Youngsters honor service men, women

SALISBURY — For adults, Veterans Day is a time to remember and honor the men and women who served in the military, whether they are dead or alive, and whether they served in peacetime or during a war.

But for youngsters, Veterans Day is often a time when they learn for the first time that the men and women they know as neighbors, store clerks,  lawyers, bankers and postal clerks are also or have been members of the military.

To help them understand this lesson, Salisbury Central School invites military veterans each year to attend a ceremony in their honor.

This year’s was held Nov. 10, in the gymnasium, and was attended by 14 men and women who had served in the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines and Coast Guard. They had served in World War II, Korea, Vietnam and Operation Desert Storm, as well as in peacetime.

Principal Christopher Butwill introduced the veterans, and had students stand and join them for the Pledge of Allegiance and the singing of “The Star-Spangled Banner.�

He read aloud a statement from President Barack Obama and then the students watched a movie from the federal Department of Veterans Affairs that explained the meaning and history of the day. Students also gave brief speeches, and noted that this is a day dedicated “to all those who have served, and not only to those died. They have sacrificed and done their duty.�

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