September/October 2005
FEATURE |
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Jackpot!
VVA's
Twelfth Biennial Convention
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BY MARC LEEPSON |
Any way you look at it, VVA’s 12th
biennial National Convention, which was held Aug. 10-13 at the
Silver Legacy Hotel and Casino in Reno, Nevada, was a huge
success. A record number of Convention delegates, 736 from across
the nation, rolled up their collective sleeves and spent three and
a half days debating and enacting a series of resolutions that
will guide the organization through the next two years. On Friday,
the delegates cast their votes for VVA’s four national officers
and nineteen members of the Board of Directors. More than a
thousand delegates and guests—including some 125 AVVA members
taking part in the organization’s National Leadership
Conference—took in the stirring opening ceremonies that kicked off
the Convention and the moving (and rocking) Saturday Night Awards
Banquet, which ended the event.
“We did ourselves proud in Reno,”
said outgoing VVA President Tom Corey, who stepped down after two
terms. “The delegates showed a seriousness of purpose that we have
come to expect at VVA Conventions. The election campaigns were
hard fought. And after the votes were counted, we came together in
support of our new national leaders who will guide us through
another two years. I look forward to working with them.”
John Rowan of Middle Village, New
York, the New York State Council president who had served as the
chair of VVA’s Conference of State Council Presidents and three
terms on the Board of Directors, was elected VVA’s sixth national
president, defeating former VVA Vice President Ed Chow. Jack
Devine of Dimondale, Michigan, a former VVA Board member who
chairs VVA’s Project 112/SHAD Task Force, was chosen as national
Vice President. Barry Hagge of Boyertown, Pennsylvania, the
long-time chair of VVA’s Constitution Committee, was elected
national Secretary, and Alan Cook of Castro Valley, California,
won re-election as national Treasurer.
“It’s a great honor to serve as
VVA’s national President,” Rowan said. “We have a great team in
place to run this great veterans’ service organization for the
next two years. I am looking forward to working with VVA members
all across the nation on every level to support Vietnam veterans
and their families In Service to America.”
The Convention got off to an
exuberant start at 9:00 on Wednesday morning with the Opening
Ceremonies, which began with rousing renditions of the
Vietnam-War-era songs “Run Through the Jungle” and “Fortunate Son”
by an uncannily realistic John Fogerty (of Creedence Clearwater
Revival) impersonator as black and white war-time images were
displayed on four huge video screens. The ceremonies also included
moving tributes to former VVA National President George Duggins
(who died just a week before the Convention) and other VVA members
lost in the previous year, as well as warm welcomes from Nevada
State Council President Virgie Hibbler, Jr., Reno Mayor Robert
Cashell, and AVVA President Mary Miller.
Most of those on hand agreed that
the highlight of the morning was the powerful Keynote Speech
delivered by VVA member Allen Hoe, a former Americal Division
medic from Honololu who today is one of Hawaii’s most prominent
attorneys—and whose son, U.S. Army Lt. Nainoa Hoe, was killed in
action in Iraq in January.
“I have stopped trying to understand why the events in my life
have come to me in the manner they have and at the times they
had,” Hoe said. “Sayings like ‘there but for the grace of God’
have true meaning in my world. I learned many lessons on the
battlefields of Hiep Duc and Que Son Valley—when all is lost, you
need to remember: someone else has it twice as bad as you.”
The delegates put in long hours on the Convention floor on
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday and during evening caucuses with
the officer and board candidates. On Thursday, the delegates heard
from Deputy Secretary Gordon Mansfield, the No. 2 person in the
VA. On Friday, the delegates honored Tabeatha Allen, a security
guard at the hotel who all week had been thanking VVA members for
their service. When members learned that Allen was a twice-wounded
veteran of the war in Iraq, she was prevailed upon to come onto
the Convention floor and be introduced. What followed was a
thunderous ovation, as Convention delegates showed their
allegiance to VVA’s founding principle: “Never again will one
generation of veterans abandon another.”
With the work of the Convention
complete by noon on Saturday, nearly everyone joined in the
autographing and book-signing event featuring Raquel Welch, who
signed photos for more than two and a half hours. Also taking part
was John Hulme, who directed the acclaimed HBO documentary,
Unknown Soldier: Searching for a Father, the story of his
quest to learn about his father, U.S. Marine Lt. Jack Hulme, who
in 1969 was killed in action in Vietnam when John Hulme was three
weeks old.
Raquel Welch, who made a Bob Hope
tour trip to Vietnam in 1967, and John Hulme received the VVA
President’s Award for Excellence in the Arts at the Saturday night
Awards Banquet, which was emceed by VVA member Troy Evans, the
veteran Hollywood character actor best known for his recurring
roles on China Beach and ER. Evans, in fact, reprised one of his
China Beach bits, “Sarge’s Rules for How to Stay Alive in Vietnam”
on stage. That included the old chestnut: “When you’ve secured an
area, don’t forget to tell the enemy. They may have other plans.”
Also receiving an Excellence in the Arts Award: Wayne Karlin, the
author of—among many other acclaimed works—the novel Lost
Armies and the memoir Rumors and Stones. Karlin, a
former Marine helicopter doorgunner, is one of the finest, most
accomplished, and most honored writers to come out of the Vietnam
War.
The Awards Banquet concluded with a tribute to retiring VVA
President Tom Corey, who said that while he was stepping down as
President, he would continue to be an active veterans’ advocate
and work with VVA for years to come.
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