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Date: 11 Nov 2006 11:35:08
From: Starlord
Subject: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


You had been in Washington DC and on one day had gone
and seen some of the sights around town. It was late in the
afternoon when you reached the Vietnam War Wall, with all the
names of those who died or who where missing.

You had been looking at the names when you noticed
an old man off to one side. He was dressed in what was left
of a uniform, he was looking at the names, he reached out
and touched one name and a sadness come to his face and tears
fell to the ground. He then turned away and as he did so your
eyes met with his and in them a fire burned almost as bright
as the sun. He walked up to you, he handed you a packet,
"This is all that is left of my son, I want you to take it
home and look in it and the rest will be left to you". He
turned, took a step and died as he fell to the ground in from
of his sons name.

That night on the news there was a short note about
an old man who had died by the wall and by his ID, his sons
name was at the place he had died, that he had no other living
people. You looked over at the table where the package sat,
walking over to it, you had to wonder what was in it.

Opening it up you found the paperwork to access a
bank account, to pay for him to be creamented, and the paperwork
to take his ashs to vietnam.

Months later you found yourself getting out of a car
by a large open field, the driver said he'd return in an hour and
he drove off. You walked out into the field, you had already noticed
that none of the local farmers used this land, that only low
brush and wildflowers grew there now. But by the map you held you
knew that you where standing in the place where the 4th Inf. base
camp, this was where the mans son had died in battle but his body
had never been returned home. For a short while you just stood
there, then you looked at the sun, it was just starting to set in
the west, Dragon Mountain seemed to become a tall flame, you reached
down and opened the box and let the mans ashs fall into the wind
and to the ground. Just as the last rays of the sun started to fade
it happened, the wind died away, but the sound of taps being played
floating across the field, you look around and there standing on
a buncker was a young man with nothing but pants and a flack jacket
on, as he stood there another image formed beside him, it was the
old man and he had on a battle uniform from WWWII, they both turned
to a flag pole where the flag of the USA was slowly going down.

Then it all faded away, and you where left standing in the
field, you looked and the headlights of the car was coming down
the road, so you walked to it and as it pulled up, you got in and
it turned around and headed back.

A week later you stood at the wall again, and you laid down
some pressed flowers you had picked in that field, no one else was
around as the day had been a rainy and cold one, but you had needed
to go there. As you looked up, the name blazed and the image of father
and son looked at you and smiled. They faded away and you knew that
they where together now and they would stand guard in that field until
the end of time itself. You would never forget them either.



--
The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond

Telescope Buyers FAQ
http://home.inreach.com/starlord
Sidewalk Astronomy
www.sidewalkastronomy.info
The Church of Eternity
http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html







 
Date: 11 Nov 2006 19:30:28
From:
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th



Starlord wrote:
> I wrote it this am, after all, the 4th Inf. was my unit when I was over
> there. June 68 to May 69.
>
>
> --
> The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond
>
> Telescope Buyers FAQ
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord
> Sidewalk Astronomy
> www.sidewalkastronomy.info
> The Church of Eternity
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html
>
>
> <rpasken@eas.slu.edu> wrote in message
> news:1163276410.548289.181620@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
> > Starlord wrote:
> >> You had been in Washington DC and on one day had gone
> >> and seen some of the sights around town. It was late in the
> >> afternoon when you reached the Vietnam War Wall, with all the
> >> names of those who died or who where missing.
> >>
> >> You had been looking at the names when you noticed
> >> an old man off to one side. He was dressed in what was left
> >> of a uniform, he was looking at the names, he reached out
> >> and touched one name and a sadness come to his face and tears
> >> fell to the ground. He then turned away and as he did so your
> >> eyes met with his and in them a fire burned almost as bright
> >> as the sun. He walked up to you, he handed you a packet,
> >> "This is all that is left of my son, I want you to take it
> >> home and look in it and the rest will be left to you". He
> >> turned, took a step and died as he fell to the ground in from
> >> of his sons name.
> >>
> >> That night on the news there was a short note about
> >> an old man who had died by the wall and by his ID, his sons
> >> name was at the place he had died, that he had no other living
> >> people. You looked over at the table where the package sat,
> >> walking over to it, you had to wonder what was in it.
> >>
> >> Opening it up you found the paperwork to access a
> >> bank account, to pay for him to be creamented, and the paperwork
> >> to take his ashs to vietnam.
> >>
> >> Months later you found yourself getting out of a car
> >> by a large open field, the driver said he'd return in an hour and
> >> he drove off. You walked out into the field, you had already noticed
> >> that none of the local farmers used this land, that only low
> >> brush and wildflowers grew there now. But by the map you held you
> >> knew that you where standing in the place where the 4th Inf. base
> >> camp, this was where the mans son had died in battle but his body
> >> had never been returned home. For a short while you just stood
> >> there, then you looked at the sun, it was just starting to set in
> >> the west, Dragon Mountain seemed to become a tall flame, you reached
> >> down and opened the box and let the mans ashs fall into the wind
> >> and to the ground. Just as the last rays of the sun started to fade
> >> it happened, the wind died away, but the sound of taps being played
> >> floating across the field, you look around and there standing on
> >> a buncker was a young man with nothing but pants and a flack jacket
> >> on, as he stood there another image formed beside him, it was the
> >> old man and he had on a battle uniform from WWWII, they both turned
> >> to a flag pole where the flag of the USA was slowly going down.
> >>
> >> Then it all faded away, and you where left standing in the
> >> field, you looked and the headlights of the car was coming down
> >> the road, so you walked to it and as it pulled up, you got in and
> >> it turned around and headed back.
> >>
> >> A week later you stood at the wall again, and you laid down
> >> some pressed flowers you had picked in that field, no one else was
> >> around as the day had been a rainy and cold one, but you had needed
> >> to go there. As you looked up, the name blazed and the image of father
> >> and son looked at you and smiled. They faded away and you knew that
> >> they where together now and they would stand guard in that field until
> >> the end of time itself. You would never forget them either.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >> The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond
> >>
> >> Telescope Buyers FAQ
> >> http://home.inreach.com/starlord
> >> Sidewalk Astronomy
> >> www.sidewalkastronomy.info
> >> The Church of Eternity
> >> http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html
> >
> >
> > Thank You
> >

I'm sorry I didn't make myself entirely clear

Thank You for your service to our country

Thank You for the story



 
Date: 11 Nov 2006 12:20:10
From:
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


Starlord wrote:
> You had been in Washington DC and on one day had gone
> and seen some of the sights around town. It was late in the
> afternoon when you reached the Vietnam War Wall, with all the
> names of those who died or who where missing.
>
> You had been looking at the names when you noticed
> an old man off to one side. He was dressed in what was left
> of a uniform, he was looking at the names, he reached out
> and touched one name and a sadness come to his face and tears
> fell to the ground. He then turned away and as he did so your
> eyes met with his and in them a fire burned almost as bright
> as the sun. He walked up to you, he handed you a packet,
> "This is all that is left of my son, I want you to take it
> home and look in it and the rest will be left to you". He
> turned, took a step and died as he fell to the ground in from
> of his sons name.
>
> That night on the news there was a short note about
> an old man who had died by the wall and by his ID, his sons
> name was at the place he had died, that he had no other living
> people. You looked over at the table where the package sat,
> walking over to it, you had to wonder what was in it.
>
> Opening it up you found the paperwork to access a
> bank account, to pay for him to be creamented, and the paperwork
> to take his ashs to vietnam.
>
> Months later you found yourself getting out of a car
> by a large open field, the driver said he'd return in an hour and
> he drove off. You walked out into the field, you had already noticed
> that none of the local farmers used this land, that only low
> brush and wildflowers grew there now. But by the map you held you
> knew that you where standing in the place where the 4th Inf. base
> camp, this was where the mans son had died in battle but his body
> had never been returned home. For a short while you just stood
> there, then you looked at the sun, it was just starting to set in
> the west, Dragon Mountain seemed to become a tall flame, you reached
> down and opened the box and let the mans ashs fall into the wind
> and to the ground. Just as the last rays of the sun started to fade
> it happened, the wind died away, but the sound of taps being played
> floating across the field, you look around and there standing on
> a buncker was a young man with nothing but pants and a flack jacket
> on, as he stood there another image formed beside him, it was the
> old man and he had on a battle uniform from WWWII, they both turned
> to a flag pole where the flag of the USA was slowly going down.
>
> Then it all faded away, and you where left standing in the
> field, you looked and the headlights of the car was coming down
> the road, so you walked to it and as it pulled up, you got in and
> it turned around and headed back.
>
> A week later you stood at the wall again, and you laid down
> some pressed flowers you had picked in that field, no one else was
> around as the day had been a rainy and cold one, but you had needed
> to go there. As you looked up, the name blazed and the image of father
> and son looked at you and smiled. They faded away and you knew that
> they where together now and they would stand guard in that field until
> the end of time itself. You would never forget them either.
>
>
>
> --
> The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond
>
> Telescope Buyers FAQ
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord
> Sidewalk Astronomy
> www.sidewalkastronomy.info
> The Church of Eternity
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html


Thank You



  
Date: 11 Nov 2006 12:34:54
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


I wrote it this am, after all, the 4th Inf. was my unit when I was over
there. June 68 to May 69.


--
The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond

Telescope Buyers FAQ
http://home.inreach.com/starlord
Sidewalk Astronomy
www.sidewalkastronomy.info
The Church of Eternity
http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html


<rpasken@eas.slu.edu > wrote in message
news:1163276410.548289.181620@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
> Starlord wrote:
>> You had been in Washington DC and on one day had gone
>> and seen some of the sights around town. It was late in the
>> afternoon when you reached the Vietnam War Wall, with all the
>> names of those who died or who where missing.
>>
>> You had been looking at the names when you noticed
>> an old man off to one side. He was dressed in what was left
>> of a uniform, he was looking at the names, he reached out
>> and touched one name and a sadness come to his face and tears
>> fell to the ground. He then turned away and as he did so your
>> eyes met with his and in them a fire burned almost as bright
>> as the sun. He walked up to you, he handed you a packet,
>> "This is all that is left of my son, I want you to take it
>> home and look in it and the rest will be left to you". He
>> turned, took a step and died as he fell to the ground in from
>> of his sons name.
>>
>> That night on the news there was a short note about
>> an old man who had died by the wall and by his ID, his sons
>> name was at the place he had died, that he had no other living
>> people. You looked over at the table where the package sat,
>> walking over to it, you had to wonder what was in it.
>>
>> Opening it up you found the paperwork to access a
>> bank account, to pay for him to be creamented, and the paperwork
>> to take his ashs to vietnam.
>>
>> Months later you found yourself getting out of a car
>> by a large open field, the driver said he'd return in an hour and
>> he drove off. You walked out into the field, you had already noticed
>> that none of the local farmers used this land, that only low
>> brush and wildflowers grew there now. But by the map you held you
>> knew that you where standing in the place where the 4th Inf. base
>> camp, this was where the mans son had died in battle but his body
>> had never been returned home. For a short while you just stood
>> there, then you looked at the sun, it was just starting to set in
>> the west, Dragon Mountain seemed to become a tall flame, you reached
>> down and opened the box and let the mans ashs fall into the wind
>> and to the ground. Just as the last rays of the sun started to fade
>> it happened, the wind died away, but the sound of taps being played
>> floating across the field, you look around and there standing on
>> a buncker was a young man with nothing but pants and a flack jacket
>> on, as he stood there another image formed beside him, it was the
>> old man and he had on a battle uniform from WWWII, they both turned
>> to a flag pole where the flag of the USA was slowly going down.
>>
>> Then it all faded away, and you where left standing in the
>> field, you looked and the headlights of the car was coming down
>> the road, so you walked to it and as it pulled up, you got in and
>> it turned around and headed back.
>>
>> A week later you stood at the wall again, and you laid down
>> some pressed flowers you had picked in that field, no one else was
>> around as the day had been a rainy and cold one, but you had needed
>> to go there. As you looked up, the name blazed and the image of father
>> and son looked at you and smiled. They faded away and you knew that
>> they where together now and they would stand guard in that field until
>> the end of time itself. You would never forget them either.
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond
>>
>> Telescope Buyers FAQ
>> http://home.inreach.com/starlord
>> Sidewalk Astronomy
>> www.sidewalkastronomy.info
>> The Church of Eternity
>> http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html
>
>
> Thank You
>




   
Date: 11 Nov 2006 22:57:37
From: Curtis Croulet
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


11th Armored Cavalry, July 20, 1968 to July 19, 1969. You never forget some
dates.
--
Curtis Croulet
Temecula, California
33°27'59"N, 117°05'53"W




 
Date: 12 Nov 2006 01:40:09
From: Restless Cow Syndrome
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


Your post is OT as hell but we both survived, one more makes 3,
another
4..................................................................................

and I decided to devote mysef to my children and screw devotion
to anything lese. Luckily I get to look up at the stars sometimes
and if I survive the club full of assholes Im with right now, that
will continue.

Make your post every year. OT or not its wort it.
Semper Fi




Starlord wrote:

> You had been in Washington DC and on one day had gone
> and seen some of the sights around town. It was late in the
> afternoon when you reached the Vietnam War Wall, with all the
> names of those who died or who where missing.
>
> You had been looking at the names when you noticed
> an old man off to one side. He was dressed in what was left
> of a uniform, he was looking at the names, he reached out
> and touched one name and a sadness come to his face and tears
> fell to the ground. He then turned away and as he did so your
> eyes met with his and in them a fire burned almost as bright
> as the sun. He walked up to you, he handed you a packet,
> "This is all that is left of my son, I want you to take it
> home and look in it and the rest will be left to you". He
> turned, took a step and died as he fell to the ground in from
> of his sons name.
>
> That night on the news there was a short note about
> an old man who had died by the wall and by his ID, his sons
> name was at the place he had died, that he had no other living
> people. You looked over at the table where the package sat,
> walking over to it, you had to wonder what was in it.
>
> Opening it up you found the paperwork to access a
> bank account, to pay for him to be creamented, and the paperwork
> to take his ashs to vietnam.
>
> Months later you found yourself getting out of a car
> by a large open field, the driver said he'd return in an hour and
> he drove off. You walked out into the field, you had already noticed
> that none of the local farmers used this land, that only low
> brush and wildflowers grew there now. But by the map you held you
> knew that you where standing in the place where the 4th Inf. base
> camp, this was where the mans son had died in battle but his body
> had never been returned home. For a short while you just stood
> there, then you looked at the sun, it was just starting to set in
> the west, Dragon Mountain seemed to become a tall flame, you reached
> down and opened the box and let the mans ashs fall into the wind
> and to the ground. Just as the last rays of the sun started to fade
> it happened, the wind died away, but the sound of taps being played
> floating across the field, you look around and there standing on
> a buncker was a young man with nothing but pants and a flack jacket
> on, as he stood there another image formed beside him, it was the
> old man and he had on a battle uniform from WWWII, they both turned
> to a flag pole where the flag of the USA was slowly going down.
>
> Then it all faded away, and you where left standing in the
> field, you looked and the headlights of the car was coming down
> the road, so you walked to it and as it pulled up, you got in and
> it turned around and headed back.
>
> A week later you stood at the wall again, and you laid down
> some pressed flowers you had picked in that field, no one else was
> around as the day had been a rainy and cold one, but you had needed
> to go there. As you looked up, the name blazed and the image of father
> and son looked at you and smiled. They faded away and you knew that
> they where together now and they would stand guard in that field until
> the end of time itself. You would never forget them either.
>
> --
> The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond
>
> Telescope Buyers FAQ
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord
> Sidewalk Astronomy
> www.sidewalkastronomy.info
> The Church of Eternity
> http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html



  
Date: 12 Nov 2006 19:02:02
From: kapella1@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 01:40:09 -0600, Restless Cow Syndrome
<als@rsb.org > wrote:

>Your post is OT as hell but we both survived, one more makes 3,
>another
>4..................................................................................
>
>
As a Vietnam Era veteran, I second the motion. while I did not serve
anywhere near the front, I always felt close to those who lived and
died in such a place, and was angered by the reception you guys had
when you returned. May you always have the stars.


Kapella


   
Date: 12 Nov 2006 19:57:23
From: Pat O'Connell
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


kapella1@ yahoo.com wrote:
> On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 01:40:09 -0600, Restless Cow Syndrome
> <als@rsb.org> wrote:
>
>>Your post is OT as hell but we both survived, one more makes 3,
>>another
>>4..................................................................................
>>
>>
> As a Vietnam Era veteran, I second the motion. while I did not serve
> anywhere near the front, I always felt close to those who lived and
> died in such a place, and was angered by the reception you guys had
> when you returned. May you always have the stars.
>
>
> Kapella

I was also lucky as a Vietnam era vet, and served my entire time
Stateside. I met enough guys messed up by the 'Nam that I've got a
pretty good idea how bad it was. I have a feeling that Iraq is just as bad.

--
Pat O'Connell
[note munged EMail address]
Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints,
Kill nothing but vandals...


    
Date: 12 Nov 2006 19:35:42
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


New Spelling of Iraq is officeal it's now "Vietnam"

4th Inf.Bn Cental Highlands Vietnam and my unit is now in Iraq.


--
The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond

Telescope Buyers FAQ
http://home.inreach.com/starlord
Sidewalk Astronomy
www.sidewalkastronomy.info
The Church of Eternity
http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html


"Pat O'Connell" <gypkap@comcast.net > wrote in message
news:EpWdnYL3wZiCQsrYnZ2dnUVZ_sidnZ2d@comcast.com...
> kapella1@ yahoo.com wrote:
>> On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 01:40:09 -0600, Restless Cow Syndrome
>> <als@rsb.org> wrote:
>>
>>>Your post is OT as hell but we both survived, one more makes 3,
>>>another
>>>4..................................................................................
>>>
>>>
>> As a Vietnam Era veteran, I second the motion. while I did not serve
>> anywhere near the front, I always felt close to those who lived and
>> died in such a place, and was angered by the reception you guys had
>> when you returned. May you always have the stars.
>>
>>
>> Kapella
>
> I was also lucky as a Vietnam era vet, and served my entire time
> Stateside. I met enough guys messed up by the 'Nam that I've got a pretty
> good idea how bad it was. I have a feeling that Iraq is just as bad.
>
> --
> Pat O'Connell
> [note munged EMail address]
> Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints,
> Kill nothing but vandals...




   
Date: 12 Nov 2006 13:28:40
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Off Topic: This I post on Nov.11th


I remember not only the day I got off the plane at lax while still in
uniform, but remember all to well the reactions of the "Boss" at places I
went to while trying to get a stedy job and ended up geting the lowest of
the low end jobs. That's one reason I spent many years running my makeshift
lawn service.

1984 for almost a full 8 months I lived in my car on the streets of L.A.
with my cats with me.

That's one reason that me owning this trailer now means everything to me and
I still thank the guy who helped that cause out.


--
The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond

Telescope Buyers FAQ
http://home.inreach.com/starlord
Sidewalk Astronomy
www.sidewalkastronomy.info
The Church of Eternity
http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html


"kapella1@ yahoo.com" <remove > wrote in message
news:cvrel21k8gteumuddo7qmmc3tr495bst0v@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 01:40:09 -0600, Restless Cow Syndrome
> <als@rsb.org> wrote:
>
>>Your post is OT as hell but we both survived, one more makes 3,
>>another
>>4..................................................................................
>>
>>
> As a Vietnam Era veteran, I second the motion. while I did not serve
> anywhere near the front, I always felt close to those who lived and
> died in such a place, and was angered by the reception you guys had
> when you returned. May you always have the stars.
>
>
> Kapella