'A sobering experience'
BRIAN WALKER/[email protected] | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 6 months AGO
Austin Bishop returned from Normandy with a new appreciation for the sacrifices made on D-Day.
Bishop, of Dalton Gardens, recently returned from a week-long trip of shooting video for the nonprofit Greatest Generations Foundation for today's 70th anniversary of the Allied invasion during World War II.
"I don't cry much, but I did going into the cemetery on Omaha Beach," said Bishop, who owns Sure Shot Video. "I learned that I knew nothing about World War II. It was a sobering experience."
Bishop said touring the memorials and cemeteries puts life into perspective.
"It's difficult to complain about things after you learn about what went on (in Normandy)," he said.
Bishop said he was familiar with several of the sites from playing war video games.
"But I wasn't familiar about what took place there and the severity of what happened on that day," he said. "I don't remember learning about it in school, just from what I knew from the video games."
The Normandy landings on June 6, 1944 - termed D-Day - led to the restoration of the French Republic and an Allied victory in World War II. Allied casualties on D-Day were at least 12,000.
ARTICLES BY BRIAN WALKER/[email protected]
Post Falls fee hikes proposed
New dog adoption fee floated; 117-acre zone change requested
Building a better economy
Local jobless rate dips slightly to 4.7 percent
POST FALLS - When looking at the economic picture, Scott Krajack sees it much like peeking out the window on a typical unsettled North Idaho spring day.
Kootenai, Plummer-Worley, St. Maries school levies pass
Voters in the Kootenai, St. Maries and Plummer-Worley school districts on Tuesday approved supplemental levies to support maintenance and operations.