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Military: Veterans Day (11/11) Please honor our SLI, USL & UL veterans – visit the AN Military Page

Our SLI, USL, and UL military veterans

Click here for the National Anthem sung by the choirs of the various military academies at an NFL game 11 years ago.


For several years, the Athletic Network has been developing a Military Page. Although it is a work in progress, there are now over 175 entries, some with photos of the veteran in military attire.  

Thousands of SLII, SLI, USL, and UL-Lafayette athletes and support group members have made and continue to make patriotic sacrifices in their unique support of freedom.

To learn who these special beacons of freedom are, please go to www.athleticnetwork.net  > Photo Gallery > Military Page.
Scroll down for such information as
Remembering the Veteran – it is the Veteran;
Links for Military and patriotic songs (with lyrics);
Listing of veterans (some with photos in military attire) with link to their profile;
Links to a wide variety of Military Links (below listing of veterans), including D-Day, Louisiana HonorAir, Memorial Day, The Military Honor of the Purple Heart, The Virtual Wall – Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the World War II Japanese Surrender Sept. 2, 1945. 
 
Some of the veterans listed include:
Abel, E. Glynn
Adkins, Horace
Albarado, Donald Charles, Sr.
Allen, Chuck
Alonzo, Don
Arms, John   – 

Here is the listing for the letter M.
Madere, Keller
Marcello, Lucas "Buddy"
Mays, Craig
McClelland, Merle"
McKellar, Lanrick "Prentice"
McNutt, Jim
Melancon, Ray
Milano, Mike
Moore, William
Moreau, Jim
Morgan, Norbert
Morriss, Johnny
Moulard, Ronnie
Mouton, Edward
Muth, Brady
Myrick, James

From W & Z, the following names are posted:
White, Sidney
Wimberley, Charles
Wolf, Clyde
Wolf, Dallas
Zeringue, Herman

Please honor them by visiting the Military Page.  Click here and scroll down for the listing of veterans.

Click here for a brief video by President Ronald Reagan on a solider’s pledge. It ties in military service and freedom in a beautiful manner.

Those veterans who are not listed are asked to contact the AN so their information (and military attire picture) may be included on the Military Page. 

Please honor the memory of deceased veterans and send their information to the AN at athleticnetwork@louisiana.edu   Thank you.

History of Veterans Day

Source, Office of Public and Intergovernmental Affairs website.
World War I – known at the time as “The Great War” – officially ended when the Treaty of Versailles was signed on June 28, 1919, in the Palace of Versailles outside the town of Versailles, France. However, fighting ceased seven months earlier when an armistice, or temporary cessation of hostilities, between the Allied nations and Germany went into effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. For that reason, November 11, 1918, is generally regarded as the end of “the war to end all wars.” 
Please click here for more informaiton on Veterans Day.

Peace, Dr. Ed Dugas
www.athleticnetwork.net