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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day....12-29-03....Military Monday
Billie, The Mayor | December 29, 2003 | Billie, The Mayor

Posted on 12/29/2003 4:47:13 AM PST by The Mayor




A Few of FR's Finest
....Every Day
FR is a Treasure Trove of talented, compassionate, patriotic, wonderful people who gather every day to discuss the latest news and issues; salute and support our military and our leaders;  tell a few jokes;  learn a new word;  write poetry;  pray for those in need;  and congratulate those who are deserving. Thank you, Jim Robinson, for giving us the vehicle in which we can express ourselves.
Free Republic made its debut in September, 1996, and the forum was added in early 1997.   Over 100,000 people have registered for posting privileges on Free Republic, and the forum is read daily by tens of thousands of concerned citizens and patriots from all around the country and the world.






A Few of FR's Finest November 11, 2001

So many people have written me since my original Veteran's Day Tribute, asking how they, or a loved one, could be included in that tribute. Since I could no longer add the photos to the body of the thread, I had been including them in additional posts as I received enough to make another collage.
Still that didn't seem to be enough. I think there's never been a better nor more appropriate time to keep the faces of our own Veterans and Active Military in front of FReepers--every day! That's why I wanted to do yet another Daily Thread .....ABOUT FReepers .....and FOR FReepers. But not only about our Military FReepers; for all FReepers! Wouldn't it be nice to get to know a few of the other FReepers as well? That's why we've created a place for just that. This is a friendly room in JimRob's house where FReeper FRiends can gather every day and just say hello if that's all they want to do.
There's more of course. We sometimes feature different FReepers, with a little background information on who they are and what makes them who they are, along with a few photos you might not have seen on other threads; sometimes others write an essay for us to post as the feature for the day; sometimes our presentation is a human interest story found elsewhere that you might not have read; sometimes special holiday threads; but whatever the topic of the day, it is always with FR's Finest in mind and that is YOU!
If you would like to be featured, or would like to see someone else featured, please send me a private FR mail.
Every Monday we will post the photos of FR's Military Personnel that I have collected and put into groups; these will be available to view through a link the remainder of the week - every day just a click away. :)   If you would like to add a photo of yourself or a loved one in the military, past or present, please let me know; I will hold it until I have enough for a new group.
Thank you, and please have fun with us...every day! ~ Billie

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thank You For Serving Our Country!

TOP: Logos, SwedeGirl's hubby, Neil E Wright, FallGuy, 1John, Sneakypete
MIDDLE:  T'wit, COB1, LadyX, Dick Bachert, 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
BOTTOM:  YankeeinSC, Delta21, JoeSixPack1



TOP:  Bosniajmc, AFVetGal, Archy, A Navy Vet
MIDDLE:  4TheFlag, Aeronaut, 68Grunt, Xinga
BOTTOM:  Codger, AAABest, Clinton's A Liar, Duke809, dcwusmc



TOP:  mc5cents, Norb2569, LBGA's son, VanJenerette
MIDDLE:  Jim Robinson, KJenerette, davidosborne, KG9Kid
BOTTOM:  gwmoore, Equality7-2521, SAMWolf



TOP:  porgygirl, Phil V., MudPuppy, NorCoGOP
MIDDLE:  RaceBannon, OneidaM, rdb3, jwTexian
BOTTOM:  USMC Vet, TheMayor, Vineyard, rhododogma



TOP:  g'nad, AgThorn's son Justin, SLB, AgThorn's son Brett.
MIDDLE:  fish70, razorback-bert, CheneyChick,Leroy S Mort, Mark17.
BOTTOM:  Terry's Take, Taxman, DinkyDau.



TOP:  ValerieUSA's son Grant, SK1Thurman, kd5cts, RangerVetNam,
dansangel and .45man's son-in-law Tony
BOTTOM:  rangerX, Old China Hand, Trish, Howlin's dad, Mustang



TOP: ohioWfan's son, MamaBear's father-in-law, MamaBear's dad, ladtx
MIDDLE:  The Mayor's niece, M.Kehoe, Beach_Babe's son-in-law
BOTTOM:  deadhead's dad, HiJinx, Severa's hubby, viligantcitizen's granddad.



TOP:  spectr17, RightOnline, SERE_Doc, Tet68.
MIDDLE:  FutureSnakeEater, RightOnline's wife, CIApilot, Clamper1797
BOTTOM:  usmcobra, onedoug, DiverDave, Joe6-pack



TOP:  Q6-God, Scan59, Mama Bear and JKPhoto's son, ofMagog.
MIDDLE:  Big'ol_freeper, JustAmy's great uncle, Prodigal Son.
BOTTOM:  JustAmy's husband, JustAmy's brother-in-law, JustAmy's brother.



TOP:  dakine's wife, MeeknMing's dad, Auntbee's nephew, MilitiaMan7, AlasBabylon.
BOTTOM:  Joe Brower, Temple Owl, Temple Owl's wife, dutchess' dad, Aomagrat.



TOP:  ladtx #2 son; DiverDave's twin Don; petuniasevan and husband
poorman; Mustard; ladtx #1 son;
BOTTOM:  AlamoGirl's brother Floyd; AG's dad; AG's brother Jim (inset);
WVNan's husband; ladtx' Aunt Eva.



TOP: Mo1's dad; BuffyT's Uncle (right, w/ her dad & grandmother); Armymarinemom's 3 sons.
MIDDLE: ru4Liberty's dad; SheLion's husband, MaineRebel; wirestripper.
BOTTOM: fivetoes; bigghurtt; hurricane; ladtx' dad; Pippin's brother.





                     








THE WEEKEND THREAD

12-13,14-03 Week in Review

Opinions by our own 'King of Ping'
The guy's good, folks!
Thanks, Mixer!

1) Click on the graphic to open the Calendar.
2) Once there you can click on any month and even click to the right to go into next year. Once you are in the month that you joined FR you will need to click on the number in the calendar and then an add item screen will come up.
3) In the next box enter your name in the "Calendar Text" field and then click on submit.
4) If any of the screens fail to load simply click on refresh in your browser and that will usually fix it.
5) If all else fails or simply if you want me to do this for you send me a FReepmail and I will gladly do it for you. ~Mixer

Click on the photo to view the album. To
submit your photo, please contact dansangel or .45Man
at
danbh59@yahoo.com
and include Freeper Photo Album in subject line.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons
KEYWORDS: finest; freepers; fun; military; patriotic; surprises; veterans
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To: GailA

Look at the temp, it's 47 and sunny in/on Grand Island on Dec 29th.
My Prayers have been answered.
Of course the rain is moving in tonight.

21 posted on 12/29/2003 6:57:36 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: lonestar; FreeTheHostages; jwfiv; Billie; Pippin; Libertina; JohnHuang2; Aquamarine; ST.LOUIE1; ...
Good morning to the Finest! Nice job Mayor!


22 posted on 12/29/2003 7:02:44 AM PST by Calpernia (Innocence seldom utters outraged shrieks. Guilt does.)
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To: GailA; The Mayor
Thanks for the coffee.


23 posted on 12/29/2003 7:03:48 AM PST by Calpernia (Innocence seldom utters outraged shrieks. Guilt does.)
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To: Calpernia
Why Thankyou Cal!
24 posted on 12/29/2003 7:13:06 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: The Mayor; GailA; MeeknMing
Thank you, Rus, for your cup of steaming fresh coffee and our Daily Bread serving we might otherwise not fit into our 'busy days.'

You and Gail and Carlsbad (Caveman) Carl work tirelessly to get us going, and we are indebted to you.

As for the flubs and typos, our friends and our Lord know our human limitations and overlook them...:))
He knows your heart, Rus, and it is a good one...

Need to venture forth and replenish depleted supplies, executing my Chief Quartermaster Duties.
Hold down the Fort - LOL

25 posted on 12/29/2003 7:24:32 AM PST by LadyX (((( To God be the praise and the glory! ))))
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To: The Mayor; ST.LOUIE1; Aquamarine; Billie; dansangel; dutchess; Mama_Bear; FreeTheHostages; ...
Good morning everyone.
26 posted on 12/29/2003 7:25:21 AM PST by Temple Owl
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To: The Mayor
Your tag says it all.

Morning, Mayor.

27 posted on 12/29/2003 7:26:29 AM PST by ST.LOUIE1
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To: The Mayor
Good Morning The Mayor! You did a fantastic job on posting the thread today. Seems fitting that a Veteran post the Military Monday thread.
Welcome aboard!

(U.S. Postal Service Photo)

28 posted on 12/29/2003 7:30:27 AM PST by Aquamarine
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To: Temple Owl
Howdy, Temp! Have a great day!
29 posted on 12/29/2003 7:33:11 AM PST by ST.LOUIE1
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To: ST.LOUIE1; Aquamarine
I'll tell you a secret, I get my tag lines fron Our Daily Bread.
Some days I post it and decide to keep what I see for my tagline.
There is a never ending source of good ones....

Thanks Aqua, Happy to be aboard!
30 posted on 12/29/2003 7:36:18 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: Temple Owl
Good Morning!
31 posted on 12/29/2003 7:36:57 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: The Mayor; Billie; dansangel; Mama_Bear; JustAmy; Diver Dave; dutchess; All
Merry Christmas and a Very Happy New Year to everyone. I haven't been on lately since we're down here in Pensacola with our #1 son and family for the holidays. Little Ashley is doing great and is one of the happiest babies I've ever seen always has a big smile for everyone. Guess she's just happy to be feeling good after all she went through. I went off and left my list of fallen comrades at home so I won't be posting the list today. But as a real rememberance tomorrow we are making a pilgrimage to Fort Rucker, Alabama and the Army Aviation Museum and show our youngest where he was born in Enterprise. So I'll remember them all tomorrow, may be a rough day for an old soldier, but a bittersweet one. Will take some pics and try to post some when I can. Once again have a good New Year everyone.

SCOUTS OUT!

32 posted on 12/29/2003 7:44:22 AM PST by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: The Mayor
I'll tell you a secret, I get my tag lines fron Our Daily Bread.

Well, I can't go there....I'd be stepping all over your toes. LOL

I've been trying to come up with a good tag.

33 posted on 12/29/2003 7:48:10 AM PST by ST.LOUIE1
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To: All
US MARINES ON THE BEACH AT PLELIU

He laid a hand on each man as he moved down the line of stretchers.

Before us stood the island of Peleiu, a jewel of the Pacific. One of the remote Palau islands, 500 miles east of the Philippines, its coral beaches glistened white in the September sun. The day was hot and dry; the island lush; its beaches dazzling. But behind the dunes, the 6.5 mm Nambu machine guns of the Japanese awaited us.

It was 1944 and the world was at war. I was sailing with a shipload of Marines. Months earlier, in 1943, they had bloodily secured Guadalcanal from the Japanese. Their assignment now was to go ashore and take this island.

I had been trained as a hospital corpsman. My job was to bandage wounded troops under tire on the front lines, to keep injured men alive until we could get them to the Navy hospital ship anchored offshore, where surgeons waited.

On this day in mid-September, as one of several Pharmacist's Mates, I was poised at the ship's rail ready to land with the Marines. "God," I prayed, "please protect me so I can tend to the injured." It was my constant fear that I'd get wounded and not be able to care for the men.

"Okay, Doc," I heard, "let's go." I scrambled over the rail and onto the cargo netting that formed a ladder down the side of the ship. Amphibious vehicles-"ducks" we called them-waited below. I was 33 years old, five feet nine inches, 150 pounds, but not the most agile sailor to participate in the landing, particularly with 120 pounds of medical supplies on my back. When the ship rolled, my foot missed the netting and I fell down toward the sea. Then I felt myself being pulled up short. A combat hardened Marine had grabbed my pack in midair; he held me until the ship rolled back and I was able to regain my footing and hurry down. Piercing screams out on the water sent chills down my spine. Men were being massacred as they landed. Again I asked God to help me handle whatever awaited me onshore.

Our duck steamed a zigzag course toward the beach head under the thunder of enemy fire. The noise deafened us. Geysers of seawater erupted everywhere. Enemy shelling intensified. The duck beside us was hit while I watched helplessly-its occupants never reached the beach. Bodies floated all around us. The water surged with explosives. The air was thick with the screams of the wounded and the dying.

Half of our troops were killed on the way to shore. Amazed to still be alive, I joined a patrol party on the beach. Their original Pharmacist's Mate had been killed. Forty-eight of us crawled from tree to tree, hiding among the brush to assess the situation. After only one hour our patrol was reduced to eight.

We were told by the brass that the island was expected to be secured within 24 hours. By nightfall, the fierce fighting had subsided, but it was obvious someone had miscalculated. Our troops had pushed back the Japanese only about a mile-and at great cost in men and materiel. Later we heard of the intricate system of tunnels the Japanese had burrowed beneath the island's coral surface. Their troops hid in these, and even heavy naval bombardment failed to make a dent in the Japanese defenses.

Now, left on the beach with men of an engineering battalion, I furiously scraped away at the hard coral, trying to help carve out a foxhole large enough to protect us during the night to come. Others worked with picks and shovels while a bulldozer dug a long trench parallel to the water's edge. We remained ashore to hold the beach, but as we watched the U.S. ships disappear over the horizon, none of us expected to be alive when they returned in the morning.

Ammunition was so low that we had only about four rounds per man-hardly enough to hold off the Japanese, who even now were reclaiming the territory won that day by our men, All night the Japanese could be heard passing among the shallow foxholes as we silently hunkered down to await the dawn…

Seven engineers and I tried to fade into the coral walls of our foxhole-eight feet square and three feet deep. As noiselessly as possible, we burrowed our way deeper into the strange island coral. The men began to tell stories about their wives and children. Photos, damp from sweat and saltwater, were pulled out of pockets and passed around, "Nice-looking kids." . . . "The boy's you all over again." … "She looks like a good woman," Nods and looks took the place of conversation. I had no wife or children. Right then, my family were those men and my duty was to take care of them-to listen, to encourage and to bind them up if they got hit on this night of terror.

Hearing Japanese troops pass close by, we held fingers to lips and pressed ourselves into the hard coral. Shells bursting in the black sky lit the enemies' silhouettes. We breathlessly waited to be discovered, to be shot, to be blown to bits by the grenades that continued to be lobbed into our foxhole. But incredibly, every grenade was a dud.

By morning we were all still alive. And at dawn we heard the Navy guns starting to bombard the island again. They were back! And we were caught in the crossfire. More Marines, bent on retaking the beachhead that had been won and lost the day before, were loading into landing craft. As they came ashore, I raised my Red Cross armband on my bayonet and was relieved to hear, "Hey, hold your fire! He's one of ours!"

The eight of us crouched low in the foxhole until the Marines overran us. Then, wearily we pulled ourselves out and scattered to perform our various assignments amid earth shattering blasts and shrieks. It was another day of flying bullets and horrible bloodshed.

I had set up my first-aid station at the end of the landing strip near Bloody Nose Ridge. Bushes and trees offered some cover, but the strip itself was a barren expanse, 1500 yards long and 400 yards wide. About a half dozen stretcher bearers worked with me. As fast as they brought in men torn apart by shrapnel and bullets, I applied sulfa and battle packs, but Japanese snipers began picking off the stretcher bearers. They were easy targets, darting into the open to retrieve the wounded. Confusion reigned. Shells exploded around us, and screams echoed from the victims as they lay in pools of blood, dismembered, entangled in their gear. Men fell faster than we could reach them.

Hopelessness overwhelmed me; the line of stretchers at my station seemed to extend into infinity. "God, help me," 1 gasped. "I don't know if 1 can do anything for these men."

And then, one after another, four men were gunned down trying to reach a Marine who looked like he would not make it. Finally, I ran to the wounded man myself. His condition was desperate. The hole in his middle was the size of my fists held side by side. His stomach leaked from the hole.

"I've got his feet, Dodd" an assistant yelled. We carried the Marine's blood-spattered body back to the station and set him down at the end of the line. There was nothing 1 could do for him. He was dying. 1 had been trained to give my attention first to those who had the best chance of living. That's how we set up the line of stretchers; so this man, mortally wounded, was placed last.

Every one of these men-bleeding, going into shock-needed me at once. 1 couldn't move fast enough.

Just then, a Marine stopped by my station. "Doc, 1 heard you were on the island last night" And then he hesitated. "Hey, Doc, those men in your foxhole. . . they didn't make it They got cut down moving equipment up to the front. . . . "

That finished me. 1 had prayed that God would sustain me, but now 1 began to crumble. Death pressed in on me. The horror was brutal, unbearable. Tears welled up, tears for my friends of the night before, for their families, and for these men waiting in agony for me to help. It all seemed too much-more than 1 could handle, even with God's aid. I was going to lose these men; they would never see their families, just like the guys in my foxhole. 1 tried to hide my face so the injured wouldn't see the extent of my despair.

A hand on my shoulder startled me. I looked into the calm face of a middle-aged man. He gazed at me with kindly eyes. Sand kicked up everywhere. Guns blasted at the front and from the battleship offshore, but the man seemed unfazed. His words puzzled me: "Don't worry, son. These Marines are going to be all right. You aren't going to lose any of them."

He was of average height, with a clean-shaven, ordinary-looking face. His dress was unusual, though. He was not wearing battle fatigues, but rather a dark gray suit-a suit without lapels or buttons and made of sweater like fabric. It was unlike any outfit I'd ever seen, and seemed odd in the midst of battle. He was not Asian, or of any other culture from that part of the world, nor did he appear to be an American.

His words gave me a surge of energy and I turned my attention to the wounded. As I patched one, and then another, I glanced up to see the man who had comforted me. He preceded me down the line of stretchers, bending over each Marine. "Hold on, son. Doc is on the way. He'll be with you soon." He laid a hand on each man as he moved down the line of 25 to 30 stretchers. The men must have thought he was a chaplain, but he wasn't. I knew that. He wasn't part of the military operation.

Then, as he paused over the last man-the Marine with the huge hole through his belly-he lingered for a few moments. When I next looked up, he was gone. But where? In front stretched the airstrip, a long open expanse-too long to cross in a few seconds. Strange, I thought. I glanced around in all directions. He had disappeared. Yet I knew that was not possible.

It would be 74 more grueling days before the island would be completely captured by the Marines. But this day would stay with me forever, because after I passed down that line of men, working over each with renewed strength and purpose I stopped short at the last stretcher

I could hardly believe what I saw It wasn't possible, and yet there it was, reminding me of a power greater than war, greater than anything we can imagine-God's power. I was staring at the Marine who should have been dead. In possible as it seemed, what had been an enormous perforation in his midsection was now a small manageable wound. In fact, it was no bigger than the tip of my thumb. As for the rest of those men, ever one of them lived and was transported to the hospital ship, just as promised by the mysterious comforter on the island of Peleliu.


34 posted on 12/29/2003 7:52:13 AM PST by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All
God brings no man into the conflicts of life to desert him. Every man has a friend in heaven whose resources are unlimited; and on him he may call at any hour and find sympathy and assistance.
35 posted on 12/29/2003 7:53:48 AM PST by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: All
Have a nice day everyone. I'm off to work. Need to show a house to a lady.
36 posted on 12/29/2003 7:55:00 AM PST by Dubya (Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father,but by me)
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To: Dubya
Thank you Dubya, Have a Great day!
37 posted on 12/29/2003 8:00:22 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: ladtx
So I'll remember them all tomorrow, may be a rough day for an old soldier, but a bittersweet one. Will take some pics and try to post some when I can. Once again have a good New Year everyone.

I would love to see the pics when you are able to post them. Take care friend, and enjoy the time with your family..

38 posted on 12/29/2003 8:10:23 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: LadyX
Need to venture forth and replenish depleted supplies, executing my Chief Quartermaster Duties.

Don't forget the Oreo Cookies ! lol ! ...


39 posted on 12/29/2003 8:13:57 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: The Mayor
Congratulations, Your Honor, on your debut, and God bless our great servicemen and women on this Military Monday!
40 posted on 12/29/2003 8:37:41 AM PST by The Thin Man
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