Face of Defense: Grandson Continues ‘Band of Brothers’ Tradition

By Army Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod
1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division

FORT BRAGG, N.C., Dec. 14, 2010 – Even at 80 years old, Frederick \”Moose\” Heyliger was an enormous man, according to his grandson, who serves with the 82nd Airborne Division’s 1st Brigade.

 

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Army 1st Sgt. Mark Heyliger stands before a C-17 Globemaster III prior to an airborne training operation Dec. 1, 2010, at Fort Bragg, N.C. When he enlisted in 1992, Heyliger knew little about the World War II exploits of his grandfather, Army 1st Lt. Frederick \”Moose\” Heyliger, until he read Stephen Ambrose’s book, \”Band of Brothers.\” U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);
high-resolution image available.

Army 1st Sgt. Mark D. Heyliger, first sergeant of Company B, 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, often is asked by young soldiers who \”put 2 and 2 together\” whether he knows \”that guy in that movie,\” and he says he does.

 

Heyliger, a veteran of five deployments, learned of his grandfather’s World War II exploits as a first lieutenant with Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, of the 101st Airborne Division \”Screaming Eagles\” the same way the rest of America did –- by reading the book and seeing the HBO mini-series, \”Band of Brothers.\”

The grandfather Heylinger knew had earned a degree in ornamental horticulture and he sold fertilizer, among other jobs. He was a bit of a wanderer, with a grand plan to own an acre of land in every state so he could travel and camp all the time.

\”I’d always known my grandfather served in the Army, and I knew that he had loved it, but he never talked about what he did during the war,\” he said. \”My dad mailed me a book while I was on recruiting duty. He said, ‘If you ever want to know what your grandfather did, you need to read the book.’\”

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SARASOTA FLORIDA:Bald eagle struck by car during rush hour on Fruitville Road

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American-Made Drywall Emerges as Potential Danger

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Man who Shot PA Hunter Faces Manslaughter; Coldwater Conservation School; Native Fish; Saltwater Registry Bill

HUNTING AND FISHING NEWS \"6a00d8341bf7d953ef0115722fc9cc970b-320wi\"

compiled by CNBNEWS.NET

 

Lawyer charged with manslaughter in hunter’s death…Philadelphia Inquirer

By Larry King

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County attorney David M. Manilla faces involuntary manslaughter and firearms charges in connection with the Nov. 29 shooting death of a Bucks County deer hunter.

In court records, investigators portray the fatal shooting of Barry Groh as a mixture of reckless hunting, disregard for firearms laws by a convicted felon, and after-the-fact deception by Manilla, 49, of Worcester, an attorney since 1992.

The records also paint an unflattering picture of the three-man hunting party that included Manilla and his uncle, former Montgomery County District Attorney Michael D. Marino.

A court affidavit said Manilla failed to render immediate aid to Groh after shooting him, that the men stood by and said nothing when paramedics initially misread Groh\’s death as being caused by a heart attack, and that they left the scene before authorities had a chance to interview them in detail.

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 Coldwater Conservation School

 

The NJ School of Conservation in Sussex County will be the host site for an exciting Coldwater Conservation School being offered in 2011 by the NJ DEP Division of Fish and Wildlife and the NJ State Council of Trout Unlimited and its supporting chapters. The School will be held from June 23 – 26 and is open to youth who will be between the ages of 11 and 14 at the time of the program.

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Legion honors baseball icon Bob Feller

 

The American Legion – December 16, 2010
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Bob Feller signs autographs during the 2009 Legion Baseball World Series banquet in Fargo, N.D. 

Nicknamed \”The Heater from Van Meter,\” \”Bullet Bob\” and \”Rapid Robert\” because of his blazing fastball, Hall-of-Famer and American Legion Baseball icon Bob Feller passed away Wednesday evening from a battle with Leukemia. He was 92.

Feller, a farm kid from rural Iowa, found his calling on the mound at age 13 while playing American Legion Baseball in Van Meter – a small town exactly 17 miles west of Des Moines, as he was known to note. It was here that he began a career that carried him to greatness in the nation’s pastime, earning eight all-star selections as a professional and eventually making it to Cooperstown in 1962 as a Hall of Famer.

In his golden years, he was a great ambassador to the game of baseball. In his younger years, he was fanning batters and hurling no-hitters in Legion Baseball leagues. He often recalled his days of playing Legion Baseball as the fondest of his life, saying the experience not only gave him a start as a baseball phenom but taught him how to form lifelong friendships, deal with letdowns in athletic competition and be discovered as a pitcher.

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Gloucester City: The Best Decorated Christmas Tree!

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