
World War II newsman Ernie Pyle remembered at Punchbowl
1 /5 COURTESY U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES Ernie Pyle and sailors listen to war reports aboard USS Charles Carroll while en route to Okinawa.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl.
2 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial.
3 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years.
4 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock.
5 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock.
COURTESY U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES Ernie Pyle and sailors listen to war reports aboard USS Charles Carroll while en route to Okinawa.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock.
RELATED PHOTO GALLERY The legendary life and career of newsman Ernie Pyle was celebrated Friday at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Punchbowl Crater, the famed war correspondent's final resting place.
The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the ceremony, which marked the 80th anniversary of his death during the Battle of Okinawa. Another ceremony was held on the island of Iejima, where a single bullet fired by a Japanese soldier struck Pyle in the head and killed him.
The ceremony brought together members of Pyle's extended family, veterans, educators, former war correspondents and community members who wanted to pay tribute to Pyle, who was best known for his human-interest reporting during the Great Depression and the intimate accounts of common service members during World War II.
Retired Army Maj. Gen. Suzanne Vares-Lum, an alum of University of Hawaii's journalism and ROTC programs, said she first encountered Pyle's writing as a student at UH, where some of her instructors were former war correspondents as well. She said Pyle's work left a profound impact on her.
'He was never the loudest man in the room, but he spoke with a voice that carried across oceans, across battlefields and across generations, ' Vares-Lum said. 'He chose to stand alongside the average soldier, the quiet heroes, rather than chasing the spotlight of generals and war rooms. He wrote from foxholes, not balconies. From bombed-out towns, not press briefings. His style was simple and spare, but it cut deep. It wasn't about grandeur ; it was about truth.'
The tradition of commemorating Pyle's death at Punchbowl began in 1949, the year his remains were repatriated from Okinawa and interred at the cemetery. Buck Buchwach, then-editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, wrote and delivered the eulogy.
Don 't miss out on what 's happening !
Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It 's FREE !
Email 28141 Sign Up By clicking to sign up, you agree to Star-Advertiser 's and Google 's and. This form is protected by reCAPTCHA.
Every five years, people would gather again at the ceremony, and Buchwach would read from that first eulogy until his own death in 1989. Buchwach's wife, Margaret, tried to keep the tradition alive, but by the end of the 1990s, it had faded.
But in 2013, members of Pyle's extended family established the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, and in 2015 the foundation helped revive the tradition. Steve Maschino, a cousin of Pyle who sits on the foundation's board, told attendees that the foundation hopes to 'promote Ernie's style of writing with that human exercise story, versus the raw news today that sometimes can seem void of the human side.'
Marine veteran Jason Seal, senior vice commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Hawaii, read Buchwach's eulogy, which proclaimed that Pyle 'was a little guy who loved the little guy, and he brought the front to the front door of every American home. His fame lies above all in the integrity of what he wrote. His byline meant truth.'
Beverly Keever, who worked as a correspondent in Vietnam covering the war for seven years and later became a UH journalism instructor, said remembering Pyle's work is important today.
'The press today is under such unprecedented attacks of a new kind, new kind of bullets, ' Keever said. 'This is a really special occasion, 80 years after his death.'
Pyle was an only child raised on a farm in Indiana, and soon decided farming wasn't for him. He enlisted in the Navy during World War I, but the fighting ended before he finished training. He pursued journalism and enjoyed a long career with stints as a beat reporter, columnist and editor. In the 1930s, feeling trapped behind a desk, he hit the road with his wife and wrote stories about the places they went and people they met.
His travels took him from the heart of the Great Plains Dust Bowl to Alaska, South America and even to Hawaii, where he wrote about the Hansen's disease colony at Kalaupapa. When war broke out in Europe, he traveled to London to write about Germany's relentless bombing of the British Isles.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he began reporting on the front lines with U.S. troops, taking him to North Africa, Europe and eventually bringing him back to Hawaii and the Pacific. His last assignment was with the 77th Infantry Division on Iejima.
'His words brought the islands to the Main Street America, ' Vares-Lum said. 'Americans in Kansas, New York and Georgia could feel the breeze of a Waikiki, could understand the struggles on Guam, Tarawa, Okinawa, and we here in Hawaii remember him as one who walked among us, who listened, who cared and who understood. … He walked into danger with a notepad. He reminds us to speak the truth, even when it's hard.'
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More than 120,000 people fled Vietnam after the North Vietnamese captured Saigon on April 30, 1975. This chaotic evacuation has been captured in iconic photos, documentary films and oral histories. How did the Vietnamese seeking safety actually get from small boats or rooftop helicopters to the United States? First, they went to Guam. In response to the emergency, the U.S. military established a refugee camp on this small island in the Pacific. On Guam, the U.S. government planned to assess the crisis and process individuals while preparing camps on the mainland for the incoming Vietnamese. However, approximately 1,500 Vietnamese had another idea – refusing resettlement in the U.S. and returning home. I first learned of these events when I discovered images of the repatriates in the U.S. National Archives and found 'Ship of Fate,' the memoir of a South Vietnamese naval officer, Tran Dinh Tru. 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Many were young South Vietnamese sailors who were aboard South Vietnamese ships as the North Vietnamese advanced on Saigon, and their captains had directed the ships out to sea and never returned to port. These young men did not see themselves as refugees. In other cases, older men and women decided they did not have the stamina to start again in America. Others, like Tru, had family members who had missed connections, and they faced indefinite separation. The repatriates turned to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the U.S. government and the Guamanian public to make the case that they should be allowed to return to Vietnam. They wrote letters to the Guam newspaper and built massive billboards within the camp demanding their return. The UNHCR and the U.S. could not guarantee their safety on return, and so they made no plans for their repatriation. Frustrated with the lack of action, many of the repatriates escalated their protests. The repatriates built a makeshift stage. Men shaved their heads in front of a banner that proclaimed boldly in English, 'Thirty-Six Hours, Hunger Sit-In, Quiet, Hair Shaving Off, To Pray for a Soon Repatriation.' The repatriates also organized hunger strikes, militant marches through the streets of Guam and eventually set fire to buildings in the refugee camp. This was a situation no one had anticipated. The repatriates did not want to go to the United States, the Guamanian government did not want them to stay on Guam and the U.S. government did not know what to do. Notably, the new Vietnamese government did not want them back. In the end, the U.S. government granted the Vietnamese a commercial ship, the Viet Nam Thuong Tin, to return home. Tru agreed to be the captain due to his experience and skill. The Vietnamese repatriates knew the communist government saw them as hostile interlopers, traitors and possible CIA plants, but they still felt strongly that they must return. 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World War II newsman Ernie Pyle remembered at Punchbowl
COURTESY U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES Ernie Pyle and sailors listen to war reports aboard USS Charles Carroll while en route to Okinawa. 1 /5 COURTESY U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES Ernie Pyle and sailors listen to war reports aboard USS Charles Carroll while en route to Okinawa. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. 2 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. 3 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. 4 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. 5 /5 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. COURTESY U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES Ernie Pyle and sailors listen to war reports aboard USS Charles Carroll while en route to Okinawa. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. RELATED PHOTO GALLERY The legendary life and career of newsman Ernie Pyle was celebrated Friday at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Punchbowl Crater, the famed war correspondent's final resting place. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the ceremony, which marked the 80th anniversary of his death during the Battle of Okinawa. Another ceremony was held on the island of Iejima, where a single bullet fired by a Japanese soldier struck Pyle in the head and killed him. The ceremony brought together members of Pyle's extended family, veterans, educators, former war correspondents and community members who wanted to pay tribute to Pyle, who was best known for his human-interest reporting during the Great Depression and the intimate accounts of common service members during World War II. Retired Army Maj. Gen. Suzanne Vares-Lum, an alum of University of Hawaii's journalism and ROTC programs, said she first encountered Pyle's writing as a student at UH, where some of her instructors were former war correspondents as well. She said Pyle's work left a profound impact on her. 'He was never the loudest man in the room, but he spoke with a voice that carried across oceans, across battlefields and across generations, ' Vares-Lum said. 'He chose to stand alongside the average soldier, the quiet heroes, rather than chasing the spotlight of generals and war rooms. He wrote from foxholes, not balconies. From bombed-out towns, not press briefings. His style was simple and spare, but it cut deep. It wasn't about grandeur ; it was about truth.' The tradition of commemorating Pyle's death at Punchbowl began in 1949, the year his remains were repatriated from Okinawa and interred at the cemetery. Buck Buchwach, then-editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, wrote and delivered the eulogy. Don 't miss out on what 's happening ! Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It 's FREE ! Email 28141 Sign Up By clicking to sign up, you agree to Star-Advertiser 's and Google 's and. This form is protected by reCAPTCHA. Every five years, people would gather again at the ceremony, and Buchwach would read from that first eulogy until his own death in 1989. Buchwach's wife, Margaret, tried to keep the tradition alive, but by the end of the 1990s, it had faded. But in 2013, members of Pyle's extended family established the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, and in 2015 the foundation helped revive the tradition. Steve Maschino, a cousin of Pyle who sits on the foundation's board, told attendees that the foundation hopes to 'promote Ernie's style of writing with that human exercise story, versus the raw news today that sometimes can seem void of the human side.' Marine veteran Jason Seal, senior vice commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Hawaii, read Buchwach's eulogy, which proclaimed that Pyle 'was a little guy who loved the little guy, and he brought the front to the front door of every American home. His fame lies above all in the integrity of what he wrote. His byline meant truth.' Beverly Keever, who worked as a correspondent in Vietnam covering the war for seven years and later became a UH journalism instructor, said remembering Pyle's work is important today. 'The press today is under such unprecedented attacks of a new kind, new kind of bullets, ' Keever said. 'This is a really special occasion, 80 years after his death.' Pyle was an only child raised on a farm in Indiana, and soon decided farming wasn't for him. He enlisted in the Navy during World War I, but the fighting ended before he finished training. He pursued journalism and enjoyed a long career with stints as a beat reporter, columnist and editor. In the 1930s, feeling trapped behind a desk, he hit the road with his wife and wrote stories about the places they went and people they met. His travels took him from the heart of the Great Plains Dust Bowl to Alaska, South America and even to Hawaii, where he wrote about the Hansen's disease colony at Kalaupapa. When war broke out in Europe, he traveled to London to write about Germany's relentless bombing of the British Isles. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he began reporting on the front lines with U.S. troops, taking him to North Africa, Europe and eventually bringing him back to Hawaii and the Pacific. His last assignment was with the 77th Infantry Division on Iejima. 'His words brought the islands to the Main Street America, ' Vares-Lum said. 'Americans in Kansas, New York and Georgia could feel the breeze of a Waikiki, could understand the struggles on Guam, Tarawa, Okinawa, and we here in Hawaii remember him as one who walked among us, who listened, who cared and who understood. … He walked into danger with a notepad. He reminds us to speak the truth, even when it's hard.'

Yahoo
19-04-2025
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War newsman Ernie Pyle is remembered at Punchbowl
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. 1 /4 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. 2 /4 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. 3 /4 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. 4 /4 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Chaplin Hurst of the Pacific Air Forces paused in front of Ernie Pyle's grave site. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the service at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ The Color Guard posted the colors during the Ernie Pyle 80th Anniversary Memorial. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Jerry Maschino, right, executive director of the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, spoke Friday with Suzanne Vares-Lum, director of the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and City Council member Tyler Dos-Santos Tam during the cemetery. The memorial takes place every five years. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Anne Harpham, former senior editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, paused Friday in front of the Ernie Pyle Memorial Rock. RELATED PHOTO GALLERY The legendary life and career of newsman Ernie Pyle was celebrated Friday at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Punchbowl Crater, the famed war correspondent's final resting place. The Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation put on the ceremony, which marked the 80th anniversary of his death during the Battle of Okinawa. Another ceremony was held on the island of Iejima, where a single bullet fired by a Japanese soldier struck Pyle in the head and killed him. The ceremony brought together members of Pyle's extended family, veterans, educators, former war correspondents and community members who wanted to pay tribute to Pyle, who was best known for his human-interest reporting during the Great Depression and the intimate accounts of common service members during World War II. Retired Army Maj. Gen. Suzanne Vares-Lum, an alum of University of Hawaii's journalism and ROTC programs, said she first encountered Pyle's writing as a student at UH, where some of her instructors were former war correspondents as well. She said Pyle's work left a profound impact on her. 'He was never the loudest man in the room, but he spoke with a voice that carried across oceans, across battlefields and across generations, ' Vares-Lum said. 'He chose to stand alongside the average soldier, the quiet heroes, rather than chasing the spotlight of generals and war rooms. He wrote from foxholes, not balconies. From bombed-out towns, not press briefings. His style was simple and spare, but it cut deep. It wasn't about grandeur ; it was about truth.' The tradition of commemorating Pyle's death at Punchbowl began in 1949, the year his remains were repatriated from Okinawa and interred at the cemetery. Buck Buchwach, then-editor of The Honolulu Advertiser, wrote and delivered the eulogy. Don 't miss out on what 's happening ! Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It 's FREE ! Email 28141 Sign Up By clicking to sign up, you agree to Star-Advertiser 's and Google 's and. This form is protected by reCAPTCHA. Every five years, people would gather again at the ceremony, and Buchwach would read from that first eulogy until his own death in 1989. Buchwach's wife, Margaret, tried to keep the tradition alive, but by the end of the 1990s, it had faded. But in 2013, members of Pyle's extended family established the Ernie Pyle Legacy Foundation, and in 2015 the foundation helped revive the tradition. Steve Maschino, a cousin of Pyle who sits on the foundation's board, told attendees that the foundation hopes to 'promote Ernie's style of writing with that human exercise story, versus the raw news today that sometimes can seem void of the human side.' Marine veteran Jason Seal, senior vice commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Hawaii, read Buchwach's eulogy, which proclaimed that Pyle 'was a little guy who loved the little guy, and he brought the front to the front door of every American home. His fame lies above all in the integrity of what he wrote. His byline meant truth.' Beverly Keever, who worked as a correspondent in Vietnam covering the war for seven years and later became a UH journalism instructor, said remembering Pyle's work is important today. 'The press today is under such unprecedented attacks of a new kind, new kind of bullets, ' Keever said. 'This is a really special occasion, 80 years after his death.' Pyle was an only child raised on a farm in Indiana, and soon decided farming wasn't for him. He enlisted in the Navy during World War I, but the fighting ended before he finished training. He pursued journalism and enjoyed a long career with stints as a beat reporter, columnist and editor. In the 1930s, feeling trapped behind a desk, he hit the road with his wife and wrote stories about the places they went and people they met. His travels took him from the heart of the Great Plains Dust Bowl to Alaska, South America and even to Hawaii, where he wrote about the Hansen's disease colony at Kalaupapa. When war broke out in Europe, he traveled to London to write about Germany's relentless bombing of the British Isles. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he began reporting on the front lines with U.S. troops, taking him to North Africa, Europe and eventually bringing him back to Hawaii and the Pacific. His last assignment was with the 77th Infantry Division on Iejima. 'His words brought the islands to the Main Street America, ' Vares-Lum said. 'Americans in Kansas, New York and Georgia could feel the breeze of a Waikiki, could understand the struggles on Guam, Tarawa, Okinawa, and we here in Hawaii remember him as one who walked among us, who listened, who cared and who understood. … He walked into danger with a notepad. He reminds us to speak the truth, even when it's hard.'