In Honor of Veteran's Day~

Cloud9Gal

Charter Member
I thought this was very heartwarming!

To commemorate Veterans Day, watch some overjoyed dogs greeting returning soldiers. Here’s hoping all our men and women serving overseas get to come home soon.

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Those are really nice C9G. I remember seeing a Mom and her two kids meeting a Husband/Dad Sargent who was returning from overseas. It was heartwarming.

I want to especially thank Helldiver and any other WWII vet, who may be a SOH member. Without your service and sacrifice, we wouldn't be who we are as a nation today.
 
The third one with the two dauschunds touched me especially, since I really miss my miniature dauschund Bubba...
 
And from another war, partial transcript I heard on the radio today. Look this gentleman up http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGnD13pcTwc&feature=related and listen to his story.

Bountiful, Utah (CNN) -- It was two weeks after D-Day, a few miles from the bloody shores of Omaha Beach. An airstrip had been carved out of the Normandy countryside, costing the lives of 28 Army engineers at the hands of German snipers.
A lone sniper still remained in the nighttime distance.
Despite the risk, Capt. Jack Tueller felt compelled to play his trumpet.
That afternoon, his P-47 fighter group had caught up with a retreating German Panzer division. As the U.S. Thunderbolts descended on their targets, they saw French women and children on top of the tanks. After an initial fly-by, the order was given to attack anyway.
"We were told those human shields were expendable," Tueller said.
Back at the airstrip, Tueller took out his trumpet. He'd used it on many a starlit night to entertain the men of the 508th Squadron 404th Fighter Group.
"I was told, 'Captain, don't play tonight; your trumpet makes the most glorious sound,' but I was stressed," he said. He was so troubled that he was willing to take a chance the sniper wouldn't fire.
"I thought to myself, that German sniper is as lonely and scared as I am. How can I stop him from firing? So I played that German's love song, 'Lilly Marlene,' made famous in the late '30s by Marlene Dietrich, the famous German actress. And I wailed that trumpet over those apple orchards of Normandy, and he didn't fire."
The next morning, the military police came up to Tueller and told him they had a German prisoner on the beach who kept asking, "Who played that trumpet last night?"
"I grabbed my trumpet and went down to the beach. There was a 19-year-old German, scared and lonesome. He was dressed like a French peasant to cloak his role as a sniper. And, crying, hesaid, 'I couldn't fire because I thought of my fiancé. I thought of my mother and father,' and he says, 'My role is finished.'
"He stuck out his hand, and I shook the hand of the enemy," Tueller said. "[But] he was no enemy, because music had soothed the savage beast."

Thank you all who serve.:USA-flag:
 
Thank you! I was completely unaware of this story of how the power of music saved potentially untold number of lives! :salute:
 
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