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Manley Notes Reach Out And Feel The Pride Page 3 I Kissed U.S. Soil The following is a reprint of a letter ad-dressed to the Editor, Orlando-Sentinel that appeared in the December 18, 2006 issue. “I read the newspaper faithfully and saw the letter last week about being proud to be an American.  I would add my story to that. I was born in Budapest, Hungary, and after the Second World War, I married a man from Prague, Czechoslovakia .  I was persecuted in Hungry by my own ‘fellow Hungarians.’ during the war, and then I was jailed in Czechoslovakia by my ‘fellow Czechoslovakians’ when the Communist Party took over and my husband, a newspaper editor, refused to join the party.  So when we escaped with our daughter in 1966, from Pra-gue to Italy, we came to America on December 21. When we arrived on a plane in New York, before doing anything else, I kissed the American soil -- what happi-ness I felt to be in a free country! I did not speak English, but within four years I learned to speak, read and write it. I do not ever say that I am Hungarian-American or Czechoslovakian-American, I am just proud to be an American! When so many editors, actors and all famous people talk against my beloved country, I just would like to tell them that if they were ever to live under a dictatorship and endure what I did, they would talk differently. No system is perfect, but the very best exists here.  We will soon celebrate the 40th anniversary that I have been privi-leged to live in America, and it has been 35 years that I have been proud to be an American. --Susan Rajsky Kissimmee (Florida)  Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund HM2 Derek McGinnis was injured in Fallujah in November of 2004, during opera-tion Phantom Fury while attached to 3rd LAR our of Twenty-nine Palms, California.  His ambulance was hit by a suicide driver.  The explosion caused him to have a traumatic brain injury, shrapnel in his right eye, and the loss of his left leg above the knee.   Derek spent over two years in recovery at rehabilitation at Bethesda Naval Hospi-tal, Walter Reed, Palo Alto Veterans Hospital, and is now finishing up at Brooke Army Medical Center.  Still on active duty, his separation process will begin soon. Petty Officer McGinnis instructs medical officers in combat medicine techniques prior to their deployment to Iraq.  He also works as a liaison of Naval personnel at Brooke, helping new patients accept their injuries.  During his off duty hours, Derek attended college and graduated this November with a BS in Business Health Care Administration.  He will start work at the VA in San Antonio and will also join the Injured Marine Semper Fi organization as a volunteer.  He will be working with Dr. Donald Barker, a retired Navy Corpsman.   Mike Lowe is the father of Lance Corporal Joe Lowe.  Joe served in the Marine Corps 4 years with 4th Tanks Battalion Reserve Unit in Boise, Idaho.  He was se-verely injured in combat on May 8, 2005, near the Syrian border, during Operation Mataor.  Joe was the gunner on an M1-A1 tank, when the tank ran over a triple stack IED, which ruptured into the turret where the three gunmen were located.  Joe’s back was broken, and he suffers paralysis from the chest down.  His loader’s right leg had extensive injuries and was later amputated, and the tank com-mander received multiple fractures to both of his legs. After several back surgeries and 4 months of rehabilitation in Seattle, Joe was able to return to Boise, where he was medically retired from the Marine Corps in September 2005.  Joe now resides independently in a residence that has been previously built and adapted for wheelchair access by the previous owner, who was also a veteran. Almost daily you reach for the morning newspaper and read of the fatalities in Iraq but mostly reported in only local newspapers are the heart-shattering stories of our uniform men and women whose bodies have been torn apart and whose lives are in a whirlpool of uncertainty.  Not only do the victims suffer but the pains of the injuries extend to their families, and too often they discover the financial im-pact that is attached.  Yes, there is a financial challenge that faces all of our in-jured Marines and Sailors.  This is when the Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund steps up to the plate. “Our concerns became focused on Joe’s needs, not on the financial challenges ahead.  The Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund stepped in at just the right time and offered to help..  We were able to travel to Seattle to be with Joe during one of the toughest times of his life.  IMSFF helped with the expenses of travel, hotels, car rental, and many other unforeseen costs.  Without the help, we wouldn’t have been able to visit Joe or participate in his recovery.” “The Semper Fi Fund helped my family when I was unconscious and helpless.  I am very grateful to them,” wrote Derek McGinnis. The Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund provides financial assistance to Marines in-jured in combat and in training, to other service members injured while in direct (Continued on page 4)
Editor:  Joe Dennison
Office: 905 Sea Duck Drive
Daytona Beach, FL 32119
Phone: (386) 767-8068
Email: pres@ussmanleydd940.org
Officers:
President - Joe Dennison
Vice-president - Dan Brewster
Secretary - Harold Kane
Treasurer - Bill Gowan
Webmaster - Bill Gowan
Page 2
Reach Out And Feel The Pride
Manley Notes
Survivor Stays In Touch
Weymouth Remembers
Presents Painting
Welcome Aboard
A big Welcome Aboard! to our recent
“enlistees” --
Norman Cleary - RM3 - 72-75
David Henderson - SN - 57-69
Lawrence Ford - RMSN - 58-59
Dennis Papich - HTFN - 75-77
Jim Brewer - SK3 - 
Johnny R. Hinson - EM2 -
Kip Hasty - MM2 - 
James Ledergerber - MM2 - 77-80
Bob Earls - RM2 - 74-76
Daniel Diasio - MS3 - 72-74
Robert Hovish - SN - 72-73
Thurman Willis - SN - 73-75
Al Wicks - LTJG - 66-68
Dolford Fretwell - SN - 61-61
Lawrence Abott - SH3 - 77-80
In Memoriam
Virgil Sinders - Jan 12, 2005
Roger Youmans - Sep 9, 2006
Christopher Shay - Sep 14, 2006
Dan Howd - Mar 13, 2007
Back some years ago - 45 years to be
exact - Manley was playing plane
guard to the Independence on Febru-
ary 28 when a young Lieutenant Bill
Brandel nosed into the raging seas of
the Atlantic at night.  Manley came to
his rescue and successfully plucked
him out of the dark waters.  It is no
doubt that the rescue team of this
destroyer gave Bill another few years
upon planet Earth and in the com-
pany of his loving wife, Dorothy.
In 2001, during the Millennium reun-
ion in Fairfax, VA, Captain Brandel
accepted the Joe Dennison’s invita-
tion and with Dorothy at his side,
reached out to give thanks to the
men of the rescue team.  He was pre-
sented an Honorary Membership in
the USS Manley (DD-940) Association
and recognized as an honorary    
Destroyerman.  
During the opening ceremonies of
The Homecoming Reunion, LTJG
Charlie Weymouth who was on board
at the time of the rescue and recalled
it vividly, presented Association Presi-
dent, Joe Dennison, with a beautiful
painting of the USS Manley as she
was breaking away from the         
Independence.  As was the tradition,
the aircraft carrier’s band gathered
on the hangar deck in salute of   
Manley’s good deed.
On each anniversary of his rescue -
February 28 - Captain Brandel, now
retired in Arlington, presses the
“send” button on his e-mail.  This is
his most recent cyber missive:
“Still being alive on the last day of
February each year has been a re-
minder of the infamous luck of the
draw.  And after meeting you those
few years ago, I never let 28 February
pass without breaking out my
“Honorary Destroyer Sailor”
card, and thinking of the fine
men who have and are still
serving on our front lines.  And
can you believe - that was 45
years ago?  My how time flies
when you are having fun - and
every day a gift.
Dorothy and I hope you are still
well, hale and hearty, like we
last remember you.
Warm regards, Bill Brandel”
Charlie Weymouth in his paint-
ing has commemorated that
fateful night.  
“Gunsmith Saluted”
Over two successive evenings of late
February 1962, “Gunsmith,” USS
Manley (DD-940), rescued two navy
and marine corps pilots from stormy
winter seas off Cape Hatteras.  Man-
ley, soon to be gifted in ice cream, in
this scene, acknowledges the car-
rier’s bravo zulu as she returns to her
plane guard station.
The painting dramatizes the artist’s
recollection of the carrier Independ-
ence (CV-62), hangar bay open, small
Navy band in dress whites, saluting
our ship - meanwhile, frigid weather
and full seas beckon the destroyer.
During this chapter of “truly” cold
war, Gunsmith spent much time at
sea - North Atlantic and Mediterra-
nean.
Happy reunion to the crew of Gun-
smith!  Charlie Weymouth - 60-62
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