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USO Canteen FReeper Style - "Thank You Troops and Veterans" - Oct. 2, 2002
Snow Bunny and friends of the USO Canteen FReeper Style
Posted on 10/01/2002 10:43:14 PM PDT by Jen
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To: LindaSOG
1821 - Alexander Peter "Old Straight" Stewart, Lt Gen (Confederate Army)
Major General A. P. Stewart, a West Point Graduate who became the Highest Ranking
officer from Tennessee. Stewart taught mathematics at West Point
following his graduation and taught math in a number of schools, but
principally in Cumberland University at Lebanon, Tenn.
He joined the Confederate forces as a Major of Artillery. He was in
the Battle of Belmont, Mo., and was fought at the Hornet's Nest at the
battle of Shiloh. He commanded troops at Stone's River, Missionary
Ridge, and in the Atlanta Campaign of 1864 from Dalton to the
Chattahoochee River. He was wounded at Ezra Church. He was held in high
regard by his superiors, and July of 1864 General Joe Johnston gave him
command of Polk's Corps leading it though the Army of Tennessee's
remaining marches and battles.
He was a remarkable officer who made friends easily. His men called
him 'Old Straight' as a matter of respect, because they knew he could be
relied upon and when he told them something, that was the way it was.
After the war he taught at Cumberland University, was Chancellor of the
University of Mississippi and the Confederate commissioner of the first
Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park.
381
posted on
10/02/2002 9:05:27 PM PDT
by
Valin
To: LaDivaLoca
I'm glad you liked my ideas. Don't worry about approaching the service men and women. While they are warriors, they are gentlemen and women and most will take your efforts kindly.
Thank you for the very kind words. GB Shaw has always been one of my favorites!
Regards,
TS
To: The Shrew; Snow Bunny; Victoria Delsoul
You know me, always ready to take on a scrounging challenge.
Heven't been able to scrounge up Victoria though.:(
383
posted on
10/02/2002 9:07:05 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: Radix
I really enjoyed the article you posted. It's nice to hear about pleasant things some of our troops get to do in Afghanistan. There's so much ugly business going on over there but as your article showed, there's also some pleasant 'business' being taken care of. :-)
384
posted on
10/02/2002 9:07:11 PM PDT
by
radu
To: LaDivaLoca
Good Night, LaDivaLoca
385
posted on
10/02/2002 9:07:43 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
Comment #386 Removed by Moderator
To: bentfeather
Wow, bentfeather, the Lovers poem is wonderful. You are bound and determined to make me
read aren't you? LOL! I am enjoying my lessons.
To: LaDivaLoca
I think you will find that having a card to hand a servicemember will make it much easier to start up a conversation. (I used to be a consultant with a direct sales company and found this to be true! hehehe) Think of it as offering a gift to them. I bet you will never have anyone refuse the card or not be thankful for you talking to them. Let me know if I'm wrong and I'll let my evil twin take care of them! ;-)
388
posted on
10/02/2002 9:11:08 PM PDT
by
Jen
Comment #389 Removed by Moderator
To: LindaSOG; All
COOL! Looks like we got a lot of the Canteen Cuties here again tonight! I can't stay though, I have to get back to work. Have a GREAT night, I'll catch you when I can.
To: LaDivaLoca
Thank you for supporting our troops. Let me make it absolutely clear though that I have never been in any branch of the Armed Forces. I just post to thes Canteen threads to add a touch of Hoosier weirdeness to the mix hoping I'll make at least one person larf, chuckle, giggle, or snortle that otherwise wouldn't have.
391
posted on
10/02/2002 9:13:38 PM PDT
by
Dakmar
To: The Shrew
I think it's terrific that you honor our servicemembers in so many ways! Thanks for sharing your experiences - you gave me some ideas I'd never thought of and maybe some other people too. Thanks for your support of the Canteen and our troops and veterans. God bless you real good my friend.
Jen
392
posted on
10/02/2002 9:15:01 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: The Shrew; All
"I did see yesterday's thread and was waiting for an In n Out Burger Graphic!" Hi, TS! Hi, all!
Wow! In N Out! Yummy!
393
posted on
10/02/2002 9:15:06 PM PDT
by
redhead
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; Kathy in Alaska; radu
To: bentfeather
What a beautiful, romantic poem. I love it.
395
posted on
10/02/2002 9:17:03 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: Militiaman7
Hi MM7, thank you for your wonderful support of the USO Canteen .....sure do love ya.
To: VOA
Thank you VOA,it is so good to see you. I loved your posts !
To: Snow Bunny
Oh how I wish I could've had one of those cards printed off this afternoon. When the guy came over to set up the satellite, asked him if he'd been in the service. When he said he had, I smiled and told him "Thank you for your service to our country."
For a brief moment he had a shocked look on his face. It quickly turned to the brightest smile I've seen in a while. He very humbly said 'thank you' to me. I got the impression no one has ever thanked him before. How sad.
Any-hoo, I proceeded to tell him about FR and the Canteen and that's when I wished I'd had a card to give him. Instead, I just wrote one up by hand and gave it to him. He grinned and said he would check it out. I hope he does and decides he'd like to join us.
398
posted on
10/02/2002 9:19:03 PM PDT
by
radu
To: Snow Bunny
You have Freep Mail
399
posted on
10/02/2002 9:19:33 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: LindaSOG
1678 - Wu San-kuei, gen, invited Manchus to China, dies trying to expel them
(snip)The downfall of the Ming house was the product of factors that extended far beyond China's borders. In the 1630s and '40s China's most commercialized regions, the Yangtze Delta and the southeast coast, suffered an acute economic depression brought on by a sharp break in the flow of silver entering ports through foreign trade from Acapulco, Malacca, and Japan. The depression was exacerbated by harvest shortfalls resulting from unusually bad weather during 1626-40. The enervated government administration failed to respond adequately to the crisis, and bandits in the northwest expanded their forces and began invading north and southwest China. One of these bandit leaders, Li Tzu-ch'eng, marched into Peking in 1644 unopposed, and the Emperor, forsaken by his officials and generals, committed suicide. A Ming general, Wu San-kuei, sought Manchu assistance against Li Tzu-ch'eng. Dorgon, the regent and uncle of Abahai's infant son (who became the first Ch'ing emperor), defeated Li and took Peking, where he declared the Manchu dynasty.
It took the Manchu several decades to complete the military conquest of China. In 1673 the conquerors confronted a major rebellion led by three generals (among them Wu San-kuei), former Ming adherents who had been given control over large parts of south and southwest China. This revolt, stimulated by Manchu attempts to cut back on the autonomous power of these generals, was finally suppressed in 1681. In 1683 the Ch'ing finally eliminated the last stronghold of Ming loyalism on Taiwan.
For more go to
http://home.swipnet.se/~w-38391/Ch'ing%20dynasty.html
400
posted on
10/02/2002 9:21:32 PM PDT
by
Valin
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