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Author and former Army Staff Sergeant shares combat stories

ELLISVILLE – Real combat is nothing like what Hollywood has created in movies like “Saving Private Ryan,” according to former Army Staff Sergeant and author, David Bellavia.  The guest speaker for Jones County Junior College’s Charles Pickering Honors Institute shared how he faced the realities of war with students.

“Fallujah is like the Super Bowl of war,” said Bellavia.  “In one encounter, this guy was choking me and I could have put my finger in his eye but I couldn’t do it….His 45 pistol went off by my ear and now I’m deaf and bleeding and this dude starts biting my hand like an animal!”

As Bellavia was sharing his vivid and terrifying memories of fighting in some of the most heated battles of the Iraq war, the platoon commander admitted he was not prepared for battle.

“As an infantryman, I wanted to be in the battle but I was in Kosovo and we didn’t see any action until we got to Iraq in 2004,” said Bellavia.  “I didn’t know what to expect because I didn’t know what war was like.  However, (during training) I thought if I could be worse than what I thought combat would be like, we’d be ready.”

However he discovered no one could prepare for what they found when the Division arrived in Fallujah. The New York native led his men into a battle encountering an enemy that used high amounts of epinephrine and other drugs to tenaciously attack them.  Feeling like a caged dog fighting for his life, Bellavia managed to survive.

“I hope you never have to see combat but if you do, never back down for what you believe in because the enemy is hell bent on destroying your world,” he said. “You can’t understand or rationalize with the enemies’ ideology because it doesn’t make sense to us.  They are judged by the quality of their death.  They are rewarded in heaven for what they do on earth,” said Bellavia.  “My goal was to protect and avenge…your way of life, back here in the U.S.”

Touring the country speaking about his six years in the Army, the Iraq veteran found a way to continue his service to his country.  The co-founder for the non-partisan veteran’s advocacy group, Vets for Freedom organization, encouraged students to find a way to serve in their hometown.

“You don’t have to serve your country by grabbing a rifle or grenade. You know service is paramount; it’s what makes our culture and our way of life so great. That you can serve your country just by walking out the door and doing things in your community,” said Bellavia, whose list of military honors includes the Silver Star, the Bronze Star, and the Conspicuous Service Cross, New York State’s highest combat valor award.

JCJC student Chris George and David Bellavia discover they were in the same division

Sitting in the audience remembering with Bellavia was JCJC freshman and fellow soldier, Chris George of Hattiesburg.  He was amazed to discover the two served in the same division, during the same time.

George explained, “I was in the college bookstore this morning and saw Bellavia’s book, ‘House to House: An Epic Memoir of War’, about door-to-door close combat in Iraq, and I recognized the patch in Bellavia’s picture.  As I flipped through the book I recognized some of the men who he memorialized in his book.  I eventually found out he was speaking today so I had to meet him!”

After Bellavia’s lecture, the former Infantry Army Staff Sergeant met with this fellow soldier and exchanged memories of their time together in Iraq.

“This is a small world,” said Bellavia obviously touched by the brief encounter.

George explained he wasn’t on the front lines.  As part of the 201st support battalion, 1st Infantry Division, the JCJC computer service technology major kept night vision goggles and other equipment working.  “Bellavia’s guys protected us,” said George.  “We knew a lot of the same people and shared a lot of the same experiences.  It was pretty cool getting to meet him.”

Bellavia and his platoon were the subjects of the Time magazine cover story, “Into the Hot Zone,” and were awarded the prestigious Presidential Unit Citation.

Museum of Art Opens With Iraq War Photo Exhibit by U.S. Soldier

Hattiesburg, MS – An array of eclectic media will fill the walls of The University of Southern Mississippi Museum of Art for the inaugural exhibit of the New Year.

The opening reception for works by Hattiesburg photographer Lt. David Holland and sculptor/artist Claudia DeMonte begin at 4 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 27 in the museum.

Lt. David Holland took 25 photos of life on the street of Baghdad during his tour of duty in 2008. (Submitted photo)

Holland took 25 gripping photographs of life on the streets of Baghdad during his 2008 tour of Iraq with the U.S. Army National Guard. For one year, Holland never went out in the streets without two things: his Nikon camera and rifle.

“While on missions, I was forced to view the world with a military mindset, ready to defend my country and my fellow soldiers and the countless innocent people that are helpless to defend themselves in the face of war,” Holland said.

Raised in a small town in North Mississippi, Holland discovered his passion for art and photography during his college days. Assigned as a military engineer, not a photojournalist, Holland felt compelled to document the hardships he witnessed firsthand in the poorest neighborhood of Baghdad. The exhibit titled, “Baghdad Beyond the Wire” offers an artist’s view of the capital of Iraq in the last years of the war.

“I was required to keep an engineer’s mindset. But I carried with me and continue to carry with me the mindset of an artist. It is from all three perspectives that my photography emerges.”

With thousands of photos from which to choose, Holland selected a few to display in Hattiesburg museums. Twenty more of Holland’s photos will be showcased in the new gallery on the first floor of Cook Library. Twenty others will soon be displayed in the Armed Forces Museum of Camp Shelby starting Feb. 15. A beautiful catalogue of Holland’s best 125 shots titled “Baghdad Beyond the Wire, Faces from the Fair Garden” will be available the day of the opening reception at the museum.

The Jan. 27 opening will also feature DeMonte’s showcase of a range of media from bronze sculptures to works made in fabric, pewter and wood. Her work forces the viewers to confront their own conceptions of global culture and the primitive. With each medium, she combines sobering commentary on the status of women in the world with lighthearted humor.

“For the last thirty years, my work has dealt with the roles of women in contemporary societies. Working in series, using various media, each body of work focuses on various aspects of gender issues. I want my work to challenge our ideas about women’s everyday lives and the concept of beauty in our global culture,” said DeMonte.

With more than 60 one-person and 300 group exhibitions nationally, DeMonte’s work is in numerous museum collections and public commission spaces. Southern Miss is showcasing a traveling display and retrospective of 30 years of DeMonte’s work titled, “Opera di Donna.”

“In Italian it simply means ‘work by a woman,’” said Dr. Jan Siesling, museum director. “It refers to her ancestry and its relative mystery will, I hope, stir the curiosity of our public.”

The museum is located in the Fine Arts Building on the Southern Miss campus in Hattiesburg. Admission is free and open to the public Tuesday-Thursday from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m.-4 pm. For more information, call 601.266.5200.

Southern Miss Lean Enterprise Center Helps Grow Mississippi’s Economy

HATTIESBURG, Miss. – Retention and expansion of existing businesses is a key strategy in economic development and, in this knowledge-driven economy, universities are in a prime position to make significant contributions.

Mississippi’s manufacturers, now more than ever, must be efficient and profitable to succeed in a competitive global market, and The University of Southern Mississippi’s Lean Enterprise Center (LEC) is helping them do just that.

“We’re helping Mississippi companies improve their bottom line, and in the process increasing awareness of the benefits of Lean practices,” said center director Ty Posey.

The Lean Enterprise Center’s mission is to help manufacturers in the state improve competitiveness through understanding and implementation of lean principles, from the company office to the shop floor. Lean principles are components of a popular management strategy designed to meet customer expectations while reducing time and errors between customer order and factory shipment.

The center’s services are paying great dividends for its clients, said former director Steve Miller, now with the university’s National Center for Spectator Sports Safety and Security. “What the center provides is not only cost savings, but the right investments in people and equipment,” said Miller. “I believe that captures the true essence of economic development.”

The numbers bear out Miller’s words. During a national survey conducted by the MEP in the fourth quarter of 2009, four Mississippi manufacturers who secured services from the Lean Enterprise Center reported a total quantified dollar impact of more than $4 million, which includes an increase in sales, retained sales and cost savings.

A jobs impact of 35, which includes positions gained and retained, was also reported, as were positive numbers in infrastructure investment and workforce practices.

Jeanette James of Pioneer Aerospace in Columbia, Miss. works on a troop harness used by the U.S. military’s airborne troops. The company, which employs 340 people from a 11 Mississippi counties, has become more efficient and profitable with help from the University of Southern Mississippi’s Lean Enterprise Center. (Photo courtesy of Pioneer Aerospace)

Pioneer Aerospace in nearby Columbia, Miss. is one of these companies. It produces parachute systems and other products for the U.S. military. According to the survey, it enjoyed a $500,000 increase in sales and creation of five new jobs.

Chris Powell, director of operations for Pioneer Aerospace, credits the services of Lean Enterprise Center for helping his company achieve those numbers.

“In 2000, we found ourselves struggling with changes in our industry and our customer demands,” he said of the company, which began in the early 1930s as Reliant Manufacturing and now employs 340. “Quality issues, cost reductions, short lead times and an aging workforce made it difficult for us to compete.”

After the company engaged the LEC’s assistance, Powell said Pioneer Aerospace went from a piece rate manufacturing plant to a highly efficient, lean production facility. He praised the center’s direct, hands-on training with employees, which in one instance helped reduce production lead time from 29 to seven days.

Hands-on training and practical applications of the techniques and tools of lean manufacturing were also especially helpful, he said, with increased demand for the company’s products due to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

“The experience and knowledge we’ve gained from the LEC has changed our company’s culture at all levels, and enabled our employees to be empowered with lean thinking and committed to improving the company’s performance,” Powell said.

Founded in 2001 through the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), the Southern Miss LEC is supported through the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology, which promotes innovation and industrial competitiveness. The center’s services include consultation and customized on-site applications and workshops using Lean principles. Outcomes include reduced inventory, production lead time and costs, thereby increasing capacity, productivity, profits and the potential for higher sales volumes.

To learn more about the Southern Miss LEC and its services, contact Posey at 601.266.4607.