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~FReeper Canteen~Veteran's Day~ Nov. 11, 2004~
November 11, 2004 | bentfeather and The Canteen Crew

Posted on 11/10/2004 8:03:44 PM PST by Soaring Feather


For the freedom you enjoyed yesterday
Thank the Veterans who served in the United States Armed Forces.

Veteran's Day


National Anthem


Grand Old Flag

On this day we Thank You Vets
for standing on the side of right.
For standing in the muddy trench
before the enemy of freedom.
For marching on the side of justice
to keep a nation free,
For standing in the line of fire,
to hold off oppression
to hold a child not yours,
to build a school for those who have none
and to give a smile to anyone who needs one.
We Thank You Vets, for all you've done.



Wake Up Call










TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Foreign Affairs; Free Republic; Government; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons
KEYWORDS: information; military; troopsupport; veteransday
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To: Kathy in Alaska
Ewww. Wet and sticky with a side of mud and slush. Stay inside!

As you can see I haven't got the picture thing out of my system yet.

181 posted on 11/11/2004 8:33:42 AM PST by Laurita ("I love the smell of napalm in the morning . . . It smells like . . . VICTORY")
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To: Kathy in Alaska

!!!!!!!


182 posted on 11/11/2004 8:36:33 AM PST by stand watie ( being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: bentfeather
!!!!!!!!

yep, in about a week-seems like LONGER!

free dixie,sw

183 posted on 11/11/2004 8:37:14 AM PST by stand watie ( being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: Diva Betsy Ross

We were on our way to look for you. *HUGS*
Has the sickness finally left your house? How are the boys?


184 posted on 11/11/2004 8:37:45 AM PST by Kathy in Alaska (Support Our Troops! Operation Season's Greetings - www.proudpatriots.com)
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To: Kathy in Alaska
CUTE pup!

free dixie,sw

185 posted on 11/11/2004 8:41:29 AM PST by stand watie ( being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: Laurita

Gotta go to work here really quick. I'm late leaving. Keep up the picture thing. You are finding great stuff. I'm off to work.


186 posted on 11/11/2004 8:41:43 AM PST by Kathy in Alaska (Support Our Troops! Operation Season's Greetings - www.proudpatriots.com)
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To: All
check out the URBAN MYTH thread on "spitters"!

guaranteed to get your back up.

free dixie,sw

187 posted on 11/11/2004 8:42:48 AM PST by stand watie ( being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: bentfeather

Thank you for today's thread Queenie!! :o)


188 posted on 11/11/2004 8:45:19 AM PST by StarCMC (It's God's job to forgive Bin Laden; it's our job to arrange the meeting.)
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To: StarCMC

Morning, Momma!! How goes it??


189 posted on 11/11/2004 8:47:53 AM PST by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte.~)
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To: bentfeather

Good morning bentfeather ~ it was my pleasure.


190 posted on 11/11/2004 8:48:25 AM PST by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: Kathy in Alaska

Hot black coffee with Kathy ~ thanks for waking up! :)


191 posted on 11/11/2004 8:50:48 AM PST by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: bentfeather; All

 

THANK GOD FOR VETERANS
By Kathy (Kennedy) Axe

 
Thank God for all of those who fight,
So that we are safe by day and night.
Thank God for all the sons and daughters
Who fought and died across the waters.

 
Thank God for those whose courage shown
And for acts of valor still unknown.

 
Thank God for all the men and women of pride
Who lived, and loved, and fought, and died.
Thank God that they helped keep the peace,
And in His arms may they find eternal release.

 
Thank God for the Veterans who survived,
They still enrich our daily lives.
Thank God for them and thank them too,
A great debt of gratitude to them is due.

 
Hoist aloft the colors true,
The red, the white, and regal blue.
Thank God each time the colors wave,
For all our soldiers, so noble and brave.

 
When you hear a martial tune,
Think not of some forgotten dune.
Instead remember well with dignity,
Those who preserved freedom for you and me.

 
Remember as those notes are played,
They were not found wanting when the balance was weighed.

 
Thank God for Veterans one and all,
That answered YES when duty called.
Thank God for Veterans on Veteran's Day,
And thank our Veterans every day.

 
Thank you God for blessing me,
With two parents who helped gain the Victory.
So Mom and Dad, this poem's for you,
Thank God for all the Veterans, especially you.

 
All my love,
Kathy

 

To see more, click here!


192 posted on 11/11/2004 8:53:15 AM PST by StarCMC (It's God's job to forgive Bin Laden; it's our job to arrange the meeting.)
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To: bentfeather

Many thanks for the beautiful words.


193 posted on 11/11/2004 8:54:12 AM PST by Billthedrill
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To: Spotsy; MoJo2001; Kathy in Alaska; Bethbg79; LaDivaLoca; Fawnn; bentfeather; Ragtime Cowgirl; ...
The Iwo Jima Flag Raising

by Lieutenant Colonel Jon T. Hoffman, USMCR

[The rest of the story:]

“Early on the morning of 23 February 1945, the fourth day after the assault landing on Iwo Jima, Lieutenant Colonel Chandler W. Johnson, commander of 2d Battalion, 28th Marines, ordered First Lieutenant Harold G. Schrier to take forty men and secure the top of Mount Suribachi. Johnson handed the lieutenant a small American flag to raise over the summit. The patrol, climbing cautiously, reached the windswept crater of the extinct volcano by mid-morning. Schrier, Platoon Sergeant Ernest I. Thomas, Jr., Sergeant Henry O. Hansen, Corporal Charles W. Lindberg, and Privates First Class Louis C. Charo and James Michels quickly rigged the flag to a length of Japanese pipe and raised the colors. Staff Sergeant Louis R. Lowry, a combat photographer for Leatherneck magazine, who came up with the patrol, recorded the scene. Two enemy soldiers emerged from hiding; others threw grenades from a large cave. The Marines disposed of the opposition, and Lowry, trying to get out of the line of fire, tumbled down a rocky slope and broke his camera. Both he and is film survived the fall.

The Stars and Stripes flying over Iwo’s highest point brought cheers from the thousands of men on the beaches below. Ships sounded horns and whistles and many a man choked up. Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal, present as an observer, saw the national colors waving over this heavily fortified Japanese island on the path to Tokyo and predicted: ‘The raising of that flag on Suribachi means there will be a Marine Corps for the next five hundred years’.

Johnson realized that his flag (just 54 x 28) inches was too small to be seen all across the island, so he sent a lieutenant to obtain a larger flag from one of the landing ships. An officer of LST 779 gave the Marine the flag (96 x 56 inches) that the ship flew on Sundays and holidays. When Johnson received the folded colors, he passed them to Private First Class Rene A. Gagnon, a runner about to head up Suribachi to deliver radio batteries to Schrier. Gagnon climbed with four other men of Company E – Sergeant Michael Strank, Corporal Harlon H. Block, and Private First Class Franklin R. Sousley and Ira A. Hayes – who were laying communications wire to the top. They passed Marines sealing caves and blowing up bunkers to silence opposition on the slopes. Three photojournalists – Staff Sergeant William H. Genaust, Private First Class Robert R. Campbell, and civilian Joe Rosenthal of the Associated Press – had heard that a flag was to be raised and they set out to record the event. Half way up they met Lowry coming down. Lowry told them of the first flag raising.

When the three photographers reached the summit, they found five Marines and a Navy corpsman clustered around a length of pipe, preparing the larger flag to replace the first one. They carefully wrapped the ensign around one end of the pipe to keep it from touching the ground. All three photographers moved into position just in time to capture the moment. As the pipe rose, the strong wind caught the flag, unfurled it, and snapped it out to full extension. The men nearest the base steadied the pole and then reached upward to jam it down into the ground, while the others gathered rocks to pile around it. Genaust’s movie camera captured those few seconds of action in color, while Campbell, shooting from another angle, caught, in a single black-and-white still image, both the smaller flagpole being lowered to the ground and the new one going up. Rosenthal, standing near Genaust, clicked his shutter at what he considered to be ‘the peak of the action’, but he felt that the shot was ‘mediocre’.

He asked the Marines and corpsmen in the vicinity to stand near the flag, and a group, imitating the classic Japanese banzai pose, shouted and raised their helmets and weapons in triumph. But no one there felt that the moment had any great significance.

Rosenthal delivered his film to a ship that afternoon. From there, it went by seaplane to Guam, where it was developed. The pool photo editor passed the flag-raising photo by radio to the States. The simple, dramatic image made the front page all across the country and stirred the hearts of nearly all who saw it. Among the few who were not moved were the editors of Life , the leading picture magazine of the day. They were certain it had been posed and did not use it. Time-Life war correspondent Robert L. Sherrod seemed to confirm their doubts when he filed a dispatch asserting that the famous picture was a ‘phony’ staged by Rosenthal after he missed out on the original flag-raising. The photographer’s own caption added to the confusion by saying it ‘signal[ed] the capture of this key position,’ thus appearing to indicate that this had been the first flag to go up. The Associated Press queried Rosenthal, ascertained the facts, and got Sherrod’s erroneous story quashed, but not before a radio program had quoted from it.

Toward the end of March, Time published a brief article explaining the two flag-raisings and noting that Rosenthal’s ‘unposed’ work was already ‘the most widely printed photograph of World War II’. At this time, Life finally published the picture and the story of the two flags. The public cared nothing for the details and continued to swoon over Rosenthal’s compelling shot. The picture became the centerpiece of the Seventh War Bond Drive and won the Pulitzer Prize. The Post Office quickly issued a stamp of the scene that would sell in record numbers.



194 posted on 11/11/2004 8:55:14 AM PST by TexasCowboy (Texan by birth, citizen of Jesusland by the Grace of God)
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To: StarCMC

Lovely tribute to our Vets. Thank You, Star.


195 posted on 11/11/2004 8:59:40 AM PST by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte.~)
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To: TexasCowboy
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

free dixie,sw

196 posted on 11/11/2004 8:59:56 AM PST by stand watie ( being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: trussell
image Hubert of Liege is the patron saint of dogs. He'll watch over Trixie.

Saint Hubert of Liege

197 posted on 11/11/2004 8:59:59 AM PST by Laurita ("I love the smell of napalm in the morning . . . It smells like . . . VICTORY")
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To: TexasCowboy

Good morning, TC!

Thank You for:

The Iwo Jima Flag Raising
by Lieutenant Colonel Jon T. Hoffman, USMCR

Thank You for your service.




198 posted on 11/11/2004 9:02:55 AM PST by Soaring Feather (~Poetry is my forte.~)
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To: TexasCowboy
Toda is Veteran's Day, the day we salute those who gave up their lives on the battlefield so that we could have the opportunity to be here and participate in this exercise of our basic freedoms as written in the U.S. Constitution.

To all our veterans past and present, Thank you.

199 posted on 11/11/2004 9:03:17 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: Laurita

LAURITA!!! I read your profile page! HUGS and thanks so much for the cute graphic -and of course for what you do. May God watch over you and your family as you stand for our freedom. ( BTW- I am the dsylexic-typo Queen.. I could teach you a thing or two!!)

;}

I will keep you on your feet that is for sure!


200 posted on 11/11/2004 9:03:29 AM PST by Diva Betsy Ross (God bless the Swift Boat Vets!)
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