Military in uniform salute unless they are in formation. If in formation then the leader of that formation salutes for them. Civilians do not salute although some choose to place their hands over their hearts. They are not required to do so.
Hail to the Chief
Yes, you should render the salute during the "Sounding of Honors". You also salute the playing of the National Anthem (of ANY country, not just the US), "To The Colors", and "Hail to the Chief".
Yes, you should render the salute during the "Sounding of Honors". You also salute the playing of the National Anthem (of ANY country, not just the US), "To The Colors", and "Hail to the Chief".
Hail to the Chief
No, the noun 'hail' is a common noun, a general word for pieces of ice that fall from clouds like rain.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, a place, or a thing; for example, the Hail & Hog Kitchen and Tap in Ashburn VA or "Hail to the Chief", the official Presidential Anthem of the United States.The word 'hail' is also a verb: hail, hails, hailing, hailed.
Hail to the Chief - TV series - was created in 1985.
The duration of Hail to the Chief - TV series - is 1800.0 seconds.
You may be refering to the fanfare "Hail to the Chief". It seems it is not used as often as it once was. It is a brief martial tune. Traditionally it is immediately preceded by 4 "ruffles and flourishes", a brief brass and percussion intro something along the lines of tum da-da-daaa da-da-daaa (played 4 times for the president). Hail to the Chief is in the public domain. The link allows you to hear both "Ruffles and Flourishes" and "Hail to the Chief".
Hail to the Chief - TV series - ended on 1985-07-20.
no they are not sleet is precipitation in the form of ice pellets created by thefreezing of rain as it fallsand hail is to cheer, salute, or greet;
Hail to the Chief.
John Tyler's second wife Julia