'Solution for peace?'
U.S.S. Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor
Louie Levy of Thousand Oaks was 15 years old on Dec. 7, 1941 and living in Brooklyn, N.Y. People came out of their homes after hearing radio reports about the Japanese attack in Pearl Harbor, Levy said.
They knew that America was going to war, he said.
Levy loved airplanes and later attended the Academy of Aeronautics at La Guardia Airport in New York City. In 1944, he was drafted into the U.S. Army Air Forces where he helped work on guided missiles, a technology that was then in its infancy.
German scientists like Wernher von Braun joined the U.S. program and advanced it.
Although Levy declines to call himself a pacifist, his prose and poetry often put an emphasis on peace.
For more information on Levy, go to cyberwit.net and select reviews at the bottom of the page.
What follows is an untitled piece he wrote less than a year ago, inspired by a photograph that he shot several years ago, above, at the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor: O say; can we not yet dare to read of the Tomb Stoned list of War Casualties? A curious vacationing boy is seen through the camera lens of a surviving veteran He worries for all curious boys. . . yet not born That of many innocents, of past horrific wars-- Of playful grown boys alike, being dog tagged and robot'd to 'Kill or Be Killed,' lacking hope for ever lasting peace. . . Continuing Silhouetted Voices at grave sites ever curious "Why Must There be War?" Friends becoming Enemies None be victorious, as saddened Earth mortally inters all, yet to weed th' evil seed of hate--all the while-- 'Love' awaits, sprouting for the inherent flowering. . . 'Solution for Peace'


