Posted on 12/20/2008 6:04:53 PM PST by bruinbirdman
Thank you for your service, Sir!
OK, it might be another proposed operation that I’m not up on. I’m pretty good on the actual operations, but there are probably holes in my knowledge as to plans that never reached fruition.
Have you read even 10% of the quotes linked in my tagline?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2130557/posts?page=81#81
The driver on the day of the crash was named Horace Woodring and he went on to live a long life and died in 2003
Death comes to all men, in time.
Patton had a high pitched voice.
His original driver was Sgt. Mims. I can’t recall his first name but he was from Abbeville, Alabama, near Dothan.
Alger Hiss, one of Roosevelt’s advisors and the guy who drew up the rules for the U.N. was also a commie spy. Recently released KGB documents proove it. FDR’s entire administration was full of commie sympathizers and spies.
“Death comes to all men, in time.”
To some quicker than others.
The undertakers say “the young may die and the old MUST die.”
I find the theory that he was assassinated by the Russians more credible.
Yes, indeed. Stalin had FDR duped beyond belief.
FDR was already dead.
About 20 years ago, I was on a hunting trip. I had been out that morning hunting, didn't have any luck and afterwards drove into a small town for lunch. The mom and pop restaurant was the type where you didn't have a table to yourself but rather, you had a seat at a table.
An older man sat across from me and we struck up a conversation. He said he served in the 3rd Army and in the course of our conversation told me something about the general that was 'peculiar as hell'.
Thank you for your service and sacrifice for our country, sir.
Thanks for posting.
And?
What did Donovan think about the commies in the government? Did he root them out after the war?
yitbos
Thank you for your service, sir.
Best comment ever on Patton, by Bill Mauldin:
Caption: "Radio th' ol' man we'll be late on account of a thousand-mile detour."
Dad knew Bill Mauldin, who was quite a character in his own right. When he was so sick out west in California, a columnist for the Orange County newspaper put out the call for veterans to write Mauldin because letters and cards from vets were the only thing that cheered him up. Dad and one of his army buddies (they live just a few miles apart) sent Mauldin a card and some old pictures.
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