Tuesday, 16 April 2013

10 Most Famous Actors Who Served in the Military

While today it is generally more common for an actor to entertain soldiers rather than be one, there was a time when even fame and stardom was not enough to keep some people out of war. As a result, during the Second World War a number of actors served in the armed forces—most through enlisting—with a few of them seeing considerable combat. Of course, most of those on this list became actors long after the war, but there are a few who left promising acting careers to serve their country and need to be recognized for their bravery and sacrifice. Because it is impossible to determine who deserves to be first, this is an alphabetical listing of those who actually saw considerable combat. (Unfortunately I am forced to omit dozens of actors who also served in WWII or have served since in peacetime—such as Elvis Presley—though their service is greatly appreciated as well.)

10. Eddie Albert


People generally remember Eddie Albert as the inept farmer and perennial straight man on the goofy hit 1960’s TV show Green Acres, but few know that he also won the Bronze Star with Combat “V” for his actions during the invasion of Tarawa. In November, 1943, Albert (then a young Navy Lieutenant by the name of Eddie Heimberger—his real name), rescued dozens of stranded and wounded Marines from the landing craft he commanded, much of the time while under heavy enemy machine-gun fire.

9. James Arness


Think Matt Dillon wasn’t for real? The fictional old west sheriff was every bit as tough as the six-foot, seven-inch tall actor who played him. As a rifleman for 3rd Infantry Division, Arness landed at Anzio, Italy in January, 1944, where he was wounded by enemy fire and evacuated. After undergoing surgery several times, Arness was honorably discharged in 1945, having received the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart medals. His wounds bothered him after the war, resulting in acute leg pain that made it increasingly difficult to mount a horse (Matt Dillon without a horse? Unthinkable!) It became so bad he had to undergo a series of operations to remove bullet fragments that had fused into the bone. Now that’s one tough hombre.

8. Mel Brooks


Hard to believe the off-the-wall director and actor famous for such goofy films as Young Frankenstein, Blazing Saddles, and Space Balls was a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute (VMI), but it’s true. A corporal in the combat engineers, his job was to destroy enemy obstacles and included occasionally defusing mines—a job that required a steady nerve, a calm demeanor, and no doubt a good sense of humor. He also fought in the famous Battle of the Bulge in December of 1944 and was even rumored to have been known to answer German propaganda that was being broadcast at regular intervals from a loudspeaker by shouting “Toot Toot Tootsie goodbye!” I guess Mel Brooks was Mel Brooks even back then.

7. Art Carney


Before becoming Jackie Gleason’s lovable but bumbling side kick on the hit 1950s TV sitcom The Honeymooners, Carney fought at Normandy in July of 1944 as part of a machine gun squad. While performing that dangerous task, he was hit in the leg by mortar shrapnel and sent home—where he walked with a limp the rest of his life. He later quipped about his military service by saying that he “Never fired a shot and maybe never wanted to. I really cost the government money.”

6. Charles Durning


This versatile actor with a long acting career and over 100 movies to his credit was one of the most decorated soldiers turned actors of World War Two. A combat infantryman during the war, he survived the bloody landings at Omaha Beach in June of 1944 and was even capture by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge in December, 1944 (though he managed to escape). Awarded three Purple Hearts and a Silver Cross for bravery, he was to spend months after the war recovering from the many wounds he received before being discharged and beginning his long acting career—a career, by the way, that is still going strong today.

5. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.


Few would have guessed the dashing actor and first husband to Joan Crawford would give up the sparkling lights of Hollywood to serve his country, but that’s exactly what he did. Commissioned an officer at the outbreak of World War Two, the actor served on Lord Louis Mountbatten’s staff in England where he observed the British make cross-channel raids on German positions designed to confuse and deceive the enemy. Taking that knowledge back to America, he was made part of a unit called the “Beach Jumpers” whose job it was to make bogus beach landings designed to confuse the enemy as to the location of the real landings. Serving in this capacity in North Africa, Sicily, and France, he was awarded several medals for bravery, chief among them the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, the British Distinguished Service Cross, and even the French Croix de guerre. Fairbanks stayed in the Naval Reserve after the war and ultimately retired a captain in 1954.

4. Russell Johnson


Hard to imagine the mild-mannered and slightly nerdy (but in a good way) professor on the popular but utterly inane 60’s sitcom Gilligan’s Island was an Army Air Corp bomber pilot who flew no less than 44 missions over the Pacific during World War Two. In one mission, his B-25 was shot down over enemy held territory in the Philippines, forcing him to crash land, which resulted in two broken ankles. He was also awarded the Air Medal before being discharged in 1945 and going on to use his GI Bill money to finance his way through acting school (which is where it is assumed he first learned how to make a radio out of a coconut. Too bad he couldn’t figure out how to fix a hole in a boat.)

3. Lee Marvin


This actor, known for his tough guy roles, was a real life roughian who left school to join the United States Marine Corps, serving as a Scout Sniper in the 4th Marine Division in the South Pacific. He was wounded in action during the Battle of Saipan and saw most of his platoon killed. Marvin was wounded by machine gun fire, which severed his sciatic nerve, for which he was awarded the Purple Heart medal and given a medical discharge. The tough old Marine died of a heart attack in 1987 and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery where his headstone reads “Lee Marvin, PFC US Marine Corps, World War II”. Once a Marine, always a Marine.

2. Audie Murphy


Murphy was a true American hero and the only actor to have been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. In fact, Murphy was the most decorated American soldier of World War II who, besides receiving the CMOH, was also awarded 32 additional U.S. and foreign medals and citations, including five from France and one from Belgium. He later went on to appear in 44 films—mostly westerns and a few army films—before he died in a plane crash near Roanoke, Virginia three weeks shy of his 46th birthday. Not surprisingly, he was buried with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery.

1. Jimmy Stewart


Stewart was an up and coming actor when he chose to give it all up and join the Army Air Corp in 1942. Considering how dangerous the skies over Europe were and the very high rate of attrition suffered by allied pilots, it’s a miracle he survived at all. Flying no fewer than 20 combat missions over Germany at the controls of the famous B-17 bomber, he received six battle stars, the Distinguished Flying Cross with Oak Leaf Clusters, the Air Medal and even the famous French decoration, the Croix de Guerre with Palm. He even stayed active in the U.S. Air Force reserve after the war, reaching the rank of Brigadier General before retiring in 1968.
Honorable Mentions: Jason Robards (he was at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941); Tom Posten (flew C-47s over Normandy dropping paratroopers on D-Day. Anyone who saw episode 2 of the HBO special Band of Brothers knows just how dangerous that was.); Clark Gable (flew on some combat missions over Germany in order to get some “realistic” training video. Couldn’t have done that if he were union.); Henry Fonda (another actor who left the glitter of Hollywood to serve in the U.S. Navy in WWII); and Jackie Coogan (flew commandoes in gliders into Japanese held territory in Burma.)
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Jeff Danelek is a Denver, Colorado author who writes on many subjects having to do with history, politics, the paranormal, spirituality and religion. To see more of his stuff, visit his website at www.ourcuriousworld.com.

10 Species That Could Most Realistically Be Cloned

Aside from a few minor successes here and there, cloning still evokes thoughts of pure science fiction, from Arnold Schwarzenegger to Star Wars. However, with each passing day, cloning is starting to become closer and closer to a legitimate scientific accomplishment. That fact got us to wondering what the most legitimate targets for cloning would be. What previously extinct species could make a comeback one day? Some of the prime candidates might be:

10. Huia

huia-birds
In the early 20th century, the Huia bird (native to New Zealand) was hunted to the point of extinction for a fashion trend. Thank the Prince of York, who later became King George V, for wearing a Huia feather in his hat, after a royal visit. That sparked a fashion craze that led to mass hunting and poaching; the last official sighting of a Huia was in the 1920′s.
However, there are many well-preserved Huia birds in museums. In the late 1990′s, the students at the Hastings Boys High School in New Zealand made an inquiry about cloning the Huia back into existence. The idea was approved, though it has not yet become a reality. Hopefully, if it does happen, we can get a tame flock of pretty Huia, not bent on vengeance, Alfred Hitchcock-style.

9. Carolina Parakeet

Carolina-Parakeet
The Carolina Parakeet was the only parakeet native to South Carolina. Most reports have it going extinct about a hundred years ago, both due to their feathers being popular in women’s hats, and having had a reputation as a nuisance and danger to cornfields.
Museums not only have stuffed parakeets, but also full and untouched eggs, making DNA cloning possible in theory.  Of course, locals in South Carolina have dismissed the idea as being “from Jurassic Park.” It is a dangerous thought: if they ever find out what we did to them, we could hardly hope to contain hundreds of years of killer parakeet gut instinct.

8. Dodo Birds

Dodo
The dodo was essentially a portly small pigeon with a distinctive beak. It went into extinction purely due to contact with sailors and pirates in their natural habitat. The dodo had never encountered a predator before, and would approach humans without fear. Big mistake: the pigs and dogs brought by humans would eat their eggs, and the humans found that their trusting nature made them easy to club on the head. A mere 80 years after first meeting us, the dodo were gone.
In 2007, a nearly full skeleton of a Dodo was recovered, which could be used to more fully map DNA, in hopes of one day cloning the species back into existence. Hopefully with less clubbing this time around.

7. Moa Birds

moa-birds
The Moa birds were hunted to extinction by the arrival of the Maori tribes in New Zealand, around the 13th century. At nearly four hundred pounds upon adulthood, the Moa were seen as an easy source of meat. However, the Moa may have well gone to extinction with even a mild hunting presence. Moa were slow to mature, and relatively easy to capture as eggs or as adolescents. Once a human element was introduced, the large flightless birds had little hope of achieving adulthood.
In 2009, a study concluded that new methods of gathering DNA could extract the DNA without destroying an entire feather. This made the possibility of cloning a Moa more plausible, though the impractically and slow growth of the species would probably still limit any examples to life in zoos. There would be little possibility of repopulating in the wild.

6. Pyrenean Ibex

Pyrenean-Ibex

The last known living Pyrenean Ibex died in 2000. The overall reason for extinction is unknown (hunting, competition for food, and disease were all listed as probable factors.) In 2009, researchers from Advanced Cell Technology were able to use DNA samples to un-extinct the Ibex for a few minutes, and actually gave birth to a female. Unfortunately, the Ibex only lived for a few minutes, due to lung problems. The experiment did raise hope though, not only for the Ibex, but also for other extinct species coming back to life.

5. Tasmanian Tiger

tasmanian-tiger
The “Tasmanian Tiger” or Thylacine, with its limited genetic diversity, weak bite, and susceptibility to the spread of disease, did not require human meddling to hasten its extinction in 1936.
Even today, with no hunting by humans, they would have a hard time surviving in the wild. DNA forms from Thylacines are also horribly fragmented and would make it hard to make even one sustainable animal. Though cloning them is very theoretically possible (their DNA has already been successfully inserted into mice,) the Tasmanian Tiger would likely have a limited existence outside of a protected zoo.

4. Passenger Pigeons

Passenger-Pigeon
It is easy to say that the literal destruction of the passenger pigeon in the 19th century was due to the lack of any conservation laws, because its absolutely true. The last known passenger pigeon died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1914.
In 2010, a potential full DNA strain of a passenger pigeon was constructed. There is a possibility of bringing the extinct bird back to life. However, the pigeon itself relied on mass flocks, numbering in the hundreds and thousands. It also relied on large forests, which we have less and less of every year. So, while the possibility of there one day again being Passenger Pigeons seems to be inching closer to reality, its population ever making a full-scale recovery seems highly unlikely.

3. Humans

Human-Cloning
In the present, the idea of human cloning faces more ethical issues than scientific ones. There are a number of ethical, as well as religious, concerns. However, strictly on the question as to whether it’s possible? Absolutely. Bringing back the dead, or making a “copy” of yourself, are all issues that will become the subject of increasingly serious debate in the coming years, which will only increase in frequency and volume as we inch closer to successfully doing so.

2. Wooly Mammoths

wooly-mammoth
Nearly intact Wooly Mammoths have been found in permafrost in places like Siberia. The trick to reviving these guys is to find an intact frozen cell, as well as a living one, in order to extract the DNA properly. It seems like a million-to-one shot but, if a living elephant could carry a mammoth to term, then the possibility does remain. A success story could also open the door to reviving species such as sabertooth tigers, wooly rhinoceroses, and giant sloths.

1.  Neanderthals

neanderthal
Recently, Harvard University geneticist Thomas Church raised the intriguing possibility that Neanderthal cloning was a possibility. Science fiction (and insurance company commercials) have long been enamored with the thought of “cavemen” astride in the modern world. However, that thought is usually reserved for the idea of thawing out a specimen who magically jumps back to life, rather than cloning new Neanderthals.
There is a lot of a professional skepticism as to whether Church’s plan would indeed work. There is also a debate as to purpose. Would you create a human-type creature merely for study, or would colonies of Neanderthals actually be established in the modern world?