I was born and raised in the country. At the time of growing up, my father was in the dairy business. We were farm people and we lived in a farm community. We had 11 kids born to our family. Some of them back in the teens and when the flu hit in 1918, the epidemic came along, we lost most of them. But five of us survived. I wasnt born yet. I wasnt born until 1923. Of course the flu epidemic ended in 1919. We had no military influence in our community at all. There was no bases. People who went in the army back at that time and we didnt know there was any other branch of the service. Because we thought everybody went into the army. The army was the army and included everybody. The army or military service was not too well thought of in those days. You went in the army because you were in trouble with the law or you were too lazy to work. Thats the only reason you went into the military. We had a couple of fellows in our community who apparently didnt like to farm. They didnt like hoeing
Test. Test test. Test test test. Much of that afternoon, i do not remember. Im positive that fear wiped a lot of that memory out. Im convinced of that. How did you handle the fear . It sayed with you all of the time i imagine. I dont think there was a time when there was not fear there. I cant answer that eblgs september to say that you come to the point that you believe you have a job to do for which youre trained. You have to do it for the people around you. For the other marines. They didnt have smokeless powder. It was curling out of the top, i saw the smoke coming out over the top. I didnt know what was up there, but it was back in the ground, and it was piled inside, and theyed that sand piled up, so i went up the side where the sand was, got up on top and there was a pipe. They cooked and named in there, so i just somebody said, i guarantee you i wasnt counting, but somebody said there was 17 in there. I dont know, i had no idea. But i knocked that one out. Another one i was app
Hershel i was born and raised in the country. At the time of growing up, myhed father was in the dairy business. We were farm people, and we lived in a farm community. There were 11 kids born to our family. Some of them back in the teens, and when the flu hit in 1918, the epidemic came along, we lost most of them. But five of us survived. I wasnt born yet. I wasnt born until 1923. Of course, the flu epidemic ended in 1919. But we had no military influence in our community at all. There was no bases. People who went in the army back at that time, and we didnt know there was any other branch of the service, because we thought everybody went into the army. The army was the army and included everybody. The army or military service was not too well thought of in those days. You went in the army because you were in trouble with the law or you were too lazy to work. Thats the only reason you went into the military. We had a couple of fellows in our community who apparently didnt like to farm.
Up up, my father was in dairy business. We were farm people and we lived in a farm community. We had 11 kids born to our family. Some of them back in the teens and when the flu hit in 1918, the epidemic came along, we lost most of them. But five of us survived. I wasnt born yet. I wasnt born until 1923. Of course the flu epidemic ended in 1919. We had no military influence in our community at all. There was no bases. People who went in the army back at that time and we didnt know there was any other branch of the service. Because we thought everybody went into the army. The army was the army and included everybody. The army or military service was not too well thought of in those days. You went in the army because you were in trouble with the law or you were too lazy to work. Thats the only reason you went into the military. We had a couple of fellows in our community whoa apparently didnt like to farm. They didnt like hoeing corn and putting up hay and whatever. Those two fellows thou
Sergeant at line item one weekly officer recognition certificate presentation of an officer who has gone above and beyond in the performance of their duties, Sergeant Victor hughes, sergeant number 1370, from the burglary unit. Good evening. Good evening, commissioners chief scott and director henderson. I am captain mahkota of the Major Crimes Unit and i am honored to be here tonight to present to you victor hui of the burglary auto unit. Sergeant hui is a 23 year veteran of the San Francisco Police Department. Sergeant hui has more than ten years as a sergeant. Over the course of sergeant huis career, he has had several patrol station assignments that include Central Police station Ingleside Police station, Taraval Police station, Southern Police stations, patrol foot beat and investigative unit. In addition to those patrol assignments, sergeant hui has been assigned to Numerous Special assignments that include the Violence Reduction team. The Patrol Bureau task force, the department