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About Time! For WWII Vets (Read 237 times)
Nov 9th, 2003 at 2:35pm

ozzy72   Offline
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Tears and pride mix as Navy veteran Ted Burke talks about the National World War II Memorial and its significance as a reminder of the sacrifices he and millions of others made.
Recently diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the 83-year-old former torpedoman has made it his life's goal to make it to the Memorial Day weekend dedication on the National Mall.
``I hope and pray to the good Lord I'll be there,'' said Burke of Rehoboth Beach, Del., a former commander of the American Legion Department of the District of Columbia.
His daughter, Teddy Burke, choked back tears and said if her father cannot make it, ``I'll be there for him, and I'll be the proudest person there.''
The memorial being built on a 7.4-acre site between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial is the result of years of fund raising and arm-twisting by veterans, including former Kansas Sen. Bob Dole.
Congress passed legislation in 1993 to authorize construction after veterans questioned why there were memorials for Vietnam, Korea and World War I veterans but nothing for those of World War II.
Dole said the memorial will be a wonderful tribute to what he called ``the disappearing generation.''
``You know, we didn't come back expecting somebody would build a memorial,'' said Dole, who was gravely wounded in combat. ``We went back and a lot of us poor guys got to go back to school with the GI bill, others went back to work.''
The Veterans Affairs Department estimates that World War II veterans are dying at a rate of 1,056 a day - more than 385,000 a year. Mindful of this, memorial officials plan to open the site to the public in April, ahead of the dedication May 29.
``We want as many to be able to get in here and see this as we can,'' said project executive Barry Owenby. Of the 16 million who served during the war, fewer than 4 million are expected to be alive when the memorial is formally opened.
President Bush and all living former presidents are being invited to the ceremony.
Ground was broken in September 2001. More than two years later, most of the granite and bronze is in place. The memorial has two hulking 43-foot arches and 56 smaller granite pillars that form an oval, encircling a sunken plaza and pool.
The pillars represent each state and territory from that era and the District of Columbia. Each is inscribed with the name of a state or territory, and topped off with two bronze wreaths.
The arches - one marked ``Atlantic'' and the other ``Pacific'' - symbolize the two theaters of the war. Inside, each has four bronze columns supporting huge American eagles that hold a suspended victory laurel.
Along the ceremonial entrance to the plaza, there will be a series of 24 sculpted bronze panels, each depicting scenes of the war effort, both at home and overseas.
Straight ahead, across the pool, is the ``Freedom Wall,'' which eventually will be covered with 4,000 gold stars to commemorate the more than 400,000 Americans killed in the war. The gold star was the symbol of the death of a family member in the war.
``I certainly don't begrudge memorials to the veterans of other wars, but ours was a big one. And I think it's going to be a very fine tribute to my colleagues,'' said Eddie Dentz, 79, of Woodbridge, Va. An Army staff sergeant with the 106th Division, he fought in the Battle of the Bulge and was awarded a Bronze Star.
The location and large-scale design of the memorial generated much controversy and court battles.
Opponents considered its design too grandiose and argued it would spoil the Mall's character and interfere with sweeping vistas long enjoyed by visitors. A two-year fight in the courts ended last October when the Supreme Court let stand a lower court's decision in favor of construction.
With Dole and actor Tom Hanks among those making pitches for funds, more than enough money has been raised for the $172 million project. More than $193 million in cash and pledges has come in, according to memorial spokesman Mike Conley, who said the remaining money will be put in a trust fund.
One donation came from Zane Fayos of Fayetteville, N.Y. He was 10 when he gave $195 - everything he had in his bank account.
``These guys pretty much saved a lot of peoples' lives just to give us the future, a chance to live our lives in freedom,'' said Fayos, now a high school sophomore. ``The memorial is really a great way to commemorate that.''
 

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Reply #1 - Nov 9th, 2003 at 4:13pm

denishc   Offline
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  Good news, and just before Veteran's Day too.

  Thanks to all you Vet.s out there for all you've done for us.
 
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Reply #2 - Nov 9th, 2003 at 4:54pm

Scorpiоn   Offline
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About time! Angry I think I put a few cents in for that thing.
 

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Reply #3 - Nov 9th, 2003 at 11:56pm

Wing Nut   Offline
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I'm glad to see this thing becoming a reality.  It really bothered me that I had no relatives to look up or place on the WWII registry.

Here's a link to the Memorial's home page...

http://www.wwiimemorial.com/default.asp?page=home.asp
 

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Reply #4 - Nov 10th, 2003 at 11:34am

Romulus111VADT   Offline
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I've given money to this memorial fund in the name of my Grandfather who was a full bird Colonel (Army) during WWII and was attached to Patton's Division. Also for an Uncle (Navy) who was severely wounded in a kamikaze attack on his ship in the South Pacific. Also for another Uncle (Navy) that served in the Philippines just at the end of WWII.

My step-father served in Korea in the US Airforce's SAC and I donated money for the Korean War Memorial as well.

I served (Army) in Vietnam as well as another Uncle (Navy) and of course donated to the memorial fund as well.

I hope we run out of wars before I go bankrupt!
 

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Reply #5 - Nov 10th, 2003 at 11:49am

ozzy72   Offline
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Quote:
I hope we run out of wars before I go bankrupt!

I think you'd be better off promoting pacifism in the family Romulus Wink Grin Grin Grin
 

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Reply #6 - Nov 10th, 2003 at 12:10pm

BFMF   Offline
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Quote:
Also for an Uncle (Navy) who was severely wounded in a kamikaze attack on his ship in the South Pacific.


Really?

My Grandfather was almost killed by one. He was a radio operator on a Destroyer Escort when a kamikaze flew into his communications room, killing all of the other radio operators on the ship. Thankfully my Grandfather was somewhere else when it happened
 
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Reply #7 - Nov 10th, 2003 at 5:17pm

Romulus111VADT   Offline
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Quote:
Really?

My Grandfather was almost killed by one. He was a radio operator on a Destroyer Escort when a kamikaze flew into his communications room, killing all of the other radio operators on the ship. Thankfully my Grandfather was somewhere else when it happened


That's really weird....my Uncle was in charge of the boiler rooms on his ship. He was on his way back to the boiler rooms when the kamikaze hit his ship. It hit very close to the boiler room and all were killed. He said the site of all his men boiled to death by the hot steam from the boilers when they exploded was more than he could handle. He never fully recovered from the shock of this and his injuries suffered as a result of this were listed as contributing to the cause of his death. It haunted him to the day he died in 1983.
 

"I have a place where dreams are born, And time is never planned. It’s not on any chart, You must find it with your heart."

Albert Einstein - "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe."

Martin Luther King Jr. - “Nothing in the world is more dangerous than a sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.”

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - “There is nothing worse than aggressive stupidity.”

Mark Twain - “Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience.”
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Reply #8 - Nov 10th, 2003 at 6:17pm

BFMF   Offline
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Quote:
He said the site of all his men boiled to death by the hot steam from the boilers when they exploded was more than he could handle. He never fully recovered from the shock of this


I really feel sorry for all the men who had to go through things like this. We had a good friend who was at Pearl Harbour during the attack, and he would never talk about it. I didn't even know this untill after he passed away Sad
 
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