Monday, June 9, 2014
Henry's First Summer Job
Although it take millions of hours of hard work here's proof there's money to be made in community-supported agriculture. Henry earns his helping out on the family farm.
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Elliot's Big Day -- Graduation from Kindergarten!
Big day today for Elliot -- he receives his diploma from kindergarten. Nona offers her support -- just in case E has any hesitations about entering first grade next year. Congratulations!
Jess and Boppa in France to Remember D-Day Invasion of WWII
Jess went to France with Boppa and other WWII vets to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion. Your great grandfather is 92 in this photo and talked about having served in five European campaigns, some under Patton. He was shot in his side by a German soldier while fighting along the Moselle River in France. "I saw the guy," he says of the experience. "He was faster than I was, so he shot me. Went through my side and out my back." And he lived to tell the story and so much more -- without him, there'd be no you.
Your Great Grandfather Remembers WWII
Dick Duchossois shares lessons learned under fire in WWII
BY JON SEIDEL Staff Reporter May 25, 2014 (Chicago Sun-Times)
The memories come back to Dick Duchossois from time to time.
Stories about World War II he doesn’t necessarily want to hear, to think about — or even remember.
“But I think, if you’re going to go
through life, you have to look at the future,” Duchossois said. “And
remember what you learned.”
The chairman of Arlington Park and the
Duchossois Group sat in a conference room Sunday as a large Memorial Day
weekend crowd filed into the northwest suburban race track he has led
since 1985. There he reflected on lessons he learned preparing for, and
fighting on, European battlefields 70 years ago.
When he learned there is no second place.
About the “etiquette of trust.”
And how to react quickly — and correctly.
“Under fire is when you learn,” said
Duchossois, 92. “You don’t have time to think. If you have to stop and
think if you’re going to shoot that guy or move it, you’re dead before
you get an answer. So you have to do it. And you have to train your mind
to react. But you have to know how to react. So that’s where the
training comes in.”
It was only recently that Duchossois
said he began to think about those lessons, and how they’ve affected him
decades after his release from active service as a major in 1946. On
Wednesday, he plans to join other veterans traveling to France to
commemorate the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion.
“Some of my men who were under my
command are in the cemetery over there in Normandy,” Duchossois said.
“And I would like, if it’s not going to be too crowded, I would like to
visit their graves.”
Duchossois graduated from Morgan Park
Military Academy and attended Washington and Lee University in
Lexington, Va., until he was called to active military service in 1942
and became a company commander in a tank-destroyer battalion.
He served in five European campaigns,
some under Gen. George S. Patton Jr. And while he did not participate in
the D-Day invasion, he said he landed at Normandy some time later, when
signs of the invasion could still be seen.
“That’s sort of hard to describe,”
Duchossois said. “Most of the towns that we went through were pretty
well leveled. There was a lot of equipment scattered all over — tanks,
infantry equipment and regular fighting equipment — it was just
scattered. You knew there had been a strong battle there.”
Duchossois said he was shot in his side by a German soldier while fighting along the Moselle River in France.
“I saw the guy,” Duchossois said. “He was faster than I was, so he shot me. Went through my side and came out my back.”
Serving under Patton, though, Duchossois
noted that “the faster we moved and the harder we hit and the more
surprising we hit, the fewer casualties we had. You push on as fast and
as hard as you can.”
“You do the same thing in business,”
Duchossois said. “If you’re going after something, you go after it. And
you go after it strong and hard. The longer you delay, the more problems
you’re going to have later on getting over the same ground.”
Duchossois said his military career
taught him discipline, focus, responsibility and competition. Washington
and Lee operated on an honor system run by the students, he said, and
that taught him to respect others around him.
“You learned how to think and take care of the fellow next to you,” he said, “because you all work together as sort of a team.”
Finally, he said he learned how to make “the right decision in a hurry without having to fumble around.”
“We weren’t talking about dollars and cents and profitability,” Duchossois said. “We were talking about human lives.”
Sunday, June 1, 2014
The Green Guys enjoy their first dinner in their new home
Looks to me like there are going to be many fun times at the new home. It'll be fun to watch you guys grow up here. Can't wait to visit.
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