Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Dave Taber WW2 Assignment #1

The Marines on Guadalcanal

DAVE TABER, 1st Raider Battalion



Dave Taber was one of "Horse Collar" Smith's communicators who fought bravely among Sweeney's men. Six of the seven men were casualties that night.

We were on top of the ridge near the command post. Major Bailey came up and made an eloquent speech. He said something like this: "All you fellows have buddies and friends that have been wounded and killed, and it will all be in vain if we lose the airfield. Now let's get out, hold the line, and save the airfield. If we lose the airfield, we're going to lose the island." That was about the gist of it. It was quite dramatic and got everybody moving. I thought to myself it was almost like something out of a movie.

I was with a close friend of mine, Ike Arnold. (Ike's name was really Herman Arnold, but I called him Ike.) We each had five or six grenades. We went out. I'm not sure what happened, but somehow we got separated from some of the other guys. In fact we were a little too extended, I guess. When the Japs attacked, we were throwing grenades. There was a lot of shooting going on, a lot of action: rifle fire, grenades moving so fast.


I also would have looked before I chucked my grenades. I would have also been like oh crap when the Japanese person was behind me. I would have done the same thing he did, turning around and shoot him because if it was him or the Japanese.  -kayla deraps 2/24/10 9:25 AM

If there was enough time, i would have looked before i threw a grenade, but sometimes there is not enough time during a battle. If I was thinking right, I would have turned around and tried shooting the Japanese guy. Brooke Randall 2/24/10 9:41 AM 



Anyway, we were throwing grenades down the ridge, and then all the sudden Ike talked to me. [Choking up, Taber said, "I'd rather not go through this," but then continued.] He called me Tabe. He said very calmly, "Tabe, I've been hit." I turned to him. He was off to my side a little, and I said, "Where?" He said, "In the throat." He no more than said that, and he was dead.


Second if my best friend had just died in front of my eyes i would have stopped and thought about it then left. I also would have been like this stinks and would have burred him or her. -kayla deraps 2/24/10 9:24 AM


 If my friend dies in front of my eyes, I would have been sad, but knew I had to keep going. Brook Randall2/24/10 9:38 AM

He must have been hit in the jugular vein or an artery. Blood just gushed out. I had my arm underneath him, across his back, and I lowered him down to the ground. [crying] There's nothing you could do. He was a very good friend of mine. I looked around, and I was all by myself.

I thought to myself that I better get back and make contact with the others. I didn't know whether to crawl back or walk back because there was danger both ways. We'd been told what to do in these cases. I acted without even thinking. I decided to stay on my feet. It was pitch dark. I was walking a little bit, and all the sudden I heard something behind me and along comes a grenade right through the air and the fuse is burning!

First if I had a grenade between my legs I would have booked it as fast as possible or I would have jumped to the side and covered my face.  -kayla deraps 2/24/10 9:22 AM

If I had a grenade between my legs, I would probably run, too if I was able to. -Brooke Randall 2/24/10 9:36 AM

Before I knew what I was doing, I fell on my face away from it. As I was going down, I turned to see where the grenade was falling; it fell in between my feet. I had sharpnel between my feet and legs. I was a little stunned but got up. I was in shock, and nothing was bothering me. I'm walking along slowly and heard a Japanese voice behind me and he was talking to me. He must have thought I was a Jap going up in front of him. I had a .03 rifle and I swung around and shot, and he dropped as I kept on going. I finally got back [to the CP], and one of the first people I ran into was Horse Collar Smith, who was wounded.





Thursday, February 11, 2010

Assignment #3

The letter I sent:
Dear Mrs. Appleton,
I am doing a project in my history class and we are told to write a
e-mail to some one who was about 10 when former president Kennedy was
shot. What I know about the shooting was that Kennedy was riding in a open
top limousine, down the street in Dallas, Texas. They were riding along
and at 12:30pm he got shot. 3 shots were fired 1st one missed, 2end hit
him in the upper back which also hit the governor and 3rd caused a fist
size whole in his head. It is believed that Lee Harvey Oswald killed
Kennedy alone, using a rifle.
Lee Harvey Oswald propped up his rifle with 2 or 3 boxes. He committed
the crime from the 6th floor of a school book depository that he was
working at. He left the seen and killed a police officer. Then was later
found in movie theater. He was killed leaving a jail.
I would like to know what you remember about the assassination of
Kennedy. Did you think it was a lone gunman or conspiracy assassination.
How do you feel the murder impacted the country? Could you tell what you
remember about the assassination?

Thank you very
much,
Kayla DeRaps
Reply I Got:
Hi Kayla,
the Kennedy assasination was one of those signal moments that was so
shocking that one always remembers like a snapshot photo where you were
and what you were doing when you heard the news. I was in junior high at
the time changing up after gym class at the end of the day. Suddenly we
all heard a radio report broadcast over the intercom saying that Kennedy
had been shot and minutes later that he had been declared dead at the
hospital in Dallas. The idea that anyone would attempt to shoot our
president was so totally foreign that the news reports seemed
unbelievable. No president had been assasinated in living memory. Millions of us felt that we had had a relative murdered. The rumors and stories flew. It was hard to know what to believe. it was reassuring that the authorities captured the murderer, but the theory of a lone gunman did not make a lot of sense. I still do not know what to believe about the events leading up to that day. For me the world changed on that day. Suddenly public figures were fair game for gunmen who did not want to bother with a ballot box. In short order after John Kennedy was shot, Martin Luther King Junior was gunned down on a motel balcony, and Bobby Kennedy was murdered on a convention stage. Riots , marches and demonstrations became the order of the day. It was a long long time before trust and belief in normalcy were restored.
Mrs. Appleton

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Assignment #2

Assignment #1--Cold War & Fear



To bomb your town click here.

The people that were alive and living during the Tsar Bomba were very afraid because they thought that they were going to get bombed at any time. Every night they were worrying if that would be the last night they laid there head on there pillow. OR that it would be the last night they would tuck there children in. Its all around them how they can get bombed like in the press and on T.V. Cartoons were made that said at any time the Souvet Union would bomb us. Former President Kendy said on T.V. that this is a serious topic. That we have plans and if they bomb us witch is a large possibility then we got a plan to get back at them. They also were afraid because the bomb took out a lot of area. Say if the bomb was dropped on Newport it would take out all the way to Burnham.