Monday, May 26, 2025

WWII bomber crash left 11 dead and 'non-recoverable.' Four are finally coming homeNew Foto - WWII bomber crash left 11 dead and 'non-recoverable.' Four are finally coming home

As the World War II bomber Heaven Can Wait was hit by enemy fire off the Pacific island of New Guinea on March 11, 1944, the co-pilot managed a final salute to flyers in an adjacent plane before crashing into the water. All 11 men aboard were killed. Their remains, deep below the vast sea, were designated as non-recoverable. Yet four crew members' remains are beginning to return to their hometowns after a remarkable investigation by family members and a recovery mission involving elite Navy divers who descended 200 feet (61 meters) in a pressurized bell to reach the sea floor. Staff Sgt. Eugene Darrigan, the radio operator was buried military honors and community support on Saturday in his hometown of Wappingers Falls, New York, more than eight decades after leaving behind his wife and baby son. The bombardier, 2nd Lt. Thomas Kelly, was to be buried Monday in Livermore, California, where he grew up in a ranching family. The remains of the pilot, 1st Lt. Herbert Tennyson, and navigator, 2nd Lt. Donald Sheppick, will be interred in the coming months. The ceremonies are happening 12 years after one of Kelly's relatives, Scott Althaus, set out to solve the mystery of where exactly the plane went down. "I'm just so grateful," he told The Associated Press. "It's been an impossible journey — just should never have been able to get to this day. And here we are, 81 years later." The Army Air Forces plane nicknamed Heaven Can Wait was a B-24 with a cartoon pin-up angel painted on its nose and a crew of 11 on its final flight. They were on a mission to bomb Japanese targets when the plane was shot down. Other flyers on the mission were not able to spot survivors. Their wives, parents and siblings were of a generation that tended to be tight-lipped in their grief. But the men were sorely missed. Sheppick, 26, and Tennyson, 24, each left behind pregnant wives who would sometimes write them two or three letters a day. Darrigan, 26, also was married, and had been able to attend his son's baptism while on leave. A photo shows him in uniform, smiling as he holds the boy. Darrigan's wife, Florence, remarried but quietly held on to photos of her late husband, as well as a telegram informing her of his death. Tennyson's wife, Jean, lived until age 96 and never remarried. "She never stopped believing that he was going to come home," said her grandson, Scott Jefferson. As Memorial Day approached twelve years ago, Althaus asked his mother for names of relatives who died in World War II. Althaus, a political science and communications professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, became curious while researching World War II casualties for work. His mother gave him the name of her cousin Thomas Kelly, who was 21 years old when he was reported missing in action. Althaus recalled that as a boy, he visited Kelly's memorial stone, which has a bomber engraved on it. He began reading up on the lost plane. "It was a mystery that I discovered really mattered to my extended family," he said. With help from other relatives, he analyzed historical documents, photos and eyewitness recollections. They weighed sometimes conflicting accounts of where the plane went down. After a four-year investigation, Althaus wrote a report concluding that the bomber likely crashed off of Awar Point in what is now Papua New Guinea The report was shared with Project Recover, a nonprofit committed to finding and repatriating missing American service members and a partner of the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, or DPAA. A team from Project Recover, led by researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, located the debris field in 2017 after searching nearly 10 square miles (27 square kilometers) of seafloor. The DPAA launched its deepest ever underwater recovery mission in 2023. A Navy dive team recovered dog tags, including Darrigan's partially corroded tag with his the name of his wife, Florence, as an emergency contact. Kelly's ring was recovered. The stone was gone, but the word BOMBARDIER was still legible. And they recovered remains that underwent DNA testing. Last September, the military officially accounted for Darrigan, Kelly, Sheppick and Tennyson. With seven men who were on the plane still unaccounted for, a future DPAA mission to the site is possible. More than 200 people honored Darrigan on Saturday in Wappingers Falls, some waving flags from the sidewalk during the procession to the church, others saluting him at a graveside ceremony under cloudy skies. "After 80 years, this great soldier has come home to rest," Darrigan's great niece, Susan Pineiro, told mourners at his graveside. Darrigan's son died in 2020, but his grandson Eric Schindler attended. Darrigan's 85-year-old niece, Virginia Pineiro, solemnly accepted the folded flag. Kelly's remains arrived in the Bay Area on Friday. He was to be buried Monday at his family's cemetery plot, right by the marker with the bomber etched on it. A procession of Veterans of Foreign Wars motorcyclists will pass by Kelly's old home and high school before he is interred. "I think it's very unlikely that Tom Kelly's memory is going to fade soon," said Althaus, now a volunteer with Project Recover. Sheppick will be buried in the months ahead near his parents in a cemetery in Coal Center, Pennsylvania. His niece, Deborah Wineland, said she thinks her late father, Sheppick's younger brother, would have wanted it that way. The son Sheppick never met died of cancer while in high school. Tennyson will be interred on June 27 in Wichita, Kansas. He'll be buried beside his wife, Jean, who died in 2017, just months before the wreckage was located. "I think because she never stopped believing that he was coming back to her, that it's only fitting she be proven right," Jefferson said. 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WWII bomber crash left 11 dead and ‘non-recoverable.’ Four are finally coming home

WWII bomber crash left 11 dead and 'non-recoverable.' Four are finally coming home As the World War II bomber Heaven Can Wait was hi...
Alibaba's new 'instant commerce' portal passes 40 million daily ordersNew Foto - Alibaba's new 'instant commerce' portal passes 40 million daily orders

SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba said Monday that its Taobao Instant Commerce portal, which delivers items within 60 minutes, has surpassed 40 million daily orders within a month of launching. The portal brings merchants from Alibaba's food delivery arm Ele.me onto its main domestic shopping app, Taobao, and is part of a broader move among Chinese online platforms in recent months to invest billions in so-called "instant retail". (Reporting by Casey Hall; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Alibaba's new 'instant commerce' portal passes 40 million daily orders

Alibaba's new 'instant commerce' portal passes 40 million daily orders SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba said...
Trump's push for Lumbee recognition causes concern among other Native tribesNew Foto - Trump's push for Lumbee recognition causes concern among other Native tribes

President Donald Trump's move toward federal recognition of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina fulfills a repeated promise he made on the campaign trail, but it has sparked concern from other Native American tribes about the precedent set by the different process used in this instance. During the first days of his second term in office, Trump signed anexecutive orderurging the Department of the Interior to create a plan that would identify a pathway for the federal recognition of the Lumbees. To be federally recognized, tribes must meet a specificset of criteria, including: proving their nation existed before the founding of the United States, that the tribe has been recognized as Native since 1900 or before, that the tribe has operated as an "autonomous entity" and that members have genealogies that demonstrate both Native heritage and distinct ancestry from previously recognized tribes. The Lumbee Tribeclaimsto be "the amalgamation of various Siouan, Algonquian, and Iroquoian speaking tribes" and to have a recorded existence since 1725. Currently, the Lumbees boast over 55,000 members who are spread across multiple counties in their home state of North Carolina. Although they were recognized by the state over a century ago, the Lumbee Tribe has not been recognized by the United States as a sovereign tribe. "The fact that we are still here centuries after colonial expansion, centuries after war and disease … should be celebrated," Lumbee Chairman John L. Lowery toldThe Robesonian, a local newspaper. Lowery declined an interview request from NBC News but said in a statement that he looks "forward to the White House formalizing the document and sending it over to congressional leadership." The Lumbees were denied the full benefits of recognition bythe Lumbee Actof 1956, a law that prohibits the U.S. from having a federal relationship with the group. This blocks the tribe's outright recognition along with access to government funding for needs such as health care, education and economic development. "The more than 60,000 North Carolina members of the Lumbee Tribe have waited decades for federal recognition," Sen. Ted Budd, R-N.C., said in a2023 press release. "They deserve the same rights, privileges, and respect granted to other Native American tribes throughout our country." In the past, the Lumbees have looked to other means for recognition, including multiple bills in Congress, most of which never made it off the chamber floor due tobacklashfrom established Native tribes. Now, Trump's Interior Department is searching for another path forward — and these methods go around the traditional process established in 1978 by the Office of Federal Acknowledgment (OFA), which has granted recognition to more than 500 tribes across the nation. By circumventing this evaluation, multiple Native groups and tribal leaders worry that this could set the wrong precedent for tribal recognition in the future. Chief Michell Hicks of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians says that a "diligent process" must be in place, and he worries about how this order could erode the current method of recognition. "We've always known who we were and where we came from, and the difficulty with the Lumbee group is they've attempted to attach to a number of historical tribal and nontribal names, trying to identify themselves," Hicks told NBC News. "I think part of it is just the clarity around who they are and are they truly a sovereign nation or are they remnants of something else, and not necessarily Native?" For some chiefs like Brad KillsCrow of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, this order undermines the efforts that other Native groups have undertaken toward their own recognition. "There's a process that has been put in place, a process that we all have gone through and each of the 574 [recognized] tribes were able to prove who they were and their existence," KillsCrow said. "Don't try to take a back door and not do what everybody else has and then get federal recognition." For KillsCrow, the Lumbee Tribe's recognition loophole is not a lone issue. The chief says he has interacted with multiple groups claiming to have Delaware ancestry but that haven't proved their historic roots. He worries that if the Lumbee are able to successfully bypass the OFA standards, other organizations that haven't met those guidelines will be able to do the same in the future. KillsCrow also highlights some potential financial ramifications to Lumbee recognition. TheCongressional Budget Officeestimates that it would cost over $350 million to recognize the Lumbee Tribe and provide it with the allotted benefits. As the leader of a small tribe, he worries this will strip money away from his own budget. Hicks and KillsCrow believe this push for Lumbee recognition by the executive branch is rooted in the politicization of Native issues. Multiple times during campaign stops in North Carolina, Trump promised the Lumbee Tribe that it would be recognized under his administration. In Robeson County, North Carolina, where the Lumbee Tribe is headquartered, 63.3% of the populationvoted Republicanlast November. Previously, Trumpcarriedthe county by 51% in 2016 and 59% in 2020. But making tribal recognition a voting issue risks Native voices going unheard depending on election winners, KillsCrow and Hicks argued. "I would recommend to President Trump, let this go through the OFA process," Hicks said. "Let the experts do their job. Whatever that answer is, it is."

Trump's push for Lumbee recognition causes concern among other Native tribes

Trump's push for Lumbee recognition causes concern among other Native tribes President Donald Trump's move toward federal recognitio...
The Army's ultimate memorial honor: horse-drawn Caissons funerals to resume at ArlingtonNew Foto - The Army's ultimate memorial honor: horse-drawn Caissons funerals to resume at Arlington

ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY — At 6:30 a.m., the scrape of manure shovels and the shuffling of horse hooves echoed through the red-brick stable at Ft. Myer. Soldiers from thecaisson detachmentin blue jeans, black shirts and white cowboy hats mucked out stalls. Kennedy, Lance and Truman – statuesque, dark horses – poked their heads between steel bars, eyes wide. The unit is in its final days of practice, preparing for the return June 2 of carrying deceased troops by horse-drawn caisson wagon to their graves, a tradition that dates to the 19thcentury. USA TODAY had access to the soldiers and horses of the caisson detachment, part of the Army's 3rdInfantry Regiment, known as "The Old Guard," during one of their final rehearsals. "It's been two years since we've taken part in a funeral," said Lt. Col. Jason Crawford, a veterinarian and former rodeo rider who commands the unit. "We're getting that muscle memory back." For decades, soldiers had been providingfuneral services at the cemeterywith caissons, wagons that once hauled supplies to the front and brought fallen troops home. That stopped in May 2023 after two of the unit's horses, Mickey and Tony, died after gravel they'd eaten fouled their guts. An Army investigation found four horses had died in a year, the Army's herd had grown old and their training and facilities were outdated. Since then, the Army has spent more than $28 million to upgrade stables, rehabilitate horses, buy new and younger ones and hire experts to advise on their care and training. Their equipment, from rubber mats to cushion their hooves to custom-made saddles for their backs, has been improved, too. More:Horse-drawn Army caissons to roll again for funerals at Arlington National Cemetery The caisson detachment passed its first major test in January, carrying the casket of former President Jimmy Carter to the White House during his state funeral. In the following months, soldiers acclimated the horses to Arlington National Cemetery's winding, hilly roads and the vehicles and people who visit the nation's premier military burying ground. With two squads of soldiers and horses trained, Army officials believe they can conduct two caisson funerals per day, said Maj. Wes Strickland, an Army spokesman. That number will increase as more soldiers and horses are trained. It hasn't all gone smoothly. Earlier this spring, something spooked the horses, and a few bolted about 100 yards before they could be controlled, Strickland said. A soldier's leg was broken, and one horse required rest to recover from the chaos. Nor, in the opinion of an influential senator, should the Army have paused the time-honored tradition at all. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas, a veteran of the Old Guard who helped conduct army funerals as a young officer, said in an interview that while it was appropriate to improve the caisson program he was "saddened and frustrated" that the funeral tradition was suspended for two years. "The caisson platoon has operated for decades without shutting down and frankly, horses have been pulling wagons since the dawn of history," Cotton said. "This is not a complicated task." The Army needs to care for the horses properly and accept that some will be injured or killed, he said. "We have to be realistic that horses are going to pass away and horses are going to be injured," Cotton said. "That's just the nature of the work they do. Just like elite horses on racetracks, we want to care for these horses. And I can promise you that no one cares for these horses better than the young horsemen soldiers who have trained with them and lived with them for years." The unit's soldiers do appear diligent about their horses' care. They shovel poop from the stalls into wheelbarrows, sweep the last wood chip from the aisle and set down fresh bedding. No grousing, instead soft, soothing words to the horses and pats on their flanks. Sgt. Natalee Silva, 23, talked about the morning ritual: cleaning the stall, filling water bowls, stocking up hay and inspecting the horses for any bumps or cuts. She grew up in Gillette, Wyoming, around the animals, and enjoys spending time with them. Lance is her favorite. "Me and him have a connection," she said, scratching Lance's neck where she once found a tick. Across the way, Truman sprawled out on a fragrant bed of fresh wood shavings. "He knows he'll be working in a few hours. You have to be patient with him; he can be a morning grouch," said Private 1stClass Joshua Allen, 19, from Houston. "We'll be getting him ready for the mission soon." Soldiers like Allen and Silva apply for the caisson detachment. About half the candidates make the cut after interviewing, slinging a bale of hay and displaying calm with horses. Then training begins: a 12-week basic horsemanship course followed by six-week boot camp at an equestrian sports facility in Ocala, Florida. Experience with horses is great but not required, said Sgt. 1stClass Trevor Carlin. About two-thirds of the unit's soldiers, including Allen, didn't grow up around them. He looks for soldiers who ask questions and want to learn. Core strength is key, too. Carlin said, as soldiers need to guide their horses while keeping erect posture. "We need very independent, super-fit soldiers," said. A soldier like Staff Sgt. Isaac Melton. He led the rehearsal, riding ahead on what is called the section horse. That's Truman, age 5, who was last seen lounging in his stall. Now Truman stood tall, a gold heart on his breast plate. All business. "Truman and I have similar personalities," said Melton, 34, from McKenzie, Louisiana. Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall adjoins Arlington National Cemetery. Melton brought Truman and the caisson team through the gate into the shade of oak trees that tower over row upon row of white marble tombstones. Six horses, three with riders, tow the caisson. At a moderate walking pace, the horses clip-clopped up the hill past Arlington House, the 19thcentury home built as a memorial to George Washington and later inherited by Robert E. Lee. Tourists snapped photos and the horses pressed on. Melton stopped the procession on a shady stretch, a designated rest stop with green metal hitching posts for the horses. The unit is ready to conduct funerals, he said. "One hundred percent," Melton said. "We've been training for a long time and have left no stone unturned. Every day the horses settle in a little more. They're in their own vibe." At the stable after the practice run, under fans suspended from its gabled roof, soldiers washed down the horses. They cleaned and stowed equipment and Kennedy gnawed at fresh hay. Cotton said the caisson ceremony holds special meaning for relatives of the fallen. The first funerals with caissons will be limited to troops killed in action, recipients of the Medal of Honor or Prisoner of War Medal and high-ranking service members. About 25 service members whose families have waited during the two-year pause will also be carried to their graves by caisson. "It's something that I think solemnifies the moment even more for those families," Cotton said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ultimate Army honor: Caisson funerals to resume at Arlington Cemetery

The Army's ultimate memorial honor: horse-drawn Caissons funerals to resume at Arlington

The Army's ultimate memorial honor: horse-drawn Caissons funerals to resume at Arlington ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY — At 6:30 a.m., the...
Russia, Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners hours after Moscow launches massive aerial assaultNew Foto - Russia, Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners hours after Moscow launches massive aerial assault

Russia and Ukraine on Sunday swapped hundreds of prisoners just hours after Moscow launched one of thelargest aerial assaultsof the more than three-year war between the two countries. The prisoner swap was the third and final part of a major exchange, marking a rare moment of cooperation. Russia's Defense Ministrysaid both sides exchanged more than 300 soldiers. This followed the release of 307 combatants and civilians each on Saturday, and 390 on Friday — the largest total swap of the war so far. "303 Ukrainian defenders are home,"Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyywrote on X, confirming the exchange. Russia Launches Largest Aerial Attack Of Ukraine War, Killing At Least 12 He said the troops returning to Ukraine were members of the Armed Forces, the National Guard, the State Border Guard Service, and the State Special Transport Service. Read On The Fox News App In talks held earlier this month in Istanbul — the first face-to-face meeting between the warring sides in recent peace talks — Kyiv and Moscow agreed to swap 1,000 prisoners of war and civilian detainees each. The exchange has been the only tangible outcome from the talks. The exchange came just hours after Russia launched a massive drone-and-missile attack targeting the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and other regions, killing at least 12 people – including three children – and injuring dozens more. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko reported that air defense forces were working in the capital against enemy drones. Oleh Syniehubov, the head of the Kharkiv military administration, said Kharkiv and its suburbs were also under attack by drones. Major Russia-ukraine Prisoner Swap Is Underway, Official Says Yuriy Ihnat, a spokesperson for Ukraine's Air Force, told The Associated Press that Russia used a total of 69 missiles of various types and 298 drones – the largest single aerial attack of the war. Russia's Defense Ministry, meanwhile, said its air defenses shot down 110 Ukrainian drones overnight. The latest round of violence came as President Donald Trump told reporters on Saturday he was "not happy" with Russia's large-scale strike against Ukraine. Speaking at Morristown Municipal Airport in New Jersey, the president accused Putin of "killing a lot of people" in the attack. Russia Bombards Ukraine With Drones Hours After Trump Announces Talks With Putin "I'm not happy with what Putin is doing," Trump said. "He's killing a lot of people, and I don't know what the hell happened to Putin." Later expanding on his comments in a Truth Social Post, Trump said Putin had "gone absolutely CRAZY!" "I've always said that [Putin] wants ALL of Ukraine, not just a piece of it, and maybe that's proving to be right, but if he does, it will lead to the downfall of Russia!" the social media post read. But the president also criticized Zelenskyy. "Likewise, President Zelenskyy is doing his Country no favors by talking the way he does. Everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop," Trump wrote, concluding: "This is a War that would never have started if I were President. This is Zelenskyy's, Putin's, and Biden's War, not 'Trump's,' I am only helping to put out the big and ugly fires, that have been started through Gross Incompetence and Hatred." Original article source:Russia, Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners hours after Moscow launches massive aerial assault

Russia, Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners hours after Moscow launches massive aerial assault

Russia, Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners hours after Moscow launches massive aerial assault Russia and Ukraine on Sunday swapped hundreds ...

 

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