Latest News

A look back at this week in Shelter Island history
ZBA: Both yes and no on controversial house
Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com
Goody was too good: Softball ace part of a winning team
Weekly police blotter: Six motorists ticketed
Dark skies again: Board hears from Manor, Zella and Grucci
Dougherty and Shepherd square off at Town Hall
Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board
Indie bookseller flourishing on Island
South Ferry crew quickly douses car fire

Sports

Eye on the Ball: Writer Vecsey takes sports seriously

May 23, 2013

Goody was too good: Softball ace part of a winning team

May 23, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Education

Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board

May 21, 2013

Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.

May 20, 2013

The Incredible Hulk? Spider Man? Mr. Becker, is that you?

May 16, 2013

Business

Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com

May 23, 2013

North Fork farmers say they're not the one with issues

May 19, 2013

Chamber gives Town Board date for holiday fireworks

May 16, 2013

Community

Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com

May 23, 2013

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Paper gobbler set to roll into town Saturday

May 15, 2013

Obituaries

Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper

May 20, 2013

Obituaries: Elmer August Kestler Jr., Lawrence William Sliker

May 9, 2013

Obituaries: Draper, Rodgers

March 7, 2013

Real Estate

ZBA: Both yes and no on controversial house

May 23, 2013

Good grief: ‘Grievance Day’ looms at Assessor’s office

May 14, 2013

High end real estate deals escalate

May 1, 2013

Opinion

Eye on the Ball: Writer Vecsey takes sports seriously

May 23, 2013

Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me

May 21, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Featured Letter: Military helicopters are instruments of life

To The Editor:

Two weeks ago, Mike Mundy wrote an exceptional, emotional letter to the Reporter in which he discussed the upcoming Spur Ride but finished by juxtaposing the joy that he felt in welcoming his son home from Afghanistan recently with the anguish Chrys Kestler must have felt knowing that her son, Lt. Joe Theinert had not been able to make the same trip.

It was a poignant reminder to all of us that there is a terrible randomness to war: some are tragic victims of the everyday violence and some are not.

Both Mike Mundy and Chrys Kestler, whose husband is now deployed to Afghanistan, understand that awful uncertainty.

It would appear that neither Mel Mendelssohn nor Jean Lawless understand the significance of the Spur Ride at all. Ms. Lawless calls the helicopter involved in the controversy “an instrument of death,” thereby displaying a complete lack of knowledge of an H-34’s role in Vietnam.

While I was a young Marine Lieutenant on the DMZ in 1967-68, my battalion was supported by the very squadron in which the helicopter that will land here on Sunday was assigned. That squadron of helicopters brought us food, water, mail, ammunition, repair parts and other necessities. It flew us to Da Nang so we could go on R&R or return home. It came to our aid, often under intense fire, to move our wounded to medical facilities. It brought us reinforcements when we were outnumbered.

While each was armed with machine guns, the helicopters were used for transport, logistics and medical evacuation, not offensive combat support. Far from an “instrument of death,” they were instruments of support, of life, of relief and there is not a Marine who ever served in Vietnam who isn’t full of gratitude and respect for the men who flew them.

I won’t engage in a debate with Mr. Mendelssohn on his view of the Vietnam War. He has a constitutional right to express his opinion, one of many rights that I and every other man and woman in our military swore an oath to defend.

I will, however, argue with his “humble opinion” that landing “a Vietnam-era Marine helicopter” on Shelter Island “constitutes a symbolic insult to the millions of Americans” whose protests allegedly brought the war to a close.

If landing a helicopter one time on Shelter Island is an insult to Mr. Mendelssohn, then surely my very presence, and that of dozens of other Vietnam veterans, must be an unbearable daily insult also.

The Spur Ride is not “a memorial to defeat and disillusion” and it is not “a staging area for further military recruitment,” as he suggests. The Spur Ride is designed to express our respect and gratitude to young Americans, including Lt. Joe Theinert, who volunteered to join our military and then paid a heavy price for it. That is not an insult to anyone.

I wonder if Mr. Mendelssohn finds the very existence of Congress, that noble entity that voted to send our troops into Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan in the first place, to be as much of a symbolic insult as landing a helicopter on Shelter Island?

KEVIN BROOKS
Colonel, USMCR (Ret)
Shelter Island

Read more Letters to the Editor in this week’s Shelter Island Reporter available on newsstands or by clicking for the E-Paper.