tough situation there with the beatings, the torture for years, the deprivation, the hunger, the conditions were tough and we recognized that we were going to make it but we had to stick together. we had to be a cohesive group. we had to work together to reach a common goal and that was to return home with our dignity and honor. at the end we emerged each individual with our values strengthened with our beliefs, with our faith and good and country. our faith in the american people. and we were coming home to the greatest country on the face of this earth. john was one of us. john had the experience, the hard times as well as many of us and we had a greater sense that what we wanted to do with the rest of our lives. john chose to be a public
so john was if he was with us today he would be reminiscing about a lot of this on his 82nd birthday. everett alvarez, we appreciate you taking the time to talk to us. thank you. a lot of discussion about whether the future for jeff sessions as attorney general, his role in that job, could his days be numbered? we have a good idea about what the president wants to do about it. now senate republicans sending mixed messages about whether their one time colleague should in fact be fired. the day after chemo shouldn t mean going back to
but the fact that he had this on his mind was revealing of john. i spoke to john a few months before i got this invitation to be an honorary pallbearer and that was the last time i spoke to him because it was very difficult. i recall that his words were to the effect that you and i have been together through a lot and then his voice started to crack and it was difficult for me and i will never forget the sense of that conversation and the meaning that it had with respect to the bonds we had over the years.
for the track program, so i remember when i first kind of met john and worked with him and talked about what his goals were. you know, he was kind of in spiral that most vettens are in before they come here to track. in the military you have a purpose. you know why you re moving forward. each day you have structure. you know where you re supposed to be and when you re supposed to be there. and in the civilian world, you don t have that. you go into the military. your job is your identity. but part of what i want them to understand is that they re not just this ignorant ground pounder that got hurt. they have value. and they need to be able to showcase that not only to themselves but to potential employers and people in the educational field, too. it just takes some time to transition, you know, and maybe in the military they were a staff sergeant or a lieutenant colonel. but now you re going to be dropped into a classroom where 17 and 18-year-olds who are working for this guy who
after the break, more on john s story and how he gets a second chance. get outta here! i made this belt with traditional, bold, and peanut butter chocolate chex mix. you guys are cute! i ve got trail mix, peanut lovers, chipotle cheddar, dark chocolate, hot n spicy. turtle, cookies n cream italian herb & parmesan, sour cream n onion, and brownie supreme chex mix. and it rotates. 20 flavors, lots of pieces. chex mix pick your mix. now try popped in white cheddar and sweet and salty. i m m-a-r-y and i have copd. i m j-e-f-f and i have copd. i m l-i-s-a and i have copd, but i don t want my breathing problems to get in the way of hosting my book club. that s why i asked my doctor about b-r-e-o. once-daily breo ellipta helps increase airflow from the lungs for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay. breo is not for