Remembering the fallen: For some people memorial day is every day

Four years ago Greg Saroyan wrote just an amazing article in USA Today. The title is stunning in its simplicity. He called it “For some people memorial day is every day.” Let me, if you will, read just a portion of that article. And then tell you about two friends who lost their lives in Iraq.

He writes,

For grieving families the gathering place is section 60 at Arlington National Cemetery which has become a memorial to the sacrifices in Iraq and Afghanistan. More  than 400 US troops killed in those countries are buried in section in 60, several hundred yards from Pres. John F. Kennedy’s grave.

…  from a distance section 60 resembles much of Arlington cemetery where 300,000 are interred beneath but a closer look reveals greater splashes of color were families keep replenishing graveside flower  arrangements

Mementoes, many from children or former comrades, are tucked next to headstones: construction-paper memorial cards in a child’s scrawl, medals and military insignia, teddy bears and stuffed Easter bunnies.

There is also a constant outpouring of grief, from those who shed quiet tears to the inconsolable. A father lies prostrate on his son’s grave; a mother sits in a thunderous downpour seemingly unaware her lawn chair is sinking into the softening earth.

“When you’re there, I feel like I’m totally focused on my own grief. And then each of the moms, they would just come up and kind of touch you on the shoulder. You turn around and they look into your eyes and tell you they’re sorry,” says Regina “Gina” Barnhurst.

One Christmas Eve, Leesa Philippon was among the first to pierce that veil of sorrow and gently pull Barnhurst into the club of grieving families.

“Gina was kneeling at her son’s site writing and had lit candles,” Philippon recalls. “I jumped out of the car, and I walked close to her, called her name and then immediately hugged her and introduced myself. She was so alone and in deep pain.”

I knew Leesa’s son, a Marine who is interned in Arlington. His name is Lcpl. Lawrence Philippon. A graduate of Conard High School, Larry chose the US Marines over college. His parents tell me 9-11 affected him greatly. For him it became a mission, even before he enlisted.

Larry was already an honored member of the United States Marines, a member of the color guard at Ronald Reagan’s funeral. Larry did not have to go to Iraq but like so many others he badgered the Marines until they let him go. Lisa Philippon remembers the day he left for Iraq. She said she did a flashback to the day she waved goodbye to him as he left for his first day in kindergarten.. Lisa  and Ray were never to see their son again, killed in action while hunting AQ house to house in Iraq. Today he is buried in Arlington Cemetery. Today I mourn the death of a great American hero Lance Cpl. Lawrence Philippon.

360 miles north of Larry’s resting place is the grave site  of another great American hero, Sgt. Felix Delgreco Junior. Felix grew up in Simsbury, played Little League (I know because I coached his team), went on to excel in high school and could probably have gone to any college he wanted. In Simsbury he was known as a brainiac. But, he too felt a calling that grew every day in his heart. Rejected by the Army for being, well a little too heavy, Felix trained night and day to get in shape so that the Army could never say no. When the Army finally accepted him, little did they know they were taking on a man would become one of their greatest soldiers.

He served with distinction in Bosnia and like Larry he too did not have to go to Iraq. But he volunteered and here’s why. In a letter he wrote just before his death to his parents, he told them he wasn’t sure if there were weapons of mass destruction … and didn’t care. What did matter were the children of Iraq. What mattered to him was that they would have the same opportunity he had to grow up free, to excel, to become whatever they wanted. This is what drove Sgt. del Greco.

Felix lost his life in Iraq when his convoy was ambushed and he took upon himself to grab the gun in the Humvee turret to protect his brothers. He died a hero.

This is the way America has been since its founding. Both my Dad, a Lieutenant on the USS Missouri BB63 (shown here as a newly minted Ensign), and and my step Dad, a lieutenant and Marine pilot, served together at Okinawa. Both survived, but their service left an indelible mark on their hearts. When my father passed, he asked before his death that his headstone simply read Lt AP Vicevich USN (active duty from 1942-1946, although he remained in the USNR for sometime after that).It is more than a calling … it is part of who you are.

I could quote George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Gen. Eisenhower, or my dad’s favorite, Gen. Douglas MacArthur. All good and necessary. But for me all you need to know is that since 1776 each service member felt that same calling in their heart. To defend and protect the Republic. To make us safe and in the process preserve for future generations the freedom the justice that is the American way.

May God rest their souls. May we never forget.

NOTE: I will be speaking Monday in Simsbury after the Memorial Day parade, one of the finest and largest in the state.

Plus … Lcpl. Lawrence Philippon’s story will be featured during a Memorial Day Television Tribute in Washington D.C. … to be aired live Sunday night at 8PM on PBS. It will be hosted by Gen Colin Powell.

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Jim Vicevich

Jim is a veteran broadcaster and conservative/libertarian blogger with more than 25 years experience in TV and radio. Jim's was the long-term host of The Jim Vicevich Show on WTIC 1080 in Hartford from 2004 through 2019. Prior to radio, Jim worked as a business and financial reporter for NBC30 - the NBC owned TV station in Hartford - and as business editor at WFSB-TV in Hartford for 14 years while earning six Emmy nominations and three Telly Awards.

5 Comments

  1. SoundOffSister on May 28, 2011 at 7:40 pm

    That is my favorite picture of Dad.
    My heartfelt condolences to the Philippons and the Delgreco families, and to all the families who have lost their sons or daughters in service of this country.
    We are both better and safer because of?your sacrifice.
    Thank you.



  2. ricbee on May 28, 2011 at 8:19 pm

    My Dad & uncles all served & all returned even Uncle Don who landed on Okinawa & still will not talk about it. I took the waters in Nam & returned a new man, sorry,a man,made ready for the? rigors of daily life.



  3. Lynn on May 29, 2011 at 8:09 am

    Thank you, As I read this post, Lcpl. Lawrence Philippons and Sgt. Felix Delgreco, Jr. came to life for me. What wonderful courageous young men. We need to keep telling the personal stories of our troops, so that we never forget their sacrifice and that of their families. I know that they would never ask it of us, but I hope we always keep the USA worthy of their sacrifice.



  4. JollyRoger on May 29, 2011 at 5:21 pm

    Please don’t forget the living.? Jim did a story a few years ago about PSU and their video tutorial on how to deal with (disgruntled or angry???) veterans…? I did 6.5 yrs in the service, saved up $25K while living on ships, falling asleep standing up in small boats with an M16 at port arms, sweating into a puddle in the engine room for almost every ship’s evolution…? And when I finally got to the PSU Bursar’s Office, some hippie woman named Nancy Eberley was annoyed that I could receive grants while having ~ $25,000 in the bank!?? I was there studying “graffiti as an art form”, among other crap while this hippie woman in the bursar’s office was annoyed that I’d saved for college while some sideways-hat-wearing graffiti artist who was driving a $25,000 sports car and had nothing but paint cans in his pockets needed funding- poor boy! There should be no stigma in going the hard route while so many students rely on mommy and daddy or hand-outs- for-nothing from government bureaucrats!? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsOsdGtBBTg?? I will never encourage my son to gamble his life for such an ungrateful nation!



  5. Anne-EH on May 30, 2011 at 9:24 am

    On this Memorial Day 2011, I want to also remember both Sergeant Steven Joseph DeLuzio of the Army/Army National Guard who died late last summer in Afghanistan and is a cousin of a good friend of mine and also my late father, Vincent E. Volowski, who served in the United States Coast Guards during World War 2. In memory of my late father, it is both Memorial Day and Father’s Day.

    I want to also give a SHOUT-OUT to my nephew-in-law Richard Labere, who served in the Vermont National Guards, now back for good from Afghanistan and my brother-in-law, Royce Marshal who was in the United States Air Force in Vietnam.

    THANK-YOU Jim in SHOUTOUT for that picture of your late father serving in the United States Navy during World War 2. Your father did a wonderful job rasing both you and your siblings.

    Have A Good And Blessed Memorial Day Holiday Jim.



Ray saluting Philippon funeral

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