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Kirsten, your photos made the news (Pictures of our troops in Iraq)(Please read)

Posted on 04/20/2004 8:59:37 PM PDT by Aliska

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To: Aliska; an amused spectator; MJY1288; xzins; Calpernia; TEXOKIE; Alamo-Girl; windchime; ...

These photos came from a young lady from my hometown serving in Iraq named Kirsten. The subject was "photos that will never make the news". For privacy reasons, I don't want to give out more information about her, but she emailed these to her sister and my daughter and they are being forwarded around the net through email. I am taking the liberty of posting them on Free Republic and want her to know that she and all her friends are in our thoughts and prayers for a safe return.

Posted on 04/20/2004 11:59:37 PM EDT by Aliska


Thank you, Aliska.

Some classics, and more great pics posted on this thread (that some of us wish we had saved the first time, lol).

Joining you in prayer for Kirsten, and her friends!

God bless our troops, civilian, native and coalition allies!


A few more pics, sources:

8 War on Terror Exhibit Attracts Thousands in North Carolina (+ Pics) ~ Exhibit 'til May, pics at website ~ 4/20/04 

8 Photo Essays of our troops ~ http://www.defendamerica.mil/photogallery.html
8 GOTTA SEE THIS! A Compiled Look at the War on Terrorism: threads posted by Diogenesis 

41 posted on 04/21/2004 7:57:53 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("Evil is out there, and evil wishes to attack us." - Lt. Gen. J Vines, commander, 18th Airborne Corp)
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To: Aliska
Kirstin. You WILL be careful! If you get yourself hurt I will NOT be pleased...and you don't what that.
42 posted on 04/21/2004 8:05:33 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl; All
Operation Uplink.

http://www.operationuplink.org/
Operation Uplink is a unique program that keeps military personnel and hospitalized veterans in touch with their families and loved ones by providing them with a free phone card. Using contributions from supporters like you, Operation Uplink purchases phone cards and distributes them to servicemen and women who are separated from those they care about.
/subtle hint

43 posted on 04/21/2004 8:07:23 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: Core_Conservative; xrp; Alisa
The soldier petting the cat is IDF, not American. Regardless, he's a man on the ground in the war on terror, of that there can be no doubt.
44 posted on 04/21/2004 8:19:34 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism.)
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To: Aliska
The soldier petting the cat is IDF, not American. Regardless, he's a man on the ground in the war on terror, of that there can be no doubt.
45 posted on 04/21/2004 8:20:12 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism.)
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl
We are winning ~ the bad guys are losing ~ trolls, terrorists, democrats and the mainstream media are sad ~ very sad!

~~ Bush/Cheney 2004 ~~

46 posted on 04/21/2004 8:31:49 AM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: in the Arena
You are so right--great stuff! Here's a sample:

http://parentsofdeployed.homestead.com/Pictures25.html

Trading Her Pom-Poms For An M-16

Former Huntington cheerleader an MP in Kuwait

By Peter Gannon

If the honor existed in the Huntington High School yearbook, "least likely to win a foreign military marksmanship award," Tara Kelly would have been a good candidate. Of course if she'd been voted in, she just might have gone out and earned it a couple of years earlier.

In 1998, Kelly was your typical teenager almost too typical, like out of a movie. She was a senior co-captain of the Devils' cheerleading squad, the Colleen of the Huntington St. Patrick's Day Parade, just an outgoing girl with dreams of going to college and becoming a schoolteacher. But something happened to her that year. As she stirred up the crowd and led the cheers from the sideline of the football field complete with pom-poms, skirt and navy-blue sweater a strange looking contraption made up of wood beams and netting stood ominously in the background.

Project Adventure, as it's called, would change Kelly's life forever. Used by the school's physical education department, a lot of preparation and work goes into the training before a student actually gets on the big structure, which is something like an obstacle course, and looks more suited for military basic training than gym class. It is intended to build self-esteem and trust, but just the sight of it says that a whole lot of courage and physical ability goes into its mastery. In her senior year, the cheerleader won an award for doing just that.

Around that time, said her mother, Kelly first started talking about signing up with the Army.

"As her mother, I was very against it," said Susan Morandi, adding that because Kelly was just 17 years old at graduation, she would have been required to sign the consent forms. "But I realized that as soon as she turned 18 she would do it on her ownshe was already talking to recruiters that came to the school."

Morandi had already been through some of this before, when she used to hang up on recruiters who called her home looking for her son Patrick, now 25, when he was a student at Huntington. But this time it was different. Kelly was serious, and she viewed the Army as an opportunity to earn money for college and help her reach her goals. As a single mother Kelly's father lives in Medford Morandi figured she needed the help.

Kelly joined the military just three months after her graduation in September of 1998. She signed on with the Army's 340th Military Police out of Jamaica, Queens, and committed herself to 6-1/2 years of reserve duty which called for one weekend a month of training in addition to two weeks every June. And just as quickly, she jumped right into her civilian life as well. Kelly secured a full-time job at the Geico Insurance Company, and at night began attending classes at Farmingdale University and Nassau Community College. But as her mother said, that part of her life just keeps getting interrupted.

Kelly was first called into service during the NATO peacekeeping mission in Kosovo, where she served from March to November of 2001. She had a life-changing experience while there, said her mother, seeing first-hand the reality of a poverty-ridden country, and for the first time seeing a culture different from her own.

"She came back with a different attitude," said Morandi. "About orphans, about culture, about a lot of things. It was really quite an experience for her."

At the same time as her outlook was changing, however, Kelly kept on proving that there was little that she couldn't do. At just 4 feet 11 inches, more than one person told her that she was too small to handle an Army issue M16 machine gun the wrong thing to tell her, said her mother. Kelly responded by becoming something of a sharpshooter, even earning a German military marksmanship award while participating in a contest at a neighboring camp.

But something else happened during her deployment in Kosovo that would change not only her life, but that of every other American citizen as well. In her sixth month away from home, the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon sent a shockwave across the world. Many soldiers in her unit are firemen and police officers from Queens and surrounding areas, so the impact of the events in New York hit especially hard in the 340th.

That's why, says Morandi from her experiences in Kosovo and from what happened at home while she was away her daughter is especially proud to be where she is today, serving the United States Army in the Middle East.

"Tara is gung-ho about what she's doing," said her mother. "She's very patriotic, and she hates to see injustice. She hates Saddam Hussein. She's really sees the importance in what she's doing."

Kelly's unit is currently protecting an important weapons depot for coalition forces. She writes home when she can, and on occasion gets to call home to speak with her family. As of Tuesday, Morandi hadn't spoken to her in over a week, but her cell phone is always on just in case her daughter gets a moment to call.

"She's just your typical Huntington girl," said Morandi. "We're all very proud of herwe're very proud of all of them."

This article from:

© 2003 Long Islander Newspapers, Inc.

47 posted on 04/21/2004 8:43:02 AM PDT by sandlady
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To: Aliska
Prayers for Kirsten, the military personnel and their families.
48 posted on 04/21/2004 8:47:37 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: sandlady
As someone born in Brooklyn, who lived in Nassau County until 1972, I am so proud of Kirsten.

Hoo-rah! Go Army. Go Kirsten!
49 posted on 04/21/2004 9:01:31 AM PDT by TruthNtegrity (We all have to work hard to make sure that Pres. Bush is re-elected in Nov. 04.)
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