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Post by fwiw on Apr 10, 2007 18:13:10 GMT -5
rkivs.com
The above site has audio links and some photos of Professing Korean Veterans at the last reunion-March 06. I think it may have been in Nevada USA. Not sure.
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Post by fyi on Apr 10, 2007 18:15:13 GMT -5
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Post by try ths on Apr 10, 2007 18:18:17 GMT -5
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Post by Ya on Apr 10, 2007 19:52:24 GMT -5
Ya, Them fessin' folks didn't succeed in Korea and they didn't on their web site either! ;D
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Post by Arse on Apr 11, 2007 15:32:38 GMT -5
Do a search of PROFESSING KOREAN VETERANS MEETING PHOTO. An Accola man probably from Wisconsin is in charge of the website.
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Post by Text on Apr 11, 2007 20:09:42 GMT -5
1A 20060323 am 01 intro Wayne Ramey 4:02 Introduction to the reunion 2 20060323 am 02 membook Bob Craig 4:50 Describes the veterans biographies memory book 3 20060323 am 03 picture book Harlan Accola 12:14 Describes the picture book, and the group picture schedule 4 20060323 am 04 intro Wayne Ramey 3:38 Introduction to reunion planners 5 20060323 am 05 Carolyn Dunnett 8:13 Experiences of Grace Pryor, the first professing resident of Korea 6 20060323 am 06 Paul Fulk 12:57 You'll be on the front lines as a medic in 3 days... I think maybe Someone was protecting me. 7 20060323 am 07 Carl Linderman 18:45 Other GIs didn't understand how we could go anywhere and have friends. The heroes of the war were those friends that supported us (professing GIs)at all the camps. Don't forget the workers that came to this country over a hundred years ago. 8 20060323 am 08 George Whitefield 3:54 "I have been persuaded" 9B 20060323 am 09 Chuck Lothspeich 11:33 [WWII] "If you'll get me back home, I'll do what's right", and "We all have a song" 10 20060323 am 10 Paul Rowland 6:26 Thanks to Wayne & Walt for organizing the reunion when I couldn't 11 20060323 am 11 Raymond Bruer 9:11 Miracles, medical and spiritual. Keep my page in God's book of life clean. 12 20060323 am 12 Don Brawdy 11:33 What's a GI party? Where do you bounce a quarter? Keeping our vows 13 20060323 am 13 Rose Farring 13:11 Did your draft notice make you give thanks for those in authority? The Lord has allowed them to be there and we love the Lord who is reigning above all 14C 20060323 am 14 Gordon Winkler 38:15 Loved the Orient from childhood. God wants people in the work that can't go in the work. Blessed be the sorrows and kind the storms, that lead us near to God. Having received help of God I continue until this time. 15 20060323 am 15 closing remarks Wayne Ramey 2:29 Several cancellations due to illness. The bungalow will be open. 16 20060323 pm 01 intro Ron Rudolph 3:29 Korean Service Medal. Grace for supper. 17 20060323 pm 02 intro Ron Rudolph 0:23 The MC must be intimidated into service. 18 20060323 pm 03 Lloyd, Esther Bone 6:41 Poem titled "Mesquite". Esther returns Pass to Wayne after 53 years. 19 20060323 pm 04 KW summary Ron Rudolph 10:30 The Korean War, referred to as the "forgotten war", was one of the most destructive wars of the 20th century. 20D 20060323 pm 05 Ed, Leah Bolt 17:53 CO Guard duty. Who're the guerillas? Warmed over Psalms. I know that my Redeemer lives. 21 20060323 pm 06 TC Morris 9:29 Korea to be the springboard for the Gospel. 22 20060323 pm 07 Ken Lehrman 13:24 I carried a little Bible my mother gave me in my breast pocket all the way through my army service. She marked Isaiah 26:3. 23 20060323 pm 08 Marvin, Julie Grotte 16:20 In Korea, I wasn't real close to any friends so I had to get up on the mountainside and read my Bible and I loved to sing and so I sang hymns, so I was my own Sunday morning meeting. Julie: It's all right to be considered dead, dead to the things of this world and alive and awake to God. 24 20060323 pm 09 Don Davidson 9:26 With Dad having been in Korea, both in the war and in the work, Korea has been an influence upon my life. 25E 20060323 pm 10 Paul Boyd 53:39 Your goal is to preserve your life - watch the one on the right and on the left, both in a war and spiritual war. If they get hurt, you could get hurt. Enemy wants to cause division, so we don't work together. Is it beyond your imagination, that some day people will read the history of our generation and read that we rose to the occasion and grasped the privileges that God has planned and arranged for us? 26 20060324 am 01 intro Walt, Lorene Smith 11:09 Fifty-five years of marriage doesn't seem very long. 27F 20060324 am 02 Lyle Davidson 16:00 The stories I love are the stories about the people in Korea. I love them. / I'd like for my testimony, to be faithful, to death. 28 20060324 am 03 Lloyd Smith 9:44 I don't know what would be the most outstanding to me, most of it was the kindness and fellowship of the friends, meeting the friends and the workers, the Philippines, the workers in Ft. Sam, anyway, I just think the Lord has a plan. 29 20060324 am 04 Jim, Eileen Hammett 11:25 When the mortars were coming in, I had this feeling that God was talking to me. Yet I was not a religious man... What's wrong with you, Jim? 30 20060324 am 05 Charles, Dorothy Wilson 20:39 Wilson, how come you are not on radio watch? ... that could have been me. I got on my knees and thanked God for his mercy that I didn't deserve. Dorothy: I can't even explain it to them, but they know I am happy. 31 20060324 am 06 Ben Farmer 9:57 We went over to Gordon Kaas's tent and we had fellowship meetings which meant a lot to me. Those things really made good experiences and caused me to have a deeper faith and hope in God. 32 20060324 am 07 Bob Liebrand 4:38 I drove an ambulance from the field hospital back to the staging area as close to the front lines as we could get. I remember this one night when I went out and picked up two wounded soldiers to bring them back to the hospital. 33G 20060324 am 08 Carl Simmons 7:30 Is this where I'm going? Isolation. "Today" and "in that day". 34 20060324 am 09 Arnold, Arlene Lyon 10:25 Separation was difficult on those left behind, especially those with children. 35 20060324 am 10 James Nelson 5:54 You'd better go to those meetings. You'll hear something you've never heard before from a pulpit. 36 20060324 am 11 Charles Lewis 10:55 A little red hymn book was the catalyst that brought me, and Virgil Grillo together. 37 20060324 am 12 Melvin, Beverly Behrend 7:13 My Japanese girlfriend. Obedience at home good training for the army. Beverly: These gatherings are very precious and it just makes the bond of love in God's way sweeter and sweeter. 38 20060324 am 13 Lloyd Wirtjes 7:07 Doug was very inspirational in helping me get to meetings. I played hymns on the chapel organ. Paul and Don had gospel meetings there. 39 20060324 am 14 Wilfred Goecke 14:44 I refuse to think negatively, I don't have time. We are scheduled for another reunion. ABIDE. A peace that passes all understanding will grip your heart and mind and it will keep you in every experience. 40 20060324 am 15 Harry Henninger 14:06 Twin brother MIA, possibly being found. I was glad for a God-given conscience that kept me. Setbacks help us understand our need of God. It was an inspiration to see Don diligently having his Korean lessons, anticipating for all those five years, the day that they would return. 41H 20060324 am 16 closing announcements 7:20 Pictures... appreciate the example of long marriages. 42 20060324 pm 01 announcements 6:05 Memory book, web site, tour of Zion, Mel Davison 43 20060324 pm 02 intro Don Egge 7:52 1AO explained. How did the war affect your spiritual life? 44 20060324 pm 03 Carol Marvin 4:08 Don't ever underestimate your silent testimony! 45 20060324 pm 04 Claire Egge 2:00 "Edify one another" and also, "Hold fast that which is good." 46 20060324 pm 05 John, Ernestine McCracken 6:22 Big gospel meetings. "I heard more than English!". We'll have time someday. 47 20060324 pm 06 Don, Sandy Schoel 6:56 So the message to me was missed opportunities. But I learned a lesson and my faith was deepened, and my understanding of Truth was deepened and I appreciated that experience. 48 20060324 pm 07 Tom Willbur 6:33 "The war was absolutely necessary, for the salvation of that country" 49 20060324 pm 08 Jack, Donna Taylor 9:01 Texas the mother-in-law of the nation. Couldn't compete with the soldiers for the local girls, but glad for the positive influence. Pray for our enemies. 50 20060324 pm 09 Lloyd, Lorraine Jacobson 11:10 You know those things just prompted me to pray. And I saw those Korean people and that they had a soul. 51 20060324 pm 10 Lyle, Elaine Smith 6:35 When I left Korea, I wanted to just forget it and put it behind me because I didn't understand why there was so much waste, so much sorrow. But the Gospel came there! Elaine: Sometimes we go through dark experiences, but the prospects still are fair ahead. 52I 20060324 pm 11 Don Egge 10:25 The Korean people are not all in Korea. 53 20060324 pm 12 Ann Bailor 19:36 I feel that He has had to do a whole lot of work to try to keep me in tune so that He can use me with the work that He wants to do. 54 20060324 pm 13 Don Egge 3:38 I don't know why I did it, but I knew it was important. 55 20060324 pm 14 Merlin Howlett 34:54 It has made me understand how sensitive we need to try to keep to the prompting of the Spirit because it is only God that knows the future. 56J 20060325 am 00 apology 0:34 Sorry, missed half of Paul Uhm's talk. 57 20060325 am 01 intro Bob Farring 0:39 Close association with Korean friends near D.C. 58 20060325 am 02 Paul Uhm 14:44 Parents were pioneers in Chinhae. Merlin named sister Anne, who was saved by penicillin and Gerber baby food 59 20060325 am 03 Myong-Ku, Mi Ryung Ahn 37:46 Mi Ryung: It was not my black-and-white day... God has always laboured human lives to win. Myong-Ku: I don't know why I wasn't dead. 2 Communist encounters. I cannot wait--this is the time. 60 20060325 am 04 Lowell Rohs 4:30 Now I have some peace and comfort about the War--it was worth it. 61K 20060325 am 05 He, Sun Wha Hong 26:05 That's a smoke screen. 7 years, he invited me to gospel meetings. Buy the truth, and sell it not. Kee-won's mother: There's more to it than the written word. 62 20060325 am 06 Sal, Sang Chong 9:45 They speak Korean better, but I love kimchi more. Thankful for the heartfelt prayers. The best is yet to come. 63 20060325 am 07 Sehee, Seung Ju Ryu 17:57 Her belief was stronger than mine. Everybody has a miracle that God worked in each of us and I'm thankful for that. Seung Ju: I thought I found Truth a few times, but instead it was kind people in a particular church, because soon I found that there was no light that I could feel. 64L 20060325 am 08 Doug, Clarice Grant 15:55 It was good that the Korean War started for me because it brought a realization to me that I was not saved, I had no peace in my soul. Experiences in Germany during that time. 65 20060325 am 09 Bob, Doris Craig 31:39 It cost him 25 cents, it cost me two years in the Marine Corps. I just have to say that this one girl that's very important to me and turned the tide for my salvation was little twelve year old Sally Alexander. 66 20060325 am 10 pic announcement Harlan Accola 4:34 Pictures, times and places. 67 20060325 am 11 closing remarks Wayne Ramey 9:39 We've seen the Lord high and lifted up. Our National Anthem. Wonderful time, wonderful food, wonderful service.
These are the recordings of the Korean War Veterans Reunion held in Mesquite NV from March 22 through March 26, 2006.
The 8-digit numbers in the title are dates, in the form year, month, day YYYYMMDD
The two sessions of one day are identified as "am" or "pm".
The 2 digit numbers are just sequence numbers, to keep the files in the right order
The last part of the title is who is being recorded, and for a few titles, the type of remarks being recorded. If the type of remarks is not recorded, then it is a "war story", the meat of the reunion.
In the Track number, the letters indicate the beginning of each individual CD.
As most of you that attended the reunion know, there were a number of technical difficulties encountered with the PA system. Fortunately, most of them did not affect the recording of the sessions. I fumbled and didn't save Pat Rudolph's little story of Ron's glasses on the raft trip. And for the same reason, I missed a couple lines of Lloyd Bone's poem, but he was kind enough to re-record those lines for me and I spliced them in. However, on Saturday morning, some of Bob Farring's introductory remarks, and approximately half of Paul Uhm's very interesting talk about the early days in Korea were not recorded.
Oh, and Pat is kind too. But I didn't ask her to re-record her story, because I'd missed it all, and wouldn't have be able to re-record it with the peals of laughter interspersed. Maybe I should have saved this comment for the next reunion.
Digitally recorded to hard disk using an M-Audio Mobile Pre to convert the analog microphone signal to digital.
Transcriptions of these audio recordings are also available.
This document also available in PDF format.
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Post by objector on Apr 11, 2007 21:55:05 GMT -5
I have heard of this reunion, I have heard of this because I have kinfolks that have always attended, although I do not see their names on the above post, they say they attended and I have always believed them and I do believe they did attend. Here is where I have a problem, I was Born and Raised in the TRUTH, but; when it came to war and you might have to go to war-- but if you are professing you can be a concientious objector, meaning, Meaning What? ?? I have a problem with professing people in general-----_____If you have to go to war: go as a concientious objector_____I have always had a problem with concientious objector----Somehow professing people are above and beyond the law. I don't think so. Professing people sure don't mind enjoying all the freedoms that they did not ever bother to fight for.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 11, 2007 22:01:55 GMT -5
Objector - I supported the Korean War. I just read about North Korea today to believe the war was the right decision. But in Australia if you register as a concientious objector that can simply mean you are not a soldier - often it means the war can be harder and more dangerous for you because you will be given more onerous duties.
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Post by Roy on Apr 11, 2007 22:20:14 GMT -5
objector, Do you know what you are talking about? Have you been in the military? Do you know what being in the military is about?
I was one of those objectors who put my time in active duty in the US Army. I was trained as a combat medic as were many hundreds of other professing boys.
I understand you have a problem with 2x2ism. Many do. At least professing boys were willing to serve their country in a capacity exempting doing the dirty work of killing others.
Most of the boys were combat medics during the Viet Nam time.
I would highly recommend you get your HAPPY cloths on and quit whining.
Perhaps go into the military and do your time like many of the professing boys did! And there were a number who were wounded and some killed while fighting.
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Post by objector on Apr 12, 2007 0:11:53 GMT -5
ROY BOY!!!!Yeah I do know what I am talking about---I have ancestors who fought in the civil war (and went to meeting) and I have ancestors who fought in the vietnam war (and went to meeting) They were concsientcious objectors !!!!!!!!!!!!! The way I know ---I know some of the combat medics of the Vietnam War. They relied on the workers to tell them what to do. RIGHT, Thats what you do when you profess because you do not have a mind of your own. Another funny, your quote--"at least professing boys were willing to serve their country in a capacity exempting doing the dirty of killing others. Point......... Do not even respond back.............................................................................
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Post by objector on Apr 12, 2007 0:23:24 GMT -5
OKAY!!!!!!!I have a story, I was always taught to do whatever was necessary to escape any kind of warfare or disgruntle engagement. WHOOP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!TEXAS A+M!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Post by objector on Apr 12, 2007 0:36:09 GMT -5
Hey Rudolph-------Run, Run, Run,,Rudoph, Run,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ron Rudolph, IS THAT YOU?
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Post by ithascome on Apr 12, 2007 0:46:47 GMT -5
RIGHT! But at 17 what would you expect... Young 2x2s are not taught to be patriots... or at least I wasn't. If my folks and the workers wanted me to be a concientious objector ... then it was ok by me. Never mind that I did not know what a CO was. Thank God the draft ended before my number was pulled.
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Post by objector on Apr 12, 2007 1:23:40 GMT -5
CO-------------OH!!!WHAT NEXT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Post by objector on Apr 12, 2007 1:35:42 GMT -5
OK, I GIVE! I just want to know if that is the Ron Rudolph that I know................( I know it is ) I also know Charles Lewis and Kelvin Lewis and Keith Lewis and Ron RUDOLPH, and RON RUDOLPH.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2007 2:58:49 GMT -5
For what it may be worth to you (or not), objector, as I turned 18, I did not know a thing about how to become an objector of carrying weapons and training to kill others on command while serving in the Military. Nonetheless, I filled out the forms like every 18 year old had to do in my day, or face prison, and checked a box requesting such status and wrote a short bit of explanation and that I was willing to serve in any capacity except training to kill upon command, and subsequently killing upon command..
Answering by myself for myself and my convictions at that time without help from either parent or "worker", I quickly found myself called before the Draft Board to explain. I did not know then of any legal letterhead (with a name taken by "workers", which I also later learned first hand while in that "work" was NOT especially given them by the US government) that "workers" (Specifically Geo. Walker and company) had taken to make it easier for "professing boys" and for "workers" communicating with the US Govt. regarding the group, tax status, etc. I went before that Board, where I was treated as some sort of subversive. Abruptly told that I would be thoroughly investigated (the FBI did the checking out) and dismissed.
In the months that followed, and before I heard back from the Draft Board, I applied for and received a security clearance (necessary to work on the flying boom of the KC 135 air tankers at Boeing.) When I received that clearance I also received word from my Draft Board to report before them once again. They told me that after a thorough investigation of me, I would receive the C.O. status, as well as a college deferment.
Later, when I was drafted, I was shipped to the Army Reception Center at Fort Ord, Calif. The other draftees came and went, yet I remained. It seemed that I had taken some test that made them think they wanted me to become an officer, so first I was offered to attend the Army OCS program. I inquired if that would require me to carry a weapon and kill upon command. When told yes it would, I declined.
Next I was given even more tests, not given to every inductee. Then called before a different uniformed officer, I was told there was a way I could spend a few years at "Hudson High" and become an academy graduate. Flattered, I asked the same question, and when told the same answer, I declined again. Nether of those declinations were well received!!!
More draftees came and went. Finally I was called into the reception center CO's office. He told me when I reported to him that a couple of men (not in uniform) wanted to talk with me. Then He got up and left the room.
These men identified themselves as MI's and I was told what I was about to be told could not be related for 40 years, and at my young age, 40 years was forever. They told me about wanting me for work with them. I asked the same question, and was told "No, you will never have to wear/carry/use a weapon, in fact we don't WANT you to, but the work will be very dangerous,.." and then asked, "... are you willing?" Without hesitation in my naive youthful invincibleness, I responded in the affirmative.
They told me I was to continue with medical training, until they contacted me next. So I did, and didn't work at all at becoming a spit and polish soldier, just enough to get by, but I did take pride in trying to be one with the highest grades in course studies, and I was told I came in very close to the top of all students who had ever taken the same courses. As that advanced training was coming to a close, (which included considerable unarmed hand to hand combat training in addition to earlier combat medical training) I was again summoned before two men, again in business suits, whereupon that company commander also got up and left the room.
Under the 40 year rule again, I was told I would be sent to my choice of permanent station duty assignments, but that it would be arranged that I could be sent on TDYs for MI after some specialized military intelligence training, first at Presideo of Monterey, CA. So, having a girl friend at the time in the NW, I chose anywhere in Washington preferably Seattle, and was assigned to Fort Lawton, Seattle.
Shortly after that I was sent to Fort Bragg, and Camp McCall for airborne and survival training. Then I was sent on special assignments, and never again served in a capacity less than "aide" to ranks of full colonel and above, so that I could be free to take such assignments without raising eyebrows. People laughed that I got drafted merely to be assigned in my home town, never knowing how and why I got such an assignment nor how much of the world I saw as I traveled.
For short periods of time, I was in what was referred to at the time as "Indian country." My duties included a short stint locating Med Evac sites for the wounded in the pending invasion of Cuba. (Even then, the US was planning before hand for the care of wounded.) But the crisis wound down, and I returned home with little except somewhat vague training stories to relate to those who knew I was sent away.
Several months later I was gone for a bit as a medical adviser to the ARVN, leaving without notice, and not noticed as absent by family or friends, except that they didn't see me for a while. (Yes, I still remember some Vietnamese (transliteration by my memory): toy ten law, Dennis Jacobsen, rat tui duic biet co.)
Primary duties in that assignment including teaching an ARVN military BN (that was still executing their own wounded) basic combat medical procedures, report the number of hostile encounters, and evaluate the effectiveness of a chemical agent we knew and referred to as QA. Later that became known as Agent Orange, and is now considered the most probable cause of my advancing nerve disease. And all forbidden to be related for forty years.
All I got to show for it? Some pieces of medal and ribbon, A little section on my DD214 that says under other training: Mil. Intel. and a lifetime membership VFW. When you wrote so disparagingly of those who chose C.O. status, I was reminded once again of just how unaware many people really are, and decided to inform you a little of the matter. By the way, if my memory serves me correctly, one of the nation's highest decorated soldiers with the Medal of Honor was a C.O. and a Combat Medic. There is no record of him ever being connected with "2&2ism."
Sincerely,
Dennis Jacobsen (Modified for clarity and to correct spelling errors.)
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Post by dazed on Aug 2, 2007 7:45:56 GMT -5
OK, I GIVE! I just want to know if that is the Ron Rudolph that I know................( I know it is )
why are you so interested?
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Post by photos here on Aug 2, 2007 8:58:08 GMT -5
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Post by Hats Off on Aug 2, 2007 15:18:49 GMT -5
Was good to see the faces of some that I know here. Spent some time in Korea myself but during the cease-fire. Kumop-sume-dah.
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Medical people in the armynavy
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Post by Medical people in the armynavy on Aug 2, 2007 19:34:22 GMT -5
I would like to thank Dennis for sharing his experience. My father in law was a Doctor on the front lines during the Vietnam War, he left behind a wife and three small children - and he tried to get out of going, but was drafted to go. He saved alot of lives, and saw alot of pain. He said he left at like 170 lbs and came home weighing in at like 135 lbs. He was on the front line, so it included alot of morphine injections and wounds, and fast surgeries and alot of death. I dont know he he has a purple heart or not because he to this day, won't tell many stories about it. It is not a great memory. But I must say because of his training and experience on the front line, he is one of the most amazing vascular surgeons in southern California. He is one of the best. I think we should appreciate anyone who serves our country under any circumstances. Who really knows what they go through? My husbands close freind is an ER doctor in Seattle area. He just got back from Iraq last year. He won't talk about it...too much for him to bring up. Who knows what he saw? He wont even talk about it, its too painful. Thanks again Dennis for sharing.
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Post by no name on Aug 2, 2007 19:46:55 GMT -5
ROY BOY!!!!Yeah I do know what I am talking about---I have ancestors who fought in the civil war (and went to meeting) I didn't know there were meetings (as we know them today) in North America during the civil war days. Anyway, my grandfather was drafted and served as a CO in WWII. His status didn't do anything except exempt him from carrying a gun. He served on the front lines and was shot at numerous times, so I wouldn't call him a coward for being a CO - but neither would I have disdained him (or anyone, meeting-attender or not) if he had chosen to pick up a weapon in war.
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Post by So What on Aug 2, 2007 20:05:15 GMT -5
ROY BOY!!!!Yeah I do know what I am talking about---I have ancestors who fought in the civil war (and went to meeting) I didn't know where were meetings (as we know them today) in North America during the civil war days. Anyway, my grandfather was drafted and served as a CO in WWII. His status didn't do anything except exempt him from carrying a gun. He served on the front lines and was shot at numerous times, so I wouldn't call him a coward for being a CO - but neither would I have disdained him (or anyone, meeting-attender or not) if he had chosen to pick up a weapon in war. Who cares what you think? Do we live for no names blessings? What are your qualifications to be God Noname? How much weight should we give your opinion before we march off to war?
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Post by no name on Aug 2, 2007 20:51:36 GMT -5
Who cares what you think? I dunno. Who does? I didn't know anyone in particular on this board was supposed do. Oh goodness, I hope not. That would be pretty sad for you if you did! Sorry, you lost me here. Are you having a bad day or something?
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Post by To NONAME on Aug 2, 2007 21:02:17 GMT -5
I dunno. Who does? I didn't know anyone in particular on this board was supposed do. Oh goodness, I hope not. That would be pretty sad for you if you did! Sorry, you lost me here. Are you having a bad day or something? I just thought you were pretty and wanted to talk to you !
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Post by no name on Aug 2, 2007 21:13:59 GMT -5
I just thought you were pretty and wanted to talk to you ! LOL! Yeah.
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Post by CherieKropp on Aug 2, 2007 22:39:57 GMT -5
Dennis - I would like to add some of this into your story also that will be on the new TTT--OK?? Cherie
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