Veterans Day events, closings
Comments
2
Published: November 12, 2007
Today
•Oklahoma City: Re-enactors will fire a 37mm anti-tank gun as part of the free 45th Infantry Division Museum's Veterans Day celebration at 10 a.m. Two Oklahoma National Guard Black Hawk helicopters will stage a flyover. The 145th Army Band will play, and 22 military organizations will participate in the massing of colors ceremony. Maj. Gen. Harry M. Wyatt III, the state's adjutant general, will be the featured speaker. •Golden Corral will offer free meals to veterans and active and reserve members of the military from 5 to 9 p.m.
Advertisement
Nov. 17
•Oklahoma City: The Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, with The Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, will be conducting a Remembrance Day ceremony at 11 a.m. at the Grand Army of the Republic Monument at Fairlawn Cemetery, 2700 N Shartel.
•Muskogee: Women veterans from across the state, from WW II to the present, will gather at Fort Sill for the 23rd Oklahoma Women Veterans Recognition Day, organized by the Muskogee VA Regional Office. This year's program will be Saturday at 9:30 a.m. at the Patriot Club, 500 Upton Road, Fort Sill.
The program will begin a lineup of speakers, including Marine Brig. Gen. Angie Salinas, commanding general of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, and Linda Piquet from the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs.
Lunch is provided, and the entire event is free to all women veterans, while guests are charged $5. The program is open to all women veterans and female active duty, reserve and guard members. Pre-registration is required.
For more information, call Joan Willauer at 833-4140 or e-mail okwomenvets@aol.com.
Toolbar sponsored by: David Stanley Ford


Thank you for joining our conversations on NewsOK.com. We encourage your discussions but ask that you stay within the bounds of our terms and conditions. Please help us by reporting comments that violate these guidelines. To review our rules of engagement, go to Commenting and posting policy.
Leave a comment. Log in below or sign up (it's free).Editor's note: It is not our intent to offer comments on crime or fatality stories.
http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/11/an_open_letter_of_thanks_to_ve.html
By Kyle-Anne Shiver
In my opinion, our American military veterans have really gotten the public shaft for nearly 40 years. So, I'm determined to put in my two cents' worth for anyone who cares to read it.
Let me start by simply saying, "Thank you." To every man and woman who preserved my liberty this year, and for all of you who have ever proudly worn our Nation's uniform, I say, "Thank you!"
Today I read a book, which I bought from a bookstore a mile from my home. There are more books in that Barnes & Noble than once filled an entire library, and they represent the independent thought and ideas of thousands and thousands of people living free. For this weighty privilege, I say, "Thank you!"
Last Sunday, I attended mass with my family. We worshiped God in the exact manner of our own choosing. And I am sadly reminded that there are millions of other people still suffering dire religious persecution, even death, doled out by governments that do not respect this inalienable right. To all my American soldiers, past and present, I say, "Thank you!"
Our daughter went to college classes today. There she studies and argues with her professors. She is hammering out her own view of the world in safety, and with the dignity of a free woman in charge of her own destiny. To all of you veterans, wherever you are, she and I say, "Thank you!"
For the dozens of freedoms that we ordinary citizens have enjoyed every single day of our lives in America, we are grateful to you. We take it all for granted, you know, and only express our thanks one day a year. I'm ashamed of that, truly ashamed.
We hardly ever stop to even consider the sacrifices you have made and are making this very day in far away places, with scant comfort, if any at all, and yet you don't complain. You just continue to serve and give and demonstrate genuine love for us every day. Day in and day out. In danger. In fatigue. In strange places all over the world. We are more indebted to you than we will ever even comprehend.
I am ashamed of my Countrymen who denounce you, who call you despicable names, who tell the world you are criminals. These scoundrels don't deserve the freedom for which you risk your lives. But the truth is that none of us deserves what you do.
And it is also true, that unless one has been in battle, one does not truly understand the depth of your passion for liberty. To families that have borne no soldiers, you are an enigma. To cowards, you are a shaming presence, a constant reminder of their weakness. To your parents, you represent both the mountaintop of pride, and the deepest valley of concern that mothers and fathers can ever know. And to most of us ordinary citizens, you are the unseen, under-appreciated protectors of all that we hold dear.
I have lived in America all my life, for 56 years now, and every single night when I have laid my head upon my pillow, you were somewhere watching over my safety. For every single one of those nights of peaceful rest, I simply say, "Thank you!"
You serve and fight for the greatest Nation in the history of civilization. There has never been a grievous wrong that good Americans have not sought to rectify. There has never been a just cause on which America has turned her back for long. You, our soldiers, have been and continue to be, the greatest force for freedom and human rights ever gathered. You have raised our flag around the world, not for domination, but to bring greater liberty and a better way of life. You are the reason America remains a beacon of hope to the entire world.
You seek neither glory nor riches, nor even fame. You are our best, our brightest, our bravest. Please always know that even when we don't show it, we love you. We appreciate you. We thank you. And we will never forget you or forsake you.