Keefe V.F.W. #6963
135 Highway 20 E., Colville, WA  99114
509 684-8795

Kettle Falls American Legion#146
1057 Highway 395 N., Kettle Falls, WA  99141
509 738-6999

Northport American Legion #158
PO Box 96, Northport, WA  99157

Wellpinit V.F.W. #10711
PO Box 180, Wellpinit, WA  99040
509 258-7331

Remembering D-Day




Omaha Beach Memorial

By Liv Stecker

June 6, 1944

“...The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you.”
- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s address to invading troops

 160,000 allied troops descend upon a 50 mile stretch of coastline in Northern France. 13,000 aircraft and 5,000 sea-going vessels spread across Normandy like a swarm for Operation Overlord. It was the turning point of the war. It was do or die. It was D-Day.
 Never before and never since has such a broadly coordinated attack taken place on the global theater of war. Within the day, the allies had the foothold they so desperately needed on the European Continent in order to take the Nazi Regime in hand. 9,000 men died on those beaches and cliffs. A high price to pay to gain the strategic upper-hand, but it was the first step the Allies needed to begin their slow sweep across Europe, routing Hitler’s army.
 Interestingly, in one of the largest sea-to-land offensive strikes in history, the US Marines, who were created for just such attacks, were not deployed. Waiting in the wings to provide support, they watched as the US Army Infantry and AIrborne descended en masse along with British and Canadian forces.
Memorial to the Army Rangers at Pointe du Hoc
 Six 155 MM German guns sat perched atop a cliff between beaches that had been dubbed Omaha and Utah by invading forces. The artillery posed a critical threat to troops as they landed on both beaches. Army Rangers from the 2nd and 5th Battalions, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel James E. Rudder were assigned to capture the cliff at Pointe Du Hoc, considered by allied planners to be one of the most dangerous offensives of the operation. The Germans believed the point to be impenetrable by enemy forces. Even a US Intelligence Officer told strategists that “Three old women with brooms could keep the Rangers from climbing that cliff.” But Rudder and his Rangers were undaunted. Landing on the narrow beaches at low tide, the die-hard Rangers scaled the cliff with ropes and ladders, securing the German guns ultimately determining the outcome of the entire operation. The Rangers suffered a 70% casualty rate that day.

 The initial phases of the largest airborne attack in history were characterized by disorganization and confusion that resulted in paratrooper scattered far beyond the targeted drop zones. In spite of the chaos, Allied troops pushed through with such determination that German forces were eventually pressed back and the objectives of Operation Overlord were achieved.

Giving War a Face: Catherine Leroy


Corpsman in anguish, 1967, © Catherine Leroy


By Liv Stecker

She stood five feet tall, but only with her boots on. She was one of only two female journalists covering the war in Vietnam (the other, Dickie Chappelle, was killed by a grenade in 1965) , and the diminutive French girl was the last thing you’d expect to see parachuting in with American troops, but the 90 pound photographer became the only known accredited photojournalist to accomplish this mission, and with it, capture some of the most haunting images of the Vietnam War that the world would ever see.

Catherine Leroy was raised in a convent in Paris, France, where a boyfriend taught her how to skydive as a teenager. She was enthralled with photojournalism, and at the age of 21 (her age was never confirmed), she bought a one way ticket to Saigon and landed in the war zone with only a few dollars and her small Leica M2 camera in hand. Her goal was to “give war a human face”. On the flight from Paris, she met someone who introduced her to Life magazine photojournalist Charles Bonnay, who helped her get the press credentials she lacked and within days she was on her way to the front lines.

Catherine Leroy, 1967
A licensed parachutist, Leroy jumped with the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade into combat during Operation Junction City in February of 1967. It was in this action, the battle for Hill 881, that Leroy photographed U.S. Navy Corpsman Vernon Wike as he rushed to the aid of a fallen comrade. “Corpsman in anguish” is the third frame of a series that Leroy shot, capturing the unimaginable grief of war. Later, in an interview for the documentary “The Hill Fights”, Wike recounted the moment that Leroy photographed.

“I know there was chaos going on around me, but there was no sound,” he says. “...I knew he didn’t have a chance, but I still got p-----d off when he died.” Leroy describes the aftermath as the corpsman “lost in this nightmare landscape” grabbed the fallen marine’s M16 and charged a Viet bunker alone in a hail of obscenities. The fallen marine was a man called “Rock”, a New Yorker from Puerto Rico. Earlier that day he had told Wike that he only had 60 days left “in country” - his deployment in Vietnam.  

Two weeks later, Leroy was wounded near the demilitarized zone where she was embedded with a Marine unit. The next year, the photojournalist was captured by the North Vietnamese Army during the TET Offensive, along with another French journalist. Somehow, the blonde girl talked them into releasing them and before they left their captors she interviewed them and took photographs for a story in Life magazine which she wrote. Leroy kept in contact with Wike over the years. The Navy veteran came home and struggled through readjusting to civilian life as an icon of an unpopular war and the death it brought.  

Along with the American Soldiers lost in countless battles across the globe, the warriors who come home to continue fighting the demons they have encountered are still here among us. Veterans like Wike who have lost more in a small window of time than many of us lose over a lifetime are very much alive and still at war against less obvious enemies. Rarely have civilian audiences been given the intimate glimpse of war that Leroy provided. What the photographer captured in the face of Wilke on the hill in Vietnam is as close to the horror of war as any of us will ever come, and in this, Leroy accomplished her mission. She gave war a face, and it was the face of an American Soldier.


U.S. Navy Corpsman Vernon Wike, Catherine Leroy


Sniper’s Aim: Dan Litzenberger and his training ranch




By Liv stecker

Never shall I fail my comrades. I will always keep myself mentally alert, physically strong, and morally straight, and I will shoulder more than my share of the task, whatever it may be, one hundred percent and then some.” - Army Ranger Creed

Dan Litzenberger grew up in Spokane with a family that was not into guns. Even though his grandfather had fought in World War II and he had an uncle in the Coast Guard, guns and the military were not part of the family dynamic through his childhood. But when he graduated from high school in 2007, Dan enlisted in the Army right away.
 Going through basic, one of Dan’s drill sergeants told Dan he should consider a ranger contract. At first Dan laughed it off, but after thinking about it, decided he would give it a try. “I had always thought special operations guys like ranger and Navy SEALS were like super humans.” He laughs, relating that it took some persuading to convince him that he had the potential for it.
 He was assigned to the 2nd Ranger Battalion, 75th Regiment and sent to Fort Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, where he underwent ranger training. “You were physically and mentally tested to limits you didn’t think you could go to,” he says about Ranger training, “but you can’t quit, and there is no problem you can’t solve.”  Part of Ranger training included SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape) School where Rangers are trained to withstand torture and avoid capture in the field.
 After ranger training he was assigned to one of the three SOF (special operations forces) units, tasked with the elimination of high value targets and terrorist cell interruption. Operating in 2 man attachments to ranger platoons, snipers learn to adapt and work in a constantly changing dynamic. “We learned to cut our own path to success,” says Kyle Kowalski, one of Dan’s closest friends and a fellow ranger who went through training with him. Rangers are trained to think outside the box and adapt and overcome any obstacle to their mission.
 Dan served 6 deployments, but it wasn’t until 2010 when he watched an Army Ranger sniper in action and decided he wanted to join the sniper section. “I fell in love with learning the science and math behind it - it’s kind of like an art form.” Dan says of long range target shooting. After two sniper deployments, Dan was medically retired from the rangers in 2016, leaving the service with an Army Commendation Medal with Valor for his performance during the Global War on Terror. “It wasn’t because I was a sniper that always had success,” Dan says of his time overseas, but every missed target became an opportunity to learn and grow as a sniper and as a soldier.
 Dan has brought that passion for learning and teaching back to civilian life at Bull Hill Training Ranch, where his vision for training active duty military and law enforcement snipers as well as civilian long range shooters is unfolding. A lack of live training opportunities on moving targets is one of the drawbacks to traditional military sniper schools. One of Dan’s missions is to provide a place where moving targets as well as a changing environment and challenging terrain provide a well rounded training facility for long range shooters of all types. The mountains north of Kettle Falls never fail to disappoint in terrain and weather changes, so all that was left for Dan was the moving targets and a rapidly growing facility where service members, veterans and civilians are able to congregate and train.
 For Dan, getting past the traditional training and instruction methods for long range target shooting is the goal. “There is more than one way to do it,” he says, and he enjoys the challenge of proving out new approaches to training. The vision of Bull Hill Training Ranch as Dan sees it is to add to the training spectrum of long range shooting. “It’s about creating a place where experts can come together to train in real terrain and build a toolbox.” He says, intent on working with the best of the best to discover new ways to achieve success as active duty snipers, LEOs, vets and civilians.
 In addition to a training ground, Dan also hopes that Bull Hill Training Ranch will eventually become a sanctuary for veterans to come and experience the “best kept secret in the Northwest” that is the rugged landscape of along the upper Columbia River. Along with shooting competitions, recreational outlets including horseback riding, hiking, fishing on the river and guided hunts will be part of the outdoor therapy available to vets and their families in the future. Already this vision is becoming a reality as several local veterans from around the area will be coming to participate in the second annual Historical Shoot Out this weekend at Bull Hill Training Ranch, will fully paid sponsorships contributed by local and national businesses and individuals.
 If you are interested in checking out what is going on at the Training Ranch, spectators are welcome at the Freedom Has a Face Historical Shootout from April 20-23rd. The range will be open for all shooters to try out the guns used in the historically based shooting scenarios, including a Barrett 50 cal. sniper rifle that participants can shoot at a real truck for a by-the-round donation, an M-1 Garand, AK-47, multiple AR models and much more, as well as food and drinks available, all for donations toward the Freedom Has a Face foundation, in memory of Tommy MacPherson, a Ranger who served with Dan and Kyle and who was killed in action in 2013. For more info about the Historical Shoot Out or Dan’s project at the Ranch check out their Facebook page Bull Hill Training Ranch, or you can email info@bullhilltrainingranch.com
 

From WAVES to Washington: Jean Thompson




By Liv Stecker


Marianna “Jean” Mix didn’t much care for school. It wasn’t that she didn’t have the smarts for it - she just felt like she had better things to do. The daughter of a horseback minister, Jean had two brothers and a sister growing up in the depression era northeastern United States. After she graduated high school in Stamford Connecticut in 1942 she tried college for a year before she moved on to a job with Machlett Laboratories where she tested medical equipment for military hospitals. As World War II drew Jean’s peers into service across the globe, her mother encouraged her to sign up to serve in one of the newly formed women's divisions in the military. In the fall of 1944, Jean tested for WAVES, Women Accepted for Emergency Volunteer Services, a branch of the United States Navy. Distinct from other women’s corps, WAVES was a specialized Naval group of enlisted service members, rather than auxiliary.

WAVES actively recruited women with college degrees, training and experience in science and technological fields. They were tested and screened rigorously, requiring background checks and solid references.   Jean was one of the few selected to enter the training program. Growing up, Jean had considered entering the field of nursing as a profession but was concerned that because she had flat feet that she wouldn’t be able to endure the long hours. But taking care of people was still something that drew her, so she opted to go into training for the hospital corps with WAVES.

 The Hospital Corps were established by the Naval Department in 1898 to answer the demand for medical attendants in the Navy. Hospital corpsman were trained in medical terminology, anatomy and physiology, record keeping, administering medication and shots, assessing vital signs such as temperature and pulse, wound dressing, “therapeutic back rubs”, and Artificial Respiration and Resuscitation, the predecessor to modern CPR for drowning victims which was at the time performed with the patient lying on his stomach.

 Passing in the top 10% of her class, Jean was given her pick of assignments. As female service members in the Navy were not allowed to serve overseas or on ships, Jean opted for the Great Lakes Naval Training Station outside of Chicago. She laughs about her learning experience, “Maybe it wasn’t so much that I was smart, maybe everybody else made me look good!” The twinkle in Jean’s eye lends a clue to the energetic curiosity that is as alive and well a few days after her 93rd birthday as it was 73 years ago when she graduated WAVES and went to work at the hospital.   Jean was promoted to Hospital Apprentice 1st Class and began her work at the hospital. She says that more than anything she remembers giving shots to the injured sailors. “One poor guy got so many shots that his backside looked like a pincushion!” She chuckled. Vaccination and antibiotic shots were administered routinely to patients in the gluteal muscles, and was one of the primary duties of the hospital corps members. In good fun, recovering patients at the Great Lakes Naval Station were given certificates of membership in the “Order of the Perforated Rectum.”

Jean’s first assignment at the Naval Station was in the eye surgery ward, where she remembers vividly being allowed to assist in the eye removal surgery for an injured pilot named Ray, who also became her first “boyfriend.” While her normal duties included administering eye drops and changing dressings, assisting in surgery was usually reserved for the nurses on staff. Injured eyes were replaced with steels balls, and Jean remembers groups of recovering soldiers being sent to Chicago to be fitted for false eyes that slid in over the steel balls.

When she left the eye ward she was reassigned to the rheumatic fever ward where she worked to keep restless patients comfortable during the painful illness. In this ward, Jean recalls that the patients were stacked in bunks, and remembers standing on a chair one night to give a suffering sailor a dose of APC (aspirin, phenacetin and caffeine) and rubbing his back until he fell asleep.
In June of 1945, Jean was reassigned to the chest surgery ward, where wounded Marines were recovering from massive chest injuries and subsequent surgeries. “Practically everyone on the ward had a big hole is his back either with drainage and irrigations tubes or great gobs of packing in it.” Jean recalled in an interview with her granddaughter in 2002. It was here that she met Minard “Tommy” Thompson, a marine who had been in Peleliu in the New Guinea Islands when he was injured by two grenades in the fall of 1944. Tommy was in the last stages of a 13 month rehabilitation that involved major skin grafts and serious complications from his wounds, but by the time he met Jean he was recovering and was assigned to the cleaning detail in the chest surgery ward. Jean and Tommy went on daily walks around the hospital, and eventually Jean took him off hospital grounds and rented a tandem bicycle that they took out for rides.

 In August of 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan triggering the surrender of the empire that had dug their heels stoutly into the struggle in the Pacific. In a letter to her parents, Jean mentions the bomb that was called “Little Boy” by the allies when the Enola Gay dropped it over Japan. “...Just think what could happen when it gets into the wrong hands, which it is bound to. It could just wipe all life off the earth.” She writes.
 Jean says that taking care of the injured soldiers and sailors and helping alleviate their suffering was the best part of her experience in WAVES. “I am glad I did it, and I am glad I didn’t have to stay any longer than I did.” In her short year with WAVES, Jean experienced the best and the worst that the Navy had to offer during World War II. In the fall of 1945, Tommy proposed to Jean and she accepted. She was given only five days leave for their wedding, but shortly after, she was released from duty as she was married to a disabled veteran.

 Jean and Tommy settled in Iowa near Tommy’s hometown, and they had two children. Tommy went back to contracting, his job before he joined the marines, and Jean stayed at home to raise the children for a few years. “Don’t call me a housewife,” she smiles, “housewife sounds horrible. Mother is just fine.” She got a job with the postal service in Jesup, Iowa, where her son jokes that she started the Women’s Liberation movement. Jean saved up her money and invested in an apartment complex, and then another, becoming and entrepreneur after her own fashion as the years went on.
 Jean Thompson was an avid swimmer, teaching swimming lessons, participating in synchronized swimming teams and long distance swims and scuba diving, as well as being an accomplished horseback rider.
“I liked to dabble in a lot of things,”she says about her various hobbies, but her first priority was her kids. She and Tommy divorced after 25 years but Jean says that no matter what, “I had to have my kids and I had to be with them,” making choices that enabled her to be with her son and daughter throughout their growing up years.
 In 2011, Jean moved to Lewiston, Idaho to be closer to family. Her grandson Shannon drove with her from Iowa on a road trip that she considers one of the highlights of her life, stopping in Missoula to enjoy the local beer.
“For the education of my grandchildren, I will try anything!” She laughs. In 2011 as an 88 year old she tested for and earned her driver's license in Idaho, and even a year later she was still swimming a mile at a time.

In 2015 she relocated again to the Colville area where her son and daughter in law lived. She moved into Parkview Assisted Living where she keeps her friends and family entertained with her spirit of adventure and keen sense of humor. Jean is a sparkling representation of the spirit of her generation and the wit and tenacity that made them so great.

A dignified struggle


By Liv Stecker


 Politically speaking, we are poised in a historic moment. As we look toward the inauguration of one of the most controversial Presidential candidates in recent memory, issues of civil rights, individual liberty, military power and social programs are paramount in a way that perhaps they haven’t been since the 1960s, when another controversial president came into power. John F. Kennedy was a democratic candidate who opposed Jim Crow (segregation) laws that were still in effect in many states, and won the presidency by one of the narrowest margins in U.S. History. Today, January 16th, 2017, is Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a federal holiday observed in remembrance of one of Kennedy’s political backers and the father of the civil rights movement. Dr. King endorsed Kennedy only after the then Senator worked for the release of King from a hard labor sentence springing from a minor traffic violation. King and Kennedy, while allied in their pursuit of civil rights, were not always in agreement about other key issues.


 A Navy veteran from World War II, It was his military service that predisposed Kennedy to make the stalwart cold war decisions that helped to avoid nuclear war and a “peace through strength” policy. Kennedy’s civil rights ally, Martin Luther King Jr., did not share the president’s views on war or the military. In fact, King has been largely considered a pacifist by many as his endorsement of conscientious objectors during the Vietnam conflict was widely publicized. But King wasn’t strictly anti-war. He was realistically aware that his religiously driven philosophy of change effected through love was a hard sell in the hate-fueled civil rights battle, much less the international political theater.
 In a recorded interview from 1960, Dr. King says, “I would ... say that it is a method which seeks to secure a moral end through moral means, and it grows out of the whole concept of love, because if one is truly nonviolent that person has a loving spirit, he refuses to inflict injury upon the opponent because he loves the opponent." Later, in 1967, King voiced his opposition to the war in Vietnam, but not in all conflict: “I see this war (Vietnam) as an unjust, evil and futile war. But if I had confronted the call to military service in a war against Hitler, I believe that I would have temporarily sacrificed my pacifism because Hitler was such an evil force in history...I would willingly have fought against the Nazi menace of the 1940s."
 President Elect Donald Trump swears in to office in the midst of violent race-driven riots that mirror the civil rights struggles of Dr. King’s day. Martin Luther King Jr was, above all, an advocate for peaceful protest and respectful civil disobedience. While enduring gross injustice in a segregated culture, he worked toward peaceful change: “I am convinced that when the history books are written in future years, historians will have to record this movement as one of the greatest epics of our heritage," he said. "It represents struggle on the highest level of dignity and discipline."
 Currently, protests against election results, ambushes on law enforcement and other civil unrest that seeks validation under the banner of human rights is a far cry from the war that Dr. King waged on the flagrant racism of the 1960s. Even his recommendation of conscientious objectors during the Vietnam War was rooted in the fight for equal treatment of black men in a military system that had only recently parted from the practice of troop segregation.
 As we observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and look ahead to the presidential inauguration, it is only the careful weight of worldviews that guarantees our success as a nation. Balancing our national “strength with power” philosophy and the unwavering support of our military forces and domestic law enforcement with the belief that our fighting energy should be saved for the real evil that pervades this world is imperative to our survival as a people united. The civil unrest and current political climate would be well served by a reappearance of Martin Luther King Jr and the spirit of his message.

 In the immortal words spoken by Dr. King on a sweltering August day in 1963, “Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred. We must forever conduct our struggle on the high plane of dignity and discipline.” The real enemy shows his face in the form of the terrorist on our own soil and the violent tyranny of factions overseas who threaten not only civil rights but life and civilization on every level.

A community of survivors: Freedom Has a Face



By Liv Stecker

Throughout history, over 1.1 million American Soldiers have died in battle. Almost half of these deaths occurred during the Civil War alone, closely followed by the number of deaths during World War II when 12% of the population served in the Armed Forces. Recent turmoil in the Global War on Terror has cost us nearly 7000 U.S. Service Members, and while statistically, the odds of one of us losing an immediate family member to war are lower than they were a century ago, the harsh reality is that every American Soldier who dies in battle leaves a family at home in the United States to cope with the aftermath of tragedy and piece together a life without their hero.


Tommy MacPherson was such a soldier. An Army Ranger, Platoon Leader in Company D, 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment based at the joint Base Lewis-McChord, the young Sgt. Was also a husband to Claudia, father to Brayden, son to Troy and Didi, and friend to countless people back in the U.S. when he was killed in action in Afghanistan at the age of 26. But it was Tommy’s sister, Jess, when speaking at his funeral, that said, “For me, now freedom has a face.” Those words resonated with a fellow ranger attending the funeral and two months later, Freedom Has a Face was born, an organization dedicated to building a community of survivors for those left behind.

SFC Joseph Lachnit Jr. founded Freedom Has a Face with the help of his family, in an effort to offer comfort and a support network to the surviving family members of service members lost in combat. While wounded service members, as the Freedom Has a Face website eloquently states, “are worthy of double honor as well as the gratitude from the nation they so courageously served,” it is the families of the fallen soldiers that this organization seeks to bring comfort and help to. “FHAF is about doing the ’hard work’ – taking the time to get to know these “wounded” families, mining their needs, and faithfully providing for them.”

One of Tommy MacPherson’s comrades-in-arms is former Army Ranger Dan Litzenberger, currently a Stevens County resident and point man for Bull Hill Training Ranch, an up and coming sniper training site in the hills outside of Kettle Falls. In April, Bull Hill Training Ranch will host their second historical shootout, a fundraiser to benefit Freedom Has a Face, where amateur and professional target shooters from across the country come together to convene and compete in the serene setting of wild northern Stevens County. Like the first shootout hosted at Bull Hill, The Freedom Has a Face Historic Shootout is a three day event that moves shooters through a series of more than ten historically based target shooting scenarios, based on actual combat experiences of United States service members. The first shootout was a fundraiser to benefit The Darby Project, an organization set up to assist military veterans in their transition to civilian life. A huge success, veteran, civilian, professional and amateur shooter alike participated in weekend of skill development, community building and good, old fashioned fun.



As Bull Hill Training Ranch builds a program for active duty service members to get field training in terrain that is impossible to replicate in military training facilities, they also look forward to the ability to reach out to veterans as a retreat site, where they can reconnect and reflect in the serenity of nature and the rural stillness. The transition from active duty to civilian can be a process for both vets and the people who love them. Coming from a combat background, Litzenberger says that vets operate in “a different kind of normal, another zone - we don’t know why we are not ‘normal’,” especially young people who have enlisted straight out of high school with no other ‘real world’ experience. Bull Hill Training Ranch seeks to provide both the camaraderie and a retreat for vets. Working toward this goal, the fundraiser shootouts that are hosted at Bull Hill create an avenue for growing a network between active duty service members, veterans and the civilians who support them.



Do you know a vet?

The Big Voice, with the cooperation of the good folks at Bull Hill Training Ranch, Northern Ales Brewing and The Silverado Express, would like to send a military veteran from the tri county area to the Freedom Has a Face Historical Shootout in April. If you are, know, or are related to a veteran in Stevens, Pend Oreille or Ferry County that would benefit from a weekend surrounded by other veterans and like minded civilians, or If you are interested in contributing to the sponsorship of local vets and the Freedom Has a Face Foundation, please email thebigvoice31@gmail.com for more information. You can also drop by the office of the Silverado Express or check in with Northern Ales for more information. R.E.D.(Remember Everyone Deployed) Friday Tshirts will be for sale soon at Northern Ales to raise money for the foundation and the shootout in April.

Tis the Season


By Liv Stecker

In the spirit of holiday giving (and receiving, if you’ve been nice) it seems like an appropriate time of year to give a shout out to some of my favorite online veteran owned and operated companies. Whether you are shopping for the dad that has everything already or your spunky, gun-toting grandma, some of our former service members have settled into providing high quality, made-in-America goods for everybody in the family, which is a handy thing to know as the holidays overtake us.

Black Rifle Coffee Company

As a coffee lover, these guys are at the top of my list, because A) who doesn’t appreciate a 3 month subscription to THE BEST COFFEE EVER for Christmas and B) retired Army Ranger Mat Best and his cadre of semi-celebrity military vet comedians/actors/operators are hilarious. Sign me up! (subtle hint to my family a friends…) With a variety of coffee ordering options, clothing and gear, Black Rifle has been leading the pack of unapologetically patriotic veterans with a flair for the dramatic. Visit www.blackriflecoffee.com and check out all the great stuff, as well as their sister companies, Leadslinger Whiskey, Black Rifle Industries and Article 15 Clothing. While I can’t promise some of their products won’t offend you, I can promise that these guys do great work, employ veterans exclusively, and are making a big difference to vets transitioning into civilian life.

Bottle Breacher

Started by a Navy SEAL and his wife, these 50 caliber bottle openers and other novelty items are the stocking stuffers that EVERYBODY will be talking about. Crafted from dummy ammunition by military vets, Bottle Breachers should be showing up under everybody’s Christmas Tree this year. www.bottlebreacher.com


Peacemaker Trading Company

A retired US Army Special Forces Green Beret, Bert and his wife Candace launched Peacemaker Trading Company from their ranch in Texas on a mission to find and market the best t-shirt in the world. As an owner of two Peacemaker t-shirts, I can vouch for their favorite status in my wardrobe, as well as the quick and amazing customer service (my two orders came with personalized notes from Bert!) With a great collection of patriotic, historic tribute, and a few tongue-in-cheek options, there is a lot to love on the Peacemaker Trading Company Website. Did I mention that they do hats, tanks and hoodies too? www.peacemakertrading.com

Rollors

Fun for the whole family, Rollors is a yard game developed by Air Force Lt. Col. during his deployment in the middle east. A cross between bocce ball and horseshoes, it’s a great backyard BBQ competition that is getting rave reviews from even the surliest of vets… www.rollors.com

RATs Tourniquets
For the safety minded person on your shopping list, the Rapid Application Tourniquet  (R.A.T.) is an innovative and inexpensive answer to costly traditional tourniquets. Invented by Master Sergeant Jeff Kirkham, still active in Army Special Forces, the RAT tourniquet is hands down the easiest and most practical TQ I have used in one handed/self application training. At $15.95 a pop, everybody should keep one of these in range bags, jump kits, hunting gear and more. www.ratsmedical.com

Combat Flip Flops

In addition to making pretty sweet sandals, the two Army Rangers behind Combat Flip Flops are after more than just a successful business. The proceeds from their products are specifically focused on change for good in the war torn places that these vets have seen first hand. From their website: “Every product Combat Flip Flops sells puts an Afghan girl into secondary school for a day. Each Peacemaker Bangle or coinwrap sold clears 3 square meters of Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) from a region rocked by long-term war - saving lives and providing economic opportunity.” Some of their products are made in the US while others are made overseas in shops that provide work for local women. Great products, great causes, great guys. www.combatflipflops.com

Sword and Plough

Sisters who grew up as army brats founded this company, creating boutique quality accessories, handbags and apparel (shop for your hipster friends and snobby sister here) out of recycled military surplus materials. Using the verse from Isaiah that references turning swords into ploughshares for inspiration, the sisters’ mission is to create an aesthetic, emotional and physical connection between service members and civilians. One of the sisters now serves as an officer in the US Army. The company is veteran owned, products are made in the USA and they give back in more ways than I could list here. Check it out for yourself: www.swordandplough.com
Here at The Big Voice, we’re all about supporting veteran owned and operated businesses, as well as giving back to the veteran community and the many great programs that are supporting our active and former service members. We’d love feedback from our readers about local veteran owned businesses so that we can get the word out! Email us at thebigvoice31@gmail.com or call 509-675-3504.



10th Mountain Scout: Stephen Louis Paparich



 
By Liv Stecker


Louie Paparich graduated high school in Northport, Washington in 1942, a few months after the United States had joined the war effort in response to the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese. Immediately following graduation, Louie took a job on the southern end of Lake Pend Orielle for a contractor building submarines at Farragut Naval Training Station, the recently established and second largest submarine training center in the United States at the time. It was during his time in Idaho that Louie heard about well-paying jobs constructing the Alaska-Canada highway from Alaska territory to the lower 48 states. Setting out from Seattle on a barge, 18 year old Paparich made his way to Skagway Alaska and then to Teslin in the Yukon Territory.



In late 1942, construction of the Alcan Highway was considered part of the war effort, and young Louie met a military service member serving on an army road engineering crew who asked Louie if he had registered with the selective service. Born and raised in Northport, Stephen Louis Paparich had never heard of the selective service or the consequences of not registering. Realizing that he would have more flexibility if he enlisted rather than wait for the draft, Louie hopped on a sternwheeler ship from Whitehorse to Dawson City where he bought an 18 foot boat for $5 so he could travel quickly to Fairbanks to register for the draft. Somewhere along the way, Paparich adopted a dog that crossed his path, and made his way 255 miles down the Yukon river, stopping at villages along the way to get directions and supplies. 


During a stop at the confluence of the Nation River with the Yukon, Louie ran across an old miner named Tom Phillips who had lived in the area since 1889 and was gravely ill. His companion begged the teenage Louie to take the sick man to Fairbanks for medical help in his $5 boat, but Louie instead left some of his provisions with the men and went ahead to send a floatplane back for the sick prospector, always wondering if the old man had survived. The float plane eventually got to Tom Phillips but they were unsuccessful in getting him to Fairbanks that way. He was moved by riverboat but died shortly afterward. 


Paparich found an army recruiter in Fairbanks where he quickly signed up for the draft. Fully expecting to be immediately deployed, Louie looked forward to the warm beaches of the South Pacific, away from the cold Pacific Northwest and Alaska. The recruiter, however, saw Louie as a candidate for a different mission. After a few questions, Louie had disclosed his experience as a skier and horseman, building skis in the rural Northport area and learning to ski on the nearby hills and working as a ranch hand in the summer. The recruiter filed away all of Louie’s information but told him that his work on the highway was needed for the war effort and directed him back to Teslin to continue his work with the civilian construction crew. Louie spent a month’s worth of wages to book a flight on a Ford Tri-motor plane back to Teslin and his old job driving trucks. Louie loved Alaska and wrote to family at home that he hated the thought of ever leaving the North. 


Paparich worked on the Alcan highway until the spring of 1943, when the army finally sent him to first basic training at Camp Roberts in California and then Fort Hale in Colorado, where the newly formed 10th Mountain Division was training the Light Infantry and one of the last mounted cavalry units for mountain warfare in the frigid and harsh climate of the European war theater. The mountaineering troops drilled on skis, snowshoes and horseback, honing survival and combat skills up against the backdrop of the rugged Colorado mountains. After several months at high elevation, the unit was moved complete with 180 head of horses to Fort Swift in Texas where they were trained and acclimatized for low elevation and high temperatures for several months. Exposed to the extremes of weather and terrain conditions, the 10th Mountain was ready for anything. 


During his training in Texas, Louie Paparich was joined briefly by his high school sweetheart, Kay Lael, a young girl with a sweet southern drawl from North Carolina who had moved to Northport with her family a few years earlier and fallen head over heels for the farm boy down the road. They were married in the chapel at Fort Swift and then Kay went back to North Carolina to live with family and wait out the war while Louie prepared to ship off. 


Louie, like many in his unit, had never been to sea before the troop crossing that winter, and to avoid the crowded bunks of seasick soldiers he found a place to sleep in the beams of the ship high above the head, where the air was fresh and the bunks weren’t stacked like sardines in a can. He never got caught in his unauthorized berth, and so Louie didn’t mind the trip as much as some others. 


It was January of 1945 when the 10th Mountain Division entered combat in the North Apennine Mountains in Italy. They were tasked with taking the five mile ridge of Mount Belvedere from the controlling German troops, and the first obstacle they faced was a 1,500 foot vertical ascent up the western stronghold, known to the Americans as Riva Ridge. The German’s were confident that the sheer face couldn’t be scaled and had minimal patrols in place, but the 10th Mountain rigged rope ladders in the night and surprised German forces, breaking through the line and taking Mount Belvedere after three days of intense fighting. 
 

Serving in the 10th Mountain Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop, Louie raised his hand when they asked for scouting volunteers. Although he didn’t know what he was signing up for, Louie made an excellent scout as he spoke Italian and his years hunting in the woods of Northeastern Washington made him adept in the Italian forests, although Louie would never have touted his valuable skill set, being above all things a humble man. Rose Paparich-Kalamarides says that her dad told her that the life expectancy of scouts were measured in minutes, rather than years, as they crept in front of their own troops to gather intelligence and report back. On one scouting mission, Louie’s partner set his rifle against a tree and left it when they crept to their next position. Knowing that a misplaced firearm was grounds for dishonorable discharge, when the scouts got back into camp Louie squirreled a rifle out of the unit commander’s tent to replace his partner’s and avoid reprimand. Neither soldier ever heard a word about the missing rifle from the officer. Louie liked to retell this story because it reminded him that outside of the reality of combat, boys will still be boys, applying mischievous ingenuity to get out of a tight spot. 


Paparich and his division continued to route the Germans out of Northern Italy, culminating in the final battle for the 10th Mountain at the Po River, where German Troops faced off against the Americans who crossed the river at Lake Garda and cut off the last escape route for Hitler’s army. Louie says that some of the bravest soldiers he saw in battle were the engineers who were laying temporary bridges across the water under heavy mortar fire while the rest of the unit sheltered in foxholes on the opposite side of the river. Louie lay flat on the ground near a foxhole, imploring the guys in it to make room for him only moments before a mortar landed square in the trench and killed all of the men crowded there. Louie’s daughter Rose says that her father said a Rosary for the men in that foxhole every day for the rest of his life. 

 


It wasn’t until Louie was dying of cancer that he began to open up about his experiences in the war to his children. At the urging of his daughter Rose, he related many anecdotes before his passing in March of 2000 at the age of 75. In addition to the stories he related, he left behind letters that he scrawled to his family at home, in the barely legible handwriting of a right-hand compelled southpaw. As time went on, Louie was able to talk about the horrors that he had seen as well as the humanity that he witnessed during his time with the army. After the battle of Mt. Belvedere, the plethera of German prisoners of war dictated the need for the digging of more latrines. As Louie supervised the POW soldiers digging, he witnessed the terror of some Germans and he realized that they thought they were digging their own graves. Once, when searching a German POW for weapons he found a beautiful pocket watch that had belonged to the man’s grandfather. Louie graciously returned it to the German soldier, telling his daughter later that the prisoners that he saw were guys that looked just like him. 



The bloody but successful campaign at the Po River transpired two days before fascist dictator Benito Mussolini was executed in a small Italian village and then hung by his feet in a public square in Milan in a retaliatory move by local communist forces. As Louie Paparich and the 10th Mountain Division marched back to their ship through Milan, he endured the gruesome sight of the deposed dictator and his mistress, swinging from the beams of a service station. Louie, like many of the soldiers he served with, bore witness to atrocities committed by enemy and even some friendly troops as the dehumanizing effect of the war ate away at moral standards. Later in life Louie would admonish his children and grandchildren about the horrors of war and would be strongly opposed to the military action in Vietnam and later engagements, like so many of his comrades in arms. 


 

The troops left Italy in the summer of 1945, destined for the planned invasion of Japan which was circumvented by Japan’s surrender in August of that year. The ship changed course and returned home, where Louie collected his young wife Kay and settled back in Northport where their first three children were born before they used the money he saved from his highway construction work to buy a large farm just outside of town. They had three more children while living on the farm and Louie and Kay went on to become pillars in the small community. Louie was the head of American Legion Post #158 in Northport for 50 years. Stephen Louis Paparich received two bronze stars on his discharge in November of 1945 after just over two years of service. 



Heroes and Horses - Bull Hill Guest Ranch



By Liv Stecker


Pete Ansaldo came to the United States from Italy in 1900, where he carved out a hard living in the mines in Butte Montana for a couple of years until he had the money to bring his wife and two daughters to America. They joined him, and shortly after in 1903, Pete left the dark mines to build a homestead in the rolling hills outside of the bustling mining town of Northport. With one Hereford bull named Curly, the formerly nameless hill overlooking the Columbia River was dubbed Bull Hill, and Pete, Curly, and his family worked to build a profitable ranch. They were joined in 1921 by a family friend from the old Country, Minot Guglielmino, who married Pete’s daughter Kate after working in the Lead Point Mine outside of Northport for awhile. Minot and Pete raised cattle on the sweeping land along the river while Minot and Kate’s only son, Don grew up in the barn that still stands on Bull Hill today. Don later married Kassie and they raised six children at Bull Hill, Jeanne, Susan, Don, Pete, Tom and Joe.


In 1981, Pete Guglielmino graduated from Eastern Washington University and returned to the family homestead at Bull Hill. He started offering guided hunts to friends while he took up the family trade of cattle ranching. In 1995, along with his brother Don, Pete launched Bull Hill Guest Ranch, to accommodate the growing demand for guided hunts and dude-ranch vacations that he was encountering. With ten horses, two wranglers and one cook, the ranch was soon busy from spring through fall, as visitors from up and down the northwest corridor caught wind of what was happening up at Bull Hill.


The guest ranch grew and expanded from the old barn and a few tents to a fully equipped cookhouse, guest cabins, and new barns. Rambling over a total of 50 thousand acres, both owned and leased, the endless hills and woods drew guests back to the ranch again and again. Pete, his wife Patsy, their children and several other family members came along over the years to help develop Bull Hill into the gathering place that it has become. “It’s always a battle to get people here for the first time,” says Tucker Guglielmino, Pete’s oldest son and the marketing director for Bull Hill, “because most people haven’t heard of Kettle Falls or Northport. But if we get them here once, we have no trouble getting them to come back.” Bull Hill specializes in making guests feel like part of the big extended family that operates the ranch. “We want people to feel like this is their spot.” Tucker adds, where they are known by name and can bring their friends for the same attention to detail. The wranglers get to know each guest and fit them to the right horse, making each visit personalized and memorable.


Near the turn of the millennium, one of Pete’s friends from college mentioned that the Navy SEAL teams were doing site surveys for a new rural sniper training range. Pete threw Bull Hill into the list of options and the Navy sent a helicopter and survey team out to check it out. The SEALs liked what they saw, and when Bull Hill underbid the competition nationwide, they were on board. Since then, SEAL teams have trained in the woods at Bull Hill twice a year, in the spring and fall, developing training curriculum that utilizes the best and most rugged landscape that northern Stevens County has to offer.


This year, Navy SEALs who participated in the very first training at Bull Hill came back as instructors. Tucker says that the contract gets renewed because Bull Hill offers something that you can’t find elsewhere. The SEALs often perform their training at Bull Hill immediately before deployment in the fall, and coming into the cookhouse at the end of the day they mingle with the Guglielminos and feel like a part of the American Dream. “They see the family and remember a little bit what they’re fighting for.” Tucker says. The sprawling ranch and the small town vibe where everybody knows your name is what it’s all about.


In 2015, Bull Hill was visited by a former Army Ranger who was looking for a place to host civilian long range shooting competitions. The guest ranch fit the bill perfectly and Dan Litzenberger, together with Pete and Patsy’s son Tucker Guglielmino created Bull Hill Training Ranch, and hosted a competition shootout in August of 2016 that was in support of the Darby Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to the successful transition of Army Rangers to civilian life after service in the military. The shootout was a success, registration sold out and both professional and amateur shooters from all over the region and country, as well as corporate sponsors, came together for a weekend of fun and camaraderie to benefit an amazing cause.


Dan and Tucker are looking forward to hosting another competitive shoot at the ranch this spring, to benefit the foundation Freedom Has a Face, a non-profit committed to keeping the memory of fallen heroes alive in the support of their families and filling the gaps they left behind at home. These competitions as well as other events promise to be an ongoing benefit to both veterans and civilians alike as it provides a relaxing escape from the day to day for visitors and participants.




Pete and Patsy, along with their sons Tucker and Hunter continue to run Bull Hill with the help of Pete’s brother Joe, nephew Brent and a small army of local friends and family. Now armed with five full time wranglers, up to five cooks in the peak season, a full cleaning staff and office manager, the ranch books reservations years in advance for hunting season and families from the west side of the state looking for a rural get away that offers the complete experience. For more information about Bull Hill, check out their website BullHillGuestRanch.com or BullHillTrainingRanch.com.

Happy 241st birthday to the Few and the Proud!


By Liv Stecker


In 1775, the Continental Congress directed in a resolution that “two battalions of marines” should be raised to serve as protective landing forces and shipboard security for the foundling US Navy. The United States Marine Corp was formally established on November 10th, 1775, and newly commissioned captains, Samuel Nicholas and Robert Mullen, recruited the early marines directly from the pubs of Philadelphia, enticing them with promises of adventure at the high seas over tankards of beer.


The first battle fought by these “sea soldiers” happened on March 3, 1776, when a force of 220 Marines under the direction of Captain Nicholas staged an amphibious assault on the beaches of Nassau in the Bahamas, capturing the two British Forts on the Island and a sizeable collection of heavy artillery.


After the revolution, the marines were briefly disbanded, until a scourge upon American merchants and traders emerged in the form of Barbary Pirates. In the first ever battle won by American Forces on foreign soil, the marines joined mercenary soldiers under the command of a naval officer and marched for 50 days across the desert in what is now Libya to overthrow the Barbary ruler in Tripoli, a successful campaign immortalized in the Marine’s Hymn with a nod to the “shores of Tripoli.”


Trained specifically for land invasions from the sea, the Marines were conspicuously absent from one of the most historic amphibious assaults in history, on D-Day when the Allied Troops invaded the beaches of Normandy. The assault, directed by Army Commanders, was executed by the army and navy, branches of the military that could provide the sheer numbers that the Marines couldn’t, especially considering the bulk of US Marines were already fighting in the Pacific. In reference to a unit of Marines aboard the USS Tennessee during the Normandy invasion, a journalist jokingly commented that they weren’t sent ashore lest headlines later read “Army Rangers saved by Marine”, a jab at the long running rivalry between the Army and the Marine Corps. There was, however, at the time, a contingency of Marines behind enemy lines in France working as observers for the OSS (pre-runner to the CIA and Secret Service) to assist with the allied paratrooper landings.


The Marine Corps have served the United States under the banner of fearless devotion and relentless conviction, maintaining the reputation of a fierce battle force on land and sea in all of our foreign wars. From Guadalcanal to Beruit, Iwo Jima to Fallujah, US Marines have paid a high price for their passionate pursuit of victory in conflicts throughout history as the few and the proud.












Vets on the farm: connecting veterans to the community


By Liv Stecker


Usually when you hear about a vet in a farm setting, visions of elbow high gloves, giant syringes and horse pills come to mind, but Zach Beer is working to redefine that. A United States Army Veteran, Zach was a Multi Channel Systems Operator (31Romeo).  Serving through seven months of deployment in Bosnia on the heels of one of the most violent conflicts in recent history. Coming home after his time in the army, Zach faced the same struggle that many U.S. veterans deal with: finding a way to connect with real life.


Aside from the rigorous structure and discipline of military training and the lifestyle that comes with it, soldiers, sailors and airmen in all branches of the military are often exposed to a whole different spectrum of reality than comfortable North American lifestyles could prepare them for. In the Bosnian war alone, the effects of ethnic cleansing, systematic rape and torture haunted a shell-shocked country and transformed the lives of many young soldiers deployed there as peacekeepers. Enlisting, at an impressionable age, before the pre-frontal cortex (which is the reasoning portion) of the brain is fully developed, many young men and women have faced unthinkable human tragedy, triumph and evil before they have held a regular job.


After discharge from the military, many veterans have a hard time coming to terms with the reality of everyday American life. “A lot of guys get out and don’t know where to go,” says Beer, and often they turn to the easiest and most readily available coping devices - drugs and alcohol. “Some guys just slip off into the woods for six years,” says Zach, trying to make sense of civilian life.


The hardest thing for friends and family back home to remember about their loved ones when they come home, is that the issues they face aren’t imaginary. “I didn’t get this way on my own,” Beer says, referring to the formative process of time served in the military. While they are still active, service members are surrounded by brothers and sisters in arms who have seen and experienced the same things and can relate to the harsh reality of life outside of our peaceful borders.


PTSD - Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, was first officially diagnosed as “gross stress reaction” in veterans of the Korean War, and references to PTSD appeared as Vietnam War vets came home to a hostile nation with no direction to turn for help. For soldiers throughout history, the horrors of war have been predominantly held hostage to social norms that required families to internalize the trauma and after effects of the veterans that they loved. “Family values were stronger,” Beer says of the generation emerging from service in World War II. Certain behaviors in the home were tolerated and to an extent, wives were expected to “suck it up,” and give their heroes the leeway they needed to cope.


World War I and II soldiers were also drafted en masse with neighbors, classmates and relatives from the same towns, and after the war returned home with a group of comrades to settle in the same neighborhoods and get to the business of creating families and building communities. American Legion branches were formed, Veterans of Foreign War posts stood ready to provide the network of support for soldiers who were on a mission to rebuild a nation shattered by war and economic crisis.


Fast forward to the end of the 21st century and returning vets come home to a lifestyle rife with every imaginable convenience, unemployment rates that would be unimaginable to our grandparents and trauma from battlefield experiences. Some modern day vets are lucky to find a minimum wage job that is as unfulfilling as it is financially impossible, all while coping with the physical and mental side effects from deployment.


While some governmental programs slowly grind into motion to help place vets in profitable long term employment, local communities face the struggle of helping their vets find solid footing in the civilian world. Enter Zach Beer, the Veteran Internship Coordinator for Stevens County. Zach, under the direction of the Washington State Office of Veteran’s Affairs, is working with the Spokane Conservation District to place local vets into volunteer internships in agricultural settings, outdoor recreation, forestry and other settings.


Vets on the Farm is a program that was started when the director of the Spokane County Conservation Distric, Vicki Carter, began to realize that local farmers were quite literally a dying breed. The mother of an Iraq vet, Vicki saw an opportunity to not only train the next generation of growers in the area, but also find a place to plug in returning vets to the community. The idea behind the program is to take vets and teach them the skills necessary to become the next generation of  American farmers and agricultural business owners. This is achieved by matching vets and farmers or loggers together into mentorship-internship roles. The goal is to give vets the skills they need to run a successful farm or other agriculturally based business and become mentors themselves, turning back to help the next generation of vets and farmers


Similar in concept to Vets of the Farm,  the Veterans Conservation Corp was founded by a veteran of the Vietnam war after he was diagnosed with a terminal illness. With the remaining time he had left, he began to volunteer on a farm, reconnecting with the land, and ultimately, prolonging his life by many years. “His thought process was that if he was going to die, he might as well give,” explains Beer. “And when you get your hands in the dirt, magical things happen.” Connecting vets to the land and the great outdoors is a form of eco-therapy that has demonstrated great results in the lives of vets dealing with PTSD and other illnesses.


A volunteer and professional wildland firefighter, Zach began to make connections with vets in the area when he started working with a Firewise Community Education program. Zach approached the Stevens County Conservation District about starting a Vets on the Farm branch in Stevens County, and they were on board immediately. Vets on the Farm works like a “match.com between vets and farmers” or land managers, Beer explains, matching interests and personalities for the maximum benefit on both sides.

Vets on the Farm meets on the first Thursday of every month at 2:00 PM at the Stevens County Conservation District 232 Williams lake rd. in Colville. For more information, contact Zach Beer at 509-685-0937 extension 118 or zbeer@co.stevens.wa.us. http://www.sccd.org/programs/vets-on-the-farms https://www.facebook.com/VeteransConservationCorps/








Moving Beyond the 22


By Liv Stecker

September 10th is National Suicide Awareness month. In some tragic twist of society, suicide has become almost synonymous with American Veterans as hashtags like #22aday trend, telling the story of horrific statistics of veteran suicides in the United States. While presidential candidates quibbled over semantics and doled out blanket promises to imploring veterans at the Commander In Chief Forum in New York last week, Americans nationwide participate in the 22 push-up challenge to raise awareness of the startling statistic. But where did we get this number, and what does it really represent?

In a “Suicide Data Report” put out by the Department of Veterans Affairs (the VA) in 2012, a projection based on the broad accumulation of research and survey results that accounted for less than half of the States in the US, stated, “...an estimated 22 Veterans will have died from suicide each day in the calendar year 2010.” In context, this statistic was based on extrapolations from incomplete data and some scientific speculation. The study reported that from the years 1999-2011, an estimated 22.2% of suicides in the United States were former service members. While the current #22aday trend is associated with the youngest generation of veterans who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, the real statistics tell a different story: the average age of veterans who take their own lives is 60. Clearly this epidemic is not limited to one demographic of veterans.

Recently, as a response to the media sensation of the 22 a day statistic, veterans of the Global War on Terror (GWOT) have spoken out against the obsession with suicide rates and the PTSD epidemic. Derek Weida, an Iraq War vet who served with the 82nd Airborne sent out a message on social media. “Stop with all the 22. Change the message. Go be great. Show the world.” He, along with many others, insist that the obsession with a questionable statistic is not helpful to vets, and neither is the act of “raising awareness.” Instead, veteran community resources like the website Taskandpurpose.com ask concerned friends and family members to reach out to individual veterans with a phone call.

In anticipation of September as suicide awareness month, the VA established the Veterans Crisis Line, a specially focused suicide prevention hotline for veterans that operates not only a toll free call line (1-800-273-8255), but a website and text helpline (text to 838255)  as well. But more often, a familiar voice on the other end of the line can help just as much as a trained professional to combat the sense of isolation and being forgotten that many vets have given voice to.

Whether the statistic of 22 deaths a day is accurate or far fetched, the idea that an alarming number of our honored vets are going missing every day from the lives they came home to live is unacceptable. One phone call, text, email or even a friendly Facebook tag is a way to remind the vet you know that he or she isn’t forgotten or alone. We don’t have to wait for Veterans Day to let them know that we are thinking about them, that we honor their sacrifice, or just to remind them of the value they hold now in their civilian lives.