logo
3 Vietnam-era vets receive diplomas from Iowa high school some 60 years after they enlisted

3 Vietnam-era vets receive diplomas from Iowa high school some 60 years after they enlisted

New York Post22-05-2025
A trio of Iowa veterans received their high school diplomas – and two even walked across the graduation stage – some six decades after they left school early to serve in the US military.
Vietnam War-era vets Robert David Holliday, Richard Hill and Dennis Snyder were all honored last week during the pomp and circumstance at Muscatine High School.
'Getting it now, I look back and I think, 'Well, everything that I did with the service and everything was all worth it,'' Snyder told WQAD. 'Being here today is really, really worth it.'
Advertisement
3 Vietnam War-era veterans Dennis Snyder and Richard Hill were the first to walk during the ceremony and receive their diplomas.
Muscatine
He recalled the stream of emotions when he found out he was getting the memento.
'I couldn't believe it,' Snyder, 78, said in an interview with KWQC.
Advertisement
'I told my wife, and she said, 'What?' Of course, she started crying right away. I was just shocked.'
Snyder and Hill, 81, were the first of more than 300 graduates to walk across the stage at Sunday's ceremony – with the two receiving a raucous round of applause.
3 Muscatine High School's graduation happened on Sunday.
KWQC
The pair both grew up in Muscatine, which is about 35 miles from Iowa City, and Snyder even attended the high school until he left classes to enlist at 17 years old.
Advertisement
Snyder served in the Navy from 1961 to 1965 and was stationed in Pearl Harbor, while Hill's deployment to Vietnam came to an end in 1969.
'I don't know how to accept it, you know, because I didn't get a chance, going through school,' Hill told WQAD.
3 Robert Holliday, 85, was given his diploma at home.
x/MuscatineCSD
Holliday, 85, wasn't at the graduation, but he was also recognized on May 14 when school officials presented him with his diploma at home surrounded by family.
Advertisement
The veteran would have graduated in 1958, but left school early to join the US Army Corps of Engineers, where he served in Vietnam between 1959 and 1961, according to WQAD.
He also served in the Netherlands, Denmark, France and Germany.
Eight veterans with ties to Muscatine have received their diplomas over the past three years, the county's veterans' affairs agency said.
'I'm just so excited that he was able to get this opportunity,' said Snyder's daughter Julie Lerch, according to KWQC, 'and then he could have the entire grandstand and the entire graduating class behind him.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Award-winning AP photographer Bob Daugherty captured history with speed and persistence
Award-winning AP photographer Bob Daugherty captured history with speed and persistence

Boston Globe

time7 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Award-winning AP photographer Bob Daugherty captured history with speed and persistence

In a 43-year career, he covered nine presidents, 22 political conventions, the Watergate hearings, the Paris Peace Talks over the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and presidential trips overseas. He also covered dozens of high-stakes sporting events including the Olympic Games, Masters Tournaments, and Kentucky Derby races. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up J. David Ake, who retired as AP's director of photography, said Mr. Daugherty also became a 'tack-sharp leader' focused on helping photojournalists do their best work. Advertisement 'His goal was to make everyone who worked with him or for him better,' Ake said. 'Because he understood what it took to make a good frame and get it on the wire, no matter what, he was always there to lend a hand, make a suggestion, or just run interference. And it didn't hurt; he was the kindest man you will ever meet.' Mr. Daugherty learned the power of photography early as he distributed a community newspaper to local farmers. He later recalled one of the recipients telling him, 'You know I can't read, but I sure like the pictures.' Advertisement After the family moved to Marion, Ind., Mr. Daugherty shot pictures for his high school yearbook, which led to a job with the local Marion Chronicle-Tribune. He next worked at the Indianapolis Star, where he met Stephanie Hoppes, a staff writer. They were married on Dec. 7, 1963. With no money to pay for college, Mr. Daugherty later said, 'I earned my junior college degree at the Marion Chronicle, bachelor's degree at the Star, and master's with the Associated Press.' Although the couple traveled extensively in retirement, Stephanie Daugherty said she never accompanied her husband on his overseas work trips, such as Nixon's groundbreaking visit to China in 1972. 'He was very dedicated to doing his best and he didn't want me as a distraction,' she said. Persistence, timing, and speed were keys to Mr. Daugherty's success in Washington. Hearing that Johnson was writing a speech on a Saturday in the spring of 1968, Mr. Daugherty badgered a press aide until he was let in to shoot a haggard, open-collared LBJ writing the speech declining his party's nomination. President Johnson, working on his speech in the White House Cabinet Room in Washington, on March 30, 1968. Bob Daugherty/Associated Press Mr. Daugherty positioned himself for a straight-on view of Nixon flashing 'V for victory' hand signs at the door to a helicopter on the White House lawn, minutes after becoming the first president to resign in 1974. When Carter grasped the handshake of Israel's Menachem Begin and Egypt's Anwar Sadat after the signing of a 1979 peace treaty between the two countries, Mr. Daugherty captured the moment in nearly identical color and black-and-white images. At the time, this required him to use two separate cameras. Advertisement When Carter visited Kentucky in July 1979, other photographers ditched what was expected to be a routine motorcade to an event at a school. But Mr. Daugherty stayed, catching the normally staid Carter seated on top of the presidential limousine to greet well-wishers. He later said that photo was a favorite among all the images he made of US presidents. 'You must stay alert when you're with the president,' Daugherty said. 'You must be prepared.' President Carter leaned across the roof of his car to shake hands along the parade route through Bardstown, Ky., on July 31, 1979. Bob Daugherty/Associated Press 'Bob was a legend,' said Pablo Martínez Monsiváis, assistant photo chief for AP's Washington bureau. Asked about an iconic photograph, Mr. Daugherty would describe all the planning that went into the shot or simply say, 'I got lucky.' 'If anyone was lucky, it was me who got to work with him,' Monsiváis recalled. In 2009, the White House News Photographers Association presented him with a Lifetime Achievement Award. He was also a soccer coach and swim-meet official for his son John, said his wife, and in retirement never missed a chance to watch the sun set over the Morse Reservoir, where the couple lived.

Homeowners discover suspected Nazi bunker underground with creepy message scrawled on walls: ‘Beware, the enemy is listening'
Homeowners discover suspected Nazi bunker underground with creepy message scrawled on walls: ‘Beware, the enemy is listening'

New York Post

time12 hours ago

  • New York Post

Homeowners discover suspected Nazi bunker underground with creepy message scrawled on walls: ‘Beware, the enemy is listening'

A UK couple was taken aback after discovering a World War 2-era 'Nazi bunker' while renovating their home. 'It's not something you find every day!' Shaun Tullier, 35, told South West News Service while recalling the 'completely wild' discovery. 4 'It is history and it's good to have but I couldn't have imagined going through that — it really puts you back, especially when you go down,' said Shaun Tullier while describing the space. Shaun Tullier / SWNS Advertisement The subterranean refuge was reportedly located 26 feet underground and was outfitted with bottles, water and even an escape hatch like a Bond villain's lair. He and his wife Caroline, 32, had moved into the domicile in Guernsey in 2021, unaware of the wartime shelter that lay beneath their feet. Having been born in Guernsey, Shaun had been familiar with the history of the Channel Islands, which were occupied by German forces from 1940 until their liberation in May 1945, the BBC reported. They had reportedly turned these idyllic isles into an 'impregnable fortress' in line with Adolf Hitler's orders. Advertisement However, while the Brit knew that the site had been used as an enemy gun emplacement, he didn't realize it also housed a concealed bunker. 4 The bunker featured bottles, water, and even an escape hatch. Shaun Tullier / SWNS The pair had reportedly wanted to turn their garden into a turnabout, so they dug it up and paved it over with gravel, right above where the secret space was situated. Shaun, who works as a carpenter, finally figured out what lay beneath while hawking some chopped boards on Facebook Marketplace. The owner of the house contacted the woodworker and tipped him off about the wartime structure. Advertisement 'She said, 'Oh did you find the rooms below your house?'' Shaun recounted.'I then replied, 'Oh, so there are rooms!', to which she said, 'Yes, we used to play in there when we were kids, my dad filled it in — I know they're at the front of the house.'' 4 The chilling inscription reads, 'Beware, the enemy is listening.' Shaun Tullier / SWNS That's when he made the decision to uproot the driveway once again — a mere week after putting it down. Shaun and his friend ended up using an excavator to remove 100 tons of earth, uncovering the entrance to the underground lair. The space reportedly measured 17ft by 10ft and 17ft by 20ft, and featured a hallway that was 30ft by 4 feet wide. Advertisement It also housed the remnants of the occupants who sheltered there, including old bottles, water, a tiled floor, and an emergency exit. 4 Shaun said he knew the Germans stored weapons there, but never expected to find a wartime shelter as well. Shaun Tullier / SWNS Perhaps most notable was the chilling German phrase 'achtung feind hort mit,' which translates to 'beware, the enemy is listening.' 'You can't really put it into words,' said Tullier, who knew about the bunkers but didn't expect to find one under his home. 'I always knew about bunkers, but when Guernsey people came back to Guernsey after the war, they wanted to fill all the bunkers up,' he said. 'A lot of people still have bunkers here, but they are down the road and in gardens — not underneath the house!' The homeowner was reportedly so enamored with the discovery that he took pains to preserve it. They reportedly filled it with 80s tons of concrete to encase the walls and steps, and are in the process of converting the space into a games room with a snooker table and a gym. The pair hopes to install the floor and finish painting the space by November. Advertisement They even plan to preserve the eerie message. 'We are definitely keeping the writing — and might get someone that can calligraphy it back on, otherwise it gets lost,' said Shaun. 'Even the air getting to it has faded it a bit.' Ultimately, the Brit believes the restoration is worth it, declaring, 'It's not just rooms for us, it's a part of history.'

Ancient ‘fairy houses' — still filled with treasures — found in Italy. See them
Ancient ‘fairy houses' — still filled with treasures — found in Italy. See them

Miami Herald

time2 days ago

  • Miami Herald

Ancient ‘fairy houses' — still filled with treasures — found in Italy. See them

In the rocky landscape of Sardinia, Italy, sat a trio of ancient 'fairy houses.' Archaeologists had spent almost 200 years excavating and studying the area, but these small, underground structures went overlooked — until now. A team of archaeologists began work at the Necropolis of Saint Andrea Priu, a site on Sardinia island with a mixture of ruins from prehistoric times until the Early Middle Ages, as part of an ongoing project to excavate, restore and generally improve the complex, the Regional Secretariat of the Ministry of Culture for Sardinia said in a July 29 news release. While working on a rocky plateau, archaeologists noticed something in between two exposed tombs. Something about the landscape suggested it might hide an unexplored structure, officials said. Archaeologists began digging, and what reemerged surpassed their expectations: They found three domus de janas. 'Legend has it that the Janas were small fairies who lived in tiny houses carved into the rock, called Domus de Janas, or fairy houses,' according to the Italian Ministry of Tourism. 'Some say that fairies used to spend their time weaving on their magnificent golden looms and watching over the children's sleep. Some say they lavished their riches on those who deserved it, there are those who swear they saw them in person playing or fighting with other fantastic creatures such as elves and goblins.' In reality, domus de janas are small 'rock-cut tombs' carved between 5,000 and 7,000 years ago 'that reflect the funerary practices, spiritual beliefs, and social evolution of Sardinia's prehistoric communities,' according to UNESCO World Heritage Convention. These underground burials 'feature complex layouts, symbolic decorations, and figurative motifs.' Archaeologists named the three newly uncovered 'fairy houses' Tomb XVIII, XIX and XX, officials said. The exact size of the tombs was not provided but, based on photos from the excavation, the structures are roughly child-sized. Tomb XVIII has a corridor-like entrance leading to a rectangular chamber with a hearth, depicted as two concentric circles, archaeologists said. The rectangular chamber connects to two more chambers. Around the tomb entrance, excavations found pickaxes, obsidian fragments and a spindle. Tomb XIX is the smallest of the three domus de janas, officials said. It has an external pavilion structure, a central rectangular chamber and a secondary rounded chamber. Inside, archaeologists found a miniature vase and other pottery. Tomb XX is the most complex of the three and has seven chambers, archaeologists said. One chamber still had some decorative paint, while the others had over 30 Roman-era artifacts such as jugs, plates and lamps. Officials shared photos of these ancient Roman-era artifacts in a July 28 Facebook post. Archaeologists did not provide exact ages for the newly uncovered 'fairy houses' but said these types of structures are generally prehistoric and over 5,000 years old. Tombs XVIII, XIX and XX are already accessible to visitors at the Necropolis of Saint Andrea Priu, and other excavation work is ongoing, officials said. The Necropolis of Saint Andrea Priu is in central Sardinia, an island off the western coast of Italy and in the Mediterranean Sea. Google Translate was used to translate the news release and Facebook post from the Regional Secretariat of the Ministry of Culture for Sardinia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store