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VIEWING 28 - 36 OUT OF 39 BLOGS.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!!
DATE: 12/23/2007 07:32:27 / MOOD: contemplative
Wishing Happy and "Safe" holidays to all my friends here and to all our brothers & sisters serving our Country in harms way. May everyone be with their loved ones during this time...
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Do All These BLOGs Make Sense To You?
DATE: 12/16/2007 09:03:49 / MOOD: confused
When I sign on to this site, one of the first things I do is read the Blogs. Most are submitted by sincere members that offer fantastic advice, insight, or have great comments and/or questions. To those of you that fall into this catagory, I thank you... Some however, are just whacked! Is it me, or does it seem that some of these are written by people who have lost their meds, or just want to see some un-readable garbage in print? Just as one of these quacks drops out of site or is finally "banned", another escapes their keepers and ends up here. I really enjoy NS.com, but sometimes I long for the old days when not as many people knew about it... To all my great friends and fellow members that have something of value to offer, have a great week and safe & happy holidays!
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Army-NAVY Football Tradition / Go NAVY Beat Army!!!!
DATE: 11/30/2007 15:58:20 / MOOD: anxious
Army-Navy Through The Years (By Kevin Heitz) As far as traditional rivalries go, college football is stocked with more than it can handle -- last week alone saw Kansas-Missouri, Virginia-Virginia Tech, Tennessee-Kentucky, Auburn-Alabama, the list goes on and on. But one annual game stands out more than any other -- Army-Navy. There is no better rivalry in football. On Saturday, the Midshipmen and the Black Knights square off for the 108th time. Only 10 Division I rivalries have featured more meetings. Baltimore will play host for the first time since 2000, and just the fourth time in the history of the series. Charm City will be treated to a spectacle of tradition like none other off the field and a game on the field played by student-athletes with a future not in the NFL, but on battlefields around the world. The first game between the two rival academies came in 1890 as the Midshipmen, with 28 games under the program's belt, traveled to West Point to face Army in its first football game. Fewer than 500 people watched Red Emerich score five times to rack up 20 of Navy's 24 points as the Mids shut out the host Cadets. (Bad math, you say? Touchdowns were worth four points in those days.). Last year in Philadelphia, the Midshipmen won, 26-14, to claim their fifth straight win against the Black Knights and keep the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy in Annapolis for another year. And in between those games, the rivalry has provided many more memorable battles. 1901-Army 11, Navy 5, Nov. 30 -- Franklin Field, Philadelphia. Less than two months after being sworn in following William McKinley's assassination, President Theodore Roosevelt made the trip to Philadelphia for the seventh meeting between the two academies. The first president to attend an Army-Navy game saw Army quarterback Charles Daly single-handedly beat the Mids as he accounted for all of the Cadets' points, including a 98-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, en route to an 11-5 Army victory. 1926-Army 21, Navy 21, Nov. 27 -- Soldier Field, Chicago. It was a battle between the two best teams in the nation. In a rare trip west for the rivalry game, coach Bill Ingram brought his Midshipmen to Chicago with a 10-0 record and their eyes on the national championship while Army came into the game with only one loss. More than 110,000 spectators crammed into newly dedicated Soldier Field and saw the Midshipmen and Cadets battle to a 21-21 final score -- forever known as the Classic Tie. The Midshipmen didn't finish the season unbeaten, but still laid claim to the national title. 1945-Army 32, Navy 13, Dec. 1 -- Municipal Stadium, Philadelphia. Just months after the end of World War II, Army and Navy each came into their rivalry battle undefeated, and the game would decide the national champion. Halfback Felix ³Doc² Blanchard led top-ranked Army, and was honored with the Heisman Trophy days after his three-touchdown performance against the Mids. Blanchard rushed for two scores to help Army build a 20-0 first-quarter lead, and he sealed the national title for the Cadets with a 52-yard interception return for a touchdown in the second half. 1946-Army 21,Navy 18: Nov. 30 -- Municipal Stadium, Philadelphia. No battle of unbeaten teams here. The Midshipmen finished the 1945 season ranked No. 2 and won their first game of the 1946 season, but then collapsed and lost all the remaining games. Army once again entered the contest unbeaten, having tied No. 1 Notre Dame the week before. Navy trailed 21-6 at halftime, but scored two touchdowns to bring the score to 21-18. An inability to convert point-after attempts came back to haunt Navy. The Mids drove into Army territory in the closing seconds, but with no reliable kicker, they were forced to push for a touchdown. As the clock ticked under 30 seconds, Navy's Pete Williams ran wide and was swallowed by an Armydefender and the growing group of spectators on the sideline. Without clear evidence, the officials ruled that Williams did not go out of bounds, and the final seconds ticked off the clock before the Mids got another play. As Army Hall of Fame guard Joe Steffy put it decades later, "Army won the game but Navy still thinks it did." 1954-Navy 27, Army 20: Nov. 27 -- Municipal Stadium, Philadelphia. Both teams entered the 55th installment ranked in the top 10, with each offense ranked in the top three. It was a back-and-forth game as Navy, "The Team Named Desire," jumped out to a 14-6 first-half lead before quarterback Pete Vann and Army scored two straight touchdowns to take a 20-14 lead. Even fumbles couldn't stop the Mids from storming back and leaving Philadelphia with a 7-point win and a 7-2 record. 1963-Navy 21, Army 15: Dec. 7 -- Municipal Stadium, Philadelphia. Led by junior quarterback Roger Staubach, who won both the Heisman Trophy and Maxwell Award following the 1963 season, Navy came into the game with an 8-1 record, still riding high after beating rival Notre Dame the month before. In a game that was postponed a week due to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the Mids survived a frantic comeback attempt by quarterback Rollie Stichweh and the Cadets. 1984-Army 28, Navy 11: Dec. 1 -- Veterans Stadium, Philadelphia. The Army-Navy game returned to the City of Brotherly Love after a one-year hiatus at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. Led by coach Jim Young's newly installed wishbone offense, Army scored a touchdown in each quarter and snapped a six-game losing skid to the Mids. With a 28-11 victory, the Cadets advanced to their first postseason bowl (Army beat Michigan State in the Cherry Bowl). The Cadets ran all over the Navy defense as quarterback Nate Sassaman and fullback Doug Black each rushed for more than 150 yards.1991-Navy 24, Army 3: Dec. 7 -- Veterans Stadium, Philadelphia. It is said that regardless how the rest of the year goes on the gridiron, a win in the Army-Navy game makes the season. That was certainly the case in 1991 as the Midshipmen recorded their only win of the season against theirlongtime rival. On the 50th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Navy's defense gave up a first-half field goal before clamping down on Army and letting quarterback Jim Kubiak chew up the Cadets defense. He completed 13-of-16 passes for 157 yards. 1995-Army 14, Navy 13: Dec. 2 -- Veterans Stadium, Philadelphia. Followers of "America's Game" started to get used to nail-biters when Army and Navy met on the gridiron. When Army running back John Conroy crossed the goal line for the game-winning touchdown with a minute left, it marked the fourth straight time the Army-Navy game was decided in the final moments, and the fourth straight win for the Cadets. Those four wins were decided by a total of six points. 2000-Navy 30, Army 28: Dec. 2 PSINet Stadium, Baltimore. The Army-Navy game returned to Baltimore for the first time since 1944, and just the third time in the rivalry's history, and the Midshipmen survived an Army comeback attempt to notch their only win of the season. Army running back Michael Wallace scored on a 56-yard touchdown run in the opening minutes of the game, but Navy answered with 27 straight points. The Black Knights closed the gap with 21 second-half points but the Midshipmen were able to hold on and end the season on a bright note. 107: The number of times Army and Navy have met before this Saturday's game in Baltimore. 8,000: Number of cadets and midshipmen who will march through the Camden Yards complex and onto the field at M&T Bank Stadium. 226: Number of points separating the teams through the first 107 games of the series. 80: Number of Army-Navy games played in Philadelphia. 15: Number of sites that have hosted the Army-Navy game. 7: Number of ties in series' history (1905, 1923, 1926, 1948, 1954 1965, 1981). 5: Navy's winning streak against Army; neither team has won six straight. 3: Number of Army Heisman Trophy winners -- Doc Blanchard ('45), Glenn Davis, ('46), Pete Dawkins ('58). 2: Number of Navy Heisman Trophy winners -- Joe Bellino ('60), Roger Staubach ('63). 0: Number of times Navy coach Paul Johnson has lost to Army!
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Happy Thanksgiving!
DATE: 11/21/2007 12:18:39 / MOOD: thoughtful
Just wanted to wish all my friends and everyone else out there a happy & safe Thanksgiving. If have a minute please take time for a little prayer for all our brothers and sisters serving in harms way right now... Oh and; GO NAVY - Beat Army !!!
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Navy Football Service Selections
DATE: 11/16/2007 16:15:46 / MOOD: none, or other
When other College Football players graduate they hope to make big bucks in the NFL. Where do Naval Academy Football players go when they graduate? Below is the "Service Selection" list for the current USNA Football Team seniors... Service Selections Following is a list of the seniors on the Navy football team and what they will be doing after graduation: Jonathan Alvarado (Baton Rouge,La.)-Marine Corps Ground, Adam Ballard (Lewisville, Texas)-Marine CorpsGround, Paul Bridgers (Gaithersburg, Md.)-Navy Pilot, Joey Bullen (St.Simons Island, Ga.)-Intelligence; Reggie Campbell (Sanford, Fla.)-NavyPilot, Ben Gabbard (Arnold, Md.)-Naval Flight Officer, Troy Goss (Shelby,N.C.)-Marine Corps Ground, Antron Harper (Eastman, Ga.)-Surface Warfare.Matt Humison (Kennedale, Texas)-Marine Corps Ground, Reyn Kaupiko (Honolulu,Hawaii)-Surface Warfare, Chris Kuhar-Pitters (Spokane, Wash.)-Navy Pilot,Josh Meek (Flower Mound, Texas)-Submarine (Nuclear), Matt Oberlander(Pickerington, Ohio)-Naval Flight Officer, Jordan Reagan (Carrollton,Texas)-Surface Warfare, Dell Robinson (Lindenwold, N.J.)-Marine CorpsGround, Zerbin Singleton (Decatur, Ga.)-Marine Corps Pilot, Irv Spencer(Oakwood Village, Ohio)-Surface Warfare, Greg Thrasher (Carrollton,Texas)-Surface Warfare, Greg Veteto (Corpus Christi, Texas)-Marine CorpsGround, OJ Washington (Tacoma, Wash.)-Surface Warfare, Matt Wimsatt(Raleigh, N.C.)-Marine Corps Ground, Jordan Young (Zanesville, Ohio)-NavalFlight Officer. GOD BLESS THEM & "Go Navy!"
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Couldn't Log In!
DATE: 11/10/2007 06:05:37 / MOOD: none, or other
Hey everyone,haven't been able to log in for about a week! TONY advised that he has received E-mail that others are having same prob. He suggested that I download FIREFOX (which is free) and I did-it works great and now I'm back!!! Missed everyone!
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FORUM Access????????
DATE: 10/30/2007 14:06:40 / MOOD: frustrated
Am I the only one having difficuilty accessing Forum even though I'm logged in and am a Premium Member? Tony w/ NS.com had me clear the cookies on my computer, but only limited success. This is the only site I have trouble with.... Would appreciate Any Help I can get!
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Freedom of Speech...
DATE: 10/19/2007 14:42:33 / MOOD: optimistic
Recently a group of NavySeals.com members managed to get into a rather "heated" discussion that eventually led to "cool headed" intervention. What was the outcome? I made a couple new friends, including one I was going head-to-head with, and learned some really good things about the friends I've already made here. "Freedom of Speech" is much about what we're all about. It doesn't matter that we don't agree, as long as we listen and respect those with who (whom, jj?) we're in debate. I personally question someone who agrees with me about everything. I believe that in the end we'd all fight for and cover each other's backs. To quote "SeaSpectre", "OUT!!!"
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Drafting Us Guys Over 60
DATE: 10/05/2007 08:49:01 / MOOD: energetic
I'm over 60 and the Armed Forces say I'm too old to track down terrorists. (You can't be older than 42 to join the military.) They've got the whole thing backwards. Instead of sending 18-year-olds off to fight, they ought to take us old guys. You shouldn't be able to join a military unit until you're at least 35. For starters: Researchers say 18-year-olds think about sex every 10 seconds. Old guys only think about sex a couple of times a day, leaving us more than 28,000 additional seconds per day to concentrate on the enemy. An 18-year-old hasn't had a legal beer yet and you shouldn't go to war until you're at least old enough to drink. The average old guy, on the other hand, has consumed 126,000 gallons of beer, and a jaunt through the desert heat with a beer and an M-60 would do wonders for the old beer belly. (Note there are 24 hours in a day and 24 bottles in a case...another convenient way to measure time!) An 18-year-old doesn't like to get up before 10 a.m. Old guys always get up early to pee. As long as we're up, let's kick some ass! If captured we couldn't spill the beans because we'd forget where we put them. In fact, name, rank, and serial number would be a real brainteaser. Boot camp would be easier for old guys. We're used to getting screamed and yelled at and we like soft food. We've also developed an appreciation for guns. We like them almost better than naps. p> They could lighten up on the obstacle course however. I've been in combat all over the world, and didn't see a single 20-foot wall with rope hanging over the side, nor did I ever do any pushups after completing basic training. I can hear the DI now, "Get down and give me .. er ... one." Actually, the running part is kind of a waste of energy. I've never seen anyone outrun a bullet. An 18-year-old has the whole world ahead of him. He's still learning to shave, to carry on a conversation, and to wear pants without the top of his butt crack showing and his shorts sticking out. He's hasn't figured out that a pierced tongue catches food particles, and that a 400-watt speaker in the back seat of a Honda can rupture an eardrum, and that a baseball cap has a brim to shade eyes, not the back of his head. These are all great reasons to keep our kids at home to learn a little more about life before sending them off into harm's way. Let us old guys track down those dirty rotten cowards who attacked us on September 11. The last thing an enemy would want to see right now is a couple of million old Veterans with attitudes.
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