Randy Head (@randy_head) 's Twitter Profile
Randy Head

@randy_head

Married to Lisa Swaim, former Deputy Prosecutor, former State Senator

ID: 47779368

calendar_today16-06-2009 23:47:17

2,2K Tweet

2,2K Followers

2,2K Following

USS Arizona (@ussarizona) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Among the complement of 1,514 men assigned to USS Arizona, there were 38 sets of brothers including a pair of twins, two sets of three brothers, and a father and son. Only 15 of these men survived the attack—a staggering 80 percent casualty rate. #FacesOfUSSArizona #PearlHarbor83

Among the complement of 1,514 men assigned to USS Arizona, there were 38 sets of brothers including a pair of twins, two sets of three brothers, and a father and son. Only 15 of these men survived the attack—a staggering 80 percent casualty rate. #FacesOfUSSArizona #PearlHarbor83
World War II History (@ww2facts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This Day in #WWII #History: On the morning of December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launches a surprise attack on the United States naval base at Pearl Harbor. #PearlHarbor83

This Day in #WWII #History: On the morning of December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launches a surprise attack on the United States naval base at Pearl Harbor.

#PearlHarbor83
LiterateIndy (@literateindy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

HA-19, one of five Japanese midget submarines that participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, on display on Monument Circle, 1943. #PearlHarbor83 (Larry Foster, Indiana Historical Society)

HA-19, one of five Japanese midget submarines that participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, on display on Monument Circle, 1943.

#PearlHarbor83  
(Larry Foster, Indiana Historical Society)
Dr. Buzz Aldrin (@therealbuzz) 's Twitter Profile Photo

83 years ago today, America experienced what President Franklin Delano Roosevelt called, “a date which will live in infamy” following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The rest, of course, is history – but out of the ashes of that war, grew a strong alliance between America

83 years ago today, America experienced what President Franklin Delano Roosevelt called, “a date which will live in infamy” following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The rest, of course, is history – but out of the ashes of that war, grew a strong alliance between America
Danny Deraney (@dannyderaney) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Every year, I share this video of French caretakers who take sand from Omaha Beach in Normandy, and scrub them into the letters to give them the gold coloring. They do this for all 9,386 US soldiers who died. France also gave us this land as American soil. #MemorialDayWeekend

James Lucas (@jameslucasit) 's Twitter Profile Photo

5. Despite battling cancer, 100-year-old veteran Dennis Porter traveled thousands of miles to reunite with his comrades and see General Patton one last time.

Ernie Pyle WWII Museum (@erniepylemuseum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#OTD June 6, 1944, the Allies launched the pivotal invasion of #Normandy. In the second of his three #DDay columns #ErniePyle chronicles the terrible cost of #WWII. erniepyle.org/the-horrible-w…

J&L Historical (@jason_r_burt) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Let us not mourn that such men died, but rejoice that such men lived." - General George S. Patton American Military Cemetery in Normandy. 🇺🇸

"Let us not mourn that such men died, but rejoice that such men lived." - General George S. Patton

American Military Cemetery in Normandy. 🇺🇸