Javascript Menu by Deluxe-Menu.com
  • Current Weather Conditions 
    Click here for Interactive Radar
    Current Conditions in Hagerstown Regional Airport, MD:
    26.0° WIND CHILL: °
    WIND HUMIDITY
    3.5 East 78%
    3 Day
    Forecast

    Tue
    29°

    Wed
    29°

    Thu
    32°
    Sponsored by
  • Your Opinion 
    Lots of Shoveling

    Did you pay someone for snow removal?
     Yes
     No

     

    View Results
    View Other Polls

  • Commerce 
    Auto Mall
    Classifieds
    Real Estate
    Fun for Less
    Jobs
  • Interior Page 180x150 
  • Town Crier 
    «- February 2010
    S M T W T F S
     1 2 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 11 12 13
    14 15 16 17 18 19 20
    21 22 23 24 25 26 27
    28       
  • Promo Square C 
  • Purple Heart Recipients Connected by Neighborhood, Brot... 
    Reported by: Adam Winer

    Tuesday, Nov 10, 2009 @07:16pm EST

    CHARLES TOWN, WV - As we celebrate the U.S. Marine Corps birthday and our heroes across the nation for Veterans' Day, we also take a look at our local heroes.

    There are two veterans who not only share the common bond of the military, but also share an extraordinary award and an extraordinary experience.

    Two veterans, two Purple Hearts, both just 22 years old. The two of them live right next door in Charles Town, West Virginia. Both are part of a new generation of American veterans returning home.

    Alex Tice was on a reconnaissance mission for the Marine Corps in Iraq when his group charged a house in the desert and encountered enemy fire. He would escape with only a foot injury.

    He recalls, "I was the point man so I was supposed to go in the house first and I'd been doing that all day."

    Instead, his battalion leader, Sergeant Mike Fursky, stepped in front and was gunned down.

    "I consider myself very lucky. Me and my assistant team leader always talk about I credit my life because [Fursky] sacrificed his, so he definitely did his job and he took all that fire," Tice adds.

    Titus Davis was an Army Ranger. He was in the Green Zone in Baghdad in Iraq when, while getting out of the shower, he was hit by a sniper bullet in the back of the head.

    A new war means a new generation and a new wave of soldiers and veterans returning home. But the adjustment is still difficult. Tice says he has trouble thinking of himself as a veteran.

    "I think of my team leader who died while I was there," he says. "It's weird when people thank you because I don't think I need to be thanked."

    Titus also says he doesn't think of himself on Veterans' Day. He says, "Veterans' Day is not about me or about you, it's about the collective whole and why they decided they want to make a difference."

    After three years overseas, Tice is back in West Virginia and is looking to go to West Virginia University to study international business. He says the Purple Heart doesn't change who he is.

    "Just a few more stories is all it is," Tice says.

    Both say they plan to spend Veterans' Day with family.
  • Your4state Community 
        
    Caring.Companies

    NBC25's Caring Companies is an effort designed to improve how we live and work. Click here to learn more.
    Community.Forum

  • Most Recent Classifieds 
  • Value Click 
  • Interior SkyScraper 
  • NRS Skyscraper 
  • Promo Square A 
  • Promo Square B