Tuesday, November 15, 2011
 
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Bonanza says thank you to veterans

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[November 15, 2011]  Monday the Bonanza restaurant in Lincoln took the time to offer a special "thank you" to all veterans by offering them a free buffet lunch. 

Throughout the day, veterans came and went through the doors, some coming in groups, some coming alone and meeting friends. And some came with only their memories and stories, ready to talk, ready to share, ready to experience a bond with their fellow veterans that only they can fully understand. 

In one corner of the restaurant sat four men at two different tables. Two were veterans of World War II and two were veterans of the Korean War. Around the corner sat yet a fifth man, also a vet who served in Korea. 

Harold Jeckel served in Korea in the "hourglass" 7th Division of the 8th Army. He spent his military career first working on tanks before being promoted to sergeant first class and put in charge of the motorcade. He was stationed at Yon Chon Railroad, just five miles from the front line. Jeckel said one thing he remembers about being in Korea was that when it was hot, it was really hot, and when it was cold, it was really cold. His dinner companion, Fred Detmers, also served in Korea and was a member of the 7th Army. 

Behind them, brothers Leonard "Whimpy" and Walter Lehner enjoyed their meal. The two brothers are two of four siblings who served their country. Leonard and Walter served in World War II as instructors.  

Leonard was stationed in Okinawa and was an instructor in small arms weaponry in the Navy. He pulls out his wallet and shows a picture of a handsome young man in his naval uniform, and then he shows a second picture, of his wife. He explains that they met while he was in the Navy, and during his tour she wrote him over 400 letters.

"I have each one, and they are gems," he said. "She would write them backward or upside down. I'd have to use a mirror to read them," he said, laughing. Obviously her efforts to lighten his day while away from home can still do so all these years later. 

Walter Lehner was also in the Navy, stationed at Norfolk, Va. He explained he trained soldiers in diesel mechanics. As part of his training program, he went out with sailors on ships, but as he put it, "We went out on the ocean but never got all the way across."

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Around the corner sits Bob Shanle. Shanle is well known in Lincoln. For years he served as a clerk with the Mike Maske Auction Service, and he can be seen daily out and about in Lincoln, getting his exercise.  

Shanle served in Korea in 1951 and 1952. He returned home safe and sound but later in life suffered an illness that took his legs and put him in a wheelchair. 

According to restaurant owner Brett Borst, the number of vets who came in Monday and the wide variety of terms of service was quite surprising. He noted that as he made his way around tables, speaking to each person there, he found several vets from World War II and Korea, but also those who defended our country in Vietnam and Desert Storm. 

For the Bonanza restaurant, this has been a year to say "thank you" in a bigger kind of way.

"We did this in September, remembering 9/11, and it went very well," Borst said. "We also wanted to do it in November for our vets." 

Bohrst said any time is a good time to say thanks to those who defend our nation and assure us of the freedom to eat out, to own a business and to be thankful to and for those who provided it for us.

He looks at it from a personal viewpoint, saying, "Without them, we couldn't have a business here." 

[By NILA SMITH]

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