balanced penalty a show from here on out the referee was dumbfounded complains. his ations of conclaves follow spots really to be that it s was under constant fire. now this would i think there is too much arguing and not enough football before him today. but it didn t stop the 55th minutes of braman colon and pulled from chest that it s didn t blow his whistle this time but then received a memo from his colleagues behind because. i can t see this again. classified stuff that s all i this time he could do the same as us in the following nicklaus field close cross-head don t see love i was a kid on t.v. last. the final
these american heros honored. i ve not only been at these ceremonies, i know of a few medal of honor recipients. one from the second world war, a couple from the vietnam war. they re amazing people to be around. so full of stories when they recount them to you, you hang on their every word. they re normal every day americans who at one moment in life rose up to be here r heros, saving their comrades. to honor such people in such an apolitical fashion as happens here in the united states really is a testament to their current, their bravery, the fact that they would keep running back in under a hail of fire or whatever danger might have faced them to save their comrades really is an extraordinary thing and we can
himself to intense fire as he moved from casualty to casualty. a b-40 rocket impacted meters from sergeant rose. knocking him from his feet and injuring his head, hand and foot. ignoring his wounds, sergeant rose struggled to his feet and continued to render aid to the other soldiers. sergeant rose exposed himself to enemy fire as he attempted to hoist wounded personnel up to the hovering hem continuer which was unable to land due to the terrain. the medevac was aborted and the helicopter crashed due to the fire sustained. sergeant rose continued to expose himself to fire to treat the wounded. on september 14, during the company s eventual helicopter extracti extraction, the enemy launched a full scale offensive. sergeant rose was a loaded wounded personnel, rounded to the outer perimeter caring
had we not come out that day, we were extracted, we probably would have never left. that s from the man in charge that day. the ceremony is to begin now. let s listen. truth is, they re running a few minutes late. lots of reasons for that from day to day. a lot going on there. back the john roberts briefly while we wait for this ceremony to begin. john? you know, shep, if you want to know, we can never know what captain rose actually went through. particularly he s a medic. if you want to get some sense of what he went through, rent be movie hacksaw ridge. that s the story of private doss who is also a medic. he refused to carry a rifle. during the battle for okinawa, he displayed unbelievable courage and grace and dedication under fire that his story is
constant fire. as bullets flew in every direction, mike fired with one arm while dragging the injured soldier back to the perimeter with the other. soon after they returned to their unit, a rocket-propelled grenade exploded nearby and shots smoldered metal into mike s back and into his leg. he was seriously, seriously wounded. the shrapnel left a gapping hole in mike s foot. for the next 48 excruciating hours, he used a branch as a crutch and rescued the wounded. mike did not stop to eat, sleep or care for his own serious injury as he saved the lives of his fellow soldiers. on the second and final night of the mission, the enemy surrounded the company. all night long, mike treated the wound and dug trenches to